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                    <text>• 1

County Police Chiefs Bock Reagan's Stand On Crime
By IHANF. I’ETRYK
Herald Staff Writer
Five of Seminole County’s top police administrators said
today they agree wholeheartedly with President Reagan's call
for strengthening the hand of police and weakening the legal
rights of criminals.
Reagan told a gathering of about 1,000 members of the
International Association of Chiefs of Police in New Orleans
Monday that he favors the death penalty and changes in
federal law on bail, sentencing ami admission of evidence. He
also said lie wants changes to prohibit those who commit
heinous crimes from going free due to technicalities, to require
mandatory prison sentences for anyone committing a felony
with a gun, and to order more offenders to pay restitution to
their victims.
"It was something every police chief wanted to hear," said
Sanford Police Chief Ben Butler.
Butler, who is attending the conference, which ends Friday,
said Reagan spoke for an hour and was applauded vigorously
many times.
Although Reagan did not offer hope of any federal money to

help fight crime, Butler said. ’T here are other ways to help."
lie added, "I don't think he was talking through his hat "
But I.ake Mary Police Chief Harry Benson said he would
have preferred to hear more about where the money is going to
come from to help local law enforcement.
Benson said he supports Reagan’s stands on mandatory
sentences and the like.
"I'm all for it if we're going to get realistic," he said, "but
there’s always something to stop it.'i
He said he also favors removing the technicalities that
permit violent criminals to go free, but that-he is not interested
in removing civil rights wholesale.
"I go back a lot of years in this business," Benson said, "and
there were abuses. W'e don't want to get back to lliat."
Winter Springs Police Chief John (Jovoruhk said he, too.
doesn't feel a technicality should let criminals off.
"Why should a missed word in the Miranda warning nullity
the whole procedure if its done in good faith?" he asked
(Jovoruhk said he would like to see a time limit on death
penalty appeals "so p eo p le won’t be dragging their feet along
the way."

He also said the parole system should be revamped
"A man goes in for five years and he's out in sis months back
doing the same things. He knows he'll get out because the jails
are overcrowded.
Tlie prisons are overpopulated, so they're turning them
loose faster than we can put ’em back in," he remarked
Govoruhk said getting tougher on paroles would over­
populate the jails for a while, but then things would begin to
change
"If you know you're not going to get out in five years, what's
going to happen to your thinking before you commit a crime
"You’ll give it a second thought." he said.
Benson and Seminole County Sheriff John Polk agreed that
the knowledge that punishment will be "swift and sure" is a
deterrrent to crime
And, they said, the mood of the country is ripe for change
"It's a m atter of the legislators deciding that's the way it will
be and making it so." Benson said. "There's nothing un­
constitutional about it.
"We went through a period that was anti-police, law and
order during the Vietnam era were dirty words Good people

were thinking that way But now we've grown up Now people
can't afford not to support us." he added
" Today most of our beautiful cities are places to stay out of
when the sun goes down, and you're scared there in the
daytime People aren't safe in their own homes. When
somebody invades your home or you're nervous in your home,
what kind of hie is that" extending super rights to criminals
has made us no longer feel safe," he commented.
Benson said part of the blame In-longs to our society, which
he said no longer puts much of a stigma on In-mg a criminal.
"There's white-collar crime, and everybody steals, and all
anybody's working tor is the almighty dollar." he said. "Our
morals in this country have declined at a higher rate than our
crime has increased "
He said he thinks this is the fault of elite educators who in the
last 20 years have promoted an extreme liberal philosophy,
and of a proliferation of lawyers in the criminal-justice
system
AMn-ii we try to enforce the law they start picking us
See C(H M Y. Page 12A

Top County W orkers
G e ttin g M erit Hikes

r(

M w iM P toto ky Tom V OKMi I

WHERE'S
THE FIRE?

Sanford's now ladder fire Iruck was on display al City Hall today. The city
acquired the IXJO.tMMI truck for the bargain price of 1297,000 by permitting it
lo be displayed at the national firemen's convention in St. Ixiuis earlier this
month. The new ladder truck is only the second truck of its type ever owned
in the city.

The two appointees will Join nine other
committee members, who for the last
several months have been reviewing the
city's charter for possible changes.
Among the changes being considered
are the black community's request that
two of the five city commissioners be
elected from geographical districts by

voters wiuim liaise districts only.
Others on the committee are: Thomas
Wilson, chairman; Dr. J.C. Ringling, Dr.
Velma Williams, Dan Pelham, Chalfant
llorrell, John Ix-roy, Evalyn Crabtree,
Richard Barnett and George Willis Jr.
In other business, the commission
accepted the low bid of Jones Electric
Supply of Sanford for 31 high-pressure
sodium-vapor street tights at a cost of
$3,825 06 The only other bidder for the
lights was Consolidated Electric Supply.
Despite a positive recommendation

For City Employees

Hospital Premiums Going Up

Two Join Charter Committee
Darryl Griemr and Clyde "Robbie"
Robertson have been appointed to the
Sanford Charter Review Committee by
the City Commission

By DARLENE JENNINGS
recommended higher salary.
safety, seven percent, to $14,459
Herald Staff Writer
"This prevents compounding at the
John Percy, director of public
County administrative personnel will
same rate and spending taxpayers services and development, five fieroent.
receive merit increases of between five
money." he said.
to $12,868
and 10 percent, effective Oct 1, and the
Kirchhoff recom m ended, and the
Jink Harward, director of data
Seminole County Commission agreed at
board agreed, lo liave the Personnel processing, eight percent, to $10,510
Tuesday's work session that county
Hoard look at his pro|k&gt;sal and to study
lo is Martin, director of personnel,
personnel will receive a ( 8 percent costthe county's continuation of the &lt;ap|&gt;ed five percent, to $30,241
of-living adjustment as well, beginning in
s;ilary system
Chuck Swanson, communications
January.
When it came down to approving m anager and G ary Lester, traffic
Merit increases are recommended to
Neiswender's merit increase, which onguii-cr. will receive 10 |»er cent merit
the board, after study by the county's
would put his salary at $48,652 up Irom increases
administrator, and are based on an in­
$47,782 — the administrator told the
'Dirts- other county employees will
dividual's performance.
board lie would rather gel more time off receive 7 5 percent merit increases They
Many of the administrative personnel's
instead of a pay increase
are (Jinny Huff, clerk and finance
salaries were flouted over their "cap­
The board offered, and Neiswender manager, $25,894; Don Flippen, building
ped" salaries, meaning that the em­
agreed to 24 extra days for vacation on official, $27,772; and U-onard Carswell,
ployee was at the end of the salary range
top of his regular 14 days of vacation He manpower manager, $22,871
but with a merit increase the employee
also agreed to a slight increase in salary,
Six percent raises go to Jim Matthew s,
earns more.
in $48,000
road
superintendent. $27,130; Don Poole,
However, Commissioners Bud Feather
Salary in creases lor other ad ­ Uittalion chief. $28,211; Herb Hardin,
and Barbara Christensen said they saw
ministrators for the county, starting with
land management manager, $21,566;
problems with ignoring the cap and the highest-paid, are:
Clint Westbrook, veterans service of­
moving employees’ salaries above the
— Dr. Jorge Deju, director o| Health
ficer, $17,926; Jean Rhein, librarian,
capped pay.
and Human Services, a nine percent $26,516 and Irene Vernay, welfare of­
"The cap is there for a reason," said
raise to $5.1,369 The county fiays $11,521. ficer. $18,169.
Feather, "and I don't think we should
the state $42,148
The following will receive five percent
Just ignore It." He proposed rewarding
— Neiswender, to $48,0uu
m erit in creases: Hqtch A lexander,
"good" employees with a bonus instead
— Nikki Clayton, county attorney,
facilities and park manager, $27,125; Bill
of merit increases.
about a seven percent increase, to
Kmley, battalion chief, $25,334; Joe
Commissioner Bill Kirchhoff said he $47,250
Walters, battalion chief, $26,600; Bill
was concerned with the way the county— Jack Schuder, director of public
Pettus, vehicle maintenance superin­
now figures cost-of-living increases for works, nine percent increase, to $36,(53.
tendent. $19,811; Buck Torres, vehicle
employees.
— Bill Bush, county engineer, 7 5 maintenance superintendent, $22,080;
He said he would rather see the ( 8 percent, to $15,706.
Ashby Jones, clerk’s administrative
percent cost-of-living adjustment figured
—Ken Hooper, environmental services assistant, $10,919; JoArin Blackmon,
on the previous year’s salary, as opposed director, 10 percent, to $14,507
purchasing director, $25,132, and Woody
to basing the increase on an employee's
— Gary Kaiser, director of public
Price, director of planning d e p t, $28,009

Irom the Planning and Zoning Com­
mission, the commission unanimously
denied a request from Patricia Thomp­
son for permission to sell alcoholic
beverages with meals at the Rib Shack,
25(5 French Ave.
The commissioners noted that city law
forbids Issuance of a permit to sell
alcoholic beverages if another establish­
ment selling such beverages is located
within 500 feet. The Rib Shack is across
the stree t from Baham a Jo e's
restaurant. - DONNA ESTES

R
n W A ESTES
Byl nDONNA
Herald Staff Wrltrr
Hospitalization-insurance premiums
for Sanford city employees and their
dependents will likely be going up early
in January , City Manager W.E. "Pete”
Knowles has told the City Commission.
Knowles said at Monday night's
com m ission m eeting that insurance
claims by employees and llieir depen­
dents exceed premiums paid and are
continuing to rise. He added, however,
that a study of the claims show* th»i

employees are not abusing the program.

i i i n r v l f i i - i u i c u r n rxnf n l w i c i n n ( L i t t r i u i e n m

He said increases in costs appear to !*•
for special hospital charges
Knowles said 45 |&gt;ercent of the dollar
claims are going toward special hospital
charges, with 23 percent lor room and
board, 16 percent for surgery . 12 percent
for other expenses, three fieroent for
prescription drugs, and one percent for
medical.
In 1979-80, 61 percent of the claims
came from emolovees and 39 percent

I.

..

1

.

.

i

. .

■

....

Irom dependents In 1980-81, 66 percent
were from employees and 34 percent
Irom dependents, Knowles said.
During 1980-81, Knowles said, 208
claims were filed by the city's 293 em ­
ployees
Sixty-four
were
for
hospitalizations averaging 7.2 days each
time, while 144 claims did not include
hospital confinements.
Die average cost pet confinement was
$2,668 in 1980-81, compared to the
average cost of $1,688 a year ago.

Casselberry Water Ban Still Stands
By TENIYARBOROl (ill
Herald Staff Writer
A city-imposed outdoor water-use ban
is still in effect until Oct. 31 for
Casselberry residents, following action
by the City Council at Monday night's
meeting.
The ban, imposed in May by the city
during a drought season to conserve
water, was renewed by the council to
prevent residents from coming under the
St. Johns River Water Management

District moratorium on outdoor water
use. H ie original city ban was required
during a period when the water level in
the area was low, and is in the best in­
terest of residents, according to city
officials.
The water management district placed
Die mandatory 15 percent cutback in
water use on 10 counties, and residents in
those counties cannot water their lawns
from 9 a.m. to 6 p in. daily.
C a sse lb erry 's ban re stric ts w ater
usage, but allows residents to use water

for outdoor use from ( a.m. until noon in
an oild-even day arrangement. Residents
with odd-numbered addresses can use
water outdoors on odd-numbered days,
und residents with even-numbered ad­
dresses on even-numbered days.
The district board is scheduled to meet
Oct. 13-K to discuss lifting or extending
the moratorium on outdoor water use,
officials said.
Until the board lifts the ban,
Casselberry will continue under its own
ban, council members said.

High Prices Spark Boom

TODAY

Veggies: Grow Your Own
A
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tm

m

2s-"

St?

ski

CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (UPIl - A study
shows more Americans than ever are fighting
high food prices by growing their own
vegetables.
"This is an unprecedented increase," David
Schaefer, spokesman for Gardens for All of
Burlington, Vt., said Tuesday. "The primary
reason is to offset inflation; the second is for
the fun of it."
Gardens for All, a research group,
commissioned the annual survey conducted by
the Gallup organuation of Princeton, N.J.
Figures showed 38 million of the nation's 80.5
million households — (7 percent — planted

food gardens, up from (3 percent in 1980.
Twenty-five million households had gardens in
1971, the first year of the survey.
The average garden size was 5(7 square
feet, and gardeners reaped about $408 worth of
food.
"That's pretty good, by anybody’s stan­
dards," Schaefer said.
Schaefer said food gardening was most
popular in the Midwest where 55 percent of the
households had gardens. Forty-two percent of
the households in the East planted gardens, (9
percent in the South and (1 percent in the
West.

Action Reports

!A

Bridge
Calendar
Comics ...................
Crossword ..........
Dear Abby
Deaths
Editorial
Florida
Horoscope ............
Hospital
Nation
Ourselves ............
Sports
Television
Weather

1C
•C

LUCKY BEAR?
Do you belie vt* in lucky
hears? ( rooms High
School's wuler girl,
Ithondu Butcher, does.
The cute ninth-grader
plans on bringing To­
ny J r .” to every
( moms game. It paid
off Tuesday night at
Seminole High School
Stadium as the Pan­
thers nipped Lake
Brantley, H-7, in fresh­
man football. See Page
HA for details.
M trold Photo by Tom Vincent

12A
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�1A— Evening Herald, Sanford. PI.

Wednesday, Sspt. &gt;0, 1H 1

3 Sanford Men Net State Prison Terms

FLORIDA
IN BRIEF
Costly Computer Prompts
Call For Investigation
TALUHASSEE, Fla. (UPIl - A House-Senate
committee wants Gov. Bob Graham to investigate
“ serious problems" it says caused a state agency to
pay 11.2 million too much for a computer system.
Graham should review: ull stale purchases of com­
puter equipment and services and give an especially
hard look to the Department of Highway Safety and
Motor Vehicles, which made the controversial com­
puter deal, the Joint legislative Auditing Committee
said Tuesday.
Slate Sen. Joe Carlucci ol Jacksonville, a committee
member, said Graham and the Cabinet should consider
liring or disciplining department director Chester
Blakemore and other officials.

GO P Leaders Want Air Time
TALUHASSEE, Fla. (UPI) - State Republican
leaders want statewide television time to rebut Gov.
Rob G raham 's criticism of President Reagan's han­
dling of the refugee situation.
GOP slate chairman Henry Sayier asked WFSU-TV
in Tallahassee to give a Republican spokesman the
same exposure Graham got last week when he went on
u statewide hookup of eight public TV stations in seven
cities.

Murderer, 27, To Die
MIAMI lUPI) — Theodore Harris was sentenced to
the electric chair Tuesday for the stabbing death of a
73-year-old woman who found him burglarizing her
home.
Dade County Circuit Court Judge Thomas Scott
sentenced Harris, 27, to death for the robbery slaying
last March of Essie Daniels of Opa-l/&gt;cka. Testimony
at Harris' trial showed the victim was stabbed 61 times
with a butcher knife.

Feds 'Blacklist' Builder?
TAMPA, Fla. (UPI) — Tampa developer Allen Z.
Wolson, saying he has been "blacklisted," has asked
the federal court to enjoin the Federal Reserve System
from blocking a Tampa bank from issuing him loans.
Wnlfson said in a civil suit filed in U.S. District Court
that the Federal Reserve had Issued a secret cease and
desist order to the^Metropolllan Bank &amp; Trust Co. lust
May, ordering bank officials not to loan money to
Wnlfson, his wife Debbie, or any of 75 associates who
were not named in the suit.

Bias Questioning Allowed
TAI-UHASSEE, Fla. I U PI) — The homeowner was
white, the alleged burglar black, und the defense
thought it had the right to raise the issue of racial
prejudice.
In a 2-1 ruling Tuesday, the 1st District Court of
Appeals agreed, saying defense attorneys in most
cases have the right to question prosecution witnesses
about their racial prejudices so Jurors can evaluate
their credibility.
The court ordered a new trial for Carl Smith of
Jacksonville, who had been sentenced to five years In
prison for attempted burglary of a Jacksonville home
on March 22, 1980.

Football Spreads Measles
FORT MYERS, Fla. (UPI) - Officials say the
current "measles emergency" in I« County has hit
area high schools the hardest and that football has
been an instrument in spreading the disease.
The cases have been "mostly in high school
students," said Bessie Fowler, nursing director for the
le e County Health Department. "It started in one high
school and spread to two others. As of today we have
declared a measles emergency."

Jocks 'Cover Up' For Press
MIAMI (UPI) — The Miami Dolphins management
lias purchased 60 robes for players and coaches to
prevent a potentially embarrassing situation in their
locker room, which is now open to female reporters
after football games.
"1 was reluctant to ugree to it, but the courts have
already ruled on tills, in favor of allowing women in the
locker room," Head Coach Don Sliula said Tuesday
after the decision was made.
"I don't think women should be In Die locker room,"
Simla admitted. "Some guys care about it and some
guys’ wives care about it. The robes were the only
logical way to handle it."

WEATHER
AREA READINGS (I a.m .|: temperature: 77; overnight
low: 71; Wedneaday'a high: 90; barometric pressure: 30.13;
relative humidity: 82 percent; winds: northeast at 6 mph.
! aTHURSDAY TIDES: DAYTONA BEACH: highs, 10:54 a m.,
11:12 p.m.; lows, 1:21 a m., 4:52 p in,; PORT CANAVERAL:
highs, 10:46 a.rn., 11:04 p.m.; lows, 4:12 a.m., 4:43 p.m.;
iBAYPORT: highs, 3:16a.m .,4:13 p.m.; lows, 10:01 a.m., 10:06
:p.m.
BOATING FORECAST: St. Augustine to Jupiter Intel, Out
N Miles: Wind east to southeast around IS knots today
becoming southeast 10 to IS knots tonight. Winds becoming
{southerly Thursday. Seas 4 to’5 feet today and 3 to 4 feet
llonlght. A few showers and thunderstorms.
AREA FORECAST: Partly cloudy through Thursday. Highs
near 90. Lows near 70. Wind easterly 10 to IS mph diminishing
tonight.

Three Sanford men were sentenced to state prison terms
Friday in circuit court in Sanford.
Donald E. Hampton. 27, was given two live-year consecutive
prison term s by Circuit Judge Volie A. Williams Jr. for the
August 1979 burglary ol Smilty’s Inc., 2714 Orlando Drive,
Sanford, and the grand theft of tools valued at more than
*1,000.
Originally Hampton had been sentenced to five years in
prison and five years probation on each count. But the 5th
District Court of Appeals ruled such sentences were illegal
under a recent Florida Supreme Court decision and ordered
Hampton rescntenced.
Williams also sentenced Terry C. Wallace, 26, to six months
to five years in prison for the March 6 burglary' of the Richard
Butler residence at 555 Valencia St., Sanford.
Karl J. Gassman, 29, was sentenced to six months to five
years after being convicted on a concealed firearms charge,
lie also received a concurrent 60-day county Jail term for
possession of less than 20 grams of marijuana.

Action Reports
★ Fires
★ Courts

* Police
TOLD A FIB
Archie Wilber McCormick, 46, of 513 East Celery Ave.,
Sanford, was being held at the Seminole County Jail this
morning in lieu of *5.000 bond for "stealing" his own rented
television and giving police a false theft report.
According to police reports, McCormick removed a TV lie
had rented from Westgate TV, Inc., 3115 S. Orlando Drive.
Sanford from his home and placed it in another location. He
then reported it stolen.
Police said he was behind two payments on the TV.

By Casselberry Council

"As a rule, we don't accept water retention
ponds or m u ck lan d ," C asselberry City
Councilman Frank Schutle told a represen­
tative of an Orlandcvbased development firm
at Monday night's council meeting.
Ray Anderson of F &amp; R Builders, developers
of Villas of Casselberry, asked the council to
accept his firm's donation of 2.1 acres of land
from F lc R to ensure the company’s com­
pliance with a city ordinance requiring
developers to donate a portion of land for city
recreational use or its assessed cash market
value. The ordinance was imposed by the
council to offset developmental impact in the
area, city officials said.
The cash market value of tlte property F &amp; R
wants to donate totals *46,376.
"We have complied with the letter of the law
by donating 2.2 acres, of which you may
subtract any 1.74 acres you wish to meet your
requirement," Anderson said. He added that
the land's use for a particular recreational use
is not a concern of F 4 R.

Council members told Anderson they had
made it clear at previous meetings that no
muckland would be acceptable as a donation
for recreational-use land. According to City
Engineer Ken Ehlers, the proposed land
donation is three to six feet deep in muck.
"We are building on the exact same land,"
Anderson said. "We are de-mucking it."
Council members told Anderson they could
not approve his offer without further
clarification of exactly which 2.1 acres are
being donated and wheDier the land is usable
for city purposes, as stipulated in the or­
dinance.
Anderson said he would provide the council
with a legal land description "no later than
Wednesday" l today).
The council voted unanimously to table
Anderson's request until the Oct. 5 council
meeting, allowing time for a review of the site.
Villas of Casselberry, on Cassation Drive
near Slate Road 436, is in the first phase of the
development project, Anderson said. That
phase consists of 276 units, and an additional
136 units will be constructed pending Die
council’s action.

F a n n in g

TA X F R E E
SA V IN G S

“ I have a 1973 Capri whose roof leaks. It has
no muffler and one of the tail lights Is broken.
But I don’t liave the money to make the
repairs."
G arry recently took his two children to a
ball game. "We Just go general admission
tickets and there were no souvenirs for the
kids. I felt really bad. The kids really don’t
understand how Dilngx are."

w it h
A ll

The controllers, who were earning an
average salary of (33,000 a year, went on
strike in demand for higher pay and improved
working conditions. They complained that
nervewracklng demands of their Jobs forced
many into early retirement.

All kindergarten students in
the Seminole County public
school system are to be

legal Notice

legal Notice

UNITED STATU DISTRICT
NOTICE OF
COURT MIDDLE DISTRICT OF
SHERIFF'S SALE
FLO R ID A
ORLANDO
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
DIVISION COURT NO: ft «1thtl by virtue ol that certain Writ
ORL'CIV-R
UNITED
of Eircution ittutd out ol and
STATU
OF
AMERICA,
under tht it*I ol Iht Circuit Court
Plslutlll, -vt- EARL E.
of Srmmol* County. Florid*, upon
WILLIAMS, tt HI, ft *1,
* lm*I lodgement rendered in Ihe
OvItnHsnl III - NOTICE OF
aloreiaid court of the Jlrd dty of
SALE — Nolict li hereby ghien
October. A O INI. in lh*t ceriein
thel purwenl to « Summary
ceteentitled, Seten Unkrich I u bo
Final D*cr«* ol Foredoeur*
Stele Form Fir* 1 Cetuelty Co
Plainldf, vt Robert E Anderton.
trdered on Augull 1. INI by ttif
abovt entlllwcS Court in tna about
Delendenl, which eloreteid Writ
cauit. The undesigned United of Evecut'On a n delivered to me
Stain Marshal, or out ol hit
a) Sherilt ol Seminole County,
Florid*, «nd I h*«e levied upon 1he
duly aulhorlitd dtpulitt. will
tall iht property tlluata In lollowing dttcribtd property
Stmlnolt County, Florida, towntd by Robert E Anderton.
deteribed* at: Lot I). LONE •Mid property being loceled m
PINES,according Is Plat thereoT Seminole County. Florid*, mart
at rtcordvd in Pit* Boot II, past p*rlicul«rly described at lollowt
II ol in* Public Records ol
One (NS Volkiwtgen. tin in
Stmlnolt County, -’Florida, 'color. ID No MKIJMJ itoring
tubitet, nowrvrr. to la m . II any Mm# *t Altamonte Towing Ser
dut. lor Iht yaar INI at public vice. Ill M«rker Street. Allemonle
outcry to tht higheit and b*tt Springy. Florid*
thddartorcathat II o'clock noon And the undrrtigntd *i Sherilt ol
on WtdnMday. October U. INI Seminole County, Florid*, will *t
at lh* Wttl door ol lha Stmlnolt II 00 A M on lh* Itth day ol Oc
County Courthoutt, Sanford, lobrr. AD INI. otter lor Ml* end
Florida
tell lo lh* highett bidder, lor ceth,
Oatad Stpitmbtr t. INI
tubieel lo eny and ell tutting
GEORGE R. GROSSE
litnt. *: the Front (Wttl) Door ol
UNITEO STATES
lh* Seminole County Cowrlhout* in
MARSHAL
Senlord. Florid*. Iht above
MIDDLE DISTRICT
described personal property.
OF FLORIDA
That Mid tale it being made la
GARY L RETZ
utitfy the terms of tald Writ ol
UNITEO STATES ATTORNEY Eteculion
MIDDLE DISTRICT
John E Polk, Sherlll
OF FLORIOA
Seminole County. Florida
Publlth: September f. I t JJ, JO. Publish September JJ. )0. Oc
lober 1, u. with lh* tale on Oc
INI
OEM II
•obey If, INI
DEM W

$ a v e rs

C e r t if ic a t e s .

Check th e se advantages:
• $500 m inim um deposit required,

Die kindergarten screening
must attend the workshop.
Additional information on
the program is available at
Die Dividends office at the
A lta m o n te
E le m e n ta ry
School by calling 834-8211.

• Fully insured by FSLIC.

• 1 year term ,
• 9 convenient locations to serve you.
• Seminole All $avers Certificates rate Is based on
70% o f average yield of one year Treasury Bills
auctioned every four weeks.

‘Prescribed
‘Trading

I o n Y O t K ( O N VI !Nll

I

O PEN SATURDAY, O C T. 3 !
‘ l:( ) O A M

By MEDCO
Although there are rarellenl
treatment* for allrrgie*. and
new and better drugs are
lieing developed constantly,
the only real prevention
course (or allergic reactions
is still avoiding their cause.
Sufferers of hay fever, for
example, will benefit from
staying inside as much as
possible during the pollen
season. Air conditioning and
filtration may be necessary.
N atural fibers used in
blankets, pillows and rugs
ar$ more likely to cause
reaction th a n sy n th e tic
ones. And. says the H arvard
M edical School, certain
foods, such
as eggs,
shellfish, nuts, tom atoes and
chocolate, are notorious
allergins. and may have to
be avoided. Venom reactions
can be avoided by wearing
dull colors and by not
wearing scents which a t­
tract insects, thus avoiding
their stings. For a particular
allergic rea ctio n , or a
s u s p e c te d o n e. y o u r
physician is the best source
of advice and treatm ent.

1 :0 0 I ’ M

Come In today. Our savings counselors will explain all
of the details so you can take advantage of this great tax
free savings opportunity, We can sliow you exactly what H
m eans for you.
Federal Regulations Require Substantial Interest
Penalties For Early Withdrawal of Term Accounts. All $avers
Certificates Subject To Final Regulations.

FED ER AL
S E M IN O L E

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17-91A T 27MI IT .

A l.U i K u .n l l A l
.11 l i t . ) 17 ' ) i

SANFORD

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S e m in o le

Effective October 1, savings become a great tax shelter.
First Federal's new IKS Approved TAX FREE All $avers
Certificates will give you a high Interest rate guaranteed for
one year and your savings arc Insured by the FSLIC. Your
earnings on this certificate will be exempt from Federal
Income Taxes, subject to a maximum of $2,000 on a join!
return and $ 1,000 for Individual returns.

Despite Reagan's vow not to allow fired
controllers to be rehired, some hold hope they
will get their jobs back, eventually. Maybe.

screened in eye-hand coor­
dination, language learning
and gross motor skills.
Volunteers are needed to
help with the screening in the
Sanford area schools, said
Dede Schaffner, Dividends
coordinator.
Mrs.
Schaffner
said
volunteers need not have
children in the schools (o help
in the volunteer program, but
that Dwse wishing to help with

O ^ S

IR S A p p r o v e d ®

work under the existing conditions," said
G arry, 35, who was an air controller earning
*42,000 a year at Ling Island's MacArthur
Airport.
"I have no regrets," he said.
But he has fell some hard times while he
wails to lake a new Job, which he refused to
Identify.

Dividends Class Friday
The Dividends School
Volunteers Program will hold
a workshop at 9 a.m. Friday
at the Seminole County School
Board office on Mellonvllle
Avenue to train volunteers to
help with a screening
program for kindergarten
students.

council previously "dem anding, not
requesting, Dial negotiations begin.
"There are a lot of things my people have
right now, like benefits such as uniform
equipment, and we want Diem in writing to
insure they get to keep them," he said.
"And, of course, we’ll negotiate pay raises
for the officers. I just want my people to get
their money."
Manuel said he plans to file an unfairlabor-action suit against the city today if he
determines that the city has taken the
annual public-safety incentive pay away
from the officers. The incentive pay totals
*300 annually.
During recent budget sessions, the dty
voted unanimously to do away with the
public-safety incentive pay because tht*
city’s public-safety officers "have been
brought up to parity with other depart­
ments," Mayor Owen Sheppard said.
Julian declined lo comment concerning
the redaction of incentive pay,

ByTENI YARHOROl'GH
Herald Staff Writer
N egotiations between the city of
Casselberry and its police officers will
begin as soon as both parties can determine
a date for talks on a police contract to
begin, according lo Ned Julian, Die at­
torney handling labor relations for the city.
Julian said the council met in executive
session on Monday and "authorized me to
commence preliminary procedures for
negotiation.
"The city's under an obligation to
bargain and there's no way to go but for­
ward," he added.
Julian said he has written a letter lo Eric
Manuel, president of Die Orange County
Police Benevolent Association, which is
representing Casselberry police oificers,
notifying him of Die city’s decision to begin
negotiations and asking Manuel to contact
Julian to set a meeting time.
Manuel said he had written a letter lo the

Controllers Try To Cope;
Some Make It, Others...
United Press International
Jam es G arry can’t afford to fix his car and
when lie lakes his kids to a ball game lie buys
cheap seats. Bob Westra stopped eating steak
und devotes more time to cabinet making.
Jesse Johnson is Job hunting and spending his
savings.
Clarry, Westra and Johnson are among the
11,400 air traffic controllers who walked off
their Jobs on Aug. 3 and refused to return.
They were ordered fired by President Reagan.
Now, nearly two months later, with airlines
on reduced flights because of the walkout and
a new legion of controllers being trained, the
discharged men and women are coping —
some better than oUters.
Some have found new Jobs. Others are still
looking. Many have been without a paycheck
for about 60 days. Some are struggling to pay
bills. Others say savings and relatives will
keep them afloat tor awhile longer.
A few privately say they made a mistake by
going on strike. Many Insist they have no
remorse and speak with words of praise for
their embattled union, the Professional Air
Traffic Controllers Organization.
"I think Diis strike wbs necessary because
the vast majority of Die controllers couldn’t

— DIANE PETR YK

Casselberry And Cops
To Discuss Contract

Muckland Not Accepted
By TENI YARBOROUGH
Hrrald Staff Writer

JAILED FOR SHOOTING
William Roger Callaghan, 21, of 939 S. Wymore Road,
Altamonte Springs, and Darryl Dwight Cole, 20. of Orlando
were being held at the Seminole County Jail this morning in
lieu of *8,000 bond on charges of shooting into an occupied
dwelling.
BATTERYCHARGED
Howard Wayne Carter. 31, 1842 McCarthy St., Sanford, was
being held this morning at the county jail in lieu of *500 bond
after being charged with battery upon Jamie Perry of Castle
Brewer Court, Sanford.
YELLOW FLING
Someone threw yellow paint over the front surface of
buildings 2301 and 2304 at the Semoran North apartment
complex on State Road 436 in Winter Park, reported building
manager Stephanie Crawford. The incident occurred
sometime between 5 a.m. and 7:30 a.m. Tuesday.
Crawford told Seminole County sheriff’s deputies the paint
covered walls, windows and doors. She estimated the cost of
repairing the mess at *200.

•

~ JL

• a t®

�Evtning Htrakl, Sanford, FI.

[$17,338.20 Already Collected

4 Get Pay Raises

Seminole United Way Inc. Kicks O ff

Tlie Sanford City Commission has approved merit in­
creases in salary for three city police officers and a
firefighter.
The salaries of uniformed police U s. Edward Hayden and
Johnny Parker were increased from $19,712 to $20,962 an­
nually. Police l.t. Paul Whitney of the investigations
division received an identical increase
Tlie salary of firefighter Michuct C. Hoening was raised
from $15,695 to $17,524 50
The step increases are given once each year for merit.

1981 Campaign Toward Record Goal
B&gt; JANK CASSKl.RERRY
H irald Stall Wrttrr
Ttie United Way of Seminole County, Inc.,
1981 lund-raising campaign was launched
today and $17,338.20 has already been
collected, workers at the "kick-off" breakfast
at the Like Monroe Holiday Inn in Sanford
learned

The Agency and Feature Division, headed
by the Herald's Doris Dietrich, reported a
total of $2,428.20 in gifts and pledges towards
its goal of *3,000. This included a *2,000
donation from the Sanford-Orlando Kennel
Club, 100 percent fair share participation—
$328.20—for the Children's Home Society
staff, and an anonymous gift of $100.

Margaret Jones, chairman of the Black
Division, reported gifts totaling $125 toward
the division goal "I $2,500

Hob Daehn, chairman of the Special (lifts
Division, reported a $1,500 donation from the
Philip Harper Foundation in Longwood, $50
from la k e Mary residents, and *635 from
Sanford. The goal for that division is $11,200

Other divisions and their goals include:
Education, Keith Stone, chairman, $13,700;
Public Employees, David Chacey, chairman,
$13,W0; and Professional, Catherine Ray.
chairman. $17,500

This year’s $305,000 campaign goal is Ihe
highest m the history of the organization's
existence in Seminole. Hirhard Fess, a Like
Mary city councilman and general manager of
Robinsons Department Store in the Altamonte
Mull, is chairman ol this year’s fund drive.
Tlie largest pledge so far was reported in the
Pilot Division by Seminole United Way
President David Joswick, manager of per­
sonnel resources for Ute NCR Corp., la k e
Mary, who said $8,600 in donations and pledges
had been collected in tile fust two days of the
United Way drive at NCR. The goul for the
Pilot Division, headed by l.arry Strickler,
manager of the Southern Hell Sanford office, is
$158,500

Jack Weible, co-chairman for the Com­
mercial Division, reported he had collected
$410 from 10 Sanford businesses. The goal for
the division is $75,100
In lieu of cash, businesses can donate goods
and sendees which will be auctioned off at 2
p in. Oct. 25, at the l.ake Mary High School
auditorium, according to division chairman
Terry Duffy.
Under the Financial Division. Maxine Ekem
of the First Federal Savings &amp; I-"an
Association of Seminole reporter! a gift of

$2,100 and pledges and donations of $1,490 from
the 35 percent of the firm's employees who
have donated thus far The division goal is
$33,000

Plaques of appreciation were presented to
Sheila Brown of I/mgiviuHl, 1980 United Way "I
Seminole president; David Joswick, mao
campaign chairman; and Ji&gt;e Hartwig, ac­
cepting on behalf "I Stromberg-Carlson, which
together with its employees donated one-fifth
of tlie $31X1,791 collected last year.
Tlie 1980 goal ol $260,000 was exceeded by
$40,791. The various agencies served by Hie
United Way received 93 1 percent of the funds
with the balance going for administrative
costs.

Wsdntsday, le ft. 34. 19&gt;t—3A -

Fess said that the Robinson's concourse at
the Altamonte Mall will be reserved for United
Way agencies during the annual charity
bazaar Oct, 24 He also said Raffles
Restaurant in the mall is planning a benefit
night for United Way of Seminole.
New agencies added to the list of those
receiving a share of United Way funds this
year are Hospice of Central Florida, Omega
Workstiop in Sanford and Consumer Credit
Counseling Service.
Other agencies include American Red
Cross. Hoy Scouts, Catholic Social Services.
Children's Home Society, of Florida, Com­
munity Coordinated Child Care, Drug Action
Committee of Seminole County, Federation of
Senior Citizen Clubs. Girl Scouts, Good
Samaritan Home, Retired Senior Volunteer
Program Salvation Army, USD, Visiting
Nurse Association, We Care, and YMCA.
I lie first report "Dutch treat" luncheon will
l&gt;e held Oct. 6 at noon at the Sundance Inn,
Altamonte Springs. The Sertoma Club will be
the twist

Candidate To Speak
A t YR Club M eeting
Hill Markham, Republican candidate for the U.S. Senate
seat currently held by Democrat Lawton Chiles of lakeland,
will be the guest speaker at the Thursday meeting, of the
Seminole County Young Republican (YR) Club.
Tlie meeting will be field at 8 p.m. at tlie Sanford Holiday
Inn, Interstate 4 ami State Road 46. A social hour will begin at
7:15 p.m. Tlie public is invited.

HOSPITAL NOTES
S rm inolr M em orial H o ip .ljl
T u tld J ,
ADMISSIONS
Hovi M Rolundo
Samuil- Ltfvey
Emma A yhlry

Doro 0 Built Dr-norm
Salvatore
Annie E

B ruualelta
Thompion

Deltona
Orange

cay
Yvonne O Bland. Seville
DISCHARGES
Marie A Gunn

BaDv G irl Cram plon
P alnca A Cramplon
Cnerrv Gain**
Naomi Glover
Cet-lle O H arknevi
llabv G&gt;rl Scoll
Tracy M Scoll
Benny Bayne Jr
Jean B r- iiillip v DeBary
M arqarei Bateman. DeBary
W'lson Me Burney, Enterprise
Claude M M vg hl, Osteen
M.Irtred V Haynes. T d u iv lll*

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Orig. 524. Choose from 3 lovely p a tte rn s. All
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saving on original prices.
Interm ediate m arkdow nt m ay
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Q uantities are lim ited.

P L A Z A

Hwy 17-92 L Stale Rd.
• Ml J C N-vu,

*S

Open Monday thru Saturday, 10 a m. 9 p.m,
Open Sunday, 12:30 5:30p.m.

MC

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Evening Herald
(USPS Ml IK)
300 N. FRENCH AVE., SANFORD, FI A 32771
Area Code 30W22-2611 or 831-9993
W ednesday, S eptem ber 30, 1981—4A

I

Wayne D. Doyle. Publisher
Thomas Giordano. Managing Editor
John Toenjes, Advertising Director

| Home Delivery: Week, 11.00; Month, $4.25; 6 Months, 824 00;

• Year, $45.00. By Mail: Week, 11.25; Month, 15.25; 6 Months,
$30.00; Year, $57.00.

On

Into
The Valley
For unparalled efforts to end inflation and
restore the nation’s economic health, President
Ronald Reagan is being attacked as an ogre out to
skin everyday Americans and shaft the poor and
elderly.
Ironically leading the pack are many of the
same persons whose reckless red-ink spending,
mountainous deficits and astronomic borrowing
have wrecked the dollar, wiped out savings,
driven interest rates sky-high, stagnated much of,
the economy and driven so many middle-income
and poor people to the wall.
It takes gall for those economic sinners now to
pose as saints eager to save the country. TTicy had
endless chances to rescue the Republic during
decades of riding high in Congress and the federal
bureaucracy. They didn’t. Now the sorry task of
undoing thedamugeof decades of misgovernment
falls to President Reagan.
Politically he has nothing to gain and he risks
losing everything.
Comparing the first months of the Reagan
administration with the onset of Franklin D.
Roosevelt's New Deal can Ik1 misleading. FDR
asked a Democratic Congress for emergency nets
to escape from the Great Depression. He gol
them. But the emergency acts became per­
manent.
Government, spending, deficits, taxes and
controls grew beyond reason. The economy got
sick. The nation drifted toward state socialism.
President Reagan is trying to turn the country
around, cut taxes, cut spending, cut deficits, cut
controls, restore confidence, stabilize the
currency, stimulate investment and growth to
generate jobs, and return America to the current
of freedom, opportunity and productivity that
made it great.
Ttie ills are more subtle thun those of the early
1930s. Today’s ills are ills of big government, ills
rooted in policies camouflaged as panaceas.
President Reugan has roused the wrath of those
who made those policies and of those who have
profited mightily from them. Theirs is a loud and
formidable army.
Even some former supporters are deserting Mr.
Reagan. GOPaillsans warn he is trying to do too
much, going too far. Indeed the President and his
people are like the Light Brigade charging into
the valley. Hiey could be wiped out politically.
But if they do not risk it, the country may sink
into incurable stagnation. So they risk it. That
takes courage.

S en sele ss Subsidies
We dared to hope this might be the year when
Congress would realize it doesn’t make sense for
the government to be subsidizing tobacco farmers
when its own public health experts are urging
people to stop smoking. But one must reckon with
the presence of Sen. Jesse Helms, the fierce
defender of tobacco subsidies, at the helm of the
Senate Agriculture Committee.
Mr. Helms effectively turned back an attack on
the tobacco program as the Senate put its farm
bill in final form last week. Support for sugar
growers, another questionable program, also
survived in spite of the pressure for budget cuts.
Nevertheless, the Senate bill reflected the
admonition of Sen. Robert Dole that if Congress
did not show some budgetary restraint in farm
programs it might have to deal with a presidential
veto. Cutbacks were voted in dairy and peanut
programs, and the “ target price" which triggers
federal support for wheat, corn, rice and feed
grain crops was reduced.
Even in its slimmed-down form, the Senate bill
would cost the federal government nearly $H
billion over the next four years. Its chief virtue is
that the farm bill taking shape in the House would
be far more costly. Whether President Reagan
must consider a veto may depend on whether the
senators can prevail when the issue reaches a
House-Senate conference.
Republican senators on the whole subscribe to
their party’s belief in free markets and free trade.
Yet when it comes to protecting farmers from the
vagaries of the commodity market-place, farmstate Republicans are barely distinguishable
from farm-slate Democrats. Should farmers be
subject to the risks of a competitive market?
Perish the thought.

BERRY'S WORLD

fZKI
• ||
v ia
3,2
I

. “..And wber1Interest rates ease, no doubt we'll
aee a strong rebound In ot‘ Bitty, here, tool"

--

Ill^ U jU U I

,**7Z&lt;’*
By SAM COOK

Seminole Youth Sports Association football
jumped Into full iwhig this past Saturday with
day-long games taking place at Lake Sylvan
west of Sanford on Lake Markham Road.
"There are gamea going on (ran 1 :8 a.m. to «
p.m.," informs 8YSA and Seminole County Park
and Recreation boas Butch Alexander.
There are five divisions in the 8YSA setup. The
breakdowns are baaed on age end weight. With
some variaUons dee to apodal caam, here are
the diviaioni;
Midget, Age 13, Maximum Weight 1M.
Junior Midget, Age IS, Maximum Weight 118.
Pee Wee, Age 11, Maximum Weight 100.
Junior Pee Wee, Age 10, Maximum Weight M.
Mighty Mite, Age t, Maximum Weight 71.
The participants a n allowed a six-pound
weight growth during the season.
Manager Mickey Norton and Angelo's owner
Frank MargareQa honored their softball teams
last week with award banquets.
The Caaaeiberry Mice, a woman's team
managed by Norton, won die league at Red Bug
Park with a perfect 184 record. The Mice were

’ . *- * da

204 for the year.
A three-way tie developed for the most
valuable player award among shortstop Dana
Hale, center fielder Sandy Leman and pitcher
Ruth Tempests.
Hale, a former aD-conterence shortstop at
Lake Howell, lad the team in hitting with a .574
average and fielded brilliantly, handling 180
chances for a .104 mark.
Tempests was 114 on the hill for the Mice with
a varU fag 1J8 in 101 innings. "Ruth also fielded
her position very well," threw in Norton.
Leman, batted .487 with 40 runs batted in and
10 extra base hits.
Other award winners included; Mary
McDonough (leadership), Anne McOaugh
(sportsm anship), Monica McNeil (Im­
provement) andDeDE Masley (golden glove for
defense).
McDonough played aU 10 positions, McGaugh
was a left-center fielder, McNeil, just IS year*
old was the leading home run hitter with six, and
Masley was flawless handling 37 chances.
For Norton's 1) to 18-year-old Casselberry

Cats’ boys team, Eddie Norton captured both
leadership and most valuable player awards.
..O ther awards Include: Pat Lacore (golden
glove for defense), Steve Cobert ( Improvement),
Bob Iannone (hustle) and Bob Bliss (sport­
smanship),
Alan Banyacski led the team in batting with a
.452 average. Tony Cardenas was second with a
.444 mark. Iannone (.439), and Norton (.404)
were the other .400 hitters.
Cobert (.391), U k e Mary’s Greg Hill (.375),
Lee Piefer (.348), Pat Lacore (.325), Barry
Johnson (.289), Bliss (.200), Kevin Roth (.167)
and Tom Tempesta (.150) filled out the roster.
Norton led In home runs (five), runs scored
(19), runs batted in (17) and hits (19). Iannone
led in doubles (five), while Lacore, Cardenas
and Johnson had one triple apiece.
Norton had a .958 fielding average at short­
stop, while Lacore was at .946 at first base.
Piefer has a 2-1 record and a 1.61 earned run
average on the mound. Roth pitched 51 innings
with a 3-4 record to lead the club in Innings pit­
ched.

JEFFREY HART

DICK WEST

Politics
Of Sandra
O'Connor

A Pool
And TV
In Cells
WASHINGON (UPI) —A concerned dtixen
identifying herself as "Mildred the Mugger"
informs me that a western motel chain has
opened a new computerized reservations
center in an Arizona prison (or women.
According to published accounts she en­
closed, the service is being operated by 30
inmates paid by the company to train as
reservations agents.
Although the program was said to provide
excellent post-penitentiary job opportunities,
Mildred seems to feel it also offered another
type of opportunity (or any inmates who
might be unrepentant.
Such information as credit card numbers
arid names, addresses and travel dates of
people about to be away from home could be
of great value to burglars, she pointed out.

’

Maybe so, but I can foresee the program
brandling out in legitimate ways whose
benefits would far outweigh any negative
potential it might have.
By coincidence, Mildred's letter arrived
shortly before the Senate voted this week to
confirm Sandra O'Connor, heraelf a former
Arizona judge, as the first woman member of
the UJ&gt;. Supreme Court.

Also by coincidence, the letter touched
indirectly on one of the legal programs about
which Mrs. O'Connor was questioned (hiring
her confirm ation. hearing* — namely,
overcrowded conditions In prisons.
Prison populations throughout the country
have grown so much faster than penal facul­
ties, there Is talk of reopening soma old
military bases and using them as detention
points.
The root cause of the problem Is easy to
isolate and identify. Simply itatsd, it boils
down to this: overbooking. Judges Uke Mrs.
O'Connor are sending more people up the
river than available accommodations can
accommodate.
Just as m olds occasionally are swamped
by conventianeeri, prisons are being
swamped by con viced felons. Some sort of
efficient reservations system Is needed soon
and badly.
Here is where the skills of prison inmates
trained as motel reservations agents could be
used to good advantage.

Before a judge hands down a sentence, he
should call the prison reservation service and
determine what or whether qtact la
available.
I mean, what happena If two lawbreakars
arrive at a given prison simultaneously and
only one cell berth is empty? Somebody ob­
viously Is going to be turned away.
(f one of them has confirmed reservations,
ilte choice will be easy to make.

Now arises the question of what to do with
the prospective Inmate who doesn't have a

reservation.
Possible answer: The ceU clerk gets on the
phone and calls around to reactivated

military bases In the area to see whether they
have any vacancies. If not, the only altarnative may be to send the prisoner to a motel.

'

\
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a s h f- J

WASHINGTON JTODfOf
OUR READERS WRITE

Judge And The Filipino
Her Letter
This la an open letter to Jedps Volte A.
WUUama Jr.
To ratrmh year memory, 1 was in Cour­
troom B this m anteg (Sept. 8 ) before you
relative to tee iwnmona I reoaivod (ram
Judge Davis to appear (or jery duty. You
i f t e w f me aometetag to Japnaae. I let
you know 1 did not unduttend. You were
surpatesd 1 was not Japanese and you said
"that waa waited." Than you added, “they
art great people unUka FiUptaoa who are a
bunch of thieves." 1 answered you then that
"1 happen to come from that country, sir." It
must have been my answer to your remarks
that evoked laughter from aoma of tea fifty or
mare peopte who were Ukewtee protect this
rooming (or jury duty. Howew, I felt eo
From the tewrl atbry you told us, I gather
yoe ateo served during the attend world war
against the Jspanaas. Therefore, you must
ateo have known what happened during the
Japansea occupation oi the FMUpptaaa and
how the FUpteoa stayed loyally by the
American ride.
You are a jedge - supposed to be the
epitome of fakiwee. Such an IrewpcnaIbte
remark agataat a race of people la uncalled
far In a court of justice which la digatfted sod
formal. Although the tear may not ba ad­
orn among the M plua prapaettvt Jurors
before you could be a form * Filipino,
prejudicial atatamanU or ethnic m a r ts
awn as that Mould not coma from you aa a
1 tried to see you in your chamber, not only
to explain the ration for my artteg exemp­
tion from jury duty at tea present tent, but
ateo to talk to you about tea remarks you
made. However, you jute amt out the ctert to
tot me know teat I w u excused. For that I
thank you. I teak forward to rredwtag this
dvic duty in tee future. However, I would not

forget this traumatic axparienco that hap­
pened to roe this morning Inside Courtroom B
M ora Yow Honor.
(Mn.)RcmediosB. Rutledge
Sanford

Hit Answer
An open tetter to Mrs. Remedioa B.
Rutledge:
This acknowledges your tetter of Seftf. 22,
181.1acknowledge I painted with too broad a
brush in the short comment I made In the
courtroom on Tuesday. White I humbly
apologise to you personally, I do not apologize
forths remark. I should have limited it to my
personal knowledge, which is rather extw ain . I w u stationed in the Philippine
Islands from December, 1*44 until Sep­
tember, 1*48.
1waa both on Leyte and Luzon. I w u a pilot
and regretfully, 1 must say that our supply
depots on both those islands were vandalised
and property stolen by some Filipinos. I know
this because they were caught on occasion by
the supply depot guarda. On Luzon there w u
a general order issued that such thieves were
to be turned over to the Philippine Con­
stabulary. Frequently, a week would not go
by when some df the same persons would be
caught again vandalising the same depots.
My own aircraft at San Fernando Pampanga, Luaon w u vandalized etveral times
and mgtoe p u ts were stolen. These events
ware frw basis of my remarks, which I have
already admitted to you were much too
I w u stationed in Japan from September,
1MB until February, 1*41. It w u never
brought to my attention that anything like this
ever occurred In Japan.
By tha way, In twenty-four years of service
on thxbmcfa, you might Ilka to know you're
the m at naturalised American who ever
asked to be excused from jury duty.
Volte A. Williams Jr.
Circuit Judge (Retired)

The nomination by Ronald Reagan of Judge
Sandra Day O'Connor to the Supreme Court,
and her triumphant passage through the
Senate, have accomplished some Interesting
things politically for the president.
Of course, nominating the first woman to
the court is an Important event, etcetera.
That may please a lot of people, but at the
margin it Is highly unlikely to get Reagan the
Gloria Stelnem vote.
What Reagan did for himself politically
with this nomination is open some distance
between the White House and the Moral
Majority — to use the term Moral Majority as
a sort of metaphor for the militant religious
right.
The O'Connor record on abortion is am­
biguous, and that may have been a plus for
Resgsn. The administration does not favor
the Rlght-to-Ufe Amendment, but, rather, an
amendment returning the abortion Issue to
the state legialatures.
That, however, is not good enough for the
militants. They are demanding a strict
constitutional ban on abortion. With his
nomination of O'Connor, Reagan in effect told
the mill tan ta to put up or shut up.
O’Connor breezed through the Senate
Judiciary Committee with a 17-0 vote, Sen.
Je re m ia h Denton voting " p re s e n t" —
because be w u unsatisfied with her refusal to
commit heraelf to an anti-abortion Judicial
position.
What Reagan did with the O'Connor ap­
pointment la otter a direct challenge to ringtolasue politics.
He threw the anti-abortion militants a kind
of slider. Okay, O'Connor ia something of an
unknown on abortion. One issue.
But, also, she is a woman. Another Issue.
Also, she has a conservative sense that the
legislatures make the laws, not judges.
Another issue.
Also, she comes from Arizona, and grew up
In Texas. She h u regional appeal. Another
facet.
Given these and other deployable assets,
Reagan u l d to the anti-abortion militants,
show us what you can do.
It turned out to be not very much.
Now, Reagan shares many of the social
concerns of the Moral Majority, but as p
shrewd handler of political power he knows
that he h u to run his own show. He cannot let
his political positions be dictated to him by
the Rev. Jerry Falwell or any other par­
ticular Interest group.
He also knows that the religious right Is
stylistically objectionable to many who
support Reagan, Indeed to many who agree
with many of the concerns and goals of the
religious right.
People outside the fundam entalist
Protestant environment, for example, do not
much like to be presented with public policy
recommendations that are presented as
coming directly from God.
Public policy in the United States Is sup­
posed to evolve through discussion, the
balancing of one thing against another.
So, Insofar u his relations with the
religious right are concerned, the O'Connor
operation w u a political success for Reagan.
Without repudiating the religious right, he
distanced I t He Indicated that its adherents
are among his supporters, but that he h u
other supporten too. He showed them that he,
and not Falwell, Is president

JACK ANDERSON

Professor’s Death Spurs Spy Probe
WASHINGTON - The mysterious (teeth of
Prof. Chen Werwheng of Carnegie Mellon
University on n visit to his native Taiwan has
finally moved the State Department to
examine the problem of spying by Tafwanau
agents In the United States.
Chen w u found dead shortly after he bad
been questioned far 18 hours by Tslwsrw—
authorities. Their official explanation at bis
death as either accident or auiddl is 1
with extreme skepticism by tea
Department; the mystery may oarer ba
solved utlsfactorily.
What particularly disturbs tea 1
— beyond the personal tragedy of Chan's
death — la that his lengthy interrogation by
Taiwanese authorities betrays their defatted
knowledge of the professor's activities to tea
United States.
Taiwanese spying on their critics hare hat
been no secret. I reported two years ago on a

Commlttee docameat that described the

Lagnado.
to O n ly

reviewed by my
It a&gt; g|idi test
thtoktogof M a i
Tbs

IL

review information on Taiwan-KMT
(Kaemiataag) artlvtttos la tha United
Tbs FBI wiB try to dsreisg
-

“If the FBI ta able to develop good evidence
of direction of rerreOlaDoo activtttea by
pareons who hare CCNAA cover, we could
PNO teem," tea memo ay s. PNG la tea
abbreviation f a declaring a foreigner
" p u m a a a grata," a unwelcome in tee
United Btatea. The todhridualte te a exprited.
Aa f a te rn Tafwanau ag a te who are not
protected by tea OCNAA'a functional im­
munity, the State Department memo
tent "they might be pnsauted
’ tee Foreign A gate Hagtofratia Act,
ho moat a u to a tetog tea
J a f f a Department can coma up with."
Al h a t, tea uam o adds, tea* ndld actioa
"would only touch tea tip of what most KMT
watchers think to an iceberg."
A f a more effective way to d a l with the
M toatia, tea n a n o ag p to a, wouM ha to cut
back a tee num ba of

r-“U

* . Ar

Uvity, I think we would have to start
restricting, perhaps selectively, the numba
of CCNAA personnel," the memo writer
That suggestion h u In fact been made by
Rep- Jim Leach, R-Iowa. He and Rep. Steve
Solan, LV-N.Y., chairman of the Houa Asian
and Padflc Affairs subcommittee, have been
bringing preeare a the State Department to
take action.
As a result of a secret meeting of the Solan
subcommittee and top officiate of tea FBI and
Ju ries Department, "the FBI h a akrted its
offices around tea country to report any
alagatiam of a y activity, and DOJ (Juatioa)
h u indicated they will prosecute whenem a
*»■ can be made," tee u cret memo notes.
To add teeth to tea crackdown, Sotan h u
a i s reted that anna a l a to Tehran ba made
contingent on a certification by the prukknt
that the Tahreneu hare ended tU r sursentence activates hen.

M -M ' ,

j* \4 f» r

�1

NATION
IN BRIEF
Reagan Chokes O ff Flow
O f Illegal Haitians
WASHINGTON i Ul’It — Presidential orders alined
at stemming the flow of illegal Haitian immigrants
authorize the Coast Guard to sail the high seas sear­
ching for their boats, intercept them, inspect them, fire
on them if necessary and turn them back.
Before the new tough orders from President Reagan
on Tuesday, the Coast Guard could only challenge
vessels suspected of carrying illegal aliens after the
boats entered U.S. territorial waters.
The new orders seem to protect refugees, those
fleeing their homeland because of political per­
secution, by authorizing the Coast Guard to ask for
documents proving their status. But a State Depart­
ment spokesman could not identify what type of
document a refugee could present to prove lie was
fleeing for political reasons.

W imp' Shoots Wife, Is Free
MOUNT Cl £ MENS. Mich. (UPI) - A husband,
whose lawyer described him as a ‘ wimp," shot his
domineering wife in the back and got away with It.
A Jury in Macomb County Circuit Court deliberated
just an hour and 10 minutes Monday before finding
Joseph Dudzinski innocent of assault with intent to
commit murder and two lesser charges.
The jury of six men and six women agreed with
defense attorney Ronald Goldstein that Dudzinski, 31,
shot his wife, Scherreil, partly because he was fed up
with being dominated by his wife.

Evening Hsratd, Sanford, FI.

The House That Jackie Built:
It's 'Unique In All The World1
By United Press International
she's not running the cash register at the
Gay Head tax collector Maysel Varv West Tisbury General Store, said people
derhoop said the town will collect no stop her constantly on her Gay Head mall
taxes from Mrs. Onassis until 1982.
route asking her to point out "Jackie's
"We assess Jan. 1 through Dec. 31. As house."
of last Jan. 1, the house was
"They ask me which driveway is hers,
uninhabitable, so the first of next year we but all I tell them is she lives in Gay
will assess It and she will begin paying Head,” she shrugged. "She gets her mall
taxes," Mrs. Vanderhoop said. "Thai’s at a post office box, anyway."
how most Massachusetts towns do it.
Jam es Regan, 77, who prunes the
“ Next year will be the first time we petunias, impatlens, mums and asters
have assessed property at 100 percent, that adorn the lawn of Vineyard Haven's
which we had to do because we don't post office, said there was a lot of
have that many year round residents," curiosity about Mrs. Onassis.
he said.
"When people see her, it becomes an
Real estate agent Peggy Hall said Mrs. event. But I'd much rather do this than
Onassis' complex had raised land values concern myself with her comings and
in Gay Head, but otherwise no one had goings," he said as he untwirled a
paid much attention to the luxurious stubborn weed from the stem of a
estate. "Everybody's happy as long as fledgling petunia.
she doesn't make too much noise.
Most Vineyard residents have learned
"It's a beautiful piece of land, and to tolerate, and, in many cases, depend
some folks were sorry to see it sold," said on the annual May-September Invasion of
Mrs. Vanderhoop. “There was some tourists and summer residents who
excitement at first and a lot of cars stream from the gangplanks of the ferry
around. That was a nuisance. But I think that runs between the Island and the
most people would rather see it go to one mainland.
person than to developers. We don't want
"Guests welcome" signs hang in the
to see a lot of kooks walking around."
front
windows of homeowners willing to
Residents who waged a successful
"stop McDonalds" campaign in 1979 are rent our spare bedrooms to visitors
quick to discourage curious onlookers daring enough to bring their overnight
from trying to get a closer look at the bags without reservations.
celebrities who call the island home, at
The Martha’s Vineyard Chamber of
least for part of the year.
Commerce, which shares its building
But they aren't always succesful.
with a health food store, estimates the
Betty Haynes, who delivers mail when day-trippers and weekenders swell the

Wedntsday. S«pt. 30. 1H I - 3A

CUSTOM M ADE DRAPERIES
auAiirr work* satisfaction guaranteed

island's summer population to 70,000.
Tourists armed with cameras and
credit cards make a crucial difference to
the dozens of small, family run
businesses whose w inter survival
depends on a lucrative summer season.
Many of the year-round residents in
Mrs. O nassis' neighborhood are
descendants of the Wampanoag Indians.

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Gladys Widdiss, 67, who heads the
Wampanoag Tribal Council, said a
federal lawsuit attempting to reclaim
sections of Gay Head common lands and
beaches lias no connection with Mrs.
Onassis' presence.
"Her land is not included In the area
involved in the lawsuit, which was filed In
1974," said the grandmother, who had
Just returned from gathering wild
grapes.
Zandler said he believed Mrs. Onassis
took into consideration other residents'
feelings when she decided exactly where
to erect the house.
"I felt she was very sensitive to the
community. It's very tastefully done," lie
said. "She could have built on a knoll
directly behind the house that stands
about 50 feet high and offers a much
better view. I'd say nine out of 10 people
would have built their house there."
Tourists may come to gawk, but
islanders who have a healthy respect for
the right of privacy will zealousy guard
that right for Mrs. Onassis.

C O N C A to

S e e .

All Souls Catholic Church
October 6
7:30 p.m.

M m Ui M .
M d (N ik . k u t a d

Reagan Opts For MX, B• 1
WASHINGTON 1UPI1 - President Reagan’s plans
to rearm America include deploying a scaled-down MX
missile system in the West and building 50 B-l bom­
bers, sources say.
Reagan, meeting with reporters Tuesday, main­
tained his decision will be under wraps until the end of
the week, saying: "We'll be making u statement on the
whole strategic decisions on Friday."
But congressional sources said Tuesday the
president lias made up his mind to build 100 MX
missiles to be spread around 1,000 shelters. The
sources said two site areas are under consideration.
The shelters would be located either mostly in Utah
and Nevada, or some in Nevada and others in current
Minuteman missile sites in North and South Dakota.

W O RLD
IN BRIEF
British Move To Close
Bases, Remove Weapons
BRIGHTON, England (UPI) - The leaden of
Britain's l.abor Party cleared the wray for a vote today
committing the party to remove all nuclear weapons
and close all U.S. and British nuclear bases when it
regains power.
The resolution on unilateral nuclear disarmament,
approved by Party leader Michael Foot and the key
policy-making committee, was described as leading
toward the creation of a nuclear-free zone in Europe.
The policy-making national executive coiiunittee
had announced its support for the resolution, ensuring
a substantial majority would order that a clear com­
mitment to unilateral nuclear disarmament be in­
cluded in the next election manifesto.

Murder And Mayhem In Iran
United Press International
Iran's Revolutionary Guards foiled plans to
assassinate Iran's chief justice and the national police
chief in raids on 30 hideouts heavily stocked with arm s
and subversive material. Tehran Radio said today.
The radio monitored by the BBC in l/mdon, also said
another leader of Iran's Islamic regime was killed in a
grenade attack attributed to an emerging guerrilla
"suicide squad" willing to pursue martyrdom as
fanatically as followers of Ayatollah Ruhollah
Khomeini.
Meanwhile, an Iranian military transport plane
crashed on the outskirts of Tehran, killing the nation’s
defense minister, the chlef-of-staff of the armed forces
and two other generals, Tehran radio said today.

FREE S P I N A L
EXAM INATION
m ,--- «-----« M---------■r i i i w i i M m n s s s
I. NsMsdMt. Mutsan.Is m *«M |
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l Ns
Sum. —M6w N s
t N a M ra a ta U w iftn
7. tsasr lick Ns. Us fits. N s fcva U p
Why F R I l f Thousands of area residents have spine
related problems which usually respond to chiropractic
care.
This Is our way of encouraging you to find out If you have a
problem that could be helped by chiropractic care. It Is
also our way of acquainting you with our staff and
tecta ties.
Examination Includes a minimum of 10 standard tests for
evaluating the spine and a contour analysis photo as

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'W e’re h e re to help!*

While we are acceptIng new patients, no one need feel any
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Most Insurances Accepted

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Shop Sanford and Orlando dally 9:30-9:30, Sun. 124
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Shop DoLand, Leesburg and Kissimmee dally 9-9, Sun. 114

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Evtnlng Htrik). Sjnford, FI.

Shop Or Undo and Sanford dally 1:20-1: 30 Sun. 11-4
ShopMt. Dora, CUrmont dally M Sun 12-4
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Wadntsday, Stpt. 30. t i l l —7A

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FOREST CITY RO

�SPO RTS
8A—Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Wednesday, Sepf. JO. D ll

Seminole In First

McCloud Excites
Crowd, Panthers
Tip Patriots, 8-7

Tribe Surge
Stuns Hawks

scoring threat, managing to get the ball
Il&gt; GEOFFREY GIORDANO
Hero Id Sports Editor
to the Grooms 16 yard line
But, the Pats used four downs, and lost
II was late coming for the Grooms
some yards on a quarterback sack by
P a n th e rs freshm an football team
Tuesday night, hut they slid past the
Lake Brantley Patriots in a single
We don t need anymore
overtime period, B-7. Pantiier quar*
terbaek Jo Jo McCloud, who is Grooms
like that' — A relieved
(test running quarterback, ran the score
in from the one yard line and then added
Bill Klein
the winning two-point conversion to give
Grooms its opening victory .
The game went scoreless for four Panthers' Grayson and Mike Debase
Then Crooqis took over on its 25, arid it
quarters, hut there were some great
missed opportunities, lake Like Bran­ looked as though il was going to take the
tley's possession at tlie Panther 25 during hall right in on a long, well-executed
Die second quarter after a Cronins drive. Speedster Deron Thompson, a
fum ble was recovered by P atrio t highly regarded Grooms prospect at
runntngback, earned for five yards on
defensive end Dennis Gmsec lose
However, Brantley Qll Scott Salmon the first play of the d riv e Then fullback
lost the handle on the ball and Panther Brian Brooks carried two times for five
linebacker Donald (irayson recovered at yards apiece liefore Thompson carried
Ids 34. But, Grooms turned the bull over again for a fourth straight five-yard
on a fumble the very next play, and once pickup Thompson also picked up a thirdagain. Like Brantley had great field and-inche« play by four yards, then It
position, although nothing came of its was Brooks again with a good gain of
nine. Tins put the Panthers on the t2 of
drive.
The game continued much in this tin- Pats.
More running followed with Thompson
fashion, in term s of turnovers and blown
drives At one point, Like Brantley and another four yards, then McCloud
pinned the Panthers at the Grooms B with 10 And then, an inexplicable pass
H v f i l i Pftolo by lo r n V in c tn t
After four downs, Tony shanked a (Hint was attempted by McCloud at the Like
Brantley 11. uliuti w as intercepted h&gt;
tor Grooms with 1:11 left in the first half
Lake H ow ells Down C raw ford spikos a poinf.
The liall went straight up ui the air, and •cnmcrhack John Mnndo at his own six
yardline
The way overtime works goes as took the bait in lor the six points Then a
landed at the Panther It
As the game was nearing Us close, the follows Each team is given a chance to decision had to be made Go for a tie
Great scoring opportunity for the
P als’’ Wrong. A Like Brantley return Pats were forced to punt, which score from their opponents in yard line, score or try for the will, or go fm the
man mistakenly touched the ball, slip­ seemingly gave the Panthers great field and this continues until one team comes latter" McCloud delivered, lun-lv g e t ­
ped. and fell Robert Brumley fell on the |msition. Thompson returned the ball t" out ahead
ting across Die line, and bringim Die
Lake Brantley won the toss, and drove crowd to its feel
ball to save the Panthers, until it was the II of the Pats before he fumbled and
killed what looked to tie a certain scoring the ball m lor a touchdown in three plays,
halftime.
"As far as Pin concerned, .h Jo was
culminating with the score on a pass our (rest player tonight." enmnonh-d a
“ Our defease was remarkable, but our drive for Grooms.
But the Pals were forced to punt again from Salmon to Groserlose The Pats relieved Klein "Then-was really in me
offense made too many mistakes," said
Panther coach Bill Klein "They didn’t .md the Panthers fumbled again, only also kicked Die conversion point to make sufier player We jus! made t«•*■ many
this time it was recovered by Like It 7-0
have enough coaching or discipline "
mistakes. Bui this was then semiul
Then il was Die Panthers turn game, and that made it harder lor us "
The third period came and went, then it Brantley at its own 35. But nothing came
was down to the final 12 minutes. Like of it at die end, and the game went into Thompson was the first to make yardage,
' We sure don't need anymore like
with nine yards to the l Hum. McCloud that."
Brantley made a very early, very strong overtime,

Tuesday s Volleyball
Del .and 11-15-15, Like Howell 154-11
Seminole 10-1515. Del .and 15-13-10
Seminole 15-11-1*., L ik e Howell 13-16-14

ll&gt; lilt IA STKIPP
Herald Sports W riter

Down 13-5 in the deciding match,
Seminole High's Cindy Pendarvis served
seven straight points to start a furious
Luly Seminole comeback which over­
took Like Howell, 16-14, in volleyball
action Tuesday mghi at Like Howell.
Seminole's -urge handed the Silver
Hawks their second (iefeat on Die night
and knocked them from first place in the
Five Star Ti c Tribe (ripped Howell. 15
13, tsh-n- losing, lf&gt;-lt. iri the second
game
In (he second part of the evening’s tn-

Howell to run off four straight points and
a Seminole victory.
The two earlier games went back and
forDi between the Tribe ami Howell.
Seminole broke a 13-13 lie when L iura
Grace spiked the ball for point 14. After
the Hawks missed on their opportunity,
Teri Hardy hit a serve which Like
Howell came up short with its return into
the net.
The Tribe trailed 13-10 in game two
against Howell when Teri Hardy scored
lour unanswered points to pull the
Seminoles up by one, 14-13 Hie Hawks,
however, took advantage of the serving
of sophomore Diane Dumont who hit
Ihree serves and pulled out the victory,
16-14
In the Tribe's victory over D efend,
seniors Pendarvis and Pee Hogan con­
tributed some solid service [mints as
S e m in o le whipped the Lady Bulldogs, 15

10

U S A NELSON
... c lu tc h s o r t o r
match, DeLind dropped I &lt;ake Howell, 1315, li-fi, 15-11 E arlier. Seminole upended
IX'L iihI, 10-15. 15-13. 1511)

Like Howell is I-.’ In the Five Star
Conference Seminole is on top witti a 5-1
mark, while fx-Lind is 3-3
The Silver Hawks had won the second
game of the three set match with
Sent mole by u narrow two-point margin
and seemed on the verge of taking the
finale wit) i a command mg. 13-5 lead.
Pendarvis, a steady senior, though, hit
two rues during tier seven-point string
and inspired her teammates to the
eventual winning rally
Still down 13-12, Die Hawks' Dawn
Crawford notched a point for a 111'.’ lend
Her second hit. however, went just over
the line out-of-bounds
Newly-eligible Lisa Nelson tfien hit Die
gaps and used a missed slam by lake

Crooms Mike DeBose (middle) causes af fum ble as Lake Brantley back Will McCord reaches for the handoff.

DeLind had an 64 advantage in gam e
three, but Hogan ran off five points to
give the Tribe an 11-8 lead. DeLind
pulled within one [mint at 11-10 before
Pendarvis sealed the victory with four
consecutive [mints
In the evening's opening lilt, the Hawks
tipped Die bulldogs. 15-13, before losing,
154 In Ihe deciding game, Like Howell
scored seven in a row behind captain
Jane Yearick to assume an B4 lead
midway through the match.
DeLind, nevertheless, rallied for a 10-8
edge behind senini Imrelta Pate who
turned in several slam serves which
Howell was unable to return After Like
Howell added a [mint. Bulldog Kay
Thomas tallied two [mints lor a 12-9 edge
Dumont, though, rallied Howell within
one with two good serves, The Bulldogs
regrouped when Denise Youlle hit three
winners (or the 15-11 final.
In other Five Star play, Lyman got its
act together by taking two games at a tri­
match at Spruce Creek
Couch Barren Newman's Junior-laden
team whipped Apopka, 1512, 15-fl and
then turned the tables on the host Hawks,
6-15, 15B. 154
"My team looked real strong on offense
and defense on the same day for the first
time this year," Newman said about her
3-3 conference Greyhounds.
In the clinching game against Apopka,
Carol Rogers served eight points to nail
down the victory.
After the victory over Ajmpka, Lyman
was flat against Spruce Creek "No
concentration," said Newman "Our
serving was just 76 percent which is
terrible."
In game two, however, the 'Hounds
picked up behind the strong defease of
Babcock and Anne Wycoff. In
three, Babcock had II straight service
(mints as Lyman romped to a 154 win
Good sets from Rogers and Lynn
Lugering paved die way
Tuesday, Lyman hosts L ike Howell
and Seabreeze at 6 p m.

Kathy Barma saves the ball for Lake Howell.

Sanford Soccer Club
Sanford 800‘s Annihilate Pine Hills, 10-0; Ray's Three-Goal Day Dips Orlando
By SAM COOK
Herald Sporti Editor
Sanford's eight and under soccer
players couldn't lave found a belter way
to open the 1981 Fall season. Ttie 800
entry booted home 10 goals — five in each
half — to anndiilate Pine Hills 801, 150
Tim Sanford Soccer Club, which us a
member of the Central Florida league,
tuts eight learns. Five team s won
Saturday, while one lied and Iwo lost.
Seven of the eight teams will be in
action this Saturday with home games at
the Sanford Airport starling at 9 u.m. and
running all day
Sanford 800's Jon Williams led a firsthalf explosion with Iwo goals, while Josh
lelchworth. Teddy Holloway and Jason

Sanford ONl-l,
Walruven tallied one each.
Pine Bills 00 U
Wulraven led the second-ball onslaught
Sanford 081 used a penalty kirk goal by
with two goals to give him three for the
day Holloway added his second, while Kaymond Tossi In Ihe second half to
Joshua Ferguson and Danny White both salvage its tie with Pine Hills.
chipped home one.
Age 10 and under
Age 10 and under
Sanford 080-2,
Sanford 000-4,
Winter Purk|061i-1
Southeast Orange 0001-2
Tim Wnisanen punched in two first-Iuilf
Ben Davis kicked In two second-hali goals as Sanford New Smyrna Speedway
goals and Troy Brewer added one as used a superb goalie elforl by Donavan
SanfordOOObiokenway fo ra 1-1 deadlock Tucker to hold olf Winter Park
to whip Southeast Orange. Brewer scored
Wacumen was assisted by Greg Dean
000‘s first goal.
on his first goal.
Malt William, Chet Tulp and Chad
Age 12 and under
Crawford, Sanford halfbacks, did a good
Sanford 200-5,
job of setting up Davis-and Brewer.
Southeast ()rlando2U3-0
Age 10 and under
J .J Parllow tallied two goals — one in

►* % L A t ■ f

t*#*, t * v ; v

each half - as Sanford Boot works
whipped Southeast Orlando 203. Charles
T«lle started 200 off to a good start with a
goal during the first minute

Picdfa along with halfback Charlie
Butler made il easy lor guahe Troy
Deppenas the Sting allowed Orlando just
five shots on goal.

Jason Helmadollar and Cindy Benge
each scored once, with Benge's aiming
on a penalty kiek. Johnny Hurkliead had
an outstanding debut from the center
fullback fmsition.
Age 12 and under
Sanford 201-5,
Southeast Orlando 201-0
(Tins Bay had a hig day with three
goals to pare Sanford Celeste Industries'
Sting past Southeast Orlando Clink Roll
and Alex Piquer chipped in the.other
goals.
Fullbacks Chattier Tyre and Oberto

Age It and under
F.C. United 181-2,
Sanford 100-1
Sanlord Kiwams forged a 1-0 first-hall
lead against F.C. United, but dropped the
decision when United came up witti two
secnnd-tialf goats.

* • *

%

John Stuart bad the lone Sanford goal.
Goalies Danny Rowe and Keith Royer
turned in solid efforts for Die Kiwums as
did (ullhack Sherri Rumler and Stuart.
Age 11 and under

Winter Park 4*2-4,
Sanford 480-2
Sanlord Celery CUy Printing Co. raced
to a 2-0 halftime edge over Winter Park,
bul the Parkers stormed back for four
scores in the second half to whip Celery
City.
Shea Whigham tallied one goal on an
assist from Sieve Sapp and Malt Albert.
The second Celery goal was booted in by
Winter Park. The Parkers added Dieir
four second-half goals on three penaltykicks and a corner kick.
Along with Whigham, Sapp and Albert,
halfback Tun Roberts, fullback Sheldon
Richards and sweeper Carry Smith had
tfood ball games.

�4&gt;#*«*''*

Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Wednesday, Sept. JO, I f lt—»A

SPO RTS
IN BRIEF

LITTON LOOKS

Flagler Drops SCC, 12-15,

S e m in o le
H ig h
q u a rt erb a c k
Je ff
l.illo n
r o lls
rlR h l
lo o k in g for a T r ib e
t e a m m a t e as f u llb a c k
L e n n y S u tto n s e t s u p to
b lo c k . L itto n
fo u n d
w h a t he w as lo o k in g
fo r n in e tim e s in 20
g la n c e s fo r 126 y a r d s .
The
s e n io r
s ig n a l
c a lle r also r a n f o r 34
y a r d s to c o m p le te h is
best
n ig h t
as
a
F ig h tin g S e m in o le . H e
c o n n e c t e d w ith J o e
C a llo w a y for a 31-yard
TI&gt; play fo r th e T r i b e 's
firs t
sc o re .
The
S e m in o le s
w h ip p e d
K d g e w a te r , 41-38. in
fo u r o v e r tim e s Friday
a t th e T a n g e r in e H ow l.
S a n f o r d is o f f t h i s
F riday
before
tr a v e lin g to A p o p k a
O ct. 9.

1S-12, 15-9 In Volleyball
AUer splitting two names by 15-12 scores. Flagler
College pinned a 15-9 setback &lt;&gt;n Sermnole Community
College m volleyball action Tuesday night at Rollins
College in Winter Park
We played really sloppy," said Lady Haider Coach
Illeana Gallagher "We had no offense No attack at
all. We missed more serves tonight than m the first
three gaities."
Gallagher singled out freshman Kendra King for a
"good Job on the back line ” The Raiders, 2-2, travel to
Hradenton Thursday to compete in the Manatee
Tournament Friday and Saturday
Hollins swept Flagler two straight in tlie second
game as former Lyman standout Maria Smith led the
way,

Henley, Johnson Pace Lyman
Mike Henley scored two touchdowns and Tony
Johnson kicked a field goal in overtime as the Lyman
freshman football team downed la k e Howell, 17-14. at
Lyman High Tuesday night,
Henley broke loose for a 60-yard gallop in the first
quarter and added a three-yard run in the second
quarter as the Greyhounds forged a 14-0 lead, A key
play on the drive was a spectacular diving grab of an
option pass by Clint Baker from Henley. Steve Aber­
nathy booted both points.
Howell scored on a pass just as the hall expired and a
60-yard run in the third quarter
In the overtime, the Silver Hawks fumbled on their
second possession, giving Lyman the ball. After a run
for three yards, an incomplete pass and a quarterback
&gt;ack, Johnson boomed a 30-yard field goal for the
victory

H*r§MkPhofoi by T«ht» VInc«itf

G O O D fY E A R

State Rankings
ORLANDO F|a fUPli

Thi*

*rrh s * IoCjiM prep foot bait poll
fro m Tbr f lo n d fl Spar tv W f if t r i
Assoc Ahon * i t h won lost record
n parentheses

CLASS 4 A
I

Mef f i l l iv Lind i 3 0 1

1 FI Latyicf.er-tfale Anderson J Of
3 Miamt K f11tart r 310 •
i Dunedin &lt;3 0 )
S
ft
t
9

T a m p a P la n t f 3 Qi
Hoc a R aton tJ G
O rla nd o Evans (J 01
Panam a ( t * M a if ly (3 Of

« Rfdtfpnfon Manatee (3 Of
10 Cora) Games u 0)

Also re teivrng votes
Tampa
*«n y , j at k von v 111e k a a m . Win le r
Park
V itro f u a t h . Sarasota
H 'vefvn** Mialeati. Miami North
A fV e rn
C le a rw a te r
M tim i
Cotumpus L a k e la n d K athleen,
C«raI S p r in g * O r anyjf P ark .
SI P e lrrsbur g Northeast
CLASS J*A
1 T allahassee Leon (JO)
2 P a ia tk a (3 0&gt;
1 si1P ete L a ke w o od (3 01
j Iitu v v iile A stro n a u t (3 0i

S F t L a u d e rd a le Aquinas (JO*
ft Ja c k s o n v ille Lee (3 Of
’ N tc w i l l * ( 3 01
i
Bro o k v k *lie H ernando OEM
9 F t P -erce C entral 11 0)
10 Vem ce 13 0i
A lso
r e c e iv in g
votes
f t L a 'Oder d a le
St r a n a h a n .
TitovviMe
R iv ie ra Beach Sun
toavt L a ke iM d in G a in e w m e
Belle G lade C e n tra l .Southfidge.
Panama City R u t tifff o r d Tampa
je v u tf,
N a p le s ,
Ft
M y e rs
W 'vefdate, O ca la Forest. Tarpon
Springs, West P a lm Beach Car
dm al N ew m a n, W auchula Hardee
County

CLASS 2 A
I F t L au d P ine cre vl (3 0)
; W ildw o od (JO )
J M o n ftc e llo Jeffervon (2 0)
4 C le w ivto n 1) 01
5 J a ckvo n vflle Boltes IJO l
ft T a v e rn ie r C oral Shores ( ] 0 )
J M .a m i W e stm in ste r (2 Of
9 N e w b e rry (3 0)
9 Sarasota M ooney (101
10 C ra w fo rc fv ill# W a kulla (7 11
A ls o r e c e iv in g v o te *
South

Zinn Beck Fafl League

Sw m frf Hon i f . H u lm n County
I a 'll ip ip f H A m i Mo n
C o u n ty
G ratcviU r- B ra d e n to n P a lm e tto
P e tu n ia *
S p r« n g \
.V .ifto n
C h ip lry . P u n ne t Ion
CLASS I A
T T allahaissee FA,MO iJ0»
2 C e n tu ry l l 0r
J Hast m as ) oi

4
5
ft
f
9
*
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HONOR ROLL
t im ira B roast h &gt;Orange P a rk )

i Glades Day (I i
S N P d lm He h H rm am .
A Wr‘ * a f ll i t h k a i l 01
) O ca la si Johns J D
9 Boca R aton A t r t iim if
9 B aker ( J 0 i
10 Sarasota Elookw 12 I

Also r *&lt;«••¥ ny

j

Lake B ra n tle y
B randon
S tuart M a rl »a C ounty *
L ake H ow e ll
Tam pa in t o
H ollyw o o d Mac A rth u r
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High School
CLASS A A AA
G IR LS ' RANKINGS
I O range P ark
7 C k w y L ife r C ountryside
1 F d y ri|ia te r

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Cross Country Rankings

PISS IQRI2

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S C C 4 , FSB R e d 2

Seminole High Junior Greg Hill pitched Florida Baseball
School Hetl past Florida Baseball School Blue, 7-4, Thursday
night as Tribe senior Brett Von Herbulis knocked out two hits.
Jerry Wallen was the losing pitcher.
In Tuesday's other game, Seminole Community College
trimmed FBS Red. 4-2, despite two hits by Sanford's John
Polk. Frank Stein suffered the loss for Reel, while SCC's Dave
Hittig picked up the victory. Geneva’s Willie Hamsun was 2for-3 tor the Haulers
Blue leads the league with a 3-1 record with SCC Just behind
ut 3-2. Hollins is 2-1 and Bid is 1-4
In other action Tuesday, SCC's "A" team used a ‘‘fantastic"
live-inning relief job by Bryan Murray to nip Stetson, 6-5, at
DeLand.
“It's the best he’s ever pitched,” raved Raider Coach Jack
Pantelias. "After the tough luck he had last year, a lot of
people might have quit, but he didn't."
Oviedo’s Brian I’hilpott and Sammy Duda each tripled in
two runs for SCC, while John Moore chases! home the gamewinner with a three-bagger,

Bucs Fine, Bench Lewis,
McKay Mum On Problem
TAMPA, Fla. i UPI) - l-aslwcek it was the status of kickers
that dominated the news coming out of One Buccaneer Place,
home id Uie Tampa Bay Buccaneers. This week it is the status
of linebacker David I-cwis, fin^d and benched by Coach John
McKay, and that of injured Tensive end !« • Roy Selmon.
lew is was removed from nis starting assignment Sunday
against the St L iuis Cardinals and spent Hie entire game on
the bench for violating team rules,
McKay was reluctant to talk about the m atter at his Monday
news conference,
"I'd rather not get into that," McKay said when asked the
nature of the problem. "It's something that I will have to
handle. I have not talked to him since it happened. I didn't
want to get into an extended conversation on the eve of a
football gam e."
L iter Monday, U w is met with McKay and then told sportsw n te rs he had been fined and benched for showing up an hour
late a t a Saturday night team meeting. He said his watch Was
an hour slow.
I^w is said he had been lined "three figures," and later said
it was between 4400 and 11.000.
McKay said at his news conference he would decide later
when to reinstate l,ewis
A bigger concern is the status of Selmon, the cat-quick end
who anchors the Bucs defense.
He went out in the second period in the 20-10 victory over the
Cardinals with a sprained knee and McKay said trainers in­
dicate he probably will miss next weekend's key NFC Central
Division clash with the Detroit lions.
"We miss a great defensive end when Lee Roy is out of the
game,” McKay said. "There aren't that many good defensive
ends.
••Look where they (Cards) ran the ball after he went out,"
McKay said.
The Cardinals did rack up 113 yards rushing in the third
period, most of it to the side Selmon normally dominates.
In the Lions, the Bucs will be facing a top running back in
Heismann Trophy winner Billy Sims.

Srmlnolr County Girl* llunor
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CIRCULATION DEPT.

OoodiMi P«rol*ing
Chpg* Account

SANFORD

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SS4W. F irst StTMt
Mon.-Frl. 7:10-4, Sat. 7t

322-2821

�10A—Evening H*r»id, Sanford, FI.

Wednesday, Sept. JO, l»lt

SPO RTS
THIS WEEK
W ED N ESD A Y
V o lle y b a ll...
Mfiianoie at New Smyrna Beach (Jv and Var.) 6:45
p.m,
I -ike Howell at Winter Park 7 p.m.
I.ake Brantley at Oviedo 3:30 p.m.
T J " ItS D A Y
C ro s s C o u n try ...
Frosh-Soph, Invitational at Lyman 4 p.m,
•IV fo o tb a ll...
1-vke Mary at Seminole 7:30 p.m.
I.ake Howell at U ke Brantley 7:30 p.m,
C ollPH r

V o lle y b a ll...

Seminole CC at Manatee Tournament In Bradenton
H U DAY
V a rs ity fo o tb a ll...
Del/ind at l.yinan 8 p.m.
Osceola at Oviedo 8 p.m.
U k e Brantley at U k e Howell 8 p.m.
V o lle y b a ll...
Seminole at Colonel's Invitational Ft. l-iuderdale
( o lle f 'e

V o lle y b a ll...

Seminole CC at Manatee Tournament In Bradenton
SATURDAY

Shuffle
Oberkfell's Performance Pulls
Cardinals Past Montreal, 8-4
By United Pres« International
April forecasts on where the St. Ijouis
Cardinals would finish in the 1981 Kastern
Division race are proving to be about as ac­
curate these days as Joe Granville’s stock
market predictions.
Ken Oberklell, who went 4-for-t, drove in
three runs and scored twice to lead St. l/iuis
past Die Expos 8-4 Tuesday night, described
the state o[ St. I/mis' economy with a wealth ot
enthusiasm.
i t was probably the greatest game I've
ever had in my major league career," Oberklell said, ' i had a good game, we won. and It
put us back in first place. It was super."
Oberkfell’s dazzling performance backed
Expo-killer Joaquin Andujar's six-hitter and
powered the storming Cardinals past Montreal
into first place in the East with a half-game
lead and a sweep ol their two-game series.
Both teams have live games left to play, all
on the road.
"We’ve got the momentum," Oberklell said.
"We’ve got to continue to play the way we
liave. If we win live in u row nobody can catch
us."
Oberklell drove in a run with a single in the
first, tripled in a run and scored in the third,
singled In a run and scored in the filth, and
singled again in the seventh.
The Cardinals, who won their fourth straight
game, pounded 13 hits off five Montreal pit­
chers to move into the lead in the battle for the
spot opposite Philadelphia in the Divisional
Playoffs.
The Expos, who lost their third straight, had
jumped to a 2-0 lead in the first on an RBI
single by Hodney Scott, a passed ball and a

ML Batoball
groundout by Andre Dawson, who aLso drove
in a run with a single in die third.
Padres 2. Astros 1
At Houston, Luis Salazar tripled to knock in
a run and key a two-run first inning and Rick
Wise and Gary U cas combined on a fourhitler to lift the Padres and reduce the Astro's
lead in the NL West to 14 games over the
Cincinnati Reds.
Dodgers $, Atlanta 3
At Atlanta, pinch hitter Jack Perconte
knocked in die goahead run with a triple to
highlight a three-run ninth inning and carry
the Dodgers. Steve Rowe, 5-3. earned the win
and Dave Stewart picked up his sixth save.
Mets 7, Phillies 0
At Philadelphia, pitcher Pete Falcone drove
in three runs with his first major league homer
and a single and tossed a four-hitter to spark
the Mets. Dave Kingman got his 22nd homer
off loser Mark Davis, 2-1.
Pirates 10, Cubs (
At Pittsburgh, Dale Berra singled home one
run and pinch hitter Willie Stargell drove
home two more with a single to key a four-run
seventh inning Tuesday night and power the
Pirates.
Reds 4, Giants 3
At Cincinnati, Ron Oester's single with one
out in the ninth inning scored pinch runner
Rafael Undesloy and lifted the Reefs. Tom
lluine picked up the victory to raise his record
to 9-3 as Greg Minton, 4-5, took the loss.

C ro ss C o u n try ...
County Teams at Daytona Beach Hun 9 a m.
Volley ball...
Seminole at Colonel's Invitational Ft. Uuderdalc

Varsity football...
Heritage Prep at Trinity Prep 2 p.m.
C o lleg e fo o tb a ll...
Miles College at Central Florida in the Tangerine Bowl
7 p.m.
( o lle f'e Volley h u ll . . .
Seminole CC at Manatee Tournament in Bradenton

American League Rubik Cube
, Tigers Regain Lead
AL Batoball

By United Press International
The American leag u e East pennant race
lias become a mathematician's delight. It lias
more twists than Rubik's Cube
Woekenfuss homered for Detroit and Rick
With four games remaining, only one game U a d i had a threc-run triple to pace the Tigers
separates the first three dubs and the rout of Scott McGregor, 12*5
possibilities of wlial could happen are in­
Mike Torrez also turned in a sparkling
triguing.
pitching performance in the Red Sox' victory
Detroit regained first place by one-half over the Brewers. Morris allowed only two hits
game over Milwaukee Tuesday night after over the first eight innings before tiring in the
beating Baltimore 14-0 while the Brewers were ninth and giving way to Mark Clear. who came
losing to Boston, 7-2. Milwaukee hosts Detroit in to get the final two outs.
in a three-game series next weekend and one
"I was pumped up, determined.’ said
of those teams is the likely winner of the Torrez, who raised his record to 9-3. The
second-half season.
adrenalin got going."
But, not necessarily.
Elsewhere in the Al„ Cleveland beat New
Boston is still in the race and even Baltimore York 3-2, California topped Chicago 5-1.
is mathematically alive, although the Orioles Kansas City downed Minnesota 4-2, Oakland
chances of winning are very slim. The Orioles defeated Toronto 5-1 and Texas whipped
have four games remaining —one with Detroit Seattle 6-2.
and three with New York — and must win
In National U ague games. New York
them all to even have a remote chance of blanked Philadelphia 7-0. St U rns downed
winning.
Montreal 8-4, San Diego nipped Houston 2-1,
"We had too many bad games this year or Cincinnati edged San Francisco 4-3, l/a
we wouldn't be In this position," Baltimore Angeles beat Atlanta 5-3 and Pittsburgh
manager Earl Weaver said Tuesday night
thumped Chicago 10-6.
after his team was battered by the Tigers.
Indians 3, Yankees 2
However, live Orioles could win the division
At Cleveland, Miguel Dilone's bases-loaded
if they win their last four games ami Detroit, infield grounder bounced off second baseman
Milwaukee and Boston all split their last four
Andre Robertson's glove for a two-run error in
Thai would give the Orioles the title by .003 of a the eighth inning as the Indians eliminated the
percentage point over the Brewers, who would Yankees, the first half winners, from con­
have played two more games than Baltimore. tention in the Al. East's second season.
Angels 5. White Sox 1
Either Detroit or Milwaukee is guaranteed
Al Chicago, Bruce Kison, with late-iiming
at least two victories, however, since the two
teams meet in the season-ending three-game relief help from Steve Renko, earned his first
scries. That makes it difficult for the Orioles victory since May 31.1980, and Don Baylor and
and third place Boston, which is only a game Hobby Grich slammed home runs to lead the
Angels to victory
back.
The Red Sox could do it, however, if they win
Royals 1, Twins 2
their last lour games while the Tigers and
At Bloomington. Minn., George Brett drove
Brewers split their last four. The Red Sox in two runs with a homer and a triple to pace
could also lake the division if they win three of the AL West Division Royals to victory over
their last four, provided Detroit loses three of Hie Twins. The' triumph enabled ihe Royals to
four and Milwaukee splits. But, there's a catch remain 14 ahead of Oakland, tlic first half
to that second part. If the Red Sox lose tonight winners,
to Milwaukee, they can do no better than tie
A's 5. Blue Jays t
even if they win their remaining three games.
Al Oakland, Calif,, Dave McKay drove in
Gel it?
tw o runs w ith a squeeze bunt and a single and
Better stick to Rubik’s Cube
The Tigers and Red Sox certainly played Tom Underwood pitched a four-hitter and
Tuesday night as if they mean business in the struck out 10 for Ins first complete game in
leading the A's to victory,
final days of the season.
Rangers 6, Mariners 2
Jack Morris and Dave Itozema combined on
At Seattle, Doc Medich ami Jun Kern
alhree-hitteras the Tigers blanked the Orioles.
Morris, 14-6, allowed Just one hit in six innings combined on a seven-hitler and Hilly Sample
and Rozeiiut gave up only two over the last clouted a three-run homer in leading the
three innings. Tom Brookens and John Rangers to victory.

Throw Records Out,

Milton

Brantley-Howell Clash
In Key Friday Game
By JOE ItrSANTLS
Herald Sports Writer
When I-ike Brantley's Patriots travel
in U k e Howell Friday night for not only
i good old Seminole County backyard
lash, hut an important district meeting
a s well, forget about current records.
The Silver Hawks are sitting at 0-3
while Ihe Patriots sport a 2-1 slate, lak e
IIrani U-y multi well be a l 3-0 if not for an
overtime loss to Colonial.
'They're a lot better than their
record," advises Patriot coach Dave
tul Iis I-ike Howell is a team ready to
explode 1 just hope they don’t do it
against us."
As far as Tullis Is concerned, when his
Patriots ami Hie Silver Hawks gel
together, records don't m ean much.
"We recognize the fact that they have a
loi of good football players, and they
have areally tough defense. U k e Howell
is really only a game behind."
While the Silver Hawks would certainly
like to exchange their current 0-3 slate,
I-ike Howell has suffered‘only one set­
back in all-important district play, Hie
other losses came to out-of-conference
(tvs.
"At 0-1 in Hie district, they're not out of
it by any means," warns Tullis.
The foremost fudor in la k e Brantley’s
current success lies in defense for the
Hurd straight week,
Hie Patriots surrendered their first
touchdown in 12 quarters of regulation
play last Friday against the Boone
Braves m a 14-7 victory. Boone's scoring
drive was aided by a pair of 15-yard
penalties against the Patriots.
"W e're averaging three m ajor
penalties a quarter," pointed out Tullis.
"We've been moving the ball belter but
we’ve just had so many penalties that
they’ve killed most of our offense."

Rfchmcm
UPI Sports F-dlur

Lemon Perfect Prototype

Boone’s touchdown was a hard pill for
a proud Patriot defense to swallow, but
Tullis fecLs his squad must look beyond
that score and concentrate on a poten­
tially explosive Silver Hawk situation.
"Our kids gave up Hie score, but
they've accepted the fad that the
scoreless string has been broken. Now
we've got to put our efforts on stopping
1-ike Howell."
la k e Brantley will once again be
looking for a big defensive effort, usually
sparked by senior Fred Baber,
In earning defensive player of the
game laurels against Boone, the talented
Patriot delivered five solo tackles, in­
cluding a pair of touchdown saving slops.
In addition, Baber complemented his
defensive show wiUi a pretty fair of­
fensive flair. Tlic lanky safely turned
receiver long enough lo gather in Hiree
passes from quarterback Al Rollison.
Another reception resulted In a
l&gt;enalty■■nullifying touchdown, one ot two
called back against Hie Patriots thanks lo
those yellow hankies Tullis would like to
see disappear.
Offensively, I/ike Brantley moved the
ball better Hum in Its first two outings
thanks to the running efforts of Hob
Brown, who picked up offensive player of
Hv week awards (hanks to his GO yards
rushing on Just four carries.
"T h ere w on't be any wholesale
changes for U k e Howell,” says Tullis.
"We’re looking better on offense, we Just
have to cut down on the mistakes and
penalties. We'll have a lew minor ad­
justments, that’s all,"
la k e Brantley and its fans will have ot
least one minor adjustment come Friday
night. Alter playing at home (or Hie first
three weeks of the season, Hie Patriots
take their show on the road for Hie first
time this season when they visit Hie
Silver Hawks on la k e Howell turf.

H«f» w Pftato e» Tem Vim m i

Rob Brown was Brantley's top running threat Friday.

Bisceglia, Hawks Seek First Victory Against Pats
By HILLY STRIP1*
llerulilSports Writer
With the lake Howell football team
coming off a hard-fought loss last
Thursday at Titusville Astronaut. Silver
Hawk Coach Mike Hiscegliu is still
looking lor his first victory.
Bisceglia and his Hawks, 0-3, entertain
the I-ike Brantley Patriots Friday, but
Hiscegliu is worried about more Hum the
Hig Blue. "We’re pretty beat up with a lot
of bumps and bruises," said Hie Hawk
mentor.
yue ol ihe Haw ks biggest bumps came
to tlielr offense. Senior receiver Nat

Edmonds suffered a broken collarbone in
Hie Titusville game and could be lost for
the season.
The Hawks went Into Hie Astronaut
game with no tight ends and came out
wiHi one less. Senior Jeff Whipple han­
dled the job, but injured his hand. "We
won't know how it will be until medweek," Bisceglia said Sunday.
Bisceglia wasn't sure about a suc­
cessor for Edmonds, but said he would
“come up with one this week."
The former Hialeah coach is putting
the emphasis on the running game in his

■* %

* * - • ■ • *

+r-

*

attempt lo knock Ihe Patriots from Hie
unbeaten ranks in Hie Five Star. They
are 1-0.
"The key to beating L-ake Brantley is to
try' and establish Hie run again,” said
Biscelia. "We will also have to put
together four good quarters and have our
offense control the ball."
The Howell defense has been spending
the majority of Hie time on the field,
something Bisceglia would like to avoid.
Senior halfback Scott Grant has been Hie
only consistent Hawk threat. Grant has
rumbled for nearly 200 yards the past two
games.

*

Bisceglia wasn’t loo pleased with his
offense Hie first three quarters against
the War Eagles, but did see some things
he liked in Uie final period of Hie 21-7
setback.
"(Quarterback! Scott Frick threw Hie
ball well Thursday," Bisceglia said.
Bisceglia hopes for a continued aerial
attack Friday.
Howell is the defending conference and
district champion. Biscelgia hopes to
grab his first Howell win along with a
first step toward defending that title
Friday,

NEW YORK i UPI I - For years. Hie
late Connie Mack was Hie perfect
prototype of a big-league manager. He
looked like one and acted like one most
of Ids life.
You'd mention the words "baseball
m anager" and his name automatically
would be the first to come to
everybody’s mind.
Nothing ever bothered him. He’d sit
on Hie bench in his street clothes
wearing a tie and that starched collar of
his and sometimes the only way you
could tell he was managing Hie
Philadelphia A’s was by the scorecard
He always had one in his hand and he'd
wave it every now and then to move tits
outfielders over.
He continued piloting Hie A’s until he
was 88, never allowing himself to grow
unduly excited or become involved in
any controversy, and the chief reason
he was able to keep his job so long was
he never had to worry about being
(Lred. He also owned Hie dub.
After he passed on, Hie manager who
came closest to him in his general
dem eanor and his handling of
ballplayers was Walt Alston with Hie
Dodgers, and now that Alston Is en­
joying the good life in Darrtown, Ohio,
the man most closely approaching him
— Ihe one who runs his ballclub most
like him and like old Connie Mack — is
Bob Lemon in his second hitch with the
Yankees.
Lemon is the most laid-back manager
in the big leagues. The only ones near
him in that respect are Bobby Mattick
of the Blue Ja y s and Johnny
McNamara of Hie Reds.
A month from now, Lemon, who led
the Yankees to a world championship in
1978 after replacing Billy Martin that
July, could be making managerial
history. He took over Hie Yankees again
from Gene "Slick" Michael Hiree
weeks ago and if they go on to win it all
once more, he'll be the first manager
ever to come in twice in mid-year and
win both times.
Lemon doesn't even bother thinking
about something like that. What will be,
will be, is his basic philosophy.
“ Don’t reach for the moon," be says,
smiling and lighting a cigarette. "Settle
for Hie tree tops so you won’t have so
far lo fall."
The possibility he may be replaced by
Dick Williams in Hie near future,
especially if Hie Yankees fail to win,
doesn't upset Hie 61-yca*-old Lemon,

either Yankees Owner George
Steinbrenner, who insists Lemon will
tiave a job with the club as long as
Steinbrenner has one, called him up to
tell him not to worry about whatever
stories he might've read regarding
Williams.
T in not concerned about It,” Union
says. "He is the owner of the club and
has a right to do what he wants. He has
been awfully good lo me, so I sure can't
complain. 1 just feel fortunate to have
had what I had and to have what I have
now."
Before lie managed Hie Yankees for
Hie first time Hiree years ago. Lemon
piloted Kansas City for 2 4 seasons and
Hie Chicago White Sox for 14.
Lemon is under contract to Hie
Yankees through next year and was
doing some scouting for them from his
home in I/mg Beach, Calif., when
Steinbrenner called him to take over
Hie club earlier this month. On U nion’s
first day back on Hie job, third baseman
Graig Nettles popped his head into his
office and offered his "condolences."
All the Yankees players liked
Michael, but if he had to go, Uvcy were
glad to have Union back.
"You kind of wonder what It's going
lo be like when you come back," he
says. "Slick was well-liked. He’s a good
friend of mine. I liked Hie way 1 was
received, though. Coming back was
easier than if I had Just come in cold..."
"You know, after you're out of it for a
while, you start to miss it. I had a
helluva long summer to rest up (or this,
and now with Hie playoffs coming up, I
think we'll be in good shape."
The split season occasioned by Hie
strike has proven to be pretty much a
bomb. The fans have generally shown
they don’t care for it, the players don’t
like it and Hie majority of managers
aren't going [or IL
Since they finished first in Hie
American U ague East in Hie first half
of the season, the Yankees, who still
have u chance of winning Hie second
half also, are assured of participating
in at least Hie mini-playoffs whether
they wind up on top again or not.
No matter what happens from hereon
in, Union, already in the Hall of Fame
(or all he did as a pitcher with the
Cleveland Indians, has no complaints.
"Ever) thing has been so good, I don’t
know why I’d want to change a thing,"
he says. "1 don't know how it could be
any belter."

�4

Major-League Roundup
S ta n d in g s
M aior League S U ndinqi
B» United Pre«» International
National League
(Second H all)
Eavl
W L P tt
CB
St Lou.S
71 )1 SS3
Montreal
JJ 77 543 &lt;j
Chicago
J3 25 it a 3&gt;,
■ P hila
32 2J aae } * ,
New York
33 34 151 4
P .IH brgn
33 29 aM a' ,
west
Houston
Jl 12 644 —
Cinci
29 | |
612 | t j
5an Fran
32 30 S2a 3' ,
• L o i Ang
25 2)
s j|
s
A tlanta
22 25 a44 8 'i
San Diego
la 15 2B4 1 2 'j
■ F lr il h a l ! b u llio n winner
Tuetdae * »e»ull&gt;
Lok Angelet 5. A tlanta ]
Cincinnati I San Francisco 1
New York I Philadelphia o
Pittsburgh 10. Chicago A
St Louis A. Montreal a
San D ego 2. Houston t
W tdnetdar's Games
(A ll Times EOT)
St
Louis I For sen I0 5i at
Philadelptxa (Larson 3 01. 2 J5
pm
Montreal iGullickson a l l
P ittsburgh iSolomon a 5), 2
p m
San Francisco IWhitson
at Atlanta INiekro 2 at
p m
Houston
tRuhle
4 51
at
Cincinnati (Soto 10 at, ) ]5 p m
Chicago i M a rti
«t at New
York I3achr» 2 131 I D ) p m
San Diego (F ire c v d 0 11 at
Los
Angeles
IHooion
I) 61
10 15 p m
American League
(Second H aiti
East
W L Pet
GB
Detroit
38 20 Si) —
Milarauke
38 21 571
’j
Boston
27 21 SA)
1
Baili
7S 22 S32 2’ j
Oeve
25 24 S10 V&gt;
■■'New Yrk
24 24 SOO 4
Toronto
20 24 4SS 6
West
Kan City
27 21 56)
24 21 51)
■ Oaklnd
Vi
M&gt;nn
2) 26 469 4’ |
Teias
21 2S 457 s
Seattle
21 27 438 6
Calif
19 V
41)
7
Chicago'
20 29 408 7'z
1 F irst halt division winner
Tuesday's Results
Kansas Cdy 4 Minnesota 7
Oakland 5. Toronto 1
Cleveland 3. New York 7
Detroit 14 Baltimore 0
California 5. Chicago 1
Boston 7, Milwaukee 7
Te*av 6 Scaltle 7
Wednesday's Games
(A ll Times E D T 1
Kansas City (Gura 10 71 at
Minnesota lA rroyo 7 9), 2 15
pm
Toronto (Leal 7 111 at Oak
land (Norris It f l , 1 JO p m
New York
(John
9 7) al
Cleveland (Garland 3 7), 7 35
Pm
Baltimore (Flanagan 8 i ) at
Detroit (W i Icok 1191, 8 p m
California
(Frost
I 7!
at
Chicago (Burns 9 6 ). 8 X p m
Boston iMurst 3 0) at M il
waukee (Caldwell 11 9|, 8 30
pm
Te«as (Hough 3 |) at Seattle
(Bannister 8 4), 10 35 p m

San Fran
000 ® 2 100- 3 1 0
C-nci
000 012 0 0 1 - 4 9 0
Holland Breminq 141, Lavelle
I'
W'nton (9 1 and Brenly
May
101
Leibrandt
LaCoss
0' Mosk lu (7i Hume I I I and
O B e rr,
No'an i d
* i Hume
(9 3)
L Minion
14 SI
HR
Cincinnati Bench I I )

E v e n in g H e n W , S enlord, F I.

Tidrow 13 91
HR Pittsburgh
BRobnson 131
Am erican League
Kan Cite
101 001 100
J It I
M&lt;rm
I0O 010 000- 2 0 0
A right Qu ‘ sen berry (1
and
A at nan A rllia m s Coroett 111
and Aynegar A Ar«gtit (2 3)
L
A d lia m s 16 101 HRt
Kansas C'ty
B retl
41
Mn
nesota Gaettl 171

San Ogo
200 000 000 - 7 S 2
HOuS
010 000 000
1 40
W ile
Lucas (11 ana Ken
Toronto
OOO 010 000
14 1
nedy
Knepper.
D Smith
101
Oaklnd
000 071 20.
S90
and A\ht)e A A is e 14 11 L
Clancy
M u rra y
111
and
Knepper 19 Si
Mart.net U n d e r w o o d
and
Meath A Underwood
4 at L
Mil
20 1 000 M l - 4 9 l
Clancy 14 171
HR Toronto.
S' Lou s
)I2 030 0O» 0 110
M a.berry 116
Lee
D Sm.th
13).
Jackson
'SI Sosa (SI Gorm an ( | l and
NY
100 000 001 7 9 I
Ca'ter
r.ndutar. Uair la) and
Cl eve
o io o o o o iv 34 J
Purler A' Anduiar id 4)
L
G u , d r y.
D avs
16
and
Lee i4 6i
Cerone Denny and D a t A
Denn. 110 5) L G u ilt 1 111 S
HR Cleveland Thornton la

Chi
200 030 0 0 1 - 6 10 I
P'sbg
203 000 41 &gt;
10 IS 1
K r an f c Smith ( ) t
Eastwick
'Si
T .dr ow 141
Capilla 111.
C audill ID
and
B ta c k w e tt,
Jones
Scurr,
151, Lee 161.
Romo (1), Tekulur ( I )
and
Nictts.a
A -R o m o
(131
L

and P.srr.sh
Fahey ( I 1 A
M o rr.i
114 6
L McGregor
t l S 1 t i l l s D etro.l
Rroosens
t
A ockenluss
9.
G bscm
tit

Ma i or le a g u e Leaders
By U nited Press International
Batting
(based on 3 1 appearances
ra th t ia m 't q a m ri played I
N ational League
g ab r pet
vad io ck P*t
9Q W 3* 143
Wosr Phi
102 414 69 1)1
Raker LA
99 M l U J l)
BuCknr Chi
101 600 U 315
Schrmdt Phil
99 350 75 311
97 J79 63 311
Griffey C-n
94 311 19 JQ9
May SF
Cro m a n
M tl
97 350 40 »9
H ff rtnd l $t(
98 357 64 308
Brooks NY
93 3)9 37 307
A m erican League
g ab r pcf
100 *9) 41 31)
la m fd
Bo\
100 191 46 377
Pat-or k Sea
104 407 17 374
Mfftdrsn Ok
Hargrov Civ
91 111 47 377
I ilik Sea
90 345 41 )\«
Cooper M il
107 40) 64 315
M m phry NY
77 310 47 310
Oliver. Ten
101 430 S3 307
G B rett k C
14 376 34 307
91 3)9 55 306
Cares* Cal
Home Hun*
National League
Schm-df

Boston
too 303 IOO 1 IJ I
M il*
900 000 003 2 5 0
T0r r e 1
Clear
1g•
and
Gedman
Slaton McClure (41.
Ayguat-ne ' f l 1 and Simmons
A
Torre!
9)
L Slaton t i l l
HRs BostonStapleton 7
10'
Gedman iSI
Cal-f

001 10) 000
000 OOO010

* son
CHityjn

1sk

ttrn iio
8*
V cG lfithen

&gt;9 0
Ii 0

»nd
is

Ott
aog

W ksoo Mil

l

CXi»wn
«8
HWj California.
Baylor , l i 'i G ricft ( ?Ui

Tr«a\

69 l
371

011 000 003
000 JO? 000

Seattle

Bail
000 000 000
0 )1
O tro t
SOI 015 20.
14 12 0
M cG regor
Stone
111
Sthne.der
161
Luecber
(61
Bodd.cker (6). Stoddard (01 and
Graham
M o rris
Rolema l i t

Leaders

V e th c h

Kern

8

and

Svir»d

t* 'f g
Clark
P arrott
(S),
e an»ey (9'i Andersen 19’ and
Bulling W Med'Ch H0 6I L
C*«irk n? Sw MW Texas, Sample
O'

Hogers M»l and Sutlpn HOg 11
Ph,
Dawson
Mtl
73
K ingm an NY 72 Falter Gin I
A m erican league
VuCk
20 C lark SF and Kendrick StP
OviCh M il U a
D Mar t.n e l
17
Oak and
A m erican League
A rm ii.
Ra» 14 5
McCaMy
M o rns
Qet 14 6
McGregor
Oak
and
Thomas,
M il
2t
6 vAnte Bov M urray
Rai and Bait 73 5 Leonard KC 17 11
Earned Hun Average
Gr'.ch. Cal 70
1based on 1 inning per each
H unt Batted In
team 's games piayrd)
N ational League
Fetter
National
league
Hyan
Cm
46
Schmidt
Phi
47
Hot* I 34 Knepper Kou 7 06
Buckner Chi 7!
Carter Mtl
C arlton Phi 7)1
Mooton l a
M Matthews. Phi 65
7 35 Heuss L A 3 34
A m erica n League
Murray,
A m erican league
Stewart
Bal 72 A rm as. Oak 71 Oghve,
1 9S
la m p
Chi
379
M il 69 Evans.
Bos 67 and Bal
Me C atty Oak 7.33 John, n y
W infield NY 65
7 50 Burns Ch. 3 63
Stolen Bates
Striheoyt*
N ational
Leaque
Hanes
N .ititm ai
league
Vaien
M tl 71 M creno P» 79 Vo»t
fuela
LA
17)
Carttqn Ph» (70
M tl 30 Dawson M il and North
So*o Cm 139 % an Mon (31
Sf 76
G uh•CksnYY
A m erican League
Mender
*\m e ric an League
Barker
son
Oak 56Cru;
Sea
43
Cle
174
Blylesen
Cle (07
L e flo re . Ch&lt; and
vVdton KC
Burns Chi 103 and Leonard k C
33 O 'lone C«e 27
10) Guidry NY 107
Pitching
Saves
Victor if*
N ational league
Sutter
Seaver
National Leaque
S tl 75 M-nton Sf I t
Allen
Carlton
Phi 13 4
Cm 147
NY 18 Camp All 1a Mume
LA
1)6
Hoof cm
V4%lcnjuria
Cm and Lucas SO 17
Huthyen. Ph. 117
LA
11 6
A m erican league
F .ngers

M&lt;i
31
Gossage
NY
20,
Qv senberry
KC II
Corbett.
M*n 16 Saucer, Det 13

Deals
Sports Trjiruiichorn
T uesday
By United Press International
Basketball
Philadelphia
Cut center Ron
W itte r
and forward's P e te r
Mu'ten per g John Smith M 'ke
Thomas
D rake M o rris and
Dw ight Moflms
P o rtla n d
Signed g u a rd
to rw a rd Jett Lamp
Football
Green Bay
Activated tackle
TI H iiilm ,yn
Kansas Cdv
Placed gu ard
BmuO SirriKiorts ufi ifiiurK t' reserve
and activated often*.»e linem an
Jim H ourke

Ni*w Orleans
Waived cor
" r r h i M H.cky Hay and t.ght end
H ch Caster s&lt;gned tree agent
w d e receiver H«ch M artini and
detens.ve back M ke Sp vey of
C olorado

NY G ia n ti
Acquired running
tu»L k Hoc Carpenter from Houston

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SHORT1/2GALLON

CASE_0FJ2-82_6_5_
^
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SHORT1/2GAIL0N_

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CRMIECUtTtKIiW aUPW

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m s\
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OF w
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175LTH
t 751TB

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Tanqueray Gin 1 1 2 .5 0
Calvert Gin
6 0 .9 5
Gordon’s Gin
6 8 .9 5
Seagram's Gin
6 7 .9 5
Popov Vodka
53 .9 5

M

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rv K U M

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C A N A D IA N
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M IU M

A BC S A .E StO U l

SmimoH ao* vui . 64.95 M
Schenley Vodka 55.95
Flelschmann v«na 53.95
Philadelphia Bi*n4 56.50
Bacardi X V 0’ 73.95
Ron Rico Rum
65.50

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THE PREMIUM IS IN TMt
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SHORT V, GALLON

10 I t l U t u Ic H n r ik jti

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71 IN
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LITER
558EA BT THE USE -10650

LA BELLA
LAJRMUSCO
317

REPEAT OF A SELLOUT

i .2 9
COLLECTORS

DECANTER

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PREMIUM
ABC BEER or ALE CUBES
i 1202
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NICOLAS

W, l OW. PRICES

! llm ik |H i Ih r k I u i
71 C*til *■ Altai Q m |
71 Imjtiiit (•; ilii
71 ImJNili YUUfti
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Early Times Brb. 6 8 .9 4 Dewar’s u m
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COLD DUCK

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BLEND |
69 |
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GOOD THURS . OCT. I

SvfFOLON ARI

G000ms, OCT. 6 ;

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LITER

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M H I D B TM IV /C M P M

GOODWED.. SEPT. 30

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LITER

59.2OZ.
SHORT1/2GALLON

LIGHTERS

C P OLD KY
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,^ 9 0 ° GIN

Major League Results
Tuesday's Games
By United Press International
National League
Los Ang
000 000 703 - 5 1
Atla
001 007 000 - 3 6 7
'Welch, Howe (71, Stewart 19)
and Scid I t Ml Boggs. Garber
171 and Vnatro W Mow# 15 31
L Garber (4 6) HRs Atlanta
Horner 2 (111. Linares (5)

&gt; 56.

e a v

BOURBON

39 ^

9

B

STR. K Y .

RCISKA

U n o tco ro s

AlO rlando Seminole
Tuesday night results
First game
Lecona E loria 1140 } 10 310
Durango Kid Goiri
3 00 3 10
Leque Juan
a aO
O I I 31 I I 401 T (12 41 24* 20
Second game
Pita Juan
14 00 5 00 3 00
Leque AUno
5 40 4 70
Durango Kid E loria
3 00
Q (I 41 21 40 P 14 I) 44110. T 14
71 154 40. OO ( I 41 135 30
Third g4m r
Negui E loria
II 70 2 00 3 00
B |urla Juan
2 70 4 10
Simon Alans
2 09
Q (0-1) 21 00i P (2 41 *1 20J T &lt;2
51 223 50
Fourth gome
Ricordo
i r rags
13 BO 3 AO 7 00
[a te Ola
4 00 5 40
Gasli Juan
2 10
0 (1 SI SI 40. P I) I t n o 20. T i l
I ) 112 40
F illh game
J rlta r [u b i
1120 S « 3 00
B lbao GsKoechea
4 00 7 00
Marti YJ4
4 40
Q 41-3) I I 40. R (712 110 I 0 ; T I 2
4) 14910
S iith game
Le(4! Arana
1100 13 00 11 0(1
3lea E loria
4 20 2 00
R ea Alano
4 70
Q ( l SI 49 4 lj P ( H I 119 OO; T (5t) 111! 30
S tte n lh gome
Bilbao
I 70 S 20 2 20
Sasli
3 40 4 40
Ricardo
TOO
&lt;3 (1 01 30 30; P (0 3) 04 SO. T 01
111 10
Eighth game
Warli A icoitia 24 00 9 60 S 70
Wanolo Y ia
* 20 3 40
uaray Echfva
3 00
Q (14) 41 29; P 14-31 100 6 0 ;T |6 I) 341 M
Nils lit game
J riia r E loria 11 40 9 00 4 40
3uratrOOKid Arana
S 40 3 10
Kegui Echtva
0 30
O (1 11 34 40; P (&gt; 1 ) 01 20. T IT
II 304 00
lOtti game
Jr lia r
12 00 1 20 3 40
!ale
2 00 7 70
feggi
7 *0
□ 14 4171 20; P (44) I M W j T I A
II 10)400
l l l h game
lastl A icollla
32 40 13 00 20 70
a&gt;d [a tre
I I 00 0 40
A a rtlF a rjh
S 40
0 (4 I) 1930; P t M ) 111 00, T 15II 491 40

W e d n e id e y , Sepf. 30, i v t l — 11A

• rot

CALIF.
BURGUNDY

3.99

147
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2.99
S T . JO H A N N IS
LKBFR A U M ILC H
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C O L A D A mix d e l c o n t e ABC 17%

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OTHERS ASK 5.9*

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DAILY’ S HALF GALLON

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Here's

How

E itor'i note: UPI iptB t weeks studying one of govenunent'a
b l u e s t b u reau cracies — the G eneral Services
AdmlnUtratloa'a Public Buildings Service — to see bow It
bandies taxpayer dollars. From a review of more than IN GSA
contracts, monitoring of Ha w-the-Job performance and Inter­
views with more than U federal officials comes a tale of (at
and Inefficiency.
By GREGORY GORDON
WASHINGTON (UP!) — If a federal agency wants an extra
office key, *« General Services A&amp;rJnistrfitlon Is always glad
I to oblige — for (IT.
Last spring, the Department of Health and Human Services
ordered 12 keys for one three-room area. For that high-volume
order, it got a break. GSA, which has exclusive authority to
y . 1 provide such services, charged five hours labor and a total of
|9M 0, or 17.60 a key.
Aides to Interior Secretary Jam es Watt asked GSA to
"rekey" the locks — alter the lock tumblers and keys for
security reasons — on 32 doors In his suite. The charge: $2,000,
1
or $82 a lock.
A hardware store will copy a key for a dollar. Ernest Litts, a
Si
locksmith at District Lock and Hardware a mile from the
Interior Department, said his firm could have "rekeyed" the
locks In Watts' suite for $335.
&amp;
The price disparities haven't deterred the GSA, source of
nearly all services provided to federal agencies. It charges a
flat one hour of labor — $17 — to copy a single key, figuring It
takes an hour for a Journeyman laborer to pick up the key,
carry it to the ahop, reproduce It and return the finished
product.
GSA has neither low-paid messengers to perform such tasks
nor a streamlined system for key-making, despite a constant
demand for keys created by shifts In government personnel.
The Interior Department got so upset with GSA's key prices
and laggard response it spent $S0 and bought Its own key­
copying machine, technically violating the law giving GSA
Jurisdiction over such services.
Arthur Rhodes Marshall, who retired this summer as com­
missioner of GSA's Public Buildings Service, has a word for
the GSA key-making fee — “asslnine."
He said when GSA regional administrators were given more
responsibility in recent years, some "took the lead in rather
strange and marvelous ways, applying overhead and coming
out with a $17 key. It's ridiculous."
Keys are Just the tip of the iceberg.
A United Press International study, Including a review of
more than 100 GSA work contracts and interviews with more
than 33 federal officials, found many GSA prices for upkeep,
repairs and alterations to be Just plain out of line.
GSA commonly charges hundreds of dollars to Install a few
bulletin boards; its estimates for painting rooms arc often
more than double what private contractors say they should be.
nw.
For carpentry, installing electrical outlets or putting In
special electric lines, GSA's prices frequently appear high —
although It has turned Increasingly to the private sector to do
the work.
GSA's customers are outraged about the prices, from which
they have no escape.
"I think we get ripped off," says Justice Department official
Ken Mcllroy.
But the ultimate victim is the taxpayer, who loses tens of

I

i

GSA Handles Your Taxpayer D

millions of dollars through the waste, inefficiency and even
outright fraud.
The GSA, almost impervious to reforms dating to the IKOs,
remains one of the government's consummate, unconquered
bureaucracies. Through layers of regulations or incom­
petence, it seems to find a way to keep its costs high.
GSA argues any extra money it assesses agencies Just ends
up back in the federal treasury, with no harm done. But critics
contend the more money pumped into GSA's bureaucracy, the
more It soaks up.
While President Reagan tries to slash the budget, PBS this
year will collect $6004600 million from federal agencies for
basic maintenance services, alterations and specially re­
quested repairs.
Without radical changes, GSA seems certain to squander a
big chunk of that money — particularly in its Washington
region covering 153 federal buildings.
Some symptoms of the waste:
—Where GSA's own 13,000 workers are assigned to regular
maintenance work (about 30 percent gif the time), Ihey often
can be seen loafing — roaming the halls or holding coffee
clatches on taxpayers' time.
-G SA foremen are allowed to bid prices on the same jobs
they will oversee. With little Incentive to do otherwise, they
frequently pad their estimates. Where GSA work crews are
involved, they allow for worker alouglvoff time or incompeten­
cy, ensuring they won't have to report to their superion that
they bid too low. Where private contractors are Involved, there
seems little explanation far routinely high prices set by the
foremen.
— Most Americans might assume their government buys
materials in huge volumes and can serve its needs af bargain
prices because it takes no profit. Perplexlngly, GSA material
prices often exceed those of private firms. GSA finds itself
buying items such as paint at retail prices because govern­
ment procurement regulations are too burdensome to order
wholesale.
Equally mysterious are prices GSA charges for the work of
private contractors under a procedure in which it sets the price
and then puts the job out for bid.
UPI asked George Ducas, vice president of the New Yorkbaaed Hudson-Shatx Painting Co., a reputable contractor, for a
price on putting two coats of blue paint on two rooms at the
Department of Housing and Urban Development
Ducas, studying the architectural plans in his Springfield,
Va., office, said he would charge $473 or $300 to paint the 1,420
square feet of walls and doors.
Informed GSA bid the same Job, done by a private con­
tractor, for $1,475, he asked: "W hat's going on over there? You
get me all the work you can get me at my prices, and I’ll make
a bundle."

Told of GSA's bid on another HUD office-painting Job, Bal­
lard let his fingers dance on his adding machine for a moment,
then exclaimed; “ At that price, he's (GSA's estimator) saying
the men are only doing 63 square feet an hour!"
Of a HUD request fo ra two+oom paint Job on the eighth floor
of Its headquarters building, Ducas said his firm could do tha

ministration will'provlde victims with "a voice."
Benson said he has always believed forced restitution wtB
reduce crime.
Govoruhk said the victim often needs psychiatric or medical
treatment. And, he sdded, the crime often affects hia or h *
work, children and neighbors.
"But the criminal often is out on the street again —
frequently outlasting the victim,” he said. "We have to stop
just slapping their hands and get back to business," Manning
said.
Polk, who said lie agrees with Reagan "100 percent," added,
" It’s time to get lough."
"If and when someone is convicted," he said, "We should
n u k e sure they serve their time — and not in a country-club
prison like Eglin Air Force Base."
Polk said he is not sure Reagan can turn the tide, but added
that "he's done pretty good so far." The president has very
good ideas if they're given a chance to woik, he commented.
“We need more prisons, federal and local, and we need to get
back to the road gang. We need to n u k e prisoners work," he
added.
Govoruhk said stricter laws will make It easier to ultimately
cut crime, and that the laws will be passed If the public want
them.
Before criminals Rot so many rights, he said, a police of­
ficer's hands weren't tied.
“The pendulum looks like It's swinging back the other way,"
Govoruhk said. "How long It will take to get back the good laws
— who can answer that?"
But he agreed Reagan's speech was a start.

AREA DEATHS
RUTH Z10UC0W8KI
Mrs. Ruth Ziolkowskl, 34, of
706 Beverly Ave., Altamonte
S prings, died Monday at
Florida Hospltal-Altamonte.
Bom June 30, 1927, in
Tonawanda, N.Y., she moved
to Altamonte Springs from
Buffalo, N.Y., In 1978. She was
a housewife and a Catholic.
She is survived by her
husband, Leonard J .; sons,
Leonard J. Jr., Apopka, and
William, Altamonte Springs;
d a u g h te r,
D eb o rah ,
Altamonte Springs; brothers,
William F. Haggerty, Red­
wood City, Calif., and James
C. Haggerty, Bliss, N.Y.;
sisters, Mrs. Bemadine Egrl
and Mrs. Sue Ann Segal, both
of Tonaw anda, and Mrs.
Peggy G anes; and three
grandchildren.
All Faiths Memorial Park,

Casselberry, is In charge of
arrangements.
MRS. ALTHA MASON
Mrs. Alta Mason, 92, of
B rim Tower, Sanford, died
Tuesday night at Seminole
Memorial Hospital. Born In
Clay County, 111., Jan. 16,1889^
she had lived in Sanford for a
number of years. She was a
num ber of the Baptist Church
of Paris. III.
She Is survived by her
husband, Jam es H , Sanford;
one daughter, Mrs. Maerene
Kendal),
Sanford;
two
g r a n d d a u g h t e r s , M rs.

N v y .t M g - F s r s N r i i

Wl WISH TO IXPMSS OUR ORATITUDI TO OUR
FRIINDS AND FAMILY FOR THf KINDNISS AND
COMCRRN THIY HAVIOIVIN US OURINO THI LOSS
OF OUR HUSBAND AND FATHIR
A

BUSINESS! HOME

HAS MOVED TO DeBARYI
Still servicing Sanford
and surrounding areas.
Our superior service hat not changod.
Only our phono number.
Our now number is

6M-8813

I

A

u

AND ISFICIA LIY TO TH1TRUCK DRIVIRS THAT
MADI OADOT'S LAST CONtfoY A SAFI ONI WITH
HIM IN TNI ROCKI9M CHAIR. Wl A l l ITIRNALLY
ORATIFUL. DADDY WOULD HAVI B U N PROUD!
Wl ARII THANK YOU.
THI RUSS ILLS

“They look at It, and tney take the worst man they’ve got,"
he said. "And they Bay, ‘Jim might be doing that Job, It might
take Jim (our days to do that Job, where Mike might do It in
half a day.'"
The bid Is submitted based on "Jim ’s" abilities, he said.
Marshall, a retired admiral, said: "In the Navy, we never let
people decide the prices if they were going to do the work.”
He said GSA has "never quite gotten around" to eliminating
that apparent conflict, adding cynically that one reason is the
agency's constant turnover of administrators (six in 12 years)
and top officials because they are political appointees.

*9450

WEEKLY
FURNISHED BEDROOM

•M B * Wr«t&lt;*
e llu n S r y F bc IIIH m
• 11 C h in m l C ib lt TV
• L l v ) f n ttrU In m rR l
7 Ni»HH I I L buhv*

en m ity RlttlwriM
• L * r» * r i M f f l i I I S
f llk lW K y Apts. A v llllb l*
At Sli«M1y H lftw r K i l t
• Spbc I bI Discount On
Monthly D i l l s

CAVALIER
MOTOR INN
3200 S. Orlando Dr.
(Hwy. 17-92) Swford
(305)321-0690

Mamith Carll, Sanford, and
Mrs. Jenta Wyatt, Wauchula;
seven
great-grandchildren
and
one
g reat-g reat-

granddaughter.
Brisson F u n eral Home,
Sanford, Is in ch arg e of
arrangements.

CALL NOW
KM TOUR
PRK-ttASON
MUTING
MSPKCTIONI

W tyisF P L ’s
fuel adjustment
so high?

Michael C. Cook, Vice President, Fuel
Resources and Girporatc Development at
I\»rt Everglades Oil Storage Facilities.
W h y h th e re a fu e l a d ju s tm e n t
in th e firs t place? Customers are
understandably annoyed by high summer
bills, and particularly the sire o h he fuel
adjustment. But fuel represents about
45% of tire total cost of generating elec­
tricity, so the cost o f fuel does haw a
big impact on the bill. Since fuel costs
change frequently, itk important to have
a timely and fair way to cope with these
enormous, fluctuating costs. Tire fuel
adjustment allows us to pay our fuel bills
so that we can continue generating
electricity, and to pass on any savings
directly to our customers.
W h y d o e s it alw ay s seem to
k e e p g o in g Up? Because the cisst of
fuel nas gone up, especially residual oil,
the kind u e use most. About half of
our electricity is generated by oil; even
more in the summer. So oil prices have a
dramatic effect on the fuel adjustment.

Residual
04 Paces
(Approximate per
barrel lewis)

OIL FURNACISAND SFACIHRATIRS
CLKCTRIC HIAYIRS—HRAT FUMPS
Wl SIRVICI ALL RRANDS

$34 00

Prices have risen so much in the past
few years that we now spend $4 million
a day on oil.
I'v e h e a rd t h a t o il p ric e s
w e re d ro p p in g . W ill th e fu e l
a d ju s tm e n t g o d o w n as a resu lt?
O il prices have dropped somewhat
recently, hut this summer we'll he using
even more oil than usual because one
i&gt;f our nuclear plants that generates
lower-cost electricity is being repaired.
During montits of moderate tempera­
tures, overall use of electricity decreases,
and we hum less oil. Tit is could mean a
lower fuel adjustment. A lot will depend
on tire weather, the price of oil and raw
much generation we can get from other
fuel sources.
W h a t is F P L d o in g to fig h t h ig h
o il p rice s? Everything we can. We
shop for bargains in the oil market, both
in contract fuel supplies and in open
market purchases. We're not building
any more oil-powered generating facil­
ities. Andhe/ure we use the ones we
have, we use all our other less-costly gen­
erating sources-nuclear, natural gas,
and coal-generated power from other
utilities brought into the state by trans­
mission lines. We've also been mixing
coal and oil at one plant, and we’re
pursuing opportunities fir converting
our oil plants to coal use.
D o e s n ’t th e fu e l a d ju s tm e n t
d e s tro y th e in c e n tiv e to b u y
fu e l eco n o m ic a lly ? No. First of all,
our own performance standards are
extremely high. In addition, there are
efficiency incentives built into the
fuel adjustment regulatory proceedings,
and FPL must prove that all fuel was
bought and used wisely when its case
on tne fuel adjustment is presented.
D o c s F P L m a k e a p ro fit &lt;?n th e
fu e l a d ju s tm e n t? No. Not a cent of
the fuel adjustment goes to profit. All
o f it goes directly to pay for the cost
o f fuel.

-s M iito l

HOMIR M. RUSSILL

I

e

ADAMS PAINTING CONTRACTOR

Sullivan complains of GSA: “They don’t t»“y through
wholesale rates. You can buy cheaper yourself at the hard­
ware store." '
, . ,
.
,
Ted Lelninger, deputy assistant administrator tor GSAs
National Capital Region, says: "If you take enough time to
look at It, many of these (prices) can be eiplabted. But a lot of
them, frankly, cannot be explained. They're Just too damned
high. I sit here indicling my own agency, and probably
myself.”
l*inlnger said in cases where GSA work crews still perform
maintenance, "We've allowed the foremen ... to get out of
hand. Frankly, we don'l have enough professional staff to get
them in hand.
"Nobody is looking at the foreman. The foreman Is allowing
his men to charge time arbitrarily. Things get way oul of
whack. Our production rates are Just abominable."
Indeed, GSA officials openly put much of the blame for their
high prices on the foremen. One senior GSA official said fore­
men simply "cover their butts by bidding high."
Noting many GSA employees are dedicated, highcaliber
craftsmen, Justice Department space management official
Ken Mcllroy said the foremen seem to cover themselves b&gt;'
calculating bids based on their lowest quality workers.

Jam es Ballard, owner of longtime GSA contractor Ballard
and Associates Inc. of Fairfax, Va., estimated he could do the
same job for $7304000.

...County Police Chiefs
. p r t - h, . J , ' " ' - 4
r *
141
Between 1130 and about 1963, he said, police could patrol the
streets with one fourth of the men they need now, but crime is
increasing and a lot of it Is due to repeal offenders because
nothing happens to them.
Benson said he still remembers one of the worst murders he
has ever seen, one that happened In Lake Mary six years ago.
"This guy had been watching the (Charles) Manson movie
and went and stabbed a young girl over and over," he said
"When we caught him, we found he was a sex offender with a
three-page record. But nothing had ever happened to him."
Unfortunately, he said, there aren't enough jails to hold all
these people. He said about four times the existing number are
&gt; needed.
Longwood Police Chief Greg Manning agreed with Benson
that a permissive society has been to blame for the sharp In­
crease In crime. He, too, blamed a decreasing respect for
human life and property and society's penchant to pursue the
dollar.
"Bury the (American) Civil liberties Union," he recom­
mended, "and let's get back to the nitty-gritty."
Manning said he didn't think Reagan really offered much of
a practical nature in his speech.
"But I agree with him," he said. "I'm glad to have somebody
pro-law enforcement for a change, somebody who thinks
criminals lose their rights when they become criminals and
who thinks victims have rights."
Reagan said he plans an effort to encourage Judges lo order
offenders to repay their victims, and promised his ad­

job for 11,323, or 23 cents a square foot. Ballard said "11,300
would be a fair price."
Both raised their eyebrows at GSA’s price o( $2,560, or 43
cents a square foot. GSA estimated it would take 129 hours to
do the Job.
Asked about that bid, Virgil Ostrander, PBS' director of
operations, ordered the two rooms measured and then told
UPI: "I am unhappy ... You should not spend more than 30
hours physically painting the Job.”
Joe Czajkowski, a top HUD space management official, said
of GSA's proposed price: "I'd like lo be doing it. I could do a lot
of work In 129 hours."
But Ostrander challenged other estimates given UPI,
saying, "There's a world of difference between signing a bid
proposal and giving somebody an estimate."
Ducas and Ballard said they would stand behind their
estimates.
Agency customers say privately they believe GSA’s
estimates are high because o( the surcharge above Lie actual
contracting costs to cover Its massive overhead. Officials at
most federal agencies say they would prefer lo farm out the
work to private contractors themselves and cut out the GSA
surcharge.
Many GSA services are loo complex for a layman to
evaluate. But agency customers, and even GSA officials, say
they are exorbitant
"In my opinion, all of these prices are high,” Rudy Bodd,
director of the Washington Facilities Division for HHS
Secretary Richard Schweiker, said while reviewing 23 ran­
domly selected Job orders with UPI.
His agency asked GSA to patch up a small hole in the wall
and paint over It, requiring a carpenter and a painter. GSA
charged $174.20.
"They must have had to wait for the plaster to dry," quipped
Edwin Sullivan, HHS' director of Office Management Ser­
vices.

OP SANFORD INC
mi

3224021

( .ir r i r r

IMN.MAPLI AVI
SANFORD

Jar-Mar Jure

____ 23___
-Arena* Summar pace -July August. Sapttmb*

FLORIDA POWER &amp;LIGHT COMPANY

t

Id
a
Ji •&lt;***%.•

- J

4

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OURSELVES
Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Wednesday, Sept, jo, 1»ll—16

Cook O f The W eek : M ary Bridges

Background Dates To
Sanford's 'Carlton House'
By LOIS SMITH
Herald Cormpondent
If you arc a long-time native of Sanford, you will probably
remember Sally Carlton's Boarding House and its dining
room on Park Avenue.
Mary Carlton Bridges certainly does. She was raised there.
Mary and her husband. Bill, live at 3442 Highway 46 West,
where Uiey own and operate Bridges AnUques and Auction. "I
take care of the clerical end of the business," Mary said, "and
Bill does most of the buying and selling."
They have one married son, Scott, and are eagerly awaiting
the birth of their first grandchild in January*.
Mary reminisced, “ I can’t really remember a time when
there wasn't a lot of cooking going on at our home or when I
wasn’t involved in some way. There were nine children In my
family, plus we liad 25 boarders to feed. Not only did we have
Uie boarders, but my mother opened the dining room to the
public for lunch. We served good down home southern meals,
which always included two meat fishes, two or three
vegetables, potatoes or rice, hot rolls and corn bread and
usually deep dish cobbler for dessert.
"Word of our good food spread Bnd in 1945 we began serving
the 150 men stationed at the Navy Base. I'll never forget how
we would take the food down to the old USO building, that’s
now llie Chamber of Commerce, and the men would come in. In
shifts, to cut. We also fed most of the civic organizations, like,
the Lions and Kiwanis Hubs at their meeUngs," Mary added.
With a background steeped in pots and pans and cooking, it
would seem unlikely that Mary would enjoy cooking. But, she
does. "1 like to cook," said Mary, "and other people seem to
enjoy what I prepare."
Maybe, it's a carryover from the boarding house days — for
on nights alter the auctions, Mary can be found in the kitchen
whipping up a meal for the group of hungry people who always
seem to gather at her door.

DIE FLEDERMAUS...MARCH I I , 1982
Die Fledermaus (The Bat),
Johann Strauss' delightful
operetta, with the gaiety of
19th-Century Vienna will lie
performed by the National
Opera Company troupe of
singers. Die Fledermaus was
first performed in Vienna in
1873 and has since become a

favorite of audiences all over
the world. Excellent English
translations have caused the
operetta to become one of
America’s favorites. PJB1-B2
marks the 34th year of the
National Opera Company, the
troupe jias brought opera to
thousands. These engaging.

enthusiastic young per­
form ers,
chosen
from
nationwide auditions, make
new and devoted friends for
"opera in English” in every
town in which they perform
throughout the Southeast and
Midwest.

1981-82 Season
Seminole Mutual Concert Association
Dr. Sara Irrgang, president ol Seminole Mutual Concert
Association, announces the 1981-82 membership drive is
currently underway. "11)6 concert association hopes to
broaden the membership throughout the county by
providing a new auditorium, a central locatioh and
a varied program," site says.
The (our concerts scheduled are as follows: Mue
Frampton. "Die Flederm aus," Measure For Measure and
The Mercy River Boys.
The concerts will be held in the auditorium of the new

fjike Mary High School, l/mgwond-Lakc Mary Road, at 8
p.m.
Membership sultscrlptions arc as follows: £15, family;
115, individual adult; ami $10, student
For information on membership and attending the
reception at the home of State Rep. Bobby Brantley, ItLungwood, and Mrs. Brantley, contact Mrs. Frederic
i Ruth i Gaines, membership chairman, 708 Oak Ave.,
Sanford, or P.O. Box 1015, l/ingwood, phone, 323-0253.
See CONCERT, Page ZB

BREAD 2 cups lukewarm milk (hot will kill the yeast)
4 cup sugar
2 teaspoons Milt
2 envelopes yeast
2 beaten whole eggs
4 cup Crisco nil
7 4 cups bread Hour
Stop I : Mix milk, sugar and salt in large bowl. Add yeast and
stir. When yeast is dissolved stir In eggs and oil. Add 4 flour,
mix then turn out on Boured board. Knead in rest of flour.
Grease a large bowl. But In lump of dough and turn over and
over to lightly coal the dough. Cover —Keep away from drafts.
Let rise until doubled, about 1 hour.
Step 1: Punch dough down and turn on Bound board. Divide
in half amt knead to break up large bubble*. Shape Into loaf
and put in greased loaf pans. Cover. Rest until doubled. Bake
in 400 degree oven about 20 to 30 minutes or until golden brown.
Tup on bread and you'll hear a hollow sound when It’s done.
HREAD VARIATION
Follow through yrith step one. When turned on floured board,
divide In half and with rolling pin roll dough about size of large
pie. Melt 1 stick of butter in a small pan, add 1 envelope U p­
ton's onion soup mix — stir. With pastry brush smooth butter
mix over dough. Roll up into a loaf or slice the roll into 1 inch
sections. Put sections on cookie sliect close together. Cook loaf
same as bread. Cook rolls at 400 degrees about 15 minutes.

H »r*M P te t* b r L b li Smirk

Mary Bridges slices into u loaf of freshly liukrtl
breud.
POUND CAKE FROSTING
1 stick butter
1 box confectioner’s sugar
4 heaping tablespoons cocoa
1 teaspoon vonlllu
6 tablespoons canned evaporated milk
Cream butter. Add milk and mix well. Add dry Ingredients u
little at a lime and mix well.
YUM YUM CAKE
Make ahead and refrigerate at least 12 hours. Serves 20
slices.
Crust: Mix well:
i cup flour
1 stick margarine
1 cup chopped pecans
Press into bottom of 9 x 12 baking dish. Press firmly like a
pie crust. Bake at 350 degrees for 30 minutes.
1 8 ounce package of cream cheese
1 cup powdered sugar
See COOK, Page 2B

Instead of onion mix use grated cheese or 2 teaspoons cinnunion, 4 cup sugar, dots of butter and nuts, raisins, etc.
Another variation brown I diced fine garlic clove In 1 stick
butter. Cool. Add 1 teaspoon Italian seasoning (dry).
CHOCOLATE POUND CAKE
Cream well in mixer:
2 sticks real butter
1 stick margarine
3 i-u|is sugar
To above mixture add 5 eggs one at a time, mixing each one
well.
Sift together:
3 cups flour
4 heaping tablespoons Cocoa
4 teaspoon baking powder
4 teaspoon salt
put 1 teaspoon vunilla into I cup milk
Mix well by alternately adding milk and dry Ingredients. Put
in greased and floured angel food cake pan. Bake at 300
degrees for approximately 2 hours. Since oven temperature
varies, check rake after 14 hours with cake tester or straw.
Cake is done when tester is clean or when sides of cake pull
away from pan.

CHECKUP
FOf sruomrs UP TO AGl 14
* 1 5
■

Xffl*

• EXAMINATION

THU AO • X-RAY

, • c l ia n in o
Thru s*pi. I0. Ifll a FLUOR ID I TREATMENT
H#un ty Atsblhtmtnl
10
U M IM erttM iai
HIAWATHA A V I..IA

Energy-Saving Sale!
Just in rime for holiday decorating.

30 %OFF

Save up to 30% on 20 styles of energy*
saving fabrics. Pius, savings up to 20%
on wide range of casement, sheer and
antique sarin draperies, woven woods
and mini*blinds, too!
SfV&lt;Ul l o u tJ iru iin g

i 4fp(ll Ssw, liai. iifi
im

f*re( S s i i f i i | i i J i

4ef|wl »fV |.«w in time

ty« ra il ImiU i i
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MAC FRAMPTON...Dee.
son of a
South Carolina Presbyterian
minister, began playing the
piano at the age of three,
studied at the Cincinnati
Conservatory, and in 19G9
received the Bronze Medal at
the Van Cliburn International
Piano Competition.
Mac Frampton is currently
one of the hottest performers
on the international concert
circuit. When he starts
playing, you know you’re
hearing an unusual talent. It's
musical
soul,
musical
charisma, musical dynamite;
Mac Kramplen.

the crux of the matter is this
— Mac Frampton is a great
artist. As an artist his aims
are to excite the ear and eye,
engage the mind, and en­
courage the imagination to
linger on the event. A Mac
Frampton concert is an event
you will rem em ber. His
unique brand of musical
showmanship reaches beyond
classic, pop, and rock to in­
clude an astonishing variety
of tastes, moods, and styles.
In fact his "rock alternative"
sound is one of the few really
successful innovations to

3 P Ik *

emerge on the concert scene
in recent years.
Mac’s show features his
dazzling keyboard acrobatics,
the ' phenomena of his
popularity. He captures the
audience and holds it
spellbound
through
a
sequence of current hit songs,
great Broadway music,
popular movie them es,
ragtime, light rock, and an
occasional piece from the
classics. “ The show is
designed to appeal to the
broadest range possible."

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SATIN
CORDUROY
SUIT

S22-E3IS o r

J22-7M2
^ V r l K ing i«if m rfgv
u sin g salr to to u t home at
v&lt;*if lu n tt m r fa t O n iim r ,

Jackal. Skirl end
coordinated MouM

Cam*. Plum, Gr#r

sunk 14.

Ttti

Purchase

£m' Place

Sanford's Newest And Most Unique Boutique
LOIS DYCUS, Owner
LISA BARKER, Mqr.
i l l EAST FIRST &gt;T.m -4l»
DOWNTOWN SANPOflO

SALE ENDS OCT. 31. 1M1

rsrmnfi i* •rrlrnja No
tharpr or le g a tio n t«« our
J n itfc tin g B tn k r,

01

PHILIPS DKOUTIMG DSH
IN BUSINESSSINCI m i
I l f WEST 131b ST.
SANFORD

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2B-gvnlnt HeriM, ftirtorj, Ft.

Wadntsday, Stpt. h , m t

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A s s o c ia tio n

Continued From Page IB)

EASURE
R MEASURE
N. 29, 1982

IlM tnurt
For
M easure is a new
instrumental a t ­
traction combining the
ialents of three at­
tractive young artists
fn a very diversified
rogram,
wh i c h
anges from familiar
(lassies to popular
Selections. Choosing
from compositions in
their original form,
Various transcriptions
a variety of
ial arrangements,
perform ers are
to please any and
til concert audiences.
Artists:
Karen
(arlsrud, Violin, a
New Yorker at the age
gf twelve appeared at
Carnegie Recital Hall,
her professional
credits include several
Orchestras
and
Symphonies. She is a
founding member of
leasure for Measure.
Joan Spergel, Cello,
from Massachusetts
vith a degree from
fuilliard School of
lusic, has
been

f

t

THE MERCY RIVER B O Y $..M o y 4, 1902

principal cellist with
the M.I.T. Symphony
and other symphonies.
C ath erin e
W hite,
Harp, from Missouri

holds a teaching
fellowship at Juilliard
School of Music. She
was principal harpist
for Festival of Two

’Hit* Mercy Itiver Roys, four
powerful voices, combined with
five solid instrumentalists, put
together one of the most exciting
concerts to be experienced.
Emerging as one of gospel
music’s most successful emm issaries of the coming
generation; like the song

Worlds in Charleston.
S.C. and Spolcto, Italy,
and lias both composed
and perform ed for
radio programs.

"Mercy River", which gave the
group their name, they are
crossing over into acceptance bycountry music fans. In their
more than 12 years of ex­
perience, the Mercy River Boys
have cut nine albums, and have
appeared on TV and major
gospel concert and country

concert stages.
From their roots in the East
Texas Piney Woods, the Mercy
River Boys are branching out to
bring old and new gospel sounds
to the rapidly growing audiences
that pack auditoriums for their
coast to coast tours.

...Cook O f The Week
(Continued From Page IB)
1 cup Cool Whip (1 envelope Dream Whip can be used)
Mix cream cheeae and sugar completely. Fold in Cool Whip
and ipread over cooled crust.
Mix together in electric mixer until blended:
1 3 ounce box instant chocolate pudding
1 3 ounce box instant vanilla pudding
3 cups milk
Spread over cream cheese mixture. Cover smoothly the
entire cake and top with 1 cup Cool Whip. Take a Iroien Hershey candy bar and grate over the Cool Whip. Cover and
refrigerate over-night. Optional: Add a tew chopped nuts or
chopped maraschino cherries as a gamlnh
PEPPERSTEAK
Good lor Crock pot or for pressure cooker. Serves 6. Serve on
rice with Chinese noodles.
24-3 pounds round steak (cut In 1 inch squares)
' salt and pepper to taste
1 garlic clove, sliced thin
Put 4 cup vegetable oil in frying pan. Add meat, salt and
pepper andgatlic. Do not flour. Brown meat on all sides. Drain
all but I tablespoons oil and put Into cooker. Cut 2 green pep­
pers into bite sired chunks and 4 onions into quarters. Add to
meat. Add: 2- IS ounce cans tomatoes, 4 cup soy sauce and 2
tablespoons Worcestershire sauce. In pressure cooker cook 15
minutes after regulator starts Jiggling. In crock pot simmer 6
to S hours. In stewpot simmer about 90 minutes.
SCALLOPED CHICKEN STUKF1NC.
1 8 ounce package or 3 4 cups o( Herb stuffing mix
3 cups cubed cooked chicken
4 cup margarine
4 cup flour
4 cups chicken broth (save from bolting chicken)
4 tea^won sail
4 teaspoon pepper
B slightly beaten eggs
Prepare stuffing according to package directions. Spread
over bottom of 9 x 13 x 2 inch baking dish. Top stuffing evenly
wilh cubed chicken. Put oleo, flour, broth, salt and pepper in
sauce pan. Stir over medium licat until mixed well. Cool
allghtly. Stir a small amount ol broth mix Into the eggs and
blend well. Pour back into remaining broth and mix well. Pour
mixtuie over chicken in the baking dish. Bake at 325 degrees
for 45 minutes. Remove from oven and let stand 5 mlnules. Cut
into squares. Yield: 12 servings
SAUCE FOR CHICKEN SQUARES
I can undiluted cream of mushroom soup
4 cup chopped pimentos
I pint sour cream
Place Ingredient! In saucepan and stir over medium Iwal.
DO NOT BOIL. When bubbly remove from heat and top each
chicken square generously. Garnish with paprika or parsley.
GOLDEN TATER BAKE
I pounds Iroien hash brown potatoes, thawed &lt;use chopped
not polalo cakes)
4 cup melted butter
1 teaspoon salt
4 leaapoon pepper
4 cup finely chopped onions
1 can undiluted cream of chicken soup
1 pint sour cream
2 cups grated Cheddar cheese
After thawing potatoes, combine with butter. Add each
ingredient singly, mixing well after each. Put mixture in a 9 x
13 Inch baking dish. Mix 2 cupa crushed com flakes and 4 cup
melted butter together. Cover potatoes with this mixture.
bpnniUe with paprika. Bake at 350 degrees for 45 to 50 minutes.
This is a good dish to make ahead and freeu . II it is made for
the freeter bake ft to • minutes longer.

EVERYONE SAVESDURING
This month we re saying "Ihonks" lo
Amenca's Senior Citizens with special
savings for everyone 'Thanks" lor everything
you've done for us For everything you've
given us You're the folks who have made
Americo great "thanks1"

If you're 60or over,
you've got seniority
at Eckerd.

We re proud to ghe you a Senior CMen's
10% Discount on oil Eckerd Prescriptions
and vttomlns Eckerd Club members have
saved miDioni of dollars since Eckerd
pioneered Senior Cttuen discounts
yean ago

A special offer just
for our Senior Citizen
Club Members &amp;
new applicants.
Just stop by out Fharmocy and osk lor
valuable coupons worth dollars oft ol the
regular price ol P'etcrptions. health ond
beauty oids candy and mony other things
you need every day

Join today.
Senior Citizen Club
Membership is free.
r.

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SENIORCITIZEN CLUB
APPLICATION FORM
NAMt.

AOOBi ss.
VONAIUB).

SOCLAi SiCUBltV NUMNI.
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CW4 CIA lam----- waiven* mcs*ngloco I*-

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to tna p&lt;&lt;• o' on* Kodtcokw a owe* *nd
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�jn And Around G eneva

Evening Herskf, Sanford, FK

Wedneidiy, lept.

a:

K , t r i l —IB

The C.J, Halls Honored
On Golden Anniversary

It is fun to roll back the curtains of your
memory now and then - and that's just
what a special Geneva couple did Sent
13,
Mr. and Mrs. Curtis John Hall recalled
a Sunday 50 years before-in 1931-when
they were married by the late Judge
James G. Sharon in Sanford. Mrs. Hall
remembers, "We were married on the
13th and we had $13 between us—and I
thought we were rich!"
The Halls moved to Geneva from
Sanford In 1964 after Mr Hall's
retirement from a business lie had
operated for over 40 y e a rs —H all's
Garage on Celery Ave.
Their golden wedding anniversary was
celebrated at the home of their daughter

MR. AND MRS.
CURTIS JOHN IIAM

Lou
Childers

church. Those wanting to make
donations may contact the Rev. Gary
Isner, 349-5707, or Mrs. Gwen Gall, 3495467.

Geneva
Correspondent
349-5790
and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond
L Stevens i Barbara )of Geneva, and
included a turkey dinner prepared by
their children.
The three tiered wedding cake was
decorated by a staircase of red roses—
especially ordered to match the dozen
red roses presented to them from their
five children.
All of the couple's other children at­
tended including; Mr. and Mrs, Donald
D. Ensrud l Maggie) of Sanford; Mr. and
Mrs Curtis J. llall Jr. of Geneva; Mr.
and Mrs. John W. Green (Shirley) of
Sanford; and Mrs. Frances Williams,
along with 12 grand children and three
great-grands'
Also, several friends of the family were
on hand to congratulate this couple—and
to watch Mr. Hal! "cut a rug” with his
granddaughter, Joyce Ann Williams.
It is time again for the annual rum­
mage sale sponsored by the BMW of the
Geneva United Methodist Church. Those
who have lived in Geneva for awhile
know tliis is quite on event—not only is
this the major fund raiser for the women
of the church, it is a great place to get a
bargain.
Tlie sale will be held Friday and
Saturday, Oct. 9 and 10, from 9 a m. until
5 p in at tin* fellowship hall at Die

The Leisure Tim e softball team
stomped the M &amp; M’s Friday night,
Sept. 25, at the Red Bug field—the score
was 10 to 4. Fans got to watch coach,
Truby Kinnaird, hit two home-runs In one
evening, and tliis was a real morale
booster tor the team after losing their
first game the week before.
Everyone in Geneva is looking forward
to another trophy year for this team.

Don't forget that October is the month
the G eneva G arden Club resum es
business as usual. Their first meeting
will be held at the community hall on Oct.
7, at 10 a.m.
According to the president, Mrs. Dave
Brown I Jenny), this first meeting will be
mainly a business-type meeting, but it
would also be a good time for newcomers
to come and find out exactly what hap­
pens at a garden club.

October will be a really busy month in
Geneva—a lot of regular meetings, like
the Geneva Citizens Association meeting
on Oct, 5 at 8:00 p.in. at the community
hall.
And, the month will be climaxed by tlie
annual carn iv al sponsored by the
gcneological society which will be the
evening of Oct. 31. Be watching for more
details about this toward the end of the
month.

Roy Pounds, president of the B. Duke Woody
Hruucii It*, Fleet Reservation Association,
greets national officers of the Ladies
Auxiliary Fleet Reserve Association from left.
M arge M iller, Sanford, regional vice

Tlie big guns of the Ladies Auxiliary Fleet Reserve
Association were trained on the Fleet Home in Sanford
Saturday to participate in a "Salute in Ihe Lidies
Auxiliary." S|x insured by the B. Duke Woody Branch 147
The event honored the national president, Glenda
Kswine, and members of tier national board
The Lillies Auxiliary FRA with over 23,000 members is
a class of membership in the Fleet Reserv e Association It
is a national organization comprised of 250 Unites located
throughout the United Stales and overseas. Hie l . \ FRA

You're Going to Like Eckerd's Pharmacy Service.
Eckerd Pharmacists are highly-trained professionals, who are going to make sure you are completely satisfied I hey
take continuing education courses to maintain an up-to-date knowledge ot developments in dr ugs They always try to
save you money by offering Senior Citizen discounts and generic drugs whenever possible They will also save you time
by constantly checking stocks to keep the drugs you need on hand1

TACO SHELLS or
TACO SAUCE
VOUNCHOICK

2 /1 0 0

ftegloM'ee. ..........roe

™

BOUNCE

FABRIC SOFTENER

ARM&amp;HAMMER

GLADE SOLID

BAKING SODA

AIR FRESHENER

3 /10 0

40 SHEETS

o /Q O *

S .l. Priced

Mix or Match 12-ct Taco Shells or
8-or Mild Taco Sauce Limit 2

president. Southeast; Doris Paul, Sanford,
national vice president; tiloria Kswine.
national p resid en t; and Put (lurw ood,
Jacksonville, national financial secretary.

Sanford Fleet Salutes The Ladies

Sale Prices
good thru
Sat. Oct. 3rd

OLD EL PASO

Htxid Phofo br Tem Vincent ■

For static tree laundry Price reflect*
1b' oil label Limit t

to read numUse on patio

11EE1OOOFUB WORTH S2j00

m m cH U H insiifc
■ sc a t a y

was cliartered In 1933 to nid and assist the Fleet Reserve
Association, its members and their families.
The guest of honor, Gloria Kswine, is a long-time
resident of Rockledge, and Is a member of Cape
Canaveral Unit 263.
Site was installed as national presidenl I .A FRA at tlie
49lli Annual National Convention held in Atlanta, GA in
September. She lias been a continuous member of the
Lidies Auxiliary (or 29 years and previously held tlie
national offices of Southeast Region president, executive
secretary and vice president.

Wife's Plea:
Keep Off
The Grass
DKAll ABBY: Must at uur
friends arc in Die 25- to 35year-old age group, and
although they are lovely
people, they occasionally
smoke marijuuna (especially
the husbands! ns a casual
recreation. I’ve never ap­
proved of this, but I figure
what people do is their own
business. However, we have a
new baby and 1 do not want
her exposed to this —
especially when she gets
older. I’m sure our friends
will respect my wishes If I ask
them not to smoke put in our
home, but I can’t expect tliem
to abstain when we are guests
in their homes.
To itutke m atters worse, my
husband sometimes joins in
the pot-smuking, although he
never smokes it otherwise,
litis infuriates me because be
knows I hate it. He claims he
enjoys it once in a while, ami
it’s harmless.
Do you sec a solution here?
Our friends are nice people
and I'd hate to lose tliem over
this issue.
POTSHOT IN CALIFORNIA
DEAR POT SHOT: Your
biggest problem is persuudlux
your husband to change his
mind. Iteeenl studies show
that marijuana is not the
“ h arm less" drug II was
thought to be. H he’s not
willing to ueeepl that, ask him
to forgo that "enjoyment" as
a fuvor to you. ( Marriage is a
series ol Ira d i-o ifi, you
know.)
And as for your lovely
iriettds: Explain Dial you
don't waul lo he where
marijuana Is being smoked,
und 11 you lose their friend­
ship, It won't he the first
friendship that has gone up In
smoke. (Or gone to po{.|
DEAR ABBY: For years 1
constantly complained about
my health. I couldn't sleep,
couldn't stay awake und was
always taking pills. Then t
discovered Recovery, Inc.!
It's a wonderful organization
and I'm sure it saved my life.
1 his support group taugiil me
specific techniques
for
h a n d lin g s le e p le s s n e s s ,
depression, nervousness, etc.
You would do your readers
a wonderful service by telling
them about Recovery. Inc.

There are 1,000 groups in ihe
U S. ami Canada.
GRATEFUL AND FUNC­
TIONING
DEAR GRATEFUL: The
organization you praise Is
everything you said il Is.
Literulurr Is available by
writing to Recovery, Inr., 118
South
M lrhlgan
Ave.,
Chicago, III. 80803. It's non­
profit, so please send a long,
stam ped,
self-addressed
envelope.
DEAR ABBY: My husband
and I have two daughters,
ages 15 and 13. We live down
the street from my folks, and
wlten lite girls liave stopped to
see their grandmother, they
lutve been greeted with such
remarks as, "Gee, you sure
have u lot of pimples," and
"My, hut you're getting fat!"
L tsl week wlten my 13-year-.
old stopped to visit, my
motlier said fright in front of
some other
re la tiv e s),
“ G racious,
but
y o u 'r e ,
developing quite a bust!"
Now llte girls don’t want to
go there any more, and 1 can't
say as 1 blame them.
I told my mother Ute reason
the girls slopped visiting Iter,
and site said, “ It's a darned
shame they are so overly
sensitive. They had belter'
outgrow that."
Are my daughters, in your
opinion, "overly sensitive" —
or is there something wrong
wilii my mother?
"HOT" IN HOT SPRINGS
DEAR HOT: I t's your
mother. She sounds hopeless,
hut try lo edu cate her
anyway.
Getting married? Whether
you want a formal church
wedding or ■ simple, "do-

youi-own-thing"

ceremony,■'

gel Abby’i new booklet Scad1
tl plus a long, self-addressed,.1
stamped (IS reals) envelope'
to: Abby’i Wedding Booklet,'

130*0 Hawthorne Blvd., Suite '
M00, Hawthorne, Calif. MM.

Luncheon, Fashions

ANFORD; DO Slate St Sanford Pla/a
ONGWOOD: Hwy IM J at S.R. 4)4
4)4 Center, f** S.R. 4)4
ASSELBERRY: Seminole Plata 14]] Scmoran Blvd.
ITAMONTE SPRINGS. »74 Wait S R. 4)4,484 E. Altamonte Drive
RANGE CITY: Four Townes Shopping Center

The United Methodist Women of the First United Methodist
Church, Sanford, is sponsoring a luncheon and fashion show
Friday, between noon and 1 p.m., In the church fellowship hall
to help defray costa of renovating the church parlor.
Models will show fashions from loots' Place, Sanford.
According to the chairman, Kubye King, tickets will not be
sold at the dour, and no reservations will be taken. Tickets are
available through Mrs. Roger (Louise) H arris in Sanford.

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with Major Hoopla

OUR BOARDING H O U SE

Legol Notice

) BDRM. 1M| Bath K itchen F um .
carpeted Fenced in backyard
plenty ot shade trees Near
school in Ravenna P ark S175
mo *100 deposit M I 141)

CLASSIFIED ADS

IN T N I C IR C U IT COURT FOR
S EM IN O LE COUNTY, F L O R ID *
PROBATE D IVISIO N
F lit Num ber I I 44IC P
C iv ilia n
IN H I : ESTATE OF
/ E l l A M M E IE R
Deceased
NOTICE OF A D M IN IS TR A TIO N
1 t i m « ............................. I t c ■ Hi m
TO A LL PERSONS HAVIN G
J consecutive times SOci lino
C LA IM S OR
DEMANDS
A
GAINST THE ABOVE ESTATE
1:00 A M . - S: 30 P .M .
7 ccftMtuHve firms .......... Oc
AND A LL OTHER PERSONS IN
M O N D A Y th r u F R ID A Y 10 consecutive tim e t. jtc a line
TER ESTED IN THE ESTATE
S A T U R D A Y t N oon
tt.OO Minimum
YOU ARE H E R E B Y NOTI
1 Lines Minimum
F lE D i h t i the ad m inistra tion ol
ih r estate o l Z E lT A M M E IE R ,
d cce Jird . F ile Number I t 4 44 CP,
.s pending in Ih r C ircuit Court lo r
Seminole County, Florida, Probate
Division, Ih r address ol which it
S cm inolr County Courthouse, N
P a rt Ayrnue, Sanlord, FI M ) ) l.
The personal representative ol I he
esiaie is E v e l y n j f e n t o n
whose address is Route a. Oo« 7a),
Spring Hamm ock. Long wood, FL
9—Good Things to Eat
4 — P e r s o n a ls
31750 T h ena m ean dad dre ssol Ihe
personal representative's attorney
are sel fo rth below
A ll persons having claim s or WHY BE LO N E LY ? W rite "G et
BLUE C R A B ! LIV E
A M e te " Deling Service. AM
demands aqainst the estate are
OR ORESSED
ages
P
O
B
o
i
40)1,
Clearrequired. W ITH IN THR EE MON
) D A Y S M .U I l i l t .
w ater, FI. 1)111.
THS THOM THE DATE OF THE
FIRST P U BLIC AT IO N OF THIS
N ight Stalker (Denny)
NOTICE, lo tile With the clerk ot
M A K E r o o m * r o STORE
You're m y everything You're
Ihe above c o u rt a w ritte n
YOUR
W IN T E R
IT E M
my hopes, m y dreams, my
stalament o l any c la im or demand
$ . .SELL "D O N ’ T N E ED S "
laughter, m y tun You mean so
they may nave Each claim must
FAST W ITH A W ANT AO
much to me Y ou're so Special
be ,n w ritin g and m ust Indicate the
Phone T il M i l or 1)1 M f) end
lo me, I love you more then
basis tor the claim , the name and
• frie ndly Ad V ito r w ill help
anyone
or
anything
else
address ot the c re ditor or his agent
you.
I Love Y o u ll
or attorney, and the amount
Spit
F
ire
claim ed II the c la im Is not yet
(Sharon)
due. the dale when It w ill breome
U — In stru c t tons
due shall be stated II Ihe claim is
lo nely
W rite " B r in g in g
lontinqenl or unlictuidaled, the
People
to g e th e r
D a tin g
Tennis Instruction — U S P T A
nature o l Ihe un certainty shall be
Servlrer A ll ages A Sen or
C ertified Group or P rivate
slated II the c la im IS secured, the
C iluens P O. 60« H U . Winter
lessons Children a specially
security shall be described The
Haven, Fie. IT*K&gt;
claim ant shall deliver lu flk ie n l
Doug M a lic ttw tk l
IT) TU I.
copies of the claim to the clerk lo
everV
D AY IS BARGAIN
6—Child C are
enable Ihe Clerk lo m all one copy
DAY IN THE WANT ADS 177
to r a th personal representative
M
il
or
131
fffl
A ll persons Interested In Ihe
FOR the U ltim a te in
estate 10 whom a copy ol this
Child Cere A Child's
Notice ot A dm inistration lias been
_______W orld ITT 14)4________
mailed are required. W ITH IN
E VE N IN G care S p m tp ) e m
THREE MONTHS FROM THE
Casselberry area
DATE OF THE FIRST PUBLICA
S em inole M e m o ria l H o sp ita l
TION OF THIS NOTICE, lo tile Call evenings I ) I I M
o v e rlo o k in g B e a u tifu l La ke
any ob|ectlons they may have Ihel
Monroe Is currently slattin g a
SPUR OF THE MOMENT
ch a lle n g e the v a lid ity o l the
Stand by Pool tor RN'S and
BAB Y S ITTIN G
decedent's w ill, ihe g u e liflc e lio n t
L P N ' s Y ou w ill receive fu ll
ITT tie *
ol trie personal re p re s e n ljtiv e , or
pay during orientation and w ill
Ihe venue or ju risd iction of the
then be placed on P R N status
Baby S itting
court
and called In as needed T h ills
M y home E iperle nced
ALL CLAIMS. DEMANDS. AND
a great opportunity lo loin a
» I I 7 t ) ___________
OBJECTIONS NOT SO F IL E D
g ro w in g o r g a n lfa lio n , and
W ILL BE FOREVER B ARRED
work w ith a highly dedicated
d e s tin e d Ads ere the im a lle tl
Dale ot Ihe t i n t publication ol
big newt item s you w ill lln d
team ol professionals
this Notice of A dm inistration
anywhere
September )J, ITI1
We otter an e ic e ltm f salary and
Evelyn J Fenlon
b e n e fits , p a ckage
I t In
As Personal Representative
iA-Haafttift Beauty
le re slrd please contact our
ot Ihe Estate ol
Personnel d ire ctor i t :
ZE lTA M M E IE R
COMPLETE BEAU TY FA C IA L.
Deceased
BY A P P O IN T M E N T ONLY
ATTORNEY FOR PERSONAL
m IffS e r M fT ill
R EPR E S EN TATIV E
W IL L IA M L COLBERT,
t i a i E . i i t st.
9—Good Things to Eat
ESQ
Sanlord. Fla rida D IM
p o no* mo
m i n t i i i n i if i
SANFORD. F L T im
Bananas
Tibs IDO
Telephone (T O S IIT T IIM
Cukes
J tor I CO
Equal
O
pportunity Em ployer
Publish September I ) . TO. I f ( l
Peppers. Large
Stor 1 00
DEM I I I
W Lopes
each )Tc
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • a
Green Onions
I tor )tc
Pie P um pkins
each )»c
ST AT » MB NT OF OW NERSHIP
Beet Slake tomatoes
lb Me
M A N A 0 1 M K N T AND
Big Rome Apples
Tibs 100
CIRCULATION
Gold Del A pplet
Jibs 100
I Required by i f U I C la m
Good salary, h o spital!jalion . I
Muf iu A pplet
Tibs I 00
I Title o l P ublication: The
RedOel Apples
4 Ib l 100
week paid vacation every a
Evening H erald
Fresh Apple
m o nths.
E x p e rie n c e
nol
7 Date o l F ilin g : September TO,
Cider
ne cessary. F o r in te rv ie w
■ygal I f f
ITU
phone the manager at:
Greens
a bunch
Me
I Frequency o l Issue: Oaily
Celery
) lo r I 00
Eacepl Saturday A Christmas.
A irp o rt B ird 44
W atermelons
ID 4 H I
each I d*
A No of issues Published An
Swt Potatoes
M M ID
C ilto f berry 44
lb Jfc
nually I I )
Tim Buc Toe Corn
4 lor m
Celery Ave. 44
m am
B Annual Subscription Price
M IA M I
S Lbt Potatoes
Me
L ik e M a ry 44
US 00
4 Location ot known o tlic e ol
Wa Taka Food Stamp*
publication (Street, C ity, County.
LE R O Y FARMS
Stateand Zip Code), TOO N French
RN OR LPN
SR 4*
A v e , Sanlord Seminole County.
4 11 and I I I S hill. Full tim e
Florida 3)7)1
W at*on'* Old Farm
A p p ly In p tr4 o n S anlord
5 Location ot the headquarters
Nursing Convalescent Cenlgr,
or generel business offices ol the
fSO M eltonvllla Ave
publishers (N ol p rin te rs ). Same
as above
RIGHT nuw we need a lew good
4 Nemes and complete ad
sales people who have the
dresses o l publisher, editor, and
NOTICE OF
am bition and dedication to
managing editor
succeed. II th a t’s you. then
S H E R IF F ’ S S A L *
P u b lis h e r W ayne D D oyle.
NOTICE IS H E R E B Y G IVEN
we’re prepared lo otter you
Sanlord. Florida 37)71
that by virtu e ol that certain W rit
real rewards and Ihe methods
M a nagin g
E d ito r
Thomas
ot Execution issued out ol and
to get them For Interview,
Giordano. Sanlord. Florida T il) I
under the seal o l Ihe C ircu it Court
please ca ll Century I I . Hayes
) Owner [ It owned by a to r
ol Orange County, Florida, upon a
Realty Services. Inc , Sanlord
poration. its name and address
Imai lodgement rendered in Ihe
H I 1 0 » ___________________
must be staled and also Im
aloretaid court on Ihe 3rd day ot
mediately thereunder Ihe names
M
E
C H A N IC
e a c e lle n l
op
June. A D n i l . In that certain
p o rtun lly Imm ediate opening
and addresses ol stockholders
case entitled, Jack C Gaddy,
ownlnq or holding I percent or
M u ll
have
e xp e rie n ce
P la in till. vs Autom ated Intensive
rebuilding carburetors, knows
more ot total amount ot stock. II
Fish F a rm ing. Inc . a Florida
A
C
A
electrical,
need good
not owned by a corporation, Ihe
c o rp o ra lio n , D efendant, w hich
diagnostic man Top wages,
names and addresses ol the In
aloresaid W rit ot Execution was
p a id
v a c a tio n ,
e x c e lle n t
dividual owners must be given It
delivered lo me as S herill ot
w o rk in g co n d itio n s
O nly
owned by a partnership or other
Semmole County. Flo rida, and I
unincorporated firm , itsne m e and
e« per fence need apply
have levied upon Ihe following
1)4 J)f4
address, as well as that ot each
d e scrib e d p ro p e rty owned by
individual m u tt be given I
Autom ated Intensive Fish Far
IMPORTANT
The M a r tin s v ille
B u lle tin ,
mmg. Inc , said property being
We n e rd m e c h a n lc i
One
M a rtinsville, V irg in ia .
located in S em inole C ounty,
automatic transm ission man
I
Known bondholders, mor
F lo rid a ,
m o re
p a r tic u la r ly
Two lin e m e ch a n ics. E i
tg a g e rs , and o th e r s e c u rity
described as lotlows
per lanced only TM MSI E al
holders owning or holding 1 per
The le ase hold In te re s t o l
)14 ask tor Bob Good
c rn l or more ol lo la l amount of
Automated Intensive Fish Far
bonds, m o rtg a g e s or o th e r
mlng, Inc . in that certain property
MAN q u a lilird to do carpentry A
securities t i l there are none, so
described as. The East 1) ol the
maintenance Apply in person
tle le 1
SW '« ot the NW '* o l the NW
aoo w nth st
Section I I Township 10 South,
■A Totel No Copies
Range ) ) East H ess the South 144
printed (Net P r r tIR u n )
IM )
★
★
★
★
★
★
★
★
leet)
B Paid C irculation
and The West 1a ot the East 1&gt; ol
AAA
E
M
P
L
O
Y
M
E
N
T
I Sales through
Ihe NW ' . ot the NW 1. ol Ihe NW
Dealers and ca rrie rs,
CALL E A R LY
Section 71. Township 70 South,
street vendors end
Range ) ) East (less Road Right ot
M IS 174
10) I
counter sales
W ar over the North P art ol
LOW
F
E E .T E R M S
) M a il subscriptions
m
Property
C Total paid C irculation
•no
YOU D O N 'T PAY
and
D Tree D istribu tion
E ight ( I I 1) leet tanks w ith
TH E F E E T IL L
by m a il, c a rrie r Or
plum bing and controls
other m eant samples,
WE O ETYO U
Well and Pump w ith Supply
com plim entary, and
Pressure Tank
T H E JOB
700
other tree copies
Fence Around P roperly ,
E Totel d istrib ution
and the undersigned as Sheriff ol
•450
Just A Few Ot Many
iS u m o l C and Dl
Seminole County, Florida, w ill at
F Copies nol distributed
I I 00 A M on Ihe I f lh day ol Oc
Legal Secretary
1 O tlice use. lett
tober, A O I f t I. o ile r tor ta le and
Locatl Challenging!
over, unaccounted.
sell to the highest bidder, lo r cash,
150
spoiled a lte r p rin tin g
sublect lo any and a ll e s lltln g
D enial A isista n l
I R rtu rn t Iro m news
liens, at Ihe From I West) Door ot
Some esperience. Good Opp
341
agents
Ihe Seminole County Courthouse in
Open fm m e d ia ltly .
G Total (Sun o l E.F 1
S anfo rd. F lo rid a , the above
and 1 should equal
described personal properly.
S alts
net press run shown
That said s e lf is being made to
Local Company
14*1
H I*
satiSly the te rm s ot seid W rit ot
Good position
1 c e rtily that ihe statements
Execution
mads by me above are correct and
John E Polk, Sheriff
M achinist
complete
Seminole County, Flo rida
Good Spot, good pay
Wayne D Doyle
Publish September I ) . TO. Oc
Publisher
lober ). U . w ith the sale on Oc
O rivffS
Publish Sept TO. If4 l
taper If. t f l l
Local F irm Steady work
DEM 1)0
DEM N

Seminole

O rlando - Winter Park

322-2611

RATES

DEADLINES

Noon The Day Before Publication

According to-Eh* Tirms of London, ( h in ts who ftn
uchad tha officai of G am ti and P uiflta, a Britiah
* * thousand
KXJian _pounds
publication, baagod aanraJ hundred
was in play mo nay.
m cold aeih. All of it,

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

31-Aporlmtnts Fumtohod

A D V E R T IS IN G
Salespeople
needed in DeLand. Deltona,
Sanlord. and Altam onte areas
P leasant p e rs o n a lity and
co m m u n ic a t I on
s k ills
n e cessary, c a r re q u ire d
Encetlenl earnings Call Stan
E ldndge, Sales M gr at (f04l
))J 1100 Call person lo person
collect

A partm ent Tor Rent
1 Bedroom Furn
M l am
CUTE E fficiency SlfOmo
U tilitie s not included
_______ I SS4 4SM_________
: urmshed apartm ents lo r Senior
C itite n t Tie Palm etto Ave , J
Cowan No phone calls

F R A M IN G C a rp e n te rs
Ei
oerienced Only Musi have
(ooli and fra n ip rirT .il,on
IT1S44)

31A—Duplexes

LOOKING lo r lom eone who is
w illin g lo spend a filtle . lo
make a lot Call M ) 4 if ) tor
appointment

I BDR. a ir ww carpet, stove,
re tr,g w d hook up, no pets
t i l l w ith lease A sec 1711T41

AVON REPRESEN TATIVES
The P art Time Career
444 jo*’ ? - Collect n s 1701
TY PIST

M a tu re

SANFORD spanous 3 bdrm . 1
bth. a ir, drapes, STM mo +
dep ) i f a m ____________

and

32-Moure* UofumMwjT

a c c u ra te M e d ic a l, pension
and p ro fit sharing plans
United Sot vents 373 Aft*a

j bd rm , 1 B. w ith
double car garage, In
Dellone Call 1)4 l«M

LAYOUT. Fitter. Welder. Wtear
A Brake Operators. F irst and
Second Shifts, Top Pay, Good
Benefits, Call Florida iron
Works Inc 37/ 0700

7 BORM. I bth newly decorated
intide A out. fenced yard,
w a te r, r e lr lg e , stove fu r
nnhed Near New Bayhead
Tennn Club o lf Lake M a ry
B lvd
tlf)
f ir s t A la st
references Available Oct 1st
call 31) TIM

PART F U L L TIM E
RN LPN AIDES
Quality Professionals Needed to
meet help needs of Seminole
County H o sp ita ls N u rsin g
Homes
HIGHEST PAY IM M E D IA T E PAY
On Call Medical Services
Call 423 1447

LONGWOOD ) Hdr H r Rath,
F lo rid a R oom , C a rp e tin g ,
fenced yard, w ith citrus Ir r e i
U tility R m
and C a rp o rt.
E .lre m e ly cle a n IT I0 mo plus
Security Deposit Call between
1 A ) p m 11) 4454

W AREHOUSEM AN
fa c to ry
experience a must
Heavy
liltin g required Full benefits,
a p ply »n person. U n ite d
Solvents 1107 A irp o rt Blvd
----- — . . .
M A N A G EM EN T trainee apply
in person to r g re a t op
portum ty Casa M«a P u n e ra
171 100ft

SANFORD - ) B drm — |V»
Bath, Cent HA. w all to w all
c a rp e tin g .
U t ilit y
Rm ,
Garage. Large corner lot, In
n ice n e ig hbo rho od
V e ry
Clean JTIO mo +■
Security Deposit Call between
_ &gt; A ) p m TIT 44 la
“ A T T fiA C fiv E 1 M r , |i., Mw;
CI1A. w asher d r y e r, con
vrmently located STti

HAIR STYLIST wanted
yyilhfollow ing Imm ed
_ t a l l Delores 171 7510_____

Seminole
M f)» t
SAV ON RENTALS R E A L T O R '
4 BDR . ) blh cent H A Lake
M ary. Sanlord area MOO mo F
Deposit M l 10*4
) BDR. 1 bth 13)0 month
1st A last « security
___________ MT 4441

33—Houses Furnished
C A S S E LB E R R Y N ic e ly F u r
nished House p riv ile g e s .
Senior C itiie n s W elcom e
Close lo churches, shopping
Transportation It necessary
3)101)1

34—Mobile Homes
71 FT M O BILE Home on St
Johns R iver Near Geneva
Scenic Location Semi P rivate
D riv e
A ll U tilitie s paid
Adults only SIM Mo M fia iS

Harold H all

THE C ENTURY 11 SYSTEM
HELPS more people buy and sell
more real estate than anyone
elst in A m eric*. Call to fa r
amt Irt It w ork tor you Call
H I 1050
Hayes Real Estate
Services. Inc
S T lW lIth St
Sanlord
Each o tlice is Independenily
owned and operated

REALTY, INC.
R E ALTOR

OWNER W ILL FINANCE J
B drm .
I
B ath
P a rtly
remodeled Hes Fireplece end
carpeting SOU on Hwy 44 W.
Only STS.TOO
ACREAGE
I 4 Acre
1’ . Acres
1 Acres
n ic e

COUNTRY ATMOSPHERE in
town P lnecre it area I Bdrm
L a rg e L iv in g Rm, Only
S IM M
OWNER FINAN C IN G av &lt;1 on
this lovely I bdrm B rick home
w D rapes,
Range.
Regrigerator F Fam Rm on
deep f * l t 1) 1.foo

*9.000
SI1.W0
H f.» 0

starter

home

C LE A N , C L E A N ,
C LE A N ,
Describes this eesy living
Heme end 111 neighborhood
Panelled Fern Rm. E at in
K itc h e n w ith Range and
R efrigerator Big Bdrm s I
U tility Bldgs. + fO iD I Landscaped le t te r tlf.M O ll

Located in good neighborhood
Hat la rg t attic tor additional
bdrm Only 115,100
REALTOR T lla w i Day or Night

ROBBIE'S
REALTY
REALTOR, MLS
13(1 S. French
Suite 4
Sanlord

N EED P R IM E EXPO SU R E) 3 I
Zoned R C I, US Ft Frontage
on Hwy E ic e lle n t location
Priced el 144,TOO

24 HOUR Q 322-9283

OVER 1500 sq II in this 4 1 with
new C ta Heel, big bedrooms.
Fam Rm. I S i t l scr porch f
heavily treed lot lo r only
144.f 001!

37—Business Property
For rent or lease - 10.T10 sq It
industrial or warehouse f l l
W 1st St., Sanlord M l 1100
SANFORD
7,000 sq. I t It. Industrial or
Com m ercial Building on 1) f l .
1,000 ft In office space Call
m 1)10 or 1)4 4141

37-B—RentaIOffices
SANFORD
7000 iq . It. It. Industrial or
Comm ercial B uilding on l ) f l .
I.0C0 ft. In office space Cell
M l 1)10 or (14 4141.
O ffice Spece
For Leese
•TO 7)1)

323-5774

" H O U IE y o u r F A M ILY
EASY
A SS U M P TIO N
Low
payments 1 B drm Near new
H o sp ita l
ZONEO
COM
M E R C IA L. Super potential.
Only 137.100

STEM PER AGENCY

1 BDRM House T ra ile r P artly
furnished w ith a ir, fenced
patio TM 54I f

mi

P0MZK HALnr

C O M P LE TE LY R E M O D ELED
1 U nit A p a rtm rn t House w ith
le rg e ro o m s , p id d le Ians,
sm oke a la rm s , c a r p r t F
P o tilfv r cash llo w i Mt.eoon

Reg ■ e e lE Ita te Broker 1
tv e m -m a
1)3 tSTS
NEW LISTINGS
HIDDEN LA K E Clean as a
whistle 3 Bdrm . 1 Bath Split
Plan has many extras. in
eluding Paddle Fans, home
w arranty, clubhouse pool and
good schools Excellent low
interest assumable mortgage
I I I . MO

CALL HALL
D E L IG H T F U L D eB ary
e ilr a
large 3 bdr. 7 bin home with
lots ol closets, on t , acre
wooded, lake Iron! lot Dream
k it, r e t r ig , is la n d stove,
washer A dryer, cent
vac
system, w w carpet, I4i3t)
screened porch, patio, and
closed garage. 14),500

SUNLAND Lovely 3 B drm , I'y
Bath, dream home can be
yours tor LOW DOWN Cent
HA Huge oak trees, tireplece
and fa m ily rm alt included
Great buy at Mf.OGO

FOUR TOWNES
R E ALTY INC BROKER
MS 41)0 anytim e

CONSULT OUR

AM IN TE R E S T E D in pa rt lim e
I T7 or fu ll tim e • 5 faking care
of the ailing in their home
Sanford Please call 173 4541

BUSINESS SERVICE USTING

2 4 -B u tirm s
Opportunltto*

A N D LET AN EXPERT D O THE JOB

WOMEN tire d ol 40 hr wk
event lo be own boss, choose
.ou r own t i n Moke e.ce lle nl
money For into rm allo n 373
10ft. T4f i l l l ott 1 P m

To List Your Business...
Dial 322-2611 or 831-9993

H E R A LD PAPER ROUTE
FOR SALE
177 H IT___________
TWO questions: W ill you be
fina ncially independent In 1 lo
i yea rs) Are you paid whet
you ere w orth? II nol cell M )

Additions A
Romodtling

C lo c k R o p o l r

L a n d s c a p in g

BA IHS. kitchens, rooting, block,
co n cre te , w indo w s, edd l
room, Iree estim ate 31)1443

G W ALTNEY j e w e l e r
» 4S P ark Ave
n ik » f

LAB OB T R B I IN STALL | «
Lendl taping, o ld Lawns Re
pieced 1 4 5 1 st

m
w------*■ - API---A-

L a n d c to a r in g

Plumbing

31—Apt*. AHoums

ToShare

YOUNG C hristian Men to shere
my ) Odrm House w ith seme
&gt;i rent is i f ! 44S 4T4S

AlrCondN toning

29-R oo m *
SANFORD Rees w kly 1
monthly retes U til me Kit
W0 Oek Adults S41 )SS1

~

Chris w ill service AC’s, re frlg.
fre eiers, w ater coolers, m is t.
Call M3 471)

» AparTmanti

Unfumtofd
L U T lT R T
F a m ily &amp;
Poolside 1
Cove Apts
weakens.
)

B*Mrty Care

J ft'A R T M E N W *
A d u lta section
B d rm t. M aster's
171 7TOO Open on

TOWER'S BEAU TY SALON
FO RM ER LY H a rrle tl’a Beauty
Nook ) t t E 1st S t. M l 1)41

Bdrm I ' , bath. Fireplace.
Form al Dining R . Modern
kitchen. Cent HA. Quiet end
wooded MT M il ett I

Boarding A Greondng

BAMBOO COVE I bedroom
e p ll Available Manager on
premises. M ) 1)40

A nim al Haven Boarding and
G ro o m in g K ennels. Shady,
insulated, screened. Ily proof
inside, outside ru n t FAna
Also AC cages We cater lo
your peta
S to rtin g stud
re g istry. Ph M l 1)11

R idgew ood A r g il 1 B drm
Apts tro m S T t) ) B drm also
avail Pool, tennis court M )
♦410.
la te y cevn tfy fiv te a t ) B dnii
A pts. O ly m p ic s i. P eel.
SAeeandeah V illage Ope* f-a.
EMW L
M fllo n v llle
T ra ce
A p is.
Spacious, modern } Bdrm , I
Bath apt C a rp e te d , k it
equipped,
C H AA
N ear
hospital 1 taka Adults, no
pets 1170. 317 m i
M a rin e rs V illage on Lake Ade l
bdrm Iro m lISO. 3 bd rm Irom
I l f * Located i f f ! iust South
ol A irp o rt B ird m Sanlord A ll
Adults M l *4)0

Make your Budget go further,
shop Ihe C liililie d Ads every
day

I

E t o c t r ic a l

When you place a Classified Ad
In The Evening Herald, stay
close lo your phone because
something wonderful I t about
to hapoen

H in d y m a n

Painting, carpentry, a ll types ol
homo repairs Coll lo r tree
•atlm ofa. M l m i

( to u tin g

i f a r . e-

-** f * ' »

1.' -&gt; *

YAR D. construct ion and
m u c clean up
Call anytim e M l (1)0

M E lN T Z E R TILE
New or re p a ir, le a k , Showers our
specialty. 11 y r i E ip Sat B 4 I

"

A

H o m o Im p ro re m o n f

C E N TR AL F LO R ID A MOMS
IM P R O V E M E N T *
Painting. Rooting, Carpentry
Lie. Bonded A Guaranteed
Free E allm ates M t- its t
J A * Hama Im provem ent Carpentry w ork ge any type
Roof repairs, gu tter w ork,
pointing tin ie r lor o r e* ter lor 1.
plum bing, special lie in m obile
homo re p a irs A root coating,
and wead patio Packs. Fraa
estim ate M l 4054

»

F re d d ie Robinson P lu m b in g
R e p a irs,’ ta u c e tl. W
C
Sprinklers. M l 1110, MlDrOe
M odernlitng your Hom e) Sell no
longer needed but useful items
w ith e Classified Ad

Acreage A lot clear.no
F ill d irt lop soil
for s e lf M ) 3411

FONSECA P LU M B IN G
Con
struclion, Repairs. Emergen
cy. Lie . Bonded. Ins M l a0)S

L a w n M a in t o n a n o t
P lum bing re pair — alltype s
w ater heaters 1 pumps
313 441)

DUNN R IT E La w n S ervice.
Mow, edge’, trim , vacuum,
mulch, sod Reas 111 i m

Rtmockling

Quality e le ctrica l w ork n yrs.
ee perle nce. M inor repairs Is
complete w irin g M l 0114

Building Contractor

Coaipteie Ceram ic Tito ie r v .
walla, tlaera, countertops, re
model, re p a ir F r. ta t. tie a r il.

BDR. w w carpet, close in
applic. no pets H I wks rent +
tec. M1S44I. M l P alm etto

1 M AN Q U A LITY OPERATIONS
f yrs y ip Patios, Driveways,
f i t Wayne Seel M r m i

Y a rd W a r*

CaremkTIla

_______i ait ini_______

Concrete W ork, looters, floors A
pools La n d sca p in g A to d
• w fk F r e t a i l M l M01

Snow H ill Kennel otters Cat *
Dog Fleo Beths IS up. IS
Hour. F u ll S ervke. 14)1111.

E m Corao. S la te C e rtifie d
B u ild in g
C o n tra c to r.
Residential or Com m ercial.
New or Remo deled M l 0404

Class Hied a d sta rve the buying A
selling com m unity every day.
Read A use them oflan

t O n C T f f ? WOTK

v—
•

3 BDR . t bth, assume FHA mtg
tl.WO dn U1.500 total. e«c
fond move rig h l in 111 71)4

M ) 6570

SANDALWOOD V illas A irp o rt
Blvd., Sanford 1 A drm , 1 Ba
The R eally Store. Realtors

*

7 BO R M , In G ro und Pool
Country Club M anor. Santoro
Fenced, ilW mo 1st. last and
1100 Deposit 44) MOO

21—S ituations W anted

Sanford — l bdrm ♦ dan.
c e ra m ic
b a th ,
fu r n itu r e
available, adults. SMI mo. I
■041 tea)

AAA E M P L O Y M E N T
HS-SI74

Eves M l 0411
707 E, l l l h SI

SAV-ON-RENTALS

legol Notice

I t l ) F ra n c k A r t .

3144 S. French M i a m
A lte r H our): ) i f fOOS, 1)1-4771

Inc.

323-7133

SANFORD Apartm ent
1 Bdrm , Porch, Kids, IHO

STORE CASHIERS

Many Many Mora

HAL C0LBIKT REALTY

SAN FORDUNFURN APT.
T rm i. epplic . k id s .I M I

UN'S A N D IP N ^

Auto Counter Person
N icapiace Start im m adiately

E icellent Business opportunity
in oood location
Compete
stock included in this priced
redjeed lo SHOO

S A N F O R O O P T.T O B U Y I
Ib d r caroprt. kldso k S150
Cottage, tu rn n o d rp SMI

Sunday - Noon Friday

SEMINOLE M EM ORIAL
HOSPITAL

ALLFLORIDA REALTY
OF SANFORD REALTOR

Associates Inc Realtors
MTSfAO

A ffordable
Sanlord
Homes lo r Rent See Now
Brand New
141) M a rshall Si.
U I I mo
T B drm , 1 4 Bath Fenced 13)1
E llio tt 1)75 mo
3 Bdrm , I ' r Bath Fenced ITO)
M ontetum a 1)10 mo
H D R E A L T Y INC.
REALTOR
•le a se s

HOURS

4) -Houses

41—Houses
PARK PLACE

LOCH ARBOR 11, CHA, carpel,
garage porch, fence, shade,
MS0 a deposit Phone S3) J0f4

831-9993

CLASSIFIED DEPT.

32—Houses Unfurnished

M a s o n ry

Romodoling Specialist

BRICK, block, fireplace, pellos.
barbecue g rills , and repairs.
Call anytim e M3I150

W ehe ndlt the
Whole B a llo t We*

B. E. Link Const.
322-7039
M in t- U - L o c k

FinaneIno Available

NEW Concrete Buildings, a ll
llie s i n A up At 1 4 A SR 44. 14 indu strial P ark. 313 0041. ’

Roofing
ROOFS, leaks re paired. Replace
ratten eaves and shingle work,
license d, I M u re d , bended.
M ika m a n

N u r s in g C a n to r

OUR R A TE S A R E LOWER
Lakeview N ursing Canter
9 lt E. Second 11, Sanlord
MldTO)

Christian Rooting. IT y r i t i p
1st S7S4. tr t e t i t Retooling,
specieliie In re p a ir w ork A
new rooting,_______________

1

SOUTHERN ROOFING I I y
e*p . re rooting, leok ip eci
ill
D ependable A honi
price Day or night M l I)

M in t in g

Hallman Pointing A Repairs.
Duality w o rt. Fraa E al, disc
te Seniors au se fO Rotor.

SMdbluting

Vacation tim e Is here ..pet what
you need to r a happy tim e w ith
a Class 11led Ad.

MNDSLASTINO
DAVIS WELDIHO
m-stff, SAN FOR 0

_

f t o ln t in g A a r

Treo Sorvict

P N W H fy fii1C J tft f l i n g

No job loo large or sm all.
OuAllty a must Call M1007I.
References F r. 1st.

**« *« •

Frog E u . M l 0 » )

.
I

»•

V*

*

i

�/

S ^

Evgrtirn Horakl, Sanford, FI.

41—Houm

41—Houses

W IN T E R SPRINGS The
H ig h la n d s
assum e
» s
»S.*a&gt;. 017 mo 01,000 dn.
owner holds 113.000 J bdr. 3
Wh, drapes re*rig, yas heat,
great rm . s tr porch, dbl
oa rage , c o m m u n ity pool,
tennis, biking, cluh hnuse
33* oass

CREATIVE
F in a n c in g '
Academy Manor. 3 Bi*rm. V ,
Ba New carpet A paint,
carport Rear tented Big lot
139 900 331 0031

REALTY, INC.
LOW IN TE R E S T t Owner w ill
finance ) bdr home w i'h u 000
dn at 13 percent ml tor TOyrs
Call today to r d e tails' 174.900
M IN I RANCH 6 wooded acres
surround a 4 bdr, ) bth
Builders custom home B uilt In
bookcases, 7 Screened patios,
fountain A solarium E itra s
galore! SI79.900
CALL

323-7843
REALTORS

BATEM AITREALTY
Lie Real Estate Broker
1440 Senior dA ve
1 ACRE Near new Hospital
Good Potential Priced Right
Terms I77.SOO
APART BLDG W X Lot Good
Terms S36 900

BLDG

Terms

STENSTROM
REALTY - REALTORS

O STEEN 1 ACRES
PINES. SCRUB OAK
TERMS

paved

Sanford’s Sales Leader
w e LIST AND S IL L
MORE HOMES THAN
ANYONE IN THE
SANFO EO AR EA
GORGEOUS S B drm . ) Bath
Heme on large corner lot.
Your own pool and patio Slone
F P L,F or. Oin Rm, Eat tn K it,
CHA, WWC, and tots more
191.SN.

M A Y FA IR V ILLA S ! 1 A 3
Bdrm ., 1 Bath Condo Villas,
n o il to May la ir Country Club
Salad your lot, floor plan t
interior decorl Q uality con.
it r u d t d by S hotm aktr tar
147,100 A upl

SEIGLER REALTY
BROKER
3765 HWY. 17-92
321-0640

ESTATE
R EALTOR. 37774ff
real

1(1 \ l

JMV0041

MLJL

A ttar hrs 1717IS4 and 173 4117

MI-4641

RIA LTO *

|

V 977

GOVERNMENT
SURPLUS
c a r s
AND TRUCKS NOW
A VA ILAB LE
through
government sates, under sioo
Call I 714 549 0741 E *t loo tor
tou r dire ctory on how to
Purchase
71 T BIRD Loaded New Tires.
Blue w ith W hile Top. or 74
Cutlass Supreme No money
down )7 ! mo 119 9100 414 4601
Dealer
1974 M A / D A RX 4
station Wagon S700
131 0777

S Sp. AC, AM FM , Naw
Tlras. Reduced To

(K in g Cab) A T , R«i61°,
Camper Top. Ready To Of -

Pick-Up Truck, 4 Sp., Sltroo
Cassette. Only

4 Door
Luxury Interior
1 Owner

*2995

*3795

191} CADI LLAC Fleetwood 4
Door Sedan Fu lly equipped
E»ceilent o rig in a l condition
11191 111 !U 4
1916 BUICK Skylark Clean
Owner. Auto AC. PS, New disc
brakes, lilt wheel AM FM
Stereo radio Custom interior.
Vm yl lop new steel be ltrd
radlals New exhaust V, *»«n
*0 Mo Battery Rust proof
17771 101 747 1140 or 1714110

5 Speed, Air

OPFN
t

1973 Nova Chav.

...

*1295

1968 Rambkr
EXTRA
NICE

*1200

SA N FO RD
M O TO R CO
A M C JE E P
104 S F r e n c h A v *
131 4111

1970 VW BUG New sticker, ru n t
well Needs some body repair.
SI9S 111 1774

17,000 M ilat
Mini Condition

9

5

III 9 P M
ft P M

in

5 I Q Q C
V Y 7 J

onlv*

2 Door, Low Mites
1 Owner
Loaded With Options

C /i f
ONLY

A P
# 3

s

ONL Y
" LT

$ C £ O C
v O # J

o

u

o ,J 2 7 9 S

1979 CHEVEnE
O N L Y ^ 4 9 9 5

; r W b.
Extra Ctean

ONLY

I 1 I

$ 4 2 9 5

I IN I

j
-FORD

B A IR D -R A Y D VTSUN
cat

*1295

Dapan-

units to chooso from

4444 H W Y 17 92
O M I L E N O R T H O F H W Y 434)
L O N G W O O D 831 13IB

1974 CodDoc

1976 VW RABBIT

*1995

*3495

7

1980 TOYOTA TERCEL

1975 CHEV.
(: » Van AT, AC,
dlabte. Only

o , L, $ 4

1979 CHRYSLER NEWPORT

'Honay Baa” , Cheep-ToIIleap. Only

m .B.

1978 DATSUN

JEEPS,C ARS.PIC KU PS
trom t i l
A v j.la o le al local
Gov t Auctions For D irectory
call Surplus Oata Center 41!
110 7400.

*3595

1979 CAPRICE CLASSIC

“

*3195

*4595

1978 DATSUft1

1971 BUICK LeSabre 4 dr . a ir.
ra d io , pow er s te e rin g A
brakes, e*cellent condition
137 7444 a ll 1 10 p m 1991

1971 Ford
Fiesta Ghis

1979 Z28 CAMAR0
M / A P
l / n U J
O N L Y » W # a #

1979 MUSTANG

DATSUN 210

I Dr. AT. AC, AM -FM . Mint
COndltlon.

Callca ( U fl Back} S Sp., AC,
sigrco. A Beauty At

Ov«r 30

80-Autos

1000 Mites
All Th« Options
Showroom Naw

*2995

*2495

*45115

1977 CHEVY CIO Pick Up lo n g
Wheel Base. V6 1 Speed Stick
Runs Eacvllent. Looks Fair
1991 811 1374

1980 BUICK REGAL

1978 DATSUN 2(101970 DATSUN 210 1'978 DATSUN 210

L A X E V IE W 3 bdr. 1 bth. tp. Ig
Yard, v tg garden, te r patia.
extras 111,100.

----------------------------------------

GARAGE
S A LE

MUST S H I NO REASONABLE OFFER
WILL BE REFUSED

4
Sp.
A M -F M .
FI.B .
5howroom Condition.

4 Door, AT, AC, Just Traded,
Only

*3795

IF THIS IS THE DAY to buy a
new car. see today s Classified
ads tor best buys

1974 OLDS Delta 64 7 Dow VS
Autom atic. A ir power win
(lows, styering and brakes
Runs emcellent. needs paint
1191 l i t 1774

MODELS

R E G I S T E R E D red A gr ay
horses lo r
sale
Horses
boarded S9S mo Hobby Horse
Ranch S m l. west ot W tk lv a
R iver on Hwy 44-___________

1977 TOYOTA

LW .B . Pick-Up, AT, iAM
FM, Low Mileage. Lika Hlow.

C a iM lh e rry

C*’ OAY TON A AUTO AUCTION
Hwy 97. t m ile w e ll ol Speed
way. Daytona Beach w ill hold
a public AUTO AUCTION
every Wednesday al 4 p m It'S
the only one m Florida You set
the reserved price Call 904
111 l i l t tor fu rth e r details

1981

1976 DATSUN J110 1976 DATSUN 710 I 1&gt;77 DATSUN 210

1977 DATSUN

*3 3 9 -7 9 8 9 *
1977 Thunderb'rd
SJ477
1916 Buick LaSahre
Custom
11490
1976 Buick 715 Coupe
11795
197' M ercury Cougar
SR 7
S477;
1969 M u ila n q Convertible 11991
1977 Buick L im ite d
Coupe
14777
t977 Monte Carlo
Sunroof
S1477
1980 Chevette
7 000 rrutes
14991
1949 F ire bird Coupe
S till
1974 v w Rabbit
( lift
1971 Volks Sta Wagon
S3088
1979 F irebird Form ula
S4S9S
Bank Im in cln g available
11N Hwy 11 97

I960

66—Horses

Used
Trucks

*38S15

CHARMING 3 bdr. 1 bth. CHA.
work shot, te r patio, w other,
dryer, goad a rta ta t too

CFA PERSIANS Adult
Females White. Black
11101710 111 l l t l

Used
Cars

I .ST \ l

L IK E TO E N TE R TA IN 3 bdr. 3
bth, 3 story, pool, roc rm . Ip. I f
lot. only 149,900.

A N IM AL Haven Kennels board
■ng A g ro o m in g . Needed
Pekingese A s m a ll l ilv e r
poodle lor stud M ale Owners
call 177 S717

52—Appliances

4 Sp. AC, AM -FM. Excal tent
Economy.

ly lS t l

CHIHUAHUA PUPPIES
FOR SALE
331 1133

SANFORD P rim e 14 SI A c r n w
option! ter toning 113.100 w
Term s, w . M a lic jo w s k i 373
74tl. Eves 331 334/1_________

*27915

★ B&amp;H Auto Sales *

Year End
Clearance
ALL BRAND NEW

65—Pets Supplies

CHECK W ith Sanlord Auction
before you buy or sell I l l s S
French 373- 7340 Mon Sat

H.B. 4 Ip . AC. Extra Ckwn,
Runs On Rag. Oat.. Spatdal.

-------------—-----mw-

1981

F IL L OI R I A tO P SOIL
YELLOW SAND
Call Clark A H irt 3717140

51-A—Furniture

WILSON M A IE R FU R N ITU R E
111 311 E FIRST ST
377 1671

OWNER W IL L F R A N C E
Large 3 B fl. 7B F a m ily Home In
town but very private E«
c e lle n l c o n d itio n In c lu d in g
brand new root A painting
Yours lor |S*.tOO M ill* 'r e

CallBart

Used Car P a rti a ll makes and
models 137 3497 We buy Used
Cart and Trucks

80—Autos for Sate

59-Mwlcal Instruments

8 SET S Custom Mad*4 Drapery 63
•n long Cost SI 100 Sell tor
l?00 Double Bed net*, noo,
Color TV Antenna ISO
373

COMM ERCIAL 3 ACRESON 17
97 N E A R
LA K E MARY
BOULEVARD 1110.000

322-2420

Flit

76—Auto P arts

51 -Household Goods

LIV IN G room, kitchen table,
washer A d r y e r, m a tte r
bedroom A morp 377 7616

C A L L A N Y T IM E
tu t

fro ntage

S9M or best otter

S U T U K I150
111 1741

PIANOS A organs large A small
star I, rtg as low as 1149 91 Bob
Ball Music Cenier A Weslern
Auto 301 W 1st Sanlord

GENEVA 30 ACRES WOODED.
COCHRAN ROAD 13.100 PER
ACRE M AY D IVID E

A LL THE EXTRAS 1 B drm , 1
Bath h a m t In Ramblowoad an
o igo landscaped tat. Cant. HA,
W W C ,S p ill b d r m , fo rm a l
dining rm , pan. Ft. rm Sunken
living rm and tats m oral
149.900

74 Ft Cruise A ir. Oodqe Motor
Home E ic e lle n l C ond ition
Low Mileage 377 1764 or
171 0411

Spring It here and it s a good
tim e to choose a new home
fro m
the pages ot our
classified ads

S&amp;-A Jatwlry

GENE VA ! ' I a c r e s w o o o e o
TONED MOBILE 117.100

JUST FOR YOU 1 B drm , 1 Both
B rick Homo Spilt Bdrm Plan.
Cent HA, WWC. Patio. Fane.
Backyard and Mora. 144,MO.
REDUCED 4 B drm , I Bath, I
story homo In Droamwotd,
w ith Oroot Rm, F P L, Igo
room I WWC. In comronlonl
areal S IM M .

road

7S G E M 13II tra ve l Ira lle r. very
clean Must see to appreciate
Call alter 6 p m weekdays,
anytim e on weekends 131 5711

62—Lawn G arden

1)4 040

tond

HONDA 410CC 71
Good Cond.lion 149!
I l l 417]

75—R ecreational Vehicles

P rice s
R educed!
No
Reasonable O tte r Refused
Sanlord C rt Apt , Apt 44.
Sanlord A vr A A irp o rt Blvd

W t DOING ring set w o m a n ! 7
I 3rd karat SlSOor
best otter 174 5978

OSTEEN 13 ACRES WOODED

e ic

79—T ru ck s-T ratlers

Pgr E sta te . C o m m e rcia l of
TRetidentlal Auctions A Ap
p ra is a ii Call D ell’s Auction
.3J1S4J0
•

FRI A SAT . O c t 7 A 3. 9 1
OiH rrenf kinds ol plants A
miscellaneous 901 E 31th St

SET OF Wrought Iron Tables
110 Compound Bow, while
Tail n o Sears Frosl Free
M r lr lg e r a io r | | ! g
U tility
Bu'ld-ng 1100 Phone 373 87*3
----------------- 1-----------

TALL
S16 100

710 H O N DA K 7 14.000 m l org

r—

RUMMAGE Sale a l the Geneva
M e th o d ist C hurch on is!
Street. Friday A Saturday.
Oct 9 t h A t 0 t h 9 a m to 1 p m
Lots ot Stull very reasonable
Cotter A sandwiches tor sale

173 6641

V,

78—M otorcycles

72—Auction

RUG Sham pooer ItO Cycl o
teacher, by W orld Book US
L o tio lm is c items cheap F ri
Sal A Sun 9 4 333 Pinewinds
Or . Hidden Lake, Sanlord

FIREW OOD

AREA.
FRONT

O STEEN
W OODED
ACRES SI7-W0 TERMS

FRI A SAT . Oct 7nd A 3rd.
s w im m in g pool, cosm etics,
clolhes. elc 7804 S P ark A vr

COT5. TENTS. TARPS
ARMY NAVY SURPLUS
HO Sanford Aye
377 1791

MARY 4 large
lots, nice trees
t i l 000each 177 4413.
W E K IV A
FALLS
W OODED R IV E R
ACRE $71,000

APT S AL E, Couch. C h a in .
Tablet. E ta g e rrt. Aquarium.
Decorator Phones. Queen Sue
Bed. Almost New. Much More.

SO—Miscellaneous for Sate

lake

323*7443

S21*0759

. Coll T77 1634, m «40
it s like pennies trom heaven
when you sell "D o n 't NeeiQ '
.. w in a want ad
---------CASH F O fe c ih V
Running or no I
339 1948

Antiques Diamonds Oil
P alnting t O riental R ugi
B ridget Antiques
3111401
■
— -*
Aluminum, cant, copper, lead,
b r a il, silve r, gold Weekdays
1 4 10 Sal 9 1 KoKoMo Tool
Co 911 W l i t St 111 1100

54—G a ra g e Sates

We pay cash tor t i t L 7nd
mortgages Ray Legg, Lie
Mortgage Broker JJ9 7749

43-L o ts-A c reage

w 'V j u n k c a r s i T r u c k s
From 110 ip ISO x more

137 7141

47A-Mortgages
Bought 6 Sold

Shop Uncle Roys M obile Home
Sales, Leesburg. U S Hwy 441
S 904 717 0134 Open 7 days

Ph 133 0311

—

Top D ollar Paid lor Junk A Used
cars, trucks A heavy equip
ment 373 1990__ .___

60—Wanted to Buy
Somebody H looking lor your
bargain Otter it today in the
C la m lird Ads

m il l e r s

76l40rlando Fr

CASH FOR EQUITY
We can dose In 41 h r i
CallBart Real E i la l t 377 / e n
We buy e q u ity In H o u ie i.
apartments, vacant land and
Acreage
LUCKY INVEST
MENTS, P O Bo* 7M0, San
lord, Fla 37771 377 4741

CHECK OUT UNCLEROYS
LARGE selection ot 14 wrdes
prices start S499S VA linen
e n g no money down, 10*.
conventional

53—TV Radio-Stereo
Good Used TVS. I l l L up

47- R e a l E sta te W anted

CHECK THISOUT
BEA U TIFU L 1983 Royal Oaks jo
wide 3 bdr, 3 bth, garden rub
d e lu *e ta r p e t, c a th e d ra l
ceilings, brick tireolace. wood
s.d.ng, shingle roof, paddle
Ian and many more extras
Only 176.900 VA financing nb
money down, 10 •« down
&lt;on»m'.onat See at Uncle
Roys M obile Home Sales ol
Leesburg, U S Hwy 441 S 904
747 0374 Open weekdays 0
7 M Sun 17 4

LK MAR Y lot, Duplex W ill trad
E guity SI*.MO

_

I NVESTORS
PLEASE!
3
Tnpie* units lust arrived
Purchase separately or both
tor 140.000 with owner holdmq
Call on this one! June P o rtig
Really Realtors. 117 4678

34*60 7 BDRM 3 Bath 10*30
Screen porch enclosed with
R oliaden s h u tte rs
IS*J0
U tility
Rm
W ell
and
S p rin k lin g system , many
e*tra s 311 Hacienda Village
337 3443

LOT m Country 14,900

Toihibta m icrow ave oven,
p ric e 1349
1911 c a n is te r
vacuum cleaner SS9 M See at
Sanford
Sewing
C enter,
Sanlord P la ia across from
.Burger King

AAB-Invwtmanf
Property

GREGORY MOBILE HOMES
300} Orlando Dr
133 S300
VA A F HA F mancing

N UTRENA FEEDS
Hwy 41 * . - 123 4170
CASH A CARRY PRICES
Hog Finisher Pellets
15 60
IS 80
Layer C
ts IS
Kabbit Pellets
Beet Kwik
14 IS
14*• V ita lity Horse
P -llfH
16 10
W Corn
15 10

Wodnasday, S«pt. 30, H it—IB

77-rJunk.Gife

Poultry

wilcosales

1981

WANTfcD 100 to 700 a c re i in
Orange or Seminole Countiei,
toned lo r mobile home sub
d iv liio n Send a ll d e ta in in
dudm g location, to P O Bo*
1444 Ocala Fla 17474

See our beautiful new BROAD
MORE, front A rear B R 't

6 7 — Livestock

Kenmore parts, service, ustm
washers MOONEY APP LI
ANCES 371 0417

H’s e o iy to place a C lastiflod Ad
W e'll even help you word
It Call 377 3411

ATLAS I0&gt;44
I bedroom S3500
349 S3S4

Alger &amp; Pond

52—Appliances

43-B—Lots &amp; Acreage
________ WBntpd

42—Mobile Names

3 LOTS Sanford A v r
SI7.S0O

. V

MON fRI
SUN 1?

ft

L o n g w &amp; o d L in c o ln - M e r c u r u
C e n tra l F lo rid a 's a I V o lu m e L in c o ln M e rc u ry D ealer

SS V j t ' I ' . M W A V 17 UJ

I

SALE ENDS
104-81

l O N I * W O O D • B3 1 A 0t»0 • 3 7 ? 4 8 8 4 • O t»E N N IC iM T l Y T il

V OO H A T A S U N

T il ft I* M

ANNUAL FALL CLEARANCE SALE

• UMI N SUN

O N C I A Y E A R IN V IN T O R Y LIQ U ID A T IO N S A L I . IR A K I O FFER

1 7 ft

SALE ENDS
10-3-81

�f

Evening Herald. Sanford. FI.

•

Wednesday, S«pt. JD, l» ll

CALENDAR

New State Troopers Are Versatile
TAIJ.AHASSEE, Fla. (UPI) - Kathleen
Hitter, St. Petersburg, plays the guitar, slnRs
country music and is a master marksman
with a 357 magnum Colt revolver.

working as a patrol radio operator for eight
years in St. Petersburg.
Did the 23 males in the class resent her
sharpshooting?
"No, some of them were rooting (or me,"
she said, noting the runner-up, a man, was
just .4 of a point off her score.
The 10 women, largest number in the
history of the patrol which has a full-scale
recru itm en t program for women and
minorities, said tliey encountered no sexism
at the academy.

Ixircnio Walker Is six feet, five inches tall,
weighs 230 pounds and played football for
Winter Haven High School. John Wimberly,
Blakely, (la., is a six foot-four inch extlnivcrsity of Georgia basketball player.
Lynn Lingcrfelt, l-eesburg, stands five feet,
two inches tall, weighs in at 120 pounds wnd
has a U-ycar-old daughter.
Tliey also arc among the 33 latest Highway
Patrol troopers, the newly-graduated recruits
of an 11-weck training school that taught them
everything from first aid, defensive ond
economy driving, to arrest techniques, boxing
and judo.
“ Boxing w asn't my favorite th in g ,"
laughed Trooper Hitter, 28, in an Interview
shortly before F rid a y 's graduation
ceremonies. "I took a few good blows."
The five foot, nine inch, 145 pound trooper
was the lop shot in her class, having had an
intensive course on the target range while

“ We w eren't extended any special
courtesies either," Trooper Hitter said.
Did she fear the danger that goes with the
job, knowing that a number of troopers have
been gunned down in recent years in the line
of duty?
"1 am academically and emotionally
prepared" to become the first woman trooper
in Pinellas County where she'll be stationed
after a two-week vacation, she said. "You
have to come to grips with the possibility of
death before you ever lake the job.
“ But you never know how you’ll react until

you do it," she said. New troopers ride with a
veteran officer before they solo.
Karen Kinard, Sanford, an attractive
blonde who looks more like a fashion model
than a state trooper, grinned apprehensively
as she got behind the wheel of the Chrysler
Newport Patrol car for a driving test.
Hunning an obstacle course at 40 miles an
hour, she didn't hit a one, burning up the
runway.at an abandoned airfield and coming
to a hairpin stop on command of her in­
structor with a screeching of tires and the
smell of rubber.
Trooper l.inderfelt, 33, followed, with
Walker hastening to move the seat forward.
She doesn't think her diminutive physique
will be a handicap, said the tiny brunette, a
telephone company secretary and patrol
auxiliary weekend volunteer before becoming
a full-time trooper.
Her husband, a (healer assistant manager,
and teenaged daughter, Chris, think it's
terrific that Mom's a trooper. She'll be
stationed in Orlando and, hopefully, she says,
lie can move from I^esburg to join her later.
"1 thought when they started there was no

WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 30

way all 10 of those women would pass, par­
ticularly the boxing parts," said Commander
F.ldrige Beach, shaking his head, "ft's
great.”
Only eight of the present force of 1,250
uniformed patrol personnel are women and
Beach has 25 people working full-time to
recruit them. Five women have quit. It takes
950 to 1,000 applicants to come up with one
class of 60 recruits, he said.

Sanford AA Beflniier*, 4:30 p.m., 1201 W. First St.
Overeaten Anonym***, 7:30 p.m., Altamonte Mall,
Sears.
Starlight Promenaders, 4 p.m., DeBary Community
Center, Shell Road.
Born to Win AA group, 4 p.m., Ravenna Park Baptist
Church, 2743 Country Club Road, Sanford. Closed.

Alcoholic* Anonymous, 4 p.m., Altamonte Springs
Community Church, State Road 436 at Hermits Trail.

Beginning pay is $14,000 a year ($17,000 on
the Southeast Florida gold coast to take care
of higher living costs). One of the latest
recruits is a "retread" — a former patrolmen
who quit and returned after seven years. The
training course is required of anyone gone
longer than three years, said Beach, himself a
retread.

Closed.
Wednesday Step AA, 8 p.m., Penguin Building,
Mental Health Center, Crane's Roost, Altamonte
Springs. Closed.
THURSDAY, OCT. I
Tropical Weavers Guild ol Orlando meeting, 10 a m.
St. John's l-ulheran Church, 1G00 S. Orlando Ave.,
Orlando. Program - "Weaving for Christmas." Open
to those interested in weaving or spinning.

Trooper Ritter can't wait to hit the high­
ways.
When they shake your hand and call you
trooper, that's what this 11 weeks was all
about," she said. "For me, llie Highway
Patrol is number one, I wouldn't settle for
second best."

Senior Citizens trip to Cypress Gardens leaving
Sanford 8:30 a.m. from Sanford Civic Center. Pick up'
at l*eds in Casselberry, 9 a.m. Lunch and boat ride
included. Call 322-9148 for reservations.
Senior Citizens Tour to Cypress Gardens. l*ave
Sanford Civic Center, 8:30 a.m.; pick-up at Seminole
Plaza, 9 a.m. Return 6 p.m. Call Doris Rogers for
reservation a t 322-9148.
Altamonte Friendship Club, 10 a.m. m uting
followed by a covered dish luncheon, Eastmonte Civic
Center, Altamonte SprtaQfc Dance, 1:30 p.m.

Clemency Board Eyes South Florida Meetings
TALUHASSKK, Fla. (UPI) - Florida's Clemency Board,
which' has been experimenting with taking its show on the
road, probably will settle for no more than one away-from-thcCapitol meeting a year, somewhere in south Florida.
Secretary of Slate George Firestone proposed the pilot
project (or the board which meets four times a year. He said
individuals who appear in person or send attorneys seem to get
what they ask in&lt;&gt;i e often than those who rely on letters and Hie
I’arple and Probation Commission to present their case.
After meetings in Tampa, Jacksonville, Fort Lauderdale

and Tallahassee, Firestone said he is ready to propose holding
away meetings to one or two a year, probably in Fort louderdale.
Agriculture Commissioner Doyle Conner and Education
Commissioner Ralph Turlington, who voted against (lie pilot
project, are still negative on it, but did not say they would vote
against one meeting a year outside Tallahassee when the
matter comes up Oct. 7.
"We don’t have a circuit riding Supreme Court," said Pete
Peterson. Conner’s cabinet aide on clemency. "These cases

come up as a m atter of time, not of geography."
Attorney General Jim Smith said he felt the m eeting*-on
balance were worthwhile. William Belli aide to Treasurer Bill
Gunter, said his boss has discussed holding the meetings to
Miami and Tallahassee, but said Gunter felt exposure outside
of Tallahassee provided an opportunity for people to un­
derstand what,(lie hoard did.
Gov. Bob Graham’s press secretary, Steve Hull, said
Graham la s readied no final decision, but "has the impression
the Jacksonville meeting, last of the three, drew more people
which might signify that as people become aware of the
localized hearing, they will use it more."
Comptroller Gerald Lewis said the taxpayer's money would
he better spent on out-oitown Cabinet meetings on major
policy matters in which public input is valuable.
"Tliese people are criminals asking ior clemency and
perhaps we should Ik- more concerned about the law abiding
citizens," I.ewis said.
Graham has Parole Chairman Barbara Greadington
analyzing the degree to which applicants used local hearings.
Former Chairman Maurice Crockett said, "I personalty favor
the traveling concept. A lot of applicants are poor people."
Board Secretary Alice Bagsdale said she gives applicants a
choice of places when their cases come up. Some wait. Others
feel their need is so pressing tliey want to wait, she said.

Lake Mary Wants Traffic Survey
The city ol la k e Mary lias appealed to the Seminole County
Commission In do a traffic survey at two Intersections in the
city where city officials insist traffic signals are needed.
Tlie intersections arc located at Country Club Hoad and
Broadmore—an entrance road to Seminole Community
College—and at Like Mary Boulevard and Lmgwood—Lake
Mary Hoad.
Traffic has increase!) dramatically on I»ngwood-Like Mary
Hoad since the new L ike Mary High School was built on
nearby properly.
"It's a had situation," councilman Hay Fox said, "and it’s

going to get worse. It's only a matter of days before we have a
bad accident,"
Before a traffic signal is installed on a public road, the state
IX'puriment of Transportation requires that a traffic survey be
done to prove that the signal is warranted.
City Manager Phil Kulbes told the council that (lie county
commission luis no plans tu install traffic signals at either
location. He added, however, that the commission in the new
budget year plans to improve the la k e Mary BoulevardLmgwood-Likc Mary Hoad intersections. Currently, the
county is re-surfacing the Lmgwood-Lnke Mary Hoad.

Personal development class on Securities and
Investment!, 7-9 p.m., runs through Nov. 10, Executive
Point Office Building, Room 518, Wymore Road and
State Road 436, Altamonte Springs. Contact Seminole
Community College, 323-1450, ext. 304.
FRIDAY, OCTOBER*
Beginning sewing sponsored by Daytona Beach
Community College, 9 a.m. to noon, Deltona Public
Lbcary, &gt;691 Providence Boulevard.

DeBary Garden Club Horticulture Group, 1 p.m.,
DeBary Community Center. Regular Garden Club
meeting, 2 p.m.
SATURDAY, OCT. 3
Boast for State Rrp. Bobby Brantley, R-Longwood, 7
p.m., Lord Chumley’s Pub.
VOL’RTH AHTstrnvaganza: Visual and Performing
Arts F air for Children, noon to 4 p.m., Maitland Art
Center, 231 W. Packwood Ave., Maitland. Featuring
art from Winter Springs Elementary School. Free to
the public.

A MATTER O F RECORD
Simp*on S Garland. 1104 W 3rd
St . reroof. 7.700
Huuh M iner. 141 M a yfair Cr.,
reroof, 1 000
A lbert StAt k i*. I t io. Carriage
E lla Robert*. 714 Cypres* Ave.
Cove. roofing. 77)0
A K StaiemAkrr. 70) V illa Dr , repair porch. 400
A H January, (70C Palm etto
rrtld tn c e , 19,909
Aye. residence. 17.10S
Han* Thompktn*. H i t C y p rr ti
Eugene Cooper, 408 Scott Ave ,
Ay® , re pair porch. 9)0
Rib Shack. 1141 French A v t . addition to garage, 1)0
M urphy Properties. 1417 Chase,
barb«qu« pit. 4.400
Video
C h a lle n g e r.
2)01 C duple*, 7)776
Laura Stephen* 1010 Laurel
Orlando Dr , fire &amp; mfr altera ,
Aye . garage. I.S00
1.400
Garfietd Walker 7404 Cedar,
Helen LuncKrt. 400 Scott, rerouf.
carport, 400
3 700
L G Bennet, 7610 Orlando Dr ,
Mogill, A ll Park Ave , reroot.
addition. 4.000
710
M urphy P rop erties 743) Chaie.
Richard Benton, I?J Country
duple* 7)776. and 743) Chase.
Club Cr . i*m carport. 7)0
John C Harper. 7301 H artwell duple*, 7).426
Tony Chesna. 709 Colonial Way.
A y r , pool, 7.V00
reroot. 1 400
E lia M Wrena W9 Catahna
enc carport K addn u til r r t i .

BUILDING PERMITS

7 000

V id o r F r e d e r i c k * , I t
)20
Carriage Cove. %hed h a wrong.
SCO
M C A . 177 Hidden Lake Dr .
residence 18700. and 121 Hidden
Lake Dr , residence, 18700. and
377 Uorada Md , rrn d e r ttf. 1)777
Sanford A irport Author HI 400
Atrport Rlvd . addition. 170 000
Sylvester P aw ling*, 700 McKay
HI yd . addition, J.OOO
Bart ttinvon. 70S M argaret Rd ,
reroof 1,1)0

Ricky H ill. 77. 74)0 G rand* St .
Sant . A Kafhylyn R Norwood. 19.
197) Summerhn Av , Sant
Douqlas
C S utton. 70. 11)
Academy Ay . Sant , A Debra L
Mason, 18, 117 Academy Av , Sant
Tyrone T Wilson. 19,171 Orienta
Ave . AS. A Janet K New. 19. 17)0
Royal Oak Dr . WS
Michael
W Oeh*le. 77.
1)1
Fairw ay Or , Sant., A A licia K.
W ilkin*. 19. Tampa
Michael W Mullen. )7. SSI E.
Semoran Qlvd . F P. A M arla R
Camarofa. If, *am e address
*
Terry ff Bishop, 76. 149 Sorrento
Cr . WP. A Janet A Payne. 71. 196)
Cree Trl. CB
Robert CBackus. 71.
Sorrento.
A Rhonda
S Howard. 18. 1016
Tulane St AS

MARRIAGE
LICENSES

Ronai a saus co.
Na.

&lt;305)323-7885

I

Sanford Seminole — Oviedo
Crooms — Lyman — Lake Mary
Lake Howell - Trinity Prep

• DELIVERY
• SERVICE
• FARTS
•LABOR

fm

YOU'VE GOT CREDIT WITH USI

1 69
u&gt; ■

NO ONE REFUSEDI
Coll Today • Enjoy Today

m

1 79
|

l»

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

1 INGUSH ROAST

Lake Brantley — UCF

Vf HVINtf

BUY ON OUR
RENTAL PLAN

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

CENTER CUT
CHUCK STEAK

vs

L a k ty w w Plata — I I * Cemmerclal Street

We Sail Only
U.S.D.A. Choice
Naturally Agad
Wat tarn Bari

I U.S.D.A. CHOICE
1 CENTER CUT
| CHUCK ROAST
f

t

laniard. Florida m i l

IOWA
MEATS
PRICES GOOD
WED THRU - SAT.

THE
TEAMS

ELECTRO

Ri char d B Hrousseau. 77.
Vatdosla Ga . A lane M Ricker,
71. 149 M ill Run Dr . I k M ary
D onald I C layton . 7). 779
Lorram e Dr Av , 4 Uoaanne E
Heckirtgrr, 71. 1004 Swcctwaler
HIvd . I w
Glenn A Barton, 71, St, Pete , A
Celesta K Richer. 71. 701 S Lk
Triplet Dr Cb

u

109

£

rs .

THE CHALLENGE
It Oviedo headed h r another ttate playoff berth?
Will Lake Mary really be "The Beginning 0/ The Beet"?
Can Lyman bouncu bqck hem leet fear's (M0 statonP
Will Seminole High again cheBeege h r the Fhre Star title t

NO G IM M IC K ! — NO CUEOIT C H IC K
N O iE C U ftlT T O l r o t l U

Will the Crooms Fanthere dew op freshman competition ?

NO DOWN PAYMENT

Admiral Ml

Can Sam Weir wore hit mhrndet h r Central Florida's
Knights? Will Lake Howell repeat as conference

Home Appliances r H

champions? Can TrhtBy Frep once again role the small

j!|
!
1

SWISS STEAK

1

FRESH DAILY

1

GROUND CHUCK

(,

03
ft

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{

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

school division? WEI leke Brantley raise Its red, white

■

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u&gt;'

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“&gt; 1

I8 9

and blue banner?

THE ANSWERS
Evening H erald

8 9

I LBS. OR MORE
ICE PACK FRESH
CEOROI A ORADE "A "

WHOLE FRYERS

^

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YOUR

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N eXT TO MR. C l FRIED CHICKEN

PHONE ORDER AHEAD
I t 'i Raady Whan You're Raady

PAPER

CUT-UP Ale LB.

For Immediate delivery Call: 322-26 f I

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�Evening H*r* Id, Sanford, FI.

Wedn.td.y, S«pt. JO, l f l l —1C

Shrimp Ah-So
Som ething O ld A n d Som ething N ew ,
Som ething Borrow ed, No O n e's Blue

i

Someth in# old, something new. something borrowed and no
one's blue with the marriage of shrimp and fruit.
By adding a new twist to an old idea and borrowing the
traditional flavor of soy sauce from the Chinese, Shrimp Ah-So
combines these ingredients in such a delicious way that it's
guaranteed to chase away the mealtime blues.
Shrimp are so versatile that they can Ik*eaten boiled with a
cocktail sauce, in a salad, with vegetables in a casserole,
fried, broiled, in a quiche or crepe. They can lx* plain or
elegant. No m atter how you serve them, the most important
thing to avoid is overcooking.
Shrimp are naturally lender and moist as they come from
the sea, and overlooking toughens the protein and results in
moisture loss. Like all seafood, shrimp require a short cooking
lime because there is very little connective tissue and no
cartilage in the flesh, and therefore is cooked in a matter of a
minute or two.
Shrimp may be cleaned before or after cooking, however,
cleaning is easier when the shrimp are raw. To cook either
peeled or unpeeled shrimp, bring salted water to a boil and add
the shrimp. Immediately reduce the heat to medium, cover
and start timing.
Very small shrimp should be done in two to three minutes
after they are placed in boiling water. I.arge shrimp will take
slightly longer. Check for doneness by cutting one of the
largest shrimp in hall, and if the watery translucent ap­
pearance in the (.enter has become opaque and white, the
shrimp are done. Drain immediately, and rinse under cold
running water for one to two minutes to reverse the cooking
process.
Since shrimp are a special treat anytime, proper cooking
will preserve the delectable flavor and exquisite texture.
With this unusal marriage ol Oriental spices, apricots and
kiwifniit, Shrimp Ah-So is served in the Chinese tradition on a
bed of rice — made deliciously untraditional with toasted,
slivered almonds and chopped parsley.
SHRIMP AII-SO
1' j pounds raw. jx'clcd anil deveined shrimp, fresh or frozen
2 tablespoons salt
1 quart water
2 tablespoons soy sauce
1 teaspoon cornstarch
•j teaspoon garlic powder
h teaspoon ginger
1 can tl pound) unpeeled apricot halves, cut in hall

OCTOBER IS
SEAFOOD MONTH

2 Iresh kiwlfruit, peeled ami cut Into wedges i optional i
2 cups hot cooked ru e
‘z cup toasted slivered almonds ioptional)
cup chopped parsley
S&lt;&gt;&gt; Sauce
Thaw shrimp il frozen Add salt lo water and brine to a boil.
Place shrimp in boiling water and m im e heat Cover and
simmer n to 4 minutes. Drain Shrimp. Hm.se under cold run­
ning water lor 1 to 2 minutes. Combine soy sauce, cornstarch,
garlic powder and ginger; shake together until thoroughly
mixed. Drain apricots, reserving liquid. Combine apricot
liquid and soy saure mixture in a 10-inch trypan. Cook over
medium heat, stirring constantly, until thick ami clear Add
shrimp, apricots and kiwitruit; cook over low heat for l to 2
minutes or until thoroughly heated Combine hot rice, almonds
and parsley. Serve shrimp mixture over almond rice Serve
with additional soy sauce if desired Makes 6 servings

Marriage of shrimp and fruit will tantalize taste buds.

U .S .D .A .C H P J C E

p r
cP tid e
T-BONE or
PORTERHOUSE
STEAKS

Tangerine Sauce complements fish.

LB

I 't t lr

‘ZY**

E M

YOU MUST BE COMPLETELY
SATISFIED WITH THE QUALITY
OF PANTRY PRIDE MEATS
OR WE WILL CHEERFULLY
REFUND THE PURCHASE
PRICE WITH PROOF OF
PURCHASE.

U.S.D.A.

Fish 'N CHnis
Fish and lemon are un age-old pair. But why not switch the
citrus’ Team up broiled fillets with tangerines in a sauce
studded with almonds.
Broiled Fillets with Tangerine Sauce is a tasty time-and
energy -saving recipe (or busy cooks. Broiling the fillets takes
just minutes and requires no advance preparation.
BROILED FIU.ETS WITH TANGERINE SAUCE
2 pounds fillets, fresh ur frozen
2 tablespoons margarine or butter, melted
2 tablespoons tangerine or orange Juice, fresh or frozen,
reconstituted
•j teaspoon salt
Dasti pepper
Tliaw fish il frozen. Cut lillets into serving-size portions.
Place fish in a single layer, skin side down, on a well-greased
baking pan, 15 by 10 by 1 inches. Combine melted margarine or
butter with tangerine or orange Juice. Brush sauce over fish.
Sprinkle with salt and pepper. Broil about 4 inches from source
of heat for approximately 8 to 12 minutes or until fish flakes
easily when tested with a fork. Baste once during broiling with
sauce in pan. Arrange fish on a warm serving platter.
Serve with Tangerine Sauce. Makes 4 In fi servings.

Guarantee

ZH*

HOhUS
BUY

ELSEWHERE S3.79 PER LB

‘ft* * - | ‘Z H *

liiSI Ka£lEaSiS S I E S I EfiSi ES3 ES9 K SX £3
QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED.

f H I C L b l l M C m i W i l l S U M 1U TI1HI] IIJ I S O C I I, I ' 1*1 1)01 t o (H IM
l o w I'K IC t S W I H I h i MSI t i l l M l(, 111 H I l INIP U IIA N I I M l h N l) N | s o i l )
IO 1)1 A l l MS S O I M t h p o n s i m i I O « ItP O l. H A P I II C A t 1MHOHS

Tangerine Sauce:
•» cup margarine or butter
one-third cup sliced almonds
2 tablespoons cornstarch
1 cup tangerine or orange juice, fresh or frozen, recon­
stituted
•» cup white wine
•« cup apple jelly
1« cup lemon Juice
•i teaspoon liquid hot pepper sauce
&gt;» teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon grated tangerine or orange rind i optional I
1 tangerine or orange, peeled and cut into bite-size pieces
Melt margarine or butter In a I-quarl sauce pan; add
almonds and saute until lighlly browned. Mis cornstarch with
i, cup tangerine or orange juice. Add remaining tangerine or
orange Juice, wine, jelly, lemon juice to sauteed almonds and
heal lo boiling. Stir In cornstarch mixture; cook and stir until
mixture thickens. Add liquid hot pepper sauce, salt, grated
citrus rmd, and tangerine or orange pieces. S e n e hot over
broiled fillets. Makes 2 cups sauce.

FAMILY PKGS. A FREEZER SALE
OVER 3 LBS

R p p f Blade
R la H e Chuck
C h u r k Steak
S te a k
Va'k
Beef
Bnls. Chuck Steak _
Lean Ground Chuck
Bnls. Cubed Chuck Steaks
Bnls. Chuck Stewing B e e f .

CUT G WRAPPED FREE!

,.«*• IB
I "S
. LB

$2*a
$188

LB
. LB

$ 2 ^ 8

LB

$JB B

B O N t IN W H O ll | . t o Z » I B *
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T lA K t Llb' cNMOU
C UU M
MnN'ictV
OsM
O U nNVDi B U Z

V r t r l r Strips
Q trln c
New York
Bnls. Sirloin Tips
Bnls. Bottom Rounds
Bnls. Chuck Rolls
Bnls. Rib Eyes
N

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IAK*

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$928

B rH O L t 7 IO 10 IB X C U 1 IN TO
M l A BS BO AM L OLOPINI) HI I f
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ill) ) ) ■ g t iilu w in t iiii

WHOLL I . 10 Z» IBBCU 1 IN IO
M l AHV MOAM t CHOUND BLLZ

WHOLE 10 10 12 LBS
CUI IfllO STI ARSON ROABV

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$ |T 8

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WE’RE FIGHTING BACK AT THE MEAT COUNTER
f i» E

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3C—Evening H trald, Sanford, FI.

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-

Wadnaiday, Sapt, 30, I H I

M icrow ave M agic

Mexican Food Is Nutritious As Well As Delicious
Marketing experts tell us that Mexican irxxi restaurants are
the fastest growing Io»m1 enterprise all across the country.
Maybe you have noticed how many have suddenly appeared
in Central Florida I counted five such restaurants along a two
mile strip ol State Houte 4.16.
hike so many other people, I had the misconception that all
Mexican food is highly seasoned and always hot. Fortunately,
that doesn’t have to be. It can be tasty, but not too hot by just
eliminating or using fewer of the chili or jalapeno peppers.
Mexican food is nutritious as well as delicious. Beans, cheese
sour cream, corn meal and fresh vegetables are a part of many
of the dishes.
Try having a Mexican meal, microwave style, sometimes
soon. Preparations are easy and the idea is sure to be a hit with
everyone. This rice dish will serve 6-8 generous portions.
I1A JA HICK
3 &lt;ups sour cream
I small can whole green chilies chopped
t tups rooked rice (do in microwave)
II His. Monterey Jack cheese, cut in narrow strips
cup grated Cheddar cheese
Combine sour cream and chopped chilies, add cooked rice
and blend, P late one-third of rice mixture in bottom of 2-quart
microwave safe baking dish lop with
of Monterey Jack
&lt;fieese. Repeat 2 times. Cover with last one-third of rice and
sprinkle witli grated cheddar cheese. Microwave at 50 percent
power I medium) 14-lf&gt; minutes.
Kncfiilada casserole will tie favorite.
CHICK KN KNCIIIUDA CASSEROLE
2 ' j cups cooked chicken (diced)
I 'j c ups chicken broth
1 can cream ol mushroom soup'

Midge
Mycoff
Home Economist
Seminole Community College

1 can cream of chicken soup
1 8 oz. 16 cups) dorttos i slightly crushedi
1 can 4 nz. green chilies chopped and undrained
1 4 oz. jar pimentos chopped und drained
1 Tablespoon dry sherry
1 lb. grated cheddar cheese
Mix all ingredients except chips and cheese. Cover the
bottom of a 13 x 9 inch baking dish with 1 cup of cheese, lmyer
l i chicken mixture then one-ihird of cheese. Hcpeat ending
with chips lopped with cheese. Refrigerate at least one Imur or

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milk il necessary to whip until fluffy.

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Pile filling lightly into potato shells. Top with grated cheese,
bacon lots or slivered almonds. Hake on cookie sheet at 375
degrees until tops are lightly browned. Tins kitchen-tested
rcci|M makes ti servings.

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a mediimiti potatoes i about 3 pounds)
a tablespoons butter
l 's cups hot milk
P to 2 pounds filet of sole
Milk or while wine i enough to cover fish for poaching)
c. to
pound cooked siirimp or crnbmrat
Salt and pepper to tuste
Parmesan cheese
Scrub potatoes and liake on oven rack without foil. Ten
minutes before they are done, simmer filet of sole in milk or
white wine until tender i about 5 to 10 minutes).
Will'll potatoes arc soft, remove u lengthwise slice from top
of each hot potato Scoop out contents and mash or press
through a ricer Add salt and fiepper and butter melted in hot
milk Whip until light and fluffy. Pile potato mixture lightly
mlo shells, leaving deep hollowed colliers.
tall file I ol sole from liquid. Reserve liquid for Mornay
sam c Divide sole Into six portions and place In the hollow of
caefi potato Top with cooked shrimp or crabmoat.
Pom Mornay Sam e over seafood, Sprinkle top with grated
Parmesan cheese Rake at 375 degrees until lightly browned.
Tins kitchen-tested recipe makes fi servings.
Nt) | E Wlien used as a fish course instead of a main dish,
use only
pound filet of sole.)
MORNAYSAUCE
3 tablespoons butler
3 tablespoons Hour
P . cups liquid from poaching
- nip shredded Swiss clieesc
Sail ami pepper
liver low (K ill, cook together butter, flour, milk or wine (ra n
(Hiaching. adding enough milk In make I‘ j cups altogether.
Win •: very Imt, -tir in shredded cheese, sail and pepper.

V

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285

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S C JhS H Ih r

Sauce (har in Quti&gt; 5

SOI III .I T ) HAKE I’OTATOES
li medium potatoes (about 3 fxiumlsi
1 cup sour cream
c* cup butler
1 egg. tightly lientcn
1 teaspoon salt
IVpper
2 tablespoons Iree/e-rlried or frozen chopped chives

‘

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5 9 ' P E H I II

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CABBAGE

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I'ntnlocs continue to lie a staple in our diet. If you’ve enjoyed
Iwlce-lmkcd potatoes in a restaurant or at a friend's home,
follow through and prepare your own for a side dish or entree
lor company

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CONCLUSION OF SERIES
Eating a wide variety of wholesome foods each day will help
you grow, stay healthy, and have "fuel" for sports and other
activities. You probably have heard Hud before, but how does
the advice relate to Die way you like In eat?
To practice, take this quiz designed by food experts at Kraft
afxiiit typical meals you might eat. Each meal has something
missing. Add a food to make the meal balanced.
1. You have ordered the following at a fnst food restaurant .
Hamburger on a bun, plus milk or a milkshake. To balance the
meal you would a d d --------------- .
2 You are fixing a delicious dinner at home for your family.
So far you have planned spaghetti with tomato-meat sauce and
a green salad. You should a d d ------------ .
:t I lashing off to school, you just don't have much time to eat.
Often it is only a piece of toast. A ifuiek but better breakfast
would also Include vdtal food*?
l You are (tacking a lunch for school. So far, you have In­
cluded a peanut butter sandwich on whole wheat bread and a
cookie Add two different fond* to make the lunch balanced.
ANSWERS
l A fruit or vegetable—preferably one that is deep yelloworange or dark green (for vitamin AI
2. A serving of milk, cheese, or any dairy product (for
calcium, riboflavin, and protein)
3. Several combinations are correct . Ccreal-milk-fruit; eggfruit-milk; meat-milk-fruit
t. A serving of milk or a dairy product, plus a serving of a
Iruit or vegetable

•&lt;* »■ A. •*-

To complete the meal with either of the casseroles, 1 would
serve a crisp green salad with Green Goddess Dressing and
Caramel Custard for dessert.
CAHAMEU CUSTARD
Microwave 'z cup sugar and 3 tablespoons waler, 100 per­
cent power 4 minutes. Pour into 6 greased custard cups
2 cups milk
4 eggs, beaten
ore-third cup sugar
1 teaspoon vanilla
Microwave milk 50 percent power 4-5 minutes. Stir in
eggs, sugar and vanilla. Pour into the 6 caramel coated
custard cups. Arrange cups in circular patteln and microw ave
at 50 percent power (medium 12-14 minutes.
Next week's column will be on macaroni and cheese and
oilier casseroles.

PANTRY
SAVINGS

Pride

Kids' Quiz
At Home On
The Range

is hot and bubbly and cheese is melted. Serve with tortilla
chips or corn chips. Makes about 2'z cups about 12 appetizer
servings.

can be made night before. Cook at 455 w l roast) 25-25 minutes
or until hot throughout. Serves 6-8.
MICRO-NACHOS
Taco or tortilla chips
Shreddded Monterey Jack cheese l with Jalapeno peppers)
Spread 20 chips on a microwave plate. Sprinkle with grated
cheese. Microwave 100 percent power (high) 1-2 minutes or
until cheese is melted. Serve immediately. You will need to
repeat this!
MEXICAN BEAN DIP
I can &lt;1 lb.) refried beans
1 cup shredded Cheddar cheese
■a cup cup thinly sliced green onions
11 teaspoon salt
2 tablespoons taco sauce or green chile salsa
Dash each ground cumin and corinander
In a 1-quart serving dish or pottery casserole, mix together
the beans, cheese, onions, salt cumin, taco sauce and
coriander. Cook covered stirring several times, until mixture

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Wadmidiy, Sept, JO, H ll—]C

Mama Mia!
Easy Guide To Italian Art Of Cooking
Are spaghetti, meatballs and pizza pie the only Italian foods
you know'1
If so, there's a whole countryful of delicious Italian-style
foods for you to discover. Italy is a lond of diversity, just like
America — and tlieir food reflects it!
From the north of the county come subtle sauces of butter,
oil, garlic and wine; rich cheese-covered pasta dishes are
favorites in the center of Italy; and from the south, there’s an
abundance of dishes with olives, fruits and vegetables.
More Hum superb recipes, Hie Italian way of cooking means
a special way of enjoying the results. Trndionally, each type of
dish is a separate course, so you can savor the unique textures
and seasonings before moving on with the meal.
First, there's the appetizer of vegetables or meat, enhanced
with a sauce or herbs. Then soup or pasta or rice, and third, a
fish, meat or chicken dish, accompanied by a vegetable and
plenty of crusty bread.

Team poultry with Italian recipes using rice.

PRIDE
ARE IN CASH
NO GIMMICKS!
SLICED
BACON

B E E F P A T T IE M IX

9

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SHI NANDOAH

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FRANKS

CORN OIL
MARGARINE

48

OVER
2 LBS

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/ O
28 PER LB

Dessert can lie as simple as lemon ice, spumom ice cream or
macaroon cookies. To make it more "Italino", try espresso, a
rich native coffee, usually servfd black.

F.OfiPI.A\T AMI ZITCHIM K1S0TT0
1 cup diced peeled eggplant
1 medium zucchini, sliced
3 tablespoons oil
I teaspoon oregano
teaspoon garlic powder
l-*: cups spaghetti sauce
t- 'i cups water
I-1: cups packaged enriched pre-cooked rice
lira led Parmesan cheese i optional)

ITALIAN!) HICKDFI.K.HT
cu|i chopped onion
1 garlic cloves, chopped
■r cup chop|Msl green (Tpix-r
2 tahlespmms oil
l-'z cups spnghetli sauiv
1-': cups water

l-'i l ups packaged eiiriclwd pre-cooked rice

6V

I I SE WHERE

Saute onion, garlic and green jh' jijht h i oil in skillet until
lender, utmul 5 minutes. Add s|iagfH'tti sauiv amt water llnng
ton boil. Stir in rice lleiuove from heat; cover and lei stand 10
minutes. Makes 4 mips or 4 servings.

FRESH WESTERN

PO R K
SP A R E R IB S

K1CF. AIJ.A ItOMAM)
1 (lockage 19 oz.) frozen deluxe artichoke hearts
l-1* cujis spaghetti sauce
l- 'j cups water
4 teaspoon basil
l- 'i eujis packaged enriched pre-c&lt;«)kcd ruv

I BONUS I

LHJ

To round out the meal, serve an anchovy i or onion), tomato
and lettuce salad. Lots of crusty Italian bread or breadslicks
and butter accompany the entire dinner

Even if your address is Main Street. U S A., your family will
feel like they are in Home for the evening when you cook
Italian-style. And, tiest of all, it is quick and easy to prepare
now that you know the basics of cooking wholesome, homestyle Italian food'

A

i

Start your dinner with fresh vegetables i like mushrooms,
peppers add cauliflower), sprinkled with garlic salt. Roast i t
bake a chicken with spices like orengano, rosemary and
parsley to bring oul the juicy flavor. Add a hearty rice side
dish — lhat combines vegetables ami spices - wilh a delecInble tomato sauce. Preparation is fast and foolproof,

Saute eggplant and zucchini in oil in skillet until tender. Add
oregano, gartic powder, spaghetti sauce and water. Hring to a
boil. Slir in rice. Kemove from heal; cover and let stand 10
minutes. Sprinkle with cheese. Makes I cups or 4 servings.

M A RKE1 STYLE

GREAT
GROUND

A salad may follow, then fruits and (lavorful cheese. The
meal may end with a dessert as simple as cookies nr as fancy
as a rich pastry
Translating this Italian style of eating into evenlay menus is
simple.

* 1 28

MEDIUM
SIZE

Prepore artichokes as directed on package; drain. Combine
spagtvctli sauce, water, ImikiI amt artichokes in saucepan.

ELSEWHERE *1.50 PER LB

B ring lo n holt. SUr In rice. Hemove Irtm i tiea l; cover and le t

stand 10 minutes. Makes 1 cups or 4 servings.
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Bagels.

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PANTRY P R ID E

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Cream C heese 7 8 c

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Pork C hops__ lb*178

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PANTRY PRIDE WILL SAVE YOU MORE OH YOUR TOTAL FOOD BILL OR WE WILL

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Quick Tips
Solve Lunch
Box Boredom
It's the same old challenge — how to make a Immc-puckcd
lunch mure exciting. Whether they're for Die children’s lunch
boxes or Hie office "brown bagger," tiomepucked lunches can
be made exciting and tasty by following these four basic rules;
i l l good nutrition (2| gomi taste i 3 i portability and &lt;41 an
occasional element of surprise.
HOW TO PACK FOODS
I,undies can be packed in a variety of containers —
everything from an elabiTale insulateil lunch box to a brown
paper bag. An ‘official” lunch box does offer some ad­
vantages It is a Ix-lter insulator, keeping cold foods cool ami
hot foods warm i which not only taste better but also are safer, i
A lunch box is aLso easier to keep clean and sanitary.
If you do use paper bags, buy them specifically for lunches'
and don't reuse them. Food leakage ami otlier items which
might lx- placed in the hags can cause food contamination or
insert infestation
laquid foods like soups or stews can be (tucked in
widemouthed vueuum jars. Solid fmxls like vegetable dips,
collage cheese or saluds cun be |tackeil in small (iirilainers like
margarine tubs or in those desigmnl ( i t lunch box use. A
freezer (tuck also helps keep lunches cold when there's no
refrigerutiT available. Huy one designed I i t this (turpose or
improvise by tilling a tight-dosing container with water and
freezing it.
New treatment of food run also solve packing probleiiLs, For
instance, split unfntsled cu|x-akes liorizuntally ami (tut the
frosting in the middle, sandwich-style. Tliis allows cupcakes tu
lie wrap|ted without disturbing tlie frosting
Fmxls (but are packaged in individual servings can be u lx»m
to lunch packers. Try treats like individual servings of pudding
or individual bags of snacks.
WHAT'S THEKKTO KAT?
Sandwidies are a guod start. To save time in the morning,
make a week's worth of sandwiches aliead of time and freeze
them. When ready to use, just take u frozen sandwich and
it will thaw by noon. In live meantime, it will help keep ullier
foods cool.
When freezing sandwidies, keep these lips in mind;
-S p read bread with a thin layer of bulter or margarine to
prevent the filling from soaking into the bread.
-H ew aro of mayonnaise and salad dressing. They soak Into
the bread and also may spoil in warm weather.
u n u : EXTRAS COUNT
Hut what turns the lunch box ordinaire into the lunch box
extraordinaire are the special surprises. Tuck in foods like
celery stuffed with peanut butler, beef jerky or peppermu
sticks, small packages of nuts or m acks like fight &amp; Crunchy.
Use rye, pumpernickel, sourdough breads, bagels or buns
(or sandwiches. Blend butter or margarine foe sandwidies
with curry, mustard or minced parsley to liven Ihem up
Brighten lunchtime settings by tucking in colorful |iaper
napkins, plastic utensils and plate*.
II Is easy to make an appealing homeparked lunch qutckly
when following these simple suggestions.

t*'
B
ir-

V
V-

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■*«

I

�V .* •* *'

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FI.

WKiw^y, M g,», m i

Slow-baked
Comlth Hens

and Vegetables
Sldly Is a

favorite dish for
Mac Davis, loft,
co-host for the
"15th Annual
Country Music
Association
____B
JG T

Awards."
a a ia

M ac Davis
Keeps Things
Simple

Publtx

.Spare time is something Mac Davia rarely has. In Uie past
ten years, he figures he has done about 3,500 concert’s and two
to three hundred television shows.
For that reason, he likes to keep things simple and that in­
cludes meals. One of his favorites is slow-baked Cornish Hens,
pictured below.
Although Mac isn't found very often In the kitchen, he luis a
great appreciation for the meal and an even greater ap­
preciation for those who cook.
“Cooking is a lot like my songwriting," says Davis. "It's a
sort of behind-the-scenes activity but it brings a lot of people
pleasure in the end."
Davis is perhaps best known for hit records he wrote which
other artists recorded. "In the Ghetto," "Memories," and
“ Don't Cry Daddy," are songs associated with the late Elvis
Presley which, in fa d , Davis wrote. "Baby Don’t Get Hooked
on Me," "I Believe In Music," and "It's Hard to be Humble"
are classics written by Davis and also recorded by him. More
recently, Davis lias turned to Hie screen to define a new side of
his versatile personality as an actor.
On Oct. 12, Mac Davis hosts with Burbaro Mandrell the "15th
Annual Country Music Association Awards,” sponsored by
Krull, live from Nashville,9:30p.m. • 11 -.00 p.m . Eastern Time
on CBS-1A' This Is the second consecutive year this dynamic
duo will headline (lie most prestigious event in country music.

Iceberg
L ettuce....... 59®

For Boiling or Slaw. Fresh
Firm Green

*1“

Tom atoes.... »'

Breakfast, Snacks or
Dessert

39e

Cabbage....... •* 15e
Top Your Salad with Fresh

Bananas...... 4 '.V. *1

Mushrooms.. X

California Red Tokay or
Black Ribier

*1”

Sun World Brand

Grapes........ 7

Green
Onions...... ...

69c

49®

Pubiix Brand Unsweetened

BOIL, FRY OR MASH

Grapefruit
Juice........... *1”

White
Potatoes

Florida Juicy Fresh

Limes......... 12

•«. *1

Colorful Fresh Cut

Daisies........ »£* *2“

$ j3 9
THIS AD EFFECTIVE
THURSDAY, OCT. 1
THRU WEDNESDAY
OCT. 7, 1 0 0 1 . . .
CLOSED S U N D A Y . . .

SWEET

each lo i

29

TH E P L A C E FO R
U.S.D.A. CH O ICE
U.S.D.A. Choice Boneless Beef

Shoulder S te a k .... r

* 1"

THE PLACE FOR
HOUSEHOLD ITEMS

U.S.D.A. Choice Beef (Whole in the BagL

C h u ck

Sirloin T ip ............. r
U.S.D.A. Choice Beef

Roast

Short R ib s ............ r

TASTY

Jumbo
Honeydews

Plain, Sour Cream A Onion,
Bar-B-Q, Plain Rippled,
Bar-B-Q Rippled

U S D A CHOICE
BONELESS BEEF

II you ask Mac what he enjoys the most, he'll say without
liesitation, "It's my music and writing songs. Touring und
working luis always kept me young,"

*239

2 4 -Piece Apotto

Tumbler Set

* 159

p
.:;m

THE PLACE FOR
FROZEN SEAFOODS

per lb

Van de Kamp

M;ic keeps in shape by squeezing in 100 sit-upa a day, playing
a little raquetball, and ikling whever possible. "I also don't
overdo it at mealtime," says Muc. "This Cornish Hen dish,
accompanied by Vegetables Sicily is u nice light meal. And buy
is it good."

VEGETABLES SICILY
3 cups zucchini slices
1 medium onion, sliced
1 teaspoon oregano leaves, crushed
'» teaspoon salt
■i teaspoon pepper
l-:trd cup margarine
I medium tomato, cut into wedges
Saute zucchini, onion und seasonings in margarine. Add
tomato; cook 5 minutes or until vegetables ure tender. Yield: 4
to fi servings

Crisp Western

Perfect for Salads, Medium
Size

10-lb. bag

A native of Lubbock, Texas, Mac has a special place in his
lieu rl for country music and country artists. His latest album,
"Texas In My Rearview Mirror," is the saga of l»w hr first
arrived in Hollywood and his early tribulations as a struggling
songwriter. On Ins way to success, Muc had a number of odd
jobs including clerking with the Atlanta city probation
department, being u promotion man (or a record company and
laler working in a record company's publishing division.

MAC DAVIS' COKNISII HENS
11 cup lemon juice
&gt;i teaspoon garlic powder
Salt
IVppcr
2 Hock Cornish hens, cut in half
Margarine, melted
Combine lemon Juice, gurlic powder, salt and pepper to
taste. Sprinkle each lien with 1 tablespoon lemon juice mixline Bake at 250 degrees, 30 minutes. Baste with margarine.
Continue baking 2 hours, basting occasionally with margarine,
until tender. Yield: 4 servings.

29c

Serve with Hollandaise Sauce

Broccoli........ »*--** 9 9 c

Orange
Juice........... , r

Nows the time to fill your table with
the robusl flavors of fall You'll satisfy
even the hungriest appetites wilh the soups,
stews, casseroles, and desserts that
make this seasons menus so tempting
And with Pubiix' exerting
Oktoberfest values, your savings
are as hearty as your meals!

.

Sweet
Potatoes....... 7

Good Anytime, "Pubiix"
Brand

with Hearty
Pubiix Savings.

i

North Carolina

THE PLACE FOR
PRODUCE

Celebrate
O ktoberfest

T U rttA D
H IM

• 4

7

Fish F ille ts.... ” V *359

SAVE 50c TOTINO
ASSORTED FROZEN

9

Party
Pizzas

Armour Star Boneless

Ham................. 7 $249
Rath

1 1 '« -oz to 12 1&gt;-oi

Daintees.......... 7 *239

Sunnyland Mild or Hot Whole
Hog

Sausage........

s175

Buddig (All Varieties)

Chipped
Meats.............. SIS* 49*
Oscar Mayer Sliced Regular
or Thick

Bacon.............. £ *1eJ

Tree Top

Apple Juice

Switl Premium (All Varieties)

Aunt Jemima Buttermilk

(All Varieties) or Cooked

Sandwich Steaks

THEPUBUX
TURKEY

Franks............. £ *159 Pancake
Batter............ X
Silver Floss
Hungry
Jack Microwave
Sauerkraut...... big 59*
Popcorn........ rt*°*
Swift Premium Sliced Bologna
Salami...........

Steak-Umm.... ”P&gt;,01
#169 Morton
Gravy &amp; Salisbury

Swift Premium Sliced Bacon
or Lazy Maple

Bacon............

Kugel Plum Good

Chub ot Jones

Kugel often is thought of us u Jewish holiday dish. However,
made with fruits or vegetables it is a year-round favorite in
many homes
A dessert version is made with fresh plums and applesauce.
Serve with heavy or whipped cream, if desired.
PLL'M NOODLE KUGEL
Gounces furlalla t bow knots l or medium egg noodles (about
2'» cups), uncooked
3 eggs
1 cup sugar
I teaspoon cinnamon
3 '| cups I I 't (muridsi fresh California plums, quartered and
pitted
1 cup applesauce
1 cup soft bread crumbs
&gt;: cup chopped nuts
2 tablespoons melted butter
Cook noodles in boiling salted water until barely lender.
Drain arid rinse in cold water. Beat eggs. Add sugar and cin­
namon; mix well.
Toss noodles in egg mixture; stir in plums und applesauce,
pour into buttered 2-quarl casserole. Combine bread crumbs,
nuts and bulter; sprinkle over top.
Bake m 160-dcgree oven, 50 minutes, or until golden. Serve
warm with heavy or whipped cream. This kitchen-tested
recipe makes 6 to 8 servings.

SAVE 70c. Johnson's

M 49

Liver Sausage. X 1 89*

$559

Steak, Sliced Turkey. Beet
Patties

Entrees......... Ul *149
Rich's Chocolate

Eclairs....... .... pkg 99*
Pel Ritz

Baby
Shampoo.....iX *189
SAVE 70c, Family Pak
Adhesive Bandages

BAND-AID... . X

Pie Shells...... X

Aqua-fresh
Toothpaste
4 h u t tu b e

79
■(Limit 7 W ith O th sri
'P u rc h a se s P lease)1

per
lb.

Switt Chicken A La Kiev or

Chicken
Cordon Bleu.

PUBIIX
RESERVES
THE RIGHT
TO LIMIT
QUANTITIES
SOLO

Laundry Detergent

Tide...............

.

';@ S 8 S i

E ra .................’iST *549
(20c Ofl Label), Dishwashing
Detergent

loin* 99*

Hetty 30 Gallon

Trash Bags.... X

Flavorful

S E S R fE S n R T

Serve with Cole Slaw

m

T

$929

MawMfc far fort1

f n h j n j rfn tom r, N O i P
M M w Wk T

II 1 1 * 1 1 or Ho

*2”

par
ib

Great for Sandwiches'
Jewish Bread
$109

Cuban
Sandwich...... *119

Maks Issm hia fun for
your c h lM rm t with The

M V i Iw

Lawn A Leaf
Bag................. X * 1 "

id

Beef
S troganoff............. *3»9
Potatoes
39* AuGratin............ *1«®

Fresh Made

89*

Hetty

Q uarter

German Potato
Salad....

Aurora White or Soft Print

Bath Tissue. .. X

Tasty Franklin or

Genoa
Salami.......

79*
Hot from the Deli'

Delicious

*548

(70c Oil Label). Liquid
Laundry Detergent

Dawn.........

THE PLACE FOR
DELI DELIG HTS

*249

X

79®

SAVE S 4 (
( 1Oc Of I I AHf l I

59*

S e lf - B a s tin g , ( B ro th B a s te d ) ,
B ro a d B r e a s t e d , G o v 't - I n s p e c t e d ,
S h ip p e d Q u ic k F r o z e n , E v is c .,
U S D A G r a d e A (12 to 14 lb. avg.)

Pumpernickel . loal 69*
THE PLACE FOR
Q UALITY MEATS

Boiled Ham.... T *249 Cooked Ham . ’pig1 S229
Eckrich Smoked

per $ 2 0 9
Bar-B-Que
Kielbasa.
ib
Beef or Pork... 7' *289 Galileo Salami or
Ready lo lake-out Southern
Peperoni....... *1”
Fried
Seafood Treat. Frozen Fillet
Chicken......... iSS *379 Grouper......... 7 *259

Fresh-Baked

Strawberry Rhubarb
Pie..................*179

Seafood Treal, Fillet

Spanish
Mackerel....... 7 *1M

�Evanlng Hank), Sanford, FI.

Step By Step
To Chicken
Roll-Ups

I. WITH SHARP knife, cut down and
scrape meat from bone, top left.
2. Roll a thin slice of boiled ham
around the flattened chicken,
bottom left. 3. Serve rolled up

tinned chicken Hunks wilti ham roll-ups are easy to prepare
at home. The secret to Imnim; chicken tx-Rins with a thoroughly
sharp knife. Follow the bone as you cut down thrmiph the meal
alonp the center ot the thich Scrape the bone and remove tile
skin.
itoll-ups se n e d on ru v with a creamy Chablis sauce are
excellent (or a dinner menu
Here are step by step instructions (or preparing and cooking
in a conventional or microwave oven.
ItOU.FIM PCIIICKKN
6 large chicken ilugtis i about l 1* pounds)
11 teaspoon rubbed sage
fi thin slices M led luun &lt;about *i {xiundi
2 tablespoons Imiter or margarine
1 can ilO1, ouncest rondensed creamy chicken mushroom
soup
'» cup Chablis or other dry white wine
CiHiked rice
CONVENTIONAL:
STEP I Place thighs, skin-side down, on cutting board. With
sharp knife, cut down through meat along center of thigh,
following bone Scrape to free bone completely from meat;
remove skin.
STE P2 Flatten thighs with flat side of knife; rub with sage.
Top each with slice ot ham Hull lightly; secure with tooth­
picks
STEP 3: In skillet, brown roll-ups in butter. Add soup and
wine. Cover; cook over low heat 30 minutes or until done. Stir
occasionally Serve with rice. This kitchen-tested recipe
makes fi servings.
MlCmiWAVK.
Omit butter and proceed as directed below
STEP 1 Place thighs, skin-side down, on cutting board. WitJi
sharp knife, cut down through meat along center of thigh,
following ltone Scrape to tree bone completely from meal;
remove skin.
STEP 2 Flatten thighs with flat side ol knife; rub with sage.
Top each with slice of ham Holt lightly; secure with toothpicks. Arrange roll-ups seam-side down around edges of 2quart oblong glass hiking dLsh; cover with plastic wrap
Microwave on HU! Hit to 10 minutes, turning dish occasionally.
Drain; turn roll-ups over.
STEP 3 Combine remaining ingredients, puir over roll-ups
Hot-over. Microwave on 1110111 lo5 minutes or until done, lo t
stand, covered, 5 minutes Serve with rice This kitchen-tested
recipe makes fi servings.

chicken over rice with creamy
Chablis sauce, right.

GALLON SIZE
DAIRI-FRESH

genized
Milk

100-CT. PKG.
MR. COFFEE

8-OZ. CTN.
DAIRI-FRESH

Coffee
Filters
lAMfcOne P«0«s Stamp

Light
Cream
AMU Ora Pat' a S li- c

Pf'cn 'Sir*f Bool

| With TWO Publix Stamp Price Special Booklets

P'fwca

Tea Bags..... "V *1®*
Folger’s
Coffee......... ;:b
a *1”

Cheez Whiz ...

SAVE 6C .K R A F T
REGULAR QUARTERS

59

Mix with Desaert Gelatin

Fruit
Cocktail.......\’.V

59e

Sliced or Cut

Beets............V :

29*

Corned
Beef............. *1“

T

r&gt;

Delicious with Eggs

Corned
Beef Hash ... \\V

Am erican........VV
Kraft s Casino Brand .

bun

Libby's Deep

Vienna
Sausage.......2

Brown
Beans.........

cans *1

Tomato
Juice..........

Cream Style or Whole Kernel
Golden (161z to 17-oz.)
Corn
2 ‘E* 08*
Sweet

P«as........ 2 VJi

Halved or Sliced

Peaches.....

*

Longhorn..... . **V *2”
Wisconsin Cheese Bar Sliced

Am erican........ p*0#' 99*

[P illsb u ry

SAVE 24c. HEINZ

Plus «
JEM?

Tomato
Ketchup

Cake M ix
|1 «&gt;f

can

SAVE 36c.KRAFT

M ayonnaise
I t U W ll

I w l N il,M l

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CO

co

G rip * Jelly..

69*

SOt 0

» Flaaaa. w ith Othe*

PurchiiBI of t S ordor»,
I aeluding A ll Tobacco Hama)

Irdb'iar pril

Money

,s *

• Viw 1*0t*t«nf tithrnut
H A ti p«m b

Borden's All Natural
Assorted
Nabisco Reg. or
Unsalted Premium

Saltines....... V.'
*. Chipstere.... V r

58

f 1 §

^V/GreenStampsH

Sliced American

GrVenStamps

...............r

4-01. Six*

6 ||M «|P.I Oclck*- 1 ■r I H I I

L mm

* • * ■ * 4 P 'M M » « # * * * i * X * * X » »

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McCormick Bacon Bite
7 llffeclivi Deiober 1 f, 1MB1j

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H ‘ 1-01. lo IZ 'i- 01 . Pkg .
axkxdi
Frox*n Blu*b*iiy. B,*n mllh Raitln*. I
Orang* Cr*nb*ir». Coin

Maripac Froten Filiate

Popporidgo Farm Muffins

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Mb Stie.
Upton Bulk Toe

lift i»« Uinflit Ot*ng« OuiuM

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black Pepper

Raddi-Wip
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3 flllKtni 0O«kw I -1 'Mil

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200 I^WGrVenStampsf^l
........... .....................

pleasue

**»'•"»#*4 C k ffM Il C-lfvl Ct/Hmi H#irn*rMfim‘

Cookiee....... £*.* *1 ”

14-01. Con.

lndl&gt;ldu*ily-Wr*pp*d Ch**»* Food

&amp;HGreenStampsR |

79*

Keebler Bonus Pak
(Regularly 13-oz.) Rich 'n
Chips, Pecan Sandies or
Iced Oatmeal A Pecan

J ( tl p V a . M - t l " * ........................................"
P L fl.. &lt;
1,
Wuconun C h i l l i B»&gt;

o&lt;io**&lt; i r 1»• 11

I .I

85*

Nabisco Corn Diggers or

large roil

r, a

SANFORD PLAZA
SANFORD
LONGWOOD
VILLAGE CTR.,
LONGWOOD

Ice Cream ... ,X. *239

B ra w n y
T o w e ls

Aupar Vintaga
Sharp Cheddar

i

where ^hoppng

^3WGreenStampsI? 1 [Tu U^WGreenStampsig j
................ I R S ,
Z lb. Pkg..

PublixPhotoCenter S

SAVF 12c ASSORTED
OR DESIGNER PAPER

• 2 8#

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I* litw ith all

lir tH rs w d i 4 x

( imrMciN a

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e FuUii Qyelxy iw l

89*

99

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Q U A M TIT'I S

r*«lmf card to land

39*

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32-oz jar

M
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h u t.d e f i t a t o n an d |I o n * o f H « d

Smuckers Orange
Marmalade or

*39B

If*

Jwtt place fom order tor photo
yrMtingcwat b#*o&gt;* D*t arwbof I Jth
f»« it k*it a k«*d start a* t*e

Breakfast Club

; s id

Dog Food

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Holiday Photo
C reating C ards.

(l *m»t I F ltiia . With Olher
PuHhfbet of |5 or Mon,
latludm g all Tobacco llemi)

*1

Field Trial Chunks

c in

8 9

IDoi

Assorted Royal Dessert

Gelatin.........4 X

3 2 - o z . b o ttle

ff* « ir and fn#nd•

White
Bread .......

W ine............ U ,r * 4 '9

It ot

Lite Fruits . .

C ris c o
Sh o rten in g
4

SAVE S I.00 Almnden
Mountain Burgundy.
Chablis, Rhine, Sauterne or
Nectar Vin Rose'

t

*

ir s j

5 llttp &lt; ti*e OcloB*r t I te s ti

«

Holy Days

Fruit
Drinks
W !*l (Yrvar Pwt'.hB Stamp
Ptu * ****** R,&gt; t i n

Yellow-Cling Sliced
PeacheB, Fruit Cocktail,
Chunky Mixed Fruit, Halved
Bartlett Pears

SAVE 38c

3 ib $

$209

Mixed F ru it.. \'.V

88*

r

12-ox. oens
e-ph, « tn .

128 O Z .. A S S T &gt;
F LA V O R P E R F E C T

Chunky

Cut or French Style
(1 5 ' j to 16-oz.)

Graen
B a a n a 2

M lllor Lite
Boor

Kraft's Colby Fullmoon Cheese

Delicious

Your Choice 2 /0 0 *

, , ,'!

Brick C h e e se . 1*%* *13B

Cottage
Cheese ......... *• cup 09*

Serve with Crackers
Si O*

$159

Aged S w iss.... ,*V *239

Your Choice 69*

90*

Sweet Cokes
For Jewish

*1J9

Dairi-Fresh Small Curd. Large
Curd. Schmierkase or Lowlat

U

. r'

Kralt's Chunk Style Cheese

O

*w*^ -nj

W th C'-f 1'vt 1* '■fan’t
PfFf# S«b#r It

Kraft's Individually-Wrapped
Cheese Food Sliced „

fc.Ubby'vx
6* Ubby 'A

Serve with Apple Sauce

Whipped
Topping

*1"

Am erican........X*

P a rk a y
M argarine

59*

8-OZ BOW C^i
Q U ICK MAID

I

Krall S Individually Wrapped
Sliced Cheese Food

1-lb cln

Pears............'!.V

$119

(P lus Tax I D eposit)

Topping........... ui $109

3 9

Halved Bartlett

1G *ei. faote.
8 *pfc. e tn .

Whipped
Kralt Plain

Libby's Libby's Libby's

Soft Drinks

Reddi-Wip Cream

00°

On* Put.' « Stamp

PKP 9 I, D 1I T H F I I , T R IM ,
P IP B I LIGHT, MT. D f W

Biscuits........3 VUi *1«

Evaporated
M ilk ......... 2 WV.

W

fr. #$««wr Hvi a*

Pmc# S««o' B o o l'# '

Orange, Lake, Seminole,
A Osceola Counties Only!

Pillsbury Hungry Jack
Buttermilk or Buttertastm'

Tall Can, Pet

HVilfi O r* Pdl'i'i Sl*mp

Bio*'*-

Margarine........ p-'S 49*

( lim il 1 Please Wtlh Other Purchases ot
IS or More E icludm g All Tobacco Items)

32-oz cannister

P'.c*

Booit al

Family
Napkins

Flour

Franks

w** o-.#i-tt1'-

Breaklasl Club Mb Dowlol
Soli or Soft Whipped, or Mb
Twm-Pk of Soft

Drip, Electric-Perk, Regular

N e ste a
T e a Mix

5ta#»

140CT. PKGn
GALA

S LB BSC PtLLSBUBT
U N BLE AC HED SELF R IS lN C l
PLAIN BREAD SELF
RISING UN BLEAC HED

1-LB. PKG.
(NO SUGAR ADDED)
OLOE SMITHFIELD

THE PLACE FOR
DAIRY FRESHNESS

Lipton Family Size
SAVE SOc SUGAR &amp;
LEMON FLAVORED

Wadnaidiy, Sapt. JO, ITU—SC

o

The shofar sounded at sundown Sept. 28 beginning Die
Jew ish New Year with the observance of Ilosli Hashann. Tlie
10-day period, know n as the High Holy Days, will end with Yam
Kippur, the day of atonement.
Hush Hashann lias Its own special symbolic foods. Honey and
sweet dishes, for example, symbolize the hope that the days
ahead will lie sweet ami happy.
Sweeten your new year with a holiday orange sponge cake
and a traditional honey cake
HOLIDAY OKANtiK
SPONGE CAKE
I 1: cu|w sifted cake flour
1*3 teaspoons hiking powder
teaspoon salt
fi eggs, separatist
1 cup sugar
I tablespoon grated orange rind
I cup orange juice
I teaspoon cream ol tartar
1 orange, sliced Confectioners' sugar
Sift together flour, hiking |x&gt;wdcr and salt In a large mixing
howl, beat egg &gt;olks until light Gradually add sugar; l&gt;eat
until thick and light-colored, uhiul 5 minutes. Stir in orange
rind, Mend in dry ingredients alternately with orange Juice.
Beat egg whites with cream ol tartar until stiff but not dry;
fold into hitter.
Pour batter into ungreased 10-inch tube pan. Bake in 325degrec oven 50 tu r&gt;0 minutes or until cake tester comes out
clean. Invert pun over neck of hillle; let cuke cool completely
before removing from pm Before serving, sprinkle with
confectioners* sugar and garnish wilh orange slices cut in hull.
Tins kitchen-tested recipe makes one 10-inch cake, about 12
servings.
HONEYCAKE
3‘ * tups siftetl ull-purpise (lour
2 teaspoons hiking powder
1 teaspoon baking soda
1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
•j teaspoon ground ginger
' j teaspoon ground allspiit*3 teaspoon salt
1 cup honey
I can 16 ounces) frozen concentrated orange juice, thawed,
undiluted
*i cup vegetable oil
one-third cup brewed coffee
\ eggs
cup sugar
1 cup chopped nuts
Grease ami line two 9-by-S-by-3-mch loaf pans with waxed
paper. Set aside. Sift together flour, baking powder, baking
soda, cinnamon, ginger, allspice and salt. In a small bowl,
combine honey, orange juice concentrate, oil and coffee. In tinlarge bowl ol an electric mixer, beat eggs; add sugar, continue
beating until light and fluffy. Blend in dry ingredients alter­
nately with orange juice mixture. Fold in nuts.
Pour baiter into prepared pans Bake in 350-degree oven 15
minutes; reduce Iteal to 325 degrees. Continue baking 45
minutes lunger or until cake tests done when cake tester Is
inserted in center. Remove loaves from pans. Cool completely.
Remove waxed paper before serving. Tliis kitchen-tested
recipe makes two 9-inch loaves.

^GreenStamps|3
m’» l*4 i*,H * M« 1.4, n»M*r I

100-Cl , 5-01. N*1U1 Six*

6 01 Sit*.

Oixio Cup Star Ware
or Heritage Collection

Sweet 'n Low
Sugar Substitute

S itllK llM O tlo * * ' I X 1MI|

10 ft Me; li*e October i

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4“
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BLONDIE

1 C—Evening Heretd, Sanford. FI.

Wadnesday, Sept. 30, l t l l

b y C h ic Y o u n g

Answer to Previous Puiila

50 Spy group
(ibbr)
51 Towtl
t Shawl
54 Unmittrtd
S Legal p ip tf
9 Spinilh hiro
writing
57 Sharp tap
12 H sw ltyt
56 Rainbow
S tm
60 Uiat chur
13 S in tib li
61 Enugn (ibbr)
14 U u o in
62 Employ!
15 Hollywood
luminary
63 Bavtragaa
16 Comidun Ed 64 Famala taint
(ibbr)
65 Filly
17 Undividtd
18 Inhiriton
661a (Sp)
20 Swift aircraft
DOWN
[ib b r)
21 2iro
22 Stcfstirys ir 1 Unfulfilled da
lira
ror
2 R epeating
24 S ilK t
from memory
26 Who (It)
Pending
26 Bird homi
Fend
31 Hourgliti
Compaii
contents
point
33 Onu (Fr|
Burnt
34 Train trick
Hotati
36 Klip (Lit I
Framt for
39 II it (contr)
llratchmg
40 Fringt
9 Old woman
41 Woodwork
10 Form of
f ilt u r u
architactura
44 Potato bud
11 M id i home
45 Pindint
19 Vacation spot
48 B id a ii
ACROSS

i

2

4

3

nfiAi

□ H tjn n

ODD

HOD

(D o n

12

13

14

15

16

17

tl

□□□□□

21

20
■

25

22
26

In ti

DEAR DH. IAMB Would
you please let us know
j o ! * 11 F I
the benefits of potassium to
i i □
□ □esuT
t " ! O, H
[tr a il■ □ u f
the system and what harm
n n K □ □ □ B un v
might be caused by not gel□ D O ■ □ ii t
□ □ a
ting enough of It? I have
42 Hun
23 Egg ihaptd
friends taking diuretics
chimber
25 Ancunt
prescribed by different
43 Id u t g it
mutical
doctors;
some also prescrib
condition
instrument
potassium supplements and
(ibbr}
26 Confadiriii
others do not. Some recom­
States Army 45 Surface
m usurt (pi) mend orange juice and
(ibbr)
46 Goliath
27 Actor
bananas and again others do
Holbrook
47 Eipire
not. I take I-asix for water
49 Burs (U t)
29 Word of
52 C tlistn l b u r retention since I had a heart
division
attack, but I don't have high
53 Coffin stand
30 Donkays
blood pressure. My doctor
32 Florida county 55 Deletes
opposite
35 Nasal in iu ts
prescribed potassium sup­
56 Wuther
36 Year of
plements. A friend with high
buiuu (ibbr)
scitnca (abbr)
blood pressure takes Aldomet
59 Compiis
37 Southern
and
Dyaiide. But her doctor
point
general
has
never
mentioned
9
10 11
6
7
S
potassium.

5

"

23

27

"
30

29
1

■

35

31

13

32

36

36

37

33

■

3,
1

41
45

46

1

42
“

47

M*t

52

49
54

53

55

50

51

57

58

61

62

63

64

65

66

59

60

By BERNICE BKOE OSOI,

For Thursday, October 1, 1981

V'MEMO SHE WWJTSIO
KEEP SOU TO HERSELF?
VC

WHOSTMWUS ABOUT MB'?
SHE WMJISTD KEEPHERSetF
ID HERSELF !
y

PRISCILLA'S POP
I \ f J E V \ BUTONE R W

TD BE
THAT
WAV
M V5ELP7

T WATCHEP
CH ILD REN AT
P lA V AM P
l

EARNEPA

— f— Y GREAT LE5CCN

by StoHul A Helmdahl

BUGS BUNNY

I
P O N T HAVE I D
A M IN D R E A D E R
X ) K N O W W H A T V O U 'R C T H I N K I N G ;

by Bob Thaves

FRANK AND ERNEST

yo ur

THfi

c h a n g in g

rrA n &gt; 5

w it h

o r g a n iz a t io n

&amp; 88SL

ARIES (March 21-April 19)
Wlial might seem like a
simple request to you might
appear to be an imposition to
the one you ask It of today.
Don't take offense* If your
appeal is denied.
TAURUS (April 20-May 201
G uard against em otions
running ynur life today. It
they do, things could get
blown out of proportion.
A rgum ents over childish
issues could occur.
GEMINI i May 21-June 20)
Be extra-careful today not to
unconsciously put your needs
and desires above those of
your co-workers. They won’t
take kindly to it and will let
you know it.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
You're prone today to going
on a shopping spree. What's
even worse, Use items you
lend to be attracted to are
mostly useless, extravagant
junk.
I.EO (July 23-Aug. 22) If
you feel that everybody’s
interest is being placed before
yours today, you could react
in an unbecoming manner.
Watch your temper.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Don't expect anyone else to
bail you out of a problem
situation today that was selfcreated. It's going to be left to
you to unravel.

I have discussed In some
detail the role of both sodium
and potassium in The Health
l i t t e r number 10-12, Salt;
Your Vital Sodium and
Potassium Balance, which I
am sending you. 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 i » l .

Radio City Station, New York,
NY 10019.

Potassium is the main salt
inside your cells and sodium
the main salt outside your
cells. If you do not have
enough potassium the fun­
damental processes of the
cells are affected. It can
cause h eart irre g u la rities,
some of which can be
dangerous.
Too
much
potassium can be equally
dangerous. That is why 1 don’t
recom m end just taking
potassium
or
adding
potassium to your diet Just
because you are taking a
diuretic. Let your doctor tell
you if you should or not for the
diuretic you are taking.
DEAR DR. U M B - What
causes a person to clear his
throat so much at night as if
there is something in the
throat? My doctor says there
is nothing wrong with my
throat.
DEAR READER - It is a
reflex action and It suggests
some Irritation at the lime. It
could be from drainage from
your sinuses. We all have
some. The drainage to your
throat may stimulate the
reflex. And it may be present
only when you lie down
because some of the sinuses
are In a position to drain more
than when you are upright.
Your sinuses may have more
secretions when you lie down
because there is an increased
blood flow and venous
congestion in the sinuses
when you are lying down. The
head is then level with the
lieart instead of above it.
You could have an allergy
related to your bedroom or
bedding. It can be a nervous
reaction. If it really bothers
you, your doctor may want to
try nose drops or an antihistam inic Just before
bedtime, at least as a test to
help Isolate the cause.

WIN AT BRIDGE
NORTH
♦ K 101
*0*

»M»I

♦q u i n

♦ Q 10

EAST
♦1

WEST
♦ 75

♦ KI
♦ K JI
♦ XKMI1

♦74412
♦ 10 51

♦ Jill

SOUTH
♦ AQJI442
♦ AJ 100
♦A
♦ T

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer South
Wrtt N«rtt East Sm U
:♦

M
Pass
Pan

1*
V4
I'm

Put ( NT
Pats M
Pan

Opening lead: +K

By Oswald Jacoby
aad Also Sou tig
The best thing we can say
about South's bidding is that
he bid as if slams grew on
bushes.

There was a reason for
both the overbidding and the
rather inappropriate use of
Blackwood. The tam e was
rubber bridge and North was
a rather poor player.
West started proceedlnp
for the defense by leading
the king and ace of clubs.
Now, South had no trouble
scoring game, slam and
rubber. He ruffed, cashed his
ace of diamonds, led a
trump to dummy, ruffed a
diamond, led a second trump
to dummy and ruffed a
diamond. Since this drop
the king, South was able to
get to dummy with the last
trump and diward the J-10-9
of hearts on good diamonds.
E ait said. "Partner, you
should have beaten the hind
by leading a trump at trick
two."
West asked how be could
possibly make that shift and
they appealed U&gt;us.
Our answer is that the
trump shift would be auto­
matic for a really good play­
er. II would kill one entry to
dummy In case South held a
singleton ace of diamonds
end would have Insured
defeat of tbe slam against
any possible South hand.
INLWSPAPCT EYTOIPIUSE ASSN)

by Leonard Starr

ANNIE

,

J o h n s o n . . . ^rom

DEAR HEADER - First,
people take diuretics for any
number of conditions that
lead to water retention. You
may not liavc as strong a
lieart as before your attack
and that may cause you to
accum ulate sodium and
water. So you take 1-asix.
Now, l,asix can also wash out
potassium from your body so
your doctor is replacing the
amount you lose.

Your friend takes Aldomet
because of high blood
pressure. The Dyaiide is a
56
diuretic but it acts on the
kidneys in a different way and
does not eliminate potassium.
People who take Dyazide
should not try to add
potassium to their diet or take
to supplem ents unless th eir
doctor tells them to do so.
Otherw ise, they may build up
u dangerously high level of
potassium. So it depends on
what diuretic you are taking
and whul tests show about
your salt and water balance.

issue is that important am!
whether you are sure you are
right.
PISCES I Feb. 20-March 20)
You have a tendency to view
things as being harder than
they really a re , thereby
cre atin g more work for
yourself than is necessary.
Gel out of your own way.

® -H-HO.0 TldHX OH(r-GOOP-mLE WE’RE
ANNE?- MAYBE
BEIN’ SMASHED PfUTSON
THEYWLEtS
THAT CLIFF, IT’LL BE A
JU5T BEING
CONSOLATIONKNOWN’ IT —
PLAYFUL*
NAS ALL IN F-F-FUM"

TT
w enp

YOUR BIRTHDAY
October 1,1961
This coming year you may
have to hang a little tougher to
get what you want, but if you
don’t give up the ship the
rewards will be there. In fact,
that extra push iisia*hl Hive
you even more than you
wanted.
l.IBKA (Sept. 2TOct. 23)
G uard your poaaesstoni
today. Someone who might
not have any qualms about
taking something that doesn't
belong to him might have an
eye on them. Kind out more of
what lies ahead for you in Hie
year following your birthday
by sending for your copy of
Astrir-Graph. Mall t l for each
to A stro-G raph, Box 469,
Hadio City Station. N.Y.
10019. Be sure to specify birth
date.
SCORPIO (Ocl. 24-Nnv. 22)
Others telling you now to do
things or giving you orders
will nut rest well with you
today. You could retaliate by
over-reacting. Keep a cool
licad.
SAGITTARIUS l Nov. 23Dec. 21) If you feel someone
has infringed upon you
somehow, chances are all
you’ll do about it is brood.
This solves nothing — either
bring it out in the open or
furget it.
CAPRICORN I Dec. 22-Jan.
19) You muy have to guard
against dominating the scene
today when among friends. Be
aware of their need to share in
the conversation or activity.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) II isn't necessarily like
you, but today you have a
tendency to be argum en­
tative. Ask yourself if the

44

■

HOROSCOPE

THE TOUBie. WrtH WOOL*
IS SHE'S IDO fOSS£SSl\£ !

Le ss Tea, Yes

■□□I

□DO

□□n cn o n

Sleeping Pills, No

WHEN/ HE STOPPED.1

- an* lo o k ! there
SEEMS T’BE MORE
SOUQ LAMP UNDER

VERY STRAH6E.
ANNE-THERE
ISN’T S0PTOSED
TUBE ANY
UWAT THIS
LATITUDE -

j

WKAK U N R TO

M i^ IN d t | N K .

05.

/V

Tm M*c » T J°

by T. K. Ryan

TUMBLEWEEDS

FLETCHER'S LANDING

by Oauflaa Coffin

is iq H l r t &gt; m r tJ L q iv t.
H0O CAM r DtLIVfcR. DR.MACLfcOEiS FACrAC^t tOlTH
HltA A- TELfc.FVlONfc. CALLH16 (**£0 bO^S M.L O itS L y N j f
I H b P L A C e . 1 ------------

,

v

&gt;y
- i *
W 4 M * 1&gt;/

I

�Evtnlna Hgrald, Sanford, FI.

Wednesday, Sepl. 30. I l l ) —7C

TONIGHT S TV
WEDNESDAY
EVENIN')

6:00
0 ® ® « I® O N E W S
■ 135) SANFORD AND SON
110) ir s EVERYBODY'S BUSI­
NESS
H (17) ANDY ORIFFITH

6:30
0 ® NBC NEWS
($1 O C BS NEWS
(£ Q ABC NEWS
II (35(CARTERCOUNTRY

S3110) rrs e v e r y b o d y ' s

b u s i­

ness

3Z |17)G 0M E R PYLE

7:00
0 ® THE MUPPET8
(1) O
PM. MAGAZINE E.wen
Ford — creator ot cover-girl superttart, a term in Taman where eel*
are ta ile d lor eating, Cathie Mann
m eeti Hollywood * h o lla it
*ongwriting team. Or Marina Granich on why liv in g together tirit
doesn I guarantee a happy marft4 g #

( D O JOKEB'SWILO
(U (35) THE JCFFERSONS
f f i (10) MACNEIL 7 LEHRER
REPORT
11 (17) CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS

7:30

O ® ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
J 10 TOU ASKED EOR IT
® Q FAMILY FEUD
II 135) BARNEY MILLER
ffi(10)D IC K C A V tT T Guest m l&lt;am Satire |R)
11 (17) BASEBALL SanFranciico
Giant* at Atlanta Brave*

8:00
O ®
REAL PEOPLE l Seaton
Premiere) featured a ptychologut
who claim* he can enlarge women t
breast*, a school tor male hula
dancer* a grandmother who rece*
cars
I1) ) O A BOY NAMED CHARLIE
BROWN Animated Charlie Brown
win* a spelling bee at school W hich
leadi him »o
national spelling
ch*mp»onsftipi |R)
0 Q THE GREATEST AMERICAN
HERO B&gt;n M iitteii teams that a
friend Of h i t it p la n n in g a m a jo r dia­
mond he«it (R|
M (35) CHARLIE'S ANGELS
(B 110) LTVE FROM THE MET la
Traviata IWam Colrubas and Placido Domingo star m the Mrliopolitan Opera s production ol Verdi a
"Le Trsviala ' James Levine con­
ducts the Metropolitan Opera
Orchestra

D onates Fixtures

' RigtX a w . P ro d ia rt Caiholic.
jm l Jewish rriiW and
(V vrlopm m aqmctrt are
wurkjrtu together (o
to give iv iv
life totanunueyv
aTungry world
asehetpih
Please
help ihem

PLEASE GIVE
Inrrtinh IM u f l Appeal
f*U Bow torn FT * Station
New Mirk. N Y 10150

predation, Waters said, his
com pany will donate the
estimated $1,500 worth of
fixtures to the city for the
Secret la k e Park restroom
facility in honor of the police.
At its Sept. 21 meeting the
council rejected three bids for
the facility which exceeded
the $10,000 budget allocation
for the project.
With the donation oi the
iixtures, Broyles said the city
can afford to build the facility
at a cost of $9,000.
In other action Mondaynight, the council set Oct. 15
through Oct. 30 as the period
in which candidates for
m unicipal elections may
qualify to run.
Among those positions open
for candidacy are the mayor’s
seal and two council positions.
Incum bent Councilmen
Tom E m bree and John
Leighty have announced their
intentions to ran for reelec­
tion.
Incum bent M ayor Owen
Sheppard said he has not
determined whether he will
seek reelectlon. — TENI
YARBOROUGH

M

Cable CIS.

8:30

10:00
0

®

SOPHISTICATED
GENTS The gents itmimsca at a
dinner party, unaware that outside
a detective is lying in wait lor a
missing member who it suspected
ot murder |Pai! 2)
ax (35) in d e p e n d e n t n e t w o r k
NEWS
,U (17) NEWS
the

10:30

© o

(ABC) Orlando

(D O
© O

(CBS) Orlando

(D O NEWS

3:40

tD O MOVIE The Eyes Hive It
|C| (1974) Sinead Cusack Dennis
Waterman
4:00
4:30

© a

H (17| RAT PATROL (WED)

at 117) RAT PATROL (MON)
5:30

J O SUMMER SEMESTER
I I (17) RAT PATROL (TUE. THU)

5:35
11 (1 7 ) WORLD AT LARGE (WED)

5:45
(It (1 7 1WORLD AT LARGE (FRI)

5:50
0 2 (1 7 ) WORLD AT LARGE (MON)

12:00

($) O WKRP IN CINCINNATI
Travis changes the formal ot the
radio station horn elevator music
to hard rock and the complaints
start rockm and rotim m |fl!
(71 o LOVE BOAT A man meets
the daughter he deserted years ear­
lier. e honeymooning couple are
plagued by mishaps, and three pho­
nes mistake a grocery clerk lor a
tycoon IRI

6:00
B 4
S
J O
JO

TOOAY IN FLORIDA
th e LAW ANO YOU (MON)
SPECTRUM (TUE)
BLACK AWARENESS (WED)
I THIRTY MINUTES (THUI
iJ i O HEALTH FIELD (FRt)
( 7 ) 0 SUNRISE
ill 1351 JIM barker

o

6:30
® Q BEWITCHED

12:30
B

®

TOMORROW Gueitt Lou

Rawls actress Ann Jitlian

(1)

12:35

O

MOViE

6:45
ff l 110) A M WEATHER

7:00

Tho Matte* Gun-

lighter * (197S) Tom laughiin. Ron
0 Neal

1:10

(D O MOVIE
The Secret Lite Of
Wader Uitty" |C| (1947| Danny
Kaye Virginia Mayo

O ® TOOAY
J O WAKE UP
17 Q GOOO MORNING AMERICA
11 (35) TOM AND JERRY
a n 10) VILLA ALEQR£(R|
) I I 17) FUNTIME

a

7:30

01 (17) BASEBALL San Francisco
Giants at Atlanta Braves

J
MORNING WITH CHARLES
KURALT
31 1351 WOODY WOODPECKER
f f l (10) SESAME STREET g

3:10

6:00

1:40

Tbt iufttfta

WEDNESDAY
IS CHICKEN DAY

): O SEARCH FOR TOMORROW

6:30

3:00

IT (35) GREAT SPACE COASTER
H ) 10 MISTER ROGERS (R)
U (17) MY THREE SONS

o ® TEXAS
I.J
QUICNHG LIGHT
iT O GENERAL HOSPITAL
It
135) BUGS BUNNY ANO
FRIENDS
ff i (10) FROM JUMP3TREET (R)
g(MON)
f f l ( 10) FEELING FREE (TUE)
f f i (10) PEOPLE OF THE FIRST
LIGHT (R) (WED)
f f i (10) ONCE UPON A CLASSIC
(THU)
ff i (10) DUE PASAT(FRI)
11 117) FUNTIME

o

8:00
O 4 1 HOUR MAOAZINE
J i O DONAHUE
17 O i l (17) MOVIE
J! (35) GOMER PYLE
f f i ( 10) SESAME STREET g
dX (35) ANDY ORIFFITH

10:00
B ® TIC TAC DOUGH
11 1 Q WELCOME BACK. KOTTER
ill (35) I LOVE LUCY
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Rivers Guest Charles Gtodm
( IIQ M - A - S - H
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31 (35) STREETS O f SAN FRAN­
CISCO
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Gun 1 1954) Paul Newman. Lita
Milan A youthful Billy the hid
avenges tut employer's death and
than escapes to Madero

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5:00
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f f l 10 POSTSCRIPTS
3 2 (1 7 ) ALL IN THE FAMILY

5:30

5:00
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a t (17) LOVE. AMERICAN STYLE

ill (35) LOVE. AMERICAN STYLE
ff l (10) DAUGHTERS OF TIME
Three contemporary nursemidwrves are proliied at they work
with patent*, families and medical
Stalls ol hospitals and dimes

11.-00

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Orlando

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Orlando

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Cable Ch

In addition •* the channels listed, cablevislan subscribers may tun* In t* Independent channel 44.
St. Petersburg, by tunln« te channel 1 1 tuning to channel 11, which carries sports and the Christian
BroadcaitInf Network (CBN).

O ® THE FACTS OF LIFE Blair
and Jo become rivals tor the atten­
tions ot a neb boy (R|

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G ra te fu l Com pany
Casselberry’s Secret l,ake
P ark will have restroom
facilities soon Irecause of a
grateful company’s donation
of plumbing fixtures, building
Official Frank Broyles told
the Casselberry City Council
at Monday night's meeting.
Richard Waters of Waters
Plumbing wrote a letter to the
council commending the
city’s Police Department for a
"Job well done” in solving a
burglary to the company and
ensuring llie return of the
stolen property. In ap-

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Mr. Jarry L. Oivan*

SpeelalB uys... a t
G reater Savings fo r YOU!
Bo nele i t Rolled

CHUCK
ROAST

Coming TOMORROW!
Special Edition of the Evening Herald's 1st Annual

44 Pages Chock Full of G reat Recipes

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Wednesday, Stpf. 30. 1911

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                    <text>74,h Y ear, No. 3 3 -T u e sd a y , S ep tem b er 2 9 .19 8 1 -S an fo rd , F lorida 32771

E vening H erald —(USPS 481 260)— P rice 20 Cents

In Sanford

Proposed Western-Style Lounge Bites The Dust
It) DONNA ESTES
Ill-raid Stall Writer
Dale Gustafson's plans to operate a Western-style lounge
with the restaurant he is building at 1200 French Ave. at 13th
Street in Sanford died Monday night
The Sanford City Commission unanimously denied a beer
and wine license for the establishment, which is a requirement
before the state will issue a liquor license.
The commission action came after members of the Mt.
Shiloh Missionary Baptist Church, led by their lawyer, Ken­
neth McIntosh, complained that issuing the license would
violate a city law and that a lounge selling alcoholic beverages

would detract from the new church sanctuary they plan to
build.
McIntosh said the proposed lounge would be located just "23
steps" from the church site, adding that the church's 185
members have been paying for the site for three years.
The lawyer said the planned lounge would “adversely affect
the public interest" in the Goldsboro community. He urged
commissioners not to "'throw aside your conunon sense" by
granting the request. McIntosh noted that the lounge also
would be close to Sanford Middle School.
Gustafson, appealing to the commission for the license, said
the planned restaurant and lounge would upgrade the French

Avenue-13th Street area Gustafson's lawyer. Jack Bridges,
said tin- Planning and Zoning Commission earlier had ap­
proved the construction of a convenience store on the site,
noting that beer and wine could be- sold at that type of
establishment,
Bridges also noted that the liquor license Gustafson planned
to acquire from the state would have required that 60 percent
of the restaurant-lounge's business come from Die sale of food,
with the remaining 40 percent coming from the sale of
alcoholic beverages.
Commissioner Milton Smith said the city has no need for
another establishment selling alcoholic beverages, adding that

city law forbids the location of two such establishments within.
506 feet of one another He noted that another liquor establish­
ment, George's Tavern, is 4fH feet from the one proposed by
Gustafson
Commissioner David K irr said lie was sorry that the issue
had narrowed down to liquor as opposed to churches. He ad­
dl'd. however, that lie was elected to express the wishes of the
people and that many of diem are opposed to the new lounge
Tlie proposed lounge was rejected by the four com­
missioners present - Mayor l.ee P Moore. Smith. F arr and
Commissioner Ned Yancey Commissioner Eddie Keith is ill
and was unable to attend the meeting

Longwood Tax Rate
Cut Down Slightly

Ntf*M m m »r T»al vsraerenw

.

2 INJURED
IN MISHAP

Gregory and Kim Hios. both 1H. of 1.15 Lakeside Drive. Sanford, were injured
this morning when their car overturned while rounding u bend in Longwood
Itoad, about a quarter of a mile south of Lake .Mary Hoad, l-ake Mary police
said. Police said the road was slippery from a morning rain. The voung
couple were transported to Seminole Memorial Hospital, Sanford, for
treatment. Hospital officials said this morning thut the couple's condition
was not vet known.
.

Sanford Closing Down Feds'
Low-Income Housing Program
Hie city of Sanford is completing final
details to close out the federally funded
Community Development Block Grant
(CDBGl program , which was ad ­
ministered by the Sanford Housing
Authority.
The city withdrew its sponsorship of
the program, designed to purchase
dilapidated housing, renovate those
homes and resell them to low-income
families, after it discovered earlier this
year that the housing authority had
purcliascd II houses and properties, and
renovated and sold seven Federal funds
totaling more ttian $5 million were spent
in the process.
City Manager W. E Knowles urged the
city to withdraw its support, saying the
project was costing too much money per
dwelling.
As part of die program s closing, the
com m issioners voted unanimously
Monday night to condemn three of the
purchased houses at 900, 902 and 904 E.
Eighth St The houses are to tie
demolished ui 10 days
Knowles told the commissioners that
the rehabilitated house at 802 Pine Ave.,

done us part ol die program lias been sold account, Knowles said.
for $14,506.75 The proceeds have been
The city perm itted the Housing
placed in a special account, he said.
Authority to cancel its lease of City Hail
City Finance Director Henry Tamm is office space six manllis before tlie lease
setting up a special account to provide an was to expire. Knowles said, however,
audit track of all CDBG transactions now that the $9,814.92 in rental fees collected
that the city is handling the program s by tlie city from the authority in advance
closing, Knowles said.
will be held until tlie CDBG program is
In addition, an auction contract is completely closed out.
being prepared, he said, to sell off items
Auditors from the Ui&gt;. Department of
purchased with the federal money in­ Housing and Urban Development told the
cluding building materials currently city several monttis ago that regular
stored at Sanford Airport and furnishings Housing Authority operating funds were
from the former Housing Authority office com mingled with CDBG funds during the
at City Hall.
more than two years the special program
Knowles said the accounting firm of was going on.
Greene &amp; Dycus of Sanford is recon­
The auditors said money spent by the
structing accounts and auditing the authority from its operating funds for
program from its federal approval two the special program should be recovered
years ago to (lie present.
and returned to tlie authority. They said
Two families who lived in houses the majority of die Housing Authority
purcliased bv the Sanford Housing director's time was spent on the DBDG
Authority for renovation and resale have program, while his salary was paid from
been relocated to public housing regular operating funds. That salary
o(&gt;erated by the authority, Knowles said.
should be recovered front federal funds,
After the three houses are demolished the auditors said
on E. Eighth Street, the two lots they
The audiority manages 488 housing
occupied will also be sold und the units in six public housing projects in the
proceeds placed in tlie special bank city. - DONNA ESTES

The commissioners agreed with tin
police chief that when the county installs
a street light at the intersection o|
Church Street and 427. some of the traffic
problems in the area should In- resolved.
Tlie board also accepted a petition for
the annexation of a parcel 400 feet north
ol Wildmere on the west side of U S
Highway 17-92 Petitioner Walter E
Judge told the board he plans to build two
eight-unit apartments on the site already
zoned residential by tin- county
Till- board also accepted Judge's
proposal to annex an adjoining lot for
future commercial use
City Attorney Marvin Rooks rejiortod
that as he sirs it. the goal of the double­
taxation suit filed by some other county
cities, and which is Ix-ing considered by
1/mgwiNKl is to get as many eilies as
possible to participate in the suit against
the county In this way. litigation costs
could tx- shared among participating
cities, he said
llepp instructed Rooks to find out how
other cities exploring the suit are han­
dling llielr investigation into tlie suit,
llepp said the rommlssinn might he able
to decide next week whether to enter the
suit.
According to Rooks, a preliminary
study for tlie city to determine the
feasibility of entering into u suit against
the county could cost the city $2,000 in
analyst firs alone.
"II we should decide to go into this
suit," Hooks said, "we must be prepared
See LONGWOOD. Page 2A

By Sanford Com m ission

$7.8 Million Budget OK'd
A $7.8 million budget (or die 1981-82
fiscal year beginning Thursday was
adopted by die Sanford City Commission
unanim ously Monday night, and a
property tax rate ol $5 88 per $1,000
assessed valuation was set for the new
year.
At a public hearing held prior to
adoption, no members of the public spoke

either for or agauist the budget
Tlie tax rate represents an increase of
'23 6 cents per $1,000 over the 1980-81
fiscal year.
Tlx- overall budget of $7,824,407 is up 15
percent over the current y e a r's
$6,809,718
Tlie total budget includes general
operations oi $4,938,454. up from

$4,359,020: utility department, water and
sewer. $2,233,954, up from $1,974,616. and
refuse, $651,999, up from $476,082
The general operating budget is up
$579,434 from the cu rren t y e a r's
$4,359,020.
The tax rate of $5 88 per $1,000 assessed
valuation is up by 4 (x-rct-nt over tlie
current year's $5.64. - DONNA ESTES

TODAY
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2A
6B
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IB
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tA

Is A Holdup

Blacks Organize New Club:
East-West Club O f Sanford
Jackman, of Altamonte Springs; and
incoming lieutenant governor-elect Jack
Weible, of Sanford.
Thatcher will install tlie officers of the
new club, who include Jim Allen,
president; Taylor Roundtree, first vice
president; the Rev. Hezekiah Ross,
second vice president; Earl Minott,
secretary, and Oscar Redden, treasurer.
According to Allen, 36 members have
signed tlie petition seeking a charter for
the new dub. Charter night has been
scheduled for Nov. 14 at a location yet to
be determined.
Regular breakfast meetings will be
held at Ba m . each Saturday at Mother's
Kitchen. 1407 W. 13th St.. Sanford. Allen
said.

"Making a new nlticc tor a mayor lias a
lot to do with an ego boost and nothing to
do with pride in this city It also has a lot
to do with wasting money.” the resident,
Robert Davis said, directing his remarks
to Mayor John llepp, win has been
quoted several times as being in favor of
expanding City Hall as a " symbol o|
pride" for Igingwood
"I think people in this city should have
a nice place to come in and talk to their
city commissioners," said llepp m
response.
llepp added that a lot o| money that is
going into the City Hall remodeling is
living gathered from private donations
In other commission action. Police
Chief Gregg Manning reported proposed
changes he has worked out with county
officials regarding the "nn parking"
signs ttiat wen- placed in front of
businesses on County Road 427.
Manning said that now some parking
would be added from the south side of
Warren Avenue and the west side of 427,
and from the east side of 427 to the
railroad tracks Uiat cross 427 und Just
before State Rond 434.
Two weeks ago the commissioners
decided to put up "no parking" signs
along 427 lx-tween Warren and the
railroad tracks, und area merc-hunls
came before tile board last week to tell
tlie commissioners the board had, in
effect, closed down their businesses.
Manning said the county is going to
work with tlie city to re-mark C.K. 427 so
that definition of the lanes will not be so
confusing to motorists

Smile — This

Kiwanis
By JANE CASS El JIEHHY
Herald Staff Writer
A new Kiwanis Club is being organized
in Sanford by business and professional
men of the black community, who hope it
will be Die first new club of the year ui tlie
United States for Kiwanis International.
Tlie organization's year begins Oct. 1,
Tlie organizational meeting for the
club, to be known as tlie Kiwanis Club of
East-West Sanford, will be field at 7 p m.
Wednesday at the G reater Sanford
Cliamber of Commerce building, First
Street and Sanlord Avenue.
Special guests at the meeting will be
the past governor of the Florida District,
Bill Thatcher, of lx-esburg; the incoming
lieutenant governor of Division 25,1-arry

By DARLENE JENNINGS
Herald Staff Writer
In an unexpected burst of generosity,
the Lingwowl City Commission voted to
reduce the tentatively set tax rote from
$3.16 of assessed property value tn $3.12
during the final budget hearing Monday
night.
Tins means residents will have a 34.2
percent increase in taxes as opposed to
the previously announced 35.9 percent
Tlie commission also adopted the $1 58
million budget for fiscal year 1981-82,
which begins Oct 1
Com m issioner J Russell Grant
proposed that taxpayers be given the
lower increase due to the unexpected
$5,000 in franchise taxes from OrangeSeminole Cablevision the city recently
received
Tlie city also received an extra $4,000 in
unexpected revenue-sharing from the
federal government, but the board
decided to use this new money for city
office equipment and additional furniture
(or City Hall.
"1 think wc ought to knock off the
mlllage rate (tax rate) in light of the
$5,000 we have found from Cablevision,"
said Grant. “ ta t's Just change it right
now,” added Deputy Mayor June l/irmann.
Tlie vole to change tlie tax rate was
unanimous.
One
resid en t,
however,
was
vehem ently opposed to the city 's
suggestion to use the additional money
from revenue-sharing fur remodeling
City Hall.

“Interested men are invited to come
and join us and help get the club on tlie
road and do tlie job we liave to do in tlie
community," he added.
This is the second Kiwanis Club
organized by blacks in the Florida
District, according to Weible, who has
been working with the Sanford group to
get the club organized. "It lias been in the
works (or about a year and a half," he
said. "I was approached by Hezekiah
Ross and "Pappy" (Timothy) Wilson to
help them get a Kiwanis G ub organized.
This club and one in the Altamonte
Springs-Longwood area are the first new
Kiwanis Gubs to be formed in this
district in nine years.”

ST. I jOUIS lU l’Il - An 18year-old high school junior
escaped with more than $1,000
in a robbery at die Bank of St.
Louis,
but
ap p aren tly
reconsidered and surrendered
to authorities a short time
later, the FBI said.
An agent said die robber
displayed no weapon in the
holdup Monday but handed a
teller a note. One side read;
"Over. No tricks." The other
side read; "This is a holdup,
$2,000 please. Smile."
The te lle r handed over
$1,050 and the robber fled.
About l'x hours later, the
agent said l&gt;eRoy Ray, a
student
in
St.
laiuis,
telephoned police and ad­
mitted the robbery.
Ray had gone to a
restaurant where he once
worked and tulkcd with die
owner, who persuaded him to
surrender.

H»r»ld Photo kr Tom Vmco

BANDS PLAN
FESTIVAL

Representing three of the seven bands to p;
ticiputi* in the seventh annual Seminole Com
llij&gt;h School Itund Festival to be held Nov. 7
L\ iiiuii High School stadium are, from left. Dut
Shavers and Tonya Washington, Seminole Ills
Philip Haile, Lake Mary High; Carol ,\nne Hal
and Craig Hibbard, Itishop Moore High. The m
Lake Mary High hand will be playing in t
festival for the first time. Sponsors of the evi
are the Sanford Optimist Club and the Kveni
Herald.

�tA -Even ln g Herald, laniard. FI.

TiMSday ,3 e p t J V m i

Gunman Robs Local Department Store

WORLD
IN BRIEF
Solidarity Declaring
‘War1Against The State?
GDANSK, Poland (UPI) - Official media accused
the Solidarity convention of declaring “w ar" on the
slate hut union officials rushed across Poland to head
off a strike today by coal miners In the southern in­
dustrial region of Silesia.
Solidarity delegates meeting In Gdansk also ex­
pected harsh attacks from Moscow and East Bloc
allies following the announcement the dissident group
KOR was disbanding to turn over its fight for the
“ Independence of Poland and the rights of man" to
Solidarity.
"Every word spoken at the congress proclaims a war
against the government and legal-political relations,"
the Polish news agency PAP said. “The authorities,
which wanted to be a partner of Solidarity, cannot have
any illusions.

Ja w s: Happy New Veor
Israelis welcomed the Jewish New Year with
prayers in more than 7,000 synagogues and hopes for
peace but five Jews were arrested in the Soviet Union
when they tried to commemorate a Nail massacre
during World War II.
The new year celebrations, called Rash Haihana,
began at sundown Monday and marked the S,7Ulh year
since creation according to the Jewish calendar.

60 Executed In Iran
Iranian authorities took revenge for street battles by
executing 60 opponents after trials as brief as IS
minutes and Tehran's revolutionary prosecutor said 9year-old children could be executed If proven "grown
enough."
The prosecutor, Assadollah lajevardi, said In a
telephone interview Monday that the 60 dissidents had
been executed In Tehran's feared Evin Prison and
added that the cells were full.
An Evin Prison official, who did not want to be
identified, earlier said some trials lasted “between IS
and 30 minutes." Tehran residents reported after
Sunday's street battles that "anyone who looked
suspicious, or even walked fast, was arrested."

Indian Airliner Hijacked
I.AHOHE, Pakistan (UPI) — Armed Sikh warriors
seeking Independence from India today hijacked an
Indian Airlines Jet carrying III passengers and landed
in U hore, Pakistan, airlines officials said.
Authorities in Lahore said the Sikh hijackers were
holding 111 passengers and six crewmen hostage, but
all appeared to be unharmed. Initial reports said only
62 people were aboard the Indian Airlines 737.
The hijackers' demands were not Immediately
known. Two of them were Identified u Rajinder Singh
and N. Sachdev ot the fanatical Khalsa Party, a Sikh
group demanding Independence for the wealthy nor­
thwestern Indian stale ot Punjab.

Plpemo To Stay In Jail
MONTREAL ( U PI) — Franco Piperoo, wanted in his
native Italy on charges related to the kidnapassasinatlon or former Italian prime minister Aldo
Moro, will not seek bail while he waits two weeks for
extradition hearings to begin, his lawyer said.
At a court appearance Monday to set an extradition
hearing date, lawyer Pierre Poupart said he would
withdraw an earlier request for ball. Quebec Superior
Court Judge Benjamin Green burg scheduled Oct. 13
for hearings to begin on an extradition request from
the Italian government.

Dollar Slips, Gold Up
IjONDON (UPI) - The dollar slipped against
European currencies today following further reduc­
tions In U S. interest rates Gold recovered quickly
from Monday's dramatic declines.
"Gold picked up following some nervousness in the
dollar and dealers saying that Monday's selling was
unrealistic," a dealer for bullion brokers Sharps Pixley
said.

WEATHER
NATIONAL REPORT: Temperatures plunged into the 30s
in northern Great la k e s stales today and a frost warning was
issued in Michigan. But a bit of summer lingered in Colorado
and Nebraska Monday, where record breaking highs reached
the mld-aQi and Ms. Winds up to 30 mph fanned a (ire that has
ulready consumed more Hum 300 acres on Muddy Mountain
near Casper, Wyo. No Injuries were reported. Marble-to dimesited luul and up to 1 inch of rain soaked the Twin Cities area in
Minnesota Monday. Snow mixed with rain was forecast today
(or the Duluth area, where lows dipped into the 30s. Showers
und thunderstorms scattered from the Mississippi Valley to
the southern Plains and along the northern Pacific Coast
Monday night. A few showers also doused northern Idaho,
western Montana and southern New England. Fair skies
stretched across the remaining hall of the nation and tem­
peratures ranged in (lie 60s and 70s.
AREA READINGS (I a m ) : temperature: 77; overnight
low: 70; Monday's high: 17; barometric pressure: 30.01;
relative humidity: 17 percent; winds: north at • mph.
WEDNESDAY TIDES: DAYTONA BEACH: highs. 10:17
a m . 10:36 p.m .; lows, 3:67 a m . 4:13 p m ; PORT
CANAVERAL: highs, 10:00 a m , 10:11 p m ; lows, 3:31 a m ,
4:06p.m., BAYPORT: highs, 1 :8 6 am ., 3:41 p m ; lo w s,l:H
u.m., 0:43 p.m.
BOATING FORECAST: BL Augustine te Japitor la k l. (tot
If Miles: St Augustine to Jupiter Inlet out 30 milee—Easterly
winds around ISknota today and tonight becoming southeast 10
to IS knots Wednesday. Seas 4 to 3 feet decreasing Wednesday.
A few showers and thunderstorms.
AREA FORECAST: Partly cloudy through Wednesday.
Highs in the upper 10s. Lows in the low 30a. Winds nor­
theasterly 10 to 13 mph decreasing at night

Sanford's Eagle Family Discount Store, 3670 Orlando Dr.,
was robbed by a man armed with a small handgun Saturday.
According to police reports, store clerk Pattie M. Basso, 43
Rock Cove Ct., said a male approached the counter from the
rear of the store, pointed a small black gun at her and ordered
her to give him money.
The man left the store on toot at about 12:23 p.m. with an
unspecified amount of cash.
JEWELRY HEISTS
Fay E. Cashe, 410 Bay Ave., Sanford, reported to police 3892
worth of Jewelry and other Items were stolen from her home
between 8 a.m. and 11 a.m. Monday.
The burglars made off with a set of wedding rings valued at
1300, a gold ring valued at 3123, a clock radio worth 140 and 3227
cash.
In an unrelated incident, John Cullum, 818 Catalina Drive,
Sanford, reported that someone broke into his house between 8
p.m. Wednesday and 9:13 a.m. Sunday and stole three
diamond rings valued at 32,000.
TVsTAKEN
Four television sets were reported stolen from the Goodyear
Tire and Rubber Co., 333 W. 1st Street, Sanford, over the
weekend.
Store Manager John Warden told police he diacovered the
store had been broken into early Saturday. He said he found
the door ajar with the lock in the unlocked position while the
glass showed It had been atruck several times.
The burglary took place between 9 p.m. Friday and 7:20 a.m.
Saturday.
No value estimate was placed on the TV sets.
SAILBOAT SNATCH

Action Reports
*

F in s
★

C o u rts
★

P o lice

Anthony Nawrocki, 2593 Old Winter Garden Rd., Orlando,
reported to Sanford Police that someone boarded hli sailboat
docked at the Monroe Harbour Marina, opened the ltd of the
sailboat'! storage locker and removed 3162 worth of property.
The Incident occurred between 8:30 p.m. Thursday and 1:30
p.m. Saturday.
KEPT HIS WORD
Ronald John Zeigen of 38 Rock Cove Ct., Sanford, reported to
police that on Sept. 22 a male named "B ill" removed the
wheels and axlei from his house trailer, but "Bill" said he
would come back and pay for them.
The next day the man, described as W ert, 10-tnches tall with
dirty blond hair, returned and attempted to pay 3150 for the
wheels and axles.'
Zeigen told police he refused the money, demanding return
of the Items.
The wheels and axles are valued at 3300.
HOUSE RANSACKED
A smashed rear door glass and concrete block used to pound
out a door hinge pin were the means of entry for unknown
persons who ransacked a bouse a t &gt;212 W. 19th Court, Sanford.

According to police reports, Allen Joseph Thomas, said
burglars scattered contents of drawers on the floors in
living room and bedrooms.
The only item missing, however, was a Star .2S calit
automatic pistol taken from a nighlstand drawer.
HELD ON AUTO THEFT
John Henry G arrett, 47, of Market St. and Blake, Altamoi
Springs, was being held at Ihe Seminole County Jail Tuesday
lieu of 33,000 bond.
Garrett is charged with grand theft-auto after he was caug
Monday evening with a van that had been reported stolen
RECRUIT ROBBED
Enlisting in the United Slates Marine Corps hasn't provi
too profitable so far for new recruit David Velen of Gcnev
While Velen was taking his entrance physical and bei;
swom Into the Marines in Jacksonville, he left his "rath&lt;
beat-up old Pontiac" parked behind the Marine Cor;
Recruiting station, 2305 S. French Ave., Sanford, said Marir
recruiter Sgt. Ike Moon.
Sometime between 3 p.m. Thursday and 9:45 a.m. Saturda;
someone broke into the vehicle. Stolen, according lo polit
reports, were an AM-FM stereo, stereo tapes, a snack tra;
and sunglasses, all valued at 3150. But that wasn't all.
"They took his notes from 16 hours of biology classes," Moo
said. "They even broke into the glove compartment and stol
dirty napkins and pencils.
"They Just cleaned out lhat poor kid's car."
But Moon said Velen was philosophical about the nutter
"He said it could have been worse. The car’s ignition doesn
lock and whoever broke in rould have Just started the car u
and driven away."

Medical Program
Gains Support
In Casselberry

Car Lot O w ner Won't Be Fined...Yet
Conflicting testim ony and the
"seriousness of the issue,” prompted the
Casselberry City Council’s unanimous
decision Monday night to continue a
request by Grady Cobb for relief from
payment of extensive fines to the city (or
alleged building-code violations at his
property until tiw Oct. 5 council meeting.
Cobb, who operates 436 Auto Sales at
870 Semoran Blvd., has been fined 3300
per day since Aug. 10 for failure to
correct code violations as stipulated by
the Codes Enforcement Board, city of­
ficials said at Monday night's meeting.
Councilman Frank Schutte told Cobb,
"If there Is still one violation and eli
others have been met, there has still not
been com pliance with the board's
requirements."
Cobb, along with his lawyer, (old the
council all violations determined by the
board "have been satisfied as of Sept.

28."
Building Official F rank Broyles
disagreed, saying Cobb has not met all
requirem ents for satisfying the
violations as determined by the board.
In a letter to the council this week,
Broyles said "everything was out of
code" concerning Cobb's property. He
cited unfinished w iring, stored In­
flammable materials, blocked ingress
and egress to a property structure, and
other hazardous situations.
Cobb said he has "acted in good faith"
by tearing down a structure used for
spray-painting cars as requested by the
city because of structural problems. He
also said he has done everything he could
to expedite correction of other problems.
The council unanimously decided to
continue the hearing until Oct. 5 and
directed the mayor, fire Inspector and
building official to inspect Cobb's

property and report to the council no
later than Wednesday concerning Cobb's
compliance or non-compliance with the
corrective requirements. The council
also decided the 3300-pcr-day fine would
be held in abeyance until it can act on the
issue at the Oct. 5 meeting.
William Lawless, lawyer for property
owner, Met Pinto of Virginia, asked the
council to waive the possibility of a lien
being placed against the property for the
fine should Cobb "run off" and not pay
the fine.
City Attorney Ken McIntosh told
Lawless, "The city has no action against
you or your client."
Lawless added that If Cobb has not
corrected all cited violations by today,
the owner will begin civil proceedings
against him and evict him from the
property.
- TENI YARBOROUGH

'Father's Murder Affected Son'
TALLAHASSEE, Flu. (UPI) - The been the motivating factor behind the
Florida Supreme Court has scheduled a shooting of the officer at the Satlmaker
hearing for next month to consider Restaurant.
whether Jeroee Raulerson's death. Bent,
Two Duval County circuit Judges have
ence should be overturned because ot rejected this, concluding Rauleraon was
possible psychological trauma he could well within hit tenses when he pulled the
have suffered a fte r w itnessing h ti trigger taking the 23-year-old officer'*
father’s murder.
life.
R aulerson's law yer will present
arguments Oct. 8 in hopes of convincing
the Justices mitigating circumstances
existed and Rauleraon should not be
sentenced to the electric chair.
Raulerson's adoptive father died In his
arm s of gunshot wounds In the Ohio
restaurant they ran together tn 1972.
Three y e a n later Raulenon gunned
down Patrolman Michael Stewart while
robbing a restaurant in Jacksonville.
Raulerson's lawyer thinks that more
than coincidence la involved and that the
death ot hta adoptive father might have

The psychiatric Issue la one of several
raised by Raulerson's public defender in
hts new attem pt to avoid the death
penalty.
Raulenon, 31, of Rockmart, Ga„ and
Jerry Tant robbed the Jacksonville
restaurant on April 27, 1975. Rauleraon
was further accuaed of raping a waitress
during the robbery. A passerby alerted
police and In a ahootout, Tant and the
officer were killed.
Rauleraon was convicted of murder
and sentenced to death by Judge Susan
Black on Aug. 20, 1973. The Florida
Supreme Court upheld the sentence three

y e a n later Bnd Gov. Bob Graham signed
Raulerson's death w arrant on April 18,
1980.
But U.S. District Court Judge William
Caitogna in Jacksonville later threw out
the death sentence on the grounds that
Rauleraon had not been given an op­
portunity to read a presentence In­
vestigation report.
A lter hearing testim ony from
Raulerson’s natural mother and others,
Circuit Judge Ralph W. Nlmmons Jr.
relmposed the death sentence on Aug. 12,
1980, saying the officer's murder was
"heinous, atrocious and cruel."
The Judge listed five aggravating
factors and no mitigating factors In
setting the sentence.
But the defense believes the earlier
murder of Dennis Raulenon could be
cited t i a mitigating factor for hts adopt­
ed ton.

... Longwood Tax Rate

There are at least 704 Casselberry residents who say they
will support a Fire Department paramedic program in the
city, according lo Firefighter Frank Stone.
Stone, along with a handful of other firefighters and
residents, has been working since August to gather enough
signatures to present a petition for the advanced lifesupport program to City Council.
“We’re very pleased," Stone said. "We have 704
signatures, which have been verified with the supervisor of
elections, and all we needed to bring the petition to the
council was 624 signatures as of Oct. 1." The number of
signatures required on the petition is based on a percentage
of the city's total population.
The paramedic program proposes training, equipping
and paying six paramedic-firefighlers with a budget oi
3150,000 annually. Stone said the funding for Ihe program
will be raised through an additional 31.25 per 31,000
assessed property value tax levy. For example, the owner
of a 350,000 home could expect to pay an additional 35.21 per
month, or $62.50 per year more in Uses.
Taxes for properly owners In Casselberry currenlly are
3195 per 31,000 of assessed property value. According to
Mayor Owen Sheppard, Casselberry’s las rate Is the lowest
In Seminole County.
Stone said the paramedic program issue will be added to
the Oct. 5 meeting of the council and then, It is hoped, to the
Oct. 12 council agenda [or the council's discussion.
Stone said Ihe council has several options concerning the
petition.
"The council could vote lo implement the program Im­
mediately or ask us to get more signatures and ihen re­
present the petition, or kill the proposal," he said.
Stone said that if the council disapproves the program,
the committee requesting the program will ask that a
referendum be added to the December election ballot to
have residents decide whether they want, and are willing to
pay for, a paramedic program.

$30 Million Coke Bust
M1AM1 (UPI I — Federal and state agents raided a suburban
home southwest of Miami Monday nlghl and found 540 pounds
of high grade cocaine with a wholesale value of more than $30
million, a spokeswoman said.
Agent lAicette Fortier of the Florida Department ol Law
Enforcement said four citizens ol Colombia found in the house
were handed over to U.S. Immigration officials.
She said the cocaine was found hidden inside 11 duffle bags
at the house. She listed the wholesale value of the cocaine at
330,250,000.

(Ccattoaed From Page 1A)

DON'T DAM■L I

to pay large litigation fees.
L ongw ood'a
h is to ric a l-d is tric t
chickens were give 30days to move out of
the city. The chickens are owned by
Mary Holton, who lives across the street
from City Hall.
The commission said Monday night
that the city must enforce its ordinance
prohibiting raising farm animals in the

city. Commissioners said the ordinance
was being enforced because of com­
plaints from resid en ts about the
chlckeni.

Hall grounds, said the only complaint he
had ever heard about Mrs. Holton's
chickens was from the city's ad­
ministrator.

However, Warren Fageley, a realdent
who last week was told by the board to
keep his rooster at home rather than
allowing it to run -freely over the CUy

"Alt I’ve ever heard was that the
chickens keep Mr. Chacey (David
Chacey, d ty administrator) awake even
during the day," said Fageley.

w ith your Insurance I
-C A L L -

|T «
B U S IN E S S

RICHARD DALE
Richard Dale, 67, of 101
Lake
O ake
B oulevard,
Longwood, died Sunday night
■I Florida HoepitahOrlando.
Bora May 13,1914, in Johnson

OAL1, M l. SiCHABb City, Ky. he moved to Hospital-Altamonte. Born In
Funeral tervlcet lor Mr
langwood IS years ago front Bayonne, N J., May 19, 1901,
Ricftord Del*. U, ol 101 Lake
Orlando. He was a Baptist, a she moved to A ltamonte
Oak* Boulevard. Longwood. who
retired coal miner and a Springs from New Jersey in died Sunday in Orlando, will be
ol 10 * tn. Wtdnetday at
member of the United Mine 1961. She w u a housewife and
Gremkow Garnet Funeral Home
Workers.
a m em ber of St. Mary
Chapel, with Ih* Rev. Jim
Hammock oMIciotlng Burial in
He la survived by hta wife, Magdalen Catholic Church.
Longwood Memorial Garden*.
Survivors include a son,
Vondle Dale, Longwood; one
Friend* may call between to
a.m. and f p .m , Tuetday.
daughter, Mrs. Joyce Platt, John B. Johnson, U.S. Air
Gremkow
Oolno* Fu n e ral
Orlando; one ion, Jam es W. Force; a daughter, Mrs. Clare
Home. IH Dog Track Road.
F
a
lk
in
g
h
a
m
,
A
lta
m
o
n
te
D ale, Jacksonville, three
Longwood, it In charge ol
gran d ch ild ren ; one g re a t­ Springs; a brother, Cyril J. , arrongemenlt
grandchild; atx aistcra, Mrs. Kelly, New Y ork; five
Jasper Cundlff, Longwood, grandchildren and five great­ ' A I I m
ODrI jr
Mra.
Im ogene
T ate, grandchildren.
Baldwln-Fairchild Funeral
C asselberry, M rs. C lara
Jarrell, Athens, W .V a.L ioie Home, Altamonte Springs, is
Daniels, Silver Creek, N.Y., in charge of arrangements.
Maxine Spencer, PainUvills,
Ky., and Mrs. Molly Levarstt,
Clarksville, N.C.; and one
S IS K IN , MRS. RUTH b ro th er,
E rn e st
D ale, Funeral
Mrvlcee Hr Mr* Ruth
PalntsviUe, Ky.
Pipkin. 77. d 111 N. Oleander St.,
Gramkow-Galnes Funeral longwged, who died Monday el
Florida Heasttsl Altamonte, will
Home, Longwood, ii in charge
beet lle .m Thursday e« .Vinter
of arrangenMnta.
toeMe* Seventh dey Advert it*

312*189

IN S U R A N C E

It's Part of
the
Serv

AREA DEATHS
MR&amp; RUTH PIPKIN
Mrs. Ruth Pipkin, 77, o( 181
N. Oleander St., Longwood,
died early Monday at Florida
Hospital-Altamonte.
Born April 7,1904, In Tilton,
G a., th e had lived in
Longwood 21 years. She was a
homemaker and a member of
the Winter Springs Seventhday Adventist Church.
S urvivors
include
a
daughter, Mrs. Doris Terry,
Valdosta, Ga., and Mra. Sarah
M cDaniel, Longwood; two
sons, William R. Childs, Lake
City, and Theodore S. Childs,
Anyor, S.D .; 13 g ran d ­
ch ild ren ;
10
g re a t­
g ran d ch ild ren ; and two
l i s t e n E lvs Wilson, F it­
zgerald, Ga. and Gertrude
Bowden, IrwinvUle, Ga.
GramkowG sines Funeral
Home is tn ch arg a ol
arrangements.

I

INSURANcV

// /'/'// ///'///
■

S 'td ifk

018nils,

GRACE
MARIE
JOHNSON
Mrs. Grace Marie Kelly
Joltneon, U, ol 424 Windmeadow*, Altamonte Sprit*!,
died Sunday a t F lo rid a

-V*

Church with Peeler Ken Cooniey
dlfcleHng. Burial In Gian Haven
Memorial Sark. Friend* may
ceil from 1 1 p.m. wtMweeay el
G ra m k e w O a in t t F u n e ra l
Home. IM Des Track Road.
Lenfwood. Gremkow Gain** H
M cnargo ol arrange*****.

■6 Jpt *- *

If you’re not getting It,
call 322-2611

I iw p S e r® n o n e

imnam
}IMORLANDO DR.
■ SAN POROBStolf ■

k k w w a e w m mi

Evening Herald
CIBCULATKM* DfPT.

�Tugsdgy, Stpl.» , 1tH -}A

Evsnlng Htrald. Sanford, FI.

FLORIDA
IN B R IE F
Spy Admits To Espionage
^o Save His Wife And Son
JACKSONVII.I E. Fla. lUI’I) — Confessed spy
'"seph George Helmlch Jr. says the Army was (he only
f.iinil) he knew and he “knowingly and willingly"
tietrayed its secrets to Hie Soviets (o keep irnm being
drummed out over a few hundred dollars in bad
• hecks.
In a
surprise move, the ■H-year-old cx-Armv
warrant officer stood up Monday at tire outset of the
ocond week of his espionage trial and pleaded guilty to
o single count of conspiring to |&gt;eddle military code
information to the Russians. In return, the government
dropped three charges of actual espionage against
him.
Defease attorney Peter M. Dearing said Helmich
wanted to “term inate" the trial “because of the
pressure on his wife and 10-year-old son."

N ew Lobbying Try For ERA
TAI.I.AHASSEE, Flu. (CPI) — Some supporters
have given up on Florida ratifying the Equal Rights
Amendment before the deadline next June 30.
Hut the National Organization (or Women says it has
such high hopes that it will mount an intensive cam­
paign to put public pressure on anti-EHA legislators
between now and the 1982 session which opens in
January.

Koziy No Nazi Puppet
WEST PALM REACH, Fla. (U P!I - Attorneys for
liohdan Koziy. accused of lying to Hie government
about his role in World War 11, will continue their
defense this morning after one of his old schoolmates
testified Monday that she never saw him in the uniform
of a Nazi puppet policeman.
Koziy is accused of lying about his past when he
entered the U.S. after the war. Government attorneys
contend that Koziy helped the Nazis kill Jewish men,
women and children during the occupation of Poland.
They are seeking to have his U.S. citizenship stripped,
which could lead to deportation.

It's Lights Out In Miami
MIAMI i U PII — Officials in the Miami area arc up
in arm s about plans to turn off street lights along
crime-riddled Biscayne Boulevard and other major
thoroughfares in the county this week in an effort to
meet budget cuts.
"Are they aware this action is going to give aid and
comfort to street criminals? Every study shows there
is a direct connection between the number of street
lights and the amount of crim e," said an angry Miami
Beach Mayor Murray Meyerson.
As many as 12,000 lights on some of the county’s
major streets will lie turned off later this week — u
move expected to save Dade County $1.S million, half
of what it would cost to keep them shining.

County Considers Getting Involved
In Multi-Family Mortgage Business
up a housing finance authority to the com­
By DARLENEJENNINGS
missioners during the Monday work session.
Herald Stall Writer
Easton told the commissioners that unless
Seminole County Commissioners took no
formal action Monday afternoon toward they decide to first issue low-lnterest mor­
establishing a housing finance authority that tgages for multi-family use, the single-family
would make low-interest mortgages available plan might nut get off the ground.
Easton suggested to the board that it con­
(o low*to middle-income families for multisider the formula Orange County used in
family residences.
In August Hie proposed plan for an authority getting past the higher initial administrative
to issue bonds (or single-family residences costs for the SFR program.
“ The county could issue multi-family bonds
i SFH i was dismissed when Hie board decided
not to rush into any decision about creating an and lake this money and Invest In i( a higher
authority and the state's Sept. 1 deadline interest rate." he said. “Then the county could
passed without the necessary resolution to do take Hie profit’ and use It to cover the singlefamily program."
so.
The reason for the higher administrative
There is no deadline for establishing housing costs for the singje-family-homes, according
authoriUes that offer financing for multi- to Easton, is a new restriction that permits
family homes.
finance authorities to charge one percent
Jim Easton, assistant county administrator, higher interest rates than are being paid to
presented Hie proposed procedure for setting bondholders.

The U S. Senate Finance Committee sup­
ports an increase In the arbitrage rate — the
buying of bonds in one market and selling in
another — from one percent to 1.5 percent.
However, Easton said, because Hie Reagan
administration is opposed to Hie arbitrage rate
it is unlikely Hiere will be an Increase.
Families in Seminole County who could
qualify for low-income status, according to a
formula developed by the federal Department
of Housing ami Urban Development (HUD),
are those earning $16,000 a year or less.
Middle-income families would be those wiUi
a combined yearly income of no more Uian
$27,750.
Families interested in applying for the lowinterest loans would have to qualify for them
according to proposed county housing finance
requirements. The authority, if established,
would consider before granting a loan such
facts as the total income of Hie family, Hie size

Of 7'/2-Acre City-Owned Tract

In Altom onte

Apartment Developer Gets
60 Days To Conclude Purchase
By DONNA ESTES
Herald Staff Writer
The Sanford City Commission Monday night gave land
developer-entrepreneur Tom Rucker of Altamonte Springs 60
days to conclude the purchase of a 7'i-acre city-owned tract
for development into an apartment complex or Hie property
will be sold to someone else.
The commissioners voted unanimously to extend Rucker’s
option on the property, located behind the Evening Herald
building on French Avenue near Uvc lakefront, until Dec. 1 and
accepted u $10,000 non-refundabte payment for the extension.
But the commissioners at the same time instructed City
Manager W. E. “ Pete” Knowles to tell Huckcr no further
extensions will be grunted and also told Knowles to prepare to
place the property on the market for sale If Rucker's latest
extension expires without positive action on his part.
The city agreed to sell Rucker tlie former city sanitary
landfill site nearly two years ago for a total of $130,000. The
idea behind Hie sale, the commissioners said at the lime, was
to encourage development of the parcel and thus place it on Hie
tax roils.
Rucker placed a deposit of $13,000 with the city for Hie
parcel. Recently he gave the city another $10,000 for a time
extension on Hie purchase, pointing to Hie high interest rate on
borrowing development funds.
Tlie commission Monday night, alter considering whether to

of Ibe family, and its ability to compete in Hie
normal private housing market.
However, the commission is not entirely
favorable to the idea of o ra tin g the housing
authority. Commissioners Hud Feather and
Rill Kirchhoff have spoken out against Hie plan
several times.
FeaHier said Monday that he was com­
fortable with the fact dial 20 percent of Hie
units in a low-interest mortgage project would
have to be set up for persons who qualify for
low-income status.
He added that lie was concerned that Hie 20
percent requirement would bring down the
standards of the project. However, one of
several builders at Hie work session told Hie
board tie saw no problems wiHi turning out
"quality, viable projects."
Kirchhoff said he is not in favor of Hie plan
because he believes the bousing bonds will
compete with the county's other bond issues.

grant Rucker a 90-day extension of bis option to purchase for
another $10,000, decided on Hie Gtklay time limit.
Commissioner Milton Smith said Hie property now probably
will bring the city $250,000 if it were placed on Hie market.
Mayor I,ee P. Moore said the city over the years lias been
criticized for "giving the property u w a j H e pointed out that
Hie city previously collected $26,000 in payments from a
prospective purchaser when a deal fell through and so far has
collected $33,000 from Rucker. Moore also noted tluit the
purpose ol selling the property was to have It developed ami
placed on the tax rolls.
He said considerable work will have to be done at the site
before It can be developed, and that Hie land will have to be dug
out to a depth of about six feet and replaced with clean fill dirt
to rid the Iracl of its underlying garbage. Tlie parcel was used
by the city fur some years as a sanitary landfill.
If Rucker is able to complete the purchase of the property by
Dec. I, the $33,000 he lias already paid Hie city will be
deducted from the $130,000 purchase price.
Tlie commissioners told Knowles to call (or proposals from
others wishing to buy the tract on Dec. 1 if Rucker is not ublc to
conclude the purchase by then. According to the contract
between Rucker und the city, lie must develop Hie land into an
apartment complex within one year alter the purchase Is
completed.

Time Running Out
To Register For
Nov. 3 Election
Time Is running oul for Altamonte Springs residents who
wish to vote in the Nov. 3 election but have not yet
registered to do so.
According to Charlotte Richter, community affairs of­
ficer, residents must register no later than the close of
business hours on Ft idu), Oct. 2.
Mrs. Richter said residents can register at City Hall, 225
Newburyport Ave., between 8 a m . and 5 p.m.; Hie tax
collector’s office, Interstate Mall, between 9 a.m, and I
p.m. and between 2 and 5 p.m .; or the county courthouse,
Sanford, between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m.

HOSPITAL NOTES
Seminole M em orial Hospital
Monday
A D M ISSIO N S

S«inlofd
B e rt eftel E Dunn
Judy M Carder
Ethel Atlthie
Charles W Brantley
tsabet N eville
M argaret B Johnson
Edna Mae Lane
E lirab e lh A Melton Deltona
Edgar M Lansing, Deltona
Alar nee W Hughes, Deltona

Ofts B S«des, Enterprise
Ronald Stevers. Orange City
Walter isham Kittle. Orange
City
M ildred V Haynes, Titusville
D IS C H A R G E S

Sanford
Belinda G Tyson
C a rrie Mae Barnes
lou»t Davts
Ctoteal A s h le y , A lta m o n te
Springs
Ralph Sprovv, Long*ood

,vn

Lovers' Spat Ends In Death
MIAMI lUPD — A man armed with a .38 caliber
revolver went to a suburban Ford auto dealer Monday
evening to see his former girl friend and ended up
shooting her three times, wounding another woman,
killing a customer paying a bill and then fleeing the
scene on a bicycle.
Police said they arrested Fidel Eladio Diaz, 23, less
than two hours after the shooting about two miles from
the scene. Diaz has been charged with first-degree
murder, aggravated assault und attempted robbery.

NATION
IN B R IE F
Graham Urges Creation O f
'Southern Common Market'
DORADO, Puerto Rico (UPII - Gov. Bob Graham
of Florida urged Hie Southern Governors’ Association
Monday to form u "common market" to head off a
takeover of banking by northern investors.
Graham outlined iiis plan fir a "Southern common
m arket" at a conference of the Southern Growth
Policies Board. He said the region lias no bank that can
compete with huge New York and Chicago institutions,
once nationwide banking comes about, and wanted the
governors to get ready for well-monied Northern
competition in (his decade.
"I think the handwriting is clearly on the wall, that
soon we will have interstate banking and finance in this
nation," said Graham "There is a very' real possibility
that our Southern institutions will be ubsorbed by a
nationwide tide centered in New York, Chicago or
California.”

Stitch pennants or school latiars onto solid color
fait to rruka an attractive badspraad for a child or
tatnagar. The fait naadt no hamming, juit cut to silt.

ADAM S PAINTING CONTRACTOR
B U S tN ES IA HOME

HAS MOVED TO DeBARYI
Still servicing Sanford
and surrounding areas.
Our suparlor sarvlca has not changad.
Only our phone number.

668-8813

Our new number is

W EEKLY
FU R N ISH ED BEDROOM

•9 4 *°

CAVALIER
MOTOR INN

•M liS tvrvlcc
• LaunSrv Fid llll**
• It Chaitml Cafcla TV
• tiva EattiialamMl
t Nights (a Lawngt

•n m llv Rtslevreal
• largar ■••m i and
Efficiency apts. available
a» Slightly Higher Raft
etavclal Discavnl On
Monthly HatVS

3200S. OrlandoDr.
(Hwy. 17-92) Sanford
(305)321-0690

SANFORD BLUEPRINT
For All Blueprint And
Drafting Supply Naadt

W einberger 'Pitches' Arms
WASHINGTON i UPI I - The Reagan administration
made its pitch to the Senate Armed Services Com­
mittee, but there was no sign it scored any points on its
embattled proposal to sell arm s to Saudi Arabia.
Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger, flanked by a
dozen uniformed Pentagon officers, testified for nearly
live hours Monday on the proposal, which majorities of
the House and Senate now oppose. Weinberger
maintained the 18.5 billion package would be good (or
tlie United Stales, bolster Middle East security and
decrease Hie chances of Soviet encroachment In Hie oilrich region.

Diablo Opening Delayed
AVI LA BEACH. Calif. (UPIl A design
discrepancy did what the nation’s largest anti-nuclear
protest was unable to do for the past two weeks - in­
definitely delayed preparations to activate Hie Diablo
Canyon nuclear power plant.
Pacific Gas A Electric, owners of Hie |2.3 billion
plant on the California roast, disclosed late Monday
that engineers had "discovered a discrepancy" in a
diagram used to analyze stress on pipe supperts in Hie
reactor’s domes.

and yellow and
stuck dll over?
Ilium...That's a imigh tine! Here arc
some more factual hints dial will hcl|&gt;
you answer dial question.
You'll find them on niosi new major
appliances. Whenever you're ready to
purchase a major appliance, they will
help you compare features and energy
efficiency so you can make the liest
buy! Always compare models rtl
similar si/.e with similar features.
There are MO HE TUAN ONE K IS H
To he more specific, there are TIIHEE
KINDS!
The first describes ENEHGY COST!
You'll find it on: Refrigerators,
freezers, refrigerator-freezers, mid
water heaters showing the range of
operating costs of competitive brands.
It will also show you the cost of
running a dishwasher or clolhcrs
washer with gas vs. electricity. Your
salesperson or utility office can tell
you the cost of gas or electricity
for your area. There is a large number
in the center describing estimated
yearly cost to run the appliance, based
on an electricity rate of approximately
5-cents [ier kilowatt-hour. The liar
underneath shows the range oT operat­
ing costs for competing models. The
table at the bottom lets you figure
your yearly operating cost for die
appliance based on your local utility
rate.

center is die rating. Tlie higher the
number, the mure efficient the
appliance, A cost and use table is
included so you can calculate die
energy cost of the aii conditioner
based on local electricity rates and
number of hours you'll use it each
year.

T he third is GEXEIUC and you’ll find
it on furnaces. It tells you how to con­
serve energy at home and refers to an
energy fact sheet with information on
the furnace system's components and
The second describes EFFICIENCY
the overall efficiency of various combi­
and you'll find it on room air condi­
nations. Well, what i the auiwer!
tioners. The large number in the
You guessed it.,.

• Blue Prints
• Drafting Supplies
• Sepias

• Specifications
• Xerox Copy Service
a Mylars

• General Copy

SANFORD BLUEPRINT

IISS. Nhntli Aw.

ENERGYGUDE LABELS
For additional information contact:
The Governor's Energy Officc/The Capitol/Tallaliasscc, Fla. 32301/(904)488-2475

3

322-1455

Free Local Pidt Up And Delivery

—.**—• — -

* —

’- a

v v -v - •«•«*♦•* «

Florida Public Service Com m ission

THE GOVERNORS ENERGy PARTNER.

ENEHG Y GUIDE LABELS - They're nothing to JOKE about.

-■ vs'V --* V

r

- -

. ' i - .

• *»** r

#* • * —

�Evening Herald

The Commercial Division of the United Way of
Seminole County, which kicks off its 1981 cam­
paign on Sept. 30, will employ some new ideas
this year in seeking support of Uie county's
business com m unity, according to Robert
Walko, division vice chairman.
Oct. 12-17 has been designated Seminole
County United Way Commercial Week and
volunteers from the various United Way agen­
cies are being encouraged to make most of their
solicitation visits during that week. Prior to
calling on the businesses, they will be contacting
them by letter and phone.

(USPS 4IMI0I
300 N. FRENCH AVE.. SANFORD, FI A 32771
Area Code 305-322-2611 or 831-9993

Tuesday, September 29, 1981—4A
Wayne D. Doyle, Publisher
Thomas Giordano, Managing Editor
John Toen|et, Advertising Director
Home Delivery: Week, 11,00: Month, I t.2 : 8 Months, 124.00;
Year, 845.00. By Mall: Week, $1.25; Month, $5.25; 6 Months,
130 00; Year. $57.00.

Apply The
Brakes Gently
President Reagan wants to apply the brakes
gently to the cost-of-living increases scheduled
next year in Social Security benefits and other
income programs indexed for inflation. This
would affect more Americans than anything Mr.
Reagan has proposed so far to hold down the
federal budget deficit.
. The president has warned that the new round of
budget cuts he will announce tonight will demand
."blood, sweat and tears," but that may be
'overstating the case where the action on Social
;Security and other entitlement programs is
-concerned.
Contrary to the Democratic thunder rolling out
of Congress, Mr. Reagan is not proposing to cut
♦anyone’s benefits for the sake of keeping his
ieconomic program on the track. An occasional
#lash of lightning in this political storm
illuminates the fact that he is proposing only to
delay the effective date of benefit increases
scheduled next year.
The delay would affect Social Security; the
Supplemental Security Income program for the
aged, blind and disabled; veterans' benefits;
military retirement pay and pensions for federal
civilian employees and railway workers.
These programs have one thing in common. By
action of previous Congresses the benefits rise
automatically on specified dates to reflect
changes in the consumer price index. In most
cases the increases would occur next Ju,y 1. Mr.
Reagan wants to postpone the date until Oct. I,
trimming $5 billion from a deficit threatening to
get so large that it will smother his economic
program in its cradle.
Rep. J.J. Pickle of the House Social Security
Committee and other Democrats are arguing that
it is unfair to retired people to withhold these
increases. We would argue just the opposite —
that it would be unfair to exempt them from any
sacrifice at all during a government fiscal crisis
which their own "entitlements" arc helping to
.create.
The automatic cost-of-living escalators in
federal program* are one reason presidents and
Congresses in recent years have been unable to
keep a lid on their budgets — a reason why a $42.5
billion deficit projected only a few months ago is
now looking more like a $65 billion deficit. When
Congress made these benefit increases
automatic, it surrendered its power to adjust
them to what the economy in a given year could
support.
We would refer Mr. Pickle to a report issued by
the U.S. Census Bureau last month which
revealed that the median family income of
Americans fell by 5.5 percent in "real" terms
between 1979 and 1980. Wages actually rose by 7.9
percent, but a 13.5 percent increase in prices
turned that into a net loss in buying power.
But the Census Bureau pointed out the decline in
real income occurred only for families supported
by wage-earners. Families supported by Social
Security, SSI benefits or other pensions indexed to
consumer prices saw their incomes rise at the
same rate as inflation. Pensioners have the
benefit of this inflation insurance while others
must bargain for pay increases or work harder to
keep their incomes abreast of inflation.
Social Security beneficiaries received an 11.2
percent increase in benefits last July 1. Mr.
Reagan is proposing that their benefits remain at
the current level for 15 months instead of 12
months. No matter what Mr. Pickle says, that
doesn't strike us as cruel or unfair.

Please Write
Letters to the editor ore welcomed for
publication. All letter* must be signed, with
a mailing addret* and, if possible, a
telephone number 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.

BERRY'S

By JANE CASSELBERRY

Each of Seminole’s United Way agencies will
have the opportunity to participate In a special
charity fair on Oct. 24,10 a.m. to 10 p.m, in the
concourse leading to Robinson's al the
Altamonte Mall. H ie Altamonte Mall Merchants
Association will award 1100, 150 and 125 prizes
for the three best displays.
"In the past 'Ma and P a' merchants haven't
had the money to participate so this year we arc
making it easier for them," Walko explained. "If

I

iibmty. '

■
?■:

Bahia Shrine Temple will hold its 15th annual
Benefit Paper Sale, Oct. 2 and 3, with local
Shriners hitting the streets to peddle Iheir
papers.
The annual paper sale and other special
projects provide 45 percent of the more than $07
million annual operating budget for the Shriners
Hospitals. Shriners are operating 18 Orthopedic
Hospitals and three Burns Institutes throughout
North America for treatment and research in
both fields. These include the germ free ward in
Boston, new bum* vaccine development in
Cincinnati and brittle bones research in Chicago,
to name a few.
The first Shriners Hospital for Crippled

Telephones arc a convenient and essential part
oi our modern living, but can. if not correctly and
courteously used also be annoying and disrup­
tive. Take the case of one new Sanford residence
w hose phone lias a number one digit off from the
number assigned to a large local discount store.
She gets three to five calls for tire store a day
and is ready to tear out her phone. Reluctant to
change her number since she (ms just Invested in
printing up business letterheads, etc., with the
number on them, site has asked us to remind
callers to check the phone numbers carefully m
the directory and lake time to dial the numbei
correctly.
So listen up. all you wrong number dialers.

ROBERT

BALTIMORE (UP1) - Research on lire
biological characteristics of one of man's
most feared predators may one day help
scientists In their effort to prevent one of
man's most feared diseases.
Sharks appear to have a lesser incidence of
cancer than other animals. Discovering why
this is so might give researchers clues to
lowering the risk of cancer in humans.
Pathologist Ray Jones of the University of
Maryland has been working since August to
determine how resistant sharks are to cancer.
He has injected 48 embryos taken from spiny
dogfish sh ark s with cancer-causing
chemicals and during the next year will check
the embryos periodically for tumors.
"A hypothesis published last year (in the
Medical Hypothesis journal) stated that
sharks have a lower incidence of tumors,"
said the 42-year-old Jones. "I think that’s
true, but I want to see for sure. I mter, 1 would
like to see why II may be true."
Another research finding published In 1976
in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute
showed that transplanted lung cancer tumors
did not develop in 59 percent of mice treated
with shark serum. Tumors did eventually
grow in the remaining 31 percent, but
researchers said those mice survived longer
than untreated mice.
Once Junes' Initial work is complete, he
plans io take a closer look at shark tissue to
determine precisely why sharks are resistant
to can cer. T h at work would Involve
"manipulation of (hath tissues,*' or treating
shark-injected tissue with substances from
sharks to determine what it is that prevents
or retards cancer.
Jones said sharks have already been found
lo have a high level of vitamin A, which in
turn has been shown to help prevent cancer.
“ It could be that the amount of vitamin A is
responsible, in which case my work would
support other research showing that vitamin
A helps prevent cancer," he aaid.
Junes SAid sharks also have been shown to
have a "high osmodlc pressure" — a large
number of dissolved particles In the blood.
Tliat may also contribute lo the shark's
ability to fend off cancer, the researcher said.
He said the Injected shark embryos have
shown no sign of cancer, bul cautioned that it
may be too early to tell if they will develop
malignancies.
"We're going to keep them around here for
u year," he said. "Hopefully, we'lt either see
something or not see something during lhat
time."
Jones, an associate professor of pathology,
aaid he first worked with sharks IS years ago
as an undergraduate at Old Dominion
University in Norfolk, Va.
He did more work on sharks while studying
for a m aster's degree at the University of
Delaware and became interested in sharks
and cancer upon learning of the 1976 study of
the effects of shark serum on mice.
Jones said his early work Is oeing funded by
the university's B rn sler Fund. He said he
may eventually apply for outside grants to
further his research.
"If we prove this hypothesis, then we can
move forward," he aaid. "Maybe someday alt
of this will help people.”

W

Who Says
You Can t
Beat IRS?

Sharks
And
Cancer

WASHINGTON (NEA) - Decisicns ol the
U.S. Tax Court rarcl) gel much attention in
the popular press. But one recent ruling
deserves mention because of both its potential
w idespread application and its sharp
departure from past interpretations of the las
law by tlie Internal Revenue Service.
For years the IRS lias held a taxpayer can
deduct a casualty loss Irom Ins taxes only (o
the extent the loss was not covered by in­
surance. Tiie loss tuis not lieen considered
deductable if the taxpayer did not seek
reimbursement from his insurance carrier

ROBERT WALTERS

Pollution Has No Barriers
TORONTO (NEA) - "There is one central
question," says an angry John Roberts,
Canada's minister of the environment. "It Is
whether the United States is going to stop
dumping Its polluted airborne garbage on this
country."
Behind u facade oi diplomatic charm,
Roberts is furious about (he millions of tons of
pollutants that originate in the United States
but land in Canada In the form of dilute yet
damaging sulphuric acid and nitric acid.
Canada, lie notes, must undertake a $400
million program to deal with the growing
problem of arid rain during the next two
decades, but the United States will have to
spend five lo eight times lhat amount — |2
billion or more — lo clean up the eastern
North American airshed shared by the two
nations.
Ttie United States, the Canadians argue,
has transformed that airshed into an airborne
sewer by releasing approximately 30 million
tons ol sulphur dioxide and 25 million tons of
nitrogen oxides into the atmosphere every
year.
Although the Clean Air Act of 1970 requires
strict emission controls on all new power
plants constructed in subsequent years, most
of the sulphur dioxide comes from generating
stations exempted from the law because they
were already operating at the time it was
enacted.
About half of the nitrogen oxides come from
autom obile and other motor vehicle
emissions.
In co n tra st, C anadian sources are
responsible for only about 5.5 million tons of
sulphur dioxide yearly and sllghUy more than
2 million tons of nitrogen oxides annually.
Because prevailing winds over the eastern
half of the continent generally blow from
south to north, Canada estimates that ap­
proximately half of the acid rain that ralla on
its soil originates in the United States.

Many ot ttie pollutants can be traced to
m assive coal-fired electric generating
stations in stales located in or near the Ohio
Valley — notably Ohio, Indiana, Pennaylvania, Illinois, Kentucky, Missouri, West
Virginia and Tennessee.
Canada, on the other hand, long held Die
dubious distinction of serving as tlte home of
the continent's single most prolific source of
sulphur dioxide contamination — an Inco Ltd.
nickel smelter In Sudbury , Ontario.
Toronto journalist Ross Howard, author o(
a book on acid rain, notes that provincial
officials who have Jurisdiction over pollution
did "a dismal Job" until recently but now
"have finally cracked down" In Sudbury and
elsewhere.
Canada’s efforts to convince tlie Untied
States to adopt a similarly (ougli approach lo
the problem met wilb considerable success
during the ad m in istratio n of President
Carter.
Preliminary negotiations were held in 1978,
tiie two nations issued a Joint Statement on
Transboundary Air Quality in mkl-1979, a
Joint research organization was established
and in August 1980 leaders of the two coun­
tries signed a memorandum of intent calling
for development of "a bilateral agreement...
to combat transboundary air pollution."
When President Reagan visited Canada last
March, hia speech to both houses of
Parliament included a commitment "to
continue lo work cooperatively lo understand
and control the air and water pollution that
respects no borders."
But when Roberts went to Washington in
June for further negotiations, tie was i ebuffed
by Anne M. Gorsuch, administrator of the
Environmental Protection Agency. "Canada
got very little in tiie way of a favorable
response," says Howard.

Now along comes Dixon Miller, who
cracked up his sailboat for damages totaling
1842. Miller feared his liability insurance
would lie canceled if lie told bis insurance
company about the accident, so tie simply
paid for Hie repairs and claimed ttie loss on
his (ax return.
When ttie IRS disallowed the deduction.
Miller appealed the derision to the Tax Court
Surprisingly, he won,
Tlie court ruled a taxpayer could have
"pragm atic considerations" for not filing an
insurance claim — such as fear that his in­
surance might lie canceled — ami that in such
cases he might bo able to take the deduction.
It should lie noted Tax Court rulings apply
only to tiie particular case at hand; tlie court
would not necessarily rule on another similar
case as it did on Miller's. And tlie IRS will not
change its interpretation of the casualty loss
deduction on the basis oi this decision.
But at least it may provide another option to
tlie taxpayer who fares an insurance can­
cellation if he reports an accident.
The general-election cam paign for
president may begin much earlier in 198! than
it has in the past.
Tlie parly in the White House traditionally
holds its convention in mid-August, while the
party out of power usually meets a month or
so earlier.
Bul C harles M anatt, the D em ocratic
national chairman, says that Ins party may
need more campaign time in I98t So, lie is
considering scheduling the convention (or as
early as tlie third week in June,
If lie does so, you can hcl (iuil the
Republicans will not allow six weeks or more
to pass before they gel together. Thus, both
1984 conventions could be over — ami tiie
"fall" campaign in full swing — by late July.
For many years tlie Cdhtral Intelligence
Agency regularly sent unclassified research
papers lo reporters and from lime to time
gave groups of reporters off-the-record
briefings on world affairs.
CIA Director William Casey stopped both
practices because lie considered it unseemly
lor a spy agency to deal so closely with
journalists.
Recently reporters all over Washington
received in Iheir mail large envelopes
bearing Uie CIA's relurn address. Ttie en­
velopes were empty.
Was this another part of Casey's noninformation campaign? No, says a CIA
spokesman. A mailroom employee lead
simply forgotten to stud tlie envelopes with a
routine news release.

JACK ANDERSON

California Airport Used For Am in
WASIUNGTON-At the lowest point in U.S
relations with Idi Amin, a Ugandan airliner
made an unauthorized landing at a California
airport and was permitted to leave with what
was apparenUy an Illegal shipment of high
explosives. Amin Is Uie homicidal maniac
who ruled Uganda unUl his overthrow two
years ago.

The airport incident occurred on Sept. 10,
1977, according to secret Justice Department
reports examined by my associate Dale Van
AUs. The United States had not had an em ­
bassy in Kampala dnee 1173; Just seven
months before Uie mysterious cargo pickup,
President Carter had denounced Idl Amin as
a ruler whose actions "have disgusted Uie
entire civilized world."

I

Children opened in Shreveport, la ., in 1922 The
hospitals are run entirely on a charitable basis
and each contains 30 or more beds They are
open to crippled children of every rare ami
religion.
The paper sale gives ttie public an opportunity
to share in making some scarred child normal or
helping some crippled child to walk.

SCIENCE WORLD

The incident was yet another chapter in Uie
weird saga of Frank Terpil and Ed Wilson,
Uie fugiUve ex-CIA agents whose sordid
exploits I have been reporting for Uie past
year. The two renegades had made a
lucrative career supplying explosive* and
terrorist training lo Amin and his Libyan
buddy, Muanunar Qaddaii.
VI

they can't make a cash pledge they can con­
tribute goods or services."
The goods and services will be auctioned off on
Oct. 25 at 2 p.m. at live Ijike Mary High School
auditorium with the proceeds to go to raising the
additional funds agencies need this year due to
inflation and cutbacks in federal funding, Walko
said.

th e assistant manager of Uie Ontario
(Calif.) International Airport told federal
investigators he had initially directed Uie
Ugandan airliner to lx* Angeles. But the
pilot refused, “stating there was cargo at
Ontario to be picked up."
On landing, Uie plane was directed to a
remote area of the field and sealed off.
Several hours later, U.S. Customs agents
boarded it and found an Egyptian captain, a
Ugandan co-pilot, a Lebanese flight engineer
and several Ugandan flight attendants.
An attorney for Jerome S. Brower, a wellknown explosives dealer, arrived and said Uie
cargo was waiting si Uie Aerojet Inc. hangar.
Nest came Uie terrible Terpil, who said he
was “ a representative of Ugandan Airlines"
and would handle everything.
One of Uie Customs agents, having deter*
mined that Uie cargo was electronic equip­
ment, OK’d it for shipment.
But Uie Customs agent returned the nest
day, Sept. 11, becauie "Uie situation at Uie
airport bothered him ," according to one of Uie

secret reports. This time lie found a shipment
of explosives waiting lo be loaded.

were paid in UJS. currency oul ol a suitcase
held by the pilot," the reports said..

"The liquid explosive, with a flash point of
110 degrees, was sitting on Uie runway in
cans," he told investigators. "As the day got
hotter, Uie cans began to burst and Uie liquid
was seeping out onto Uie runway and later
onto Uie floor of Uie aircrait."

Brower pleaded guilty earlier this year to
one count of iUegally shipping explosives to
IJbya in 1978 through Terpil. Tlie Aerojet Inc.
(acilily chief at Ontario, Frank Dontinski, told
investigators he had let Brower, who nnce
worked for Uie company, use Uie hangar, and
was shocked when he learned it had been used
to load a Ugandan aircraft. Doniinski was
reprimanded by Aerojet officials, according
to one report "for allowing Brower, known lo
do anyUiing far money, to use Iheir facility."

Tlie explosives had come Irom Brower's
company. The Customs agent also spotled
some 55-gallon drums of an unknown sub­
stance nearby, bul was told they weren't part
of Uie shipment. He told InvesUgalors he
didn't know if any of Uie mysterious drums
had been loaded on earlier, but anotlier
Customs agent said he had seen some in Uie
cargo hold.
But when Uie agents checked with Uie State
Department In Washington, they were told
there was no reason to prevent the export of
Uie explosives. The plane w u approved lor
departure, and flew out that day after filing a
flight plan lo Canada.
“All bills for food, fuel and airport services

One thing is not clear: High explosives had
been embargoed for shipment lo Uganda. So
why was a Ugandan airplane allowed to pick
up explosives? One Customs agent al the
airport said Die load was not inspected
because lie “ wouldn't know one explosive
from another anyway."
Footnote: Indictments are expected soon in
a similar case a month after Uie Ontario in­
cident. it involves Wilson, Brower ami the
illegal shipment oi 20 tons of C4 plastic ex­
plosives from Houston to Ubya.

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SPORTS

Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Tuesday, Sept. It, 1f t 1—5A

Crooms' Running Back Thompson Flashes 9.9 Speed

Speedy Panthers Kick Off With Patriots

MIKE WHELCIIEL
.. Crooms quarterback

DONALD GRAYSON
... hard-hitting linebacker

Marlette have been at Crooms for four
years.

with him, Donald Grayson and Mike
Dubose will be alternating at the fullback
position.

DERON THOMPSON
... blazing speed
By GEOFFREY GIORDANO
Herald Sports Writer
Crooms' Panthers will kick off their
season tonight at 7:30 at Seminole High
School against the Lake B rantley
Patriots In what should be a very exciting
freshman football game.

Whelchel, McCloud
Share Quarterback

Mike Whelchel and Jo Jo McCloud will
R will be exciting to watch this year’s
Panthers mainly because of running be alternating at the starting quar­
back Deron Thompson's blazing 9.9 105- terback position. Whelchel has an ac­
yard dash speed and tackle Frank curate arm , but McCloud is observed to
Bromley's 295-pound size in the defensive be a better runner. Their passing targets
will Include wide receiv ers Rod
line.
"Thompson is faster than Tim Raines Alexander, who lias very good hands, and
was when he was at Crooms," said Clilton Campbell, who lias exceptional
Panther veteran assistant coach Ernie speed.
McPherson. Bromley is one of the
The running game will be a definite
biggest players Crooms has had.
Panther strong point, due to Thompson’s
I-asl year, Crooms finished the season blazing speed. Along with McPherson's
a disappointing 2-4, including a 45-20 assessm ent ot Thom pson’s speed,
drubbing at the hands ol the Patriots. Marlette concurs.
Head Coach Bill Klein points out the
Panthers had less physical players and a
fairly small defensive line.

Thompson Faster

"This will definitely be a better year,"
confirm ed a ssista n t coach Chris
Marlette. We are a little better off sizewise since I've been here." Klein and

Than Tim Raines
"Without a doubt, he's the fastest
we've ever had," said Marlette. Along

Another good area is Die line with
guards Strickland Sunlit and Scott
1.arson, tackles Anthony Hall and Tony
Cox, anti center Jerry Walsh. Walsh nnri
Strickland are the two smallest of the
five, while Hall weighs m at around 198
lbs, and Cox at approximately 200 lbs.
Much better size here litis year.

295-Pound Brumley
Anchors Defense
The defense, again, has much better
size. Hall doubles his playing lime here,
along with Frank Bromley, who weighs
an astonishing 295 pounds, dow n (rom his
previous 310. Along with tliosc tackles
are ends Fred Brinson and Mike Dubose.
Dubose, also a fullback, is one of the
better defensive players o{ the squad.
Cox and Walsh alternate tackle positions.

FRANK BRUMLEY
...295-pound tackle

G rayson Heads Up

Tough Linebackers
McCloud, Campbell, Thompson, and
Grayson all do double duty linebneking.
McCloud, according to Marlette, will be
playing a lot of defense. And, he also
commented that, “Grayson is one of our
lop prospects. He will be playing both
ways most of die lime."
Alexander will be the only (free)
safety, assisted by cornerbacks Brian
Brooks and Charles Smith. This is in
collaboration with the “50," on five
linemen defense the Handlers will use
this year.
Grayson and Grady Caldwell are 0 k
two most likely people to be kicking off
this year, und both have good
distance. Marlette says that, “Grayson is
probably our best all around athlete this
year." He is doing better in practice with
kickoff distances. Punting for Crooms
will be Cox, who lias "Not too bad
distance, but still needs to work out a
little more," states Marlette.

N*r*M Ph*)* h i T*m VOK*n)

Croom s' q u arterb ack Jo Jo M cClouds sets to throw .

Irvin's Punt Return ’ &gt;
Dash Crashes Bears

—V olleyballLac/y Raiders
Plaster Polk

CHICAGO ( U PI) — It isn’t every day that a team gels a punt
return for a touchdown, nor is It every day that a defense can
stop a Walter Payton.
•
But that was what tiuppened when the l/&gt;s Angeles Rams
shut down the Chicago Bears 23-7 in Monday night's nationally
televised game of die week.
For the first time in 20 years, die Rams got u punt return lor
a touchdown when second year pro fjeRoy Irvin dashed 55
yards in the third quarter to pul the Rams oul ol reach from
the Bears.
While Irvin was turning in his dramatic (Hint return — the
first for a TD by a Ram since Dick Bass went 90 yurtls against
Green Bay in 1961 — the revitalized 1.A defense was
dominating the Bears and Payton.
The perennial NFC rushing champion was held to Just 45
yards and 17 carries and fumbled twice against a Rains’ unit
which had given up 73 points in its first lltrce game.
The only real drama, however, belonged to Irvin.
“Our coaches drill us at every meeting that it lias been 20
years without a TD return," said Irvin, who fielded die ball at
his own 45 und broke several tackles enroute lo his louchdowi)
with 9:4G left In the third quarter.
,
"You don't get a TD like that all the time, It was just the
right place at the right time."
Rams head coach llay Malavasi admitted the punt retu ri
and his team ’s defense were Instrumental in vaulting the
Roms back Into dK NFC Western Division title picture with s
2-2 record, one game behind Atlanta.

This one wasn’t one to lose any sleep over. In fact, it was
one that put most of the spectators to sleep.
Seminole Community College ripped Polk City Com­
munity College 15-1,15-9,1W In Division II volleyball action
Monday night at SCC.
"We walked all over them," said Lady Raider Coach
IDeana Gallagher. "We had a great crowd. But most of
them left after the second game."
The Raiders used the strong serving of Patty Corso, Nan
Gallagher, Fran Rhodes and Debra Dyer to plaster Polk in
game one. Corso, ex-Seminole High, and Gallagher, exLyman High, combined for 10 of the points before Dyer
finished off PCC.
"They couldn’t return our serves," pointed out
Gallagher.
Seminole CC, 2-1, goes to Rollins tonight to play Flagler at
7. Thursday, the Raiders partake In the Manatee Junior
College Tournament at Bradenton. They return home Oct. 8
against Lake City CC, the team which beat them in five
games to open the season.

Tribe
JV Trips Rams;
Blockbuster Match
Tonight A t Howell
Tampa Ray
Seminole High’s Junior varsity volleyball team swept two
games from the Lake Mary JV Monday night 16-14,15-1 and
15-9,15-5 at Seminole High School.
The consistent play of Penny Morris, Arlene Jones, Toni
Washington, Susanna Huaman and Jill Janak helped the
Junior Tribe to its first game win according to Coach
Donalyn Knight.
In the second game, Janine Stallworth, Tracy McNeil,
Julie F arr, Debbie Siliaway and Octavla Horn over­
whelmed the Rams with their serving.
Tonight, the Tribe van ity swings Into action with a block­
buster tri-match at Lake Howell at 6. Five Star conference
MgiMr U k e Howell hosts Seminole and DeLand, who are
both one-game back.
"We’re ready to go after them ," said Knight about
tonight'* matchup. The Lady Seminole* won the conference
last year, but were upset by the Silver Hawks In the district.

Waltrip Increases
Point Advantage
DAYTONA BEACH, FU. (U PI) - Darrel] Waltrip’a victory
In Sunday'a Old Dominion 500 stock car race increased his lead
to 43 points in the 1M1 driving championship chase, NASCAR
announced' Monday.
The victory raised Waltrip’s point total to an even 4,000.
Second place Bobby Allison has 3,957. Harry Gant la third with
3111.
Others in the top 10 included 4. Ricky Rudd. J I T ; 5. Terry
Lahonte 3,413; 4. Dale Earnhardt, 3131; 7. Richard Petty,
31M; I. Jody Ridley, 3194; 9. Dave W ards, 3,043, and 10.
Benny Parsons, 3,035.

HtfftM

Buccaneer defensive end Scott
Hutchinson (no. 70) moves in on a Si. Louis hall
carrier in Sunday's Rue victory. The former
Winter Park High and Florida (iator standout is u

l r fti

backup end for (he Hues. Sunday he recorded
Tampa’s only quarterback sack in the fourth
quarter.

Buffalo 'Hutch' Thaws Out In Tampa Bay
By SAM COOK
Herald Sports Editor
One cold Buffalo morning Winter
irk’s Scott Hutchinson woke up from a
sptesa night, rolled over, took one look
the treated window and asked himself,
Ifhat the hell am I doing here?"
Maybe it didn't go exactly like that, but
r Hutchinson, an ex-W ildcat and
indout defensive performer for the
orida Gators, there was no room for
ow In his pro football career.
So when the Tampa Bay Bucs acquired
6 6-foot-3, 245-puund defensive end
rller this year, it was like a coming
me for the former Gator. "Yeah, I'm
id I’m here especially since Buffalo
it today and we won,” said "Hutch"
die undressing Sunday afternoon.
Hutchinson is being used in s reserve
le for the Buccaneers, but was call ad
when defensive end LeRoy Salmon
tnt down with an injured right knee,
imon will not play Sunday against
•troit.
Which is bad news for the Bucs, but
tybe a little good news for Hutrnon’j playing time.

IVCCOKHn
"I've been lilllng In where I’m
needed,” said Hutchinson about his
playing time. " They've been working me
in some on passing situations to rush the
passer or to fill in on either end when
someone is tired or hurt."
Selmon's "h u rt" Sunday gave Hub
chinson a chance to show his wares and
Ik responded well. The giant end broke
past Cardinal guard George Collins In the
fourth quarter and dumped Cardinal
quarterback Jim Hart on his butt.
On a previous play. Hutchinson also
batted down a pass.
"I took him (Collins) upfield and then
spun inside," Hutchinson said about his
defensive manuever. “ That's when I
blocked the pats.
“That kinds got him guessing a little
bit to what I was going to do. On the lack,
1got a good jump off the ball, Hart took a
little deeper drop than usual and Collins
pushed me right in there."
Sunday's win gave the Buccaneers a 22 record and a tie for the division lead.

"Hutch" sees a battle down the wire and
figures If the Bucs duplicate the 1979
record (1(26), It should win the division.
"Ten wins would be a good enough
record. But if you gel any less than that
you're going to be pushing It," Hut­
chinson said.
Hutchinson was impressed by the
showing o( place kicker Bill Capece (two
field goals, two extra points) and punter
Larry Swider who boomed for nearly a
50-yard average.
"The young guys showed they can do tt
today," Hutchinson observed. "It was
great. I Just hope they can go out and do it
every week."
Speaking of young guys, Hutchinson is
Just 25 years old snd in his fifth season.
What does the rest o fth e season have in
store for the ex-Gstor?
"Hopefully, I’ll get some more pitying
time snd be able to help the d u b ,"
reasoned "H utch." "And I'd also like to
be part of a championship team."
No doubt the rest of the Bucs will
second that notion.

USC Passes Test,
Retains Top Rank
NEW YORK ( UPI) — There »my have been Just a trace of
smugness in John Robinson's voice Monday, but it's easy to
understand why the coach of the Southern California Trojans
believes his team deserves their continued No. 1 ranking by the
UPI Coaches’ Poll,
"I assumed we’d be No. 1 again because we passed a fairly
severe lest this past Saturday," Robinson said. "1 put some
credence In the strong vote for us. 1 know we have to Improve,
but I'm very pleased with our team so far and pleased to be
ranked at the lop."
The Trojans, who pulled out a 28-24 victory over the
Oklahoma Sooners with two seconds left to play Saturday,
were a near-unanimous choice for the top spot Monday]
receiving 39 first-place votes from the 42 coaches on U PI's
Board of Coaches.
Southern Cal totaled 626 points to easily outdistance No. 2
Penn Stale, wiiich moved up a notch following its 35-34 triumph
over Nebraska. Penn State received 565 points and two firstplace votes.
CapirtgM III) fey UPI
NEW YORK (UPI) Th*
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S North Carotin! 11110)
* Oklahoma (I I)
1 Ohio St (101
I Michigan l i l t
f MittiMtppi St 1101
10 Alabama (1 It
It Brigham Young (4 01

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t A - Iy w lm H m M , U w H fC f l

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ltd

Above, Seminole Assistant Coach Chuck
Russakov has a word with his offensive line (left
to right) Aubrey Kendall, l)on Croslyn and center
Jay llauck. At the left, defensive tackle Bill

Painter &lt;\o. 77) drags down Edge water’s Marcus
Slade for a four-yard loss during the fourth extra
period Friday. Seminole whipped the Eagles, 4138.

Seminoles Savor Edgewater Victory Cigar
Week by the Sanford Optimist Club and
was nominated for Burger King Player of
tlie Week.
Litton was a complete quarterback
Friday night. The maturing senior’s play
will probably hold the key to Seminole’s
conference chances. He threw 20 times
and completed nine for 126 yards.
He found huge light end Frank Rowe
four times for 48 yards and wideout Joe
Calloway three times for 53 yards, in­
cluding a 31-yard scoring strike. Litton
added 34 yards on the ground via six
carries.

By SAM COOK
Hr raid Sporti Editor
Just like puffing on an extra-long cigar,
the Seminole High football team will
have a long limb lo savor Its ex riling 4138 four-overtime victory over Edgewater
last Saturday.
Coach Jerry Posey’s Tribe will be off
this week before traveling to Apopka Oct.
10 for a key Five Star Conference
meeting. Seminole is 1-0 In the Five Star,
thanks to a 9-6 three-overtime win over
Like Howell.

“ We're going to get started on them right
away."
Following the film viewing by the
coaches over tt&gt;e weekend, the Seminole
coaching staff had these awards to hand
out. On offense, the Hatchetman awards
.went to offensive tackle Issac Williams,
quarterback Jeff l.itton, halfback Victor
Williams and fullback !-cnny Sutton.
1. Williams played up to his “blue chip"
status In the win over Edgewater. The 6(oot-J, 243-pound strong tackle opened
gaping holes for Die Tribe backs.

Although tlic Apopka clash is 11 days
away, Posey Isn't hesitating in his
preparation for the Blue Darters. After
viewing the films und a light workout
Monday, the Tribe plans go full speed
ahead Tuesday.

One of the beneficiaries was Sutton.
Turning lo Coach Dave Mosure’s
The powerful fullback rumbled for 190
yards on 32 carries and showed no signs defense, tackle Bill Painter and defen­
of his bruised Achilles tendon. Sutton also sive back Willie C a rter earned
bulled for three touchdowns from short . Headhunter awards for their sterling
performances.
range.

“No, we’re not waiting for next week to
start on Apopka," said Posey Monday.

Along with his llatcheUuan Award,
Sutton was named Seminole Player of the

Painter made the defensive play of the
night when he chased Marcus Slade from

Purler tail only 35 hits in 156 at-bals
when lie came up in Hie fourth but lie said
he fell no extra pressure.
Montreal, which ta d won seven of its
previous eight games, jumped in front 1-0
in die fourth on tark-to-taek doubles by

Ni Im k a N
Andre Dawson and Gary Carter after
Rodney Scott was thrown out at the plate
trying lo score from first on Dawson’s hit
into Ihe right-field corner.
Giants 4, Reds 0
At Cincinnati, Al Rargeshetmer and
Greg Minton combined on a four-hitter
und Jerry Martin hit a two-run homer to
give the Giants a victory over the Reds.
The loss dropped die Reds 2lx games
behind (irsl place Houston In the NL
West. Hargeslieimer, 1-1, making tils
second start since being recalled from
Phoenix of tlie Pacific Coast taague,
struck nut four and walked four In seven
Innings.
Astros 2, Padres I
Al Houston, Art Howe's baaes-loaded,
checked-swing single delivered Jose
Cruz from third base with two out in the
ninth inning to snap a 1-1 lie and give the
Astros their victory, Tony Scott opened
the ninth with a single and was forced by
Cruz. Alan Ashby walked on four pilches
und Cesar Cedeno also walked before
llowe punrited u single through die right
side.

Junior Harold Gaines also picked up a
Savage award for his work on the kick
coverage untls. Gaines made several
tackles while covering punts und
kickoffs.
FIVE STAR NOTES - Daytona Bench
Mainland's Buccaneers moved into Die
top spot in die Five Star conference with
an 8-7 victory over D ctam l last Friday.

The Bucs, 2-6, scored a touchdown in
die last four minutes of the fourth
quarter and then tacked on the two-point
conversion to upend die Bulldogs, 1-1.
Mainland owns wins over Lyman and
New Smyrna Beach for its 34) mark.
Seminole (1-0), ta k e Brantley (1-0)
and Spruce Creek are all tied for second
place.
DeLind Is followed in the standings by
Lyman (0-1), Apopka (0-1) and ta k e
Howell 10-1). The Greyhounds are 2-1 on
the year, however, thanks to stunning
Winter Park, 7-5, Friday. The Wildcats
were die second-ranked 4A team at the
time.
"Well, at least for one weekend,"
pninltx) out Scott Saturday afternoon,
"the Five Star took care of die Metro
i Conference),"
Along with Lyman's decision over

Winter Park und Seminole's conquest of
Edgewater, ta k e Brantley tipped Boone,
14-7. Apopka also nailed Colonial, 17-14.
Conlerince Overall
W L Pci W L Pet.
M a in la n d
S e m in o le
L k B r a n tle y
S p ru c e C re e k
D eLand
Lym an
A popka
L a k e H o w e ll

7
1
1
1
1
0
0
0

0
0
0
0
1
1
1
1

1 000
1 000
1 000
1 000
300
000
000
000

Major Let fur Standmit
By United Piess international
National League
(Second Hall)
Cast
W L PCI. OB
la 71 551 —
Montreal
75 71 S41
51 LOU'S
1 PhBa
77 71 41* 1
71 14 447 4
Chicago
New York
It 74 447 5
Pittsbrgh
It 7* IN l ' i
West
It II 440
Houston
Cmcl
71 II 40* 7'y
77 1* 547 l ' i
San Fran
&gt;
4 71 511 7
&gt; Lot Ang
74 471 l ' i
71
Atlanta
San D&gt;ego
11 35 771 11’ ;
1 First hall division wtnittr
Monday's Rasults
Pittsburgh 4. Chicago 0, 1st
game
Chicago 1. Pittsburgh 1. Jnd
game
Philadelphia 17. New York 4
Atlanta 7. Los Angeles I
San Francisco 4, Cincinnati 6
St Louis a. Montreal 7
Houston 7, San Diego I
Tuesday's Oames
(Alt Timas ROT I
Los Angeles IWelch 15) a*
Atlanta (Boggs ) 111, 4 pm
! San Francisco (Holland 7 51
a* Cmcmn.l) tLeibrandt I I I .
7 15 P m
New York iFa'cone 171 at
Philadelphia (Davis 1 7). ' 15

p m
C h ic a g o
P itts b u rg h

ART HOWE
...check-cwlng single

playing center field, robbed Mookie
Wilson of an extra base hit with the bases
loaded In the fourth Inning and the
Phillies went on lo rip seven pitchers for
12 hits and six walks.
Brevet 2, Dodgers 1
Al Atlanta, Rick Mahler and Rick
Camp combined on a slxhlttcr to lead the
Braves. The triumph snapped a fourgame losing streak (or Atlanta while the
loss was the third In a row for the
Dodgers, who were nohitted by Houston's
Nolan Ryan on Saturday and managed
just two hits off the Astros' Don Sutton on
Sunday.
Pirates 8-1, Cubs 6-3
At Pittsburgh, Rick Rhoden tossed a
lour-hUter arxt Bill Madlock drove in two
runs to carry the Pirates In the opener. In
the nightcap, Dave Gclsel, making his
Phillies 12. McU 4
At Philadelphia, tannic Smith banged first start this year and only the second of
out three hits und scored three runs and his career, pitched a shutout for five
contributed u sparkling defensive play to innings and Steve Henderson added Uiree
lead the Phillies to victory. Smith, RBI os tta Cubs salvaged a split.

p m
(K r a v e c
1 6)
&lt;1
[J o n rt
4 4 ),
I 35

0 1 000
1 6 67
1 667
1 667
1 667
1 667
7 3JJ
3 000

Correction
In die cutline below a picture ( Page
IB) of tanny Sutton in Saturday's
paper, die Evening Herald incorrectly
declared that Seminole beat Boone, 4118 Friday. The victims, of course, was
Edgewater. The Herald readies the
Tribe would have beaten Boone by
more than three points

By United Press International
Pete Vuckovich needed Just one run to
win. Getting it for him proved to be a
problem that only Mark Broutard could
.solve.
“ When 1 hit It was pretty sure It was
gone," Broutard said Monday night alter
his seventh-inning homer vaulted the
Milwaukee Brewers into first place in die
AL East with a 1-0 victory over the
Boston Red Sox.
"I was Just happy for Vuckovich,"
continued the 25-year-old outfielder. “He
really deserved this game. From the
lime he stepped on the mound, he was
going to do wta t lie ta d to do to win, even
if It meant throwing a shutout. He pitched
a super game."
So did Frank Tnnana, but die left­
hander made one mistake — the pitch
that Broutard hit into die left field
bleachers for his second home run ol the
season.
"I just hit the ball hard," Brouhard
said. "I haven’t hit a home run for three
months. I just got lucky... Tanana hit my
bat, but I’ll take it.
The game marked the beginning of a
three-game set and placed Milwaukee a
half-game ahead of second-place Detroit
while Boston fell P i games tack. All
diree teams have five games left, and all
of Milwaukee's are at home.
“ I would Iwve to say definitely being at
home Is an advantage," said Vuckovich,
14-4, acquired during the offseason with
catcher Ted Simmons from St. Louis.
Like B rouhard, "V ukc" appeared

A l B ffftboll
more interested in spreading credit than
in taking it despite his masterful threehitter.
"Everybody's got to be chipping in,"
he said. "You have lo give diem (his
teammates) credit, too."
Boston Manager Ralph Houk praised
both pitchers, and particularly men­
tioned Tanana, whose 3-10 record is less
than impressive.
"I thought both pitchers deserved to
win," Houk said. "Vuckovich pitched a
heckuvu game, but so did Frank. Tnnana
ta s pitched belter this year than his
record indicates."
Vuckovich was In such complete
control that Milwaukee Manager Bob
Rodgers never even thought of replacing
him, even Ihough die Brewers have Ihe
league's premier reliever In Rollie
Fingers.
Orioles 7, Tigers 3
In Detroit, Eddie Murray doubled
home two runs in a four-run third and hit
u two-run homer in die seventh to support
Sammy Stewart's 81-3 innings of shutout
relief. The Tigers staked George Cnppuuello, l-l, for a 34) lend against Jim
Palmer but failed to solve Stewart, 4-7,
who lowered his league-leading ERA to
195.
Royals I, Twins 1
Al Bloomington, Minn., Willie Aikens
and Hal McRae each slugged a two-run

homer und Dennis taonard, 12-11. pit­
ched a five-hitter. The decision increased
the Royals’ lead lo 3‘i games over tlic
Tw ins in die race for die AL West secondhalf title. Dave Engle, who extended his
hitting streak to 14 games, ta d three of
die hits off taonard, including a home
run in the fourth. Aikens hit his 17th
homer off Brad Havens, 3-6, with one
man aboard.
Indians 6, Yankees 2
Al Cleveland, rookie Tom Brennan, 2-1,
tossed a six-hitter und Jorge Orta drove
In diree runs with a pair of singles to pace
the Indians. Alter grabbing a 1-0 lead in
the first on an RBI single by Toby
Hurrah, Cleveland chased Hick Reuschel, 4-3, with a two-run second on singles
by Jerry Dybzinski and Miguel Diione
and O rta's two-run single. New York's
Reggie Jackson hit his 15th homer.
Angels 8, White Sox 0
At Chicago, rookie Mike Witt scattered
six hits and Don Baylor and Brian
Downing each drove In two runs to lead
die Angels. Witt, 7-9, posted his first
major-league shutout. It was the 21-yearold righttander’s third triumph in as
many starts against Chicago. He struck
out (our and walked one.
Rangers 8, Mariners 5
At Seattle, Mark Wagner hit a threerun, second-inning double in support of
Rick Honeycutt, 11-6. Jim Kent pitched
ihe final 1 1-3 innings for his fifth save.
The Rangers belted two pitchers for 14
hits and Lagged Glenn Abbott, 4-8, with
the loss.

M ajor-League Roundup
9 t * m d lm g §

3
7
7
7
7
7
1
0

Brouhard's Homer Solves Problem;
Vuckovich Keeps Brewers In Suds

Porters Double
Keys Card Victory
By United Press International
Darrell Porter lias given die St. tauis
Cardinals only a nickcl-oml-dime return
cm dielr million dollar investment this
season. Yet, lie may still lead them to
dial pot o' gold.
Porter, signed as u tree agent to a fiveyear, |3.5 million contract by die Car­
dinals last winter, lias struggled lor most
ol the season, missing much of die
campaign with a tear In die rotator cuff
in his right shoulder.
The Cardinals' catcher wus hitting only
.226 entering Mumluy night’s game
against the Montreal Expos, yet lie
delivered a two-run double oil reliever
Grunt Jackson to highlight u five-run
fourth inning dial curried the Cardinals
lo a fi-2 victory.
The triumph in the opening game ol die
two-game series moved the Cardinals
within one-half game of the K x |k &gt;s in the
National taague East with six games left
lo play.
" f ’ve been giving Itie best I can even
though 1 know it tiasn’l been very good,"
Porter said. " I ’d like to have done better
but I know every time I've gone out on
die field I've given 100 percent"

his left tackle spot and pulled the 4.6 140yard dash) sprinter down from behind
for a four-yard loss. On the next play the
Eagles' George Burkett had his 25-yard
field goal blocked by Byron Washington
to set up the winning kick when Seminole
got die ball by Alan Cahill.
Cahill, by the way, picked up a Savage
award for his work on the speciality
team. The smooth-booling senior canned
two field goals and five extra points. He
lias eight straight successful kicks.

New York (Guidry II 41 at
Cleveland (Denny »51, ?;1S

pm
pm
Baltimore (McGregor 1141 al
Montreal f Lee 4 5) 41 St
Delroil (Morris IIa ), I p m
Louis (Anduiar 7 4), I 35 pm
California
(Kison O il
al
Son Oirgo (Wise 31) «l
Chicaoo (Dotson » 71, 1:10 pm.
Moulton (Nuhle 4 51. I 31 pm
Boston
(Torrtl
1
1)
al
Mil
American League
waukee (Caldwell I I »). 110
(Secend Mall)
pm
Catl
Tenas (Medich f t ) al Seattle
w L Pci. OB
(Clark 3 41. 10 35 pm
Milwauke
34 30 503 —
37 70 574
‘1
Detroit
74 71 551 l'i
Boston
U m m o t m
15 71 543 1
Halt
14 71 511 1' r
1 New Yrk
Maiar League Results
14 14 500 4
Clevelnd
Mender
70 71 445 5&lt;i
Toronto
By Unltad Prats Intarnatleael
West
National League
74 II 555 —
kan City
1 Oakind
71 11 513 I'S
(First Game)
11 75 474 Jiy
Mim
Chi
000 000 000- 0 4 0
3) M 447 5
Seattle
Pttbgh
103 10000s— 40 1
70 75 444 5
Teaes
Grlllln,
Caudill
« ).
Her
70 74 417 4’ v nendel (5), Tldrow (•) and
Chicago
II 77 400 7
Blackwell: Rhoden and Nicosia.
cam
1 First hall division winner
W-RhOOen It 41 L-G rlftin (1
Monday's Return
5).
Santas Clip 5. Mmnetola I
Cleveland a. New York I
(Second game)
Baltimore 7, Detroit 1
010 010000-14 1
Chi
Milwaukee I. Ootlon 0
000 00) 000- 1 5 0
PtsbQh
California 4. Chicago 0
Geisal. Marti 141 and Black
T r ia l 5, Seaille 5
well. Long, O Robtoaon III.
Tuesday's Camas
WTekulve (!) and Pena
(All Timas ID T )
Geisel (7 0) L-Lon g ( t l ) . HR
Kansas City (Wright 1)1 al
- Chicago . Henderson (5).
Minnesota (Williams t t l , 1:15
0)0000 000- 1*0
pm
Los Ang
Toronto
(Clancy
t ill
al
OOO000 701-3 *6
Alia
Oakland (Underwood 71). 4 10
Stewart
II)
and
Reuss,

Yeager. Mahler. Camp (II and
Smalro W-Mahler (3 5) L —
Reuss 1*41 N R -Lo s Angeles,
Garvey 110)
San Frn
030 001 000 - 4 1 0
Clncl
000 000 000- 0 4 0
Hergesheimrr,
Minion
(I)
and May; Peslorr, Cdeien (5),
Price II) and Nolan
W—
Hergrahelmrr (M l. L —Pastora
(4 1 ) HR — San Francisco.
Marlin (4).

Minn
000 100 000— I J ] Honeycutt. Comer 17), Mercer
Leonard and Walhan Havens. (•&gt;. Kern (4) and Sundberg.
Cooper (7) and Wynegar w - Abbott, Gisaton 151 and Bui
Leonard H i l l ) L-H avent 13 hng. F.rova (It. W- Honeycutt
4) HR - Aikrni (171, Engle (5), Ml 4) L -Abbott 14 4) H » lMcRae (7)
Seaille. Meyer 111 . Bocnte 141

NY
001 IOOOOO 3 4 1
Cleve
I70 000 ) 0 i - 4 I J 1
D M ll
R e u s c h e l . LeRoche 13).
Freiier (7) and Crrone; Bren
nan and Hassey W-Brennan Oporls Transactions
17 11 L —Reuschel (4 3) H R Monday
New York. Jackson (IS)
By Uncled Press International
NY
100 130 000- 4 II 1
Baseball
Phlle
005 JJ3 OOi- 13 I I I
National League - Fined Los
Bait
004 010 TOO— 7 7 0
Lynch, Leech 111, Boilano Detroit
100 000 OOO-3 to 0 Angeles outfielder Reggie Smith
(41, Seereoe (41, Jones (51.
Palmer.
Stewart
(||
and 55.000 and suspended him for live
Marshall la), Harris (I) and Dempsey. Cappullello. Lopei dayt
Stearns. Notes. Brosstar (S3. tl). Kinney (7). Rothschild 14)
Basketball
Christenson (5) and Moreiand
Dalles - Cut center Glenn
and Parrish W-Stewart (4 71
W—Chrlstanson 14 5). L-Lyn ch
L-Cappuiirtlo
(II)
HRs— Sudhop
(4 5).
Denver — Signed guard Billy
Baltimore. Ayala 111, Murray
(701
McKinney lo a multi year con
San Ogo
MX) 000 too- i 4 1
tract
Hows
000 000 101-74 1 Botfon
Golden State - Named Nate
000 000 000 - 03 1
Eichetoerger and Kennedy; MilW
000 000 )0 « - I 5 0 Thurmond director ot community
Niekro. Sambito (t) and Ashby.
Tansna and Gfdmen. Vuck relations.
W—Sembilo
1511. L -E lc h e l
Washington — Matched offer
ovich
and
Simmons
w—
bergar I I I ) . HR—Ian Diego, Vuckovich
(14 41.
L-Tanana sheet from Indiana tar guard
Kennedy (3).
(1 101 HR—Milwaukee. Brou
Kevin Grevey
hard (2)
Football
Mil
000 100 10O- 3 I I
Philaelphla — Signed tree agent
W Louts
000 500 )01- 4 10 0
Call!
000 101 040- 4 7 0 fullback Steve Atkins; placed
S a n d e r s o n , Jackson (41, Chi
000 000 000- 0 4 7 luilback Terry Harrington on
Gorman (1), Sosa II) and
Wilt and Ferguson; Lamp, in|ured reserve
Carter; Martin. Keel ()) and Farmer (I). Hickey If) and
San Diago - Waived defensive
Porter. w -M ertin (75). L Fisk. W -W Itl (7 f). L-L e m p end Don Reese
Senderson 4* PI. HR-Monireel, (7 41
Hockey
Parrish (I).
Hart lord — Assigned left wing
American Leaf vs
Ttsai
Oil 010 OOO- 4 14 0 Jett Brubaker lo Binghamton ot
Kan City
010 101 003- 4 110 Seattle
030 000 300- 5 17 0 tht American Hockty League

McRMERTS
PH. I l l 0451
405 W. FIRST ST
SANFORD

PM. *04-771-470

teas veiusia
Oranga City

�OURSELVES
Evening Herald, Senlord, FI.

Tuexdey, Sepl. 1»,

TONIGHT S TV
11:00

TUESDAY]
EVENING

12

6:00

6:30

12:30
0 3 ) TOMORROW Guosls I ddm
Rabbit Pall, Davit

T P(35)
s : THE JEFFERSON3
lit
CD (10) MACNEIL / LEHRER
REPORT

12:35
()) O MCCLOUD McCloud bias
lo protacl a union ohvial and al Ihe
sama lima back down a hookar
who pamlt har cliants bhro (111

7:30

O
u
O d
(41i ENTERTAINMENT
TONIGHT
~l YOU
11) O
YC ASKED FOR IT

l 7 ' O IFFAMILY
4
FEUD
il)'
I
„ (35)
. ) BARNEY
MILLER
CD (101 DICK CAVETT Guait

Joan Madisnn. director n| tin* llctim ! Senior
Volunteer Program, iltSV Pi received a plaque
lor outstanding iummunity service. Debbie
Shannon o| the Junior Woman's Club ot Sanford,
made the presentation.
"This plaque is especially meaningful to us
entiling from an organization which has also
contributed so much to our community," said the

HSVP Director as she accepted tin- award at the
10th anniversary celebration of ItSVP at the
Senior Citizen M ultipurpose Center in
Casselberry.
Com m issioner
B arb ara
Christenson,
representing tin- Hoard ol County Com­
missioners. presented a resolution in ap­
preciation and ;o know lodgement on In half o| the

DBAH ABBY: My husband died a year ago. My
neighbors were very considerate at the time o| the
funeral, bringing in food, etc. But after that, I never
heard a word from any of them, t I’m not com­
plaining. Cm a working woman and not the ly|ie to
socialize a great deal with my neighbors.}
Three weeks ago I quietly married a line gen­
tleman 1 had known lor years. I bad intended to
have a little wine-mid-cheese party and invite my
neighbors In to meet my husband, but I guess I
wasn't quick enough, because 1Just got u call from a
friend telling me I bad better burry and announce
my marriage because my gossipy neighbors were
talking. It scents they just found out I have a man
living with me, and they think I’ve got a live-in
boyfriend! I think it's rather funny.
What should I do?
U s u a l l y h it c h e d

A bby
wander oft, and I'd always find him nest to
woman who was well-endowed.

DEAH ABBY: Your answer to "Flat in Front"
was all wet. "F iat" wanted to surprise her husband
and tiave tier breasts surgically enlarged because
lie always ogled big-busted women. You said,
"Don'l surprise him. Ask him. lie may like you just
the way you are.”
Abby, ( went through Hits kind ol surgery 10 years
ago because, like “ F lat," my husband ogled bigbusted women. When we'd go to a parly, he'd

DEAH ABBY; My husband is a wondcrlul guy.
but he is very unreasonable when someone Is late
Abby, I don’t mean realty bile like l!&gt; minutes or an

“Florida's own proofing
aorvlco" — dedicated to
wotcoming now residents

F lo rid a M anaged

A call from you will bring a
prompt visit from our re­
presents) Ivs. She has bro­
chures, civic Information;
and lo holp with your shop­
ping ntods. cards ot In­
troduction horn local msrchants.

SatM
L o la W in n -31 1 -1 7 5 1

Swtli Stninok
L a u r a Bab a — J l f - I M I

Coordinator

r"

;

Gridin And The Minor Canon" in the Edy lh
Hush Theatre. This production is sponsored
by Bed Dibster lleslaurants.
For the second year in a row, The Theatre
lor Young People from the University of
North Carolina will visit our ttieatre to bring
The Darn ing Donkey. This third play opens
m Edy tli Bush Tlienlre, Jan. 29, 1932.
The final production of the season will be
Tlie Wind jn Tlie Willows. This beloved
classic by Kenneth Graliame will be
directed by Gmny light in the Tupperwure
Children's Ttieatre beginning April 23.
Season subscriptions for tlie four plays are
now on sale for f )0. Individual tickets will be
sold for S3 each. Call Edyth Bush Ttieatre
(or tickets and information — 896-7365.

Tlie Sanford-Sciuinole Jaycecltes will
sponsor n Youth Forum on Shelter and
Foster Homes today tit 7:30 p in at tin*
Chamber of Commerce budding, 400 E.
First St., Sanford.

---------- --

Homo O ffice
904 734 6031

{

2:00

O

LAVERNE

I

0 4 ANOTHER WORLD
1 F ' O ONE LIFE TO LIVE

MORNMa

5.00

CD O MARCUS WELBY. MD
(TUC-FRI)

300

5'20
61117| RAT PATROL (MON)
5:30
1) 0 SUMMER SEMESTER
61 (T7| RAT PATROL (TUE, THU)

5:35

I I (17) LAST OF THE WILO

82 ( 1 7) WORLD AT LARGE (WED)

9 :0 0
0
(41 THE SOPHISTICATED
GENTS Nine member! ol an athlelrt-aocial dub reunite altar l i yearl
lo pay tubule lo Iherr lormar coach
and mentor (Part !|
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6 1 (17 ) WORLO AT LARGE (FRI)

5:50
81 (17) WORLD AT LARGE (MON)

6:00

4) TODAY M FLORIDA
) THE LAW AND YOU (MON)

"RUM(TUE)
kBLACK AM AM M M M IDI
ITWRTY MMUTSB (TW|

Marmara' Undarwalar archaaorograft raconalrud tha davalopmanl
ol shipbuilding and tha hvwa of
ancient aaalarara Irom Ihraa ahrpa
Inal tank m (he Madrtarranaan
Ihoutandi ot year! ago a

| HEALTH FIELD (FR6

6:30

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3 30
61) (35) BCOORY DOO
© 10 ELECTRIC COMPANY (HI
6 1 117) THE FLINTS10NEB

44

6:45

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9 :3 0
(7) O HART TO HART tha Mam
inveihgala lha mysterious death ol
a close hiend at a health apa (R |q

7:00
0 1 441) TODAY
Di i O
p WAKE UP
(7) O OOOO MORMNO AMERICA
(l?t)(35 ) TOM AND JERRY
VILLA AUO RE(R)
S i 1? J FUNTIME

10:00
(!) O UNO 4 An anli larronsl
tlnke torca allampls 10 Iraa a gov
ernmenl ollicial hom levoMion-

© ( 10) THE DUCHESS OF DUKE
STREET "A Lesson In Manners1'
Louisa enlists the Major s unwilling
help m lur rung an impoverished
chautteui mlo a proper gentleman
IParl JllR K J
M (17) NEWS

0&lt;4&gt;TEXAS
i ) I o GUIOINO LIOHT
(7.) O GENERAL HOSPITAL
i l l 1 (35) BLK1S BUNNY AND
FRIENDS
CD (101 FROM JUMPSTREET fFl)
□ I MON)
a 9(10)
i i o i FFEELING
_________
I REE (TUE)
J ) ((10)
PEOPLI--------ffl
10| PEOPLE
OF TME~FIRST
LIGHT (R) (WED)
CD ( 10| ONCE UPON A CLASSIC
(THU)
(D (10)OUEPA8AT|FRI|
1 1 117) FUNTIME

i J J WCHARO SIMMONS
(7J m e r v g r if f in
J6 (35) WOODY WOODPECKER
© (10 SESAME STREET a
6 1 117j THE MUNSTER8

35) JMJSAXKER

Ml (17) MISSION; IMPOSSIBLE

NEWS

SEAnCH FOR TOMORROW

5:05
61 (17) RAT PATROL (WEO)

SHIRLEY

&lt;11 (35) WOf PENDENT NETWORK

2:30
1) 0

7:30
D ) a MORNMO WITH CHARLES
KURALT
,1t) (35) WOOOY WOOOPCCKER
© } 1 0 } SESAME STREET g

800
6 t (35) CASPER
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11 1 P h a p p y d a y s a g a in
HIM(35) TOM ANO JERnY
62 (17) LEAVE IT TO BEAVER

5:00
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I) i p ilO a A N S HEROES
6 J (35) THE INCREDIBLE HULK
© 1 0 MISTER ROQERS (It)
I I i t 7) THE BRADY BUNCH

5:30
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COMPANY
f } ) Q M * A 'l* H
m r I NEWS

.T0)PO8T8CRIPTB
(17) BEVERLY Mllinn LIES

6:30

10:30
d t (35) LOVE. AMERICAN STYLE

WEDNESDAY
IS CHICKEN DAY

I OFTHEI
HUNGRY.
FAMOUS RECIFE'S REGULAR DINNER
1 pietei hsMr-SIpBBd IrW chicken, meih
P*t4twi 1 n4*r»vy,cats ilaw in dl hat butttr
Mi«n‘ bliculh. Haney upon reavett.

Youth Forum Tonight

R e e l in g S a u c e $ n c .

;

1:30
3 ' O AS THE WORLD TURNS

DEAH NOT: Ask your grandmother’s husband
what he wauls you lu call him. Or ask your grand­
mother what she thinks he'd like tn be called.

TIh1 Chiklivn's Tlteulrc wl Hie Civic
Tiled! re Guild is opening its seventh season
of plays with "Balia Yaga. Tlie Witch," a
Hussian talk talc, 0&lt; l. 23, at the Tuppcrwnrc
Children’s Ttieatre in l/ich Haven Park,
Orlando.
Children's Theatre is operated by guild
members, as well as community volunteers
All areas of production need volunteer help,
This includes actors, costume and set
designers, properly |&gt;eople, and ligtit and
sound technicians.
Auditions (or Hie locally produced plays
are open to every one
Coining in December is a prestigious
pufrpet group from New York, The Starry
Night Players, who will present "Die

Florida O w ned

■

1:00
O 1 4) DAYS OF OUR LIVES
(7 10 ALL MY CHILDREN
31 (35) ,11 (17) MOVIE

Children's Theatre
To Open Season

NEWCOMER!

-- --------■-

4:05
8 1 (1 7 )MISSION IMPOSSIBLE

NOTSUIIB INGEORGIA

Welcome

%

0 ( 4 1 HEWS
|i o
th e youn o and th e
RESTLESS
(Tl O RYAN'S HOPE
J T (J 5 ) MAUDt

3:35
H it t ? ) LOVE. AMERICAN STYLE

la r n n e and Shirley's lormar dna
•nsbuclor goat AWOL and pitches
a tent in the gull apartment (FT)rj

Finally I went to a plastic surgeon to ask about
silicone implants and was told it would cost Jj.tKKl
«this was in 19701. I asked my husband (or the
money. He refused, so I sold my t ar and paid for the
operation myscll, and it was the lies I investment I
HI'.All WIFE: Don't look tor a cure where therr'i
ever made.
no disease. Mr. Piim tualily will probably train Ills
InniHy before they "cure" him.
I got a gorgeous figure out ol it i IS7-26-311), hut my
husband couldn't take the whistles and com­
DEAH ABBY: I am 12 years old. My grumlfulher
pliments, and the confidence I bad acquired I died before I was born and my grandmother lived
realized then what a loser be was, and I divorced alone for 13 years. She got m arried again four years
him.
ago. Here is my problem. What shall I call lier
Now I'm married to a real winner who loves me husband? Should I call him "G randpa," or should I
call him "Harold," which is his name?
the way I am.
BUILTANHLt)\ INC* IT
I haven’t been calling him anything so far
DEAH IIITI.T: llubliy No. I was a loser lor sure. because I'm not sure what to call him
Hut lluliby No. 2 i* a winner only if he also would
have loved you the way you were.

DEAH HITCHED: Don’t do anything. 1st your
gossipy neighbors find out you're married Just like
they found out you had a mail living with you.

(7) Q MOVIE
Victory Al Sea
IB'WI) I9MI Documentary Narrat­
ed by Ataiander Scout by

B:30

Well, yesterdny we were going out lor dinner with
out kids, tmd we hud a 7 p in reservation at a place
about a HI minutes' drive from liere. Our daughter
and tier husband weren't here at 6'.30 lik e they w ere
Mipi&gt;osrd to lx*, so my husband Insisted that we
leave at li 15 on the dot! I begged him to wait
another live minutes, but be wouldn'l do it. My
husband is the kind wim lias to In* at the nlr|&gt;ort an
hour early, and lie tias absolutely no patience willt
anyone who is even five minutes late for anything.
Is there anv way to cure him?
Mil PUNCTUALITY'S WIFK

0 4 1CARO SHARKS
l O ; l O NEWS
i)1’ (35) RHOOA

12:30

3:15

Th« Cosmtc OcMn Dr Carl Sagan
labps v»ptbpf» on a Bpnctacular
flight through Sf&gt;ac« in a iifrtuiat#d
acHHiliftcaify occur ato journey halfpay from tha edga of INi known
untvpita toFarlh |R|fJ

Both our kids are married and they are respon­
sible adults, tint they sometimes run a little late.

D ear

2:45

|R|
f t |?SI QJftfiMI* W ftft# * o«

h o u r; I a m talk in g liv e to III m in utes.

M (35)l
H O V E . A M ER IC A N STY lf

(D O N E W S

( D O HAPPY DAYS Fonfremviiaa
tha Cunmnghami lo dinner al C h i­
chi a mother 1 humble apartment

&gt;7'

11:30
O 4 1 P A S S W 0 R D PLUS

12:00

|H|

Widow's Live-In' Causes Gossip

11:00
0 4 WHEEL OF FORTUNE
!) O THE PRICE ISRKJHT
(7.' O LOVE BOAT (R)
IT (35) BUD BREWER
(D (10) EDUCATIONAL PRO­
GRAMMING
»J ( 17) MOVIE

1:15

6:00

citizens of Seminole County, and to commend the
members n( the Itetired Senior Volunteer
Program (nr their services."
Students (rum Nnrthsldc Christian School
presented a patriotic program and Joe Miele, a
IISVP volunteer who entertains weekly at I.ife
Care Center, provided music lur the special
occasion

O 41 BLOCKBUSTERS
J Q ALICE (R)
11 (35) OfCK VAN OYKE
CD 1101 ELECTRIC COMPANY |R|

AFTERNOON

(12 (17) BASEBALL 101 AngolaDodgara al Atlanta Braves

O (11 PROJECT PEACOCK "The
Big Slullad Dog" A live-loot tall
Snoopy dog touchat tha krai ol
Ihoaa who tmd it aliar it bacomaa
separated Irom ill ownar |R)
i$l O MOVIE
High Noon Part
Two Tha Ralurn Ol Will Nana"
119B0I laa Majors David Canadine Will and Amy Kane maka than
■vsl viail to Hadleyviee since I ha
lamed gunlight and hod it in tha
grip ot a bounty hunting marahal

RSVP Celebrates National Anniversary

10:00
O '4' TIC TAC DOUGH
) ’ Q WELCOME b a c k , HOTTER
,)t ( J 5 I I LOVE LUCY
ffl (10) EDUCATIONAL PRO­
GRAM UtltQ

1:10

chairman ol I ha FC C Charta* Farrra

Ken Howell Phofai

9:30
(35) AN0Y GRIFFITH

(D Q M O V IE "Tha Dasparadot

IRI
M a d is o n .

,1)

10:30

l i ) O ALICE Al&lt;a discovms lhal
hat tala husband lafl a snabia
msuraoca policy bul who is tha
banahciaiyt (R)
(JD o FANTASY ISLAND A World
Wai I bull lights lha Rad Baton, and
an aging woman tamporarily
ragatns har youth fFT)

g n o JOKER'S WILD

t t 'f t . i h t s i m i I s p lu &lt; | iir In J o a n

M (3
(35)01
II
5 )OOMERPYLE
CD (10)I SESAME
f ----------STREET q

12:00

7:00
0 ( 4 } th e m u rpets
I J ' O P M MAQAZIHE A pro Me ol
San D»go Zoo apo* etwoman Joan
Embary Pat Ttavan. a rock n roll
gudanst m production with hra lab
esl album • Radio Active". Chat Tad
makaa a tomato salad Vicki Lanaky
discovert ' under a dollar" pal
itama

4 ' HOUR MAGAZINE

OOOI
DONAHUE
&gt; O UI l (17) MOVIE

O GD IONIOHT Ouetl host Joan
Rrvwrs Guwsls Erma Bombetk
Jam « Coco
(IIQ U 'A 'S 'H
l i ) Q ABC NEWS NWHTUNE
J r (35) STREETS OF SAN FRANCISCO
I I (17) MOVIE
The N.ghl Walker (!W5| Rohm I Taylor. Barbara
S ir w&gt;ck A widow endangers I *
Ida whan sha mvatiigalas a racur.
ring draam

B
U d ■) NBC
w NEWS
d O
I tae a s NEWS
d D I«ABC
i HEWS
I CARTER COUNTRY
0 1 (35)C
(1 0 ) UNDERSTANDING
HUMAN BEHAVIOR

I S l u i n i i m i ,

9:00
O
)"

11:30

O J I 0 7 O nzw s
67 (35) SANFORD ANO SON
O l (1 0 ) UNDERSTANDING
HUMAN BEHAVIOR
n (17) BASEOAU Lot Angeles
Dodgers &lt;1 Atlanta Brava*

■Icm* .Midi* (&gt;nl&lt;&gt;r(;iius ;it fete.

,11 |3S) OREAT SPACE COASTER
© 10 MISTER ROOE RS( R)
M t t 'iM Y THREE SONS

J lO J O t D O N E W S
35) BENNY HILL
10 POSTSCRIPTS
17) ALL IN THE FAMILY

- *-

mi tfko requirement.', for becoming a shelter
home.
A question and answer period will follow
t*acfi presentation.
1 tie public is invited to attend this forum
us qualified homes fur tlie abused and
neglected children of Seminole County are
needed.
A siftort presentation will also be made
concerning the Guardian Ad lite m program
presenting operating in the Circuit Court lor
Seminole County and the requirements for
becoming a guardian.

F e a tu re d sp eak ers will be B arb ara
Stalford from tlie Foster Care Division ol
the
D epartm ent
of
H ealth
and
Hetiabilitative Services who will speak on
the requirements for becoming a Foster
Home, and Clieryl L'livs of (lie Single Intake
Division of the Department wlio will speak

•- -

- w-e»

*

|

^ 4 : ' J . P &lt;y&gt;. J '

• I

f

|

4|-« *

• » m r

HUS

WJDlS

Jam as R$c/jpe

T U IS D A rC A ItlO A D
N IT I

* - •

^

N r car

FWHJCMKKEN
"IT'S HONEY DIPPED"

I.M

TMIULTIMATI
h id osn T iia o a
■

O P E N I l i M a .m . - IS p.m. Except F r i. A Set. C le iln f I l i M p.i
Tier F re n ch A y *.
(H w y. 17-fI)

n . e e*

Y n

ft Y

a

* 1 N. H w y. l» -ti

CetxeNerry

, x . •—

�• s .

Evtnlnp Horn id, Sanford, FI.

Tuoiday, Sopt. Jt, m i

Five Points ^ n t i q u c g A G illd ’lahletl

FRUIT JARS

. w

DEEP

CARPET CLEANERS
Prepared by Advertising Dept, of

LIVINONOOM
DININOROOM
ANOHALL

•B O T T LES
•PRIM ITIV ES

$2 5 ° °

E v e n in g H erald

*10.00 Eocti Additional Room

Optn II a m -4:11 Hwy 1)
Closed WH
Nritto Hondy W*y

24 H our Service 331-0051
CARPET SALES - INSTALLATION - REPAIR

RESIDEN TIAL

DON'T E E SORRY LATER
CALL OATORI

Business
Review

Steam

Largo Selection
• GLASS
• FURNITURE

r i

Distinctive Mirror Designs

COMMERCIAL

al322-2611 Kwu!
C

H erald A d v e r tise r

ADVERTISING

ADVERTISING

ADVERTISING

■Ka.2tTZ.VC f r a a n

FOR EVERY DECOR

• PUT YOUR BUSINESS ON THE MOVE •

a ."•aTHi.i'.

GLASS
FOR EVERY
PURPOSE

Ph. 322-4422

OKU A Point
Company. Inc
&gt;1* Maynolia. Sanlard

Seecfuuik

*41-41n

SANFORD. FLORIDA'

SALINSKI

REGISTER FOR FREE DRA W ING
A GEN UIN E MINK STOLE
TO THE LUCKY WINNER

GROOMING
DOES YOUR 0 0 0 HAVE DRY,
F L A K E Y SKIN, HAIR LOSS,
SUMMER ITCH, ETC.f

n r out

hot

on

&gt;1$ A t . I

• • • *-

• M

C

v-’

t m a t m in t i

r

SECO N D

CALL FOR APPOINTMENT
(I S S

323-4635

AU .

*'

\ \ 'L
' ( . I I )

Pet Animal Supply

IM A G E

CONSIGNME NT C L O T H IN G
O P f N T U f S THRU SAT 10 a

• A &lt;|*i.t1 Mi. fl A S.&lt;nlnn1 A,i

*

SANFORD PLAZA

FREE SPINAL EXAMINATION
Dingtr Signals el Pinched Server
t Headaches
? NtCk Pam
} Shoulder Pam

SANFORD

TROPHY SHOP

4 Oillicult Bieattung
5 l9»f* Back ram
Hip Pain,
Pant Down leqs

SANFORD PAIN
CONTROL CLINIC

PHm-sio*
2107 French Ave.
SANFORD

M ill. F f m K Ave , lt*f*r#
tBCrotlI Vrtm
trf«n PII2A
PIZZA NUT)
HUT)

PLAQUES — TROPHIES — DESK S IT S
DESK PLATES — NAME TAOS - PEN S IT S
MEDALS — RI EBONS — REV CHAINS

Meet laseranca
Aiceyted
3 2 3 -5 763
Or Tkemai Vaadell. CMraaraetlc PtiysWM*
Irsa I iM
(at Mcwas I (ays e In

24 HOUR ENORAVINO S E R V IC E

It. Gary Garrnnd offers quality furniture for the lowest prices.

The Salt House
A Unique Country emporium

Once you *t»p through our door*, you'll surprisingly find
yourstlf In A dream world ol Nottalgla
Hand cralttd lattlar furniture by a Ttnnem * craftsman, Idely
waits to become a lutura collectors Item
Hand made quills, dolls, kitchen acces
cones, and baby Hems from "grandmothers
| creative tmeglnalion "

a

ACE AUTO RADIATOR
B IL L M c C A L L E Y O W N E R
PH. 322-023S
711 FR EN C H A V E.
SANFORD
RABIATOII

.ammm

Step Into The Salt House. . .
And F m I At Horn*
3S B Hwy. 17-93, DoBery
— —

»■

the

OPEN MON. THRU F R I.1 4
SAT.6-U
ALL WORK GUARANTEED
1 DAY SERVICE

10% DISCOUNT

ion

323-6522 ,

t H.

11TI0N
Formerly
Hair Cara
Jvnclian

w :

PIO M

Hot Dogs! G arrand’s Is
Having A Truckload Sale

CITlIIN t

•72"

San lor Cltiian Day
Every Wednesday
IS Pet. Off

P E E MO.

MENTION THIS AD

SAVE MS

OWN FOR LESS
THAN RENT

R EO .S 35

MOBILE HOME MODELS ON DISPLAY
COMPARE THESE FEA TURES

Driftwood Village
Lake M ary Blvd

Tues.-Sat.9-S
Mon. A Thurt 94

•
•
•
•

LAROE POOL • ADULT CLUB HOUSE
T EEN CEN TER • LAUNDRY FA CILITIES
CITY WATER AND SEWER INCLUDED
ADULT ONLY AND FAMILY SECTIONS
SR 417 SANFORD, 1 Ml. E. OF 17 W
MON.-SAT.f a.m.-S p.m. JJUUO

N ELSO N FLO RID A

op BIsrs
m i LC
o^d
L o L /W G E

The Flnasl Rosas for Florida So il.
PATENTED
S4.S0
NON PATENTED
S7.00
SPECIAL
NEW VARIEOATED l * S 0
AFRICAN VIOLETS
*

BRING THIS AD
For 1 FREI Drink
HR! PARK DR. And IMS
I •• I

PERM *20

NIVt)jcssi(mal
IYtxhicts
{U (l£

Long Hair Extra

SJ-'a tn flE.’lE.cl J2 o o (z
MOORS

/AYBI PvA/A
'.AM090

TOCft SAT 91

Iv o slr Aigt

323*7530

©N.B.C. AIR

“
A ir Conditioning
Heating &amp; Refrigeration

JEAN NORRIS

RESIDENTIAL A COMMERCIAL
REFRIGERATION A A/C
hrw)

FERNS 4 EXOTIC PLANTS
Spaclallllht In Perm. Hanqiao aatketi. Alrican Violate

BLAIR AGENCY

Servict Call *1
A8
O .9
i95
9

OPEN MON THRU SAT. ta.m . S p.m.
Calory Ava.
Ph. 322-3074
Sanford

SP EC IA LISTS IN
AUTOM OBILE INSURANCE
S R 2M F IL E D

Med-Care Surgical
and
Respiratory Clinic
RENTALS &amp; SALES

• IM M EDIATE TAO
INSURANCE
• S P EC IA L PACKAOE RA TE
FOR P E O P L E O VER SO
Serving Sanford for 2S Yotrs

• Respiratory Therapy
• Wheelchair*
Equipment
• Colostomy Supplies
• Hoipital Bed*
• Breathing Machine*
ff Mastectomy Supplies •O aygen

PHONE
3237710 or 323*3166

* 2 0 YEARS EXPERIENCE*
WIPING PEOPLE SAVE AIR CONDITIONING OOIURSI

3 0 5 /3 2 2 -0 7 9 3
Toll Free:
•6 8 -8 3 3 0 or 327-1677

Call N.B.C. Air
oday!

MEDICARE APPROVED

Everything for horn* patient cart
"W E D E L IV E R "

SANFORD
ICtfAAf ft I . Park Avt 6 Oak)

Phone (JOS) 22240SS
MS E . First Street
Sanford, Fla. JJ 771

John's Sew 'N^-Vac
Q bbr , OR/ Aijvft Tewr $«wLf
tF O O
V Mm Mm Or Vbcbbm Q m m c
3
F t S i l f i l R OF SCISSORS SHAIPPtfD Ft HI

Ctaaa. OM. kaiett NttfM Caatral

CamaHN QW-e *********

Ctaaa Meek a M N R t a a
Ckatk «te»d Ta CaMrtN

cw

4
' A

i fc

ACCIDENT or INJURY

Id l W . N E W Y O R K A V E N U E -

O tL*n d -

73*4190

'It J

M

TRAOESACCEPTEO —FINANCING AVAILABLE
HOURS: Monday Friday 9 S:M• Saturday 9-3:00
10 Yaars Eaper lence- 1Day Sarvlca - Fr»a Esilmatas

»SU tt»« « STATE ,

From Jim Loth To G o t Q u ality
W orkm anship And Fa ir P rk o t At

Based
on
this
philosophy,
G ary
opened his no-frills
furniture store in 1980
and stocked it with
brand name furniture
at discount prices. He
m ad e n a tio n a lly
known brands such as
Kcstonic
bedding,
Broyhill, American of
Martinsville, Bassett
and many others
available to the public
as a great savings.
G a r r a n d 's
has
furniture for every
room in the house
including living room,
bedroom and dining
room sets, and in­
cidental pieces such as
end tables, wall units,
rockers and reeliners,
desks, coffee tables,
hunk beds and lamps.
How are these for
bargains? Garrand’s
has brass plated head
boards — any size —
for only $33 and fullsized bedding at just
$75 a set.
Delivery and set up
are available. Master
Charge and Visa credit
cards are accepted
and Garrand's has a
layaway plan.
For further in­
formation call 3390469.

BARBS
P h il P a s to r e t
The postal service U con­
sidered aelling ad ipace on
the back o( ttampa. Pretumablv, you won't be reading
ol United Parcel Service or
of air freight.
Why do mail order boose*
dock ilte* op to, bol not
laclodiag, yoor dImen*too*?

Jim Lath's Bluo Book Sorvlco Cantor

e N O RECO VERY. N O FEE

O C T O B ER

SPECIAL

CHAROE AIR CONDITIONER M

Qm

(include* 3 earn of frwn)
ft lt Y 3
F R i f COOCIMO IV tT tM C H IC K INCLUDKD

ATTORNEY-AT-LAW

iU A U H T B D OH SA U S, S B V IC i i S U P H ID

ARRIVE AUVE

You Don't Hovo To Buy A Cor

WALLACE W. HARDY

I l l S .M A O N O L I A A V E N U E — S A N FO R D — 22J-77II

•FLO R ID A *

S A V I M ONIY ON
AUTOMOTIVE IMPAIRS

a FREE CO N FEREN CE

ITep a*d

Where can you feed
a family of five for $l
and take advantage of
furniture bargains by
the truckload at the
same time?
Come to Garraad's
Furniture at 2905
Lnkevicw Drive, Fern
Park, (in back of Club
Juana and just off of
State
Hoad 4:16).
Owner
It.
Gary
Garrand is celebrating
bis truckload sale this
Saturday by serving
Pepsi and hot dogs for
only 10 cents each.
To add to the
fe s tiv itie s
WDBO
Radio Disc Jockey
Perry Moore will lie on
hand from 9 a.m. to 1
p.m.
“ You get what you
pay for” is the familiar
old adage, and we
expect to pay a little
extra to get the kind of
furniture that will last
for many years.
But does paying
more really make it
better? Gary believes
customers shouldn’t
have to pay nr ore for
fancy showroom frills
— just for quality
furniture.

IMPORTANT NOTICE!

Do y«4 Km A Chum?

A *21-50
b f 16
Vak»
aapm Ti

w is

IKON 4 FMI CHAN01S IXTIU

• Crutches

3S10AOAK A V E.

I

I ln|ury And

JIM LASH'S BUM BOOK

No. Gwendolyn, to skip
smoking you don't have to
take up Jump-rope.

*114 NlgHway 17-93, IH webe lawlari 4 LawgwBEd
Man.-Fri.
Ie I i M p.a«., tat. E:M a.m. la 1r .r
014741

Who needs air raadiUoatag o k ra the booa can chill
yoa with a fiance a* he
walks by yaar leak?

WrVNfnfl u n i x .

117 N. I * Dr.

425*4134

OrtaRta, FI. »m

4

P

a;

*

•

"••••» »• a •'

* **

f, * • * # # ^

&lt;

�Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

BATTERIES

Business
Review

Prepared by Advertising Dept, oi

★
★

AUTO S
TRUCK

★
*

G O L F CARTS
LA W N M O W ER S

★

M A R IN E

*

IN D USTRIAL

E v e n in g H erald

• PUT TOUK BUSINESS ON THE MOVE •

BATTERIES

H erald A d v ertiser

ADVERTISING

201 N. P A R K A V E .

PH. 323-1114

S A N FO R D

ADVERTISING

BIG SAVINGS
DISCOUNTS

A Hair-Do For Fall Fun
From The Pampered Look G c if t c in d S

For Any
Room In Your House

Don’t face Kali with
hair that shows the
result of two much sun
and surf. Get rid of
those sum m er split
ends and frizzies.
come to The Pam­
pered Look for a hair­
do that will help you
look your best for all
the upcoming holidays
and events.
Conveniently located
in the west end of
Zayrc Plaza at High­
way 17-92 at Airport
Boulevard,
The
Pampered Look can be
reached by the Transit
Authority buses from
many parts of Sanford
and South Seminole.
When
custom ers
come to The Pam­
pered Look they don’t
just get a quick
assembly cut or curl.
They are counseled
about their hair and
any problems they
may have with it so
that the stylists can
take the proper course
of action for their
particular hair. They
will advise you, but
will do what YOU want
in any case when it
comes to styling your
hair.
Owner • manager,
Delores Brooks of
C a s s e lb e rry ,
and
hai r s t yl i s t Vickie
Mahoney, always want
their customers to be
satisfied and they
guarantee their work
on color and perms.
They use quality
Redkin and Kenra hair
products. They feature
Apple Pectin, Zotos
and Tressa perms.
Delores, who pur­
chased the hairstyling
salon, formerly known
as "Alene’s Fashion
and Beauty Salon," in
February,
is
a

PuRnTture
134-1444

1401 L A K E V IE W in F E R N P A R K
I Behind Barrwtt’t Uted Appliancetl
MON F R I . 104. SAT 10 1 SUN I S

tD som ttttm m i m m m u n n i m j L

A.
f

PH.

322-5044

'/

FOR RENT

f/

WFnniNft
r.nwNC
W ED D IN G GOWNS
W ED D IN G E Q U IP M E N T

.

-j

4tti A Sanford Avo., Sanlord

• ,

tw&gt;
;?•*.;**

/,

Gaynelle's Antiques

1

' t i -^ -4^

rrr

f m r r r r n 4444 sT m r r m
L a r g e Selection

MEN'S CLOTHING
A L L S IZ E S
SH IR IS
PAN TS - J A C K E T S
1 A ) P IE C E SU ITS
MASTER CHARGE
VISA

/rv

1 . ! /*

lLt3

f i n * •«,

N E W * U S E D CO N SIG N M EN T SHOT
L
O P EN MON T H R U SAT 10 A
,,
PH 311 0040
\
J 47I Orlando Or (in F airw a y P lata) Sanford

NUTRITIONAL
PRODUCTS

HOUSEHOLD
PRODUCTS

PERSONAL
CARE

For fiattar
Health

Biodegradable
Non-Polluting

In Harmony
With N itura

C A L L E L A IN E 322-42ST

L O U IS E 323-7442

FREE

Hairstylist Vickie Mahoney (left! admires Blanche Harriett's new hair-do
while Delores Brooks, owner manager of The Pampered Umk puts on
finishing touch.
gruduate
of
the
cuts,
hair
during daytime hours. style
B l*a u l y
Wilfred
coloring
and
lints,
A pre-perm shamjmo
Academy.
and
pre-wrap lotion m anicures are of­
Vickie, a Sanford are always used to f e r e d .
Delores
graduated
resident,
specializes
in
lacotol
protect hair against
from Komar H air­
m anicures.
Vickie
styling Academy, being burnt. A protein does facials and make­
porosity filler is ap­ up by appointment for
Orlando, in 1977.
The Pampered Look plied after the per­ special occasions.
For an appointment
is a full service salon manent.
In addition to perms, call :«:t-75:io.
for men, women, and
children. Hours are 9
a.m. to 5 p.in.,
T uesday
through
Saturday and evenings
by appointment.
Appointments are not
al ways n e c e ssa ry

N U TR IT IO N A L-SU M M IN G C LA S S E S
at t h e s alva tio n ar m y g y m

........... r
M « P M Every

100 W ItTM ST SANFORD
5pontorfdby

T h u n d iy Evening

Louit*4 Elaint

For VYomtn
A Min

SA LES &amp; SERVICE
A ik About Our S E N IO R C IT IZ E N D ISCO U N T
H E A T IN O
F IN A N C IN G A V A IL A B L E
A IR C O N D IT IO N IN G
10 P C T . DOWN
R E F R IG E R A T IO N
At Long At 14 Mo. To Pay
Approved Credit

Save Money!
Save Energy!
CARRIER
AIR C O N D ITIO N IN G
SOUTHERN AIR OF SANFORD
Eitab llth e d 1441

104 North Maple Avenue
Ph. ( H I) 1114111

P w Jw ju w af

Halt Styltat

THE GINGERBREAD HOUSE
ChIM C a n — Pre-School — Kindergarten

W iik J k

"Ouelity 4*rvie* For Th* Concerned P a r e n tf

"PewwcaE Jm k"

NOW A CCEPTIN G APPLICATIONS
FOR EN RO LLM EN T
, ^

PH. 322-0547
ISM ELM A V E.

VOLKSHOP

#
d

Specializing In Sarvlca A Parti For
V.W.'t, Toyota and Datiun

t: *

SANFORD

214 S. Palmetto Ave.
SA N FO R D
PH O N E

321-0120

*5°° O ff
THE PERM O F
Y O U R C H O IC E
(Long Hair Eitra)

Ph. 322-7684

^ings of ^Hair

i

STYLING SALON

wfluJ

dHUfll A jg m I .-tstAa Cifrifh Him n r
i l Q J T O n K T y ilU B IlIB i

QKIeee O

inA t

jlsal
UHI I n
&lt;7mstJ

FLORIDA PATIENT AIDS

339-4969

FH EC o au v aav . . . wc b il l m e d ic a r e or D ia le r
-Owned me Op*r«t*d fey laniard Itniar Cillteni"

a W H E E L CHAIRS * W A L K E R S
• C R U T C H E S *• HOSPITAL BED S

f J C ^ g iA T H

B E D PADS

— — £*&gt;

EQ U IPM EN T

• MISC. SICKROOM S U P F U E S

LOWE ST PKICIS
COMI’AHi OUR PRICES

323-157 0

-.rer-rw. j . - •***•»♦ -i »*“T - *

Living Room
Dining Aree
A Hall

\&gt;-------

h
I

\n
i

f Ii

STARLET STEEMER

'» ■r -- -j - • ♦ — —*. i

i &gt; *

• &gt; •

aa r KhO,

p

121.000

Ronald N. Vail, Sal &amp; Daraltvy
M .Sgl to Edward P. landar 4 Wt
Carol D , From SL&lt; cor. ol Sac. 17
21 32 ate . 14.700
Libia O* Pan* Gontalal 4 Hb
. Romuio lo Karl W. Croaby. Sol. —
Lot 4, Lak* Harrlat E ttl.. 141,000
Allred E Sawyer 4 Wl Sherry lo
Jake D Woos lay 4 Wl Barbara F ,
— S JT'ol Lot a. allot 7 4 N 5 It o il
blk II, San Lanla 2nd rapt, 1)4,100
Greater Conttr Corp to Charles
L Griffin, tg l. Lot lit River Run
Sec Four, 142.000
The Herklni Corp lo Silvaoor
A Loiano 4 Wf Carol 1 , Lol U
Cardinal Oaki. 141.100
Sib il Point Prop Inc to R L.
Peatrost 4 Hutbar. Inc., Lol 1).
Timber Rldg* at Sabat Point, UN.
I, 111.500
4 1 Paatroai 4 Huabar, Inc. lo
Francii P Loporto 4 Wl Miriam
L., Lot $. aik A. Fairway Cove,
119.000
Ft Land Co lo Barnett Bk ol
Sem . Pari ol Lott 12 12 4 S3, Blk
D D R Milchallt Survey pi Matas
E Levy Grant. 142S.OOO
Belly S Want 4 Hb Joel R. Jr.
to Stanley F Gold, Sgl Lot II. Blk
C. Swaatwatar Club UN 1 A.
1450.000
Urban E ip . Corp. to Midiatl R.
Hogan 4 Wl Sherry O , Lol 11.
Wekiva Cov*. PH On*. 1)1.400
H investments. Inc lo Raymond
J. Jenny 4 Wf Patricia A , — UN
103. Th* Allam onlt Condo..
134 055
Jacob H Schlllman lo Jacob H
Schiilman 4 Wl Sondra, Lot II.
Blk C, Th* Springs O*
E t l l , 1100

855 E. 25th ST. SANFORD
PH. 323 6468

COMPLETE AUTO REPAIRS
AT OUR NEW LOCATION
COMPlflf
SIOCKOf
SI AH 1 F HS
At I F HNAI OHS
HFGUlAIOHS
NF W AND HF B U I l T

/

&lt;0
VV

^

S P E C IA LS
l o o t TOBF R I5lh
F L E C 1 HON 1C I UNF UI'S
AIR CONDI 1 ION f H HI l»A IHS

15% OFF
•
•
•
•

$CflPt£h|*n|

Walker
Fertlliter Co
lo
Spaceport, USA Inc S US' (lest E
347 4 W 3 I5 I4 E SoF S US’ ot Lot
2a. St Josephs S D etc . 1300
Maronda Hornet Inc. lo Fran
cisco Brlgriont Soto 4 Wl Olga, Lot
22. Blk K. Fonmoor UN ). 154 400
Olin Amer Homes lo Juko 1.
Otsukl 4 Wl Michl E .Lot 27 Blk A,
Greenwood Lakes Un I, 144,704
Carlock Myers lo Louis F.
Correa 4 Wt Marlette, Lol 307
Forest Brook Third Sec , 144.900
BMA Prop Etc to Jennla t.
Kinkel, Sgl , Lot 319 Lake ol th*
Woods Townhoutt. Sec 10,114,700
JSI Dev. to James M Col* 4 Wt
Joy D , Lot 104, Wedgtwood UN I.

PACE AUTO ELECTRIC

Tha carpal daaalnf m m r m y

114 SANFORD AVE., SANFORD

Equity Realty Inc. to Carol E
Garland. Sgl 4 Deborah Franklin,
tg l. Un 91 C. Deitiny Springs,
129,900
FF .O rl lo Raymond P. Rlet 4
Wl Jean M . Lot 112, Th* Foreit,
PH 2. Sec 2. 110.000

HAIR STYLI NG STUDIO

• tru ck m o u n tid unit
• we MIAT THE WATER
• we do n o t ute y o u r
ELECTRICITY
• NO WATIB M l 14 IN
voue homi
• WE DO NOT U4I tNAMPOO

• COMMODE CHAIRS
U H U L lF ilE t S U R E

3224991

Newell A Weittnbarger l Wf
Clara to Hoy J Davit 1 Wf Doris.
Lot 4 Blk 12. Highland Park,
440 000
Sylvia Wrlton to Edward C Abt.
Sr &amp; Wf Jo Ann*. Lot 22 4. E 40' of
If. Blk B. Tr 14, Sanlando Springs.
2nd r*pl 414.900
Equity Realty Inc to Wayn* E
Lilhetski 4 Wl Nancy G . UN aaE.
Destiny Spnngt. 1)1.900
G rral*r Conitr
Corp
to
Richard A Franco. SgI 4 Mary A
Carlton, tgl . Lot las. Rivrr Run
S*c Four. 47.200
Prtrr Rralmonlr 4 Wl Elm a 10
Diana Nv* (Marr I. Lott J 4 4. Btk
54. Sanlando
Th*
Suburb
i n«autilu1. Palm Springs S*c .
410.000
JSI Dev . Iltc lo Lawrenca M
Scott 4 Wl Ethel Rrda M . Lot 12.
Wrdgewood Tennlt Villas. 144.400
A J. Thomas Jr Etc. to Mt
Lucill* Florimonl. Un H Maytalr
Villas. 447.400
S 4 H Fabr Icatlng 4 Engr., Inc.
So James L. Mulchings 4 Wl
Barbara J . N 222 54'of W 141 2S'ol
blk ID. M M Smith*! S D I SS,
Mfg incl cither propl to Flaglhlp
Bk of Stm . 11.400
(OCD) Gary L. Mcllhanny to
Theresa F Mcllh*nny4 Mb, Gary.
Lot 57. Blk A. Carriage Hill. Un
No I. 4100
Marlene Conklin. Repr E ll D J
A,innorth to Virginia Lodalo. Lot
113. Longoale S D. 4J0.J00
Peter Matlrangelo 4 Wl Linda
F To Ramon Toranto 4 Wl
Ooloret. Lot 40. Spring Oiks, Un
4. $74,000
Richard F Kuchariyk 4 Wl
Theresa to James C Neal 4 Wf
Joyce M . Lot 40. Grove E t t t ,
4105.000
(QCOI Patricia Katter. Sgi to
Edward Katter, i g l, E 14 47' ot
Lot 14. allot 114 W l4 4 fo l 14 Blk
D. Lake Wymote H ts, 1100
Donald A Dum. Jr 4 Wt Tretta
V to Julian N Dunn 4 Wl Alyct
M . W no- ol N 90- o4 S 105- ol Lot
74A, Sanford Celery Della S D.
4D500
I RC Landings Assoc, to John W
Campbell 4 Wf Joan S . Lot II. Th*
Landings. 449,000
FRC Landings Assoc lo Steven
M Roiantky 4 Wl Stephanie, Lot
92. Th* Lanalngs, 449,100
Equity Really Inc to Paul
Writer 4 Wl Bernice 4 Lawrenca
E . Sgl Un 42C. Destiny Springs.
424.400
AlytnH Savage 4 Wl Rose E. lo
Frank A Mnima 4 James J.
McCutker, Par I From NE cor
ot NW'iOl NW'i ot Sec 4 21 30 He ,
3 parcels, 437,000

R IC K O O ETTSCH .O w ner-O peretor
1SS7S. P A R K D R IV E
SA N FO R D

We Work Saturdeyi Too

SALES AND RENTALS

WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 30
Sanford AA Beslnners, 6:30 p.m., 1201 W. First St.
Starlight Promenaders, 8 p.m., DeBary Community
Center, Shell Road.
O vereaten Anonymous, 7:30
Altamonte MaU,
Sears.
Bom to Win AA group, 8 p.m., Ravenna Park Baptist
Church, 2743 Country Club Road. Sanford. Goaed.
Alcoholics Anonymous, 8 p.m„ Altamonte Springs
Community Church, State Ro*d 436 at Hermita Trail.
Closed.
Wednesday Step AA, 8 p.m., Penguin Buildiig,
Mental Health Center, Crane's Roost, Altamonte
Springs. Gosed.
THURSDAY, OCT. 1
Tropical W eavrn Guild of Orlando meeting, 10 n.m.
St. John's lAitheran Church, 1600 S. Orlando Ave.,
Orlando. Program — "Weaving (or Christmas." Open
to those interested-In weaving or spinning.
Senior C itiirai trip to Cypress Gardens leaving
Sanford 8:30 a.m. from Sanford Gvic Center. Pick up
at 1&gt;eeds in Casselberry, 9 a.m. Lunch and boat ride
included. Call 322-9148 for reservations.
Senior Cltlzeni Tour to Cypress Gardens. Leave
Sanford Civic Center, 8:30 a.m.; pick-up at Seminole
Plaza, 9 a.m. Return 6 p.m. Call Doris Rogers for
reservations at 322-9148.
Altamonte Friendship Gub, 10 a.m. meeting
followed by a covered dish luncheon, Eastmonte Gvtc
Center, Altamonte Springs. Dance, 1:30 p.m.
FRIDAY, OCTOBER!
Beginning sew big sponsored by Daytona Beach
Community College, 9 a.m. to noon, Deltona Public
Library, 1691 Providence Boulevard.

G U YS &amp; GALS

“Some stains had been on our
carpet all winter long. I didn’t
think theyd come out but they

Sanford

1P11 F ranch Ava.

Johnetle Thompion

S P E C IA L IZ IN G IN
CUSTOM P E R M IN G
PH O N E

(Corner Ind A Pelm etlo)

Good Thru Oct. 1

NenveedK

-T S

Srmlnolr County Counril PTA Skate Party. 6:30-9
All American Skating Kink, State Road 436,
Altamonte Springs. 12 for students, parents skate free.
Tickets at Rear 1-ike, Spring la k e and la k e Orient!
schools.

REALTY TRANSFERS

( ’/ A l l !

Twice 9» Mice

A G ES 2 Y E A R S 4 U P
AModrrn Stale Licensed Facility
Certified TeecheM

CALENDAR
TUESDAY, SEPT. 29

Catt 322-2611 tteuil
a d v e r t is in g

Tueidey, Sa»t.*», tetl— SB

A l l UNI TS G U A R A N T E E D
( A S H A C A R R Y OR 1Nii t A l l 1 D
H f i AI D F X HF HI F NCF IN A u l O
F L EC T R K
U T F A H S IN SE MINOL f CO
W O P b 1 AND St F US'

^ V % 1&gt;t ^

f *9 e &lt; 1 • ^ •

• • - -

V

• .

r

.
■

�4ft—I v tn ln f H tn ld , U nford, F I

Ttm d&gt;y, U p t, if , ifH

K - H t t e ja ig M L

H igh Court's Secret Opinion

CLASSIFIED ADS
Orlando - Winter Park

Sem inole

G ay Law yers Can't Be Barred
TALUHASSEE, Fla. (UPI) The stale Supreme Court has ruled
in a secret opinion that people who
pursue th e ir sexual desires in
private with other consenting adults
may not be Kept Irom practicing law
in Florida, the St. Petersburg Times
reported Monday,
The court gave the confidential
opinion to the Board o{ Bar
Examiners after the board withheld
a license from a New York lawyer
applying to practice in Florida.
The lawyer, who admitted a
sexual preference for men, appealed
to the high court, which has the
authority to render secret rulings to
the board, an agency of the Supreme
Court which deals solely with
licensing of attorneys.
Chief Justice Alan Sundberg will
not adm it the ruling exists and the

New York lawyer’s Miami attorney,
Robert Eimers, said the court's
clerk told him to keep it a secret.
But Eimers told the Times he has
asked that the opinion be made
public, using only the initials of the
New York homosexual involved,
because he thinks the public has the
right to know the rulings of the
court, controversial or otherwise, so
they can govern their conduct ac­
cordingly.
Sundberg said since secrecy is for
the protection of the applicant, the
applicant can make it public if lie
wishes.
While the opinion came in lire case
of a homosexual, the lawyer thinks it
also would apply to heterosexuals,
Including lawyers who live with
someone of the opposite sex outside
of marriage

The court’s opinion, according to
the Times, said, "Private non­
co m m ercial sex ac ts between
consenting adults are not relevant to
prove fitness to practice law."
The ruling, made on June 18, was
iirst made public in July by a gayoriented newspaper in Miami and by
live American Civil Liberties Union
newspaper, the Times said.
Sundberg said the only opinions
the court kcqvs confidential are in
appeals Irom bar examiner board
decisions and appeals by practicing
attorneys of privolc reprimands
issued by the Bar for misconduct. In
juvenile cases, w here the law
protects llie names of defendants,
tlie opinions arc made (wblic, using
only the initials of the party in­
volved.
This is not the first lime the court

lias giyn a sim ilar ruling, this one
to Eiders himself, though the
earlieri opinion dealt specifically
with hfnosexuals, the Times said.
In 197) when Eimers was being
denied admission to the Bar after
admittjg a homosexual preference,
the enrt ruled 6-1, "We cannot
bclievethat the candidate*! m ere
p refern ce for homoaexualUy'*
renderd him unfit to practice law.
Eim fs gave his consent to having
the rullg published using his name.
Justle Joseph Boyd d is ra te d In
both oinlons, says the Bar should
not adiil anyone whose sexual
lifesty? contem plates routine
violatip of a criminal statute. Boyd
said lorida law makes it a
mlsdeaeanor to commit an unnatura’ and lascivious act with
nnotha person.

Council Chairman Nat Polak of Tallahassee said
it is likely Marks and Ms. LeLsncr will get the new
term s they are seeking, but lie doesn’t believe the
oilier finalists are wasting their time.
Tlie council must submit at least three names to
Guv. Bob Graham for the Marks and U-isncr seats
and Polak said he sees no reason why tire two in­
cumbents won’t be rc-nomlnated.
He will recommend to his council colleagues that
if Graham reappoints the incumbents, any other
people olso nominated be automatically considered
for any PSC vacancy that may arise next year.
Tlie term s of PSC Chairman Joe Crcssc and
Gerald Gunter will be up at tlie end of 1982 and
Crcssc says lie may retire, which would mean a
wide-open race for one commission seat.

Over ;uw people applied to succeed Marks and Ms.
Ijoisner, whose term s are up at the end of this year.
Tlie council met two weeks ago and selected 17
persons for interviews, including tlie incumbents.
One candidate chose not to come to Tallahassee
(or an interview, Barney le e Capehart of
Gainesville, a University of Florida associate
professor in engineering.
Marks and Ms. Leisncr pnibably have had "the
inside track" all along, said Polak, but (lie
nominating council laid no choice but to act as If
there were two vacancies on the utility-regulating
commission.
"There lias been talk that everything is wired in
as far as Marks and 1-elsner are concerned. Of
course, our only concern is that they are qualified to
go forward again," he said.
One of the candidates being interviewed is
Stephen Kiser ol Naples, a blind attorney wliose
brother, Curl, of Clearwater, is a nominating
council member and House Republican leader. Curl
Kiser lias abstained whenever his brother's name

CLASSIFIED DEPT.

RATES
III mo...................... Met Dm

HOURS

IcoROOCuttvotimes, tec a Hr#
1:40 A.M. — S:JO P.M. 7ORMCVftVtlRMO ........ OlC
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 10cMMCVlfvOtlRNS.S7ceftRO
SATURDAY *• Noon
tl.M Minimum
.........
“ ■ J Lines Minimum

Also, Robert Dcipsey of North Miami Beach,
assistant director o|he Metro-Dade County Police
Department; Rich«l Gunter of Tallahassee, aide
to PSC member Ktie Nichols; Claude Davis of
Rockledgc, a NAB engineer; Jam es Henry of
Sarasota, a m echjlcal engineer specfalixing In
energy conscrvatid; Charles Lockwood, a Lutx
attorney; Donald Proctor, a Pompano Beach
lawyer; Kemper M iriam, a University of South
Florida accountinf professor from Clearwater;
Stuart Stein, a Forifjiuderdale attorney; and Pat
Dore of Tallahasscra Florida State University law
professor.

Sunday-N oon Friday

MAN qualified lo do cerpentry A
maintenence Apply In person
too w. urn st

RN OR LPN ’
4— Personals

u - H w m iA B t t t f ir
COM PLETE BEAUTY FACIAL,
BY APPOINTMENT ONLY
n i- t t e io r M t m i

WHY BE LO N ELY ? Writ* "Off
A Mat*” Dating Service All
ages P 0 Bon ton, Clearwater, PI. MSI*.
W ILL the gentlemen
teacher. who asked
weekend position,
contact Al Dawson at
nr 171 Ml]

school
tor a
pltata
Ml l t d

6— Child O r *
FOR tha Ultimata in
CtUW Cara A Child's
World Ml IO&lt;
SPUR OF THE MOMENT
BABYSITTING
n in s a

9—Good Things to E it
lib s. 1.40
Star 1.00
Cukes
Star 1.00
Pepptrs, Large
eechitc
W. Lopes
1 lor tfc
Green Onlcns
each ttc
Pie Pumpkins
lb Me
Beef Slakatomatoes
libs, too
Big Rome Apples
1
lbs.
1 00
Gold Dal. Apples
lib s 100
Mutiu Apples
4 lbs. 1.00
Rad Del. Apples
Fresh Apple
V»gal. i f*
Cider
Me
Greens
a bunch
1 tar 1.00
Catery
each 1,4t
Wal ar t^taiona
lb r e
Swi Potatoes
Startle
Tim Buc Toe Com
Me
J Lbs. Potatoes

We Taka Food Stamps
L E R O Y FARMS
SR 44
Watson's Old Form

Baby Sitting
My home. Eiparlancad.
»&gt; m
m sltriad Adi art tha smallest
big flaws Hams you will find

L iflfll NoticB
IN T H I CIRCUIT COURT OF
T H l IIO H TEBN TH JUDICIAL
C IR C U IT
IN
AND
FOR
IS M IN O L I COUNTY, FLORIDA.
CASS NO. CIM-MSS-CA-*? K
FIRST F ED ER A L SAVINGS AND
LOAN
ASSOCIATION
OF
SEM IN O LE CO UN TY, a cor
poraiton organliad and ailsling
undtr tha laws ol tha Uflitad Su its
o4 Amarlca.
plaint 1ft.
vs
JOHN CONOLEY FOX, ft at,
Oatandants.
N O T IC IO FSA LB
NOTICE IS H ER EB Y GIVEN
that on Iha list day of October,
m i, at 11:00 o'clock AM al lha
West Front door ot lha Cowrihoust
oI Saminola County, at Sanford,
Florida. ARTHUR H. B EC K
w it h , JR . Clark ot th* Circuit
Court will otfar tor salt to lha
hlohast and bast bidder lor cosh at
public outcry, tha following
described raal proparty McMad ta
Saminola County. Florida, m*ra
particularly dascribad as tallows,
to wit:
Lot IJ. Spancar H el*itl, *
cording to tha plat Iharaot as
recorded in Plat Book 1. paga I I ol
tha Public Racords ol Saminola
County, Florida.
Tha abevt sala Is mada pursuant
lotha Final Judgment oI Partition
and Sala entered In lha abova
entitled causa
IN WITNESS W HEREOF, I
have naraunto sat my hand and
official saal this list day ol Sap
tarnbar. m l .
Arthur H. Beckwith, Jr.
Clark ol lha Circuit Court
Saminola County, Florida
By- Cynthia Proctor
As Deputy Clark
(Seat I
Publish. September II. 1?, m l
DEM 1M
NOTICBOF
tH B R IF F 'M A L B
NOTICE IS H E R E B Y OIVEN
that by virtue ol that certain Writ
ol Eiacutlon issued out ol and
under lha saal al lha COUNTY
court ol Volusia County, Florida,
upon a final lodgement rendered
in lha aforesaid court an lha 1 M
day el May, A.O. 1M1, in that
certain case entitled. Thomas R.
Larrivaa d b e Tom's Electronics
Plaintiff, vs Henry Marlin.
Oatandenl. which aforesaid Writ
of Execution was delivered lo me
as Sheri It of Saminola County,
Florida, and I have levied upon tha
following dascribad proparly
owned by Henry Martin, said
properly being located In Sam Mala
County, Florida, more par.
tkulerly dascribad as tallows:
One 1*70 Ford 4 door Automobile
ID No. O N S IF llim being star ad
al Saminola Petal A Body, Ianlard
and lha undersigned as Sheriff of
Seminole County, Florida, will al
II 00 AM on lha HU day of Oc­
tober, A D IW1, otter lor sale and
salt to the highest bidder, tar cash,
subi act to any and all a listing
Hens, at lha Freni IWest I Dear of
lha Saminola County Courthouse in
Santord, Florida, lha above
dascribad personal property
That said sale Is being mada to
satisfy tha term* al said Writ el
Eiacutlon
John E . Polk, Sheriff
Saminola County, Florida
Publish: September 11,11, It ,
October a, with lha sola on October
I. IM1
OEM o*

In this ever-changing world...it's the ever-changing newspeper
that keeps you "in rouch" with whar's happening, whafeveryoj re
looking fo r... in entertainment... in information... in the krow
,. .find if oil here in the pages of your newspaper! Take a l&lt;ok!

m am
n iit ii
1114111
n tiM i

Airport lied . 44
Casselberry 44
Celery Ave 44
Lake Mtry 44

Noon The Day Before Publication

came up belore tnc ouncil (or a vote.
Also being intcrvtwed are Wilson Wright of
Tallahassee, a lawyr-lobbyist; Dorothy Owen of
Tallahassee, an (counting official for the
Department of Heal) and Rehabilitative Services;
I-irry M denagan. i Coral Springs businessman;
and Kenneth Most a North Bay Village, a Florida
International Unlvetity accounting professor.

Good salary, hotpitalliattan, I
weak paid vacallon every 4
months
Eeperlence not
necessity
For mlerview
phone the meneger a l:

DEADLINES

LO N E LY
w rlta "Brlnfllne
Ptopla
Tootlhar
Dating
Service!" All agas A Senior
Clllians P O. eos USl.WInttr
Ha van, Fla DUO.

Interviews Begun For PSC Finalists
TAIJjMfASSEE, Fin, (UPI) - The Ihibllc
Service Commission Nominating Council began
interviews Monday of 16 finalists for PSC ap­
pointments, including incumbent Commissioners
John Marks and Susan liisn e r.

831-9993

322-2611

| C0NVEMKMC! |
STORE CASHIERS

YOUR NEWSPAPER W ORKS FOR YOU

Evening Herald
U m i i f h C M ftfy 'i Only M f y N tw v q w r

RIGHT now we need a tew good
sales people who have the
ambition and dedication to
succeed. It that's you. then
we're prepared to id lf you
real rewards and the methods
to get them. For Interview,
please call Century 11. Hayes
Realty Services. Inc . Santord
H I MSB
LOOKING for someone who is
willing to spend a little, to
make a lot. Call H I 44t] tar
appointment.
LPN 111 1 nights per week
Apply Lakevlew Nursing
Center, f lf Tnd St. Santord
AVON REP R ESEN TA TIV ES
The Part Time Career
444 MI? - Collect NS SIM
H EA V Y Equipment operator
' !4 SOper hour minimum Must
be able to operate motor
grader Apply al Long wood
City Hall I S. Mon Frl. i l l w.
Warren Ave . Long wood, Fla.
Ty p i s t — Mature. Fail erxt
accuraie. Medical, pension
and profll sharing plans.
Unlled Solvents. H I 44aa

Tannic Instruction — U.I.P.T.A.
Certified Group or Private
lesson*. Children a specialty,
DeegMellciewihl
m in t.

M'S AND IFNI
Saminola Mamorlal Hospital
overlooking Beautiful Lake
Monroe is currently staff tag a.
Stand by Pool tar RN's and
LON'S. You will racalva lull
pay during orient at ten and will
than be placed on P RN status
and called In as needed. This IS
a great opportunity lo loin a
growing organliatlen, and
work with a highly dedicated
team ol professionals.
Wa offer an eicellent salary and
banaflti, packaga. II inlerected please contact our
Personnel director at:

HOSPITAL
m ia .t im
laniard. Florida W TI
IM-m-dSll a il 1*1
Equal Opportunity Employer
N EED good homo? I neod a
good, mature part time sitter
lor my husband. H I S4JI * 11 .

L ty d N o tte i
U N ITED S T A T E* D IST R IC T
COURT MIDDLE DISTRICT OF
FLORIDA ORLANDO DIVISION
COURT NO: 1M M-ORL-CIV-YUNITEO STATES OF AMERICA.
Plalntllf, vs
O EO R O E W.
STEVEN SO N , el u i, al al.
O alandanllsl. - N O T IC E OP
SA LE— Notice Is hereby given
that pursuant to a Final Decree at
Foreclosure entered on August It,
Ittl by the abova entitled Court In
tha abova causa, tha undersigned
United States Marshal, ar one el
Ms duly authorized deputies, will
sail the property situate In
Saminola
County,
Florida,
described as:
Lot tl. Orange
Estates, according to the plat
Iharaot as recorded in Plat B o *
M. paga 14. of the Public Records
el Seminole County. Florida,
sublact. however, to laies. if any
Mm . tar tft year m l al public
adcry to tha nignasi ana post
bidder lor cash at 11 o'clock noen
on Tuesday, October I?, m i al lha
Wool door of lha Saminola County
Courthouse. Santard. Florida
Dated: September a . IN I
OEOROE R. CROSSE
UNITEO STATES
MARSHAL
MIDDLE DISTRICT OF
FLORIDA
GARY L. B E T !
UNITED STATES ATTORNEY
M ID D LE
D IST R IC T
OF
FLORIDA
Publish: September 11. a , Oc
labor a, 1 ], INI
OEM 74
FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice It hereby given that wa
are engaged In bushiest al 1*0 W.
Highland II., Attemente Springs.
F I., l i r i l , Seminole County,
Florida under the ftctitlous name
a*
A LLSEASO N S
LAWNSCAPING, ana that wa hdand ta
register said name with lha Clark
M lha Circuit Court, temtaeta
County, Florida ta accordance
with me previsions al lha F ic ­
titious Name statutes. TeWtt:
Station MSB* Florida Statutes
Its .
Sig Mika Richards A
II
Publish September a If. S Oc
tabor A IS. IN I
DEM Ml
FICTITIOUS NASffr
Notice It hereby given that i am
»ng i gad m buswest al n North
Mary 114*1 Cease Merry lombwie
County, Florida under the tie
lllleut name el FASHION
WAREHOUSE,endIhet I intend 1a
register said name with Me Clark
al lha Circuit Ceurt, SemlrMe
County. Florida ta accordance
with the pravtsians of tha Fle­
nt Nua Nam* Statutes, Te-WR:
Section SMB* Florida Sfatafaa

THE

411 and 111 Shin. Full time.
Apply In person Santord
Nursing Convalescent Crnijr,
tS9 Mellonville Ave

LAYOUT, Fitter, Welder, Shear
A Brake Operelors. First and
Second Shifts, Top Pay. Good
Benefits, Call Florida Iron
Works Inc H I CJ00

START YOUR DAY
WITH AAA
AAA EM P LO YM EN T
CA LL EA R LY
333-5174
W E 'L L G E T YOU
TH A TJO B
OR YOU DON'T
PAYOR
LOW F E E
. JUST A F BW
E i . Secretary ...................... |M 0
Nursery Teachers
Open
Housekeeper .........................m i
Beautician ........................ m s
Dental Assiitent ................aaao
Manicurist......... ......... Open
Phone S a le s........................ Open
Field Reg ......................... sell
Cashier ................................. m t
Factory ................................. m t
Draftsmen ........./.................m i
Welder .............., . . .
saoo
Machinist ............................ M00
Salts R e g ......... Comm A Draw
US -1111

tail French

PART ■FU LL TIM E
RN • LPN -A ID IS
Quality Professionals Needed lo
meet help needs ol Seminole
County Hospitals - Nursing
’ Hemes
HIGHEST P A Y IMMEOIATE PAY
On Call Medical Servlets
__________ Call 411144?___________
W AREHOUSEM AN
le d o ry
experience a must. Heavy
lilting required Full beneflli,
apply In person. United
Solvents HOI Airport Blvd.

NOTICE
BINOO

K N IG H TS OF
COLUMBUS
11*4 Oak Avtu

Thursday 7:30
Sunday 7:30
Win *25-1100
DM you knew that yo
dub or organisation ci
in this listing ee
tar only U SB p
T This Is an Ideal w
ta Infor m the public el ye
dub activities

s x rrrr
AMERICAN
VETERANS
Chapter
»
Hwy. If *1
J ju J ^ M e jJ g r ^
Generel Meeting
lit T u n 7 30
Cocktail Lounge open Mon
thru Sat. IlStaonliM?
Binge
Early Bird
every wad. * Sal.
evening at 1:11PM
H yeur club ar organisation
•muM like tebt included in this
Idling call:

no.

MARCH O f MMB

300 N. French Ave„ Sanford, Florida
V

* *,«&gt;.

.

• ^

—i

r*

t z±\*

v '* » '**i

f'

Sig. Ray Marlowe
PuMMh: September 11 , |f. Oc

i is. mi

i M V U i comeputioev M r * * *

- * a ? f f » f

e r n e

. «- - -

# JS,vf\ '

4

CLASSIFIED

DEPARTMENT
U114I1

♦ T

-

-?

I

�------------------ Evgning Hwtld. Sanford, FI.

32—Houses Unfurnished

.1—
MANAGEMENT Trainee apply
In p erso n Ipr g r e a t op
porlunity Cava M.a P i n ,e r a
333 3004

SANFOR D OPT. TO BUY I
7 bdr caroprl, kidso k 1750
Cottage, turn n o d r p 3773
SANFORD UNFURN APT
3 rim, appllc .Aids. 1733

HAIRSTYLIST wanted
with following Immed,
Call Delores 31) 7171)

21—Situations W anted
WILL do babysitting waihinq ft
ironing ;n my Nome 331 7530
Ttiora L Frl 8 3 3737m
anytime

SANFORD Apartment
3 Bdrm, Porch K.ds, tzsfi

SAV-ON-RENTALS
Seminole
338 T700
SAV ON RENTALS REALTOR
4 BDR 7 blh cent H A t a k e
Mary, Santord ar ea sing mo *
Deposit 373 1084

AM INTERESTED In part time
a 13 or lull limn l 5 1 .iking t a m
ol the ailing in their home
Santord Pleas* rail 373 m i
STORING IT MAKES W ASTESELLING IT MAKES CASH
PLACE A CLASSIFIED AO
NOW Call 377 3M1 or 8)1 888)

W O M EN
f ir m of io hr wk
wuinl to bo ow n bo*%. choo*e
*ouf own h r* M a ke e xce lle n t
m oney For in fo rm atio n 127
U)98 )i9 j * * * Aff 5 p m

PLUMBING OlY MdrdWAre
anti

E le c t ri c a l

Esta te

th o se

73 * T W O B It t

Home on Sf
Johns R .vfr
Near Geneva
Sren.c Location Serin P rivate
D riv e
AM U tilitie s paid
Adulls only S7S0 Mo 348 3818

4604

37—Business P roperly
For ftnf or lease*
10 )20 sq ff
»ndu*irial or warrhou*e 9|f
W 1*1 Sf . Sanford 32)1100
sa n fo pd

YOUNG Christian Man lo share
my 1 Bdrm House with same
'7 rent is US 668 4)66

29- Rooms
PRIVATE ENTRANCE
333 IBSJ

SANTORO
7000 %q M If industrial or
Commercial Building on 17 92
L000 ft in office *paee Cell
177 5510 or 834 4147
Have some camping equipment
you no longer u*e* Srll it all
with a Classified Ad in The
Herald Call 177 761 1 or 031
9991 .if»d a frlmdly .id viler
will help you
Office Space
For Lease
130 7773

30 Apartments
Unfur Misled

7 Bdrm

I'j

l l l ' A T I M f l i ysi,
Adults se ction"
Bdrrns Master's
)33 7800 Open on
path

fire p la ce .

323-7832
Eves 37? Oil?
70» E ?3thSt

!I tlouses

Large Country Home Fineolder
3 ftof y. 4 BN, 7 Bath Home in
good tpndifton Ma* several

cifru* trer* and garden space

**PARI BLOC. W X l o l Good
t i'f m* 536,900
Term*

waft? if evil ipi* (in , ftow A
i iioos« fay oul A coleus
JMuiii, ,ValV i r
£ si h l i l f r INC Brc*

MARY lot, Duplex Will trad
Equity 516.500

k

Kids outgrow the swing set or
small bicycle’ Sell Ihese .die
items with a want ad To place
your ad. call your friendly
Classified gal at The Herald,
377 7411, or 8)1 888)

322-7643

PARK PLACE
Associate* Inc Realtor*
123 8960

W )H I
Mellonvllle
T ra c e
A'pls
Spacious, modern 7 Bdrm, I
B i l h apl C a rp e t e d , kil
equipped,
CH4A
Near
hospital 4 lake Adults, no
.pets 1770 377 8713
Mariner s village on Lake Adi I
bdrm Irom 8730 7 bd rm Irom
I7K Located 17 82 lust South
of Airport Blvd in Sanford All
Adults 37) 1670

321-0041

Santord •- i bdrm 4 den,
ce r a m ic
Path,
f u rn i t u r e
available, adults. 1773 mo I

31-Apartrmnts Furnished
I BOR turn apl, Adulls
1165. Sec Dep 1100
Carpeted 377 7786
STOP AND THINK A MINUTE
II Classified Ads didn't work
Ihrre wouldn l be any
'u rnish ed apartm ents lor Senior
Cilitens ) i l Palmetto Ave , J
Cowan No phone calls
. « wA

31A—Rjplexes
? BDR air ww carpel, stove,
reln g w d hook up, no pels
S7T5 with lease 4 set 377 786?
SANFOHD spaCKXit 7 bdrm, I
blh. alf, drapes, S330 mo *
dep 338 1347________________

REALTY, INC.
Owin'r

will

tin.vote 3 bdr home with 16,000
tin nt *7 percent inf for 20 yr*
Cali textfly tor rMfttfif 176,900
M INI RA N CH 6 wooded acre*
surround a 4 bdr. 3 bth
Builder* cu*tom home Built in
bookcase*, 7 screened patio*,
fountain A solarium E x tra *
q d o rr* 8179 900
CALL

323-7843
REALTORS
j

BDR . I bib. assume F HA mtg
S7.300 dn S)?,300 total etc
rood move r.ghl in 377 78)4

0

3

THE CENTURY 71 SYSTEM
HELPS more people buy and sell
more real estate than anyone
else in America Call luTay
and leT it work lor you Call
37) 3030
llay rs Heal Estate
Services. Inc
6)5 W 7Sm$l
Santord
Each oilier is independently
owned and operated

Vudrm. 1 ■ with
double car garage, In
DeIlona Call 371107
LONG WOOD 3 Bdr I ' i Baih.
F lo rid a Room, Carpeting,

I

fenced yard, with citrus trees
u t i l i ty Rm a n d C a rp o rt
Citremely clean 1330 mo plus
Security Deposit Call between
1 4 7 p m 373 alS*

SANFORD
3 Bdrm
I'i
Belt). Cent HA. wall lo wall
carpeting.
Utility
Rm .
Garage, Large corner lot. in
.m ce n eig hborhood
.,&lt; &gt;
•Clean 1330 mo -fi Security Deposit Call between
1 4 7 p m 373 t t i t

*

,SF4*pT.Tb1*r-.ae

REALTOR

323-5774

WE HAVE R EN TA LS
reduced

sf.fpp —

Now prierd below appraisal,
this 7 bdrm homy w hyom.-d
ty.hngt t lovyly, shaded lol H
Sanford's best buy i t only
&gt;75.00011
C O U N T R Y A T M O S P H E R E in
town P iiw crfst i t r * ) Bdrm
L o ig r
L iv in g
Rm
O nly
1)7.300
easy

a ssu m pt io n

low

p iy m y n ls 7 B d 'm Nyor n*w
H o sp ita l
ZO N ED
COM
M E R C IA l
Supfr potential
Only I77.I00
O W N ER F IN A N C IN G I v ,1 on
Ih n lovyly 7 bdtm B u ck homy
w D i t p i i .
Kong*.
R r g i.g y r ilo r 4 F i m Rm on
d rrp la lll H I TOO
O V E R I MO vq II in IhiS 4 7 with
n*w Con Hfot. big brdroom i.
F i m Rm . 18.17 I t . porch 6
h y iv ily Ircrd lol lor only
S4l,f00!1
CU STO M E X E C U T I V E HO M E
w o vrr HOP sg (I, 7 bdrm spill
pi in . F i r . p l i c r , F i m R m . o il
in kitcbrn, huge scr porch 6
lin d tc ip in g g ilo r r i t 383.00811

37) 0600

kree/er 7 yr* old
Amana 5300 Electric phonic I
T ra c k Stereo cabinet type
HB0 372 3167
Cu M

SET Ol yVrouqhl iron Table*
150 Compound Bow while
R .t r.k j

OWNER WILL FINANCE 3
Bdrm.
I
Bath
P a r tly
lemodeled Has T ireplace and
caipetmg 30 It on Hwy 46 W
Only 1)8 800
acreage

I * Acre
7’ a Acre*
5 Acre*

59,000
517.500
519.500

STENSTR0M
REALTY - REALTORS

Sanford's Salas Leader

■OBBIK’S
■BAITY

EX T R A ! GALORE I Edrm. I
Roth Homo E i l in Kll., Dining
Rm , Ctnl Air. Ntw Carpal.
Lirgg icrttnid porch Wish
Dry Ftnctd and Marti IJt.fN

REALTOR, ML!
mi t . French
Suite 4
laniard

24 HOUR m 322-9283

Reg.
1 )1 1 X 8

NEWLISTINGS
HIDDEN LAKE Clean as a
whistle 3 Bdrm. 7 Bam Split
Plan has many n t r a s , &lt;n
clud.ng Paddle Fans, home
warranty, clubhouse pool and
good schools Eacellcnl low
interest assumable- mortgage
137.300
SUNLAND lovely ) Bdrm. t ' j
Bath, d ream home can tie
yours toe LOW DOWN Cent
h a Huge oak Irres. I .replace
and lam.ly rm all included
Great buy al 148.000

W i LI1T AND I1 L L
MORE HOMES THAN
ANYONE IN THE
1ANFOROARXA

BEAUTIFUL 1 Bdrm I Rif*
Horn* in Lindstiptd Lot with
ctnl HA. Dm. Rm., C i l in Kil..
Lirgg Utility With Ory. W W
Cirpot Miny E if r lt l 141.801
FANTA1TIC I Bdrm I BtlR
FR PL in F ll. Rm., Fintlling
w w carpel, Equip. Kit..
Ulillfy. w irk ih ip , Fenced
V ir d l
A tiu m ib lt
Mlg.
148,IN .
JU1T FOR YOUI Cwstim Bgilt)
Bdrm I Ritb M m i in Lick
Arbor, in weeded L it I Entrgy
living Fiilwrg, llono F R F L .
m l i l l! m in i U8.8M
A S lO C IA T il N EED ED I How
or (im ritn cm cm Hof*
lltn iln m i f 1*0 AlbcigAI
M i l A d t u a v t r secces il

C A L L AN YTIM E
INI
F IX

322-2420

5150

U tility

Building 5100 Phone J73 9207
------------------------- T - ■_ ■■

Jewelry

I Jrii kar at 1350 of

Rm

•darting a* tow as 1149 95 Bob
Ball Music Center &amp; Western
AU'I'P

62—Lawn G arden

51—Household Goods
it SETS Cuslom Made Drapery 63
&gt;n long Cost 51100 Sell for
5?h0 Double Bed new 8100.
Color TV Antenna 550
373 5756

32? 286?
C H E C K T H IS OUT
B E A U T IF U L 196? Royal Oak* 71
wide 3 bdr. 7 bth, garden tub.
d e lu xe c a r p e t ,
c a th e d ra l
ced in g * b ric k fire p la c e , wood
*id&gt;ng shingle root paddle
fan and m an y m ore e x tr a *
O nly 176 900 V A fin an cin g nd
m o ney
d ow n
10 % dow n
co n ven tion al See i*t Uncte
R o y* M obile Hom e S a le * ot
Le e *b u rg . U S H w y 441 S 904
70? 0374 Open w ee kd ay* 0
7 JO Sun 12 6

Air Conditioning

43—Lots-Acreage
Chrt* w ill te rv ic * AC'8. r ifr ig .
f r * * j* r t . wafer c o o lrri, m il*
C l l l 3 7 )4 )?)

AREA.
FRONT

Beauty Cara

Boarding A Grooming
Animil Hiven Bonding and
Groom ing Kennel! Sh id y ,
miulited. u feen ed , lly proof
inttdf. oul!id* run! F i n !
a im AC cage! We cafer fo
your p e l l
Stirling ttud
reg.ilry Pn 177 5)5?
Make your Budget go furfltcr,
shop the Classified Ad! every
day
Snow Hill Kennel offer! Cat 6
Dog F it* Bath! 13 up 14
Hour. Full Service 143 3)1?

Building Contractor
Bill C o n g , S l i l t Certified
B u ild in g
C o n tracto r
R n U e n t t i l or Commercial,
New or Remodelad 177 0884

47—Real Estate Wanted
CASH FOR EQUITY
W tc m c io ilin K h rt.
C iliaiM R t il E slile m -iH t

Camplctt Ceramic Till 3try .
walls, ftoori. couniertopt, re
model, repair Fr eat J3807II

H i * i s y t o p i n t i c.ivniiod Ad
. Wl'll even help you word
» C lll 377 7411

M fclN I/E R t i l l
New or repair, leak r showers our
specially. ZSyrs E»p I88BS8I

t s * * ‘

new car * 01* foday’* Cla**ified
ads tor best buy*
1973 C A D IL L A C f k e la o o d 4
CXior Sedan 1 ully equipped
Ix ie lle n f original comlilion

51195 0)1 1774

79—T rucks T railers

tills

CARS

arm

TR U C KS a y .1 liable M any sell
under 82001 C a ll 31? 74? I la J
E » t 7O0 for information on
1*0w lo purchase
75C H E V Y Van 3 sperd

80-A u to s for Sale

a ir , custom p lu s extra*

M akeolfer 32) 2299

00 7 CH&gt;or V 0
A iiiom allc. A ir. power win
dow*. steering and brake*
Run* excellent, need* paint

I9U O l DS D ella

ANIMAL Haven Kennels hoard
•no A g room in g, Needed
P ek in g ese A sm a ll silver
poodle lor stud Male Owners
(all )?? 3)3?

OAYTONA AUTO AUCTION
Hwy 87. I mile west ot Speed
way. Oaylona Beach, will hold
a public AUTO AUCTION
every Wednesday al 8 p m It’s
Ih« only on* in Florida Yousel
the reserved price Call 804
73S83II lor lurlher details

CF A PERSIANS Adult
fem ales White, Black
S130S730 37) 3313

gwaltn

Ey jew eler

704 1 Park Ay*
37? 4508

Concratx Work
Concrete Work, fooler!, floor! 1
pool! L an d scap in g t sod
work F r e a e s t 37)710)
I MAN QUALITY o p e r a t i o n
* yr! e . p Pal,os. Driveway!,
He W a.ne Beal 37) |j ? |_____

I

9

^

Quality electrical work 77 yr!
e a p e r i e n c e Minor repairs lo
complete wiring 377 0716
When rou place a Classified Ad
in The Evening Herald. Slay
(lose lo your phone because
something wonderful is about
lo happen

Handyman
Painting, carpentry, all types ol
home repairs Call lor Ire#
estimate 377 I87S

Hauling 6
Yard Work
It'S I'ke pennies Irom heaven
when you sell "Don't Needs"
w.lh a want ad

Home Improvement
CENTRAL FLORIDA HOME
IMPROVEMENT!
Painting. HooJing, Carpentry
Lie Bonded 4 Guaranteed
Free Estimates 77)1148

Cara m k T ib

% M

IF IN IS IS I H E D A Y lo t&gt;uy M

1------------

Electrical

TOWER S BEAUTY SALON
FORMERLY H arrie'l't Braufy
Nook 111 E lit II . J7) 3)4?

J t l ’InvKtimrrt
IN VESTORS
PL E A S E I
7
Tr.pl»* units full i r rived
Pure his* le p in ltly or both
lor 160.000 with owner holding
Cell on thu on*! Jim* Porng
Reilly Reillors. 377 16)1

NOW

f ft f ri it i| h

iKivernm m t safe*, under | | 0O
Cab I 714 569 0741 E x t 500 tor
your d re tte ry cnt how to
purch.ne

1880

Landscaping
LAROC TREK INSTALLS*
Landscaping, Old Lawns Ra
Placed 1413101_____________

Landdaaring
Acreage A lot clear inq
Fill dirt top soil
for sale 377 34a)

8595 0)1 1224
73 B U IC K Century 4 dr.

P S. P H . AC. tilt.
clean5750 321 4)40

x * r*

J A B Home Improvement Carpentry work ot any type
Root repairs, gutter work,
painting (interior er r* latter I,
plumbing, ipeclalllt in mobllt
home repairs 1 root coaling,
and wood pal to decks Frag
estimate 3714034

r f ' -'V •*

Pkm ting
F re d d ie Robinson P lu m b in g
Repairs,* l a u c a l s . W C
Sprinklers 37) 8)10. 37)6)04
Modi rn.j.rig your Home? Sell no
longer needrd but uselul items
with a Classified Ad
FONSECA PLUMBING Con
slrudlon . Repairs, E m trgan
cy Lit . Bonded. Ins 3)3 40)S

Lawn Maintenance
DUNN RITE Lawn S rr y i c r
Mew,
Dim, vacuum,
mulch, sod Real i?2 2590

7 'i

S E IG L E R R E A L TY
BROKER
3765 HW Y. 17-92
321-0640

AV AI1 A B t f

5995 6)1 1774

Clock R«f»lr

EVERY OAY IS BARGAIN
DAY IN THE WANT AOS 32?
1613 or 1)1 999)

COMMERCIAL 7ACRESON I)
8? NEAR LAKE MARY
BOULEVARD 1130.000

SU RPLU S

TRU CKS

Dial 322-2611 or 831-9993

BATHS kitchen*, rooting, block,
co n crete, window*, add a
room tree estimate 323 8463

GENEVA 70 ACRES WOODED.
COCHRAN HOAO 13.300 PER
ACRE MAY DIVIDE

CAWS AND

To List Youf Business...

Shop U n cle R o y* M obile Hom e
S ale * L re * b u rg U S H w y 441
S 904 707 0324 Open 7 d a y *

GENEVA 7'r ACRES WOODED
ZONED MOBILE 117.S0O

I

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB

C H EC K OUT U N C LE RO YS
L A R G E selection of 14 w ide*
p ric e * * ta rt 10995 V A (m an
cing no m oney clown
10%
convent tonal

OSTEEN I? ACRES WOODED
PAVED HOAD FRONTAGE
1)4,000

57177
57096
56595

BUSINESS SERVICE LISTING

S p rin k lin t} s y s t e m ,
m any
e x tr a * l i t H acien d a V d laq e

OS TEEN S ACRES TALL
PINES, SCRUB OAK 116 300
TERM)

11398

197# VW Rabbit
107J Volk* sta Waoofl
1979 * irebiftl F nrm ula

55477

CONSULT OUR

and

L A K E M A R Y 4 U rg e
lots, n ic e tre e s
113 DOOelch )? ? 4117

54995

1969 F «r e b if d Cf*Upe

GO VERN M EN T

1977 C H E V Y CIO P ick Up l cmq
Wheel Base V8. J Speed S in k
Run* E xce lle n t, took* Fa it

I ILL DIRT A TOPSOH
YELLOW SAND
Call Clark A M.rl )?) 13*0

S4??7

Coupe
»97? Monte Carlo
Sunroof
1900 Chrvette
7 000 m ile*

5895 0)1 1774

?? 1674. j ; : *4*o

S U Z U K I 330
37? 1783

8477?
53998

1970 VW B U G , New slic k e r, run*
well Need* *ome body repair

# u v ' jl Fnts CA’RS A TRUCKS
( 1 cm1 110 la 8)0 or m a r t

78—M otorcycles

53 795

Owner Auto AC PS N e w d iic
brake*, lilt Whrei AM FM
Stef **1 radm Cu*tom interior
V inyl top new if t e l belted
rad ial* New exfiau if lyafetd
M) Mi) Battery R u *1 proof
57775 305 787 J 560 er 373 6110

177 3880

c u d

1970 Bu-i k 275 Ct&gt;UP‘%
19 77 M ercury CouilAf
sh 1
i969Mu*ta»Hj Con xrrfible
1977 Bu*ck Lim dPd

1976 BUICK Skylark Clean

77—Junk Cap Renxxied

Top Dollar Paid lor Junk A Used
cars, trucks A heavy equip

!J i? f

Bank fm anong av aila b le
SIN Hwy 17 92
C a m lb t f r y

used Car P aris all makes and
models 37) 7*87 We buy Died
Cars and Trucks

CASH FOR CAR!
Running or not
3)8 8844

I I 490

S U R P l US

65—Pets Supplies

------— ?----------1

Well

Podge M eter

Heme E x cellen t Condifien
Low Mileage 377 1760 or
373 0411

P IA N O S &amp; org an * farq e &amp; sm a ll

24x60 2 B D R M , 2 B a th 10*10
■Screen p orch enclosed w ith
R o lla d e n
s h u ft e r *
VSaJO

Uflllty

* 339 7 9 8 9 a
!07? I h under bird
1976 Buick LaSarw r
Custom

best offer 5?4 5970

realtor

- ■■

C ru is e A ir

59-Musical Instruments

7 ,1 O iU N G u n g set w om an 5 7

OS TEEN
WOODED
AIRES 117.300 TERMS

NlCF
STARTER
HOME
Located in good neighborhood
Has large attic lor add-fional
bdrm Only 173.300
REALTOR 31148*1 O ayor NigM

31)1411

.it f

A l f ?r h r* U J I ' U .in J 197 x« *;

WEKIVA
FALLS
WOODED RIVER
ACRE 373 000

STEM PER AGENCY

ATTRACTIVE 3 DOT , l'» bib.
CMA. w as h er d r y e r , con
venienlly located 1373
373 tvo
inside 4 oul, fenced yard,
w a t e r , r e l ri g e , sto v e fur
mshed Near New Bayhead
Tennis CluO oil Lake Mary
Bird
1783 l i n t 4 Iasi
references Available Oct 1st
call 373 3373

REALTY, INC.

pr ic e d

22-Houses Unfurnished

} BDRM. I bib newly decorated

C H A R M IN G ) bdr I blh CIIA,
work shot, v&lt;r p-ilio. wayl.er.
dryer, goovl ir.-a 117 too

See our beautiful new BROAD
MORE, front &amp; rear HR *
GREGORY MOBILE HOMES
3603 OrlAndo Dr
373 5200
VA &amp; F HA r inane ina

Alger &amp; Pond

,1 4 1 7M1

Classified adsserve the buying 4
Selling community every day
— ® » M 4 j i l t J I ) t m often______
SANDALWOOD Villas Airport
Blvd , Santord 1 Bdrm. 7 Ba
The Really Store. Realtors
i »7i m i

FIREW O O D
I?

★ B8.H A u to S a le s a

F’gr E s t a t e . C o m m ercial Of
iR r t i d rn t i i l Auctions A Ap
praitals Cill Dell’S Auction
3?) 3470

man I

10 fT BOAT d e a n L la*t V 0 175
HP I O. Gator trader like New
373IQf?_____________________

Tail 180 Sear* Frost Free

H a r o ld H a ll

Spr.nq »t here and it's a qood
l.me lo choose a new home
Irom the p ages ol our
class,lied ads

C h air 810 373 607?

MLS.

new lu e s 3630
171 Xj*77altar ^ p m

72—Auction

76 F t

difficulty

18)? P IN T O 4 cp runsoood

76—Auto P a rts
APT SALE. Ceucb. Chairs,
Tablet. Etager*t. Aquarium.
Decorator Phones. Queen Sue
Drd Almotl New. Much Mor*.
P ric es
R r d u ced !
No
Re aso n ab le Oiler Mrluted
Sanlord Crf A p t , Apt 14,
S4nlord Ave A Airport Blvd

55—Boats &amp; A ccessories

560 Oc f t**ionat

L I K E TO C N T E R I A I N 3 bdr, 7
blh ) story, pool, ret r m, Ip, Ig
lot. only 168.800

Dnn f (vvpair Or Pull Your Mur
UU* A Want Ad 177 7AII or
F.JI 9993

Good Used TV *. 525 4 up
MILLERS
7619OrlandoFr
Ph 327 0352

having

U T B IR O lo a d e d New T if f s .
Blue with W hile Ten or 74
Cutlass Suprem e No money
down II S mo 3)8 flOO 834 4*05
Dealer

75—R ecreatio n al Vehicles

SEARS rrlngrraior like new

42—Mobile ffcjmcs

tN T ru rS ft

7

p m

LAKEVIEW 1 bdr. 1 bib. Ip. Ig
yard, veg garden, scr palio.
e .lr a i IIJ.N t

V -

LOW

1 m ap lf tw*n

bed 575 firm 377 0959 alter

K JS lC
Hf \ l 1S T \ | J
It

321-0041

Apartment For Rent
7 Bedroom
373 878?
I BDRM, cofy. secluded. A C.
carport SISOplusSISO Security
Dep 377 8407 or 377 787?

COTS, TENTS. TARPS
ARMY NAVY SURPLUS
310 Santord Avp
32? 5791

50 A -

377 64*7

*470 ____________________________
in ia y country livin g? 8 ttfrm
A p t i, O ly m p ic s i .
P ao l.
tbanandaah Village. Open 8 J.

&gt;0—M iscellaneous for Sale

GAS G R I L L 850

? BDRM, In Groun d PoolCountry Club Manor. Sanford
f erxed 8150 mo 1st. last and
5100 Deposit 64 7 8000

S3—TV R adio-Stereo

ir e

drive a job, or tom e t e r v .c *
you have need ol. read a ll our
( want i d s every day.

54—G arag e Sales

We pay cash lor l»t A ?nd
mortgages Ray Leqg, Lie
Mortgage Broker 338 ))48

R IA L ESTA TE
R E A L T O R 37? T i f f

BAMBOO COVE 7 bedroom
apis Available Manaqer on
premises, 373 1340
H.dqewood A r g il T Bdrm
Apis Irom 1714 3 Bdrm also
avail Pool, tennis court 373

47A-Mortgages
Bought ft Sold

CallBart

Itl.SOB

DELIGHTf UL Ur Bary
extra
large I btfr. 7 blh home with
tot* of closets, on 1 1 acre
wooded take Irani lot Dream
kit, refriQ, (stand stove,
washer K dryer, cent vac
system, w w carpet. I4k20
screened porch, patio and
dosed gar age 167.500

We buy eq u ity in Mouses,
apartments, vacant land and
Acreage LUCKY INVENT
MENTS, P O Bo* 7400 San
lord. Fla )7))l 377 4)41

Th \ .* yuur p la c e Only
867.500

i OUR TOWNES
REAL 1 Y INC BROKER
AM 67JOany! ime

PH I (. 1)145 1 **&lt;•- i«rUa&gt;i i 7 tpe

I utmal Dining R , Asudmi
Kitchen, Cent IIA, Ouiel and
wooded )?) Sal I all S

O W N E N W IL L F IN A N C E

1 ACRE Near new Hospital
Good Potential Priced Right
Trrm* 522 500

321-075?

you

finding a place, to liv e , c a r to

Aluminum, cant, copper, lead
briss. silver, gold Wt*4.days
1 4 30 Sat 8 1 KokoMo Tool
Co 811 W III SI 37) HOC

1981

Lie Real E sta te Broker

l

•t

Antiques Diamonds Oil
Paintings Oriental Rugs
Bridges Antiques
37) 7801

APPLI

Tostubil microwave oven, sale
price 3748 1881 c a n i s t e r
vacuum cleaner 838 30 S-e al
Santord
Sew.nq
Center.
S-mlord P lata across Irom
burger King

BATEM ANREALTY

3 LOTS Sanfard Ave

1974 M A Z D A N X 4
Statio n WaqoolTOO
373 077?

68—W anted to Buy

G t G as Dryer
I vear e ld 3 ISO
C all 371 28S)

M you ar e having difficulty
finding a place lo live, car lo
drive, a job, or some service
you h a . e heed o l, read atl our
warn ads every day

37-B—Rental Offices

SANTORD
Reas wkty &amp;
monlhly rales Util Inc Kit
300 OaS Adults 841 788)

L W rtm Y
Tam ity a
Poolside 3
Cove Apts
nfdm ui

washers MOONEY
ANCES 373 068)

BLOG LOT in Country 56 900

7000 *q ff II Induitrial or
Commercial Building on 17 9?
1,000 If In office sp a te Call
177 5510 or 834 4147

26—Apts. &amp; Houses
ToStiare

WILCOSALES
NUTRENAFEEDS
Hwy 44W, - ))! 61)8
CASH A CARRY PRICES
1)40
Hog F.nisher PyllHs
3)10
Laver C
36 1)
Ribb.l Pellets
14 83
Beel Kw.k
14*. Vitality Morse
36 10
Pellets
10 V J it l l l l y Sweet
13)3
r red

•0-Avfoe

Kenm ory p arts, serv ice, usru

2640 Sanford Ave

7 BDRM House Trailer Parity
lurn.shed with air. fenced
pat-o 377 3*58

Re*t Term *. 5MJ.0Q0

TW O Question*
W ill you be
f Inane ta lly independent in 7 to
5 y e a r* ? A re you pa«tl what
rou a re w o rth * it not c a ll 37J

CHECK With Santord Auction
before you buy or sell 1215 S
French 3 73- 7340 Mon Sal

52—A ppliances

r ol a »I and

J22 798) E v e * 377 310/

W ILSO N M A IE R F U R N IT U R E
111 U S E F IR S T ST
37? 567?

Excellent Business opcorfunify
in good location Compleft
tfock included in Ihi* priced
reduced to 1 1100
2544 S Fre nth 3110211

LU X U R Y it e m s
FO B A F RA C1 ION Of T M E lR
COST FR O M TOD AY s w a n t
AD S'

repair Bu*mc** W WO kcal
Wm Malic/ow*kt «EALTO»

ALLFLORIDA REALTY
OF SANFORD REALTOR

HAL COLBERT REALTY

34—Mobile Homos

EBusiness
Opportunities

Somebody t» looking tor your
b ir g u n OHer il today in th*
C U s v I if d Ads

Inc
g et

67—Livestock-Poultry

G R E E N 6011A H ig h b ic k
ch air to m atch
C a lla tt 3 p m 111 6311

C R EA T IV E
F in an cin g !
Academy Manor, 3 Bdrm. P i
B,s New carpel 4 paifll,
carport Rear fenced Big lot
378 8(111 1)1 6011

A lte r Hour * : 319 9990.122 0779

) DDR ? blh 3730month
1st 4 last . security
37) 4461

Tuitdiy. Stp». J V IM t- J B

51*A—Furniture

•it—Houses

Masonry
II you ar en't using your poof
table, lake a cue. and sell il
With a Herald classified ad
Call 377 7411

Mlni-U-Lock
NEW Concrete Buildings, all
Site! 170 A up Al I 4 A SR 44 I
4 Industrial Park. 3?) 0041

Nursing Center
OUR RATES ARE LOWER
Lake view Nursing Center
818 E. Second SI., Sanlord
337 470)

Painting
Heilman Painting A Repairs
Quality work Fra* E il, Disc
la Santert l i t 1480. Rater.
Vacation lima is here gel what
you need lor a happy lime with
a Classified JLd

Plumbing repair — all types
water heaters A pumps
3?) 14)3

Remodeling
Remodeling Specialist
We handle the
Whole Ballot Wa.

B. E. Link Const.
322-7029
Financing Avilla Oil

Roofing
ROOFS, laaks rapairad. Rtplac*
rattan t iv t s and stengla wart,
licenced. Inivred. banded
Mike 37) 4711
Christian Rooting IT yrs t« p
148 3)30. l i f t esl Rerooting,
specialu* in repair work A
new rooling
SOUTHERN HOOFING IS yrs
* « p . re rooting, leak sp ao al
1st
D e p en d a b le A honest
pt&gt;C* Day or night 7?) | jg]

Sandblasting
SANOBLAtTINO
O A V Ittm eiN O
333-4788, SANFORD

h in tin g 6 or
TreaSorvica
No job loo large or small
Quality a must Call n iO V l
References Fr Esl

HARPER'S t h
Trimming, rami
scaping Fra*

�f

1 I*
BLOW D IE

4 B--Ev*nlnflH#rald,

Sanford, FI.

Tuesd ay.S ept.lt, m i

by Chic Young

1

THE BORN LOSER

by Art Sansom

Answer to Previous Puule

38 Bullfight
cheer
39 People of
I Type of
ection
glockenspiel
41 Crude metel
S Poke
8 Early stringed 42 Actor Murrey
43 Obhgetions
inttrumint
46 1984 eulhor
12 Socnl club
50 Ferrous metel
(ebbr |
51 Three (prefu)
13 Compns
53 Lerge
point
continent
14 Bunon
54 Pert of e ship
lestener
55 Actress
15 Calm
Southern
18 Greenswird
17 Malarial levet 56 Invitation re­
sponse (ebbr)
18 Pleasures
57 Tree kind (pi)
20 Areb
58 Betreyer (st)
22 Actress West
59 Of greet
23 Light meal
depth
24 Slumbered
27 Morey
DOWN
28 Telk |sl I
31 Be beholden
1 Cedence
to
2 Possessive
32 Burmese
pronoun
currency
3 Function
33 Eggs
4 Burning
34 Ones (Fr)
5 Devid s fether
35 Noun
6 Yeer(Sp)
36 Ammel doctor 7 Sleeping
(ebbr)
piece
37 Time aone
8 Beest of
(ebbr |
burden

ACROSS

2

3

4

5

Dieters
IHnrnHWnnan
?
1C3DO
■ ■ ■ ■ □ n a n a a l
PO D dU

nO O B O O D

9 Hindu escetic
10 Chese ewey
11 Smallsword
19 litlle child
21 Skinny fish
24 Condemn
25 Possesses
26 Gusto
27 Journey
28 Jupiter
29 Affirm
30 Telephone
service (ebbr)
32 Polaris (2
wds)
35 Used clothes
7

6

8

12

&lt;3

14

15

16

17

18

■
1
■
|
I
■■
■1
1 y■
■
19

W €tf£H &gt;«£'&lt;X )6K U

39 Wom»nY
patriotic
society (ibbr)
40 Forward
41 Mikes pig
sounds
42 Ribbet
43 Queen ol
Csrthigt
44 Ammil w iite
chemicel
45 Clock sound
47 Being (Lat)
48 Subsist
49 Northern
Europein
52 Genetic
materiel

20

9

10

11

21

22

_

I UNTIL THIS HOUR1.?

24

25

26

"

28

29

30

2'

31

33

*

34

35

37

38

1

39

36

40

•

43

A R CHIE

by Bob Montana

/ I M s e r io u s l y co n sid er in g
DUMPING tha t C Q m r r iR

44

45

50

51

54

55

56

57

58

59

47

48

49

•
52

53

II

MAILING SERVICE FOR MY

HOROSCOPE
By BERNICE BF.DE OSOL

For Wednesday, September 30, 1981
YOUR BIRTHDAY
September

E E K &amp; MEEK

In ilie year feillowsri^ your
birthday I-id) Luck has some
improvements in mind for
you. Through a fortunate
contact you’ll be able to ac­
ce le ra te your drives and
produce a larger profit.
I.IBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23)
Som ething
lucky
could
luippen to you if you’re where
the crowd is today. Whether it
deals with business or
pleasure, it will fulfill a
personal desire. Romance,
trav el, luck, resources,
possible pitfalls and career
for the coming months are all
discussed in your AstroGraph that begins with your
birthday. Mail t l for each to
Astro-Graph, Box 489, Radio
City Station, N.Y. 10019. Be
sure to specify birth date.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nnv. 221
Although you won’t in­
tentionally coinc on strong,
th e re ’s som ething com ­
manding about the way you
handle yourself today. Others
can’t help but do all they can
for you.
SAGITTARIUS I Nov. 23Dec. 21) Perhaps without
even being aware of it or
knowing why, you have a way
today of g enerating ex ­
citement and making good
things happen that are
pleasing to all.
CAPRICORN i Dec. 22-Jun.
19| You m ight m eet an
aggressive person today who
thinks you are the individual
he can team up with. He lias
something that could spell
"big time.”
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) If you have any
negotiating to do, do it today.
There's a good chance you’ll

by Howie Schneider

IS THIS ALL1HE.RE IS? lUORfc
VUOlfc. T O H i BW.DRIUK'
D£l&amp;JK.DRIk)K AIL MGHT...

PAY AFTER DAY AFTER
PAY? KJHAT roes IT ALL
ADDLP'DIU'THE EJJD?,

PRISCILLA'S POP

1981

AT THE MOMENT
IT'S * 2 .4 .5 0

by Ed Sullivan

by Stoffel A Heimdah

That v^BBiT is not 1M JUST GONNA UOO&lt;
S O n n a l p s e t M E UP AT TWE CLOUDS
TODAY.
A N D . . . * ^ — — --------- j

get all you hoped, and
something extra might be
thrown in to sweeten the pot.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 201
This might turn out to be an
extremely profitable day for
you workwisc. Because you’re
doing something you like,
your productivity is in­
creased.
ARIES t March 21-April 191
You're one of Cupid's favorite
people today and members of
the opposite sex will find you
more attractive than usual.
Rom antic adventure
is
possible.
TAURUS i April 20-May 201
This is one of those fortunate
days when your efforts will
reap larger rewards tlum
normal. Pursue your am ­
bitions vigorously.
GEMINI (May 21-Junc 20)
There could be a pleasant
surprise for you today when
someone you thought never
noticed you comes on ratlier
strong. You'll welcome the
overtures.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
Tliut which will be of real
value to you Unlay cannot be
counted in dollars and cents.
Your wealth will be found in
fumilv and friendships.
I.EO (July 23-Aug. 22) II
you are unattached and have
a chance to go where you
might meet someone new, by
all means do so. Some in­
teresting and exciting things
could luippen today.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Your genuine in terest in
otlieni today evokes a similar
response. Ttiose you help or
are kind to will reciprocate in
ways extremely fortunate for
you.

by Bob Thaves

DEAR DR. i-A.MB - My
sister is in Iter mid-20s and
has always been pleasantly
plump. Stic decided to lose
weight and in about a year she
lost 40 1winds. I think she lost
far too much. Stic is very thin
now but says she feels fine.
This weight loss seems to
have changed her whole
personality and what’s more
she Iras not had her period for
about a year.
Many of her friends told her
Hits is normal and even her
doctor said not to worry. But
isn' this something to be
concerned about? I know she
wants to get married some
day and have children. Won’t
this affect her organs and
fierluips make it impossible to
bear children? A word from
you could help.
DEAR READER - Since
you didn’t comment on your
sister’s actual weight it would
be difficult for me to even
guess if she has lost too much
weight or not. Friends and
relativ es
often
react
emotionally when a person
loses weight, even when the
weight loss is essential to
improved health. You uuiy bo
one of those people.
And you do not know why
your sister has stopped
having m en stru al periods.
Site was correct in seeing her
doctor about this. But you arc
correct ttuit overdoing weight
loss can bo one cause for a
woman not tiaving menstrual
periods. F at tissue does servo
an endocrine function in
women. Ballot dancers or thin
women athletes often have
m enstrual problem s or
irregularity.
This is only one ol (he many
things ttuit overdoing weight
loss can do to your health.
You’ll be interested in the
other tilings that can happen
discussed in The Health
L etter
num ber
16-2,
Dangerous Dieting, which 1
am sending you.
Olliers who want ibis issue
can send 75 cents with a long,
stam ped.
self-addressed
envelope for it to me, in care
of this newspaper, P.O. Box
1551, Radio City Station, New
York. NY 10019.
F o rtunutely, m enstrual
irregularity and absence1 ol

TU M B LE W E E D S

n o rry ,

'

TVl SICK. OF FEADiNQ
0OOK5 ON HOCJTO L O S t
CJHC.MT.

THIS WAS F0UNP ATTHE
SCENE OF THE HOLP-UFi
IS IT

DEAR DR. IAMB - For to
years I have worked very
hard as a butcher. I'm 58
years old. My brother is 5fi
years old and he is a butcher,
too. We both have a problem
the doctor calls a protein fluid
that se ttle s in the right
testicle. The doctor said I
need an operation to close the
bag. What I want to know ts
what happens to the fluid"
Where does it go? To the toft
side? I have it drained at least
once a year. It is a very
d elicate situ atio n . Please

advise.
DEAR READER - You
evidently have wlwl we call a
hy drocele. There is a sac-like
structure around the testicle
that looks a lot like plastic
wrapping paper. In certain
conditions two lay ers of it can
accumulate fluid, like a cyst
willi the testicle inside the
cyst.
It can be drained as you
have had dixie, but usually it
Just fills with fluid again. The
sac can be removed or closed.
When this operation is suecessful tin* problem is cured
and the fluid doesn't show up
some other place or in ihc
oilier testicle.
The simxith round swelling
is simply a hag of fluid. II cun
gel quite large, even 10 inches
in diameter.

- FLORIDA"

ARRIVE AUVE
. SlINSHlNf STA TE.

WIN AT BRIDGE
NORTH

III ||

♦ AQI0I4
*107
♦ K J»

♦ Kl i
WEST
♦ 7J

EAST
♦KJ9S2

VKQI I

* ---.

• 142
4 J 101 4

♦ A4S1
♦ Q4 1 2
SOITH

♦I
ftJ IIIlt
♦ QI OT
♦ A7

Vulnerable Both
Dealer: South
Wm

N»rtk

Eut

Put
I’m
P in

!•
2 NT
P iu

Put
Put
Pm

Sm U
I*
2*
4*

Opening lead 4J

By Oiwald Jacoby
and Alto Sontag

Here U another Karpin
hand on trump management

-ER-WHALES ACTUALLY
FEEP ON THE TINIEST
CREATURES -FUWT0N,
KRILL-HE’S P-PR0BA6LY
JUST HAVINGJ

South won the club lead in
dummy in order to lead the
seven of trumps toward his
hand All this look no time at
all
East showed out and after
long prolonged thought,
South conceded down one
Just a little thought earli­
er would have given South
his game and saved the long
thought before conceding the
set.
South should win the first
club in his hand and lead a
low trump West could play
low, rise with an honor, sing
a sad tong or do anything
except defeat the contract.
Suppose that East had
held all four trumps Then
dummy’s 10 would lose to
the king or queen Later on,
South would lead the last
trump from dummy and
take the proven finesse to
win the game and rubber.
Suppose trumps had bro­
ken 2-2. South would lose
one trump trick on any line
of play and make five odd
Suppose trumps had bro­
ken J-l. South might well
have lost two trumps instead
of just one. but he could
afford that
(Newspaper enterprise assn &gt;

O fl-1 G'GuESS
THEY JUST
CAN’ T HELP
HAVIN’ FUN IN
A S-BK} M Y-

F L E T C H E R 'S LA N D IN G

by T. K. Ryan

menstruation that is actually
caused by being hxi lean is a
temporary’ state. As soon as
the woman gains a little fai
tissue and has a more normal
body
composition, her
reproductive functions return
in normal. So if that is the
case with your sister she will
be able to have a family like
other normal women

by Leonard Starr

r n J-J0ST TRYIN*
ANNIE-- WHA.E5
T’ REMEMBER HOW
AREN’ T- E R - A 6 W - JONAHMACE OUfTD -rw T

FUN’

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More Than Weight

A N N IE

FRA NK A N D ERNEST

Can Lose

by DoufllM Coffin

DIETING ISN’T THt tJAtf fOfc

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• —I

74th Y ear, No. 5 3 -T h u rs d a y , O ctober 22, 1981—Sanford, F lorida 32771

Calls It

E vening H e ra ld -(U S P S 481-280)—P ric e 20 Cents

Insensitive'O n Teacher Pay

'

SEA Blasts County School Adm inistration
By DONNA ESTES
Herald Staff Writer
A Seminole Education Association (SEA) representative
Wednesday night charged the county school administration
with "incredible insensitivity" toward teachers ami their
financial needs.
He specifically pointed to the administration’s failure to
immediately pay the county’s 2,000 teachers retroactive salary
Increases granted in a contract ratified on Oct. 7 and its failure
to notify teachers that deposit of credit-union deductions from
salaries was going to be held up eight days.
Hon Boethe, executive director of the teachers' union, told
the School Board that although contract negotiations con­
cluded Sept. Band a contract was ratified Oct. 7, the pay raises

retroactive to Aug. 24 will not be paid In a lump sum until Nov
20.
He also complained that money from Sept. 30 deductions for
the credit union was not available to teachers for eight days.
He said the administration knew about the delay and failed to
notify the teachers.
"We had teachers who needed the money and it was not
available," Boethe said, adding he was petitioning for relief
for the 1,400 teachers who are union members.
Hoger Harris, assistant superintendent for finance in the
school administration, said today the teachers' retroactive pay
raises for the period Aug. 24 to Oct. 15 totals about $255,000.
Ann Neiswender, assistant personnel director, said
teachers' paychecks on Oct. 30 will be based on their new

Parks
Dept, s
Motto:
Service'

Next Saturday Is
Halloween, and you
history buffs can leam
how H all began by
reading Herald feature
writer Diane Jefferson's
story In Friday's
Leisure magailne.

problem P

CaUSed by 3 comPuler-Programming

Boethe said the employees would like to receive the com­
pensation they are entitled to in a timely fashion.
McCarron said it usually takes a three-day period after
payroll deductions before the money is deposited with the
credit union and two days after that before the money is
available to the teachers.

To R e tire

Mtftte Phtt* By T»M Ytrkarw|h

The gazebo in Sanford's Centennial Park.
But what, exactly, do all these
people do?
"We are charged with maintaining
the city ’s 27 p ark s; providing
recreational programs for the com­
m unity, ad m in istratio n of the
municipal cemetery, the Sanford
Civic Center and museum-library,”
Jem igan says. "Each one has its own
problems to be solved."
"One of our current goals for the
department and the city Is to acquire
large sections of land for natural
parks," he notes. "Some of our parks
a re developed with equipm ent,
athletic fields and tennis courts, and
we have two recreation centers. We
want to develop some natural parks
with more open space. I think people

'WeVe had 35 waddings

In the gaiebo this year,'
Jemlgan notes.
enjoy getting away from telephones,
mechanical equipment, and even
other people, and that's die goal of
these parks. The major obstacle to
acquiring the land is the extremely
high cost of property."
Jem igan says the goal of the
recreation section of the department
is to be an "innovative force in the
community by getting citizen groups
more involved in planning and
financing programs."
"We hope to evolve to the
philosophy of ‘Those who play must
pay,’" lie says. "With the rising costs,
we Just can't continue to ask every
laxpayer to foot the bill for something
they may never use.
"W e're going to have to withdraw
from patting Johnny on the head,
which we'U miss very much, but we’li
s e n e as organizers, allowing the
community to get more Involved," he
adds.

The department currently Is at­
tempting to obtain a $16,000 to $20,000
grant from the federal government to
develop the Marshall Avenue Park,
Jem lgan says.
"Since 1977, about $200,000 in grant
money has been brought Into the city
for park development," he notes.
"I'm afraid this trend won't continue,
because we arc looking for a real
shutdown in g ran ts because of
President Reagan's cutbacks in aid.
"If we get the grant for Marshall
Avenue P a rk —and I think our
chances are good—It would be real
fancy. It will be a functional park with
tennis courts, handball, a picnic table
or two, jogging trails and parking," he
adds. "There Just won't be enough
money to do anything more."
Jem lgan says the grant period for
this grant ends Oct. 31 and It will be a
couple of months before the city Is
notified as to whether or not it will be
awarded the grant.
The P ark s and R ecreation
Department, in addition to developing
and maintaining the city's parks and
providing recreational programs, also
makes reservations for the Civic
Center, the Youth and Westside
Recreation Centers, and weddings In
the parks, especially in the gazebo at
Centennial Park, located at Fifth
Street and Park Avenue.

Hick Harris, a teacher at Oviedo High School, said he had to
pay his home mortgage payment late because of the delay in
deposit by the administration. He suggested that if the ad­
ministration is having a computer problem with the
retroactive pay raises, the checks be hand-written.
Boethe said 225 county teachers since Jan. 1 have declined to
return to the classrooms because of inadequate salaries.
"We're talking about people who have to pay their bills," he
said.
Some $60,000 to $70,000 in retroactive pay raises for clerical
workers was held up from August until Oct. 15, when they
received their correct salaries, Harris said.

For Deaf Children

No D e sire

TO D A Y

0
1

Owen NfcCarron, personnel director, said the delay in credit-

J e m ig a n :

ByTENI YAHBOKOL'Oll
Herald Staff Writer
The words "parks and recreation”
may spark fond m em ories of
childhood play in the minds of most
Sanford residents, but to those people
who work in the city’s Parks and
llecreation Department, the words
mean "service."
"It I* our lob to oerform a service
with a smile for the residents of
Sanford,” Jam es Jem lgan, parks and
recreatio n d irector, says. "We
operate under the philosophy that the
people come first and the city is
second. We aren't confused about
th a t, like the chicken-and-egg
question. We know who comes Drat."
The P ark s and R ecreation
Department, with a fiscal budget of
$466,693, Is composed of 20 staff
members, including the director, two
superintendents (one tn parks and one
In recreation), 11 parks workers and
eight recreation workers (including
two clerical and two maintenance
personnel). The d epartm ent also
employs a person part-time to serve
as curator for the city's museumlibrary.
Jem lgan, who has worked (or Die
city 20 years, receives a salary of
about $27,000 annually. He says a new
man coming into his position could
expect to make about $19,000 a year,
but because of his 20 years of service
his salary has gone up with longevity
increases.
"We have some excellent people
working for us right now," Jcmigan
comments. "Sure, from lime to time
we have had problems, but whenever
you get a number of people together
there can be problems."
Of the 20 people employed in the
department, 13 are black and seven
are white; there are 17 men in the
department, with three women who
serve as clerical personnel and one as
the recreation supervisor; and the
curator of the city museum-library is
a woman, Jem lgan notes.
"We've had black, white, Chinese
and Korean workers in the depart­
ment,” Jem lgan says. "It makes no
difference to me as long as you have
qualified people for qualified jobs.
You can't legislate social comfort,
reople used to working together are
going to work together."

Calendar
Classified A d s.....................
C om ics................................
Crossword ........................
DearAbby .........................
Deaths
Hospital
Ourselves
Sports
Television
Weather

salary rates. She added the total retroactive money for the
seven-week period prior to Oct. 15 is being delayed until
research is completed on the exact number of days teachers
worked, to be sure the checks are accurate.

He's 50 years old, and since May 3,
1961, he's given almost 20 and a half
years to the city of Sanford, but James
Jem igan "feels like a young man, and
I want to keep working as long as I
can."
Jemigan is the director of the Parks
and Recreation Department, located
in Room 252, City Hall, and has a 20member staff.
The veteran director came to the
city in 1961 as Die department director
from Rock Hill, S.C., where he served
as that city's assistant parks and
recreation director.
“ I’ve enjoyed my years with the
city. This is home," he says. "City
Manager Pete Knowles has a few
years on me —he’s been here 27 years
— but I've enjoyed working with him
and the people here in Sanford. I’m
happy to stay right where I am for as
long as they want me and as long as I
can do my Job.”
Jem igan Is married and has three
children and two grandchildren. The
youngest grandchild is Just 10 months
old.
“I like my work, and although
sometimes I get bogged down in my
administrative duties, I do try to get
out in the field for a couple of hours a
day — at least one hour a day," he
says.
As director of the department,
Jem lgan Is charged with overseeing
the development and maintenance of
the city's 27 parks, administration and
See JERNIGAN, Page 2A

Board Eyeing
Bus Solution
School Superintendent Bob Hughes will
recommend "the best solution possible"
to the Seminole County School Board on
Nov. 4 on busing eight deaf students to an
Orlando high school in the most speedy
fashion.
During the intervening two weeks,
Hughes said today, school administration
personnel will be looking at alternatives,
including the possibility of using two
minibuses to pick up the students from
various spots around the county.
The buses, after picking up the
students, might meet at a central
location where students would board one
bus for the trip to Oakridge High School
in Orlando. The academic program (or
daal-atudent education is provided there,
while Mid-Florida Technical School, also
in Orlando, provides vocational training.
Also during the two-week period,
parents will bus three of the eight
students who now are riding the school
bus from three to four hours daily to and
from school.
Dorothy Crumpton of Winter Springs,
mother of one of the students and the
parent who spearheaded a protest before
the School Board Wednesday night, said
she will transport her son and another
student to school for the two weeks. A
second m other will transport her
daughter while the administration is
seeking a solution.
Seven parents and two grandmothers

of the eight deaf students met with school
personnel in Hughes' office Wednesdaynight to discuss possible solutions. Mrs.
Crumpton told the board prior to the
meeting with school personnel that her
son must get up at 4:30 a.m. to get ready
to attend classes at 7:30 p.m. at
Oakridge. "I don't think getting up at
4:30 a.m. is a normal life," she said.
Board member Allan Keeth asked
whether the parents could transport their
children to a central location for bus
pickup, but the parents present said they
all work and it would be an impossible
task.
Hughes said his staff will be looking at
alltraa llv ts during the next two weeks.
"We'U be calling Orange County to see
where the special unit for teaching the
deaf children will be located next year.
We'll be looking at the possibilities of
rerouting the chUdren and whether a
second minibus, perhaps one used to
tran sp o rt oth er special education
children, can be used."
He said the existing route will be
ridden by personnel to see If there is any
way to shorten it. "By Nov. 4 we will have
explored aU the alternatives," he added.
Hughes said that according to statistics
it will be at least five years before the
Seminole school system can have
educational programs within the county
for deaf children. - DONNA ESTES

EE*.

Court: Arbitrator Can't
Overrule School Board
The Seminole County School Board
"alone has the power to hire and fire its
employees," the Fifth District Court of
Appeal at Daytona Beach ruled Wed­
nesday In a case concerning Lynnette
Comellson who had been a librarian at
Jackson Heights Middle School in
Oviedo.
Reversing a decision of Judge Robert
McGregor of the 18th Judicial C lrcuitSemtnole-Brevard Counties—the court
said an arbitrator could not order the
School Board to reinstate Ms. Comellson
with $9,000 in back pay.
An arbitrator had found the School
Board had not given Ms. Comellson the
evaluaUons required by a collective­

"We’ve had 35 weddings in the
gazebo this year," Jem igan notes.
"Although I’m happy for people to use
It, it Is a time-consuming duty.
"As I said before, we are public
servants, and the people of this
community are our Number One
priority," he adds. "If they have a
problem we can handle, we are more
than happy to talk to them. I have an
open-door policy In this office. No one
screens my calls. If someone wants to
talk to me, I’m here."

JAMES JERNIGAN
... he’» enjoyed it all

bargaining agreement that would have
warned her of any deficiencies.
Ms. Comellson was told in April 1976
that she would not be re hired for the next
school year. She took her case to ar­
bitration the following year.
School Board Attorney Ned Julian Jr.
told the School Board Wednesday night
the decision wiU have a bearing on a case
currently in the circuit court at Sanford
where an arbitrator made a similar
finding after a counselor at the South
Seminole Middle School was fired. H$
said he expects Judge Kenneth I&gt;effler,
based on this decision, will rule against
the counselor. Raym ond M asters.

Honored
12 New Seminole Memorial
Doctors Feted At Breakfast

IB
3A
2A

2A

The Greater Sanford Chamber of
Commerce honored 12 new members of
the Seminole Memorial Hospital staff
this morning during the annual Per­
sonality Breakfast.

foreign countries as far away as India,
Vietnam and Jordan.

Tesar also announced the building on
the new C entral F lorida Regional
Hospital in Sanford is on schedule and he
Ja m e s D. T esar, hospital ad ­ an ticip ates the hospital sta ff and
ministrator, told the gathering of ap- equipment will move into the new facility
proxlm ately 70 a re a business r e ­
as soon as the first week of September of
presentatives, hospital staff members next year.
and Chamber members the community
Is fortunate to be attracting quality
Even though it was a morning to
physldans like the doctors who were recognize the new members of the
recognized today.
medical staff, Jack Homer, executive
Several of the doctors honored during
the hour-long breakfast were from

W.XA ——* T'T'N f-•»

, — »--/» »-«

manager of the Chamber, also called on
the audience to commend the doctors
who have already been in the Sanford

- r w . —r r — —--- •- - -r -j. pm-*

^

,

--

area and serving the public here for
several years.
The 12 new physicians honored at the
breakfast are: Glen Davis, internal
medicine; Humberto Dominguez, family
p rac titio n e r, from Spain; Orlando
G arda-Piedra, anesthesiologist, from
Cuba; Lenkala R. Mallaiah, gastroen­
terologist, from India; David C. Mowers,
obstetrics and gynecology; Lac Hong
Pham, pediatrician, from South Viet­
nam; Juan L Ravelo, obstetrics and
gynecology, from Cuba; P e te r G.
Selassie, hematologist, from Jordan;
Mark E. Webster, family practice;
Joseph Azelvandre, family practice; and
Brett Bolhofner, general practice.

• i - a.

r ^

MartM WBtla ay Tam V isu a l

DUELING FOR DOLLARS
King and Queen candidate* for the Greater Sanford Chamber of
Commerce Christmas Parade contest, (from left) Dusty Gregory,
Deborah Alderman and Jamie Jessup, turn in money they have
collected for votes to contest chairman Martha Yancey. Hie winning
couple will be crowned after the final tally Is made at 8 p.m. Nov. 17.

►». —

——*i

T-

�2A-Evewlng Herald, S sn tx d , FI.

Thursday, O ct.li, its l

&lt;A

Garage Man Arrested For Holding Auto

FLORIDA
IN BRIEF
Judge In Kidnap Case
Disqualifies Himself
MIAMI (UPI) — The latest twist In a bizarre case
involving two former police officers charged In a
kldnap-for-ranson plot came Wednesday when the
judge who was to preside over next month's trial
disqualified himself.
Circuit Court Judge Thomas Scott, who earlier set
trial for Nov. 18, excused himself from hearing the
case after one of the defendants called him at home
asking for police protection.

Pilot Dies In Crash
AVON PARK (UPI) - The pilot of a U.S. Marine
Corps A-4 Skyhawk was killed Wednesday when the
plane, on a low-level practice bombing mission,
crashed In central Florida’s remote interior.
Marine CapL Michael McKee, 12, of New Orleans, a
Delta Air lin e s pilot on a two-week training mission
with the Marine Corps reserve, was killed in the ac­
cident.

Deregulation Upheld
TAIXAHASSEE (UPI) - Florida's deregulation of
the trucking and busing industries has been upheld by
on appeals court which paraphrased the Bible In
concluding, “That which the Legislature giveth, so
may it taketh away."
The 1st District Court of Appeal, in a M ruling,
concluded that Leon County Circuit Judge Victor
Cawthon had been correct In dismissing a lawsuit
challenging the deregulation.

Bums Plaguing Beach
FORT LAUDERDALE (UPI) - City fathers
weighing the Idea of spraying beachfront trash cans
witli kerosene or chemicals to keep transients from
eating the garbage have been told the idea could spark
on expensive lawsuit.
The proposal to deter transients from eating (he
garbage was made by City Commissioner Robert Cox
after residents complained about bums wandering
around the beach area.

Haitians Keep Coming
MIAMI BEACH (U PI) - Federal officials Insist that
President Reagan's program to turn back illegal aliens
on the high seas is not a failure, despite the arrival of a
boatload of Haitians before dawn Wednesday on the
shores of Miami Beach.
Eighty-six Haitians beached their wooden sailboat
behind a high-rise hotel, making it the third time
refugees have landed In south Florida in a month since
President Reagan ordered the Coast Guard to send
refugees heading for the U.S. back to their homelands.
IA1.

Airmen Face Drug Charges
HOMESTEAD AIR FORCE BASE (UPI) - Seventyeight airmen suspected of using drugs here could face
charges when a four-month-old investigation into their
activities is completed, officials said Wednesday.
Base spokesman Capl. Jim Dilda said no charges
have yet been filed and it would probably be "two to
three" months before charges could be brought against
any of the men under investigation.

WEATHER
NATIONAL REPORT: Thunderstorms again battered
Texas, touching off flash flood watches in the southwest part of
the state earty today. Freezing temperatures gripped a vast
section of the nation from the upper Great I.akes to the
Rockies. Rain was scattered across Texas, hit by furious
thunderstorms less than a week ago, and into the middle
Mississippi Valley. The cold front spread showers across the
Southern Plains, leaving behind 1 inch of rain at Joplin, Mo.,
and a half inch in both McAlester, Okla., and Fayetteville, Ark.
Freezing temperatures were reported from the upper Great
U k e s Region to the northern and central Rockies, lig h t snow
developed over northern Michigan and portions of the Nor­
thern Plains. One inch of snow covered the ground at Fargo,
N.D. in the early morning hours. Nearly an inch of snow fell on
northwest Minnesota and flurries were expected to continue
through today, but the National Weather Service said the
storms should be followed by sunshine. Light showers also
moved through the northeastern corner of the nation where
temperatures were mostly in the 40s. F air weather prevailed
across the Western states Wednesday, but during the af­
ternoon only a few places in the Southwestern deserts warmed
into the 90s.
AREA READINGS (I a.m .|: temperature: 71; overnight
low: 68; Wednesday high: 86; barometric pressure: 30.19;
relative humidity: 93 percent; winds: north at 7 mph.
FRIDAY TIDES: DAYTONA BEACH: highs, 5:39 a.m., 6:07
p.m.; lows, 11:38 a.m., 12:04 p.m.; PORT CANAVERAL:
highs, 5:31 a.m., 5:59 p.m.; lows, 11:27 a m ., 11.55 p.m.;
BAYPORT: highs, 11:24 a.m., - p.m.; lows, 6:42 a.m., 8:07
p.m.
BOATING FORECAST: S t Augustine to Juptter Ialei, Out
H Miles: A small craft advisory remains In effect. Winds
easterly 15 to 20 knots today decreasing to southeast around 15
knots tonight and becoming south to southeast 10 to 16 knots
Friday. Seas 5 to 7 feet with moderate to heavy easterly swells.
Widely scattered showers.
AREA FORECAST: Partly cloudy today and Friday with
highs in the mid to upper 90s. F air tonight with lows In the 60s.
Wind easterly 15 mph today diminishing tonight.
EXTENDED FORECAST: Mostly cloudy and cooler with a
chance of rain north half Saturday continuing Sunday
becoming partly cloudy with scattered Rwwers extreme north
Monday. Partly cloudy south half with a chance of showers
mainly eastern half of peninsula. Lows mostly in the 50s north
ranging to low and mid 70s extreme aouth. Highs from low to
mid 70s north to mid Ms extreme south.

/

The 41-year-old owner of a Sanford auto-repair shop has been
arrested and charged with violating a court order directing
him to release the impounded car of a dissatisfied customer.
Thurman Thompson, operator of Thompson’s Automotive
Service, 3797 Orlando Dr., was arrested Tuesday afternoon by
Doug Hulh, consumer-fraud investigator for the state at­
torney's office. Thompson later was released on 5100 bond.
If convicted, Thompson could be sentenced up to 60 days in
the county Jail and-or a maximum fine of 1500
According to court records, Thompson's arrest stemmed
from a disagreement he had with Robert J . Pennell of Orlando
concerning the cost of repairing Pennell's classic 1957 Ford
Skyllner.
Initially, Thompson quoted a price of $400 for the Job, which
included rebuilding the ca r's engine, according to a statement
Pennell gave Hulh.
The price later was doubled, and Pennell said he paid half of
the bill, only to find when he went to pick up his car that the Job
had not been done properly. He said he told Thompson he
would pay the remainder ol the bill when the work was
corrected.
Two weeks later, according to court records, Thompson
threatened to sell Pennell's car at auction if he did not pay the
bill—which then totaled $910.26—plus a |7,50-per-day storage
charge.
On Monday, the &gt;910.26 was placed in a court escrow account
and an order Issued by County Judge Wallace Hall directing
Thompson to release the car. Hall gave Thompson 60 days to
contest the order.
Hulh said Thompson refused to relinquish the vehicle and
was placed under arrest.
THIEVES CAN FEAST
Whoever broke into the Rex Sandwich Truck parked at the
Cavalier Motel, 3200 S. Orlando Dr., Sanford, Monday night,
won’t go hungry for awhile.

Action Reports
*

Fires
it Courts
it Police

They m ay also have music by which to dine.
Police said thieves took &gt;342 worth In goods from the truck
including one radio, one CB, 35 super submarine sandwiches,
20 snack Paks, 75 biscuits, 40 cheese packs and 35 packages of
m eat
NARCOTICS ARREST
Gene Merrlman, 25, of 205 North St., Altamonte Springs, was
being held at the Seminole County Jail this morning in lieu of
&gt;500 bond on a charge of possessing a controlled substance.
Seminole County sheriffs deputies report Merriman was
seen standing by a car which was parked illegally near
Jackson and North streets in Altamonte Springs about 1:45
p.m. Tuesday.
Deputies said they observed Merriman throw three brown
packets of m arijuana into a white bucket. On the floor of the
car deputies report they found a plastic bag containing more
than 50 gram s of marijuana.
MANSLAUGHTER ARREST
A 25-year-old Winter Park man was arrested Monday while
attending Seminole Community College's Voc-Tec Telephone
Lineman Repair School at the Sanford Airport.
Glenn Alan Tatro, 2003 Hannon Ave., is being held at the
Seminole County Jail in lieu of &gt;2,500 bond on an Orange
County charge of manslaughter while driving under the in­
fluence of alculiul.

United Way
C a m p a ig n Still F a r Sh o rt O f G o a l
By JANE CASSELBERRY
Herald SUff Writer
With one more week to go, the United Way of Seminole
County's 1981 campaign drive has now reached &gt;146,893.47, or
48.5 percent of the &gt;305,000 goal.
The new total reported by volunteers during the third report
luncheon, held Wednesday at the Holiday Inn, 1-4 and SUte
Hoad 46, was up &gt;53,843 from the previous week.
The luncheon was hosted by the Sanford Optimist Club Bill
Livingston, who will be the auctioneer at the United Way
auction at l.ake Mary High School auditorium on Sunday, gave
the Optimists a demonstration of his expertise by auctioning
off three palra of tickets for the Disney World Pro-Am Golf
Tournament.
The auction will begin at 2 p.m. and Is open to the public.
More than &gt;2,000 in goods and services donated by area
businesses and individuals will be auctioned to benefit United
Way. Among these are a dinner for two at Malson et Jardin
Restaurant, and gift certificates from stores such as Rullands
and Jacobson's.
In the Commercial Division, Jack Weible reported an ad­
ditional &gt;300 for Sanford for a total of &gt;2,651. Other Seminole
County commercial gifts reported Included &gt;2,091 from
Robinson's; &gt;1,900 corporate gift and 1018 employee donations
from Jefferson Ward; &gt;1,321 from AllsUtc Insurance em­
ployees; &gt;113 from Insurance firm*; &gt;600 from McClain Pierce
Associates, with a matching gift from the Equitable Life
Insurance Co., and &gt;50 from Altamonte Mali Carousel Snack
Bars.
In the Pilot Division, Sandy Cummings reported for the
Southern Bell employees and Communications W orken of
America I^ocal 3113 an additional &gt;1,599 and a corporate gift of
&gt;2,500 for a total of &gt;12,839. "T hat’s 24 percent over last year,
and we’re not done yet," said Ms. Cummings. StrombergCarlson employees have donated or pledged &gt;16,908 to date,
Bruce Cox reported.
Also In the Pilot report were the following; &gt;3,744 from
United Tel Group employees for a total of &gt;14,7B0; &gt;1,100 from
NCR employees for a new total of &gt;20,371; &gt;2,445 from Winter
Park Telephone Co. employees, &gt;2,000; &gt;1,232 new money from
Qwip for a total of &gt;6,747; &gt;400 Nelson k Co.; &gt;822, Starllne
employees; &gt;525, Sunnlland Corp. employees; &gt;1,279, Evening
Herald employees.
Bert Pearsall, co-chairman of the Financial Division,
reported donations and pledges from Dade Federal Savings k
]&gt;oan of &gt;2,737, including a &gt;1,000 corporate gift and &gt;1,737 from
the employees, and &gt;621 from Florida Federal Savings A Loan,
including a corporate gift of £50 and employee donations of
&gt;371.
An additonal &gt;850 was reported by the Education Division,

Keith Stone, chairman, bringing the total from Seminole
County schools and Seminole Community College of &gt;7,225.
With an additional &gt;1,645 received in the mall from county
residents, the Special Gifts Division headed by Robert Daehn
now totals &gt;5,860.
Catherine Ray, chairman of the Professional Division,
reported &gt;160 from South Seminole attorneys; &gt;50 North
Seminole dentists; &gt;100, South Seminole dentists; &gt;190, North
Seminole doctors: &gt;887 Seminole Memorial Hospital, and
&gt;1,183, Florida Hospital-AlUmonte; &gt;50, optometrists; &gt;1,010,
Realtors and builders (Including &gt;1,000 from G reater Con­
struction Corp.), for a total of &gt;3,450.
David Chacey, Public Employees Division chairman,
reported &gt;1,355 in new money for at total of &gt;3,373 to date.
M argaret Jones, chairman of the Black Division, reported
new gifts of &gt;385 for a total of &gt;1,220.

BUI Earle of the Children'! Home Society (right)
and auctioneer Bill Livingston (left) display a golf
bag donated by the Par &amp; Birdie Goir Shop in Fern
Park for the United Way of Seminole County
auction to be held at 2 p.m., Sunday at Lake Mary
High School auditorium.

S a lv a tio n A rm y : A id in g K id s, N e e d y
The Salvation Army of Seminole
County is slated to receive &gt;43,000 as a
United Way of Seminole County agency
in the coming year.
The Salvation Army community center
at 700 W. 24th St., Sanford, is the hub of
activities for all ages throughout the
year, as well as being the source of
emergency help for transients and local
residents.
In addition to sponsoring recreational
and character-building activities for
youth In programs such as the Boy
Scouts, Cub Scouts, Girl Guardi and
Sunbeams, plus Junior singing and band
groups, the Salvation Army opens its
facilities for use by other organizations
such as the Girl Scouts, the Sanford
Gymnastic Association, local basketball
teams and Weight Watchers. There le
also a summ er camping progrsm.
There Is a men’s club and women's
club sponsored by the Salvation Army,
and a thrift shop Is open Monday,

Thursday and Friday. The welfare office
Is open five days a week.
Through the annual Christmas fund
drive at area shopping centers, food
baskets and toys are distributed. Last
year &lt;30 families received baskets and
gifts from the Salvation Army at
Christmas.
The Salvation Army, headed here by
Capt. Carl Phillips, extends its aid to the
entire county. It provides emergency
food, clothing, furniture, meals, and (if
funds are available) utilities. There are
no sleeping faculties at the local
headquarters, but for those In need of a
place to spend the night, an effort Is
made to get them In the Orlando faculties
and Urey are given the bus fare to get
there.
The Salvation Army also has a Jobreferral program and a missing-persons
bureau. The organization stands ready to
serve in the event pf a disaster, and Its
faculties are available for emergency

shelter. Partly funded by United Way,
the Salvation Army received permission
to conduct a capital-funds drive this past
summer In an effort to pay off some of
the m ortgage, m ake badly needed
repairs at the quarters used by the corps
commander and his wife, and complete
the Interior of the gymnasium.
Thanks to an anonymous foundation
gUt of &gt;50,000, a total of &gt;78,000 In pledges
and cash gifts was received during the
drive.In making the gUt, the foundation
sUpulatcd that IIO.OQOof the sum be used
to fix up the quarters. The roof was
replaced, the Jalousies replaced with
energy-saving windows, and a heating
and sir-conditioning system installed.
The remaining &gt;40,000 of the grant was
applied to the principal on the mortgage
on the building, leaving a balance of
&gt;34,000. The remainder of the pledgee will
be used to make monthly mortgage
payments until the next Friends ol the
Army banquet, scheduled for next April.

TVs TAKEN
All the doors were still locked but burglars somehow
removed two television sets and a stereo from a residence a
504 Oak St., Altamonte Springs, sometime between 3 p.m. am
10:30 p.m. Tuesday.
Police report entry to the home of Shawn M. Byrd wa&lt;
gained by breaking out a bedroom window.
WOMAN ASSAULTED IN HOME
A 36-year-old Altamonte Springs woman was assaulted ir
her apartm ent early today.
Leola Montgomery, 145B Oak Street, told police she was
awakened about 3 a.m. by the sound of doors opening. When
she walked from her bedroom into the living room she was
grabbed by nr. unknown man, she said.
"He grabbed me and pushed me and I started screaming,"
she said. "Then he said ic be quiet or he would cut me."
"I guess I kept on screaming
he ran out," she said. "I
don’t know if there was more than one person."
Ms. Montgomery said she didn't see a knife, nor could she
see her assailant because it was dark in the apartment.
Police said the man entered the apartment through a dining
room window,
LONGWOOD MAN JAILED
Glulio Frank Santltli, 18, of 167 Exeter Ave., Longwood, was
being held a t the Seminole County Jail this morning In lieu o(
&gt;5,000 bond on a charge of burglary in connection with the
Wednesday break-in at 129 Exeter Ave.
Police said SantiUi was caught inside the residence by the
owner.
In an unrelated incident, Seminole County Sheriff’s deputies
Wednesday arrested Jack Allen Rickel, 20, of Orlando, on
charges he sold stolen property to Connie's Pawn Shop. 414
U.S. Highway 17-92, Fern Park.
Rickel is being held at the Seminole County Jail in lieu of
&gt;8,000 bond.

Elvis Received
Drugs Stronger
Than Heroin
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UPI) - Some of the drugs Elvis
Presley's physician prescribed to him regularly for 13
months are so powerful and so addictive that they "are
rarely used, bul when they are — only for three or four
days," a drug abuse expert testified.
The prosecution said it would present more drug experts
today In the trial of Dr. George C. Nichopoulos, 53, Is
charged with overprescribing thousands of stimulants,
depressants and painkillers to Presley, entertainer Jerry
Lee Lewis, himself and eight others.
Dr. William David Lerner, a drug abuse specialist at the
Medical College of Virgina in Richmond, refused on crossexamination Wednesday to agree with the defense conten­
tion that a "m aintenance" approach is a proper way to
treat some addicts.
Prosecutor Jewett Miller asked Lerner when he would
prescribe Quaaludes, one of the depressants Nichopoulos
allegedly prescribed for Presley over a 13-month period.
Lerner said he would use the drug only in "acute, un­
toward times (when) It is absolutely essential that someone
sleep," for Instance before major surgery.
"They (Quaaludes) are highly addictive," Lerner said.
"They are rarely used, but when they are — only for three
or four days."
Lerner said Dilaudld, also prescribed for Presley, is
twice as powerful as heroin. He said would prescribe
Dilaudld "only for the most extreme of pains" — for
"someone who has been hit by a truck" or who had severe
bums over 80 percent of his body.
Prosecutors decided against calling Linda Thompson
Jenner, a former Presley liveln girlfriend, to the witness
stand, which brought a protest from defense attorney
Jam es NeaL Mrs. Jenner is now the wife of former Olympic
decathlon champion Bruce Jenner.
Neal tried unsuccessfully to convince the Judge to order
the prosecution to call Mrs. Jenner as a witness because he
wanted to question her under cross examination. Attorneys
have more leeway in what they can ask under cross
examination than In direct examination.
Criminal Court Judge Bemle Weinman said the court
could not force the prosecution to call her, but the defense
may do so on its own.
Wilson told the Judge the prosecution originally intended
to call Mrs. Jenner to the stand to offer proof of Presley's
drug addiction, but the superstar’s drug problems were
already brought out by other testimony.
"I think I understand why (the prosecution changed its
mind) since I've seen her statem ent," Neal said.
Reading from a sworn statement, Neal quoted Mrs.
Jenner, "He (Nichopoulos) tried to control his (Presley’s)
Ingestion of drugs, because that's all he could do."
Neal said Mrs. Jenner stated Presley could get drugs
"anywhere he wanted."
The 41-year-old superstar was found dead Aug. 18,1977, in
a bathroom of Grace land, his Memphis mansion. The cause
of death was ruled heart disease, but testimony has
revealed Presley was addicted to narcotics and
depressants, and had 14 different drugs In his body when he
died.

One More Running
In Casselberry
Another name has been added In Casselberry's Dec. 1
election race for mayor and two council seats.
Council Chairman Tom Embree qualified Tuesday with City
Clerk Mary Hawthorne to seek reelection to his council seat.
The only other person who has qualified to run Is incumbent
Councilman John Lelghty. Lelghty, who qualified Monday, Is
also seeking ree lection to his current council post.

Qualifying for the three council positions ends at 5 p.m., Oct.

30.

...Jemigan Will Stick Around
Cealiaaed From Page LA
coordination
of
num erous
re c re a tio n a l
p ro g ram s,
ad ­
m in istratio n of the m unicipal
cemetery and muaeum-library, and
supervision of his staff.
On two occasions he’s even per­
formed weddings In the city’s parks.
Jem igan is a notary public.
"The first time I had to do a wed­
ding came as a shock," he recalls.
"My ton cam e to me and said, "Dad, I
want you to do the wedding.' I ob­
jected, but he finally woo and In ths
gazebo at Centennial Park I per­

formed the marriage of my eon tn
front of all thoee people — there mutt
have been MO of them."
Jemigan says he swore that would
be the first and last wedding he would
ever perform. But that vow was rturtUvsd.
"One day this kid popped his head
Into my office and said he had heard I
do wsddinga," be says. "I explained I
only did the wedding as a (aver to my
son and that I don’t perform the
ceremonies aay mors. Well, be
pleaded with me, saying be was a
sailor and his Mdp was leaving in a

few days end he had all the nsceasary
papers and blood tests and would 1
pleas* do it far him.”
That afternoon a young sailor and
his lady were married by Jemigan
before the parents and a few friends in
the gaiebo In Centennial Park at Fifth
Street and Park Avenue.
“I've enjoyed the dty and I have no
complaints," Jemigan says. "Every
week they've given me my paycheck
for th* Job I’ve done, and who could
ask for better. The city's been good to
me and my family.”
—TEN I YARBOROUGH

HOSPITAL NOTES
tom toe le Msmertel Meteit*l
OrtH wH.IMt
aOMIIHONI
bntord:
Dmi IrooU
Jennie O. Clement
David a. Loopp
M m e e . tw h
Candida Boris, Deltona
Ethel L. Campbell. Dettone
tom Chen. Dettone
Shell# M Fields, Deitone
Carol Ann Hoeper. Doltona
Irma I. Hopp. Deltona
Oracle D Phillips, Deitone
Eager Osborn. Drltone
Joseph Kelly, Orange City
■IETHS
Joseph f . 4 Katherine O.

DIICHAROII
Santord:

Sr Itley C. Angle
Doris E. Blast
Lula P. Burgtsa
Joaaph T. Sharp#
Defers Am Young
Dorothy R. Lennox, Ceps
Canevtral, FI.
William S. Harbert. DsSary
John E. Kent, Deltona
Jerry S. Schvelm. Deitone
Lula M. Brandt, Orange city
Marguerite L. Luces, Pierson.
FI.
Robert A. toitsn, Titusville. FI.

�t

Evening Herald. Ssnlord, H.
$ 9 4 5 0 *

NATION

Thursday, Oct. 13, 1W —3A

W EEK LY
FU R N ISH E D BEDROOM

CAVALIER

IWiid Itrvict
• Laundry Fecllltfn
• 11 Channtl Cabla TV
• liv t Cnltrtatnmml
T Nighlt In Launtf
•Family Haitawranf
• La r«tr Roemi and
Ellidancy Ayt» Availably
Al Sl'fbtly Hifhar Rat*
• Special Oitcsunl On
Monthly Ratal
a Through Dec St. IW1

IN BRIEF
Was Polities A t Root
O f $1.6 Million Heist?
NEW YORK (UPI) — FBI agent! and police today
investigated the possibility that a 11.6 million armoredcar holdup, resulting in the capture of Weather
Underground fugitive Kathy Boudin, was carried out to
finance radical political activities.
Ms. Boudin, 38, and three others were charged
Wednesday with the terrorist-style holdup and the
slayings of two police officers and a Brinks security
guard during a shoot-out Tuesday in suburban
Rockland County.
The arrests led police to an East Orangy, N.J.,
apartment, where they found a bomb manual, weapons
and diagrams of six New York City police stations. No
explosives were discovered, however.

M O T O R IN N
3200 S. (Hondo Dr.
(Hwy. 17-92) Sanford
(305)321-0690

Byrd Opposes AWACS Sale
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Breaking a long silence.
Senate Democratic leader Robert Byrd announced his
opposition to the administration’s proposed sale of
AWACS radar planes to Saudi Arabia, and thereby
made President Reagan's selling job tougher.
With Byrd, United Press International now counts 34
senators against or leaning against the Saudi arm s
package. The same count has 40 senators for the sale
and six undecided.

COUNTRY U S U A L PINE CROUP

269

QUIET WALK
Durably Hyrculsn — It Icalurtt
m il and match ryvyrtlbly
tmhiom and haavy talid wood
I n m u Include, iota, chair, J
.slid wood rnd labial and t
caltea table. Lava laat antra
Similar to llluitrallan. Limited
Quantity I

THROUGH NATURE
R e n o v a tio n of th e C e n ­
t r a l F lo r id a Z o o 's e le ­
v a te d n a t u r e t r a i l lia s
b e e n c o m p le te d a n d Is
now o p e n to th e p u b lic .
T h e to p p h o to d e p ic ts
th e r u g g e d s w a m p -lik e
te rra in
th e
sp an
c r o s s e s . T h e o rig in a l
n a t u r e t r a i l , sh o w n b e ­
low d u r in g r e f u r b i s h ­
m e n t , s u r v i v e d f iv e
y e a r s of w e a th e r a n d
400,000 p a i r s o f sh o e s
s tr id in g a c r o s s it.

Cops Close In On Rapist
NEW YORK (UPI — Police said today fingerprints
discovered In an East Harlem convent may help
Identify the man who raped a nun and scratched 27
crosses on her body nearly two weeks ago-lhe first
attack In a crime wave against the city's clergy.
Police have promised to Increase security around
churches and synagogues, but another robbery took
place Wednesday. A 830,000 tapestry depicting the
Resurrection was stolen from the Madison Avenue
Presbyterian Church In Manhattan.

$1

D IS T R IB U T O R S IN C .
L O W E S T P R IC E S IN C E N I H A l

SI - n ... I I , A n t,
It A , It Al '
• I a t|H ■ I

W ORLD

Reagan Brings His Own
CANCUN. Mexico (UPI) - President
Reagan brought along jelly beans and his own
Jugs of water to the north-south economic
summit, presumably to avoid “ Montezuma’s
Revenge."

IN BRIEF
Reagan Promises Help
For World’s Poor Nations

“ I'll drink to that," Reagan said Wednesday
as he toasted Chinese Premier Zhao Ziyang on
their first meeting.

CANCUN, Mexico (UPI) — President Reagan
rejected a “Global Marshall Plan" for poor nations but
promised flexibility before the opening today of a B nation summit on ways to help the world's hungTy.
On the eve of the "North-South" conference in the hot
and humid Mexican island resort of Cancun, Secretary
of State Alexander Haig said Wednesday that Reagan
was willing to consider several proposals to narrow the
gap between rich and poor nations.

With that, an Iced glati of water went down.
Reagan's private water supply revived
memories of the "Montezuma’s Revenge"
comment made by then-Prezident Jimmy

LONDON (UPI) — Defense Secretary Caspar
Weinberger won the backing of NATO nations for the
deployment of new U.S. nuclear missiles In western
Europe, but faced expected anti-nuclear demon­
strations at his speech today to a 1/mdon think lank.
A six-page communique Issued by the 13 North
Atlantic Treaty Organization defense ministers at the
end of the two-day meeting Wednesday in Gleneagles,
Scotland, renewed their commitment to modernize
European defenses with U.S. nuclear missiles aimed at
the Soviet Union.

Economy: Gaining
Speed In Reverse?
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Even with a second consecutive
quarterly drop In the gross national product, private analysts
are still not sure the United States is in a recession.
Whatever the situation, Republican and Democratic leaders
are blaming each other (or tL
The third quarter decline In the GNP was 0 6 percent, not
half as steep as the second quarter drop of 1.6 percent, the
Commerce Department reported Wednesday.
Economists generally agreed the economy was worsening, If
only because the end of the quarter — September — was ac­
companied by a combination of bad economic omens. Spend­
ing decreased sharply, factory production cuts were wide­
spread and housing construction was at its third lowest level on
record for the month.
Virtually every administration spokesman with a forum
Wednesday had the word "recession" written into briefing
papers, testimony and news conferences, echoing President
Reagan's weekend declaration that a "light recession" was
under way.
Commerce Secretary Malcolm Baldrige responded with a
"y e t" to a reporter's question about whether he agreed with
the president. Baldrige added he thought a recession had been
in progress "for some tim e" — a result of the previous
Democratic administration's excesaes.
Baldrige's long-range forecast grew slightly more
pessimistic, seeing an economic upturn within the first half of
next year, rather than the first quarter and an • percent
unemployment rate by year’s end.

On Capitol Hill, economist Lawrence Chimertne, head of
Chase Econometrics of Bala Cynwyd, Pa., told the Joint
Economic Committee that whatever was happening was
nothing new. "If this is a recession, it really is a recession that
began in 1171 to 1179."
Two leading economists, George Perry of the Brookings
Institution and John Rutledge, head of the Claremont Econom­
ic Institute that developed much of the administration’s early
economic planning, endorsed the use of the term, finding
complete agreement from the committee's chairman, Rep.
Henry Reuas, D-Wls.
Another leading private economic forecaster, Otto Eckstein
of Data Resources, Inc. of I s lington, Mass., said of the
president’s remark, "I think he was wise to de-fang the Issue
instead of letting a long controversy develop."

-

INSORANCI1

A ll

I iisi federal's new IKS Approved TAX fKlT. All $nvers
C ertillcales will {live you a high interest w le guarani c e il lor
one yeat *iii(l your savings .lie Insured hy the 1’SI.IC. Your
e.unings on litis certificate will lx* exempt hum federal
Income faxes, subject tun m.iximum of $ 2 ,0 0 0 on a Joint
lelu n i (ind $ 1 ,0 0 0 lot individual returns.

HARDWARE
V IIILIIIIH O IO M II
o u a n o t I e^

C h e c k t h e s e •irfix in fa g e s:
• $ 5 0 0 m in im u m d e p o s it r e q u ir e d .
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• I y e a r te r m .
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h ig h e s t a llo w e d .
• D ally c o m p o u n d in g o r I n te r e s t Is a v a ila b le , h o w ev er. II
I n te r e s t Is d i s t r i b u t e d p r io r lo m a tu r ity , th e c f le c tlv c
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a v e r a g e y ie ld o f o n e y e a r T re a s u ry B ills au c tin n e d e v e ry
lo u r w e e k s .

LIMITED

W e ll h e lp y o u g e t th e m o s t
fo r y o u r m o n e y I
Com e in Unlay. Our savings counselors will explain nil
ol llie details so you can lake advantage ol this great lax
lice savings op |xn lu n ily. We can show you exactly what it
m eans for you.
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whil« the price i* low Each case contain* 20 inside (rotted
bulbs: twelve 60 watt and eight 100-wan.
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He Is survived by a
daughter, Mrs. Mary Burg,
Sanford; two sons, G arritt
J r ., M emphis, Tenn. and
Sidney R., Sanford, and five
grandchildren.

j

C e r tific a te s .

LOW COST AUTO INSURANCE

GARRITT W. LOYD SR.
GarrIU W. Loyd Sr., 61, of
126 E. Coleman Circle,
Sanford, died this morning at
a local nursing home. Born In
Alachua Feb. 22, 1920, he
came to Sanford In 1977 from
Gainesville. He was a retired
chief w airant officer In the
UJ5. Army, with 20 y e a n of
service. He was a Mason and
a Baptist.

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DO N 'T GAMBLE

fK

A firearms training and
safety course for women will
be offered by Seminole
Community College beginning
Nov. 18.
The class will meet from 7
to9p.rn.Nov. 18and 19. It will
conclude with eight hours of
firing-range practice Nov. 21
from 9 a.m. to 5 p in.
The course will include
discussion on when to use a
gun, safely req u irem en ts,
legal lim itations, nom en­
clature, and maintenance and
range qualifications.
The cost of the 12-hour
course Is |6 Students will
need lo provide at least 60
rounds of ammunition.
Registration for "Women’s
Basic Firearm s Training and
Safety" may be completed in
the re g is tra r's office at
Seminole Community College.
For fu rth er inform ation,
call the Office of Community
Services at the college.

' 1
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Approved

Carter during his 1979 visit to Mexico — a
comment that ired Mexican President Jnse
Ix&gt;pez Portillo.
In a long, rambling speech in the presence of
Uipcz Portillo, Carter said on previous visits
to Mexico ho had contracted "Montezuma's
Revenge," a reference to an intestinal
disorder often caused by drinking water
containing unfamiliar enzymes.
At an August meeting o( foreign ministers In
Cancun lo plan for today’s summit, the
physician for the UJ5. delegation advised the
water in Cancun was not drinkable.

SCC Offers R
Gun Course

NATO Wants U.S. M issiles

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�E vening Herald

Horne Delivery : Week, 11.00; Month, 14.25; 6 Months, 124.00;
Year, (45.00. By Mall: Week. 11.25; Month, 15 25 ; 6 Months,
(30.00; Year. 157.00.

Capt. Carl Phillips, local corps commander, is
justifiably proud of the Boy Scout Troop 508 and
Cub Scout Pack 508 sponsored by the SalvaUon
Army In Sanford. The scouts brought home just
about every award in sight this week from the
Seminole District Fail Camporee at Camp La-noche. Troop 506 was awarded the banner for best
troop, having accumulated the moat overall
points for competitive events in water sports,
physical fitness and camp judging. They also
took first place for the patrol flag contest for
"The Adventurers" Patrol flag. They received 16
award ribbons in addition to the banner and
earned a perfect score in the camp Judging.

Civil Defense: A

The Webelos Den of the Cub Pack placed
second In overall points. There were 19 Boy
Scouts and 23 Webelos from Troop and Pack 508.
More than 400 boys from all over the county
attended the Camporee.

iusps w im o i

300 N. FRENCH AVE..SANFORD, Fl-A. 32771
Area Code 30M22-2611 or 831-9993
T h u rsd ay , O ctober 22. 1981—4A
Wayne D. Doyle, Publliher
Thome* Giordano, Managing Editor
Robert Lovanbury, Advertising and Circulation Director

By JANE CASSELBERRY

Ben Hendricks is scoutmaster of the troop and
Mrs. Barbara Hendricks is the cubmaster.

Nuclear Deterrent
The Soviet Union spends an estimated $2 billion
per year on a civil defense program that employs
100,000 military and civilian workers. The United
States spends barely a tenth of that sum, has no
full-time civil defense work force, and lacks even
rudimentary plans to protect civilians in the event
of a nuclear attack.
Question: What does Moscow know that
Washington doesn't? Put another way, if civil
defense is as useless as many Americans seem to
believe, why are the Russians spending billions on
it every year?
University of Miami Prof. Leon Goure, an
acknowledged expert on the subject, argues that
the Soviet civil defense program is extensive
enough to protect up to 90 percent of the civilian
population and nearly all military and political
leaders during a nuclear exchange.
Prof. Goure and other civil defense advocates
note pointedly that the United States has no
comparable defenses and is thus that much more
v ulnerable to Soviet nuclear blackmail.
Admittedly, the figures cited by Prof. Goure
t resuppose that most Soviet cities would be at
I last partially evacuated and that the Soviets
v ould strike first against American missiles.
£ till, given the odds against the United States ever
I lunching an unprovoked nuclear attack on (he
Soviet Union, Prof. Goure's assumptions don’t
s eem entirely unreasonable.
Most Pentagon analysts caution against
( verestimating the effectiveness of Soviet civil
c efenses. But most now also agree that the gross
( isparity between Soviet and U.S. programs does
a*eate certain dangers, not the least of which is
the perception that Americans would suffer far
greater losses in any plausible nuclear exchange.
That is precisely the kind of perception that
might someday tempt the Kremlin to gamble on a
cosmic throw .o f the nuclear dice. Seen in this
lig h t, c iv il d e te n te sh o u ld p ro p e rly b e c o n sid e re d

a significant component of the U.S. nuclear
deterrent. ''*,‘
The Reagan administration seems to agree,
although the extent of its commitment to a
revitalized civil defense program isn’t yet a p ­
parent. The five-point strategic weapons buildup
unveiled by President Reagan and Defense
Secretary Weinberger two weeks ago included a
pledge to develop "an expanded, cost effective,
civil defense program."
No dollar figures for the program have been
announced, nor has the administration provided
any details on what sort of civil defense effort it
lias in mind.
Presumably, the program will include little
more than the modest funding needed to improve
civil defense planning and to develop the urban
evacuation procedures that could save millions of
lives.
Although an extensive system of shelters of­
fering protection against blast and fallout could
cut casualties in any nuclear attack by at least 50
percent, the estimated $70 billion price tag for an
effective shelter network is probably prohibitive.
A workable evacuation plan would be infinitely
cheaper and, with luck, might be almost as ef­
fective. The key, of course, would be sufficient
warning of an impending attack and a timely
decision to order evacuation of likely target
areas.
Most important, perhaps, than the specifics of
the administration's proposals is the fact that
civil defense is at least being discussed seriously.
Nuclear war isn’t made any less likely by refusing
to consider prudent precautions. And allowing the
Soviets an unchallenged civil defense monoply is
a luxury Americans can ill afford.

BERRYS WORLD

Speaking of Scouts . . .
All area Girl Scouts — past and present — are
invited to help celebrate the 45th anniversary of
the original vespers held back In 1936 and honor
"D ick ie" Colado and " N lta " M utlspaugh,
founders of the Girl Scout Vespers held each
year at Knowles Memorial Chapel on the Rollins
College campus In Winter Park. The celebration
will be held Sunday, Nov. 1, at 4:15 p.m., and
area troops are working hard to plan the
program. After, the vespers the Girl Scouts and
leaders will form a circle and sing Ups on the
front Uwn, followed by a reception In the chapel
lounge.
The vespers always gave the scouts of all the
troops the opportunity to get together and
celebrate their founder’s Juliette Low's bir­
thday, which falls on Halloween. The
magnificent Knowles Memorial Chapel is such
an impressive place to hold this service, put on
by the girls themselves, that it is something you
never forget. I should know because as a Girl

Scout T attended the vespers there. NIU
Mutlspaugh was my scout leader In Winter Park
and Dickie Colado, director of the Citrus Council,
for whom I baby sat. Donna Lou Pratt, who was
in Dickie’s troop in her Girl Scout days, has been
involved In getting the anniversary celebration
organised and was excited about seeing a lot of
her old Girl Scout "buddies" there. She dropped
in the newsroom Tuesday.
Looking for ways to cultivate your Ulents or
discover abilities you didn't know you had?
A free caUlog of fall cultural classes Is
available from the Council of Arts k Sciences by
calling THE-ARTS (843-2787) or writing P.O.
Box 2062, Orlando, FL 32801
The catalog lists many of the classes that are
being offered in the area and covers a variety of
topics, such as art, drama, music, china pain­
ting, macrame and weaving. The book also tells
how to contact the various organizations.

ROBERT WAGMAN

WILLIAM STEIF

Parent
Care Is
Important

Why Was
Shooting
So Easy?
WASHINGTON (NEA) - U.S. intelligence
officials say that many questions remain to be
answered as to how the assassins of Egyptian
President Anwar Sadat were able to ac­
complish their mission so easily.
The official Egyptian version of the
assassination is that an army second
lieutenant named Khaled Attallah, who has
been described as a Moslem extremist, led
three civilians In the attack. "It la an In­
dividual group and they are not even related
to any group or country," said Gen. Abdel
Abu Ghazala, the Egyptian defense minister
who has become the governm ent's
spokesman on the matter.
But high-ranking U.S. officials In Cairo pose
a number of questions that tend to contradict
the explanation of the shooting given by the
Egyptian government.
For Instance, the official version holds that
only four men were Involved In the
assassination. Egyptian authorities have
unofficially told foreign intelligence services
that Attallah granted leave to three of his men
and replaced them with civilians, all of whom
were Moslem extremists who had served in
the military.
But some witnesses say that at least eight
and possibly nine soldiers were on the
assassins' truck; many witnesses report
having seen at least a half-dozen soldiers
Bring Into the reviewing stand.
Then there are the questions of how the
assassins were able to get live ammunition
into the parade and to position their truck on
the Inside row. The placement of the truck
was critical to the success of the mission.
The security surrounding Sadat was con­
sidered to be among the best provided by any
country for Its chief executive. The Egyptian
security forces have received extensive
training in this country, and the United States
has provided them with technical advisers.
The U.S. officials say that the Egyptian
security forces checked every soldier and
every vehicle in the parade In an effort to
prevent exactly what happened from hap­
pening. It is hard to believe that a
small group acting alone could have come
through the inspection with that quantity of
ammunition and explosives.
The parade was meticulously planned
almost down to the second. Intelligence of­
ficers do not think it was mere coincidence
that the attackers' truck reached the
reviewing stand at exactly the moment that
the air force was flying by overhead. Rather,
they believe that the truck was deliberately
placed In the most opportune position in the
parade. This also raises doubts about the size
of the assassination squad.
Then there is the question of what happened
to Sadat's bodyguards. Moments before the
attack the area in front of the raised
reviewing stand was crowded with security
personnel and cameramen. Witnesses say
that all of the security forces seemed to
d isappear suddenly when the shooting
started. Some of the pictures of the
assassination show that at least two of the
attackers were able to advance to the front of
the reviewing stand and to shoot point-blank
at the Egyptian president.

BUSINESS WORLD

Tax Plan Eyed Favorably
By JAMES J. DOYLE
LOS ANGELES (U P I) - The administration's recently passed tax plan will
materially Improve the economy, according
to a large percentage of major industries
across the country who were polled on the
question.
The survey, by J.E . Fowler A Associates
management consultants, was the first such
poll taken after the plan had moved through
Congress.
An earlier poll, by the U.S. Commerce
Dept., of similar Industries gave figures in­
dicating just the opposite, but It was taken
before the tax plan was approved.
Joe Fowler, head of the Burbank, Calif.,
headquartered business which bears his
name, said the two polls show an interesting
difference in philosophies.
Fowler's poll, which questioned decision
makers among the top Industries in the
Fortune 500, indicated that 93.6 percent
thought new tax legislation would materially
aid or Improve the economy.
A total of 60 percent said the new legislation
would help control Inflation. Only 17.7 percent
thought It would not help.
"We doo't know what questions the Com­
merce Department asked," Fowler said. “It
said It sent the questions to major cor­
porations, but we don't know who in the
corporations. We sent our questionnaire to
decision making executives."
Fowler's poll, widely publicized after a
significant portion of reponses were gathered
and tabulated, brought a response from
President Reagan.
In a letter to Fowler, the president said, "I
was grateful to learn the results of the survey
that you conducted among your clients.
"This expression of confidence in our

program for economic recovery reflects the
spirit needed among our people to assure our
success.”
The president also said his administration
has “made substantial inroads at controlling
federal spending, reducing tax rates and
curbing excessive regulations.”
He noted, however, that his administration
"has not reached" Its goals and there is
plenty of work ahead.
The fact is that many major corporations,
particularly those in the high technology
fields, see the president's tax program and
focus on defense as a major stimulant not
only to the economy but to their own in­
dustries.
"Here’s a point," Fowler said. "There have
been other recent surveys that indicated an
optimistic outlook because of new tax
legislation. One of them said clients took a
wait and see attitude and I Interpret that as
telling us the Fortune 500 are reactionary
corporations.
"1 don't accept that," he said. "Wall Street
is reactionary; the president sneezes and
stocks go down.
"The media are reactionary, but you can't
tell me a major corporation is reactionary.
They have master plans and one-year and
five-year forecasts, and they are probably on
the optimistic side."
The president's advocacy of the MX and B-l
programs sent a wave of optimism through
the giant defense Industries.
"Sure, there's a more optimistic economy
ahead," Fowler said. "Rockwell (Inter­
national Corp.) will hire 15,000 more people.
Of that number maybe 6,000 have worked on
these projects before, so they will put on an
additional 9,000 people, but before It's all over
it will mean about 14,000 to 16,000 new jobs."

Five years ago Bernice Welssbourd, a
Chicago specialist in early childhood work,
decided "parent care" was Just as important
as "child care."
That's how Family Focus Inc. was bom.
Family Focus is the model for about 400
similar "parent care" centers around the
nation and Canada. They're linked in the
Family Resource Coalition, founded at a
Chicago conference last May with the help of
money from the Federal Administration of
Children, Youth and Families.
The point of Family Focus, says Mrs.
Welssbourd, is to "give support and Informal
counseling" to parents of very young children
— and expectant parents — at three drop-in
centers in Chicago and suburban Evanston.
"We started in a very small way," she says,
"expecting about 50 families." She was
"absolutely astounded" when 300 families
appeared within two months.
Today the Evanston center serves 1,200
families, the Chicago center almost 1,000 and
the Evanston center for teen-age parents,
about 600. They’re open an average of 35
hours a week at the most convenient times for
their clients.
Why is this kind of institution needed?
"Basically,” says Mrs. Welssbourd, "a lot
of parents are pretty isolated in our society.
They’re lonely."
That's especially true of motberMo-be and
new mothers.
"To be a good parent, and everyone wants
to be that, you have to feel good about
yourself," Mrs. Welssbourd says. "If you're
depressed, negative, you communicate that
to your child" — no m atter how young the
child is.
The single mother, who has no family
support or anyone else, can feel very low, she
says. "The professional woman with a new
child wrestles with the question of whether or
not to return to her career."
And the problems of "parenting" are not
confined to mothers.
Mrs. Welssbourd rites a couple of exam­
ples:
— How do divorced fathers of young
children stay in touch with the children?
— How do interracial families handle their
Inevitable problems?
The three Family Focus centers, run in
fiscal 1980 for less than $850,000, enable people
to “sit around, drink coffee, exchange ex­
periences and help each other." The parents
who drop in create their own baby-sitting co­
ops, food coops and clothing exchanges, and
find sensitive professionals who give them
informal advice or can refer the parent to
more formal aid.
Supporting funds come from corporations,
foundations, service groups and a mixture of
city, state and federal granta. Chlcago-area
high schools and churches are among the
biggest booste n of Family Focus.
The center for teen-age parents la a
national model, too, backed by a $66,000 grant
from the Federal Office of Adolescent
Pregnancy Programs. Its clientele, Mrs.
Welssbourd says, Includes “ many fathers." A
particular concern at this center: avoiding
second pregnancies.

JACK ANDERSON

Soviets Can Take Iran In 30 Days: Report
WASHINGTON - The Soviets have the
brute military power to smash through Iran
to the Persian Gulf and menace the flow of
Arab oU to the West. This Is a nightmare that
has Pentagon strategists tossing in their
sleep.
A top-secret assessment warns that the
Soviets could "Initiate and sustain a full-scale
Invasion" of Iran in 30 days. But "four to
seven selected Soviet divisions could com­
mence a limited attack into Iran's nor­
thwestern and northeastern border areas
after a preparation period of about 10 daysi"
Our surveillance satellites and monitoring
equipment have picked up "no indication that
an invasion is Imminent" But certainly the
Kremlin must be salavatlng over Iran, which
Ayatollah Khomeini has left so temptingly
vulnerable.
"The U.S. could expect to detect
^-operations necessary for a fuUbcals In­
vasion of Iran within one or two weeks after
commencement," according to the top secret
report. "However, preparations for a limited
Soviet attack to seize Azerbaijan and possibly
border a m s east of the Caspian Saa might

not be discernible before leas than a week."
The Kremlin now has 36 divisions near
enough to Iran that they could be quickly
mobilized into an Invasion force, my
associate Dale Van Atta has learned. These
combat divisions are now deployed against
Afghanistan, Iran and eastern Turkey.
A Soviet strike into Iran not only would
endanger the western world's oil supply, but
upset the military balance in the Middle E ast
This could create a debacle so Inextricable,
prospect so gloom-laden as to spoil the I-toidyou-eo's that have been emanating from this
column for the past two years.
To stop a Soviet thrust to the Persian Gulf
would take nuclear weapons and risk ■
holocaust. Indeed, cootbwsocy
«-»n for
a nuclear response to a Soviet attempt to
occupy Iran. Hopefully, the more cautious
elements on both aides will be able to control
the military hotheads ao that we may
somehow muddle through without
Footnote: The two superpowers came dose
to a military confrontation over Iran in

August 1910. But that's a separata story,
which I will report In a future column.
LIVES IN THE BALANCE: On the bat­
tlefield, generals must often make derisions
thst send their men to certain death. Now a
civilian is being asked by the Reagan ad­
ministration to make such a derision in­
volving the lives of thousands of Americans.
He is Ray Peck, national highway traffic
safety administrator. At Issue is a federal
regulation that would require either
automatic safety belts or air bags in all new
■s, starting with the 190 models.
Peck's own statisticians and technical
experts have told Mm the safety requirement
could prevent anywhere from 2,00 to 8,710
highway (slabties a year, phis tens of
ttw im vii of O m U kj Injuries.
Some safety experts say the safety d rv ia
would cost $80 to $111 per car. The
automakers claim they would cost more, and
they have successfully stalled Im­
plementation of the regulation for years. Now
they look to the Reagan administration to kill
the requirement once and for all.

"I'm on the hot seat," Peck told my
associate Lee Whitten. "They've left it up to
me."

In private talks with Ms top aides, Peck w u
told, with varying degrees of otnphMts, that
the standard should not be rescinded, frww
even begged him to delay the effective date to
the 1984 models la hopes of keeniac the
regulation alive.
Peck was told that, « iumu auum auc aaai
belts or air bags, from 770 to U t t pereons will
die over the next II years In the 190 mn«uu
alone. As older cars are jo k ed , the safety
devices could save almost tjm tre e each
year. In addition, eome 0 biUen la kMTMoe
and 0 J billion in taalth bawaoce costa
would be saved every yr— “ -» ■ — *-*-*

win

Peck
decide later this m»M« r a w e r w
stick to the regulatory timetable or scrap the
safety requirem ent altogether. He has
suggested that the states weted be en­
couraged to enact stricter safety
requirements if the federal law is withdrawn.
But outside exports say this would never

�i

SPORTS
Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Briefly

Y o u

High-Powered Hot Dogs
An Omen For Panthers ?
True, Lake Mary nipped Crooms, 7-6, In freshman foot­
ball Tuesday night.
But, was It forewarned?
Three plays after Crooms had scored its touchdown in the
second quarter, the scoreboard clock disappeared, lights
and all, with 9:58 left to play. About five minutes later, as
the clock was revived, the field was left in total darkness.
Why?
According to Jam es Porzlg, who was standing near the
Lake Mary concession stand at the time of the Incident, it
was the fault of the hot dog machine.
“Somebody told me that the hot dog machine shorted the
field lights out because It took a lot of the power that was
used for them," Porzig said.
The lights stayed out a good 10-15 minutes, then slowly
wanned up and the game continued. But not after the crowd
fully enjoyed the moment, with much cheering and air-horn
blowing.
Was this pn omen for the doomed Panthers?
- GEOFFREY GIORDANO

Tribe JV s Host DeLand Tonight
Seminole’s Junior varsity football team, winners of two of
Its last three games, entertains the DeLand JV tonight at 6
at Seminole High School.
The Tribe JV is led by Tim "lightning" Lawrence,
Sanford's most explosive running back and leading ground
gainer. He is Joined by fullback William Wynn and quarterback Mike Futrell to form the Seminole backfleld.
Defensively, Wynn is a standout linebacker. Safeties
Steve Alexander and Brian Cash along with monster back
Stevln Dennis anchor the defense. Richard Whittaker is the
main man in the defensive front.
The JV is 2-3 and a victory will better last year’s win
mark.

Oviedo Takes On Rockledge
Oviedo Coach Joe Montgomery takes his Lions on the
road tonight to Rockledge in one of those meaningless
mlddle-of-the-aeason games he now wishes he hadn't
scheduled.
The Lions are tied with St. Cloud, Osceola-Kissimmee and
Eustis for the top of the District 3A-8 ladder. All have 2-1
records.
Rockledge is a non-district opponent with a 2-3 record.
The ledger, nevertheless, is deceiving. Losses have come to
lOth-ranked twins Titusville Astronaut and Titusville. The
other setback is to respected Satellite.

Thursday, Oct. 22, t t l l —JA

A in 't S e e n

If you thought last year's threeway playoff for the Five Star Con­
ference and District 4A-9 cham­
pionships was something—you ain't
seen nu... nu... nuthin' yet.
Coach Terry Manfredi's Spruce
Creek Hawks had a two-game lead
with two games to play last year, but
choked away the twin titles. ta k e
Howell and Apopka both came in the
backdoor and the Silver Hawks
escaped with the crown the week
after the regular season ended with
a special tiebreaker meeting among
the three schools at Apopka.
This year the same thing could
happen. And, get this, it could in­
clude as many as five teams. The
talent, or mediocrity, of the con­
ference is such that everyone seems
capable of beating everyone else,
but not by too many points.
Sanford, 3-0, beat doorm at
Detand, &lt;M, Just, 7-0. The Tribe is
one-half game ahead of Manfredi’s
2-0 Spruce Creek. The Creek
whipped ta k e Brantley, 14-7, last
Friday. The Patriots were knocking
on the door Bt the two-yard line with
2:24 to play. Not much difference in
those two teams. The Pats are still
very much alive at 2-1.
Daytona Beach Mainland, 3-1,
eased past another conference cellar
dweller ta k e Howell, 0-3, by a slim
15-10 margin. The Silver Hawks are
still winless, so you can see there's
not a whole let of difference there.
Bill Scott's Lyman squad didn't
look very good in an early season 190 setback to Mainland. The 'Hounds,
however, have been pretty tough
since then. They clobbered DeLand
and whipped Apopka on an elec­
trifying run by Vince Presley that
set up a TD last Friday. Lyman is 2-1
and alive, too.
Which leaves us Apopka, ta k e
Howell and DeLand. The bull dogs'

offense is best left unsaid. The
defense is pretty good. You ran
write them off at (H. They could be
the spoiler, though.
Write off the Silver Hawks, too.
This isn’t close to being the team it
was last year. Only one offensive
starter returned. Give departing
Sam Weir credit, he knows when to

Ro.
The Blue Darters of Chip Gierke
are done too. Apopka is 1-3. No way.
Here's a look at how they stand
W
3
2
3
2
2

Seminole
Sp. Creek
Mainland
U Brantley
Lyman

L
0
0
1
1
1

The Fighting Semlnoles are the
hottest team. They have won four in
a row after losing to 3A power
Titusville Astronaut. Seminole has
beaten ta k e Howell (M ), Apopka
(26-131 and DeLand (7-0).
Here’s what remains for Jerry
Posey's crew;
Oct. 24 takeland Kathleen
Oct. 30
ta k e Brantley
Nov. 6
Lyman
Nov. 13
At Mainland
Nov. 20
Spruce Creek
The schedule favors Santord,
somewhat. Three of the remaining
four district games are at home. The
K athleen gam e, of course, is
meaningless, but Seminole wants a
victory to sustain its winning streak.
However, the Tribe is past the soft
part of the schedule. And it was soft.
The following week should be a
war—defensively. Both the Patriots
and Sanford have excellent defenses

N u ...

Elmore is good, but his age may
show down the stretch. Also, the
Patriots are no San Diego Chargers
on offense, so the Hawks' defense Is
suspect.

Sam
Cook
Spurts Editor

led by big-play performers. Antonio
Davis is averaging 14 tackles a
game the past two weeks. Bill
Painter is fast-coming at defensive
tackle and reliable Vince Edwards is
at safety. Patriots, Otis Cliatt, Fred
Baber and Kyle Davis are all
superb.
If Brantley loses to Seminole, it
might be out of it. It’s a must win for
Dave Tullls' boys, while Sanford can
still lose one game and not seriously
hurt itself because the Tribe plays
the remaining contenders—Lyman,
Mainland and Spruce Creek—in
succession. The finale with the
Hawks could be for all the jewels.
Nobody seems to know much
about Spruce Creek. Kenny Flowers,
the Hawks talented halfback, broke
two good runs against Brantley, but
was controlled the rest of U&gt;e time.
His longest run was 14 yards. Here’s
a look at the Hawks' slate;
Oct. 23
Oct. 30
Nov. 6
Nov. 13
Nov. 20

N u th iri

ta k e Howell
Mainland
At Apopka
At Lyman
At Sanford

The stage is set for another Spruce
Creek orange-swallowing act. The
Hawks have a somewhat easy
schedule for the next three dates
with Howell, Mainland and Apopka.
For the final two, though, it gets
tough. And both games—Lyman and
Seminole—are on the visitors' turf.
Sophomore q u arte rb a ck Mike

Mainland is 3-1, somehow. It faces
a murderous schedule, though.

Oct. 23
Oct. 30
Nov. 6
Nov. 13
Nov. 20

At ta k e Brantley
At Spruce Creek
Titusville
Sanford
Seabreeze

The guy that made out Florida
State's schedule must have spent the
night before in Daytona Beach. The
chances are good Mainland will lose
its next two games and be out of it.
If it splits or sweeps, then
T itusville m anhandles the Buc­
caneers in a game that means
nothing before M ainland hosts
Sanford.
The patsy game, Seabreeze, is
scheduled last, where the Titusville
game should be to get them ready
for post-season play. About Nov. 6,
Coach Bob Wallace will be looking
for a breatlier, but he'll get powerful
Titusville.
Lyman isn't silting too bad. The
Greyhounds are idle this week,
which is important this time of the
year to heal. Junior lineman Gene
Allen, however, found time for a new
break Wednesday in practice.
"Yeah, Gene broke his nose,"
informed Scott Wednesday night.
“ He'll be all right, though. It's the
third time he broke it. He’s getting
used to it."
Lyman, like Seminole, has three of
its last four at home.

Y e t

Oct. 30
Nov. 6
Nov. 13
Nov. 20

ta k e Howell
At Sanford
Spruce Creek
ta k e Brantley

Should the 'Hounds dispose of
Howell, the Sanford game becomes'}
very pivotal. A loss really hurts, but *
a victory would put them in the
driver's seat.
Lyman, like many of its con-. ,
ference opponents, sports a solid ,
defense led by ta n za Collier and
C arl Q uesinberry
(five
In­
terceptions).
The offense has all the makings of
greatness—Vince Presley and Theo
Jones running, J e rry A lle y 's
passing and several fine re c e iv e rs- ,
but the offensive line is young which .
ka n l 4
ka 'Hounds
'Unnn/ll Ml
holds back
the
on /Wiatinfl
occasion.
Still, a dangerous, young, Improving
team.
Seminole and Lyman are very
similar. Having taken care of the •:
easy part of the Five Star schedule •;
without too much damage, they
anxiously look ahead.
It Is what lies in the forefront for
)l
the Semlnoles and Greyhounds,
however, which will determine If
they are of championship caliber.

Lucarelli
Scored TD
The winning touchdown In ta k e
M ary's victory over Crooms
Tuesday night was scored by
freshman Charlie Lucarelli, not
Jim M o t t lion. The Lake Mary
program Incorrectly Identifies
Morrison as number 31, which is
tacareUI’i number. The Evening
Herald regrets the error.

Shepherd Drops A ll Souls, 2-0

TV STARS?

Good Shepherd pushed across two goals in the second half
Wednesday night to knock off All Souls, 2d, in soccer action
In Orlando.
Next Wednesday, All Souls plays St. Mary Magdalene at
St. Vianney’s Field in Orlando.

Former Major League second
baseman Jerry Klndall runs
some Sanford baseball players
through a fielding drill at San­
ford Memorial Stadium Wed- ‘
nesday afternoon. Klndall, who
played with the Chicago Cubs
and Minnesota Twins, along with
ex-Twln manager Frank QuilUd
and Florida Baseball School'-'
operator Wes Rinker are putting
together a package of 19 In­
structional baseball films which ,,
they hope to market to coaches ,
and players throughout the
United States.

Football Tickets A t Local Spots
Tickets for Friday’s football game between Seminole
High and lakeland Kathleen High are available at
Seminole High School, Sanford and Lakeview Middle
Schools, Crooms High School, Sweeney's Office Supply and
the downtown Flagship Bank.
The cost is $2.25.

Golden Gloves Set For Sanford
Chuluota boxing promoter Kent Foyer has called a press
conference for today at 4 p.m. to announce that the SanfordCentral Florida District Golden Gloves Championships will
be held at Sanford's Civic Center.
The conference will be held at the Greator Sanford
Chamber of Commerce Building at 400 E. First St. Foyer, a
veteran boxing promoter in the area, and former Sanford
fighter Vic "Taco” Perex, were instrumental in bringing
the Jan. 22-23 tournament to Sanford.
Interested parties arc Invited to attend.

Sanford 800, Celeste Remain Unbeaten; Celery Squeezes Orange
IUwSiy'1 tester iateOvit
Stnford 100 vt. AMIttond » 1 #t Atom*
Elfmtntsry 4:40 p.m.
Santord 000 vt. Maitland 701 at Aloma
Clamantary 1 p.m.
Santord OSO vt. Maitland t il el Aloma
Elamantary t a m
Santord ZOO vt. F.C. Unlttd 770 at Rad Dug
Park.
Santord » t . . . Sya.
Santord 4S0 vt Santord 400 at Santord Air
port.

By SAM COOK

Herald Sports Editor
Sanford's Jon Williams scored three
goals and goalie Joshua Ferguson threw
up an invisible wall around the net as
Sanford 100 blanked College Park 001,30, Saturday to remain undefeated in
Sanford Soccer Club action.
victory Improved the age eight and
under group of Coach Gene Williams to 3The

SANFORD 2S1-7, M i lalaad ISM
Chan Tyre banged home two first-half
goals and assisted on one in the second
half as Sanford Celeste Industries 201
won its fourth straight without a loss.

I w

l a t a r i

l o t f l f

Steve Sapp. Ricky Shea picked up a 44
edge on a feed from Whigham.

•• f &gt;

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A71 k. • 0

Ft
».*

is*&gt;

t*.

Downtown Orlando Mt-t,
Sanford 6664

Downtown Orlando collected Its second
victory of the day over a Sanford team
when It scored a goal in each half to whip
000. It was the second setback of the year
for the Raiders to go with two victorias.
"Sanford played well," said coach Tom
Brewer. "Orlando scared on a penalty
kick and then a regular kick.
Goalie Matt Williams stopped 10 rizota
on the goal In a losing effort
Winter Park MM, Sanfsrd 400-1
Sanford Kiwanls 400 received a goal
from Tim Deppen on an assist from
Danny Kearns, but couldn't stay with
powerful Winter Park.

m

%
-

"Sheldon Richards turned In a
i'j
performance on defense and Hal Posy
did a good Job In the goal," said coach
Suzy Reno who saw her age 14 "A" team ''
Improve to 3-1 for the year.

Orlando held a narrow 14 edge at*'
halftime, but scared two goals to offset
Helms doliar's solo in the final half. The,;
age 12 and under team plays F. C. United ^
at Red Bug Park Saturday.

Cory Stlckney had a hnnd in the next
two goals as he scared on a pais from
Mike A1liter and then assisted Pastls for
a 6-1 bulge. Rusty Smith, on a nice feed
from Mitch Albert, booted home the final
Celeste goal.
Coach Wayne Albert's team outshot
Maitland, 2M, for the game. The lone
Maitland goal was scared on a deflection
off a Sanford player.

pimn

/ •

ev aeua

boots a shot at Maitland during Saturday's soccwr action.

’•’SJtr

'M ■*-.

i’j

Despite an unassisted goal from Jaaon
Helms dollar, Sanford Boatworks 306!
dropped its first game of the seaaon to
Downtown Orlando after two wins.

y jF M /f ■i

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both added unassisted goals before Sapp
notched his second on a feed from
Richards and Richards ended the rout
with his last goal on a pass from
Whlgham.

Downtown Orlandod, Sanford 206-1

m

£ 3H S

Whlgham helped out Matt Albert on the
first of his two goals and then Whigham
banged one home for himself for the 8-0
halftime bulge.
In the * cond hajf, SapP and Albert

In the second half "Quick Chris" Ray
took a feed from Nicky Pastls and scored
for Sanford's 3-1 lead. Chuck Roll han­
dled a pass from Tyre to boost the
margin to 4-1.

0 for the season. Saturday, 100 travels to
"Chris Ray shut out the Maitland team
Aloma Elementary to play Maitland 103
as goalie in the second half," pointed out
in search of victory number four.
Albert. "We had outstanding Jobs from
"It was a hard-fought game,” said Steve Edwards, Danny B adrach, Brent
Williams about the match. "Both teams Posey and David Farr on defense."
gave a great effort."
Sanford 406-16, b a th O ria*e-3
Jon, eon of Williams the coach, tallied
Sanford Celery City Printing Co. 410
the Brat part of his hat trick in the first
continued to crush the opposition as its
half to give Sanford a 1-4) edge. He added
dynamic duo of scorer Durrand Richards
two more goals in the second half to
and feeder Shea Whigham manhandled
cement the win.
South Orange.
Although Joshua Letchworth didn't
Richards turned in the hat trick,
score, Williams died him for five shod ecoring two goals In the first half as
on goal and keeping the ball alive for the Sanford built a 64 margin, and one in the
other Mis.
second half.
Teddy Holloway, Jason Wakaven,
Whlgham assisted on four goak for the
Paul Guarino, James Stewart and Kris day, Including two for the foot of
Eaterson were all acclaimed by Williams Richards. In all, the twoeon &lt;• combined
for their defensive efforts.
Z i J t W A i y ' w i i jK » v
for four goals and five assists
"Hoikway hustled really well and
Tim Roberts picked up the second
Guarino wgs e * e r defensively," ob­
Sanford's Travis Groovar
Cekry goal of the game on an assist from
served WUHams.

w

« -t;

the
slaught, Sherry Rumler did a good lo t In
the goalie according to coach
S n y Reno.
i
ch Susy
In a battle between Sanford 14 yewpoke, Sanford 400 dashes with Seafood
400 Seturdey at the Sanford Airport
In other 10 year-old and under action,
the Sanford New Smyrna Speedway 000
battle with Maitland 001 will be
reecheduled at another time.

1

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V r

«&lt; r

*»c.r

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* * —Evtnlng Htrald, Sanford, FI.

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Thursday, Oct. 12, It ll

Gossage Nails Down 3-0 Win, Yanks L/p 2

John's Sinker Deepens Dodgers' Despair
NEW YORK (UPI) - Tommy John,
using his sinker to perfection, drove his
ex -te am m ate s’ cham pionship hopes
deeper Into the ground Wednesday night
with seven Innings of three-hit pitching in
helping the New York Yankees defeat the
lx* Angeles Dodgers 34 and take a
commanding two-game lead In the World
Series.
I^ rry Milboume's two-out, run-scoring
double in the fifth inning, which came
after an error by second baseman Dave
lopes, provided the only run John and
reliever Rich Gossage needed to defeat
Burt Hooton and complete a home sweep
. for the Yankees in the first two games of
the Series. The Yankees added a pair of
dghth-lnning Insurance runs on an RBI
Single by Bob Watson and a sacrifice fly
by Willie Randolph.
After a travel day Thursday, the bestof-seven Series resumes at Io s Angeles
Friday night, beginning at 8:30 p.m.
EDT, with rookie left-hander Dave
RlghetU pitching for New York and
rookie left-hander Fernando Valenzuela
going for the Dodgers. It will mark the
first Ume since 1950 that two rookie
starters will oppose each other in the
Series.
John, 38, who pitched for the Dodgers
against the Yankeci in the 1977 and 1978
seasons, struck out four and allowed only
three outfield outs before leaving the
game for a pinch hitter In the seventh.

losing the first two games. In the NL
cham pionship playoff, they trailed
Montreal 2-1 and came back to capture
the series on the road.
Steve Garvey, one of the few Dodgers
to look sharp thus far, admitted that
playing two consecutive tension-packed
series may have taken a toll.
"All I can say is the day off will do us
good," said Garvey. " It’s not like we are
getting overwhelmed, we're just not
executing properly. It’s a simple matter
of their pitching overpowering our hitting
right now."
The Yankee formula Involves solid
B U R T HOOTON
TO M M Y LA SO RD A
L A R R Y M IL B O U R N E
TOM M Y JO H N
starting pitching, a nearly invincible
... w a s te d e f f o r t
... w o rr ie d s k ip p e r ?
... c lu tc h d o u b le
bullpen, timely hitting and virtually ... s e v e n s c o r e le s s f r a m e s
flawless defense.
tough enough. Needing three is virtually then helped himself with an outstanding Valenzuela against Yankee rookie left­
In this case, the starting pitcher was
hander Dave Rlghetti Friday night, may
former Dodger Tommy John, who went
impossible. But down 34, the Dodgers defensive play to end the Inning.
Garvey led off with a single, moved to offer another lineup change. Dodger
seven innings and allowed Just three
might just as well have tried to scale the
second on an infield out and beat short­ outfielder Reggie Smith has said he will
singles. He gave way ot the start of the
Empire State Building.
eighth to Rich Gossage, who registered
"We've seen some outstanding pit­ stop Milboume's throw to third on Pedro ask l osorda to play Game 3.
Smith has been reduced to pinchhis usual near Impeccable job of stopping
ching in these two gam es," admitted Guerrero's grounder, setting up an op­
hitting duties after undergoing surgery
Io so rd a." ( Ron) Guidry was outstanding portunity. But Landreaux struck out.
the opponent.
With two out, Steve Yeager rifled a for his right shoulder.
last night. John was his usual type of.
The Dodgers blew any chance lliey had
For the Yankees. Reggie Jackson,
pitcher, getting the hitters on the ground. shot through the box. John knocked it
of reaching Gossage by allowing two runs
Then you have that flame thrower down with his glove, picked it up and hampered by a left calf injury for the
in the eighth. Pinch hitter I&gt;ou Pinlella,
threw to first Just in time to nail Yeager first two games, may play Friday.
Graig Nettles and Bob Watson singled for
(Gossage).”
Whether either of the Reggies will
one run. Nettles and Watson advanced on
Just as they did in the Montreal series, with first baseman Watson coming off
a wild plckoff throw by reliever Dave
the Dodgers squandered scoring oppor­ the bag to make a fine catch and tag make a difference, no one knows. One
tunities. They had a chance to make a despite being rammed by the baserun- thing appears sure. Unless the Dodgers
Stewart and after Rick Cerone received
do something in a hurry, Stelnbrenner
run for hard-luck loser Burt Hooton in the ner.
an intentional walk, Willie Randolph
fifth but Ken londreaux failed to deliver
The Dodgers, who will send rookie could wind up being as silent as the Dos
lofted a sacrifice fly.
sensation
Fernando Angeles bats.
a run from third with one out and John southpaw
Trying to score one run off Gossage is

W o r ld So rfo s
Gossage allowed one hit over the final
two innings to pick up his second save of
the Series.
As lias been the case in the previous
meetings between these clubs since 1977,
it was a defensive play the Yankees
made and one the Dodgers didn't that
proved to be the difference.
"We don't want to let lx&gt;s Angeles win
one and get off the ground," said lo rry
Mllboume, whose fifth-inning double
drove home Willie Randolph for a 14
lead. "We want to end it as fast as
possible."
The Yankees own a powerful ad­
v antage. Only seven team s have
rebounded to win a World Series after
losing the first two games. Instead of
appearing in a position to become the
eighth, the Dodgers look like a candidate
to become the 14th team to lose in four
straight.
“We’re two down," said Dodgers
Manager Tom losorda. "It was a tough
loss because we were looking to win
tonight. Now we must go back and play
some kind of baseball. Any time you are
down 9-2, it is tough to come back. But I
believe we can do it again."
In the Notional league West playoff
scries, tire Dodgers became the first
team to win a best-of-five series after

Rookies

Wild Rumors Fly Around Series,
Lemon To Houston For Virdon?

Confident Yanks Send
Righetti Vs. Valenzuela
V ALENZUELA
... D o d g e r s 'S a v io u r ?
NEW YORK (UPI) - There is an
abundance of confidence filtering
through the New York Yankees.
Oh, they'll all issue the standard lines
about the l» s Angeles Dodgers being a
fine, competitive team that can come
back from tl*e dead. To a man, they all
have the compliments ready and will
quickly n p n a a undying respect and f u r
for their west coast rivals.
The Series now heads back to Los
Angeles where the Dodgers will pin their
hopes on rookie sensation Fernando
Valenzuela in Game 3 Friday night.
Valenzuela flew back to I/ m Angeles

W ednesday afternoon to rest. The
Yankees will counter with their own
rookie sensation, Dave Righetti.
But Tommy John and Rich Gossage
had a blast Wednesday night, combining
on on easy four-hitter to give the Yanks a
34 victory and a 24 lead in the World
Series. So easy, in fact, that it was almost
frightening.
John, who spent much of his fine career
with the Dodgers, baffled his ex-mates
with a vicious sinker that had 1/ m
Angeles hitters pounding ground balls all
over the infield. He knew the hitters
intimately and even though lie later

D A V E R IG H E T T I
... h a r d - th r o w in g ro o k ie

denied it, his time spent in Dodger blue
had to help.
"Sometimes knowledge can be a
dangerous thing," said John. "If you
know too much about a team, you tend to
forget about your own game. I con­
centrated on pitching my game as if they
w a n tha CtncinnaU Rada or the Detroit
Tigers or the Milwaukee Brewers.”
And when the seventh inning had come
and gone, John had thrown a mere 77
pilches, 5) for strikes, and Gossage came
In to tidy up.

Turner Wants Torre To Whistle Dixie
NEW YORK (UPI) - If Ted Turner,
the maverick owner of the Atlanta
Braves, has his way, Joe Torre will be
whistling Dixie by the weekend.
Torre, dismissed as manager of the
New York Meta Oct. 4, is Turner's
personal choice to take over (lie
Braves' helm and Torre practically
upstaged Gome 2 of the World Series
between the New York Yankees and
l/&gt;s Angeles Dodgers Wednesday night

by making an Bppearance on the field
before the contest.
Surrounded by members of the
media, Torre emphasized he has not
agreed to any term s with the Braves,
pointing out he hasn’t even spoken with
Turner yet.
Turner said lie wanted to name his
manager on Friday because that’s the
only day this week he'll be in Atlanta.
He dispatched A tlanta G eneral

Manager John Mullen and Executive
Vice President A1 Thomwell to New
York in hopes of signing Torre, but a
snag has developed about the length of
the contract.
The Braves have been offering either
a one or two-year contract, but Torre is
holding out for three years. When he
signed his last contract with the Meta,
Torre Insisted on a two-year deal.

I/OS ANGEI.ES (UPI) - You hear all
kinds of crazy rumors already about
what will happen after the World
Scries. Things like Bob U nion being let
go by the Yankees so he can join his old
buddy, Al Rosen, at Houston, where Bill
Virdon supposedly is on the outs and
headed for Atlanta.
That's what these rumors are, crazy.
For starters, Virdon has another year
to go on his two-year contract with the
Astros and Rosen guarantees he'll be
back with them next season.
For another thing, Lemon is being
allowed the luxury of calling his own
■hot whether he'll manage the Yankees
again next eeaeon. And if you want to
know who says so, his boss, George
Stelnbrenner, does—a s late as Wed­
nesday night Just after the Yankees liad
blanked the Dodgers 34 at Yankee
Stadium to go two games up on them in
the World Series.
Pointedly asked whether he has any
plans for making a managerial change
after the Series, Stelnbrenner was very
firm in his Immediate answer.
"No plans whatsoever," he insisted.
“U rn is part of the family. He's going
to n uke the decision, not me, and I hope
it's affirmative. He doesn't come in and
ask, ‘How much are you going to pay
me?' or 'What's the length of my
contract?' All he says is 'Just tell me
where you want me, boss, and I'll be
there.’ Well, we want him back

Milton
Rlchman

managing.”
That's fine because it ties in perfectly
with Lemon’s plans. He wants to
manage the Yankees again next year,
and If you're curious as to who says
that, he does.
H« was sitting alone a t the desk in his
office after Wednesday night's win over
the Dodgers, with most of the media
congregated outside in the clubhouse
around fellows like Tommy John,
Goose Gossage, Larry Mllboume and
Bobby Watson, when I asked him
whether he really wanted to come back
and manage the club next year.
"George and I have to talk when this
thing is all over," he replied, his voice
hoarse and a couple of octaves lower
than usual due to a cold he has had the
past few days. "Whatever happens,
happens. I think I'd like to be back."
That's Bob Lemon for you. He never
pushes, never tries to muscle his way
and takes whatever comes although it's
clear enough that after having been out
of harness the past two years, not
managing that is, and getting another

Chowan Standouts

These three talented ex-Oviedo Lions have been part Murfreesboro is expected to win the INI Region I
of the reason for Chowan College's volleyball success title. From left to right are, Judy Llagard, daughter
this year, the Mnrfreeabaro, (N.C.) school had an of Brantley Ltngard of Oviedo, Cheryl Hendrix,
impressive 144 record at mid-season. Coach Janet daughter of Walter and Bernice Hendrix of Oviedo
Collins' squad has been ranked as high as 14th in the and Armella Alexander, daughter of Peariee
nation by the National Junior College Association. Alexander of Oviedo.

11 • -• *•

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taste of it now, he'd like to give it
another try next year.
The way George Stelnbrenner talks,
I’m inclined to believe I&gt;cmon will at
least start next season as the Yankees’
manager. And if some other club
doesn't hire Dick Williams as its
m an ag er in the m eantim e, he’ll
probably wind up with a job in the
Yankees' front office. And that way,
he'd be readily available to manage the
club any time Stelnbrenner felt a
change was needed or U nion thought
he had enough.
But the Yankees had made up their
minds to relcas* Yogi Berra as their
manager and wanted to bring In Keane.
In the end, Berra was fired and
replaced as Y ankee m an ager by
Keane, after Keane resigned with the
Cardinals and was in turn replaced by
Red Schoendlenst.
Sounds crazy, doesn't it? But even
weirder things are happening now.
Would you believe that one of the
clubs which made a managerial change
recently had Walt Alston on its list of
candidates? It's true. Next thing you
know, old Charlie Grimm will be get­
ting another call.
Bob U m on isn't going anywhere,
though. He's staying on as the Yankees’
manager and if you'd like to check It
out, all you have to do is ask George
Stelnbrenner.

�1

s •

E»«nlng H«r«kl. Sanford, FI.

Scorecard
Jal

A

O

(G attl
10 40 5 00
1 Caray
too
0 (6 (1 19 10; P (611 119 6*; Tbi
(161) 117 60
Ei(hth (am t
0 Said Mendi
11 60 7 (0 1 40
(Bilbao Atcoitia
am 1(0
1Uriiar Eloria
1(0
Q (6 0 41I t ; P 1(6) 17( S«i T I I

AlOrlandb-Stminolt
Wednesday night retullt
First game
7 RiCd Zarraga
16 60 7 (0 140
5 Pita 016
4 00 100
1Lecona Coiri
7 60
0 IS -I) 70 6«i T (7-1-11 710 10
*11 SM (0
Second | im i
Ninth (am t
0 Durango Kid
tUritarZubi
17 60 4 70 1 00
Arana
11 00 4 70 4(0
10 40 1 60
1 Simon Coiri
s 40 5 40 7 Catti Zarraoa
10ita Otari
)*o
6 0lea Cltonlt
4(0
O (1-61 41 40; P (6 1) 117 00; T (6
0 II ( ) 54 4(i P ( I 71 417 40; T ( (M l 41) 00
1*1 179.6*1 DO (7 *1 114 tO
10th (am t
Third (am t
I 70 4 70 1 70
1 Oita Zarraqa
10 40 1 40 5 60 6 Said
1Manolo
4 30 1 40
4 0guiia Atano
5 60 II (0
4 7arrt
} (0
2Lecona Cilonii
7 40
O (1-41 It 40; P (6-1) 111.90; T (6011-41 61 00, P I14I 144 60; T &lt;1
1-4) lit 60
6-1) I K 60
11th (am t
Fourth (am t
9 40 9 60 7 70
6 Ira Arana
14 60 5 60 6 70 4AjuriaZarre
I
Bilbao
Zarrata
5 (0 1 60
ILeour Coiri
4 70 5 00
lU
rita
r
Mmdi
5 70
7 Pita Otari
) tQ
O 11-41 11 60; P (4-1) 41 60; T Bi
0 (1 61 50 40; P (6-11 90 90; T (6
(1 4 1) 177 60
171 491 6*
119h (am t
Filth (am t
51 00 7 m *00
1 Said Atano
6 (0 4 40 7 60 6 Bilbao Zubi
1 Manolo Mend;
4 20 1 00
1 Bilbao Vegat
) to 160
7Gatti Vtqat
100
7 Pila Atcoitia
170
O I ) *111 60; P (6-1) 11)10; T 160(1-111 4 1 (;P (1 -I) 109.70; T ( l 1-1) A ~ M l* ! Handlt 5111.714
1-7) 149 6*
tilth (am t
(Rica Vegat
17 00 7 40 6 00
ISIm onEloria
7 00 5 60 W e d n e s d a y '* World Strict
4 Durango Kid Ola
5 70
Linttcore
0 ( 1 0 IS 60; P 1* 1) 74 40; T ( I
By Untied Prttt International
141 )0( 00
(Oame 1)
Seventh (am t
Lot Ang
000 000 000— 0 4 7
6 Ricardo
9 40 ( 70 4 40 NY
000 010 0 2 * - 16 1

World Morion

&amp;

©

lohn.
Gottagt
(I )
and
Cfront. Moot on. Fortttr (7)
Howe (I), Strwart (*) and
Yeager. Sciotcia (I). W— John
(I 0i L-Hooton (0 1).
World t t r it i Schtdvlt
•t Umttd P rtH International
(New York Itadt terlet, 2 0
Oct 70 — New York 5. Lot
Angelet 1
Oct 71 — Ntw York 1. Lot
Angelet 0
Oct 71 — New York al Lot
Angelet. I 10 p m EOT
Oct 24 — Ntw York al Lot
Angeltt. 4.25 p m E D T
«Oc1 IS — New York al Lot
Angelet. 4 45 p m EST
&lt; Oct 77 - Lot Angelet al New
York. ( 70 p m EST
* Oct 7t — Lot Angelet at New
York. I 20 p m EST

Dealt
Spoett Trantacttent
Wtdnttday
By United P rttt International
Battball
Philadelphia — Obtained pitcher
Dave RajHch Irom Teiat lor
intielder Ramon Avlltt
St Loun - Sold pitcher Bob
Syktt to Ihe Ntw York Yanktrt;
purchated outlielder Willie McGee
Irom the Yankeet' larm lean at
Nathville ot the Southern League,
purchated catcher George Biork
man. pitcher Ralph Citarella and
intielder Kelly Parit Irom Iheir
larm learn al Springlleld ot the
International League, told pitcher
Jetl Little to the Mmnrtota larm

0

61 Toledo ol the International
League, purchated pitcher Mike
Kinnunen Irom Toledo
Batketball
Indiana —
Signed guard
Raymond Towntend to a 7 year
contract
Football
Altanta — Placed reterve
linebacker Neal Mutter on Inlured
reterve. tigned Iree agent
detentive back Tom Moriarty.
Chicago — Placed quarterback
Mike Phippt on Inlured reserve;
tigned kick returnerwide receiver
Emery Morehead
Detroit — Releated linebacker
Charlie Weaver; tigned detentive
back Jetl Oelaney
St Louit — Signed linebacker
Doak Field; placed linebacker
Tim Kearney on injured reterve
San Diego — Acquired on
waivert detentive back Doug
Beaudoin ot Miami; placed talely
Frank Duncan on injured reterve
Soccer
Seattle — Midfielder Alan
Hudton agreed to return at player
coach

Unit Botk
ZINN BECK LEAO UE
Won Loti Pet.
II
1 (46
Hollins College
Seminole CC
6
5 545
Fla BS Red
1 (
797
Fir BS Blue
1 (
797
Tuesday's Retullt
Rollins College 1. Seminole CC 2
Thursday's game
Fla BS Blue vt Fla. BS Red

0

,

P ro

-

75

9

B F G o o d r ic h

Hotkey

NHL Standing*
By United Prett International
Walet Conference
Adamt Olvition
W L T Pit.
11
Botton
Quebec
10
9
Montreal
9
Buffalo
4
Hartford
Patrick Oivition
Philadelphia
4 0
NY Itlandert
4 I
Pilttburgh
1 4
NY Ranger*
2 5
Wathmgton
I 6
Campbell Conleronce
Norrit Oivition
W L T Ptt.
Mmnetota
I
7
Winnipeg
Detroit
Toronto
Chicago
St Louit
Smythe Oivition
Edmonton
10
5
4
Lot Angelet
Vancouver
7
1
Colorado
Calgary
1
(Top lour m each dlvition
quality
lor Stanley Cup playoff* 1
Wednesday's Retullt
Quebec 6. Wash 1
Lot Ang 5. NY Rangers 2
Colo 4, Toronto 4 (tie)
Winnipeg 2. Bull 2 (tie)
Montreal 1. Chi 1 (tie)
Edmonton 5. Hartford 1

S e r v ic e
4 WHEEL BRAKE JOB

74.95

(m o s t c a r s )

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OIL CHANGE, FILTER &amp; LUBE

(m o s t c a r s &gt;

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Smith, six feet, one inch, guard, LaGrange.
"Any time you have a new coach and a lot of
new players it is going to take time to put
something together," Corless aid. "I'm ex­
cited about the possibilities, but I also realize
that we have a big challenge to do the Job that
needs to be done.
“My first priority is to blend the old with the
new. The returning players have an excellent
enthusiasm about our new style of play. The
faster tempo will mean more players will have
an opportunity to participate.
"The new players will give the team a new
look and added depth at each position. My
hope is that our fans and supporters will see
above all else a real 'team spirit' and team
unity."

WINNINO TEAM
DALLAS
BUFFALO
NEW YORK JETS
NEW ENGLAND
CLEVELAND
CINCINNATI
SAN DIECO
KANSAS C ITY
PHILADELPHIA
ATLAN TA
MINNESOTA
O ETR O IT
SAN FRANCISCO
PITTSBURGH

U A O
I l v 9

G ATES

TR 1D O N H 0 8 E C LA M P S '

c l if f h a n o e r s

OAME*
W E E K O F O C T O B E R .lt, 19(1

____

SURE
STOP
BRAND/

LAGRANGE, Ga. — I-aGrange College's
Panthers will go into the 1981-82 season with
eight returning players and nine outstanding
newcomers, according to EC's new basketball
coach, Hugh C. Corless.
In beginning a new era in Panther basket­
ball history Corless said, "We will be
rebuilding this year with a solid nucleus of
veterans and a host of new players challenging
for a position. All positions are open and the
competition should bring out the best in
everyone.
"The Panthers will try a new style of play
with a quick tempo set by a pressing full-court
defense and a quick-shooting fast break of­
fense. Transfers should hold the key to any
chances of a winning season."
The 1981-82 season will begin on Saturday,
Nov. 7, at 3 p.m. when the Panthers play
Piedmont College, a GIAC opponent, In the I£
gymnasium as a part of the annual
Homecoming festivities.

There are four freshmen — Paul Minter, six
feet, three inches, guard-forward, Atlanta;
Brian Sanl, six feet, six inches, forward,
Waycross, G a.; David Shealy, five feet, eleven
inches, guard, Fayetteville, Ga.; and Rick

si
f?

S p e c ia ls

Hanson Bolsters
LaGrange Attack

The eight returning lettermen are Mitch
Hanson, six feet, seven inches, Junior forward
from Lym an; Wayne Johnson, six feet, one
inch, Junior guard, U G range; Doug Mason,
six feet, one Inch, sophomore guard, Tampa;
Greg Nable, six feet, seven Inches, senior
forward, Tallahassee; Bill Sexton, five foot,
nine Inches, senior point guard, Selma, Ala.;
Carl Sills, six feet, four inches, Junior guardforward, Culhbert; Ken Smith, six feet, four
inches, senior guard-forward, Tallapoosa; and
Richard Svacha, six feet, nine inches, senior
center, Auburn, Ala.
Five new transfers include Ken Alexander,
five feet, eleven inches, Junior guard, Phoenix
City, Ala.; Jeff Cotton, six feet, six inches, and
Sam Cotton, six feet, five inches, both Junior
forwards and brothers from 1-aGrange; Frank
Hall, six feet, three inches, Junior guardforward, West Point; and Jerome Woodyard
six feet, one inch, Junior guard, U G range.

Thursday. Oct. » . 1MN.VA

I;

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LIONS’ BiST

2 5 4 -1 7 2 2

Oviedo football player Carl Jones (left) receives the Lion Player of the Week
award from Jim Barnett (second from light) as Oviedo coach Joe Mon­
tgomery and cheerleader Robin Eward look on. Jones, a senior quarterback,
threw for 200 yards and ran for 67 as the Lions squashed Lake Weir.

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Thursday, Oct, tt, ifil

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That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.

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OURSELVES
Evaning Herald, Sanford, FI.

Thursday,Ocf. 11,1M1-1B

In And Around Geneva

Halloween Carnival Bigger And Better Than Ever
(Jet ready Geneva. The carnival is
coming!
The Geneva Community Hall will be
buning the night of October 31st eqpimencing at 5:30 p.m. when the annual
Halloween Carnival officially begins.
What a lineup of fun-filled events the
Geneva Historical and Genealogical
Society me niters have planned. The list
is almost endless - bingo, country store ta
boutique of crafts and used household
items i, the haunted house, a costume
parade with prizes to be awarded, an old
fashioned hayride, men's leg contest and
dozens of children’s games.
Here are the particulars. Bingo will
start at 5:30 p.m. inside the hall and
continue all night. The prizes for bingo
winners are passes to the movies fur-

Don’t miss the Men’s Leg Contest — It
is the laugh of the year. The contestants
stand behind a curtain that allows only
their legs to be viewed! Prizes will be
awarded for boniest legs, best dressed
legs, hairiest legs and most athleticlooking legs.

Lou

Childers
Geneva
Correspondent

349-5790

nished by the Santoro Plaza Rocking
Chair Theatre.

If you have a hunger pang hit you while
you are enjoying the evening you may
partake of a good hot dog or hamburger
sandwich or platter that will include
sandwich, beans, slaw and pickle. And, it
won’t cost you an arm and a leg, either.

The costum e p arad e will sta rt
promptly at 6:30 p.m. and the winners
will receive certificates for free pizzas Dogs will be 50 cents and burgers 60
from Mr, Ed’s In Sanford. And, the cents; platters, 11.15 and 11.25. Cokes,
winners of the Men's Leg Contest will coffee and donuts will be sold, also.
receive complimentary dinners from
Also in the food department will be a
Western Sizzlin' Steak in Sanford.
Cake Walk and Bake Sale.

The first time you attend the Geneva
The tickets for the children's games—
the duck pond, balloon darts, ring toss, Halloween Carnival you w ill swear there
apple bob, weight guessing, softball toss, couldn’t be "that many people in
basketball throw, and others — will Seminole County", let alone in Geneva.
range in price from 15 cents to 50 cents.
That's what Susan Chase thought last
"Funny money" will be given to the year when she and her husband Steve
winners of each game, and may be ex­ attended for the first time with their two
changed at the end of the evening at the children, Tracy, 5, and Matthew, now 19
redemption center for some mighty fine months. This year, Susan found herself
more than just attending — she is
prizes.
chairman of the games. “ It has taken a
All barriers are down at carnival time. lot of hard work to get organized," Susan
The youngsters attending will range in said. "1 called over 80 people seeking
age from 8 days to 80 years young. There
workers to help with the gome booths,
will be newcomers and oldtimers — a and now have 21 commitments." She
chance for country neighbors to get to added, "The reason I wanted to gel in­
meet the new faces and greet the volved is for the children of the com­
munity. I remember how much fun I had
familiar ones.

as a child at our school carnival, and 1
think this is a nice tradition." For more
information, you may coll her at 349-5232.
Have you driven down Old Geneva
Road this week’ If you have, you know il
has been paved.
This "m ain arte ry " which connects
"downtown" Geneva to Osceola Road
has been a washboard-type dirt road for
many years. Now that it is more heavily
traveled, especially by the huge garbage
trucks going to the county land fill, more
commonly called the dump, It was
probably a necessity to have it paved.
Wliatever the motive, we, the citizens
of Geneva, will reap the benefit of the
blacktop.

Suicide, Funeral Concern Woman

CLUB OBSERVES
20TH BIRTHDAY

C h a r te r m e m b e rs H elen N e w c o m e r, le ft, a n d L ena H a m m o n d , h o n o red
M onday a t a 20th A n n iv e rs a ry p a r ty fo r S outh S em in o le G a rd e n C lub h e ld a t
th e l a k e K a th ry n E s ta te s C lu b h o u se In C a s s e lb e rry , a d m ir e a n n iv e r s a r y
c a k e . iMrs. G e n e v iv e B row n is th e c u r r e n t c lu b p re s id e n t.

Pilot Club International
Wins Top Safety Award
Pilot Club International, one of five worldwide classified
civic-service clubs for executive and professional women,
received the highest award given to an organization by
National Safety Council. The Award of Honor was presented on
Oct. 17, to Helen Quinn, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, president of
Pilot International.
Also present was Maude Stackhouse, a member of the Pilot
Club of Mason City, Iowa, current International Safety teader
for the organization. The presentation was made at the fall
meeting of the Women's Department of the National Safety
Council held in Chicago, 111. in conjunction with the 1981
National Safety Congress.
In accepting the award. Ms. Quinn revealed that the
organization has been promoting safety activities since 1961
and that the past year was its most productive in ac­
complishments.
She expressed pleasure at having a past Pilot International
president serving as the Awards Chairman, Mrs. Margaret
Cronan of Kannapolis, N.C., then quickly added, she refused to
Judge any of our Pilot entries, Ms, Quinn credited Allstate
Insurance Company and its Foundation for her organization's
special interest in safety. "Allstate has worked closely with us
since 1961". she said.
The winning scrapbook was compiled by Mrs. Stackhouse
for Pilot International and contained local newspaper stories,
photos and other supporting evidence of safety activities
carried out by Pilot Clubs throughout the United States during
the organization’s 1980-81 fiscal year. Pilot International is
composed of over 600 Pilot Clubs and 20,000 members, many of
which are involved In their communities promoting safety on
the highways, in the home, on the streets, In the water and at
work. The entry contained many safety programs for han­
dicapped people, the elderly and youth.
Mrs. Stackhouse is well qualified to present a winning
presentation on safety. Her work in that area spans many
years. Prior to her arrival in Chicago, she attended the
combined annual meeting of National Association of Women
Highway Safety le ad e rs and National Association of
Governor’s Highway Representatives in Hershey, Pa,
The Women's Conference of the National Safety Council,
through its annual Citation Awards Program, publicly
recognizes significant safety activities by individual women

Crafts, White Elephants
Candied apples will sweeten the craft and white elephant
sale being staged Saturday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. in the
auditorium at Seminole Memorial Hospital.
Plants of all kinds will be on hand along with glassware,
kitchen gadgets, books and a limited number of furniture
items such as bar stools. Other articles include a clock,
vacuum cleaner, and an electric fingernail set.
In the baby line there is a stroller and matching bib and burb
seta. There are even items for a child’s doll.
Decorative crafts for the holidays have been readied and
there will be an array of freshly baked goodies.

atn

* *

and by women’s and parents organizations. Pilot International
has worked closely with the National Safety Council for over
twenty years in developing and implementing all phases of
safety.
In addition to the highest Aword of Honor for an
organization, the awards program recognizes individuals for
their outstanding contributions. Mrs. Jean B. Hartley of the
Pilot Club of Elberton, Ga. received the highest individual
award, the Citation for Distinguished Service. Of 21 awards
presented, seven went to Pilot International and its clubs and
members.
Pilot Club of Sanford members are serving as mediators on
citizens dispute council, and they work on cases of family
disagreement misdemeanor charges and first offenses, ac­
cording to Virginia Wood, president.

GAG
Talent
Show
The search is on (or area
talent to participate in the
Ju b ilee V ariety Show in
conjunction with the Golden
Age Games on Nov. 10 at the
Sanford Civic Center.
According
to
M artha
Yancey, coordinator of the
talent show, anyone over 55
can compete for the gold,
silver and bronze medals.
M rs. Yancey said oth er
talent, not in competition, Is
also welcome.
Those desiring to p a r­
ticipate are asked to fill out an
entiy form at the Greater
Sanford Chamber of Com­
merce.
In previous years, the talent
show has attracted a variety
of acts from a variety of ages.
L ast y e a r 's show caught
several prominent seniors in
tutus performing a hilarious
ballet canedy of errors.

DEAR ABBY: I have a
question, as you will see. I
can’t very well ask anyone
else. I am nearly 80, quite
alone in the world, and have a
progressive disease that will
eventually make me helpless.
Before that time comes, I plan
to end my own life, a choice I
believe each one of us has the
right to make for himself.
I am Jew ish, but not
Orthodox. I want a Jewish
funeral, but I need to know if a
rabbi would consent to per­
form a funeral for a person
known to have committed
suicide.
Could I be buried in a
Jewish cemetery? Please do
not Identify me or my town.
ANONYMOUS
DEAR ANONYMOUS:
According to Jewish law, our
bodies belong to God, and only
be can take a life. However,
out of consideration for the
grieving family, suicides are
entitled to have a religious
funeral and they may be
buried In a Jewish cemetery.
DEAR ABBY: Your column
telling girls that they don't
have to "go all the way” to
prove their love has made me
sit down and write this.
Why is all the blame piled
on the boys? Listen to this:
I'm a high school senior. 1
dated a girl last year (I'll call
her Angie) and she told me if I
didn't go to ted with her II
meant I didn't "love” her.
Well, 1 kept my self-respect
and my virginity, even though
Angle leaked a few rumors
around school.
A friend of mine (I'll call
him Tim) was advised by his
fath er to get som e " e x ­
perience" in his teens so that
when he gets married he will
be able to guide his bride
through the honeymoon. Tim
followed his father's advice
und as a result he contracted
syphilis! I know all this
because I was the friend who
took Tim to the clinic for
treatments.

I just want to say that it's
not only the girl who pays the
price for hasty sex. (Consider
the boy who has fathered a
child nut of wedlock.)
Please print this to let other
boys know that virginity is
nothing to be ashamed of. I'm
not a religious fanatic, I'm
just waiting for "the right
tim e."
IN NO HURRY
DEAR IN: I commend you
for your wholesome outlook
and manly sell-control. It's
loo bud Tim’s lather didn't
tell his son how to prevent the
twin tragedies ol irrespon­
sible sex: venereal disease
and unwanted pregnanrlei.
DEAR ABBY: A recent
dlieunion with my girlfriend
has led me to write to you with
this question. For the last
three months we have teen
together dally with very few
exceptions. We have dinner
together almost every night
and have slept In the same
bed (at my place) about five
nights out of the week.
She maintains an apart­
ment nearby where she keeps
her clothes and belongings
and goes there Just to change
clothes, do her laundry', pay
her bills, get her mail, etc.
1 say that we are living
together. She says we are not.
What do you say?
US IN SAN FRANCISCO
DEAR US: I say as lung ai
she maintains an Independent
residence, you are not living
together.

C O N F ID E N T IA L
TO
MUSICIAN'S WIFE: Don't
judge all women by the one*
who chase your husband.
M uslrians are constantly
being pursued by women, but
Ihosr who don't want la be
bothered know how to Ignore
the overtures when they get
the pltrh.

Getting married? Whether
you want n formal church
wedding or a simple, "doyour-own-thing" ceremony,
get Abby's new booklet. Send
t l plus a long, self-addressed,
stamped |35 rents) envelope
to: Abby’s Wedding Booklet,
12060 Hawthorne Blvd., Suite
5000, Hawthorne, Calif. 90250.

An important
part of Mlody'i
naods

_____

PEIG NOIR SET
P erio d companion lor
easy fit and elegant
beauty ... Plunging v
neckline g racefully
edged In wear easy
stretch lace
long
sleeves elaitlcited at
wrists ... silky satin
lustre finish with an
alluring lettuca Itaf
hem. Matching gown.

'YYlahy-fcAth&amp;AA
I « o lin in i| I m liin n s J u s l P o r V o n
ZOO N O R TH PARK A V fN U E

PHONE J Z Z Z J I J

S A N F O R D . F L O R IO A

'TcihionrJc.ln.ici ^ox tractive People!
SU E
STARTS

MOM. FBI.
SAT.

FRIDAY

11:00 Vo,:M
SUN.
IR S IN

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U N W IN D

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in Sofr

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Thursday, Oct. 77,1M1

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by Chic Young
because

I'd f e e l s i l l y '

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39 Obiacl of an
40 Puna
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41 Mala adult
S Tiansmittad 42 Hatty
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31 Strive
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39 Halt unit
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41 Maktt
57 Soldiers' mail 19 Author
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20 Eivmnn
SB Esau's country
21 Environment 42 Quota at an
22 Nona color
agency(abbr)
authority
24 Plan
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23 Bautitt
25 Mtmorial
43 Eitaniiva
1 Nautical mop 24 Word! (Fr) 44 Biblical
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25 Small
2 Agtt
27 Having
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28 Cooling drinks 45 Mika untidy
31 Woodworking
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27 Compriid
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29 Group of
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33 Olympic
patron taint
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41 Standar
30 Outar
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8 Biblical
34 Prict
51 Peal ragrat
32 Parcolata
brothtr
31 Look!
52 Compaia
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38 Danomination 7 Unused
point
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By BERNICE BEDE OSOL

For Friday, Ocfobor 23, JW I
E E K &amp; M EEK

____________ by H ow ie S c h n e id e r

IUHAT‘3 THE

"TLDTH IUG ! I tUAS DOIUG
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P R IS C IL L A 'S P O P

by Ed Sullivan

T H ie \ L E T S PSVCH
TEAM \ EM OUT BV
LOOKS I SINGING SOME
TOUGH' / FIGHT S O N G S.

FORGET THE
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SOME HVMNS

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by S toffvl &amp; H e im d a h l

V WONt EVEN PIT

OHBOY/W CARROT "THIS MONTHS SELECT10M

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J u st a p p iv e d .

FRA N K AND E R N E ST

by Bob Thaves

YOUR BIRTHDAY
October 23,1911
This coming year you are
likely to be luckier with
p ro jects on which you've
already spent time than you
will with new ones. Be patient,
keep the faith and finish what
you've begun.
LIBRA (Sept. 23«ct. 23)
You could become involved in
som ething very opportune
today and yet there's a chance
you won't recognize it for
w hat It is. Count your
blessings
instead
of
questioning them. Romance,
trav e l, luck, recources,
possible putfaUs and career
for the coming months are all
discussed In your Astro*
Graph which begins with your
birthday. Mail |1 for each to
Astro-Graph, Bos 489, Radio
City Station, N.Y. 10019. Be
sure to apecify birth date.
SCORPIO (O ct 24-Nov. 22)
There is a possibility that you
will treat friends far more
generously today than they'll
treat you. Be kind, but alio
protect your Interests.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) In situations where
you are strongly motivated,
success is likely today.
However, your attention span
may be rather brief and you
won’t do all you can.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) Doing the difficult is
within your capabilities
today. What you accomplish
should earn you admiration,
provided It's done with style
and taste.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
IB) Friends could be more of a
hindrance than a help today in
managing serious m atters for

you. Keep them out of the
picture, even though their
intentions are good.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
Keep to the cold, hard facta
when m aking im portant
decisions today. If you let
emotions enter the picture
they could cloud your
Judgment.
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19)
You’re good at conceiving
concepts and Ideas today, but
you could lack skill In im­
plementing them. Keep your
work on a par with your bright
thoughts.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Be complimentary today if
kudos are warranted, but
don’t lay it on too thick If they
are not. Such flattery would
work agatnst you, rather than
for you.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
Y ou're very reliab le and
responsible today in dealings
with outsiders, but you might
fail to do something you
promised your mate you'd do.
CANCER (June 2Wuly 22)
Leave the tough artistic Jobe
around the houae today to
professionals. You could
botch the Job, and have to call
In someone later.
LEO (Ju ly 23-Aug. 22)
You're good at making sales
pitches today, but you may
lack the skill to close the d eal
Know when to stop selling.
VIRGO (Aug. 2 tte p L 22)
Gauge
your
audience
carefully today. Don't talk
about what you have or own to
"h a v e-n o ts." R a th er than
being im pressed, they'll
resent your making them feel
Inferior.

Replacing Hormones
After Hysterectomy
DEAR DR. LAMB - Three
m onths ago I had a
hysterectomy. A week later 1
was put on Premarin. Since I
had hot flashes and headaches
the amount was Increased.
Now I feel fine but I’m
worried about blood clots.
Will I age quicker, wrinkle
and dry up if I do not take envelope for It to me, in care
enough hormones? I'm 36 of this newspaper, P.O. Box
now. Do the hormones affect 1551, Radio City Station, New
your sexual desire? Are there York, NY 10019.
some check points to know If
You will need to rely on
you are taking enough or too your doctor to know if you are
m uch? Do the horm ones taking the right amount of
affect mood? Does the body hormone or not. If you don't
develop a tolerance so you take enough you may have hot
have to gradually Increase the flashes and other changes
amount? What happens If you that he can see when he
miss one or two a month? This examines you. Tt«e risk of
surgery Is irrevocable so one blood clots and other com­
has to make the best of it.
plications from hormones Is
DEAR READER - You not really great In your case,
should think of the hormones probably less than the risk of
you
are
taking
as a normal pregnancy.
r e p l a c e m e n t th e r a p y ,
DEAR DR. LAMB - I am
meaning they replace the trying to serve foods to my
hormones that would nor­ family that are good for them,
mally be formed by your own but I find sodium nitrate in all
ovaries If you had not had an packages of cold meats, hot
operation. Since ft is a dogs, pepperoni, all their
rep lacem en t of a n atu ra l favorites. How unsafe is it to
substance you will not develop consume foods containing
a tolerance and need to in­ this? Am I over-reacting?
crease your dosage for that
DEAR READER - The
reason.
m ain reason for concern
You must have had more about nitrates and nitriles is
than Just a hysterectomy. The the possibility that they may­
uterus does not form female be converted in the body to
hormone#. The ovaries do. nitrosam ines, which may
When a young woman has her cause cancer. To put the issue
ovaries removed along with a in perspective, there are
hysterectom y, she usually bacteria In the Intestine that
needs and should have hor­ produce m any tim es the
mone replacement. If not you amount of these substances
will be thrown into the than exists In cured meals
menopause early with some of They are absorbed into the
the problems you mention.
blood stream and are in your
Yes, the hormones do affect saliva. Hence there Is more
your sexual desire, Just the nitrate and nitrite in your
same as the normal hormones saliva than you can expect to
you form from your ovaries at get from your food. So 1 guess
the onset of puberty influence people concerned about this
you. One big difference In should stop swallowing saliva
Individual responses is how — and that will Indeed be
much fem ale horm one Is interesting to watch.
produced by the ad ren al
Now, I don’t happen to
gland.
approve of the foods you
To help you sort all this out, mention. But my reason Is
I am sending you The Health that these are exceptionally
L etter
num ber
14-12, high fat foods. Their high fat
Hysterectomy, Cystocele and content, and often high
Rectocele. These are common saturated fat content, means
operations In women.. .
u they should be avoided by
Others who want this l e w those dextrin* ■ low-fat diet to ,
can send 75 cents with a long, avoid h eart attac k s and id
stam ped,
self-addressed strokes.

W IN A T B R ID G E
NORTH

10 Zl II

• 7 51

• 41
• 910113
• 755

WEST

EAST

• J 14 3
• JI00T

• QlOt
• 1543
• 75

• A lt

• 91

• K 1011
SOUTH

«

• AKI
• akq
♦ K J4
♦ A J 47

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer South
Wttl

Nertb Exit

Pen

Put

With 25 high-card points
and balanced distribution
South has a very standard
three-notrump opening
He is lucky enough lo get
a heart lead and sees that tie
has a lot ol tricks if he can
get lo dummy's diamonds,
but he assumes that the
delender with the ace of dia­
monds will be able to hold
off twice and that two dia­
mond tricks will be the best
he can take.
Can be get to nine with
just two diamond tricks?
.’es, if he can establish ;
second club He can do thi
against a 3-3 club break
How about a 4-2 club break?
He can handle some 4-1
club breaks by leading a lov
club immediately and will
still have time to try dia­
monds so at trick two he
leads a low club. West wins
with the nine or East with
the 10 and a heart or spade
is led. It makes no difference.
South wins, cashes his ac
of clubs and leads hts king c
diamonds. West must due
and the jack of diamonds ii
led next. West must duck
again. South overtakes will
dummy's queen and lead:
dummy's last club to estab
lish his Jack of clubs lot
trick nine.

South
3 NT

Put

Opening lead: VJ

By Oswald Jacohy
aad AlaaSaatag
AU of Jannersten'i hands
don't show overbidding or
bad breaki that must be
overcome

mrwipAPEn

ANNIE____________

u n t t h i ' kisk assn

by Leonard Starr

D-THOSE INHALERS ARE

by T. K. Ryan

TUM BLEW EEDS

HELLO J YOU M U S T 0E
SCfUKAMlAlG H £ A , TH E
FANTASTIC SPEAKER I'VE

Dwalat

FLE TC H ER 'S LANDING
O K D fc A A . X 3UST*
fo rg o t

so M etH tN q .

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CALENDAR
THURSDAY, OCT. a
Sm lnole County ta ig u c of Women Voten OrieoUtlon Choeio and Wine Festival, 5-7 p.m.t 114 Live Oak
l-ane, Altamonte Springs. Open to all peraons Interested In learning about league activities.
Florida Audubon Society Seminole tnapter, t p.m.,
Florida Power &amp; Light. N. Myrtle Avenue. Sanford,
l-arry Hayes will speak on violent storms. Refresh­
ments.
O vereaten Anonymous, 7:30 p.m., Community
United Methodist Church, Casselberry.
Sanford AA, 6 p.m., 1101 W. First St.
A1-Anon, 8 p.m., Crossroads Halfway House, Lake
Minnie Drive. Sanford.
Weight Witchers, 7 p.m., Good Shepherd Lutheran
Church, 2917 Highway 17-92; 7 p.m.. Quality Inn, U
and State Road 434.
SATURDAY, OCT. 14
Fall Frolic, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., First Pentecostal
Church of Sanford, 16th Street at Magnolia Avenue.
Food and game booths.
Kiwanli Club of Central Florida, 7:30 a m., First
Federal Savings and Loan, State Road 434, Altamonte
Springs.
Sanford-Semlnole Jaycees Cystic Fibrosis Blke-athon. 9 a.m., Sanford Airport Authority Building,
MellonvUle and 26th Place. Ends 2 p.m. T-Shirts and
prizes. Sponsor sheets available at Sanford schools and
Slemper Agency.
Pioneer Days Pine Castle Center of the Arts 5903
Randolph St., Orlando. Folk art, crafts, Bluegrass
Street'Dance, 6:30-9:30; fish fry, 4-7 p. m. Children
free.
Champagne breakfast and fashion show featuring
Givenchy Sport collection, 9 a.m., Garden Room,
Robinson's Altamonte Mall. Tickets at customer
service.
Sanford AA Women's Group, 2 p.m., 1201 W. First
St., Sanford.
Casselberry AA, closed, 8 p.m., Ascension Lutheran
Church, Casselberry.
Halloween Costume Dance, open Parents Without
Partners event, 9 p.m., DeBary Fire Hall. (turn east at
blinking light on Highway 17-92.1 Costumes optional.
Call 904-734-4735 for Information.
Pancake Day sponsored by Methodist Men, 7 a.m. to
6 p.m., Community United Methodist Church
fellowship hall, Highway 17-92, Casselberry.
SUNDAY, OCT. 15
10th District meeting of the Disabled American
Veterans, DAV building, Highway 17-92, Sanford.
Auxiliary will sponsor dinner from noon to 2 p.m.
Sanford Big Book AA, Florida Power building,
Myrtle Avenue, Sanford, open discussion, 7 p.m.
Seminole AA, 8 p.m., Halfway House off Highway 1792 on ta k e Minnie Road.
"Young-at-Heart" dance, 8 p.m., DeBary Com­
munity Center, Shell Road, DeBary. Open to public.
Ballroom and round dancing, 8 p.m., Temple
Shalom, Providence and Elk cam boulevards, Deltona.

n

'Clean' TO N IG H T 'S
Bond
Ordered
KEZ2SH
EVE NINO

6:00

f jiD t D O i? O

KEY WEST, Fla. (UPI) —
In the first ruling of its kind in
Florida, a Monroe County
magistrate has ordered that
those posting bond for a
suspected drug sm uggler
must swear under oath that
the money was legally ob­
tained.

Tha Huskey Co. to Russell T.
Swam, Jr., Let 4 Slk ■. Sweet
water Club UN. Ill, SMBM.
tOCD) Annette L. Campbell
(Form Stafford! Id Henry L.
Campbell 4 Wt Annette L , Lot 114
Sen Lanta, Third Sec. It®
Melvin Frelkln 4 Wt Elms to
GracoS. Hiller, sgl., UN. X Indian
Ridge, Condo. PH. I IM J ®
Hendrik L. Ten Moor 4 Wt
A J..O. to Warren T. Oldroyd 4 Wt
Patricia. Lot SI, Casa Aloma

401.000
Michael F. Trov 4 Wt Carmel lo
Aubrey Billingsley 4 Wl Paula M.,
S' lot SEi* Of s e n ot N E N of Sac.

1171 11. IIS.0®
(QCO) Joseph E Burra to
Josrph E Burns 4 Wl Mindy. Lot
S4. Goldie Msnor, HI Addn. SIM
Daniel R. Belslel 4 Wl Diana to
Jon M. Hall 4 Wt Priscilla K.. S'y
ot N E U ot SEN ol Sec. I I I I St.
*92,0®.
Blaine G Faber, Jr 4 Wf Diane
to Timothy J Callahan 4 Wf
Christina S. Lot 1, Whisper Wood
at Sebel Point, lllS.OM
Watson M Reel 4 Wf Ola to S E
L C District, The Lutheran
Church Missouri Synod. From SU
cor. ol Sac 7 ZO 30. etc, I11J.JOO
George H. Hofmann 4 Wf Ella to
Shtret L Graham sgl.. Lot lOf
Queens Mirror So. Repl 141,0®
Raymond BalsomA Wf Lillian to
Oouglaa C. Andrews 4 Wf Paula
A.. Lot 44, Winter Spgs UN }.

t i n ,000

Joyce J Schell, Sgl. lo Bernice
K Siebuhr. Sgl Lot 1. Blk 41.
Townslte ot North Chuluota,
147, SW

Welcome
N EW C O M ER !
“ F lo rid a '! o w n g ro ttin g
Bondco“ — dodteatod to
wot c o m in g now roaldonta.
Florida O w iw d

*9

A call from you will bring a
prompt visit front out r»prseaoiatlvg Shg haa brochuraa, civic Information;
and to halp with your shop­
ping naadt, cards of In­
troduction from local marchants.

Lais W l n n - m i 7 l l

Seat* Umkm k
Laura Raha — U M M l
C i ardhsalar

%
Q M d iig S e w e

Horn# Off let

901-734-6031

BIWCVVI K tSTT -*
' ‘ - &lt;T. ■

C “k

n ew b

II (35) SANFOROANDSON
03110) EARTH. SEA ANDSKY
6:05
11 (17l ANDYGRIFFITH
6:30
O 4 NBC NEWS
5 O CBS NEWS
7 O ABC NEWS
It (351 CARTER COUNTRY
0 ( 1 0 ) EARTH. SEA AND SKY

6:35
t] ( 17) GOMER PYLE

“ Bond is just another cost of
doing drug business these
days," Monroe County Judge
Richard Payne told the Miami
H erald. "M aybe this will
make it a little harder to use
illegal monies to post bond."
Donald Taylor, of Key West,
was arrested last week and
charged with possession and
trafficking of cocaine, posses­
sion of more than 20 grams of
marijuana and possession of
drug paraphernalia.
Paj-ne has ruled that Taylor
will not be released on
$109,000 bond unless those
posting his bail sign an af­
fidavit statin g w here the
money originated and swear
it Is not "drug money."
Several law enforcement
officials around the state said
Payne’s order is the first of its
kind in Florida and could be a

landmark decision.
Payne said his ruling might
make those posting bond think
twice before swearing under
oath that the money was
legally obtained.
"An affidavit is only as good
as the people who sign It,"
Payne said. "But If someone
lies, they could face perjury
charges. A guy might get off
on the drug charges, but be
convicted of perjury."
Origins ot the bond money
would be investigated by the
state attorney's office or the
In tern al Revenue Service,
Payne said.

REALTY TRANSFERS
Romans M. Crant lo Romans
M.Crana, M 1 aerosol EWot NEW
R N I U t l NWW of NWV* lots r w
4 In t S 24V. Sac JJ II 30 S S 245' of
N 1 aerate* EVyof NE'a of N E ', ol
NWW lau E ZS’ lor rtf , S r f U If
10, t i n
William K Tyu» 1 Raymond
Krogman to Richard A. Said S Wl
Randy. Lot Zl, Applt Vallry Un a,
1104.000
Richard Feld 4 Wt Randy to
Raymond R. Krogman 1 Wl
Michelle L , Lot tf . Barclay
Woods. 1st Ad S4S.OOO
Maronda Homes Inc to Shoou
Tal Tal A w l Kutngnl L. T il, Lot
1), Cedar Ridge Un. II. IJ7.4M
Gladys P. Brown. Wld. to Linda
L Herendeen. Lott 1J I ] 4 14. BIX
17 Crystal Laka Winter Homes S D
50.000
D 4 K Orv to Kenneth J. Arthur
4 Wl Charlotte R. Pob 1UO WP,
Lot 44, Cardinal FLeki, H7,S00
Bel Alrt Homes In C. to Vlnlclo
D'Angelo Pallolllnl 4 Wl Mary D .
Lot 111. Bel A lrt Hills, un three,
140.000
FI Relid Comm to Clarence M.
Riggs 4 Wl Georgenne K., Lot II
Wtklva Golf Villas. Sec two
147.0®
Ft Retld Comm lo Marguerite
M Culp 4 Allison M. Matttnon,
Both S gl. UN A, Bl. I. Wtklva
Fairway Townhomat. 144.0®
Llnnerl, N.V. to Roy C. Snyder 4
Wt Mabel 4 Jess R Snyder 4 Wl
Terri J , UN G t Marbeya Club
Condo . 141.5®
FRC to Barbara A Batlnl. sgl..
UN B, Bl. II, Wtklva Fairway
Townhomtt, 170.0®

m

Sentinel Bldg Co. lo Larry W.
Morrill 4 Wt Johann V.. Lot 1.
Deimar Etta., tej.soo.
Equity Realty Inc. to Joseph
Taormina. Sgl 4 Pamela to Ar
mine iMarr ), UN J D, Destiny
Springs. S1I.SM
Equity Really Inc. lo Brenda Jo
Gass. Sgl., K. Werner Gass 4 Wl
Nancy Jo. UN MSB Destiny
Springs. Sll.f®
Equity Realty Inc to Randall J
Ball. Sgl., Malcolm J. Ball 4 Wl
Lorraint V . UN 204B. Destiny
Springs, SIM M
Mary E Martin lo William B
Avery 4 Wl Doris J , Lot If. Blk B.
Lake Branlley Isles Tnd Addn.
130.0®
East Seminole Co to James E
Boisvert. Sgl 4 Dennis 1 . (M arr.l
- W 71'of From SE tor ot N E '.
ot N E N ol Sec 77 71 17 etc SIM
Dennis J Boisvert 4 James E .
Sgl toWallaceC Glass A Wt Belly
J , From SE cor. ot N E '. ot N E 1.
ol Sec 77 71 17 etc 110.0®
IQCDI Lynne A Tyler, Sgl
(Form Morrison) to David S
Morrison, s g l. UN 4 Bl B
Cherry wood Gardens. II®
David S Morrison. Sgl. to
Patricia S Spray, i g l , UN. 4. Bl
B. Cherrywood Gardens. Sll.fOO
Richard C Johnson 4 Wf Susan
to Conrad O Quintero 4 Wl Gall.
U 17. Blk A. Dot Ray Manor,
SJ4W0
(QCO) Cynlhla A Pease Braley
lo Robert N Braley 4 Wf Cynthia
A P Lot 4f. Barclay Woods First
Adn SI®
V Entr , Inc to John L Chanlof
4 Wf Lora L , Lot 71. Blk 15.
Oreamwold tth Sec., li t .4®
Mar|orit (Willman) flugg to
Marjorie Rugg 4 Donald H . HB .
Lot If Blk at North Chuluota SIM
Donald H Rugg lo Donald H
Rugg 4 Marlorle. Jt W IOC ot Lot
1 Swopes Second Addn Black
Hammond 11®
Coe Corp to Gabriel* E.
Evangelist* 4 Wf Dora G. Lot II
Wtklva Club E s t. Sec 7„ 1114,too
H Jtmes Shtttl. El A l , Trustees
to Mark M Rubin 4 Wt Sue W , Lot
It . Slttpy Hollow 1st Addn,
171,1®
Thomas D. Tyr*. Jr 4 Wl Joyct
lo Sue Homback Partnership,
desc. es Russell Street on plat ot
Tr H Sanlando Springs, I14.1W
Waynt Cars* lo Calhy J.
Ptatross. Lot 4. Blk C. Columbus
Harbor. 127.0®
Russell T Swain, Jr. to Frank
M Paler mill 4 Wl Sara M , Lot 7.
Blk A, Swaetwatar Oaks Sac. II.
SMS.0M
Edward A . Schralbar 4 Wt Anita
to Nancy D Daniel, Sgl. 4 Fred L.
Parker (M arr.l, Lot 4 Blk F,
Sterling Pk UN Four, 141.500
Norma J. Cottle, Rtpr. Est
Gwyn Beshaars 4 Alda M. to
Norm* Jean Cotlla 4 Loretta D
Boyle, Heirs, Lot 4 Evergreen
Place. D M
The Springs to Myron J. Carton
4 Andrew Kwtl. Lot 1, Blk B,
Deer wood Etta.. The Springs.
S1AM0
Area Bldg Corp. to Joel D.
Rosemary, sgl., Lot 71 Cypress
Landing al label Point. If74®
Dale Jones. Trut to Devee. Inc ,
Lots 7, A 4 IS. Springdale Id ,
ISIS®
Robert L. Fuhrmen 4 wf Vlote lo
William Trlckal Jr., Tr.. Lot 11
Winter Spring* UN. Two. D IM M .
IQCDI Robert E. Beeching to
PetrKI* A. Beeching, Lot II, 61k
6, Sweetwater Oaks, DM .
H Inv., Inc. to Kone Village.
Inc., UN. Ill, The Altamonte
Condo. 141,fW
Chariot Froodanberg 4 wl
Kristine to Mouln Anl 4 wf Susan,
LI V La Floretta UN. Two. t f l. M .

« -

-

- —. - - *

7:00
Q 4 THEMUPPETB
5 O P M MAGAZINE A loos el
the JZ-ttory Crytlal Cethedrel e
grandmother rvho it 4 Chemp.on
po*ertx)4t racer Or Wasco on
using lasers to remove brrthmarks.
Susan Wasserstem on running your
own hea market booth
7 O JOKER SWILO
11 (35) THE JEFFERSONS
0
(10) MACNEIL 7 LEHRER
REPORT

7:05
&lt;JI (17) CAROL BURNETT ANO
FRIENDS

7:30
O * ENTERTAINMENT TONIOHT
i O YOU ASKED FOR IT
7 O FAMILY FEUD
11 (35) BARNEY MILLER
0 110) DICK CAVETT Guest trim
d.rector Ahtra Kurosawa

7:35
11(17) SANFORO ANO 80N

8:00
0 ' 4 BOO HOPE Rob Hop# it
imnetl by tenon* stars dl the c1#dtcat«ort ceremony ot !h« Gerald R ford
muiftiffi in Grand Rapids Michi.
gan
) O MAGNUM. PI Magnum
attempu lo sof*e a 3S-ypar-(Hd
crime
12i O MORK AND MINOY The
newlyweds whif through space in
m egg lo 0&lt;nk for their honeymoon
II (35) CHARLIE S ANGELS
CD (10) APPOINTMENT WITH
DESTINY They *e Killed President
Linco*n The events which occurred
prior lo the assassination and the
aftermath are chronicled

6:05
tl (17) MOVIE
Wrli Penny
( ISMBi) Chainon Net ion. Joan Hack­
ed A cowboy tries to slay out of
trouble while a new frontierswoman
tries build a nee life

8:30
1 l O BEST OF THE WEST Sam
mMlrales an outlaw hideout fo try
to prove Parker Tillman innocent of
calf herrustling charge* (Pari I1!

9:00
C|) O MOVIE
A Man Called
Horae $C| 119701 Richard Harris,
Judith Anderson An f ngltsh anifocral captured by the Stout Indian*
endures pain and humiliation

Once
Upon
A Time...

Evening Herald, Sanford. FI.

TV

before becoming leader of ihe tribe
0
BOSOM BUDDIES Henry
recalls the time he hurt the leelingi
ot a g*rl classmate when he and
some frtends plan a high school
reunion
H (35) THE ROCKFORD RLES
0 j 10) SNEAK PREVIEWS Rog*y
Ebert and Gene Siskef host an
informative io©* at wt&gt;at s new a!
the movies

10:00
o 4 CANDID CAMERA SPECIAL
VaK-&lt;i* Mi*pei Lon, And*f»on artd
Wilt Chamtvilain |»n Allan Funt fo&lt;
this contemporary version of IK*
television senes |R)
7 O 30 770
11 |35l INDEPENDENT NETWORK
NEWS
0 (101 DAVE ALLEN AT LARGE

10:15

t o AS THE WORLD TURNS

S O BEWITCHED

2:00

6:45

0 4 ANOTHER WORLO
7 O ONE LIFE TO LIVE

0 1 1 0 ) AM WEATHER

7.00

1 O SEARCH FOR TOMORROW
11 (35) DO IT YOURSELF / LAU­
REL AND HARDY (TIME APPROXI­
MATE) (TUE)

7:05

2:45
(1 (35) YESTEROArS NEWS­
REELS (TIME APPROXIMATE!
(MON. THU. FRI)

I I (1 7 )FUNTIME

7:30
S O MORNING WITH CHARLES
KURALT
II (35) WOODY WOODPECKER
0 ( 10) SESAME STREET g

BOO
tl(35VCASPER

8:05
11 (17)1 DREAM OF JEANNIE

6:30
11(35) OREAT SPACE COASTER
0 (10) MISTER ROGERS |R|

1J (171 NEWS

6:35

10:30

2:30

0 ( £ TODAY
S O WAKE UP
7 O GOOD MORNNQ AMERICA
II (35) TOM AND JERRY
0 1 1 0 ) VILLA ALEGRE (R)

9:30
17 O TAXIg
0
(10) ALFREO HITCHCOCK
PRESENTS

3:00
J O GUIDING LM3HT
7 O OENERAL HOSPITAL
I) (35) BOOS BUNNY ANO
FRIENDS
0 (101 FROM JUMPSTREET (R)
g (MON)
0 (10) ONCE UPON A CLASSIC
(THU)
0 (f n i O U E PASAT(FRJ)

11:00
0 4 S O I O NEWS
H (35) BENNY HILL
0 ( 1 0 ) POSTSCRIPTS

3:30

0 4 HOUR MAGAZINE
1 O DONAHUE
7 o MOVIE
11 (35.
35) GOMER PYLE
0 (10) 8ESAME STREET g

ill (17ITHEFLINTSTONES

3:35

9:30

0 (4 THE BEST OF CARSON
Guests Crystal Gayle Jo*
Hamath Johnny Sun* Red Horvo.
Rosstompkms (Fit
5 O M 'A 'S 'H
7 Q ABC NEWS NIGHTLINE
II (35) STREETS Of SAN FRAN­
CISCO

tl (351 ANDY GRIFFITH

12:00
5 O QUINCY Oumcy finds d.J
moods hidden inside a dead body
and goes to las Vegas to (rack
down rne fence
1 o VEGAf

12:30
0
4 TOMORROW Guests for­
mer Iranian President Abolhatsan
Dam-Sadr. Omar Sharif. HavierA
Hollander journalist P*erre Sainnger

1:10
J O THE SAINT Simon lr&gt;es to
determine if a woman if a crook or
an intelligence agent at she claims
t O MOVIE
Berserk (Cl
(19681 Joan Crawford Ty Hardin

5:05
11 (17) THE BRADY BUNCH

5:30

( I LAVERNE 4 SHIRLEY 4
COMPANY
] Q M 'A T H
I ' O NEWS
0 (1 0 1 POSTSCRIPTS

5:35
&lt;11 ( 171 BEVERLY HILLBILLIES

Dinner 12 Noon
DINNER M . Adults

0 4 BLOCKBUSTERS
) O ALICE (R)
It (35) DICK VAN OYKE
0 (10) ELECTRIC COMPANY (R)

7 O LOVE BO A T (R)

II (35) BUD BREWER
0
(10) EDUCATIONAL PROQRAMMINO

11:05

*2. Children t.

4-nd.*

Pay at Ih* doay I

CHAPTER NO. 30, D.A.V. BUILDING
Jill Orlande Or., laniard

11:00

O 4 WHEEL OR FORTUNE
} O THE PRICE IS RGHT

Mooting 2 PM

Mtsllng 4 Dinntr hosttd by AviiliAry. ftmlitalt Chaptar N*. 71

A &amp; R R e c re a tio n a l
V e h ic le R e n ta l a n d Sales
MAXI VANS, MOTOR HOMES, TRAVEL TRAILERS

,)I (1 7 )MOVIE

RENT or BUY

11:30

O 4 PASSWORD PLUS
II (35) INOEPENOENT NETWORK
NEWS

MINIBUS
IS lo 12
P a m n g tr s

AFTERNOON

12:00

2:05
11 (17) MOVIE
The last Sun­
set (19611 Rock Hudson Kirk
Douglas
9-fiA
1 O NEWS

3:20
&lt; 7 0 MOVIE
Th» N.gh1 fhyry
Ra.di&gt;d Minsky s ' (C) |tS69| Jason
Robards Brill [kland

4:35
t] (17) MISSION IMPOSSIBLE

, fbbatL

0 4 CARO SHARKS

4S7 SR 414
ALTAMONTE SPRINGS

S O ' O NEWS
II (35IHHOOA

12:30
O 4 NEWS
)&gt; Q THE YOUNG AND THE
RESTLESS
7 O RYAN'S HOPE
II (35) MAUDE

RON McOARRY

OPEN i DAYS

JOJ-7M-1177

1:00
0 &lt; 4 ) DAYS OF OUR LIVES
&gt;7 O ALL MY CHILDREN
1) (35) MOVIE

1:05
(II (17) MOVIE

MORNING

6:00

(7J O MARCUS WELBY, M O.
(TUf-FRII

6:10

&lt;11 (17) RAT PATROL (THU)

D.D.S.

6:30

Also
Offtdr
Fruit**

Tak*
Pood
Sfampi

5.35
&lt;11 (17) WORLD AT LAROE (WED,
FRI)

Vagatablai

IMS HIAWATHA AVI.
IANPOBD, PLJL
HOUM BY APPOINTMINT
323-1174 Of 323-1)85

5:40
12(171 WORLD AT LAROE (THU)

5:50

LEROY FARMS

(Watson's Old Fana)|
SR 46 (W e»t let St.)

tl (171 WORLD AT LARGE (TUEI

6:00
O (J) NASHVILLE ON THE ROAD
(MON)
Q 14 1MARTY ROBBINS (TUEI
0 4 . POP) OOES THE COUNTRY
(WED)
0 l|) BACKSTAGE AT THE
GRAND OLE OPRY (THU)
1 f4; PORTER WAGONER (FFU)
J O THE LAW AND YOU (MON)
t O SPECTRUM (TUE)
J O BLACK AWARENESS (WED)
J O THIRTY MINUTES (Till/)
— HEALTH FIELD (FRI)
SUNRISE
&lt;ii
(7e5) JIM BARKER
&lt;11 (351
II (17) CABLE NETWORK NEWS

ARE YOU PAYING TOO MUCH FOR INSURANCE?
Service A t Com petitive Rates

AUTO • LIFE • HOME • BUSINESS • RECREATION

KARNS INSURANCE AGENCY INC.

18

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SANFORD 322-3762

6:30
| (4 &lt;TOOAY M FLORIDA

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buffet
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SA TUR D A Y

APPETIZER-SOUP ANO SALAD bA&gt;

Ocean Gems
FRIED SHRIMP • FRIED PERCH
BAKED FISH • SHRIMP CREOLE
CLAM CHOW DER • CRAB CAKES
FRIED CLAMS
CRAB ROLLS • HUSH PUPPIES
C O R N -O N THE CO B • FRENCH FRIES
URFAVORITE

E N JO Y Y O

COCKTAIL
tM THE

BUCCANEER LOUNGE
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ttOOS. ORLANDO O L

4 * »

t . O HOGAN'S HEROES (MON.
WEO-FRI)
J1 o
t h e BODY HUMAN
BECOMING A MAN (TUE)
It (35) THE INCREDIBLE HULK
0 1 10) MISTER ROGERS (R)

SUNDAY, OCTOBER M, ltd

5:00 P.M. Till 9:30 P M . Children Under 12 —

\ . I -A *

0 4 OILUGAN S ISLAND

10th District Meeting &amp; Dinner

10:00
Q 4 TIC TAC DOUGH
S 0 WELCOME BACK. KOTTER
II (3511LOVE LUCY
0
(10) EDUCATIONAL PRO­
GRAMMING

10:30

11:35
tl (17) MOVIE The Third Day
(1905) George Pepperd Fitia.be!h
Ashley

4:35
11 (171 LEAVE IT TO BEAVER

ATTENTION D .A .V . VETERANS
AND AUXILIARY

9:05
12 (17) MOVIE

11:30

4:30
J O HAPPY DAYS AGAIN (MON.
WED-FRJI
,in 3 5 ) TOM ANO JERRY

0

II (35) SCOOBY DOO
0 ( 10) ELECTRIC COMPANY (R)

11.05
II 117) ALL IN THE FAMILY

4:05
11 (171 THE MUNSTERS

3:05
12 (17) FUNTIME

9:00

O (4 LITTLE HOUSE ON THE
PRAIRIE
I O RICHARO SIMMONS
7 0 MERV GRIFFIN
II (351 WOOOV WOOOPECKER
0 ( 1 0 ) SESAME STREET g

5:00

0 4 TEXAS

1] (17) MY THREE SONS

II (35) LOVE. AMERICAN STYLE
0 (10) UP POMPEII

4:00

1:30

o

( J O SUNRISE SEMESTER

CARBONDAI£, 111. (UPI)
— Children's books about bad
boys and girls who learn to be
good may be a bad influence
on kids, researchers say.
llalhcr than learning to be
good, the children who read
such books often pick up the
bad hablta the books are
designed to cure, said John
and Sandra l.utzker of
Southern Illinois University.
The tatzkers conducted a
two-month
study
al
University of the Pacific in
Stockton, Calif., of children
teaming from books.
They chose 11 popular books
deemed to have a moral issue
or lesson, Including "Noisy
Nancy N o rris," "C o n trary
Woodrow"
and
"T he
Toughest and Meanest Kid on
the Block."
Each of the volumes is
designed to show bad children
improving their behavior. But
in the ta tzk e rs’ study, It
didn't always work that way.
"When we read a story
describing a naughty girl who
had a habit of sticking her
tongue out, for example, we
noticed later that a lot of the
kids were sticking th eir
tongues out at each other,"
tatzker said.
T ie effect was especially
noticeable in pre-school chil­
dren, he said.
Children who read books
depicting only
positive
behavior did not appear to
mimic the characters.
tatzk er said parents should
seek out books with positive or
neutral behavioral content.

Thursday. Oct. 21, I W - i a

• -

* — - ** —• n* • ■W -*

n \4 tn

SA N F O R O

PRICE

�I • ,*

&lt;*■* 5

:
I

i f r - EvAnlng Haraid,

Sanford, FI.

Thursday, Oct. 33, If ll

Grass Use
Drops Again
WASHINGTON lU I’I) — The number of high school seniors
who smoke m arijuana dropped for the third consecutive year,
n loading drug abuse official reports.
The report was coupled with a warning by a psychiatrist that
pilots suffer enough “severe deterioration" with one
marijuana cigarette to crash their planes.
Additionally, the psychiatrist said there was evidence that
marijuana lends to car accidents, causes people with impaired
heart functions to suffer chest pain more quickly and hinders a
user from making a rapid choice between (wo alternatives.
Dr William I’ollln, director of the National Institute of Drug
Abuse, bended n list of professional witnesses testifying
Wednesday at the Senate Libor and Human Resources'
Alcoholism and Drug Abuse subcommittee hearing on the
effects of marijuana on youth. I’ollin said the percentage of
high school seniors using marijuana daily dropped from 10.7
percent in 1978 to 10.3 percent in 1979 and to 9.1 percent In 1980,
and that preliminary 1981 figures continue to show this
downward trend.
I’nllin said nearly 05 percent of high school seniors have used
;m illicit drug, 00 percent have used marijuana and 9 percent
use marijuana dnily. A total of 31 percent of the seniors had
their first experience with marijuana before high school.
Of the seniors who use marijuana regularly, Pollln reported,
42 percent said they have less energy, 38 percent said their
relationship with their parents lias been hurt, 34 percent said
H eir school or Job performance has been hurt, 28 percent said
they a rr less Interested in other activities, 28 percent said they
think less dearly and 11 percent said they are less stable
emotionally.
Pollln also testified the "stepping stone" hypothesis — that a
j erson using marijuana is more likely to use drugs such as
cocaine and heroin — “ was rejected prematurely and now
needs serious re-evaluation."
He cited a study that reported while less than 1 percent of the
young men who lead never used marijuana went on to use
cocaine and fieroin, 73 percent of those who had used
marijuana 1,000 times or more went on to use cocaine and 33
percent went on to use heroin.
Pharmacologist Carol Grace Smith of the Uniformed Ser­
vices University of the Health Sciences said studies have
shown that marijuana can produce Infertility In both male and
female animals, although the effect appears to be reversible In
jcxunlly mature animals.
! Site said marijuana can cause abnormal menstrual cycles,
fari lower the birth weights of Infants, and lower the number of
form al sperm,

Radiation Helps
Arthritis Victims
! BOSTON (U P li — A woman afflicted with rheumatoid arilintis climbed steps to her house for tlto first time in 12 years
jlianks to X-l lay treatment used for Hodgkins disease but
Allowing promise for hundreds of thousands of rheumatoid
Sufferers, researchers reported today.
1 Oilier sufferers were oble to cook or take tub baths again —
previously impossible because of tire destructive joint disease,
which nutlets some e.8 million Americans, reports in the New
Pnglnnd .Vmrnnl ot Medicine said. Tire Irailnicjil, used to treat Hodgins Diseases for 20 years,
was given lo two small groups of patients in two separate
Studies by rosea rrlrcrs from Stanford University and Harvard
Medical School. They outlined the treatment in separate
reports in the Journal.
An editorial written by Dr. Daniel McCarty of the Medical
College of Wisconsin in Milwaukee called lire reports "err‘■ournglng" but warned they can only be taken as grounds for
tutiber rirnly before the treatment becomes available to the
fmblie.
“ We're talking nbout another couple of years at least of
studies at research centers lo prove that it is better than some
nf line existing therapies available," said Dr. Samuel Slrobcr,
Stanford's chief of Immunology.
I)r. David Ttcntham, who headed the Harvard study, said
it’s u relatively safe technique, considering the other op­
tions."
Trentham said 30 lo 40 percent of rheumatoid patients are
lirescntly unbeatable because of side effects from drugs or
because conventional therapies have no effect.
In the Stanford study, 11 patients were exposed lo radiation
(or eight weeks. Nine showed improvement a month after
treatment. 'Hie best response was seen six to seven months
after therapy and continued up to 18 months.
At Harvard, joint swelling in five of 10 patients disappeared
Jn tin* first eight weeks of the 16-week course of radiation
therapy. Might patients showed marked Improvement, but the
disease began to return in six patients eight to 10 months after
*1 ndiation.
The disease — causing severe inflammation, pain, stiffness
and deformity of Joints —is believed to be caused by the body's
sown immune system, which somehnw labels the Joints as
foreign and attacks diem.
The latest two studies support tile theory die culprits could
J&gt;e a group of white blood cells called T-cells,

It's Part of
the Servicel

Legal Notice
NO TICE OF SHERIFF'S
SALE
NOTICE IS H E R EB Y GIVEN
trial by virtue of that certain Writ
of Execution issued owl ol and
under Ihe veal o» the County Court
of Seminole County. Florida, upon
a imal judgement rendered In Ine
«loreva&gt;d court on Ihe Itlh day o*
August. A o If ll. in thai certain
cave entitled. Realtron Cor
poratlon Plaintiff, n I D Realty,
Inc . Defendant, which alortvald
Writ ot E.ecution wav delivered lo
me av Sherill ot Seminole County,
Florida, and I have levied upon Ihe
lollowing devcrlbed property
owned by 1 D Realty, Inc , vald
properly being located in Seminole
County, Florida, more per
Mcularly devcrlbed av tollowv
Olflce Equipment of the
Del endant Corporation devcrlbed
av tollowv
7
alack Two drawer File
Cabmetv
I Black A Chrome Arm Chair
I Brown Devk Top
I Brown Clock
}
Four drawer File Cabinetv
I Two drawer File Cabinetv
I Metal Devk. Grey
1 Metal Devk, Brown
2 Orange Swivel Arm Chalrv
I Metal Folding Chairt
I Wood Folding Chair
I Metal Shelf
vaid property being vtored at Dave
Jonev Wrecker Service, Fern
Park, Florida
and Ihe undervigned av Sheriff ol
Seminole County, Florida, will al
II 00 A M on Ihe 73rd day ol
October, A D If ll, oiler lor vale
and veil to the highevt bidder, for
:avh. vublecl lo any and all
existing lienv, at Ihe Front IWevI)
Door ol the Seminole Counly
Courlhouve in Sanlord. Florida,
Ihe above devcrlbed pervonal
properly
Thai vaid vale Iv being made lo
valivly Ihe termv ot vaid Writ ol
Execution
John E Polk,
Sherill
Seminole County, Florida
Publivh October 1,1, IS. 71. with
Ihe vale on October 73, Ifll.
DEN 7

IN V Ii ATION TO RID
A T H L E T IC T O IL E T
FAC ILITIES
SEMINOLE COMM UNITY
COLLEOE
.SANFORD, FLORIDA
Sealed bldl from Conlractorv
will be received by Owner, Board
of Truvteev, for Seminole Com
munlly College at 4 :IS P.M. local
lime. October 30, If ll, In Ihe Board
Room ol Seminole Community
College. The following Iv Included:
A T H L E T IC TO IL E T
FA C ILITIES
Bid documenlv are open lo
public invpeclion In the otflcev ol
F W Dodge Plan Room and
Central Florida Bullderv E «
change In Orlando: and may be
obtained or reviewed Irom Ihe
oflietv ot Gulmann Associates,
Architectv, Planners, Inc., I0S N
Oak Av*.. P.O. Drawer f3l.
Sanlord, Florida 13IM, upon
rtquevl accompanied by SIS 00
depot It par vet.
DepotII will be refunded In full
lor two vote to contractor* tub
mating bona tide bfda and return
of documenlv In good uteebfe
condition within S dayv after the
opening ot bids. R rf undv for velv In
n c t u ol fwo will bo lev* SIS 00 lo
cover coal ol reproduction, on Ihe
tame ballv of return of documenlv.
Conlractorv who obtain bid
documenlv and do nol bid the
protect, muvl return veme af leavt
10 dayv before Ihe bid date, or pay
IIS 00 per vrf lo delray coat ot
reproduction and handling, av vet
lorth above
Sub coniraclorv and otherv may
obtain complete bid documenlv
upon depovtl of STS 00 which will be
refunded, levs IIS 00 lo cover
reproduction covt, upon return ol
documenlv In good condition
within Sdeyv alter opening of bldv.
Perlial vetv will not be ivvued due
to vile and vcope of protect
Each bid mutt be accompanied
by a certified check or bid bond
ivvued by an acceptable surety
company tor not lava than S per
cento! the bate bid. The successful
bidder will be required to lurnlth
performance bond and labor and
materials payment bond, each In
Ihe lull amount of ihe contract
sum, issued by e bonding company
licensed In Florida and holding an
A f (A Pluit rating. Evidence ot
said rating will be required
The successful bidder will be
required lo submit a complete list
ot subcontractors who will be
performing work on the protect,
prior lo release ot any partial
payment.
To be eligible for consideration,
bids mutt comply with Ihe laws of
Florida,
all conditions ot the
specifications, and mutt be made
on a facsimile ol the lorm Included
with Ihe cdntract documenlv. In
duplicate, encloved In an opaque
sealed envelope bearing Ihe name
and addrevt ol the bidder and
marked:
A T H L E T IC TO ILET
F A C ILITIES
and delivered not laler than date
and hour mentioned above
Owner reserves the right to
reject any or all bids or certain
port iont ol a bid at stipulated In
Ihe FORM OF PROPOSAL, and to
waive any Informalities and
technicalities in bidding, and Is
award Ihe lob in the best Interest
of the Owner. No bid shall be with
drawn for a period of 10 days from
the opening dale.
President
Seminole Community College
Or Earl S Weldon
Chairman
Board ol Truvleev
Seminole Community College
Beverly P. Lee
Publish October II. tT, 70. 11, 77.
73. B 75, t i ll
OEN 10

If y o u 're n o t g e ttin g It,
ca ll 322-2611

Evening Herald
CIRCULATION DEPT.

li your kitchen short on
drawtr ipaca? Malu "booquati" of frequently uiad
utantili likg itrving spoon*
and i pa tula i in Jan or
jug* on the counter top.

) A §**

Legal Notice

9—Good T hings to E a t

C LASSIFIED A D S

IN TH E C IR C U IT COURT FOR
SEMINOLE CO U N TY, FLORIDA
PROBATE DIVISION
File Number St 411 CP
Division
IN R E: E S TA TE OF
ANNIE E. FALES.
Deceived
NOTICE OF ADM INISTRATION
t time .
.............Me ill!**
TO ALL PERSONS HAVING
] consecutive times socellna
CLAIM S
OR
D EM AN OS
7conmu1tvgtlfT»#»
«e
I 00 A M . - 510 P M
AGAINST TH E ABOVE ES TA TE
AND ALL OTHER PERSONS
M O N D AY thru FR ID A Y to consecutive 11nidi 37ca lint
IN TE R E S TE D IN THE E S TA TE
S A TU R D A Y » Noon
12.00 Minimum
YOU
AR E
HEREBY
) Unas Minimum
N O T IF IE D
lhal
Ihe
ad
ministration of the estate of AN
NIE E FALES, deceased, File
Number 11 411 CP. is pending in
Ihe Circuit Court tor Seminole
County. Florida, Probale Division.
Ihe address ol which Is Seminole
County Courthouse, Sanlord.
Florida The personal represen
talive oil he estate Is FRANCES A.
FALE S. whose address is P O Box
MO, Winter Park, FL 37710 The
9—Good T hings to E at
4—P erso n als
name and address of the personal
representative’s attorney are set
lorth below
WHY BE LO N ELY? Write “ Get
Bsnents
3 lbs 100
All personi having claims or
A Mate'1 Deling Service All
Swl Potatoes
3 lb* 1 00
demands against the estate are
ages P O Bos 1071. Clear
Lg. Peppers
5for 100
required,
W IT H IN
TH R EE
water, FI 31SI|_
RedGrepelruil
Slor I 00
MONTHS FROM THE D ATE OF
LO N LEVT (1131 7*3 7777 record
W Lopes
**c
THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF
ed
messege
&lt;14
hril
Bringing
Tangerine*
IJforl.f*
THIS N O TICE, to tile with the
People
Together
Dallngl
Green Onion*
7 lor 71c
clerk of the above courl a written
Jumbo Tomatoes
lb 71c
statement ot any claim or demand
O VERW EIGHT men A women
Pumpkins
7*c up
they may have Each claim must
ready lo lost weight? Join an
Red Del. Apples
fib*. 100
be Inwrillng and must Indicate the
I session nutritional slimming
Rom* Apples
Jibs 100
basis lor the claim, the name and
course A then conduct your
Mutru Apples
3 lbs 100
address ot Ihe creditor or his agent
own class excellent Income
Gold Del Apples
3 lbs 100
or attorney, and the amount
772 47S7, 327 7**7.____________
Wrnesep Apples
3 lbs I 00
claimed it the claim is not yet
LADY interested in meeting
Yellow Squish Sm.
libs 100
due, Ihe date when II will become
gentlemen. Cell lor In
Med Zucclnl Squash
Jib* 100
due shell be slated It the claim It
tormstlon anytime 3111*1*.
Lg Zuccini Squash
fibs 100
contingent or unltquldeted, Ine
Cracked Pecans
'llb t lc
nature ol ihe uncertainty shall be
LON
ELY?
New
tingles
mag.
Fresh
Apple
Cider
1
ig
s l.lt *
staled if the claim Is secured, Ihe
Stamp address envelope lor
Fresh Maple Syrup
I t*
security shill be described The
tree Into.
Box 119.( I t )
claimant shall deliver sufficient
SOLbs Pol aloes
**0
Boynton. FIS 13415
Jack O'Lanlern Pumpkins
copies ol Ihe claim to the clerk to
1 CD And Under
enable the clerk lo mall one copy
Pomegranatrs
J for I 00
lo eech personal representative
6—Child
C
are
All persons interested In Ihe
Indian Corn
3 to a bunch t*c
estate lo whom a copy ol this
Green Beans
7 lbs **c
Notice ot Administration has been
Cukes
lOforlOO
F O R ih e U lh m a te in
mailed ere required, W ITHIN
Pickling Cukes
bu 3 00
Child Care A Child's
TH R EE MONTHS FROM THE
SLbs Potatoes
ftc
World 373 1474________
D A TE
OF
TH E
F IR S T
Greens
a bunch 10*
P U B L IC A TIO N
OF
THIS
SPUR OF TH E MOM ENT
W «Ta k« Food Stamps
NO TICE, lo tile any objections
b a b y s it t in g
they may have that challenge the
LER O Y FARMS
111 •)**
validity ol the decedent's will, Ihe
SR 44
qualifications ol Ihe personal
WILL Babysllin
Watson's Old Farm
representative, or the venue or
my home weekdeys.
jurisdiction ot Ihe court.
__________ 323 3413___________
SUM
B U D G E TS
ARE
ALL CLAIMS, DEMANDS. AND
EXP. M OTH ER . TLC In my
BO LSTERED W ITH VALUES
OBJECTIONS NOT SO F IL E D
home.
Any
dey
or
hour.
FROM T H E
W AN T AD
WILL BE FOR EVER BARRED
Reasonable Rate 313 1171,
COLUMNS
Dale ol the first publication ol
this Notice at Administration:
October 77, l**l.
Frances A Fates
As Personal Represent alive
ot Ihe Estate of
N OTICE UNDER FICTITIO US
IN V ITA TIO N TO BIO
ANNIE E FALES
NAME S TA TU TE
AD D ITIO N TO S TU D EN T
Deceased
TO WHOM IT M AY CONCERN
C E N TE R F A C IL ITY
A TTO R N E Y FOR PERSONAL
Notice Is hereby given Ihe! the
SEMINOLE COM M UNITY
R EP R ES E N TA TIV E
undersigned
pursuenl
to
the
COLLEOE
W E. W IN D ER W EED LE. JR.
•'Fictitious Name Statute",
SANFORD, FLORIDA
Wmderweedle. Haines. Ward
Chapter MS0* Florida Statute*,
Seeled bids from Contractors
A Woodmen, P A .
will register with Ihe Clerk ol lha
will be received by Owner. Board
P O Bm 110.
Circuit Courl, In and tor Seminole
of Trustees, lor Seminole Cam
Winter Park, FL 777*0
County, Florida upon receipt ot
munlly College *1 4: IS P.M. local
Telephone: I30S) *444317
proof ot ihe publication ol t|»it
lime, October 30.1*11, inlha Board
Publish October 77, 71, 1*11
notice.the fictitious Name, lo wit:
Room ol Seminole Community
DEN 71
PLAZA O E L PRADO JO IN T
College. Th* following it Included:
V E N TU R E under which we are
AD DITION TO STUD EN T
engaged In buslnesi al Wesltponte
C E N TE R F A C IL ITY
Drive,
Altamonte
Springs,
Florida
Bid
documents ere, open to
IN TH E CIRCUIT COURT OF
37701.
public Inspection In the oil Ices ot
THR R IOH TR R N TH JU D IC IAL
That
the
partial
Interested
In
F.w . Dodge Plan Room and
CIRCUIT 1RMINOLR COUNTY,
**td business enterprise are at
Central Florida Builders E «
FLORIDA
follows:
change In Orlando; and may be
CASE NO. tl im -C A It-K
PARK FIN ANCIAL SERVICES.
obtained or reviewed from the
JU D G E :
R OBERT
B.
INC.
offices of Gutmenn Assoc teles.
MCGREGOR
CONDEV GROUP, INC.
Architects. Planners, Inc., IDS N.
IN RE: F O R F E IT U R E OF A 1»7S
Dated
at
Winter
Park,
Oranga
Oak Av*., P.O. Drawer *31,
C H EVR O LET C O R V ETTE TWO
Counly,
Florida,
October
2.
Ifll.
Sanford, Florida 31771. upon
DOOR AUTO M O B ILE, VEH IC LE
Publish:
October
I,
IS.
77,
2*.
1*11
request accompanied by SIS 00
ID E N T IF IC A T IO N
N U M B ER
OEN JS
deposit per set.
IZ37JSS47177* and 11.37*00
U N ITE D STATES CURRENCY
Deposit will be refunded In lull
IN TH E CIRCUIT COURT FOR
lor two kefs to contraclon sub
NOTICE OF
SEMINOLE
COUNTY.
FLORIDA
F O R F E ITU R E PROCEBDINOS
milling bona fid* bids end return
PROBATE DIVISION
of documents In good useable
TO
F
ill
Number
II-441CP
condition within S days alter the
G*ry L Dirl«n, c o Gurney,
Division
opening of bids. Ref undt for salt In
Gurney 1 Handley. P A , 703 North
IN
R
E:
E
S
TA
TE
OF
race** of two will be Ins SIS 00 to
Magnolia, Orlando, FL 37*01
LOLA L E E McCHESNEY
cover coll ot reproduction, on th*
Paul J Sandidge, SSI* Turin
a k a LOLA McCHESNEY
SI reel, Orlando, FL 37107
same basis of return ol documents.
Deceased
Gail Sandra Charles. SSIf Turin
Contractors who obtain bid
N OTICE OF ADM INISTBATION
Street, Orlando. FL 31107
documents and do not bid the
TO ALL PERSONS HAVING
and all othen who claim an In
project, mult return same it lent
CLAIM S
OR
D EM AN D S
lerrst in Iht lollowing property:
10days before Ihe bid date, or pay
AGAINST THE ABOVE E S TA TE
One 117S Chevrolet Corvette,
I1SO0 per set lo defray coal of
AND A L L OTHER PERSONS
two door automobile Vehicle
reproduction and handling, as set
IN TE R E S TE D IN THE E S TA TE :
Idenlilirntlon Number IZJ7JSS
lorth above.
YOU
AR E
HEREBY
421771: One thousand. Ihree
Sub contractors and others may
N O T IF IE D
that
the
ad
hundred and twenty via dollars
obtain
complete bid documents
ministration of tha estate ot LOLA
and eleven cents. United States
upon
deposit of I7S 00 which will be
L E E M cC H E S N E Y , detailed,
Currency (S U M til
refunded. In s *1500 to cover
File Number It at* CP, IS pending
W ESLEY T PLACE, Chlel ot
reproduction cost, upon return of
In tha Circuit Court tor Seminole
Florida, through
documenti In good condition
County, Florida, Probate Division,
his duly sworn officers, sailed Ihe
within S doys liter opening of bids.
the address ol which Is Seminole
described property on the 14th day
Parflol sot* will not bo Issued due
County Courlhouve, Sanlord,
of April, 1*11 at or near North
fo site end scope ol project.
Florida 77771 The personal
Central Avenue and Artesla.
Each bid must be accompanied
representative ot the estate is
Oviedo,
Seminole
Counly,
by o certified check or bid bond
P A T R IC IA E. BOND, whose
Florida, and ha will appear before
issued
by on acceptable surety
address It USA ELM SHAPE ISO.
me
Honorable
Robert
B
company tor not leu than S per
APO New York 0*055. The name
McGrranr. Judge ol the Circuit
cent of tho bast bid. Th* succniful
and address ol the personal
Court. Eighteenth Judicial Circuit,
bidder will be required lo furnish
representative's attorney are sal
on Ihe 3rd day of Oecember, |*tl
parlor mine* bond and labor end
torth below.
at 10.30 a m tor Ihe purpose of
meter Is 11 payment bond, each in
All persons having claims or
filing a Rult to Show Cause why
the full amount of Ihe contract
demands against th* eslat* are
ihs described property sfiould nol
sum.
Issued by a bonding company
required.
W IT H IN
TH R EE
be forfeited to the use ol. or sold by
licensed In Florid* and holding an
MONTHS FROM THE DATE OF
Ihe Chief ol Police upon producing
A t (A Plus) rating. Evidence of
THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF
due proof lhal same was being
THIS NO TICE, lo III* with the sold rating will be required.
used in violation of Florida Laws
Th* successful bidder will be
clerk ol th* ebov* courl ■ written
dealing with contraband, all
statement of Any claim or demand required to submit a complete list
pursuant lo Sections *43 41 143.44
they may have. Each claim must of subcontractors who will b*
Florida Statute* (1*101. It no
be Inwrillng and mutt indicata th* performing work on Ihe protect,
Claimant* appear, a request will
basis lor th* claim, Ihe name and prior lo release of any partial
be made lor an immediate hearing
payment.
address olthacredilor or his agent
and Final Order ot Forleilure.
To be eligible for consider*1Ion,
or ellorney, end the amount
Wesley T. Place,
claimed It Ihe claim is not yet
bids musl comply with th* lows ol
Chief ot Police
due. th# date when II will become Florida, Oil conditions ot Ihe
Oviedo. Florida
due shall be staled It th* claim is specifications, end must be mod*
contingent or unliquidated, th* on* facsimile of th* form Included
By Lind* R McCann
nature ot the uncertainly shall be with the contract documenlv. In
Office ol The Stale
staled It th* claim H secured, th* duplicate, enclosed in an opaque
Attorney Seminole County
security shall be described Th* seeled envelop* bearing th* nem*
Courthouse Sanford.
claimant shall deliver sufficient and address of th* bidder and
Florida 17771
copies ot th* claim to the clerk to marked:
Telephone (JOS) 171 7S14 enable Ihe clerk to mall on* copy
AD D ITIO N TO S TU D EN T
Publish October 71 A 71. t i ll
lo each personal representative.
C E N TE R F A C IL ITY
DEN *1
All persons Inlerested In the and delivered nol later than dot*
■slat* to whom a copy ol this end hour mentioned above.
Nolle* ol Administration hat been
Owner reserve* th* right to
mailed art required, W ITHIN
rojoct any or *11 bids or certain
NOTICE OF M E E TIN O
TH R EE MONTHS FROM TH E
portions ot o bid as stipulated In
The Seminole Counly Industrial
D A TE
OF
TH E
F IR S T
Devetopmenl Authority will hold a
th* FORM OF PROPOIAL, Ami to
P U B L IC A TIO N
OF
TH IS
meeting on Thursday, November
waive any Intarmalllla* and
N O TICE, to file any obltctloni lectin Ical It tee In bidding, and le
S. m i at Ihe Seminole County
they
may
hay*
that
challenge
th*
Agriculture Center (Board Room),
award th* |ob In th* best Infarast
validity of tha decedent's will, the of th* Owner. No bid shall be with
4370 South Orlando Oriva, Sanlord.
qualifications
el
th*
personal
Florida Tima of meeting is |:M
drawn for a parted of 3D day* from
representative, or th* venue or th* opening data.
AM
jurisdiction ol tha courl.
Hems for discussion Include
President
ALL CLAIMS, DEMANDS. AND
acquiring lte*i council lo
Seminole Community College
OBJECTIONS NOT SO F IL E D
represent the Seminole County
Bom 13S
W ILL BE FO R EVER EARRED
In t f u s t i lo l
D e v e lo p m e n t
Or. Earl ». Weldor
Data ot th* tin i publication of
Authority; lnuonce ol Industrial
this Nolle* of Administration:
Rtvwsut Bonds la Florida Elec
Chairman
October IS, m i . Patricia E.
Ironies and Transformer Com
Board of Trustees
pony, and any other business to
Seminole Community College
A*
Personal
Representative
coma before tno board.
Beverly P. Loo
ol
th*
Ettaf*
of
Persons ore advised that, If may
Publish October I I If, 70. 11, II,
LOLA
L
E
E
M
cCHESNEY
decida to ogpool any decision
n , 73, INI
mad* ot m il meeting, may will
DEN 71
A TTO R N E Y FOR PERSONAL
naad a record ot the proceedings,
R E P R E S E N TA TIV E :
and tor such purposes, they may
Mack N. C levHand Jr.
need to Insura mat a verbatim
— F L O R ID A *
C LEV ELA N D A BRIDGES
record ol the proceedings It mod*,
Foil Office Drawer Z
which record include* th*
Sanford, Florida 37771
testimony and evidence upon
Telephone (IBS) 177 131*
which Ihe appeal is to be mad.
Publish October l i U , m i
SUNSHINE STATE .
Publish October 71. IMt
L-M -DEN44
DEN**

S e m in o le

O r la n d o -W in te r P o rk

322-2611______

831-9993

C L A S S IF IE D D E P T .
HOURS

RATES

D E A D L IN E S
N o o n T h e D a y B e f o r e P u b lic a t io n
S u n d a y - N o o n F r id a y

Legal Notice

Legal Notice

(? ”
niuciinic
ID
Anstilt Aim

.
’#
■■
ip
: L " 'JL* •*% r *r&gt; f* t
1 **
" »6 g *....... &gt;—

*

24— Business Opportunities
HER ALD PAPER ROUTE
FOR SALE
377 1133

M A K E ROOM TO STO RE
YOUR W INTER ITEM S
S E LL “ P O N 'T
NEEDS"
f a s t W ITH A WANT AD
Phone 371 2111 or 131 m i end
a friendly Ad Visor will help
you

TOUCH OF CLASS
Restaurant • Lounge
4300 sq ft bldg corner lot 200
seat, ail equipped going
operation. Liquor license
All StS.000
S3).000 H Incur:

BLUE CRABSLIVE
OR DRESSEO
t DA V S S I 44111)1

11—In stru ctio n s
Ttnnift Instruction
U S PVT.,A
Crr lifted Group or Private
lessons Children a specialty
Doug Maliclowsln
1)1)267

CALL ROB BESKE,
R EALTOR ASSOC.
331 *444 or 13* SJOS
GLASS A P F E IF F E R .IN C .
REALTOR
_
# * # # * # * # * ■ * * *

28—Apts. &amp; Houses
____ To Share

18—Help W anted
FR EE TU ITIO N — Real Estate
School Alger end Pond Really
INC ERA 313 7143

SINGLE or Couple to Share 3 2
pool home Sanford Near
Hospital and downtown Call
evening* eft S. 172 2115

BOOKKEEPER - secretary,
small office, typing snd
10 key required 373 *503
Reap your own Foil Harvest ol
Fall Cash — Use Herald Want
Ads Ollen 3711411.
RIGHT now we need a lew good
sales people who have Ihe
ambition snd dedication to
succeed II that’* you. then
we’re prepared lo otter you
reel rewards and the method*
lo get them For interview,
please call Century 71. Hayes
Realty Services. Inc , Sanford
J l) 1050
E X P E R IE N C ED meat cutter
Food Barn Inc.. Jlth SI. Park
Ave Sanford
E X P E R IE N C E D short order
cook apply Food Barn Inc. 7Sth
St. A Park Ave
W AN TED : mature lady to live In
2 days end 1 nights a week,
prepare mean A car* for J
Invalid ladles in Sanlord
residence Call 70S 777 S1IJ
weekdays.
LA YO U T, Filler, Welder, Shear
A Brahe Operators A Indus
trial Painter First and Second *
Shills, Top
Pay. Good
Benefits. Call Florida Iron
Works Inc. 377 0700
PERSON lo deliver P.M. paper
rout* 1 days per week 311 41SI
all * p m good pay

CAS A TTE N D A N T
IN SOUTH SEMINOLE
STATION
Good salary, hospIlaUiation, 1
week paid vacation every S
months. Call 37) 3443.
WORK *t home Jobs available!
Substantial earnings possible
Call SOS *41 1003 E if. 117 tor
information.

SANFORD - Rees wkly 1
monthly rales Ulil me Kit
500 Dak Adult: 141 71*1
A CLEAN turn. room.
call 373 4507 or
Inquire 427 Palmetto

JO A p artm en ts U nfu rn ish ed
LUXURY
AP A R TM EN TS
Fam ily A Adults section
PoolS’de 1 Bdrm*. Master
Cove Apli 371 7t00 Open on
weekends
BAM BOO
CO VE
Apts
Available. 1 A 7 Bdrm*
Starting at 1700 11) 1340.
Ridgewood Arrp* ? Bdtrrr
Apts Irom 1315 3 Bdrm also
avail Pool, tennis court 333
M30_______________ _________
EN JO Y country living? 1 Bdrm
Apis. Olympic si. Poet.
Shenandoah Village. Open I S.
1331*11.
WE
HAVE
Apartments.
Dupleiesand Houses tor Rent
June Porrig Really 3171431
100 ELM Ave , newly remodeled.
I Bdrm, 1 Bath 1715 + Deposit
J Bdrm. 1 Bath S32S a Deposit
Call 13* 7530 Days or 111 SMS
Evenings.
CLEAN large luxurious 1 Bdrm
Apt 10 It ceiling Ceramic
Bath Bay windows, carpel,
kit equip Ulil paid 1 bik
from downtown Sanlord
_Adults no pets SOI Oak A v t.
AIRPORT Blvd , Sanlord Large
7 Bdrm, 7 Full Bath, Kitchen

•quipped. I 215 77M.

--------1-------------------------------------------

Mariner's Village on Lake Ada t
bdrm Irom 1350. J bdrm from
53*0 Located 17*2 lust Soutn
of Airport Blvd In Sanford All
Adults. 313 1*70
M ellonvillt
Trace
Apts
Spacious, modern 7 Bdrrr), 3
Bath apt Carpeted, kit
equipped, CH A A
Near
hospital A lake Adults, no
pets *770 111 f &gt; »

BOYS A GIRLS
AGES 11*17
EARN EXTRA $$
AFTER SCHOOL

1 Rdrm unfurnished oe* with
tec. Dep. No children
Harold Hall Realty Inc. Raaltar

322*2611

CAU

29—Room s

121-1774

CIRCULATION D EP T.

E v e n in g Herald
• t lt lllllllllt lM

M

COOK
FAST FOOD OPE RATION
Good salary, hospilalliation, 1
week paid vacation every a
month*
Experience
nol
necessary Phone Manager
I eke Mary aa — 112 IJSS

.H H M lllia iW M I l

31—A p a rtm e n ts F u rn ish ed
IA N F O R D COZY C O TTA O E
Porch, air, shed 1100 dn 1125 mo
C A IS R L tE R R Y FURN APTS.
3 bdrm, ulil, 175 dn. 1150 mo
3 bdrm, 1 acres, util, 155 wk.

SAVO N-R ENTALS
Seminal*
l i t 7701
1AV ON R E N T A L ! REALTOR

AVON R EP R ES EN TATIVES
The Pari Time Career
*4*107* - Collect H i 170*
F U L L charge double entry
bookkeeper taperlenc* In ten
forms, payroll, accounts
payable
A
receivable,
financial PAL. Small corp.
located In Sanford J712S4S.
W AN TED middla age couple to
live In and car* tor elderly
woman Room, board, salary.
Sanlord,
Fla
Contact
Raymond L. Hall SS4S Lake
Dr , va. Beach. V* 73455
HAIR stylist tip . needed lull
lime,
soma
following
preferred. Lake Mary 111 *517

CUT E Efficiency IttO mo
A L G . I BDRM 1775 mo
Utilities nol Included
I M* M7I
Furnished apartments tor Senior
Citllen* 111 Palmetto Avt., J.
Cowan. No phone calls.
When you piaca a Classified Ad
in The Evening Herald, slay
dost lo your phone because
something wonderful I* about
la happen
E F F IC IE N C Y , with Stove,
refrig , nr. downtown, 1175 mo
lit, tail mo a dap, Raf.
desired 771 2M7 alt 5 p m
1 Bdrm Large 1)71 with lac.
Dap. N* Children
Harold Natl Raalty lac. Realtor
HM7T4

M ATURE Bookkeeper Hour*
negotiable. Apply In person.
Sanford Nursing and Cot
vrlescenl
Center.
ISO
MeHonvlIle Ay*.

3IA— Duplexes

'Halloween Ghosts1 Can't Scar*
Away Classlfiad Ad R h u II*
Her#
*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

STOP IN TOD AYI
BE WORKING
TOMORROW
AAA E M P LO YM EN T
TH E A G EN CY T H A T
PUTS YOU Istl

SANFORD spacious 2 bdr,
I blh. air. drapes.
1)50 mo • dep 33* 1542
SANFORD specious 1 bdr, I
bath, air, drapes, kit appll,
1350 mo. * dtp. 1111547.

32—H ouses U nfurnished
j L d r m .ll with
double car garage, In
Oellana f*1IS7*-l4».

ILLU STR ATIO N ARTIST
D E N TA L ASSISTANT
V E T ASSISTANT
M ANAGER TR A IN EE
E LE C TR IC IA N
COMPUTER PROGRAMMER
LAB TECH

SANFORD 3 bdr, J bih, applic.,
including w d. no pets 1)75
teg 373 p W, ) n
2 BDRM home tor rant 1350 mo.
1100 dep. No pets, children are
fin*. Central Air, fanead yard,
close to town 172 0*30 or
•104 717 75*1

Way too many le list

CALL EAR LY
131-1174

3 BDR J blh AIM month,
lit 4 llt l + tacurify.
_________ 331*4*1,__________

1117 FRENCH AVE
1 BDRM. 15? Bath, Cant HA,
wail lo wall carpel. USD mo. +
tec Pap W J M L

14— Business Opportunities

1 BDRM, 1 bth, appf, fane*,
doubt* oarage 70S Santa St.,
Santord, 311)153___________
SANFORD 3 Bdrm, carpal,
appliance*, utility room, air,
near school 1350 mo. 1311117.

I MONEY IF O R CHRISTMAS
Tgrrlic way tor woman to tarn
money tor Christ mas or year
round. Call today far In
tarvlaw, 373 JOT!
TWO questions w.ll you b#
financially mdeptndanl in 7 lo
S years? A rt you paid whai
you are worm? it not call » )

LOCH ARBOR 1 1 CHA. carpal,
JAfApt Porch, tone*, shade.
S4I0 * deposit. Phone t)| 5***
abdrm, H? bth, w w carpal, can.
H A appll, large fenced yard
w pool MOO, m « 7 H

,■ -

-'

# *.»-

-•

�t

I I

W—Houses Unfurnished
SANFORD 3 bdrm, S3!)
per month. Coll
i l l 9335 After 5 X p m

C R E A T IV E
F in a n c in g !
Academy Manor. 3 Bdrm. Hy
ba New carpel A paint,
carport Rear fenced Big lot
121.100 331 1031

1 BDRM. I Both
tlSO * *JSO Orp
3?3 46)4

IJ Bu.ll in erergy llv t r t , attic
\»oraq«» Dciton* Arc*
____________ 323 3310___________

ALL FLORIDA REALTY
OF SANFORD REALTOR

D ELTO N A — Executive type
home: 2 bdr, I' &gt; pth, seperate
dining area. w w carpet. Irg
lighted closets, modern Alt.
cen HA, closed garage No
pels 5335

3 BDRM. 2 bth. split plan. A 1
condition. Priced 153.100
owner financing
SUPER buy for a professional
building ample parking,
located on well traveled street
141.100

574-1040
F U L L Y Furnished 2 Bdrm. 1
Bath Doll house Available
now Long term lease 1350 mo
Winter season 1400 mo June
Portli Realty Realtors
222 1671

IF you are looking for something
to do on your own. then 1IS00
could put you in business in
this consignment shop Call tor
details
31441 French 322 &lt;111
Alter Hours; 3411000, 1J 2 &lt;7)1

SANFORD Jbd rm .tJtJ
per month Call
322 9335 alter 5 30 p m

OWNER W ILL f i n a n c e
Large 3 BR. 2B Family Home In
town but very private. E i
cellenl condition including
brand new root 1 painting
Yours lor ist.too MusJ see

37—B usiness P rop erty
For rent or lease — 10.320 sq tf
industrial or warehouse t i l
w lit St . Sanford 333 I too

CallBart
real estate

37-fJ— Rental Offices

R EALTOR. 377 7414

Office Space
For Lease
130 7723

PRICE reduced 2 Bdrm, 1 Bath.
Low down payment
No
closing costs Located at l&lt;07
Summerlin Ave Call owner
&lt;34 713!

41—Houses

Inc

Sanford
Just Listed
CHARMING 3 Bdrm. 2 bath.
Fireplace. Country Kitchen.
Family Din., Formal Din
Rm,, Scr Porch, Cent AH +
Attic Fan. detached 2 car
garage with office or ideal apt.
Dbl. Lot, 10 mature fruit trees.
Much More Asking 144.100.
PHYLLIS CAPPONI. REALTOR
C E N TU R Y 31,
&lt;307717

333-7832
Eves 377 007
707 E 75th St
A

K jsH
H IM

i :s t

\ 11

I!

311-0041

MLS

Alter hrs 123 7114 and 132 1111

321-0041

r ealto r

STENSTROM

FOUR TOWNES
R E A L TY INC BROKER
641 4710 anytime

Harold Hall

WE LIST AND SELL
M O R I HOMES THAN
ANYONE IN TH E
1ANPORDAREA
CONDO 1 Bdrm. I Bath Ik
Sandalwood Villas. Cent HA.
WW Cor pet, Bgotpped Kit­
chen. Werner end dryer and
much mere. Comm. Pool and
Cluhhausa. 174,let.
LOTS OP BXTRAS New 2 Bdrm.
7 Bath Hama In Midden Labe
with Cent HA. Well la wall
carpel. Spill Bdrm Plan. Kal
in K itchan. Plarlda Rm. and
Much mare. Just tll.aaa.
PURNISHRO 2 Barm, I Bath
Mama In Bell Aire, with new
carpet, PI. Rm. Dining Rm,
Spill Bdrm Plen. Prutl Trees
in Beckl 122.Mb.
B E A U TIP U L Permer I Bdrm. 2
Beth Model Heme in Deltona.
Many Decor touches! All the
eitras Plus lets morel Only
H i Vrs. Oldl IM .M I

REALTY, INC.
323-5774

WE HANDLE RENTALS
REST BUY IN SANFORD! 3
bdrm w new paint B carpel,
separate OR. eettnkil. i«
bdr ms 1 good assumption at
.M y 124,W HI
HANDYM AN
S P E C IA L Surrounded by much more
eipenslve homes, this 1 7 is on
a huge lot In Pine Crest -f
priced for quick sale at 117.100.
R EO U C ED 117.OOOt 1 bdrm. I
bath heme toned Restricted
Commercial with I I I leet en
highway ter prime espesure
New tuft S44.1MII
2 S TO R Y A P T MOU1E Completely remodeled w new
wiring, plumbing, smoke
alarms. 2 paddle Ians + large
rooms Positive cash now 4
eicellent linancingl You'd
better hurry at only &lt;47.m t t

______ 323-5774_______

6-12 Mo. Lease

322-2420

3MI
Park

THE C E N TU R Y 71 SYSTEM
HELPS more people buy end sell
more reel esteft than anyone
else in Amrrice Cell todey
end Id it work lor you Cell
272 2050
H e r r s Reel E s le lr

Services. Inc
421W JSth St
Sanlord
Eech ollice is independently
owned end operated

*285 M o.
•Phone: 322-2090-

1BEDROOM
1 BATH
LUXURY
OARDEN
APARTMENTS
On-The-Lake
a p a r t m e n t s

8 *245.
V v

7

323-7900
»

«

r t » i e» eg

61—Building ^ t e r i a l s

43— Lois-Acreage
W EK IV A

R EA LTO R 222 4111 Day or Night

w ooded

Me. Leeae

rA L L S
r iv e r

AR EA ,

3 FAM ILY Garage Sale All
kinds ol things Saturday only
3315 S. Grandview Ave

fr ont

ACRE 175 000

2 1 'iW F AM RM. assume M il
mo wi tla.OOOdown
122 1720

O S TE E N
W OODED
ACRES 117.500 TERMS

ALMOST new lovely executive
home In Idyllwilde, many
»«tre i 513.500 Cell M lli s i

O S TE E N S ACRES
PINES. SCRUB OAK
TERMS

7 'i

TALL
t i t .500

GENEVA 7' i ACRES WOODED
ZONEO MOBILE 1I7.S00

YARO Sale Saturday
• 5Only 1104 Magnolia
Variety of Hems

GENEVA 70 ACRES WOODED.
COCHRAN ROAD S3 500 PER
ACRE MAY DIVIOE
COMMERCIAL 7 ACRESON 17
17 NEAR L A K E M AR Y
BOULEVARD 1150.000

S E IG L E R R E A L T Y
BROKER
3765 HWY. 17-92
321.0640

LAKE MARY
m -lH O
541W Like Mary Blvd
IN DR IF TWOOD VILLAGE
SANORA boiler then new 2
bedroom. 7 both. 7 car garage,
rough cedar siding Low down
542,100 7721160

Hive some camping equipment
you no longer use? Sell il all
with a Classified Ad in The
Herald Call 277 7611 or i l l
m i and a friendly ad visor
will help you

★

★

★

★

Time
Only

7&lt; TO YO TA Corolla assume
paymentSI6S per mo . balance
14000 Good running condition
1)00 down 222 7513

TR A V E L T R A IL E R 17 fl
tandem aale. elec brakes, sell
contained, tleeps 6 11100
271 0675.UI 5p m
FOR SALE jo Fl Travel Trailer
Sleeps 6 Sell contained. 1J500
JJ3 7I7J

3 $ A V TONA AUTO AUCTION
Hwy 13. I mile west of Speed
way Daytona Beach, will hold
a public AUTO AUCTION
every Wednesday at f p m It’s
the only one in Florida You lei
the reserved price Call 104
3551)11 I4r further detail!
STOP ANO THINK A M IN U TE
II Classified Ads didn’t work
there wouldn't be any
1174 CHEVY Comoro 4 Cyl
Aulo PS. PB. Stereo AM FM.
light green paint, while In
ler lor 12415 M l 1724

77—Junk C ars Rem oved
CASH FOR CARS
Running or not
ui m i

11?) CH EVY Vega GT Hal
chback 4 Cyl. 4 Sp Bright
yellow and while Air con
d'tioner not working 5)15
_______
M l 1734___________
1174 AMC Horne! Hatchback
Aulo PS AM rad&gt;o II miles
per gallon Looks and drives
like a new car 11415 May
consider trade Ml }?)!.

78—M otorcycles

68—W anted to Buy
W ANT T O B U Y A
H E A TE R 34x34
CALL 333 0143

* B 4 H Auto Sates *
*339 7989*

HONDA Passport I HO
Low mileage 1*00
Call 333 0447 aft 6

Bank Imanclng available
55 N Hwy 1711
Cassefberry

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB
T o List Y o u r B u sin e ss...
D ia l 322-2611 o r 831-9993
^ - - - — *- 14 ■1&lt;
lO n C r B lf TVDfK

Additions 4
Remodeling

47-A—Mortgages Bought
ft Sold

Lawn M b into* n e t

BATHS, kitchen*, roofing block,
concrete window*, add a
room free r*timatr 373 1863

We pay cash lor 1st A 7nd
mortgages Ray Lrgg. Lie.
Mortgage Broker 2)1 7741

Air Conditioning

■ Concrete Work, footer*, floor* &amp;
pools landscaping A tod
work Frew etl m i l l )
1 MAN q u a l i t y o p e r a t i o n
t yrs rip Pal os OrisrwayS
He Wayne Heal 177 |)ji

SO—M iscellaneous fo r Sale
LIK E new air condl., tools,
formica cabinets. A mite. 174
Lake Irene Rd 1)1 not.

★

Chris will service AC's, refng.
heeiers. water coolers, mlsc
Call Ml 5&lt;ll

Appliance Repair

LE V I JEANS A JACKETS
ARMY NAVY SURPLUS
210 Sanlord Ave.
222 SKI

4 l-B—Condominiums

For Sal*

S E R V IC E , Installation, Air
cond.,
r tlrlg .,
washers,
dryers, celling fans, minor
plumbing Reas No service
charge with repair. 105 574

20 IN K ELVINATO R elecfrlr
range, avocado 171 Call affae
&gt; p m. jnooaa

SEW AND SAVE
UN G ER Z&gt;g Zag and cabinet
Pay balance 161 or to
payments 17 50 See al Sanlord
Sewing Center. Sanlord Plara

I7a44 2 BORM. 2 Mh. A H. 1.10
shad In Carriage Cova 17.000
277 0414 ah 4 p m

SEARS lop of the ground
swimming pool 1Si 4 « , cellenl
condition, i l l 1114.

Looking lor a |ob? The Ciassilied
Ads will help you find that job

Electrical
Quality electrical work 33 yrs
experience Minor repairs lo
complete wiring 133 0314

Handyman
Pamiing. carpentry, all types ol
home repairs Call lor tree
estimate i l l 1171

Home Improvement

Beauty Cere

CEN TR AL FLORIDA HOME
IM P R O V E M EN T!
Pamiing, Rooting. Carpentry
Lie Bonded 1 Guaranteed
Free Estimates 11) )44»

TOWER'S b e a u t y s a l o n
TO RM ER LY Harrietts Beauty
Nook 511 E III SI . &gt;71 5747

51-A— Fumiluns

CHECK TM IJO U T
B E A U TIFU L 111; Royal Oaks 21
wide 7 bdr. 2 bln, gardm tub.
deluxe c.irpet, cathedral
ceilings, brick lirrplece. wood
tiding, shingle roof, peddle
ten end rrieny more eitras
Only 174.100 VA financing nb
money down. 10 % down
conventional See ol Uncle
Roys Mobile Home Sales ol
Leesburg. U S Hwv 441 S 104
717 0)34 Ooen weekdays I
7 10. Sun 17 4

FOR sale furniture, household
odds A ends 372 7146, II)
Crystal Laka Ave Neil lo the
Pub

CHECK O U T UNCLE ROYS
LARGE selection ol 14 widet
prices start S till VA tman
cing no money down. 10%
conventional

52—Appliances

WILSON M AIER FU R N ITUR E
111 U S E FIRST ST
377 1421
STORING IT M AKES W A S T E SELLING IT M AKES CASH
PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD
NOW Call 777 7611 or »7I 111)

SEARS Coldtpol rtlrlgerator
I t 'i cubic lief, coppertone
22)1664

Shop Uncle troys Mobile Home
Seles. Leesburg, U S Hwy 441
S 104 717 0314 Ooen 7 days

Boarding 4 Grooming
TLC W ITH "R U T H ”
Dog grooming, small Breeds SI.
Fra* pick up. delivery
Longwood area 1)1117)
Ammal Haven Boardmg and
Grooming Kennels Shady,
insulated, screened. Ily proof
mside. outside runs Fans
Also AC cages We calrr to
your pels
Starting stud
registry Ph 333 S7S3________
Snow Hill Kennel otters Cal i
Dog Flea Baths IS up 34
Hour. Full Service MS 5713

B u ild in g C o n tr a c to r

1 Commercial dryers, tea at
Laka Mary coin laundry 1100
each 131 5574

M O B IL E Home 47 fl long.
Central Air, gat lumanca.
Florida R it i . IW a l). F u r­
nished Windy Hill Mobile
Home Park Lot )A 771 0777.

RENT A W4Shee, Dryer.
Refngereior.or TV
104 775 4115__________
ken more parts, service, utwa
washers M OONEY APPLI
ANCES 233 0117

See oOr beautiful new BROAD
MORE, front A rear BR's
GREGOR Y M O B ILE HOMES
2101 Orlando Or,
221 1700
VA A F H A Financing

October is Fire Prevention
Month Cleanup and Sellout
with a Herald Classified Ad.

53— T V - R a d i o - S I t n o
Good Usad TV'S, *25 A up
M ILLER S
741!Orlando Fr.
Ph 2210151

NEW Nobilily, 3 bdr. 7 bth. dbl
wide, shingle reol, wood
tiding Oct special Sll.ftJ
delivered 4 set up
Open Sundays
Uncle Roys Mobilt
Home ilelet Of
Leesburg 104 717 0374

54— Garage Sales
GARAGE SaK Oct. 34 35. 14
p.m. Baby Hams A clothe*,
turn, m atlratt A mlsc.
household Hams. 115 Wildwood
Dr. (Hidden Lakes)

43—Loti-A creage

Ceramic Tilt
Complete Ceramic Tile Serv.
walls. Iloori. countertops, re
model repair Fr est )&gt;!0?ll

FB I. A SAT., MI3 Iroquois Avo.
off Santa Barbara Or. M :M
aacb day baby clafhat,

LAKEFEONT 10 Acres Deltona.
Terms.1MA00

w. Malicjowskl Realtor
177 75*1

womant clothaa 7.» A 14 fvrn.
mlsc. household Items A toys.

f
i f--

\ v

t

K.T. REM ODELING
Kit. bath A additions Quality
workmanship in all home
Improvements
LICEN SED A INSURED .
C A L l KEN TAYLOR
1)11114
It you are having difficulty
lindmg a place lo live, car lo
drive, a lob. or some service
you have need 01. read all our
Wfnl ads every day

Homt 4 Office
Cleaning Services
G E T ready lor the holidays.
Dependable A reasonable,
home end ollice cleening
service. Cell Leu 331 4)41

Garage sales are in season Tell
•he people about il with a
Ciassilied Ad in the Herald
33) 3411; MI-1WJ

M ElN TZ ER TILE
Newur repa'f, leaky showers our
specially. 75yrs Exp I 4 I B T )

T H R E E Fam ily yard sail.
Saturday only Oct. 34fh IS .
Back of Sunland E slates on 437
and Bbdlo Sf._______________

FOE SALE S acres of land (un
developed) appro* 7 miles
wen Of Geneva. Call 3731441

J A B Home Improvement —
Carpentry work ot any type
Root repairs, gutter work,
pamtmg Imterior or exlericrl,
plumbing, spec table in mobile
home repairs A root coating,
and wood palio decks Free
estimate 13)4054

SHIELDS CONSTRUCTION
Additions,
rem odeling,
designs. Guar. Slate License
Prompt estimate*. 477 S337.

e4f Ilya C4II 3y 1AM I

U ntiled

73 T BIRD Loaded. New Tires.
Blue with While Top. or 74
Cutlass Supreme No money
down 175 mo 221 1100. &lt;74 4105
Dealer

CONSULT OUR

Wa buy equity In Heutet.
apartments, vacant land and
Acreage LUC K Y INVEST
M ENTS. P O Bo, 7100. San
lord. Fla 27771 22) 4741

ir it it it ir

★

fo r E tfa tt. Commercial or
Retidentiai Auction* &amp; Ap
praiiait Call Dell* Auction
. W *670 _

HUY JUNK CARS A TRUCKS
From SlOloSSOor more
Call 377 1674. 377 4460

7 LEVER action 20)0 rilles. 2
pistols. I black powder rllle. 1&lt;
HP wheel horse tractor 22)
0753 all 5 p m

1164 Renault, runs good 1750
VW bus IN4 runs good 5650 or
trade lor equal value i l l 4747
77GR ANO Safari waaon
runs good asking 5)50
222 4550

Moving lo a newer home,
apartment? Sell "don’t needs"
last with a want ad.

—

VW 1171 good mechanical
condition. 1150
_________ 773 4441___________

72—A uction

F R E E k mens. 4 adorable a week
old kittens. ) mates. I lemale.
333 4)1)

CASH FOR E Q U ITY
Wacanclostlnathrs.
CallBart Real Etlala 22] rail

331-0754 Ev# 333-7843
LA K E MARY
Immaculate cuilem 2 2 built 1
Vr. age Pireplece. Intercom,
closets gnlere, elec, garage
opener, wooded let end morel
Ad|. treed let avail. Call Becky
c our sen 222-1421 (evesl. Park
Place
Associates
Inc.
Realters. 372-IM4.

A L U M IN U M , can*, copper,
lead brati. itlvff. gold Week
d*** k 4 30 Sat 9 1 k o k o Mo
Tool Co T il W lit St 3?) 1100

TOP Dollar Paid tor Junk A.
U*cd car*, truck* A heavy
equipment 373 *990

47—R eal E sla te W anted

B ATEM AN R E A LTY

★

I

1164 FORO Galaxy 500 air. PS.
PB. 1 new radialt. excellent
2nd car 1500 17) 4770

ANIMXC Haven Kennell board
&gt;ng &lt; grooming, Needed
Pekingese A small silvar
poodle lor stud Male Owners
call )?7 575?_______

323 i960

NO
REASONABLE
otter
refused 3 tty Blk. Eat In Kit.
FP, Carpet, reedy lo move In
Lg. Assume Mlg. Consldec
renting. Asking tie.SBO
Lie Real Estate Broker
7440 Sanford Aye

★

GUN auction Sunday Nov
Sanlord Auction
17155 Frm chAve
More mlo 27) 7)40

PAPER BACK Books Western.
Adventure. Romance. Comics
Baby Furniture 77? 1504

USE D eng Ines 1150 u
Usedtrani 150 up
Fuel' Salvage 377 2447

DOG training classes obedience
1 confirmation Starling Oct
71 IS) 0717

W ANTED 100 to 700 acres in
Orange or Seminole Counties,
joned lor mobile home tub
division Send all details in
eluding location, to P o Boi
1161. Ocala. Fla )767t

SALES ASSOCIATES
NEEDEJ

★ if

57A-Gum ft Ammo

CASH far Cars t r Trucks
Martin Malar tales.
JU S . French. I l l 7*24

43-B— Lots &amp; Acreage'
----------Wanted______

ASSUMABLE, no qualifying 12%
mlg 2bdrm. I bath Cent. M A,
7 extra lots! Fireplace, pooll
In town 155.000

S opening* Itfl.

CFA PERSIANS Adult
Females While. Black
1150 S750 12) )511

FRIOAY only Healer, lamps,
nails, tools, lumber, dishes,
mlsc, Cleaningoul garage t ?
Lake and W 70lh 373 7457

Anltques Diamonds Oil
Patntingi Oriental Rugs
Bridget Antiques
12) KOI

76—Auto P a rts
» ILL DIRT 8* TOPSOIL
YELLOW SANO
Call Clark 1 M.rt 333 /MO

65—Pets-Supplies

F R I .A S A T .f 5 p m .
furnllurel mlsc.
1707 Palmetto Ave

80-AutOS

62—Law n-G arden

GARAGE Sale Saturday. Ocf 74
All Soul's " O L D ” School,
between llh 4 10th Streets on
Oik Ave 10 7 o'clock

OSTEEN IJ ACRES WOODED
PAVED ROAD f r o n t a g e
1)6 000

ASSOCIATES. INC . REALTORS'
17Offices Throughout
Central Florida

BUILOINGS ALL STEEL
X'x40' 13.177, 40 ,60' S4.2K
4&lt;'*&lt;0' 11,421. 60 ,1)5* 111,111
Call Bill Webb 2)1 4445
-------- -------------

54—G a ra g e Sales

68—Wanted fo Buy

75—R ecreatio n al V ehicles

Buy Football Tickets with
Money You make with a
Garage Sale

SLIM
B U D G ETS
ARE
BO LSTER ED W ITH VALUES
FROM
TH E
W ANT AD
COLUMNS

"

«270u-

W AN TED : Responsible party to
take over payments on Spinet
Console Piano. Can be seen
locally Write Mr Foster, P O
Bo* 541. Astor. Fla 17007

BUILDING LOTS 4 loti in
Geneva Good location, dose to
SI Johns River end Lake
Herney Owner will finance
If 0CO Ea
N E ED ROOM? This lovely j
Bdrm 2 Bath has it Nicely
landscaped and sdtled neigh
borhood Has Cent HA with
wall lo wall carpet 141.100
EXCELLENT
S TA R TER
HOME There ! room lo e«
peml in this 1 Bdrm I Bath
Home Central location end
priced right., at only 175.100

4 2 -M o b ile H om es

Coble T.V .

WAS

PIANOS A organs large A small
stari ng as low as 114115 Bob
BUI Music C m '»r A Wr^ern
Auto 101 W Is! Sanlord

STEMPER AGENCY

CALL A N Y TIM E

2 Bed-oom, W o sh«r/D ryer Hookup

SPECIAL

59—M usical M erch an d ise

322-9283

m

O ELTO N A
condom inium s
located no or Lake Monroe. 1
bdr, 2 bth. unit over looking
swimming pool 155.100 Cell
collect 212 457 0042

A D U L T S E C T IO N

t h e

24 HOUR

MAVPAIR VILLASI 1 B I
Bdrm., 2 Beth Cende Vines,
noil to Maylalr Country Club
Select your let, lleer plen B
Interior decarl Ovality cen
itruded By Shoemaker ler
147.210 B upl

—Geneva Qardeqs-----

1-1506 West 25th Street*
Sanlord, Florida 32771

MALTY
REALTOR. MLS
2101 S French
Suite 4
Sanlord

REALTY - REALTORS

Sanford's Sales Leader

O ELIGH 4FU L DeBary — eitra
large 1 bdr. 2 bth home with
tots of closets, on ■&gt; acre
wooded, lake Iron! lot. Dream
kit, re tna . Island stove,
washer A dryer, cent vac
system, w w carpet, 14x30
screened porch, patio, and
closed garage. 147.500

R EALTO R

R O B B I I ’S

E N TE R TA IN In this pool home
w everything! 1 2, gameroom,
pert cond. !♦ acre, wooded,
burglar proofing! M4.S00

Spr.ng is "Move outside lim e "
Get patio and lawn furniture at
a good price Read the
Classified Ads
' 111.500 SPACIOUS 1 bdr, tw bth
FI rm New root — newly
pamted, near Pmecrest Sch
- Large Large fenced back
yard.
A.A. McClanahan
Lie. Real Estate Broker
372 5117

M O T O R IZ E D ] month old
DeSolo tricycle. m i i «*«. •
charger included 1421
177 1715

Get on Your Broomstick — Clean
Upl Sweep Upl and List your
"Don't
Wants"
in the
Classifieds

HAL COLBERT REALTY1

58—Bicycles
Classified ads serve the buying
selling comibunlly every day
Read A use them often __

you are having difficulty
finding * place to live, car fo
cJr vt. a job. or tome service
vo j haw need of, read all our
war! ads every day

2 BDRM. I bth, carport, can HA.
carpet. 30*30 garage, fenced
back yard, deep well 131.100
or make reasonable offer.
tISOOdn assume mortgage, no
Qualifying call 323 7521

new energy
e f f ic ie n t m o m e

33—Houses Furnished

It

Thursday, Ocf. M .M 1 -J B

Evgnlng Herald, Sanford. FI.

with Major Hoople

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

41—Houses

41—Houses

I

dock Repair

LARGE T R E E i N l T A U I t
Landscaping. 0 U Lewna Be
M l MCI

G W ALTN EV j e w e l e r
304 S ParkAva.
133 M0&lt;

Heve seme camping equipment
you no longer use) Sell II ell
with e Ciassilied Ad in The
Hereld Call 33)1411 or t ) l
t i t ) and a friendly advisor
will help you

Start Indian Summer In a
"TaePea" of your own, check
Baal Eatatt Bargains...

\ k k &lt; q * q * - t

Landscaping

•

* S

* w q •

j

Remodtling

DUN R ITE Lawn Service Mow,
edge. trim, vacuum, mulch,
tod Reas ) ) ) 3511

Remodeling Specialist

LAWN care lo suit your needs,
rubbish
removal.
Call
evenings 471 7544

B. E. Link Const.
332-7029

Legal Services

SOCIAL SICUIITY
DISABILITY CLAIMANTS
1 provide representation *1 Ihe
Administrative Law Judge
Level lor claimants who have
been turned down lor recon
tlderatlon.
35)4111
Richard A. Schwartt Ally,
311 Magnolia Aye
Daytona Beach. FL 3X1
M AK E ROOM TO STORE
YOUR W INTER H EM S
S ELL " D O N ’ T N E E D S "
FAST WITH A WANT AD
Phone )?7 3611 or Ml m ) and
a Inmdly AdVisor will help
vou

Wr handle the
Whole Ballot Wax

Financing Available

Roofing
ROOFS, leaks repaired. Replace
relten eaves and shingle werk.
licensed, insured, banded
Mike 111 4)73.
ROOFING ol all kinds com
merclal 1 residential Bonded
A insured 13) 3517

Christian Rooting 17 yrs exp
1415150. tree esl Nrroofmg.
sprciilile m repair work A
new roofing
SOUTHERN Roor ING IS v'*
r i p . re roolmg. leak special
ill Dependable A honrsl
price Day or night )7) 1)1)

Sandblasting
Nursing Cent*r
OUR R A TES A R ELO W ER
Lakeview Nursing Center
f it E Second S I, Sanlord
331 4707

Painting
Heilman Painting A Repairs
Quality work Free E tl, Disc
lo Seniors IM LUO Refer.
October's Flying. Leaves are
Falling Bui Ciassilied keep
Buyers calling 111 3411.

Painting 4 or
Pressure Cleaning
No 10b loo large or small
Quality a mull Call 133 0071
References Fr Etl
II you are having difficulty
lining a place, lo live, car to
drive, a |oo. or some service
you have need ol, read all our
want ads every day

SANDBLAITINO
O A V II W ILO IN O
133 4311. SANFORD

Small Home Repair
SM ALL home repairs, rool
repair, tree esl All work
guaranteed 1)1 lias

Sodding
C 1 J LAWN CARE. No lob loo
small Ret. and Comm. Free
Est S7I &lt;054 or 7K i)30.

Sprinklen
IN S T A L L
and
Rapalf.
Residential and Commercial
Fret E tl. 574 405a or 7114330

Tractor Wbrk
NEEOASERVICIMANT Yaw'll

Plumbing
FONSECA
P L U M B IN G
Repairs, emergency service,
sewer drain cleaning 13) 407$
Freddie Robinson Plumbing
Repairs,' taucais. w
C.
Sprinklers 31) H it. 33)4704
IF THIS I S T H t DAY lo buy •
new car, aw todaya Ciassilied
ada 1or best buys
Plumbing repair — all types
weier healers A pumps
33) 147)

find him llttti Wi ovr B vtln a i
Directory.

Tree Service
JU N G L E J im T r t t Ser
Trimming, topping &lt; removal,
tree esl.male (also rubbish
removal i 1)4 r m
If looking lor your
bargain Otter it today m iha
C iitiile d Ads

Trimming, removing A [ t r *
scap&lt;ng Free Est 333 03M

' K

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• • « •

Scotty's Best-For-Less Specials
Magnetic DOOR CATCH

P A N E L IN G /M O U L D IN G S 1

General Purpose
BATTERIES

Prefinished Cellular
MOULDINGS

In ”C" or "D" sizes.

In finishes to match
most paneling.

Aluminum finish. No. 148.

a

'

Crime Deterrent
SECURITY UTE

Each

Your Choice:

'• .

Outside Corner — 8' . . . 1 . 0 9

“

S to p - 7 ' ..

1 . 1 9

Casing — 7 ’

1 . 9 9

Cove — 8 ' ..

1 . 7 9

Prefinished PANEUN6

,
Interior, exterior. Can be
| p a i n t e d without staining. 11
fl. oz.

3.0 mm x 4' x 8'
lauan backing. Ap
palachian Hickory or
Mandolin Maple.

ttstroTOrf
'■Uonuntj

Cocoa synthetic turf mats. One
daisy design. 17Vi" x 23’/j".

Your Choice:

PIUSUIOOD

4x4x8*
Pressure Treated PINE
P ie ce ..................................3 . 7 0

TO O LS

SCREWDRIVER KIT

S co tty ^

Nine pieces. PSK-8.

1

S a v e « •%
C a t a la f S p e c ia l

C a ta lo g S p e c ia l

M ISCELLANEOUS

it e m s

S a v t 37%

i rtridge

Latex paint for interior walls and
ceilings.
White

POLYSEAMSEAL CAULK
For interior or ex­
terior use. Resists
mildew.

Colors

Last Catalog Price (kit)................... I 59

Aluminum LEVEL
SPRAY ENAM EL j e o t t y i
In Appliance White
and colors.

Cam

SUPER CAULK

11 fl or.

Can

Pure Vinyl FLOOR TILE
No-wax, s e lf ­
adhesive 12” x 12”
tiles.
Rochelle Stone —
1.3 mm.

White
Each

Redwood, Brown or
Woodtone (each), .i

DOQQDOD^
l L

^ R
3 V «4
Sq Ft.
*

/*”

W a s h e rle s s , 2 acrylic
handles. (Without spray.)
TC-1100.

White and colors.

3-Tab FIBERGLASS
2 0 Year Warranty
S q u a re ... 2 4 . 4 8

8« 1 S
Bundle

CDX Sheets
Agency Approved
Sheet
3 /0 " X 4 ’ X 8 '..................... G e l s
1/2" x 4' x 8' (3 ply)...........6 . 7 7
1/2" x 4 ' x 8'(4 p l y ). . .. . . 7 . 3 9
5 /8 " x 4 'x 8 '— .............. | 0 . | 5

GYPSUM WALLBOARD

Gf/fc£r piK°

1/2” x4' x 12' ...............4 . 7 0

Each Tile

CUT-and-CARRY CARPET

SAWHORSE BRACKETS

Scotty's do-it-yourself foam-backed
carpet can be installed in an
afternoonl

All-purpose hinged
brackets. SH-1.

I

^

Heavy-Duty Saw horse Brackets

TU FTTO N ES — 100%
nylon level loop, foam
back. In Gold, Earth
and Green. 12’ width.

|SH-2 (pair)....................2 . 1 9

later Level
CONTROL VALVE

HOI IYh’

KOVAl SCOT
i *H%v

Metal BIFOLO DOORS

-corrosive, quiet.
Easily fits most tanks.
Model 200A.
fL U ID

White louver design.
Each unit contains
tw o p a n e l s a n d
hardware.
Unit
2 ’-0" x 6 -8” S O . M
2'-6" x 6 -8” 2 0 . 1 9

Reg Price
(each) 2539

Self-Sealing T‘
ROOF SHINGLES em

3 / 8 x 4 x 8 ‘ ..................3 . 1 4
1/2" x 4 x 8 ' .................. 3 . 1 0

nil

Each

SPRUCE STUDS

, D.

(r&lt; #

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AquaUiK*

titchen FAUCET

Vir.y?
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Kraft-Backed
BERGLASS INSULATION

8' through 16' lengths.
Lin. Ft...................................... 5 2 C

Sheathing PLYWOOD

A

Interior-exterior. 11 fl. oz.
cartridge.

1 x t 2 N o . 3 P I N E SHELVING

2 x 4 x 92H " (piece)....... 1
2 x 4 x 9 6 ” (piece)........... 1

Wall-Cote PAINT Scotty*

Lest Catalog Price (each).......99C

2 x 4 x S' Pressure Treated
PINE SPECIAL
P iece .................................. 1 . 3 0

Reg Price
Ieach) . . . .

Interior, exterior. Provides
watertight, long-lasting seal
on most building materials.

2 x 4 x 8 ' YELLOW PINE
SPECIAL
P ie ce ....................................... S I

T

LATEX KORKER CAULK

•The higher the R - a
value, the greeter
....
the In s u la tin g
1
power. Ask y o u r3 ” * 23
Scotty's salesmen R-19*
for the feet sheet 6" x 15”
jtn R values
6“ x 23” *

Reg Price
(each)__

Base — 8 ' ....................... 2 . ;

Interior-Exterior
CAULK
Scotty*

M ACCO*

N a tio n / R u ik in
✓ *
*

Inside Corner — 8 ' .......

Photo-electric cell turns light on at
dusk . . . off at dawn.
Model SLC-200.

Reg Price (each)...........22C

9

For quick, easy clean­
ups. In Oval, Rectang­
ular and Turtleback
shapes.
.
.—

Batten — 8 ' .............. .
Shoe — 8 ' .......................

b F

SPONGES

(Jp

M A STC R '

■
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3 *0” x 6 ’-8” 2 9 . 4 9

MKB GOOD RIOAr 1HMI THUBOAT

Scotty
Shop

O CTO BER 28

— • ra n .iP M
700 French Aw*.

Fh: 323*4700
ALTAMONTE 6FAING8
1029 E. Altamonte Or.
(Hwy.436)
Fh: 336*6311

Save

O R A N G E C IT Y
2323 S. Volusia Ava.
Hwy. 17 and 92
Fh: 776-7268

Prices quoted in this ad are
based on customers picking-up
merchandise at our store De­
livery is available lor a small
charge.
Management reserves the right
I n lim .l
__ __ _ 9 .
lo limit auantities on special
sale merer
rchandise.

I

ALTAMONTE SFRINOt
878 W. H w y . 4438
Fh: 862•7254

V ISA *

ffi-i

If'
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P£s

V a. f L4*7.

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�E v e n i n g ■l«&gt;n t k l

LEISURE
Com plwt* W h Ic' i T V Listings

Sanford, Florida — Friday, Octobar U , m i

H a llo w e e n 's A n c ie n t P o s t

T h o s e

H a u n tin g

By DIANE JE FFE R SO N
H erald Staff W riter
I/ook again a t that carved pum pkin silting on your
window slll.Irishlegend has It that a m em ber of the squash
fam ily with the toothy grin is a gift of the Devil himself.

+

R e m in d e r s

Despite Pope G regory I ll’s designation of October 31 as
All Hallows Eve, moving the festival of All Hallows or All
Saints Day to November 1 in the eighth century did not
rem ove pagan trappings associated with the ancient
.D ruidic celebration of New Y ear's Day on November 1.

Celtic tribes of the British Isles gathered on hilltops to
light a sacred fire to rejuvenate their weakening sun god,
alw ays fearing the sun m ight die during winter as their
crops did if the m agical rites w ere not perform ed to
perfection.
The Druidic lx&gt;rd of the Dead Sam hain m eted out
judgem ents on this day to souls who had died during the
previous year. The Celts believed souls had to wait inside
the bodies of anim als until Sam hain cam e to earth during
the New Y ear's holiday to determ ine if they would be
freed to ascend to heaven or be doomed to continue their
existence in anim al form. Sacrifices w ere m ade to pay for
the sins of the dead, hoping to gain them favor with
S am hain—and a place in heaven. Robert J. M yers states
in his book C elebrations—The Complete Book of
A m erican Holidays th at horses w ere still being sacrificed
to the sun god during the feast of Sam hain in 400 A.D.
Ghosts w andered am ong the homes of the living while
aw aiting judgem ent, so the ancient Celts laid out a place
for them at the fam ily table and prepared a feast
A fte rw a rd s, fam ily m e m b e rs d o nned co stu m e s
representing the souls of the departed and led them away
from the village in a procession to the outskirts of the
town.
T oday's custom of w earing costum es while asking
neighbors for food can be traced back to tills pagan New
Y ear feast.
Halloween was not widely celebrated in America until
after the potatp fam ine in Ireland in Die I840's, M yers tells
us. Descendants of the Celts settled in Ireland, the Irish
brought their celebration with them ucross the Atlantic.
They introduced a rich lore of ghosts, fairies, and legends,
such a s th at of Irish Jack .
A m iserly drunkard, Irish Jack nevertheless was
cunning enough to tra p the Devil by inviting him to pick a
ripe apple from a tree. Quickly cutting a cross into the
bark beneath the dem on, Jack prevented his descent.
Jack allowed the Devil to climb down on one condition:
lie m ust sw ear to never lay claim to J a c k 's soul. The Devil
agreed.
When Juck died, heaven turned him aw ay, saying tie
w as too tightfisted and lacked com passion. So Ja ck went
to hell. But the Devil told him he could not stay there,
cither, since he hud m ade the Devil sw ear an oath
relinquishing all claim to his soul. The Devil told Jack to
go back where he cam e from.
D ejectedly, Jack trudged through the darkness bock up
from hell. Jack sat down to eat a turnip, when the Devil
threw him a coal from the fires of hell to help light his
way. le g e n d says Jack pul the sm oldering coal inside the
turnip, und lie has been wondering Die earth with his jacko'-lantern since. Children in Ireland hollowed out
potatoes, ru tab ag as, and turnips in his honor before the
custom of carving pum pkins becam e p art of the lore.

Hits feline is fortunate she wasn’t born in the Middle Ages and a few shades
darker. Back then, black cats were burned in wicker baskets on Halloween
because they were believed to be the animal form of demons or the Devil him­
self.

The Altamonte South Seminole Jaycees will kick off
their "N ine Nights of Halloween" haunted house project
with these leering rem inders of poor Irish Ja c k 's
dilem m a. The haunting will take place at Die I/ing wood
Village Inn, Highway 427 a t Highway 434 October 23
through O ctober 31, 7 p.m . through the bewitching hour.
Among the ghosts and skeletons and eerie events that
will be occurring there, Irish Ja ck would have felt right at
home.

�Friday, Pel. 22,1»ll

2—Evening Herald, Sanford. FI.

B ro a d w a y's 'R eplacem ent'

Stepping Into Television
Ann Rcinking has a halfdozen B ro ad w ay show s
under her belt, two movies
and she turned down parts in
both "C harlie's Angels" and
"T h ree 's Com pany." And
she doesn't even have a
press agent. In fact, she
alw ays had the fear she
might not m ake it — a fear
that should be quelled by
now
Miss Iteinking does a Bob
Fosse num ber in the Kmmy
a w a r d - w in n in g
" J u lie
Andrews' Invitation to the
D unce
w ith
R udolf
N ureyev," to lx- rebroadcast
S unday on " T h e CBS
Festival of liv e ly A rts for
Young People” series.
The dancing that Miss
Iteinking does, both on stage
and in front of the cam era, is
grueling. "Anyone who does
sta r dancing or solo w ork,"
sh e sa y s , " g e ts pulled
m uscles and so forth. You’re
really out there eight p er­
form ances u week, trying to
m uke It work and be the best.
You have to give them m ore
than step-step, kick-kick. It's
like being a sta r football
player. You get a few m ore
injuries than the guy sitting
on lltc bench.”
Miss Iteinking has spent
very little tim e on tlx: bench.

ANN KK1NK1NG
She arrived in New York
from h er native Seattle,
Wash., a t 18, exactly seven
years after she announced to
her p arents over dinner that
sire wanted to be a dancer.
("T hey all but choked," she
recalls.) Her first Job w as In
the corps de bullet ul Itadlo
City Music Hall.
"It w as u good place to
leum the ropes, to learn
p ro fe s s io n a lis m "
—
something she needed. " I'd
go on stage with a squirt gun
or blacken my teeth ," she
sa y s. "O n B ro ad w a y , I
would hnvc been fired. You
don’t have girls walking
around with squirt guns."

PAIR STAR IN R iM A K i
Melissa Gilbert plays Deanle Loomis and
Cyril O'Reilly play* Bud Stamper In this new
production of the famous William Inge drama,
“Splendor in the Grass," the story of two teen­
agers whose romance cannot thrive in the
strict environment of pre-Depression Kansas
In which they live. To air Monday on NBC.

Her first Job a fte r Radio
City was in the chorus of a
to u rin g “ F id d le r on th e
Roof," and she now says,
" I ’ll never go on the road
agin."
She didn’t have to. Bob
Fosse cast her in "P ip p in ,"
in which he used dancers
individually, ra th e r than us
an o n y m o u s c h o ru s m e m ­
bers. Then it w as on to the
starrin g role of Jo an of Arc
in the flop m usical "Good­
bye, Charley.'* "B ut who
wouldn't w ant to play a
sa in t? " she asks.
Then cam e “ Coco," the
K atharine Hepburn m usical.
Miss Reinking had a sm all
p a r t. “ K n lh rin e H ep b u rn
said to me, ‘You can a c t.'
W asn’t that n ice?”
A fter th a t sh e w ent

Young
Poets
T h ese p o em s a r e by
Seminole County students
kindergarten through 12th
grade. They resulted from
the Florida Poetry In the
Schools program taught by
poet Bob Wishoff of Oviedo
and Evylyn Muntz of Dela n d . Ihipils a re provided
with a general them e, but
are not told what they
should write.

through w hat she. calls her
replacem ent period, taking
over for Donna McKechnie
in "A Chorus U n e" and
Gwen Verdon in "C hicago."
S ay s
M iss
Ite in k in g ,
"Someone said I was the
r e p la c e m e n t
q u een
of
Broadw ay."
Miss Reinking's last show
w as “ D ancin’," and then the
film “All T hat J a n . " The
next stop is playing G race
F arre ll, Daddy W nrbuck’s
s e c r e ta r y , in th e inpvie
version of "A nnie."
"Acting is something I can
do,” she says. "And I'd like
to be able to m ake a living
for myself past the age of 45
or 50. I don't w ant to kill
m yself every night If 1 don't
have to. You try doing this at
50. It’ll hurt. It h u rts now."

Tommy Smothers stars as news cam eram an
Bones Howard in "Fitz and Bones," a limitedrun comedy series to afr Saturday evenings
beginning OcL 24 on NBC.

I was stopped by a solid Cu
plug
Which w ouldn't perm it my
Ideas to run
1 slowly burned and m elted
the stopper
I was stopped by a solid Cu
plug
Now I have a pile of copper
W hich is sh in in g an d
burning inside
I w as stopped by a solid Cu
plug
Which wouldn't perm it my
Ideas to run
K risten Sweet
Jackson Heights

SILENT FOOTSTEPS IN
TH E HOWLING WIND
In the howling wind
you can only hear
y o u r fo o tste p s In y o u r
Imagination
a s if they were in the
When I w alk on the sands of
darkness
tim e
all alone.
I go to old age and back.
John Barbery
And on the sands of tim e
Kastbrook E lem entary
I gain the sm a rts I lack.
Cans of lunn they like
I see 1 told a lie.
And when they’re scared
I see m y p aren ts die.
they hump their back
I back off fast.
They like to play around
I t's no fun to walk
with a ball.
on the sands of time.
Donnie Nestor
Hobby Craw ford
Sabal Point E lem entary
Idytlwllde E lem entary
TH E KAN BOW
Happy songs
The rainbow Is colorful
W hispering leaves
lik e the e a rth colors.
Dew-spangled webs
The rainbow Is high
T h a t's how to s ta rt
Where the birds fly.
a m orning
The rainbow m akes Joy to
Andl K endrarki
everyone.
Idyll wtlde E lem entary The rainbow m akes the sky
DARK
P U R P L E
light up.
MOUNTAINS
The rainbow aays h e's a
I never seen a d ark purple
m essenger
m ountain
F o r God.
Ha-ha-ha, Just kidding.
The rainbow m akes m e
T h e re a r e d a r k p u rp le Feel happy inside.
mountains
The rainbow Is a smiling
In my backyard.
Face.
I clim b them every day.
A m anda Millwood
Milton Wilton E n g l i s h
Estates
IdyUwllde E lem entary
E l e m e n t a r y

Melissa Gilbert plays the
Loomis and Eva M arie
overprotective mother in
G rass," to air Monday on

trooubled Deanle
Saint plays her
"Splendor in the
NBC.

Valerie BertlnelU stars as a young woman
with a learning disability In "Tfcte Princess
and the Cabbie," to air Tuesday on CBS.

�Evening Herald, Sanford, FI

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independent
Atlanta. Ga
O rla n d o Public

,

Broadcasting System

in addilion to 1ft* channels luted, cadeviiion subscribers may fune In to independent channel 44.
it Petersburg, by tuning So channel •; tuning fo channel 11. which carries sports end the Christian
Broadcasting Network I C B N ).

Specials Of The Week
SUNDAY

CD ( 10)

AFTERNOON

S ) (10) THE QOLDEN AOE OF
TELEVISION I he Oa,s Of Wine
And Moses Piper laune and CMt

TU E S D A Y

Robertson star as a husband and
wde who fall into the pit of alcohol
ism

AFTERNOON

9:30

f f l( 10) MILE POST 407 Tl.en .vm -

® O

5:00
FESTIVAL OF LIVELY ARTS

Ju til Andrews Invitation To The
Dance With Rudolf Nureyev The
actress and the dancer team up to
itlutliate the diversity ot dance (Ml

EVENING

7:00
(2) Q

4:30
. } ! o THE BODY HUMAN THE
FACTS FOR OIRLS Mario fhomis
hosts a look at the physical and
emotional changes girls undergo
while eotertng adolescence iRl

WHATEVER BECAME OF

6:30
O

(f ) O GREAT WORLD SERIES
HEROES The greatest baseball
players of all times from Ruth to
Rose are profiled

EVENING

8:00
a
(4) LEGENDARY HEROES
SPRING T O LIFE Tales Of Wash

12:30
(7) O

(10) APPOINTMENT WITH
DESTINY The la st Days Of John

Bunny and Wdch H u e ! get into an
all-out competition to see who can
be scarier on Halloween (R)

BASEBALL Gama 4 Naw

York Yankees at Los Angeles
Dodgers or Montreal Expos (Note
If the l OS Angeles Dodgers win the
National League Championship,
N C A A Foot ball will begin at t? 30
lET, foUuwnti by game -I ot H m
W orld Senes at approaimately 4 00

CD
8:00

2-COUNTRY FISHING

12:00

TH U R S D A Y

EVENINQ

IS) o
BUGS BUNNY'S HOWLOWEEN SPECIAL Animated Mugs

Dillinger A look at the final days of
this infamous criminal — the first
person ever to tie named Public
Enemy Number O n e ” and who died
on July 22, t934 at the hands of the
FBI *- is presented

FT I
1:00
O C 4 ) WRESTLING

6:00
fD 110) THE CR1SCO KID A TO
year old v courageous struggle with
a skin disease that his crippled him
from truth is documented

(Sl O

8:30

FR IDAY

THE FAT ALBERT HALLOWEEN SPECIAL Animated The Cos­
by Kids set out to scare the weird "

3:30
7 ) 0 NCAA FOOTBALL

EVENING

people in the neighborhood (R|

ill

8:00

8:30
Q&gt; (10) THE MAKING OF THE
WIZARD OF OZ Margaret Hamilton

W EDNESDAY

(Th e Wicked Witch), May Oolger
(Th e Scarecrow) and Jack Haley
(Th e Tin Man) reminisce about their
tourney down the yellow brick road

AFTERNOON

T O

10:00
(1) O t h e m a g ic o f
COPPER FIELD Illusionist

o a v io

David
Copperfield performs a variety ol
magic tricks Jason Mobards hosts
and Susan Anton Audrey la nd ers
and Catherine H ath guest

Ilf O SOMEDAY. YOU'LL FIND
HER, CHARLIE BROWN Animated
Charhe f)iown falls ma-’l, in love
wilh a gill ha soas on latavision and
allampls 10 track hat down

O

4:30
SPORTS SATURDAY Mr

Universe Competition |fmm Cairo
Egypt) a laalura on Mickay Manila

AFTERSCHOOL SPECIALS

Tough G a l
A 16 year-old girl
with a rough exterior meets a deaf
student who helps her to accept
hersial and his friendship r j

5:0 0
MANY Hayarn Munich *s

7 ) O AMERICAN BANDSTAND S
30TH ANNIVERSARY lop names
in Iha music world jo-n host Dick
Clark 1o pay tribute (o (ha long run­
ning laan-aga danca show

Ham

EVENING

8:05
1 1 (1 7 ) WRESTLING

9:05

8:30
EVENING

(11 (17) FOOTBALL SATURDAY

( 5 ) 0 IT'S THE GREAT PUMPKIN.

MORNING

11:00
Alabama

soo
11:30
(2)
O NEW YORK C ITY
MARATHON (Jo.nod In Progressi
Livo coverage ol the world s largest
marathon race
AFTERNOON

1:00
O

(4) NFL FOOTBALL Regional
coverage of Oallimorfi Colls al
Cleveland Browns. Ownvnr Broncos
al Buffalo Bills New England Patri­
ots al Washington Redskins
11 ) 0 NFL FOOTBALL Tampa Bay
Buccaneers af Philadelphia Eagles

(2) O

1:30
DON JONAS

4:00

S

U ) NFL FOOTBALL M.am. Dot
phms at Dallas Cowboy*
(7) O SPOMTSBEAT

12:30
0 (T ) NFL ' l l
( 1 ) 0 NFL TODAY
. - ‘t y } tHl

&lt;11(17) WRESTLING

M ONDAY
7:05
U (17) NBA PRE-SEASON BAS­
KETBALL Atlanta Hawks vs Wash
mgton Bullet*

9:00

4:29

EVENINQ
(7) O BASEBALL Game 6 Los
Anoeies Dodgers or Montreal

O

t S' h r

V i l ' I t V r 7 '»&lt;!.* ilOTt

2 5 4 5 French A ve. ( H w y . 1 7 / 9 2 )
Sa n fo rd . Florida 3 2 7 7 1
(3 0 5 ) 3 2 1 -0 0 9 0

W EDNESDAY
EVENING

7:59
( I ) O BASEBALL Game 7 Los
Ange'es Dodgers or Montreal
F ipos at Naw Voik Yank was lif nee

World Harrowrvtd Barbequt Chal
fo r Ovar is Yaart

RIBS ARE OUR SPECIALTY
You Will Alto En|oy Our

CHICKEN. PORK A BEEF
Otv lacral Bland 01 Hevbs A Spices Pitts Ow How
Small ng Pracask Oiva Our Birbeqee Its Dehcieus Flavar
Ana Pint, lift Cater

7 ) O NFL FOOTBALL Houston
Oilers al Pittsburgh Steeler* 'J

BASEBALL Game f. Naw
York Yankees at Los Angeles
Dodgers or Montreal E ipos (.1 nec­
essary)

UJ

Expos al New York Yankees bt nec­
essary)

EVENING

TU E S D A Y

12:00

0 T4T BOBBY BOWDEN
(3) O JOHN MCKAY

5:35

NOW OPEN
BBQ RIB RANCH
INTRODUCING
MR. LUCIOUS NEWSOM

Sports On The Air
SUNDAY

Kobin Williams and Pam Dawber return with
a big surprise on the new season of “ Mork &amp;
Mindy," to a ir Thursday on ABC.

CD (10) SOCCER MADE IN GER­
burg SV

4:30

( I ) AUTO RACINO

Sidney Schorr (Tony Kandall) is reunited with
Patti Morgan (Kaleena Kiff) in the series
prem iere of "I^ive. Sidney,” to a ir Wednesday
on NBC.

MORNING

France and Spam a portrait of the
late artist and his work features
reminiscences by his daughter, son
and many colleagues |R)

5:00
(J l O
THE BODY HUMAN
BECOMING A WOMAN Cicely
Tyson hosts an informal e.am.na
tion of the physical and emotional
feelings of older teen-age girls

D*ck Van Patten looks into what
has become of celebrities, real and
fictional, who have left the public
limelight

EVENING

S A TU R D A Y

ffi (10) PICASSO A PAINTERS
DIARY Filmed on locations in

rnglon Irv.nq

M ONDAY

C H A R L IE B R O W N Animated l inus 1
chooses to wait in a pumpkin patch
for a magical jack-o lantern to
appear rather than go h ic k -or treating wilh his frtends (R )

8:00

David Frost narrates a documen
I ary profile of the Netherlands Wind
F nsembie

3:30
ry and spirit of the people of West
Texas is captured in a documentary
revolving around the dolling of an
oil well and Ab-tene s centennial
celebration

10:30
MORE THAN A CONCERT

7:59

i«&gt;«.|a«&lt; *,

FR ID AY
EVENING

HOURS
a 11 A M. Til 10P.M.
N MON THRU SAT

!* DRIVE
THRU

TAKE OUTr|
f SERVICE

11:25
(1) O HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL
ROUNDUP
1ft* V r T .f l 'i t f : T f i: •&gt;'(

V/t* V t i l l f l y ;

�4— Evening H f aid, Sanford, Ft.

Friday, Oct. 13,1W1

O ctober 23

FRIDAY

VIEWS Dr Jonas Salk discusses
hit ides* about lha philosophical
nature ot tctanlilic inquiry and why
ha it optimum about human death

MORNING

S i (17)i
) NEWS
EVENING

Charlie Brown telti madly In love
with a girl he seel on television and
attempti to track her down
CD O AMERICAN BANDSTAND'S
JOTH ANNIVERSARY Top namet
in the music world (owi boat Ock
Clark to IF
pay Inbuta to the long-run.
n*rwa■toon
teen-age dance thow
_ " ) CHARLIE'S A NOELS
8
W9) WASHINGTON WEEK IN
REVIEW

8:00

. 1 ) 0 ( D O NEWS
,j5fSANFOROAND BOH
{1 0 } THE ART O f BEINO
HUMAN

8:05
8 X ( 17) ANOY GRIFFITH

6:30
O ® NBC NEWS
I} j 0 CBS NEWS
(~7 )^0 ABC
A! NEWS
35) CARTER COUNTRY
J) THE ART O f BERM
HUMAN

6:35

6:0 5
O
(1 7 ) MOVIE
The Th rri
Slooget Meal Hercules" (10611
Three Sloogea. Vicki Trlckell The
trio uae a scientists machine to
travel horn Ithaca. New York, to
Ancient Ora

8'30

821(17) OOMER PYLE

7:00
O QD THE MUP PETS
(J )
PM . MAQA2INE The
bn at re experiences ot a pair ot
ghott hunterl. a car powered by
compressed aw. Joyce Kuthawik
discovers computert that tutor,
fitere Caney maket a Italtoween
tcareciow
( 7 ) 0 JOKER'S WHO
(11) (35) THE JEFfERSONS
® (10) MACNEIL 7 LEHRER
REPORT

o

7:05
ID (17) WINNERS Kevin Chnslopher hoits a lasc mating e&gt;plot at ion
into the many laceta ot tuccets
through prolitet ot peopte who have
achieved H

7:30

O (4) ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
f j) O YOU ASKED FOR IT
(?) O FAMILY FEUO
(Ml (35) BARNEY MILLER
® (10) DICK CAVETT Quetl
John living

7:35

(J ) O TT8 THE GREAT PUMPKIN.
CHARLIE BROWN Animated Linui
chootet to wait in a pumpkin pitch
lor a magical (ack-o'-lantern to
appeal rather than go trick -or*
treating with tua tnanda (R)
0
( TO) WALL STREET WEEK
"The View Trom St Lou” Guest
Derick Dnemeyer. director of
reseerch tor A G Fdwardi S Sons

8:00
0 ( 4 ) NBC MAGAZINE
(J) o SOMEDAY, YOU'LL FIND
HER, CHARLIE BROWN Animated

11:00
. 1 ) O GD a NEWS
35 (BENNY HILL
110) POSTSCRIPTS

11:05
82) (17) ALL IN THE FAMILY

11:25
1 ) O HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL
ROUNDUP

11:35
8X (1 7 ) MOVIE
Suppose They
Gave A War And Nobody Came?"
(1970) Brian Keith. Tony CuHil

11:40
( 1 ) 0 SATURDAY NIGHT

Donald Plensonce. Jamie Leo
Curln On Halloween night, e mur­
derer escepea from an aiytum and
wreaki terror on a email town
(S) o THE OUKES OF HAZ2AR0
R on Hogg concoct! a icheme to
win the deed to lha Duke term
(U) (35) THE ROCKFORD FILES
® (10) ENTERPRISE Bankrupt
Eric Sevaretd examines the etlecti
on employeei when their company
goet down lor the count

9:30

(I) O
MOVIE
the Paiama
Game (C| (1957) Doris Day. John
Had!

AJECKLE
CD O DR. SNUGGLES
82 (17) WORLD AT LAAOE

82) (17) MOVIE "Them (1954)
James Whitmore. Edmund Gwenn

2:30

S ( 10) FLORIOA FOCUS

10:00

DALLAS J R prepare! to
challenge Sue Ellen lor temporary
custody ol John R o »
(ID (35) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
NEWS
0 ( 1 0 ) JOHN CALLAWAY INTER-

A&amp;R Recreational
Vehicle Rental and Sales
MAXI VANS, MOTOR HOMES, TRAVEL TRAILERS

(7) O MOVIE "The Secret Ot
Santa Vdtona (CM 1969) Anthony
Quinn Anna Magnam

8X (17) INFINITY FACTORY

7.-00
0 (4) NEW 2 0 0 REVUE

ax (17)

6:05
(O (17) ITS YOUR BUSINESS

6:30
12-COUNTRY FISHING
I 0RAK PACK
(7) O RAINBOW PATCH

6:35

(T ) O
M MINUTES Featured
Mackenne Phillips leHs ol her drug
experiences and crsitonul and
evoiutioniil theories are discussed
CD O ANIMALS ANIMALS ANI­
MALS "The Girelle"
(ID (35) JIM BAKKER

7:05
82) (17) VEGETABLE SOUP

7:30
THE FLINT8TONE3
POPEYE
GOLDIE OOLD

7:35
8 X ( 17) ROMPER ROOM

8:00
KW1CKV KOALA
SUPER FUN HOUR
5| PRAISE
(10) THE WOOOWRWHT'8
SHOP Dumbheads in Action 1Roy
Under hill completers the upper part
of the shaving horse

8:05
8X &lt; 17) THE PARTRIDGE FAMILY

4:00
8X (17) MOVIE
Cesar And
Rosalia (1971) Yves Montand.
Romy Schneider

An optim iil U a fellow
wilh loose dentures who
plans to bob (or apples a t
the Halloween party.

KBIT or BUY

8:30
St
SMURFS
TF
TROLLKINS
THE GOOO NEIGHBORS
))1
6:35
8X &lt; 17) MOVIE "Tank Force"
(1958) Victor Mature, Leo Oenn A
band ol British POWi escapes then
Italian captors and auftera lha
ordeal ol a long desert Irek through
North Africa

H
Cl) O

9:00

BUGS BUNNY / ROAD
RUNNER
CD O FONZ 7 LAVERNE 6 SHIR­
LEY
I P (35) HERALD OF TRUTH
0 ( 1 0 ) FLORIOA HOMEGROWN

MINI-BUS
is la n
PaSiangan

9:30
0 ®KID SUPER POWER HOUR

457 S R 4M

ALTAMONTE SPRINOS
RON McQARRY

O PEN 4 DAYS

505-7M-1177

It's Halloween around this
office all year, as we happen
to have a number of pumpkinheadi on (he staff. So
says the Old Man

Give clutter a home of
it* own.
If clutter Is robbing your house ot valuable llvln
space, unclutter your Ilia with a strong, s(
Sheds America storage shed.
B South Florida Building Code
Approved No. BO 3015 with or without
concrete slab
iimuea warronry
B 70i year limited
warranty
ampletely Installed and anchored
••Comp...................................
'Indstorm protection to 170 m.p.h.
B Wlr
ully sealed aluminum to
• Fully
prevent rust and leaks

FREE SET-UP A DELIVERY

811 (35) UFE BEGINS AT CAL­
VARY
0 (10) THE WORLO OF COOK1 NO "India A Miharijan Menu"

10:00

(7) O RICHIE RICH 7 SCOOBY
DOO
0 (10) MAQIC METHOD OF OIL
PAINTINO

10:05
8X (17) MOVIE
East 01 Eden
(19551 James Dean. Julia Hama
Based on the novel by John Stein­
beck Frusliated love creates contlicls between two boys and then
lather

10:30
(4) SPACE STARS
3 0 LITTLE RASCALS
(35) SUPERMAN
0 (10) THIS OLD HOUSE Bob
Vila sfvowi an efficient European
version ol a radiator. Norm Abram
installs new windows and a lighting
eiperl makes some recommenda­
tions |R|!j

SIZES from 4x4 to 12x50
1 M % F IN A N C IN G
ON M OST

11.-00
I BLACKSTAR
I LASSIE

P

5) WANTED: DEAD OR ALIVE
_
(10) AMERICAN GOVERN­
MENT

11:30

ORLANDO

LONGW OOO

4100 W Colonial Dr
OrlarOo FI 32806

1135 Hwy 17-92 N
Cttselbeiry. FI 32707

8308300

OPEN M 0N.-SAT. I I ; SUN. 1-C

295-3100

12:30
I AMERICA'S TOP TEN
I TOM AND JERRY
BASEBALL Game 4 New
York Yankees at Lot Angeles
Dodgers or Montreal Espot (Hole:
II the Los Angeles Dodgers win the
National Laague Championship.
NCAA Foolbak w* begin at 11 30
ET, followed by game 4 ol the
World Sanaa al approximately 4 00
ET |
0 (10) THE GROWING YEARS

12:40

2:00

( D O 0 V A T WORLO SERIES
HEROES Tie greatest baseball
players ol ■Jl times, from Ruth to
Rose, are profiled
0 (10) THE GROWING YEARS

6:00

O ® sc TV NETWORK 00

CD Q NEWS

5:30

CD O MIGHTY MOUSE 7 HECKLE

12:30
( 1 ) 0 MOVIE No Place To Run
10(19711 Herschel Bernard, lany
Magman

12^0
0 ( I ) DAFFY 7 SPEEDY SHOW

( I ) O SUNRISE SEMESTER
© (17) RAT PATROL

11:30

(4) TONIGHT Hoil Johnny
Carson Ouesta Sheene Ettlon.
Michael Land on
(7) O ABC NEWS NIGHT LINE
(ID (35) STREETS OF SAN FRANCISCO
0 (10) WORLD CHESS CHAM­
PIONSHIP

AFTERNOON

5:00

CD O MARCUS WELBY, M.O.

12:00

9:00

0 ( 4 ) MOVIE -Halloween (1976)

Cl) o

81 (17) SANFORD AND SON

10:30

(LD(35) LOVE. AMERICAN STYLE

0

October 24

SATURDAY

I SPIDER-MAN
T A RIAN 7 LONE RANGER
_ THUNDARR
„
(35) MOVIE
Vengeance
Vow (B/WI (19551 Oaylon Moora.
Jay Silveiheeis The Lone Ranger
and Ionto tangle with an escaped
convict- a miser end a gang ol indtan-haling cowboys
0 (10) AMERICAN GOVERN­
MENT

12:35

MOVIE "Crash Dive"
(1941) Tyrone Power, Anne Baiter
Two officers involved In submarine
warfare m the North Atlantic tall In
love with the same girl

1:00
0 ( 4 ) WRESTLING
U Q FAT ALBERT
(LD (35) MOVIE The Naked Jungl«" (C) (1954) Charltofi Heston,
Clean* Parker Billions of soldier
anti invade a South American plan­
tation
0 ( 1 0 ) FAMILY PORTRAIT

1:30
( 1 ) 0 SOLID OOLD
0 (TO) FAMILY PORTRAIT

2:00

7:30

0

®
FLORIDA'S WATCHING
"Money Mallets"

8:00

0

® BARBARA MANDRELL AND
THE MANDRELL SISTERS Guests
John Schneider. Terry Gibbs
( D O WALT OtSNEY The Leg­
end Qt Sleepy Hollow " Animaled
CD O MAGGIE (Premiere) A har­
ried housewife end mother (Miriam
Flynn) discovers e note from her
ton’s (sachet accusing rum at being
obscene
8D (35) QUNSMOKE
0 ( 1 0 ) MOVIE "Royal Wedding '
(0(19511 Fred Aslans. Jane Row

-

8:05

OX (17) NASHVILLE ALIVE Guest
Porltr Wagon*

8*30
CD O MAKING A LIVING (Season
Premiers) The players on a minor
league baseball learn decide to
hang out al the restaurant during
theft playoff lanes

9:00

0

® THE NASHVILLE PALACE
(Premiere) Host Roy Clark
Guests Tanya Tucker. Jerry Reed
Grady Null. Woody Herman and the
Thundering Herd
(1) Q MOVIE "Dark Night Ol The
Scaiecrow" (Premiere) Charles
Durnmg. Roberl F Lyons
CD O LOVE BOAT The ship's new
entertainer hides his occupation
from his love. Isaac discovers a pre
vtous passenger misundertlood hn
advice, a (ewef thief meets his
match [J
CU) (3 5 ) BIG VALLEY

9:05

ax ( 17) FOOTBALL SATURDAY

0 (41 LAS VEGAS JUBILEE
0 (10) LIVING ENVIRONMENT

9:30
0 ( 1 0 ) VICTORY AT SEA

2:30
(1) o MOVIE Spies Casanova"
(C) (1979) Lome Gfeene. Richard
Hitch Lt St a, buck must break hit
relationship with beautiful Aurora
when he learns she is the leader ot
a mutiny
0 &lt; 10) LIVING ENVIRONMENT

3:00
0 (41 EMERGENCY
ID (35) MOVIE "Apporntmenl In
London" (B/W) (19551 Dirk
Bogarde. Ian Hunter Bntiah pilots
tight deiperatsfy to halt Millar's air
war over London
0 ( 1 0 ) PRESENT!

10:00

0

®
F ITZ AN D B O N ES
(Premiere) Terrorists lake over the
TV station where the newsmen
work and demand two milkon dol­
lar a m ransom
( D O FANTASY ISLAND A mod
etn young woman eipenencea the
adventure ol 17th-century France,
and an amateur magician comet to
possess the tecietl ot sorcerers tJ
(LD (3 5 ) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
NEWS
0 (1 0 ) NASHVILLE MUSIC

10:05

ax (1 7 ) NEWS

3:05

ax (17) MOVIE

" Til We Meet
Again" (1940) Marla Oberon.
George Brent An ocean voyage
brings happiness to a terminally lit
girt when aha tails In love with a
convicted murderer

10:30
.
(THE BAXTERS
(10) SUNSHINE MUSIC HALL
"Mike Redman"

11:00
,^ - O C D O news
5) BENNY HILL
10) THEOOOOtEB

3:30
I NCAA FOOTBALL
10) MATINEE AT THE BUOU
Featured 1Pertor. Bedroom And
Bath " (1931). starring Busier Kea­
ton and Chartotla Greenwood. •
Betty Boop cartoon, a Rudy Vallee
short, and Chapter 3 ol "The Phan­
tom Empire 0935) starring Gene
Autry end Smiley Burnette (R)

4:00

0

®
MOVIE
Moudml (C)
(1953) Tony Curtis, Janet Leigh The
file ol the woild s greatest escape
artist is ticlionaJued

4:30

(1) O SPORTS SATURDAY Ml
Universe Competition (from Cairo.
Egypt), a teature on Mickey Mantle

5.00
8D (351 DANIEL BOONE
0 (10) SOCCER MADE IN GER­
MANY Bayern Munich va Hamburg S V

ax (17)

5:05

UNTOUCHABLE8 Elrot
Neat follows the trait ol an armored
truck-robbing gang
EVENING

6.00
,
'0 N C W 8
JST w ONOCR WOMAN
_ 110) ALL CREATURES GREAT
AND SMALL It

6.-05
aX (17) WRESTLING
6 :3 0
0 ( 4 1 NBC NEWS
i l l S CBS NEWS

_

7.00

I ® IN SEARCH OF-.
1 0 HEEHAW
I B LAWRENCE WEEK
l(35lw n.O,W ILOW EST
— J &lt;101 UNOERSEA WORLO OF
J A C Q W COUSTEAU

11:05

ax (17) MOVIE "The Howards Ot
Virginia ’ (1940) Cary Grant. Martha
Scott

0

11:30

® BOB AND RAY 6 JANE.
LAR7UNE AND QILDA Jana Curtin
Lerame Newman and Gilds Radnet
loin comedians Bob Elliott and Ray
Goulding and amger Willis Nelson
to re-create some ol Bob end Ray t
memorable characters (R)
I H Q SOLID OOLD
( 7 J 0 MOVIE
Notorious (Il/Wl
(1946) Cary Grant. Ingrid Bargman
Directed by Allied Hitchcock An
American undercover agent per­
suades the daughter ol a traitor to
infiltrate a gang of N u n living in
South Amenca
8D (35) BTREET8 OF SAN FRAN­
CISCO

12:30
(1) Q MOVIE Pursuit" &lt;CH tori)
Ben Q ujsra. E G Marshall
(ID (35) THE KANE PAPERS

0®

1:00
DANCE FEVER

1:30
0 (4) PORTRAIT OF A LEGEND
( D O NEWS

ax

1:35

(1 7 ) MOVIE "Pride Ol the
Mannas' (1945) John Oerfietd.
Eleanor Parker

2:00
( D 0 MOVIE
The Good the
Bed And The Ugly" (C) 11967| Clint
Eastwood. Lee Van Cteel

3:05

ax (1 7 ) MOVIE "Top Banana
(1954) Phil Seven. Rose Mane
4:50

( D o MOVIE "American Goenila
In The Philippines" (Ct (t«50)

�Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

SUNDAY
MOWING
5:10
42) (17) WORLD AT LARGE

October 25
Ben Wallenberg discusses medical
science and pracKe with Or Lewis
Thomas. Dr Philip Handler and Dr
Donald Fredrickson

5:35
OS (17) AGRICULTURE U S A.

6.00
0 Q

CDO

THE LAW ANO YOU
AGRICULTURE U.8 A

6:05
ax 117) BETWEEN THE LINES

6:30
|SPECTRUM
I VIEWPOINT ON NUTRITION

7.00
0 0 OPPORTUNITY LINE
0 0 ROBERT SCHULLER
O PICTURE OP HEALTH
B(35) CHANGED LIVES

7.-05
OX (17) JAMES ROBISON

7:30
B 0
MONTAGE: THE BLACK
PRESS
CD O DIRECTIONS The concern!
□I Ihe women'i tight! activuti of
Industrial and thud world nation*
arecontfitted
(ID (35) E.J. DANIELS

7:35
flX (17) IT IS WRITTEN

B:00
a 0 VOICE OP VICTORY
~ l REX HUMBARO
J SHOW MV PEOPLE
,J 5 ) JONNY QUEST
(10) SESAME STREET (R|g

ax (17)

6:05
THREE 8TOOOES AND

FRIENDS

0:00
J J J . ’S CLUBHOUSE
) SUNDAY MORNING
KIOS ARE PEOPLE TOO
Quasi* Qilda Radnor. Benil and
hit trainer, consumer enperl Jon
Steinberg. Oran Thomas with camp­
ing runts
(35) BUGS BUNNY / ROAD

m

a (10) WORLD OF THE SEA

6:05

ax (17) LOST IN SPACE
0:15

a0
ESTATE ACTION LINE
0:30
a
0 MOVIE "Sherlock Holmes
And The Scarlet Claw'' |B/W|( 19441
real

Basil Rathbone. Nigel Bruce
3 5 )TH E JE TS O N S
10) AMERICA TO THE MOON

10:00
( 7 ) 0 KIOSWORLD
01) (35) MOVIE "Abbott And Cos­
tello Meet The Keystone Kops"
(B/WI (19551 Fred Clark. Lynn Bari
S (10) COSMOS

10:05

ax (17) HAZEL

10:30

O
0 O

BLACK AWARENESS
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH

10:35

ax

(1 7 ) MOVIE
Shane ' (1955)
Alan Ladd. Jean Arthur

11:00

a
0
500'

AUTO RACINQ

Alabama

9 ) 0 A CHOICE IN UFE
a (10) MATINEE AT THE BIJOU
Featured The Last Mile |t93?J.
a prison / death-row drama alarring
Preston Foster, a cartoon, and
Chapter 3 ot "The Phantom
Empire" (1935) alarring Oene Autry
and Smiley Burnette (R)

11:30
I FACE THE NATION
„
O
NEW YORK C IT Y
MARATHON (Joined In Progress)
U*e coverage ot the world ! largest
marathon race
( U (3 5 ) MOVIE "Zenobra (B/W)
119391 Sten Laurel. Oliver Hardy

s

12.00

SS

BOBBY BOWDEN
JOHN MCKAY

12:30
) N FL'SI
INPLTOOAY
10) BEN WATTENBERG AT
LARGE ' Progreal Irt Medicine"

m

1:00

0 0 NFL FOOTBALL Regional
coverage ot Baltimore Colts at
Cleveland Browns Denver Bronco*
al Buffalo Bills. New England Patri­
ots at Washington Redskins
0 O NFL FOOTBALL Tampa Bay
Buccaneers at Philadelphia Eaglet
0 O ISSUES AND ANSWERS
Quest Austrian Chancellor Dr
Bruno Kreisky
OX (35) MOVIE
Separate
TibleV (B/W) (1956) Deborah Kerr.
Rita Hayworth
S&gt; (10) WASHINGTON WEEK IN
REVIEW (R)

1:05
ax (17) MOVIE

Return To Pey-

ton Placfl (1961) Carol tynNry, Jeff

Oiandler

7:05

ax

(17) MOVIE
The Ladies'
Man" |19€1| Jerry Lewis, Helen
Traubei A love-scorned man
decide* to give up on women only
to land a )ob at a houseboy m a
girls boarding house

6:00

O

0
CHIPS Otficer Sieve
McLersh gets Jon * help to stop
motorcycle street race* that hi*
brothers are involved In.
0 Q ARCHIE BUNKER'S PLACE
Archie suggests that Harry buy
Murrays share ol Ihe business
0
O
MOVIE "Today's FBI"
(Premiere) Mike Connor*. Joseph
Cali A team ot special FBI agents
seek evidence against a member ot
an organized crime syndicate and
race to save an undercover agent's
Me g
OX (35) W.V. GRANT
iD (to) NOVA Locust War With­
out End filmed in Europe arid Afri­
ca. some of man's latest attempts
to r»d himself of the locust are eaamined EJ

■W hal s Happening To Commodt
Im»s7 Guest Paul Sarnofl, director
of research. Rudolf Woltf Com m od&gt;ify Brokers, Inc |R)

( I ) O ONE DAY AT A TIME Ann
gets a surprise visd from her old
business nemesis Francine *ho
announces she wards to be Ann's
new partner
dJ) ( j 5) JERRY FALWELL

2:00

9:00

0

O MOVIE
Beat The Devil
|BrW| |1954| Humphrey Bogart.
Jennifer Jones

S&gt;

(10) MOVIE

Angel On My

Shoulder" (R/WI 11946| Paul Mum.
Claude Rams

(LX(35) MOVIE

Omar Khayyam"
|C) (1957) Cornel Wilde. Debra
Pagel

3:30

S) ( 10) MILE POST 407

The histo­
ry and spirit ot the people ol West
Teias 11 captured m a documentary
revolving around the drilling ot an
oil well and Abilene s centennial

celebration

3:35
OX (17) MOVIE ' The Pied Piper
01 Hamelin" (1957) Van Johnson.
Kay Starr

4:00
0 0 NFL FOOTBALL Miami Dol­
phins at Dallas Cowboys
0Q 8TA R TR EK
. 7 ) 0 SPORTSBEAT
© (TO) NOVA "Cosmic fire The
eilraordinary discoveries made by
s-ray astronomy ot neutron stars,
eiptodmg galaires. quasars and
black holes are eiammed (R ig

o

0 MOVIE Twirl |Prermere)
Stella Stevens Charles Maid Two
young baton twitters face the pres­
sure* and challenges ol a national
competition tj
(J ) o ALICE Alice is letl in charge
ot tour trick-or-trealera
0 (10) MASTERPIECE THEATRE
A Town Like Alice Jean travels
to outback Australia in search ot
Joe. who is m London looking tor
her (Part 4 )g

4:30
TO BE ANNOUNCED

5:00
0 O FESTIVAL OF LIVELY ARTS
"Julie Andrews Invitation To Tha
Dance With Rudolf Nureyev The
actress and the dancer team up to
illustrate Ihe diversity ol dance (R)
(1J) (35) DANIEL BOONE
© (10) FIRING LINE Is Modern
Architecture
Tom Wolle

Disastrous’

Guest

5:35
OX (17) WRESTLING
EVENING

0 O THE JEFFERSONS George
and Louise each lure a maid
(U) (35) JIMMY SWAOGART
TRAPPER JOHN. M D.
Gonzo and Trapper learn that a
brilliant stall surgeon may alio be a
Ku Kku Klan leader
0 Q THE PALACE
© (10) THE FALL ANO RISE Of
REGINALD PERRIN

10:05

OX(17) NEWS

10:30
(35) JIM BARKER
(10) THE GOOD NEIGHBORS

11:00

( I ) O 0 O NEWS
10) SNEAK PREVIEWS "I
Was A Teen-Age Movie Hollywood
1981" Roger Ebert and Gene Siskel
eiamine the reasons why the teen­
age audience is now determining
Hollywood s biggest hit* (R)

11:05
aX (17) CARIBBEAN NIOHT8

11:30
A
0
ENTERTAINMENT THIS
WEEK
0 o SATURDAY NIGHT
0 O LOUIS RUKEYSER S BUSI­
NESS JOURNAL
(IX (35) tr S YOUR BUSINESS

11:35

ax (17) OPEN UP

12:00

( 1 ) 0 0 0 NEWS
Oil (35) WONDER WOMAN
© (10) MAOIC METHOD OF OIL
PAINTING

0 0 MOVIE
the Best Years Ol
Our Lives' (B/WI (1946) Fredrtc
March. Myrna Loy

6:30

O 0
MOVIE "little Caesar
IB'W) (1930) Edward G Robinson
Douglas Fairbanks Jr
0
IB MOVIE Can Ellen Be
Saved?" 1C) (19741 Kathy Cannon.
Michael Parks.

12:30

6:35
OX (17) NICE PEOPLE

7:00

Ja m e s Coco: “ A ludy
grabbed m e and said, "To
think I'd see my favorite s ta r
— D om D el.u ise!* " . ..

0 0 HERE'S BOOMER Boomer
and a basketball laam help a handi­
capped boy. and Boomer gels an
aspumg comedian to go to Holly­
wood [J
9 ) 0 BO MINUTES
0 O WHATEVER BECAME OF...
Dick Van Pattsn looks mlo what
hat become ol celebrities, real and
fictional, who have lefl the public
hmahflhl
0X135) THE HARDY BO YS/NAN­

ERNEST BORCiNINE

K atharine Hepburn: "To be
alone is a blessing. 1 love it."
Tove Rorgnlne debuts iter
c o sm e tic c o m p a n y 's new
frag ran ce, T ova, next month

12:35

5:00
5:10

ax (17) RAT PATROL (TUE)
5:20

0X(17) RATPATROL(MON)
0&lt;

5:30
) SUNRISE SEMESTER

5:35
OX (17) WORLD AT LARGE (WED)

5:40
OX (17) WORLD AT LARGE (TUE)

5:50
OX (17) WORLD AT LARGE (MON.
THU, Ffll)

6:00
0 0

NASHVILLE ON THE ROAO
(MON)
0 C4) MARTY ROBBINS (TUE)
0 8 ) POP! GOES THE COUNTRY
s n ,
BACKSTAGE AT THE
GRAND OLE OPAY (THU)
— 0 PORTER WAOONER (FRI)
THE LAW ANO YOU (MON)
(J)
0 8PECTRUM (TUE)
BLACK
AWARENESS (WED)
(J)
(SI THIRTY MINUTES (THU)
HEALTH FIELD (FRI)
SUNRISE
5) JIM BAKKER
17) CABLE NETWORK NEWS

9!

91

3:00
3:30

0 O MOVIE ’ "Death In Deep
Water" (Cl 11975) Bradford Dtllman.

SuzannePamar.................... • ••

(TIME APPROXIMATE) |MON)

3:00
001) TEXAS

0:05
0:30

a® (3 5 ) ANDY GRIFFITH

10:00
0 0 TIC TAG DOUGH
151Q HEALTHBEAT (MON)
0 O WELCOME BACK. KOTTER
(TUE-FRI)
0® (35) I LOVE LUCY
©
(1 0 ) EDUCATIONAL PRO­
GRAMMING

10:30

6:45
0 ( 4 ) TODAY

7:00

1 J I O WAKE UP
0 O GOOD MORNING AMERICA
91) (35) TOM AND JERRY
0 ( 1 0 ) VILLA ALEGRE (R)

7:05

ax (17) FUNTIME

11:00

8:05

ax (17) IOREAM OF JEANNIE
6:30
ax (35) QREAT SPACE COASTER
0 ( 1 0 ) MISTER ROGERS (R)

8:35
UK 17) MV THREE SONS

3:05

(1) O THE PRICE IS RIGHT
1 Ti O LOVE BOAT (R)
(IX (35) BU0 BREWER
©
(1 0 ) EDUCATIONAL
GRAMMING

3:30

1

35) SCOOBY DOG
10) ELECTRIC COMPANY (R)

3'35

aX(17)THEFLIN TSTO N ES

0 0 WHEEL O f FORTUNE

4:00
PRO­

11:05

ax 117) MOVIE

11:30

I0 BATTLES!AR3
15) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
NEWS

O 0 LITTLE HOUSE ON THE
PRAIRIE
) Q RICHARD SIMMONS
) O MERV GRIFFIN (MON. TUE.
THU, FRI)
0 O ON THE OO (WED)
OX (35) WOOOY WOODPECKER
0 ( 1 0 ) SESAME STREET q

8

4:05
a X (1 7 )T H E M U N S T E R S

4:30
AFTERNOON

12:00
0 (4) PASSWORD PLUS

0OK
ax

NEWS
RHOOA

( 1 ) 0 HAPPY DAYS AGAIN (MON,
WED-FRI)
0 o t h e BODY HUMAN THE
FACTB FOR GIRLS (TUE)
0 O AFTERSCHOOL SPECIALS
(WED)
a il(3 5 )T O M ANO JERRY

12:30
0 0 NEWS
IS) O
THE YOUNG AND THE
RESTLESS
0 O RYAN'S HOPE
Oil (35) MAUDE

1:00

7:30

ax (35) CASPER

0 ( 1 0 ) DUE PASAT (FRI)
aX (17) FUNTIME

0 O BEWITCHED
0 ( 1 0 ) A M WEATHER

I QUIOINO LIGHT
0 O GENERAL HOSPITAL
ax (3 5 ) BUGS BUNNY AND
FRIENDS
0 (10) FROM JUMP8TREET (R)
q(M O N )
0 (10) I AM. I CAN. I WILL (TUE)
0 (10) PEOPLE OF THE FIRST
LIGHTJR|(WED|
0 (10) ONCE UPON A CLASSIC

0 0 BLOCKBUSTERS
T l 0 ALICE (fl)
01) (35) DICK VAN DYKE
© ( 1 0 ) ELECTRIC COMPANY (R)

6:30

2:20

NEWS

at) (35) LAUREL ANO HAR0Y

ax (17) MOVIE

0 0 TODAY IN FLORJOA

8:00

0 0

2:45

I HOUR MAGAZINE
) DONAHUE
J MOVIE
15) GOMER PYLE
(1 0 ) SESAME STREET Q

0
o
MARCUS WELBY. M O
(TUE-FRI)

0 O MORNING WITH CHARLES
KURALT
(ID (35) WOODY WOODPECKER
© ( 1 0 ) SESAME STREET q

(17) MOVIE
War Paint
(1953) Robert Slack. Joan Taylor

for the O klahom a Symphony
charity, A half-gallon will
get auctioned for a $10,000
m in im u m
w hich
will
g u a r a n te e h a n d -d e liv e ry
anyw here in tlw world by Iter
husband, Ernest.

(TIME APPROXIMATE! (WED)

0:00

MORNINO

OX (17) MOVIE "Tha Petrified
Forest " (1936) Humphrey Bogart.
Bette Davts

ax

JAMES COCO

Daytime Schedule

10:00

O

0

6:00

0 O 30 MINUTE3 Crime Com­
mission
0 O ABC NEWS
© (10) FLORIDA HOMEOROWN
' Homegrown Update"

w ith
“ T a p s ,"
s ta r r in g
George C. Scott, that they
pushed the release d ate up
fro m n e x t y e a r to th is
C h ris tm a s ... Danny Kaye
showed up at a high-class
hotel (or breakfast recently.
Mis order? Coffee and one
b anana... The two skinny
hum ans w earing dungarees
and carry in g huge grocery
bags on P ark &amp; 60th were
Joel G rey and the m issus...
T hey're planning to nam e a
drug rehabilitation center in
iiv erp o o l a fter John Lennon.

0:05

4:20
0 O BASEBALL Game 5 New
York Yankees al Los Angeles
Dodgers or Montreal Eipos (it nec­
essary)

0o

NEW YORK - Columbia
sh o t a p o s te r (o r th e
American
Library
A sso c iatio n w ith A lleen
Quinn, the “ A nnie" movie
sta r, which will decorate
30,000 lib r a r ie s ...
20th
Century Fox is so ecstatic

ax (17) ATLANTIC CITY ALIVE
0:30

Friday, Oct. H , 1 W I-1

Scott Movie Promising;
'Annie' For Libraries

8:30

1:30

0 O DON JONAS
© ( 1 0 ) WALL STREET WEEK

3:00

6:30
) SUNDAY MASS
I DAY O f DISCOVERY
I ORAL ROBERTS
_
55) JOSIE AND THE PUSSYCATS

0

12:45

OX (35) LAUREL AND HARDY
(TIME APPROXIMATE) Pie In The
Face

CY DREW MYSTERIES
S (10) SOUNOSTAOE Souths**
Johnny and Ihe As bury Jukes per­
form "Part*." "Time" and "little By
Little ' (R|U

DAYS OF OUR LIVES
ALL MY CHILDREN
5) MOVIE

1:06

ax (1 7 ) MOVIE

1:30

0

5:00
) 0 GILUOAN S ISLAND
) 0 HOGAN'S HEROES (MON,
WED-FRI)
(1) O
THE BODY HUMAN:
BECOMING A WOMAN (TUE)
OX (3 5 ) THE INCREDIBLE HULK
© (10) MISTER ROGERS (R)

f

5:05

ax &lt;17) THE BRADY BUNCH

O AS THE WORLD TURNS
2:00

0 0 ANOTHER WORLD
0 O ONE LIFE TO LIVE

2:30
) Q SEARCH FOR TOMORROW
X (35) BATTLE OF THE CENTU­
RY / YESTERDAY'S NEWSREELS

a

4:35
aX (17) LEAVE IT TO BEAVER

530

0

(4) LAVERHE t 8HIRLEY A

COMPANY
0 0 M -A -S -H
( 7 ) 0 NEWS
© (1 0 ) POSTSCRIPTS
POSTSCI

5:35
OX (1 7 ) BEVERLY HILLBILLIES

�6— Evening HoraM, Sanford, FI.

Friday, Oct. 1), 1N 1
0 &lt;10) MORE THAN A CONCERT
David Frotl narrale* a documen­
tary profile of Ihe Netherlands Wind
Fnsembi*

October 26

M ONDAY

11:00
EVENING

0:00

0 (f)cda m o news

nb (35) SANFORD AND SON
0 ( 1 0 ) OCEANUS

0:30
) NSC NEWS
I CBS NEWS
I ABC NEWS
,35) CARTER COUNTRY
(10) OCEANUS

6:35
0 3 } THE MUPPETS
CD O P.u MAGAZINE M M Sim
and Angel* Campbell who adopted
five children nodody wanted, an
Interview with Dantetie Bntebota* ol
"At chi* Bunker* Plata". Linda
Harm vi id a Durango. Colorado.
Chat Tad Iruaaaa a chick an
( 7 ) 0 JOKER'S WILD
Ml (35) THE JEFFERSONS
f l (10) MACNCIL / LEHRER
REPORT

7:05
02 (17) NBA PRE-SEASON BAS­
KETBALL Atlanta Hawk! vi Wash­
ing! on Buuatk

7:30

O U T OF
UNIFOWM

P v t . Benjam in (Lo rn a Patterson) Is w a y oat
of uniform when she takes a coveted bath in
Cap*. Lewis' quarters, on "Private Ben­
jam in," Monday on CBS.

A n O ff-Broadw ay For T V ?
By GERSON NASON
T e le v is io n ,
a lw a y s
searching for new m aterial,
h as team ed up with the
N a ti o n a l
P la y w r ig h ts
Conference at the Eugene
O'Neill T h eater C enter In
W a te rfo rd , C onn. T h is
season ABC will a ir “ My
Body, My Child,'* a new play
first produced a t the O'Neill
Center an d adapted for the
ABC T heater series.
"M y Body, My C hild," by
l/oulsa Bums-Bisogno, In Its
original form w as one of over
1,200 entries to the O'Neill
conference, of which only 14
were chosen. In the sum m er
of 1081, th e p la y w as
produced and worked on a t
the O'Neill C enter by a group
of talented directors and
actors, before ABC selected
It for television adaption.
“ My Body" is the story of
a Catholic wom an, played by
V an e ssa R e d g ra v a , who
m ust decide w hether or not
to abort the child she knows
will be born deferm ed. Ja ck
A lbertson plays h e r father
and Joe C am panella Is her
husband.
The
O 'N e ill
C e n te r
p r o g ra m e n c o u ra g e s th e
d e v e lo p m e n t of o rig in a l
w orks by talented young
playwrights.
L lo y d
R ichards, a rtistic d irecto r of
th e p r o g r s m , s a y s th e
O'Neill C enter Is looking for
new playw riting talent, not
ju st plays. " I t's not th a t we
Just choose the play,” he
say s, " b u t th a t the w riter
h as v alu e."
P layw rights whose plays
( ili.q i- .m .llf

D uring the last 15 sum ­
m e rs th e p r o g ra m h a s
o p e ra te d ,
n u m e ro u s
productions have gone on to
r e g io n a l
th e a te r ,
offBroadw ay, Broadw ay and
television.

a re accepted by the p rogram
spend a m onth of th eir
s u m m e r a t th e O ’N eill
C enter In W aterford, w here
the play Is produced and
a c te d b y a g ro u p of
renow ned d ram a tu rg es and
actors. In this w ay, Inex­
perienced playw rights, who
m ay not be able to have th eir
p la y s p ro d u c e d th ro u g h
reg u lar channels, have a
d u n c e for recognition.

Reflecting on the cu rren t
sta te of th e ate r in A m erica,
R ichards adds: "F in ally we
a r e p ro v id in g a n offBroadw ay far television."

t o n ig h t

) f l YOU ASKED FOR IT
) f l FAMILY FEUO
) (35) BARNEY MILLER
)
(1 0 )
DICK
CA V ETT
"Liberalism" Quest* ft Robarl
Orman. Sen Paul Taongaa. Tom
Wicker. I F Stone (Pari t|

0

8:00

3 ) LITTLE HOUSE ON THE
PRAME A black phywcian i arrival
upseti the cituen* ol Walnut Grove

&amp;

PRIVATE BENJAMIN Judy
aneakt into Captain Lewte'a quarlara to u m the only bethtub m
camp
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T H A T’S INCREDIBLE
Featured Iha httl Incredible Hero
award, an air aalaty breakthrough.

uvTH&amp;ce rue cern&amp;s a m p use rue
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6:00
0 3)11)0m0 NEWS
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•
(1 0 ) U N D E R S TA N D IN G
HUMAN BEHAVIOR
02) f 17) AHOY GRIFFITH

6:30
) ( T ) NBC NEWS
) 0 CBS NEWS
) 0 ABC NEWS
) (3 5 ) CARTER COUNTRY
■ ( 1 0 ) U N D E R S TA N D IN G
HUMAN BEHAVIOR

6:35
(Q) (17) QOMER PYLE

7:00
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7:30

7:36
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7:59

;2ort*fr
•»»!»

7.05
0 (1 7 ) CAROL BURNETT ANO
FRIENDS
I ® ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
J 0 YOU ASKEO FOR IT
) 0 FAMILY FEUO
) (3 5 ) BARNEY MILLER
(1 0 )
D ICK
C A V ETT
"libaraiiim" Quests Fr Robert
Ormen. Sen Paul Taongaa. Tom
Wickar. I F Stone (Part 3)

m0

BASEBALL Game S. Lot
Angela* Dodger* or Montreal
E*po* at New York Yankees (8 nec-

• I N I United FsMuti Syndic*** me
l

0 3 ) THE MUPPETS
3 ) O P.M. MAGAZINE A woman
who kvet a normal kta without
arms: the making o&lt; the world'*
longett hot dog. Maria Shriver MM
how the Krottt Puppet* work; Paula
Nataon toil* how to teach kid* the
ol e
value or
fl dollar
S WILD
C D 0) JOKER
X
| THE JEFFERSONS
(10) MACNCIL / LEHRER
REPORT

if r a

A O LiisV

a d o itflA M

3 ) MOVIE "Splendor In The
Grass" IPremier*) Mallaaa Gilbert.
Cyril O'Reilty Two aenaillve teen­
ager* wraelle with atrtet aeaual
more* end parental praaaura In preDeprauron Kanaai
( £ O M‘ A ‘ 8 ‘ H (Seaaon Pramlere) A USO troupe make* an unaa peeled detour to the 4077th when
one ol it* member* lall* Ml
m O NFL FOOTBALL Houston
Oder* at Pitltburgh Stealer* Q
M (35) THE ROCKFORD FILES
0 110) GREAT PERFORMANCES
"Dance In America Tribute To
Ni|«ntky" Rudolf Nut ryev join* Rob­
ert Jottrvy and the Johrey Ballet tor
performance* of Patrouchka." "La
Spectre De La Rose" and "L’ApreeMidi D Un Faune In a tribute to the
legendary dance gemu* Vatlav
NljmUy (R)

ZYYiV 53 ‘i

1 J IO

M 'A ’ S'H

© (35) STREETS OF SAN FRAN­
CISCO

11:35
0 (1 7 ) MOVIE "I Aim Al The
Sl*r»" (1980) Curt Jurgen*. Victoria
Shaw.

11:45

CD O NEWS

12:00

3 D Q O U IN C V The police are lru«baled In their attempt lo prosecute
a man suspected ol aes crime* (R)

12:15
CD O ABC NEWS M GHTUNE

12:30

0

3 ) TOMORROW Gtie*11 Con­
gressman John Leboul inter (RN V.): author Aleiandar SafxtieniHyn. Charlie Pride

12:45

(D O MOVIE “A Night Al The
opera" (B/W| (1935) Mar* Broth­
er *. Allan Jonas

1:10
3 ) O HARRY O Harry commits
himself lo an Institution lo hefp a
young woman. (R)

9'35
0 (1 7 ) UP CLOSE Guatl; author
leaac AUmov
1(h00
CD O THE MAGIC OF DAVIO
COPPERFIELD lilunom*! David
Copperfield perform* • variety ol
magic trick*. Jaaon Robard* holt*
and Susan Anton, Audrey Lander*
and Cal harm* Bach gueat
( a (35) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
NEWS

10:05

1:40
0 (1 7 ) MOVIE ‘‘8 bail-Jackal"
(1954) Joan Crawford. Diane Baker

CD 0 NEWS

10:30
M (35) LOVE. AMERICAN STYLE

2:60

CD 0 MOVIE "Johnny Apoho"
IB/W) (1940) Tyrone Power, Doro­
thy Lamour.

Alone" (1959)
Cra*g Steven*

Randolph

Rida*
Scott.

marriage (R|
CD 0 HART TO HART Jonathan
Mart i look-alike and hi* magician
brother ptol lo murder Jonathan. □
0 j 3 5 ) INDEPENDENT NETWORK

O ctober 27

eaaaryl

0

2:20

3:40
0 (1 7 ) MOVIE "Buchanan

0 ( 1 7 ) NEWS

TU E S D A Y

6.05

T V Q T W .E

3 ) t h e BEST OF CARSON
Guest* Dick Van Pallen. David
Slembevg. Melissa Manchester. (R)

9:00

0

7:00

11:30

0

c c Q THE TWO OF US Cubby
and Reggie come to Brentwood tor
advice about (hew love live*
0 (10) THE MAKING OF THE
WIZARD OF OZ Margaret Hamilton
(The Wicked W'lch). Ray Bolger
(The Scaredow| and Jack Haley
(The Tin Man) raminitce about their
journey down the yellow brick road

0 (1 7 )O O M E R PYLE

) e n t e r t a in m e n t

11:05
0 ( 1 7 ) ALL IN THE FAMILY

6‘30

6:05
( 0 ( 1 7 ) ANDY GRIFFITH

1 3

0 3 ) 3 ) O NEWS
© (3 5 T b e n n y h iu
® ( 10} POSTSCRIPTS

48 akieri behind one boat; a loam
home
M (35) CHARLIE S ANGELS
O (10) THE CRISCO KID A 10year-old ■ couregeou* atruggie with
a akin diaeaaa lhat ha* crippled him
tror.i birth n documented

0

&lt;10) THE DUCHESS OF DUKE
STREET "The Patriots" la Ih* bla­
tantly unpatriotic Mr. Appleby or
Louisa’* favorite new stall member
the spy m Ih* BenllnckT (Part 7) (R)

6:00

3 ) MOVIE
The Brady Girl*
Get Married" (1980) Maureen
McCormick. Eye Plumb
3) 0 BUGS BUNNY'S HOWL10:30
OWEEN SPECIAL Animated.
0 (35) LOVE, AMERICAN STYLE
CD 0 HAPPY DAYS Just ai Jo an­
10:35
te la ready to go ataady. Chachi
0 ( 1 7 ) NEWS
decide* to play th# field
11ft)
35) CHARLIE'S ANGELS
(10) COSMOS "Blue* For A
, i r -_ K D 0 N E w a
Red Planer' Dr Carl Sagan look* al
35TBEMNYHIU
Ih* Viking Lander In Death Valley
(10) POSTSCRIPTS
and demonatrataa Ih* machinery
11.-05
lhat ha* *ent picture* and measure0 (17) ALL IN THE FAMILY
menla from Mart back to Earth
■tarting m 1978 (Ft) cj
,
11:30
0 QD TONIGHT Host Johnny
8:05
Carson Guests Tony Randall. Jim
0
(1 7 ) MOVIE
"The Sin* Ol
Slatlord
Rachel Cade" (t98t| Angle Dickin­
3)OM'A*S*H
son. Polar Finch A missionary toa­
CD f l ABC NEWS NIGHT LINE
st th* respect ol th* native* after
M (35) STREETS OF SAN FRANah* succumb* lo lamptatlon

r

3)0

8:30

THE FAT ALBERT HALLOW­
EEN SPECIAL Animated

9:00
3 ) O MOVIE
Sunburn" (1979)
Fsnah Fawcett Charts* Grodin
CD 0 THREE'S COMPANY Tarry
mistakenly auumea lhal Jack la
romancing th* arfta ol Janet * boa*
(3 5 ) THE ROCKFORD FILES
o il--------------^ I 310)
OOYSSEY Bath Water*"
Archaaoioaislt. engineers and gsoi00**1* eicaval* Ih* not aprmga apa
In Balh, England to learn about Ih*
Roman* who bunt th* baths 3.000
years ago Q

9:30

CD 0 TO O CLOSE FOR COM­
FORT Henry * hae-apirited niece
Aprk move* m with he and Muriel
-

10 :0 0
0m
3 ) MARRMOE
A U V f ANO
WELL A Iree-lanc* photographer *
assignment* provide him with a
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J %l V
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11:35
0 ( 1 7 ) MOVIE "Satan'a Harvest
(1955) George Montgomery. Tippi
Medren

12:00

CD 0 ALICE Flo hat hopes for a
reconciliation with her *i-husband

CD 0 FANTASY ISLAND A wom­
an doctor who distrusts man is
transformed kilo an aiotic beauty,
and a professor finds th* Greek
goddea* of love (fl)

03)

12:30

TOMORROW Guest* Con­
gressman John LebouMUet (RNV.I, author Al*render SotrhenHayn; Re* Reed. Lena Horne
rm —
12:» *
3 ) 0 MCCLOUO A nightclub
ak^er trie* to fram* Chief Clifford
for murder. |R)
^

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1 :1 0

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Zande" (B/W) (1937) .
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WEDNESDAY
6:00

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110) rrs e v e r y b o o y '8 b u s i­
n ess

6:05
0 ( 1 7 ) ANDY GRIFFITH

6:30
) NBC NEWS
|C8S NEWS
J ABC NEWS
35) CARTER COUNTRY
_ 110) IT S EVERYBODY'S BUSI­
NESS

6:35
® (1 7 )O O M E R PYLE

7:00
0 (£) THE MUPPET8
on O P M MAGAZINE A m ,n «il
l*k« reputed to edect miracle cure*,
a Beacti Boy* Ian ertio utei apecial
recording tecnmquet to duplicate
the group s sound. Chet Tee makes
apple fritters: Dr. Marina Qramch
on when your kid goes "punk."
l O JOKER S WILD
) (35) THE JEFFERSON*
(1 0 ) MACNEIL / LEHRER
REPORT

7:05
(Q (1 7 ) CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS

7:30
|3 ) ENTERTAINMENT TONIQHT
I A YOU ASKED FOR rr
) a FAMILY FEUD
) (35) BARNEY MILLER
_ (10) DICK CAVETT Guests
The Modern Jazz Quartet - Milt
Jackson. John Lewis. Percy Heath.
Connie Kaye

7:35
OX (17) SANFORO AND SON

7*60

CD 0

BASEBALL Oame 7 Los
Angeles Dodgers or Montreal
Eipoa at New York Yankees (it nec­
essary)

8.-00
• (3) REAL PEOPLE Featured a
ghost town; a haunted church, a liv­
ing saucer on Washington's Ml
Rainier, a couple who have a wax
museum al home.
CD 0
MR. MERLIN Would-be
rock stars Zack and Leo try to
obtain a formula lor success Irom

Mai
CD O t h e GREATEST AMERICAN
HERO (Season Premiere) Ralph the
reluctant hero is once again called
upon to use his super powers when
America s national security and
national pasttime are threatened
(It (35) CHARLIE'S ANGELS
SI (10) THE GOLDEN AOE OF
TELEVISION "The Days CM Wine
And Roses Piper Laurie and Clift
Robertson star as a husband and
wile who fall into the pit ol alcohol­
ism

8:05
OX (17) MOVIE "Murphy's War"
1197') Peter O'Toole. Sian Phillips
A mim decides to light a one-man
war i gainst the Germans alter they
shoo his plane down m the middle
ot a |ingle river

0:00
O
®
THE FACTS OF LIFE
(Season Premierel Tootle gets
drunk while trying to prove she is
mature
(1) O MOVIE
Hide In Plain
Sight" (19791 James Caan. Jill Elkenberry
CD O t h e FALL GUY (Premiers)
A stunt man moonlighting as a bail
bondsman sets out to capture a
bill lumper, the most powerful man
m a small southwestern town
(U) (35) THE ROCKFORD FILES

9:30
O (3) LOVE. SIDNEY (Premiere)
Tony Randall stars as a middleaged New Yorker sharing an apart­
ment with a woman hall his age and
her young daughter
a (10) PICASSO: A PAINTER S
DIARY Filmed on locations in
France and Spain, a portrait of the
late arlist and his work leatures
reminiscences by his daughter, son
and many colleagues |R)

10:00
0 (3) QUINCY (Season Premierel
Quincy lakes a romantic interest In
an amnesiac and discovers that her
life Is m danger
(LD (35) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
NEWS

6:00

NEW8
, — ) SANFORO ANO SON
(10) EARTH, SEA AND SKY

6:05

(D(17)ANOYORIFFTTH

O ctober 29
DESTINY "The Last Days Of John
OiUmger " A look at the final days ol
this mlamous criminal - the first
person ever to be named "Public
Enemy Number One" and who died
on July 22. 1934 at the hands of the
FBI -• is presented

6:30

) NBC NEWS
less NEWS
i ABC NEWS
.-51 CARTER COUNTRY
(10) EARTH. SEA ANO SKY
6:35

&lt;D(17)GOMER PYLE

7.-00
0 m

P.M. MAGAZINE A profile of
country singer Crystal Oayfe: a slide
show used lo frighten teen-agers
Into no! driving drunk; Joan Embery
shows the different horses on her
farm; Dr. Wasco on new rvonsleroadIpatnkRe
. JOKER'S WILD

J5) THE JEFFERSON8
(10) MACNEIL / LEHRER
REPORT

7:05
17) CAROL BURNETT ANO

7£0

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® 0 YOU ABKED FOR IT
CjD 0 FAMK.Y FEUO
(35) BARNEY MILLER
0
(10) DICK CAVETT Guest:
Lease Carqn.

O J (17) MOVIE "The McConnell
Story" (1955) Alan Ladd. June Ally
son
0-30
CD O BEST OF THE WE8T An
election lor marshal is held and
Sam loses his |ob to Parker Till­
man's hand-picked candidate

9:00

7:36

0 ( 1 7 ) SANFOROANOSON
M 0

(2)

LEGENDARY HEROES
I TO UPV "Tales Of Wash-

0

(3) OIFF’RENT 8TROKE8
(Season Premierel In order to (om
a dub. Arnold steals a comic book
from a slots g
( L O MOVIE "Blazing Saddles'
(1974) C leavon Little. Gene wader
CD O BARNEY MILLER (Season
Premiere) Wo)o is slapped with a
paternity suit. Dietrich arrests a
man who goes berserk m a movie
house and Harris helps a mugging
victim tj
(TD (35) THE ROCKFORD FILES
0 ( 1 0 ) SNEAK PREVIEWS Roger
Ebert and Gene Siskel review "All
The Marbles." "Chariots Of Fire"
and "Southern Comfort "

9:30
0

become the proud par­
entso»S«eBrelEarthingOrkar
a j (35) CHARMED ANGELS
0
(10) APPOSfTMBfT 1

CD GIMME A BREAK

(Premiere) A widowed pokes cap­
tain hires a no-noneanee woman to
raise hW children and run Ns home
( D 0 TAXI Jen's prediction that a
TV show ma be a ratings success
comas true. g
_
__
~ (10) ALFRED HITCHCOCK

0

11:05
OX (17) ALL IN THE FAMILY
11:30
O
(3) TONIQHT Host Johnny
Carton Guests Dick Caved. Natal­
ie Cole. Lance Burton
C L Q M ' A ’ S'H
7&gt;Q ABC NEWS NIGHTLINE
© (35) 8TREETS OF SAN FRAN­
CISCO

OX (17) MOVIE ' The Pride And
The Passion (19571 Frank Sinatra.
Cary Grant

12:00
(1) a
WKRP IN CINCINNATI
Arthur Carlsons mother arrives
and demands lo see how the sta­
tion stands financially (R)
CD O LOVE BOAT A w,dower end
his son (all lor the same girl, and a
bachelor develops an allergic reac­
tion to his girlfriend (R)

h il l

str eet

blues

(Season Premiere) Captain FurtBo
cerebrates Ns 40th birthday whla
Baaing with a recentty released and
MR powerful gang Nadar and a
purte-anatching orangutan

A
B u ffalo.
N .Y .,
stonemason
(played
by Jam es Caan) and
his second wife (Jill
Eikenberry) reflect on
the disappearance of
his two children by his
previous w ife, who
have been abducted by
the U.S. Department of
Justice in "Hide in
Plain Sight." The dra­
matic thriller will pre­
mier on network tele­
vision Wednesday on
CBS.

12:30
0

(3) TOMORROW Quests
author Tom Wolfs, singer Connie
Francis, actor James Coco. Dr
Norman Vmcenl Pesle

12:35
( S O MOVIE Terror Out Of The
Sky" (1978) Efrem Zimbaliet J r,
Dan Haggerty

1:10

(D O

MOVIE "The Bishops
Wile" (B/W) (1948) Cary Grant.
Lor alia Young

2:20
OX (17) MOVIE "Carnival Story"
(1954) Anna Bailer. Sieve Cochran

3:05
( D O NEWS

3:35

(D O

MOVIE
Color Him Deed '
(C) 11974) QayN Hunmcutt. Stephen
Rea

4:20
OX (17) RAT PATROL

4:50
CDO 20/20
a t (35) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
NEWS
0 ( 1 0 ) DAVE ALLEN AT LA ROE

10:15

ax (17) NEWS

10:30
01) (35) LOVE. AMERICAN STYLE
0 ( 1 0 ) UP POMPEII

11:00
. JO IO O N E W S
5T8ENNV HILL
10) POSTSCRIPTS

11:05
0 X (l7 )A L U N T H E FAMILY

11:30

0

t i ) TONIGHT Host Johnny
Carson Guests Angie Dickinson,
the dance group Ptulobolus Gary
Shandkng
( S Q M * A ‘ 8 'H
(D
0 ABC NEWS NIGHTLINE
OD (35) STREETS OF SAN FRAN­
CISCO

11:35

ax (17)

MOVIE "The Cossacks"
(1980) Edmund Purdom, John Drew
Barrymore

12:00

CD 0 Q U IN C Y A nurse seeki help
Irom Quincy when the suspects a
hospital cover-up (R)
(D 0
V E G A S Dan attempts to
rescue some ehowgirta abducted by
a while slave merchant (R)

12:30
0

(3) TOMORROW

Oueets Lyn­

da CaH ar, Rea Reed

1 :1 0
(D 0 THC SAINT An American
flimmafcar't daughter la kidnapped.
(D 0 M O V K
The CoidIU Story
(B/W) (1957) Eric Portman. John

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10:20

TH U R S D A Y
.___| (D O

10:30
( I I (35) LOVE. AMERICAN STYLE

6:30
CP Q
WKRP IN CINCINNATI
dailey temporarily allows Johnny
Fever to move in with her

Friday, Oct.» , m i— 7

01 (1 7)NEW 8

0 ( 1 7 ) MOWS "fight Crealuree "
(1982)

Pafar

CD 0 NEWS

Cuthing.
2 :6 6

Yvonne

Swoosie Stars In Sitcom
Swoosie Kurtz, winner of
this y e a r's Tony, D ram a
D esk an d O u te r C ritic s
Circle aw ard s for her p e r­
fo rm a n c e in B ro a d w a y 's
"F ifth of Ju ly ," tu rn s her
ta le n ts to te le v isio n th is
season.
She plays the fem ale lead
in the new NBC comedy
se rie s " L o v e , S id n e y ,"
starrin g Tony Randall. The
prem iere segm ent of the
series is W ednesday.
Kurtz will play I^ u rie
Morgan, a struggling actress
who retu rn s to New York
from California with her 6lyyear-old daughter (played
by K ale e n a K iff). M iss
Morgan and her daughter
move into the large Upper
W est S ide a p a r tm e n t of
middle-aged bachelor Sidney
Shnrr (H undall), who has
been like a p aren t to the
child.
In addition to the above
trio of aw ards, K urtz won the
D ram a Desk Award for her
perform ance In the play "A
History of the Am erican
F ilm ," a Tony nom ination as
best featured ac tress .fo r
"T artu ffe" and Obie and
D ram a Desk nom inations for
"U n c o m m o n W om en an d
O lh eri."

Kurts la the only child of
c a re e r U.S. Air F orce
Colonel F ra n k K urtz, a
decorated American fighter
pilot of World War II. She
w u bom In Omaha, Neb.,
and atten d ed 17 schools
before settlin g down at
Hollywood (C alif.) High
School.
She studied dram a at the
U niversity of Southern
C alifornia and London's
Academ y of M usic and
Dramatic A rt
In the years 1966-70, ahe
acted In regional theaters:
Cincinnati's Playhouae-int h e - P a r k , W i n n i p a g ’i
M anitoba T h e a te r, the

SWOOSIE KURTZ
Charles Playhouse In Boston
and the H artford (Conn.)
Stage Company.
H er New Y ork b r e a k ­
through cam e in "T he Effect

of G am m a Hays on Man-inthc-M oon M a rig o ld s ," in
w h ich , o v e r a tw o -y ea r
period, she played three
roles. She also appeared wilh
Mike Nichols and Elaine
M ay in E d w a rd A lb ee 's
"W ho's Afraid of Virglnin
Woolf?" at New H aven’s
Wharf T heater.
K urtz sta rs with Robin
W illiams in the upcoming
movie adaptation of John
I rv in g 's b e s t-s e lle r, " T h e
World According to G arp ."
She was also In the film
" S la p S h o t," w ith P a u l
Newman.
On te le v isio n , sh e a p ­
peared in the movie "The
Mating Season" (w ith I Aide
A rnaz
an d
I.a u re n c c
I-ucklnblll).

BUDGET
OPTICAL
SIN O LS VISIO N
IN C L U O E t F R A M S
Bifocalt S Tlnft Additional

• Glasses Duplicated •
• Youi Dottoi s Prescription filled •
• Free Adjustments ona Repaiis •

SANFORD

2344 FBINCH A V I.
(ACROSS PROM SAMBO'S)

Maw. Thru Prl.
f a.m.-S p.m.

323-8080

SatwrBay
fa.mT-t p.m.

�8— Evening H w M i Sanford, PI.

Friday. Oct. 23, 1W1

John Travolta:

GO GUIDE
U yow’re tfclakiag of getting oat of the boose aad are
looking lor m d k k | to do this weekead, here are a
few suggestions:
Centra] Florida Zoological P a rt, open daily Ba jn . to
5 p.m. U.S. Highway 17-82 between 1-4 and Sanford.
Picnic fadlitiea.
“ A Little Night M arie” by Stephen Sondheim,
presented by the Rollins Players, Oct. 22, 23,24, 29, SO
and 31 at • p.m., Annie Russel] Theatre, Winter Park.
Matinee 2 p.m., O ct 31. Call 646-2143 for reservations.
O eaeva G eaeslsg lo al a a d H istorical Society
Museum, First Avenue, Geneva. Open Sunday, 2-4 p.m.
or by appointment by calling 349-3206.
The Nine Nights of Halls wees sponsored by the
Altamonte-South Seminole Jaycees, O ct 23-31, 7 p.m.,
to the "bewitching hour" at the Longwood Village Inn,
County State Road 424, Longwood. Different each
night.
“ The Elephant Man”, Seminole Community College
Fine Arts auditorium, 8 p.m., Oct. 28-31 and 2 p.m.,
matinee, Nov. 1. For reservations call 323-1450 Ex. 291.
Collaborative Photographic Exhibition of Maitland
Art Center and Cornell Fine Arts Center Museum,
. Rollins College, In cooperation with New Orleans
Museum of Art: “ Andre Kertesz — A Retrospective,"
Oct. 24, through Nov. 29, a t Cornell Museum Holt
Avenue, Winter P ark; Galleries International, 401-B
Park Avenue North, Winter Park; and Maitland Art
Center, 231 W. Packwood Ave. Opening receptions at
the three sites, 7-10 p.m., Oct. 24.
Seventh Annunl Seminole Comity High School Band
Festival featuring Seminole, Lyman. Lake Howell
Lake Brantley, Oviedo, Lake Mary and Bishop Moot*
bands, 8 p.m., Nov. 7 at Lyman High School stadium.
Fireworks display.

m eip

DEAR DICK: What ever happened to John Travolta of
"Welcome Back, Hotter?” You never see him oo TV any
more. ALISON BURKE, Zflwaakee, Mich.
Maybe the news hasn't reached Zilwaukee yet, but John
has become a movie star. You mean you haven’t heard of
"Saturday Night Fever" or "Blow Out" or all of his
movies? That’s why he Isn’t on TV any more — he’s gone
on to bigger and better things.
DEAR DICK: My grandfather and I were watching a
commercial about selling Kate Smith’s records and he
said she died aad I said she Is alive. We made a bet. Who
wins? JERRY ESPEY, Spring Church, Pa.
You win. Kate is still with us.
DEAR DICK: Is the guy who played Danny In “ Caddyshack” the same guy who played Ben In “ The Great
Sandal"? R H ., Torrtngtou, Wyo.
Yes. His name is Michael O'Keefe.
DEAR DICK: I would like to know what the name of the
ranch was on the old “ Big Valley” series. TONY
STONER, Warsaw, lad.
It was the Barkley ranch.
DEAR DICK: I have watched Wink Martlndale (or
three years on “ Tic-Tac-Dough,” and before that I heard
him on radio. I have often wondered where he got such an
odd nickname. Can you tell me? JAMES A. BROWN,
Ventura, Calif.
He started out in life as Winston Martindale, in Jackson,
Tenn. But according to the family legend, the kid across

Better
Ask Dick
Kleiner
By DICK KLEINER

the street couldn’t manage Winston and said Wlnky in­
stead. Growing up he was Wlnky Martlndale, and he Just
chopped off the last syllable of the nickname when he
became an adult.
DEAR DICK: In the early '58s and NBC, after the
“ Tonight” show, Nancy Berg did a “ Good Night” show.
She had a Mack poodle with her. Can you tell me the name
of the poodle? I would appreciate getting this nonsense off
my mind, and I sure hope you have the Information.
DOROTHY ZAPACK, Fort Lauderdale, Fla.
Sorry, I can tell you a lot about Nancy — I Interviewed
her back in '55 — but not the name of her dog. Her show
was called "Count Sheep” and she was a beautiful,
Audrey Hepburn-like model who did five minutes of
pantomime — and then went to bed. I don't remember the
dog and can find no reference to It in any book or article.
Anybody out there know the answer?

Cosby Teaches
Bill Cosby's talents as a
stand-up
com edian,
television and nightclub
entertainer serve him well
when he pursues his other
interest — education.
"A teacher has to be some
kind of actor,” Cosby says,
"b e c a u se kids a r e the
toughest audience of all.”
Cosby spends a lot of time
proving that an actor can be
a teacher as well. Cosby's
philosophy of "learning with
l a u gh t e r " has brought
education and comedy
together In the form of the
Cosby Kids, a group that
Includes F at Albert, Weird
Harold, Dumb Donald and
Mushmouth.
"T h e
Fat
Albert
Halloween Special,” a half­
hour a ni ma te d holiday
special to be rebroadcast
Tuesday, on CBS, Is Just one
example of how Cosby uses
his talents in association
with artists and writers to
c re at e a n e nt e rt a inme nt
special that also educates.

Movie p l a n n e d

Actress Ingrid Bergman is coming ont of
retirement to portray former Israeli Prime
Minister Golds Melr, in “A Woman Called
Golda," a four-hour TV m ovie planned for
syndication in the spring of 1982. lliis picture
of M bs Bergman was taken during a screen
test she insisted on taking before accepting
the role. The actresa has been reading books
on Golda Meir and studying voice tapes.

A nightmare
o f holy terror.
SHOWTIME 7:30
The Maniac Show Of Tho Cantury Comet To Youc Town Thit Weekend I
Hwf U N I

U l UK

S li BIG AD
'OMSK TO OAWN SNOW**

|r j |

L SPECIAL ENGAGEMENT • R l . 8 SAT.

M O V I E l A N D k - r f l *3.00

sox o m a o r a n u

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                    <text>?4»h Y ea r, No. 32— M onday. Septem ber 28, 1981— Sanford, F lo rid a 32771

E venin g H e r a ld - I U S P S 481 280)— P ric e 20 Cents

Feds Back Off O n Shrinking Lunches; County Cheers
By DONNA ESTES
Hera Id Stall Writer
President Beaman's scrapping of proposed U S Department
of Agriculture (USDA i ru lrs to cut the quality and quantity of
public school lunches as a money-saving technique received
the approval of county set ool officials today.
Charlotte Whitmore, director of food services for Seminole
schools said she was delig hted
She noted that Reagan's D rectnr o f the Budget, David
Stockman had called the proposed guidelines on lunch
programs a "bureaucratic goof", and said, "sometimes
people, who are not on the firing line, draw up regulations that
look good on paper but in actual practice do not work."
She said the county's lu n d i pattern is geared to supply onethird of the minimum daily dietary requirement with a daily

menu of two ounces of protein, a vegetable and a truit or two
vegetables, milk, bread, pasta or both. Continuing the same
[wittern is included in this year's school budget
The USDA tiad proposed school districts serve smaller
portions and substitute nuts, seeds, soybean t urd or yogurt for
meat in lunches The USDA proposed protein Ik * cut to l 1ounces; that 8-&lt;&gt;uncc servings of milk be cut to fi ounces and
that bread or pasta, served eigtit times weekly, be cut to five
times weekly.
Prices for school lunches in Seminole were raised 10 tents to
85 cents and 95 tents at the middle anil high schools respec­
tively, to replace federal funds cut from the program. Mrs
Whitmore said
"We looked for ways to save money other than by cutting
back in the quantity and quality of food," she said. One of those

ways was to limit the number of choices available to students
Mrs. Whitmore said the USDA proposal would have cut the
meals to one-fourth of the daily requirement while even the
one-third of daily requirement "assumes children are eating a
good breakfast which many of them are not."
The now withdrawn USDA guidelines establishing minimum
standards for school lunches financed with federal money
were made in response to Reagan budget cuts. Under the
proposals, a complete lunch could have consisted of an ersatz
hamburger, one slice of bread, fi ounces of milk, french fried
potatoes and ketchup
Among other things, the minimum standards listed ketchup
and relish as acceptable vegetables It also offered a group of
protein substitutes — yogurt, nuts anti sunflower seeds — and
suggested that tofu, a soybean cake, be substituted for a

hamburger to save money
After meeting with Reagan at the White House. Agriculture
Secretary John Block announced he is withdrawing the
proposed guidelines Earlier. Stockman said he had ordered
the regulations ktlled last week
Singling out the soybean-hamburger swap, Stockman said
officials who drew them up have "egg on their face."
White House spokesman David (iergen said the rules had
been a matter of discussion between White House and
Agriculture officials since they became public about two
weeks ago and Reagan "had questions."
The president asked, "What is this all about?" (Iergen said,
and was told. "There is a great deal of misunSee I T M l IKS. I'agr 2A

Planning Council Reports

Record Growth Seen
For Next 5 Years
lly B R U T SMITH
Herald Staff Writer
drouth. For at least the past two
decades, mid-Florida lias been almost
synonymous with the word. And ac­
cording t« the East Central Florida
Regional Planning Council lE C K R P C i,
ttii’ trend appears likely to continue for
the next five years
As purl of the six-county east central
Florida area
consisting of Seminole.
Orange. Brevard, la k e , Osceola and
Volusia counties — Seminole County w ill
lie a part of tins continued growth, but not
as much as its larger neighbors such as
Orange and Brevard counties.
The E C F R P C report, entitled "P e r­
spective On Regional Growth ,1981-1985,"
predicts that in terms of imputation. "the
upcoming five years will possibly record
tlie greatest growth ever experienced in
the region.
"A s was the case during the last boom
period, a «W alt» Disney entertainment
complex will be largely responsible for
the anticipated growth surge," the report
says. The development of Disney’s
Experimental Prototype Community Of
Tomorrow (EPCO T) "is serving ns the
mqietus for major expansion in the
regional tourism industry ."
Unlike the situation of the early 1970s,
however, "tourism represents only one
facet of the current growth cycle,”
E C F R P C reports. “ It is the prospect of
major manufacturing sector expansion
in addition to tourist industry growth
which makes the next few years appear
to be so potentially explosive."
Most of that industrializatio n,
however, is expected to occur in counties
other than Seminole Of the (5 ma|or

l O C A t PRIEST

M A D E BISHO P
'Hu* llo v . I H s n ia s .M arkin. ( le f t.
r ig h t p h o to ) p r ie s t of O u r l.a d y
({linen o f I V u c e C h a p e l in S a n f o r d ,
w a s c o n s e c r a te d B ishop o f th e
s o u th e a s t e r n D io c e se o f th e E a s t e r n
O rth o d o x
C a th o lic
C h u rch
in
A m e r i c a S u n d a y b y t h e .M o st
R e v e r e n d J o h n A d a ir ( r i g h t ) ,
B is h o p of th e E a s t e r n O rth o d o x
C a th o lic C h u r c h in A m e r ic a f r o m
C o y le , O k la . 'Ilie s e r v ic e w a s h eld 1 a t
th e S t. J o h n ’s E a s t e r n O rth o d o x
C h u r c h . F e r n P a r k . In p h o to a b o v e ,
m e m b e r s of th e c o n g r e g a tio n lin e u p
to k is s th e c r o s s a n d r e c e iv e b le s s in g
f r o m th e new b ish o p . F iv e o t h e r
p rie s ts
p a rtic ip a te d
in
th e
ce rem o n y .
Herald (’ Soldi by Tom V in crnl

construction projects listed by the EC­ 180.000 to 224.500, a 24 7 percent increase.
F R P C as planned for the region during
Where to put all these new residents’
the next half-decade, only two - the $30 In the nearly 140,000 housing units exmillion North D ike Center office fwrk jiectcd to built within the next five years,
and the $25 million Seminole Memorial the E C F R P C says.
Hospital — will In1 in Seminole County.
Despite high interest rates, rising
With commercial growth, obviously, construction costs, and the tightness of
comes new jobs. According to the E C F R ­ mortgage money, central F lo rid a 's
PC. "as many as 80,000" new jobs can tie "housing industry has continued to do
directlv attributed lo those 45 major exceedingly well," the report says "The
building projects. And "approximately •'•.051 budding permits issued during the
23,000 additional jobs
police, barbers, lirst quarter of 1981 represent an in­
salespeople, etc
will be created in­ crease ol 15 percent over the number
directly by major business expansions issued in the same |teriod of 1980."
and new construction," the E C FR P C
Ol tlu approximately 140.000 new
study says. By 1985, "total employment housing units expected to tie constructed
is projected to reach 040,000 "
by 1985,13.174 will lie located in Seminole
The only problem foreseen in all Dus County. tlie E C F R P C says Ttiat number
by the E C F R P C "w ill involve a labor is second only in the six-county region to
shortage in the services sector of the Orange County 's projected 21,110 units
economy, particularly centering on the
Very few ol these new homes, however,
tourist industry. At its present level. Un­
will he intended for low and moderateavailable labor pool of unemployed
income families, tlie E C F R P C reports
persons within the area is grossly in­
sufficient to meet the demands of these Ttiat fact, combined with "low wages and
high transportation costs limits the
projects," the E C F R P C report says
"Ordinarily, u labor shortage would be available workforce... and lias an impact
somewhat self-correcting bv stimulating on future growtti and development in the
region."
increased m igration into the area.
This grow tli and tlie accompanying
However, because the majority of new
service sector Jobs will be at or near the need for more housing will have only a
minimum wage, a major incentive for mild effect on area agriculture, once tlie
drawing additional people is lost," the dominant industry in central Florida
Farming "lias (or many years been a
report claims.
Even so, construction and yobs mean mainstay in the region's economy,
more people and by 1985, the E C F R P C providing a stable source of employment
forecasts the six-county region will have and disposable income." the E C FR P C
244.000 new residents, up from last y ear's study says
1.338.000 persons to a projected 1,482,000
The recent surge in tourism,
During that time, Seminole County is however, lias relegated agriculture to a
expected to attract an additional 44.500 less (imminent role in tlie region's
citizens, growing from the 1980 figure of economy ," the report says

2,000 Free Shots Available

County Begins Flu Immunizations
The Seminole County Health Department
has be,4un its annual flu immunization
program, but not everyone is going to lie
eligible for tlie free shots
'.‘We can only provide for 2,000 im­
munizations," said Dr Jorge Deju, the
county's director of Health and Human Ser­
vices. "W e can only provide (or (lie high risk
individua Is, because last year we gave shots to
everyone who wanted them, and our supply
was exhausted before tlie end of the flu
season," IX’Ju said.
Health officials recommend flu shots for
persons 65 years of age ami over, and (or those

suffering from chronic diseases
Although final details have not been worked
out, IVju said, as of now, the Dikeview
Nursing Home, Sanford. Dmgwood Health
Care Center, ami the Life Care Nursing Home.
Altiimonte Springs, have agreed to set up flu
clinics tic Seminole County residents.
However, it will be a "couple of weeks"
M o r e the program gels underway, he said,
noting that the county has yet to receive its
allocation of flu vaccine from tlie state.
"It is very important to receive tlie flu
vaccine early in the fall season in order to be
protected throughout tlie fall and winter

months," said Bernice K
Duncan, a the vaccine were reported in some states.
registered nurse and community health
Federal health officials do not know how
supervisor
widespread influenza w ill be this w inter, ami
The flu season usually begins in late whether there will in’ vaccine shortages will
November or early December, Deju said, depend upon "how desirous tlie population is of
adding that it normally takes two or more receiving flu vaccine," according to Dr
weeks after a person gels a flu shot for the Edward Brink, a flue researcher with the
vaccine to provide "top" protection. Federal Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta Brink
health officials are ordering drug companies said the new double-strength flu vaccine that
to manufacture 18 4 million doses of a new will be manufactured this season will provide
double-strength flu vaccine to provide more protection against three influenza strains — Aprotection against viruses this fall and w inter
Brazil, A-Bankok, and IKS mg a pore
This compares with the 12.4 million doses
— D A R LE N E JE N N IN G S
available last winter when spot shortages of

Action Reports
Around The Dim k
Classified Ads
Dear Aliliy
Deaths

?A
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2IF3B
IB
8A

Editorial
Ourselves
Sports
Television
Weather

IA
III
5A-7A
IB
2A

Write Yourself A Farm
DESOTO. Wis. i U l’ l i
John and Amy Disney are selling
their 51-acre homestead for a 25-word essay.
Tlie Disney s are sponsoring an essay contest with a $50 entry
fee First prize is their farm, which features a two-story, woodIrame house, one-car garage, log-cabin studio ami garden
To win the contest, entrants simply must come up with a
catchy essay stating "Why I want to own a farm in Wisconsin."
Tlie essays, due by March .11, will 1m- judged by a Rhode
Island firm Disney said he hopes to get 3,500 entries, but needs
at least 1,800 contestants to break even.

Life Getting Lonely And Desperate
For Mother Facing Disease, Poverty
By D A R L E N E JEN N ING S
Herald Stall Writer
Tw o -yetr-o ld C rysta l M ichelle
Burkes, doesn't understand what it
means to have leukemia, and neither
does her fc ur-year old brother Brian.
But, for t'leir mother, Brenda, the
pain of turning a child with the often
fatal illnesn is complicated by tlie fact
she knows soon she will have no way
lo pay for the expensive treatments
her daughter must undergo to keep
the disease in remission.
The Burkes live in rural Sanford.
Recently the fam ily seems to have
been hit w ith a particularly cruel
wave of m isfortune.
Brenda L« due to have her third child
any day, ar d the child may not have a
father there to see it come into the
world. Brenda's husband left tier and
her children last week because "he
couldn't handle tlie stress of Crystal's
illness." Hr is presently unemployed.
Brenda, n fanner waitress, has not
worked since she "started showing"

m •~

and now there is no money coming
into tlie household.
"Tlie neighbors have been great.
They bring food ovc r to us. And some
neighbors luive brought baby clothes
and stuff for my new baby," she said,
nervously sm oking a cigarette.
"Right now we're juM living day by­
day. I hope things start Imiking up
soon," she said.
Even with tlie help that neighbors
give, the ever-increasing medical bills
greatly reduces the fam ily's chances
to plan for the future. “ I just feel like
the situation is really out of my
control now," Brenda said.
The 22-year-old mother does receive
some financial help with medical
expenses from the Children's Medical
Service (CMS) for Crystal's hospital
stays and fur some of her treatments,
but the CMS doesn't pay for the gas
that Brenda spends to take Iter
daughter to Orlando to get the
treatments she needs to live.
CMS is part of tlie state department

of Health and Rehabilitative Sendees.
Brenda is still trying to make
(layments on her 1977 Chevette, which
are about $35 a week, but with no
money coming into the house and bills
always meeting her at the mailbox.
Brenda said she doesn't see how she's
going to be able to continue to pay for
the car.
"Crystal just came home from Die
hospital last week She was in the
hospital for three weeks — con­
tinuously. Site's already had two red
cell transfusions, three spinal taps,
and one bone marrow examination
Next week she goes into the hospital
for another bone marrow exam," site
said as site stroked the little girl's
blonde liair.
"Cry stal's hair used to be long and
so curly," site said as she looks at
Cry stal. "Now she's nearly bald in tlie
back. It makes you wonder if the
treatments are really helping tier
sometimes," Brenda said.
" I ’m try ing to get on Welfare at this

» * I * *

point. At this point. I'll try any tiling.
But it's going to take six weeks, for tlie
Welfare to come through." she said.
"They told me I have to get social
security cards for my kids and that's
going to take six weeks," Brenda said.
Right now she said she's trying to
plan for the day after she comes home
from the hospital with her new baby,
as well as trying to plan for the care of
lier sick daughter.
" I ’ll probably try to find a Job as a.
waitress. I’m also going to liave to
find a place to take care of my
children" she said. "M y sister was
going to take care of them, but her
child has cerebral palsy so it would
be really hard on her to take care of
my kids, too. Working as a waitress,
I'll always have money on hand in
case Crystal gets sick," si* added.
"I worry about putting Crystal in a
day care center, though, because, she
can't fight infection that she might
pick up from other kids in a center.
See D E S P E R A T E . Page IA

H t r t ia P a c t , d r Tom V i k c m i

A lo n e a m i c a r in g f o r h e r I w o c h ild r e n , B r ia n . 4. le ft, a n d C r y s ta l, 2, riy&gt;ht.
e x p e c t a n t m o th e r B r e n d a B u r k e s , 22, h o p e s f o r th e d a y h e r d a u g h t e r 's
le u k e m ia w ill h e c o n tro lle d a n d s h e c a n p a y h e r m o u n tin g h ills.

�2 * -R v b n ln f H fU g .lE irtirg .F l.

ManAsy, U p t. TS, 1761

He Got More Than He 'Bargained' For

WORLD

An Orlando man was arrested Saturday after he allegedly
attempted to bribe a Seminole County sheriff’s deputy.
Michael Thomas Fives, 20, of 666 Prim Drive, Orlando, was
arrested wlien he offered ISO to a deputy after being ticketed
for speeding. The deputy said Fives signed the traffic citation
and then offered a $50 bill to the deputy to forget about the
Infraction. Fives told the deputy he couldn't afford to get a
tick et
The deputy told Fives she hoped his |S0 offer was a Joke.
However, Fives allegedly Insisted the deputy take the money.
Fives was arrested and taken to the Seminole County JaiL At
the Jail, Fives was asked to empty his pockets and upon doing
so, deputies discovered a plastic bag containing marijuana.
Fives was also charged with possession of the drug, deputies
said.

IN BRIEF
'Khomolnl, Your Death It
C e rta in S h o u t Guerrillas
United P re ii In te n u tle u l
Iranian Guerrillas armed with submachine guns and
parading through Tehran shouting, "Khomeini, your
death Is certain this month," fought Revolutionary
Guards in street battles that killed at least 10 and
wounded scores.
Sunday’s fighting, the most savage since the current
violence began In June, was blamed by state radio on
"American fifth columnists" and Iraq. But residents
said the shooting began after about 150 armed
dissidents met at Tehran University and began
parading through the city's streets.
The radio said “ about 40 ... defenseless people of
Tehran" were injured and mentioned no fatalities. But
residents reported many killed — one hospital con­
firmed it had 10 dead and another 43 injured, and other
hospitals refused to give figures.

LOVES HIS BUD
A man with a revolver robbed the Lll’ Champ convenience
food store Friday at 2990 S. Sanford Ave., Sanford, a t 9:21 p.m.
taking an unknown amount of cash and one large can of
Budweiser beer, according to Sanford police.
The store clerk, Dora Sweat, 56, told police the man fled the
store after the robbery on foot toward the Bamboo Cove
Apartment complex.
No arrests have been made In the case.
UP IN SMOKE
A burning vehicle was discovered by police and fire per­

mph in a 45 mph tone.
When the deputy stopped Shaw’s; vehicle, Shaw slid over t*
the passenger side of the ca r and refused to get out of the
vehicle and take a sobriety test. S tew told the deputy he wu
not the driver of the vehicle.

Action Reports

Shaw was arrested for driving under the influence of alcohol
and taken to the Seminole County Jail where bond w u set at
*500
Gary Erdman, 2100 Howell Branch Road, Maitland, w u
discovered sleeping In the back sc a t of the vehicle Shaw w u
allegedly driving. Erdm an’s father Is the owner of the vehicle;
deputies said.

★

Fires

it Courts

*

Police

stolen from Sanford, deputies said.
Seminole County Fire Department personnel extinguished
the fire,' but not before the flames did approximately $3,000
worth of damage to the vehicle. Arson Is suspected.
WHO ME?
A Casselberry man was arrested this morning around 1 a.m.
and charged with driving under the influence of alcohol, ac­
cording to Seminole County sheriff department officials.
Keith Alan Shaw, 27, of 210 Mockingbird Lane, Casselberry,
was arrested when a deputy reportedly observed him traveling
eastbound along State Road 436 at Oxford Road at a high rate
of speed. The arresting deputies said Shaw was traveling at 65

BOY SHOT WITH B-B GUN
A Forest City youth said someone shot him with a B-B gun
while he w u riding his motorcyc le Sunday around 4:45 p.m.,
sheriff's deputies said.
Michele J. Thompson, 13, of 105 Wessex Drive, Forest City,
said a man shot him with a B-B gun while he w u riding his
motorcycle In the wooded area behind Forest Lake Elemen­
tary School, Sunday. Thompson told sheriff deputies he w u
shot in the left arm and u w a m an fleeing through the wooded
area carrying a B-B gun.
Sheriff deputies u id Thompson had a small round cut under
his left arm , apparently made by a B-B.

Crowder
To Address
Drug Meet i

Reagan Launches
Crim e Crackdown

Abadan: Who's In Control
BEIRUT, Lebanon (UPI) — Iran today said it was
sending to Tehran thousands of Iraqi troops captured
in a major battle that broke the siege of Abadan, but
Iraq claimed its forces were still In control of the oil
refining city.
Iran also said its crushed the Iraqi army siege of the
oil refining city of Abadan, pushed the Iraqis ac ro u the
strategic Karun river, and opened the Abedan-Ahvat
and Abqd*n*Mashahr road Sunday In one of the
heaviest days of the year-old Persian Gulf war.

He said the “ frightening reality" is that for
all the speeches, surveys and blue ribbon
panels, crime has continued its steady, up­
ward climb "and our citizens have grown
more and more frustrated, frightened and
angry."
He said the war on crime "will only be won
when an attitude of mind and a change of heart
takes place in America — when certain truths
take hold again and plant their roots deep into
our national consciousness. Truths like: right
and wrong m atters; individuals are respon­
sible for their actions; retribution should be
swift and sure for those who prey on the in­
nocent."
Reagan stressed the need for moral values
and decried "aodal thinkers" of the past who
“We will support legislation that permits discuss crime only in terms of "disadvantaged
Judges to order offenders to make restitution childhoods and poverty strick en neigh­
borhoods."
to their victims," he said.
He outlined areas where the government can
The speech was one of the most com­ assist local law enforcement officers In
prehensive and strongest anti-crim e fighting crime:
documents delivered by a president In recent
—The ad m in istratio n will support " a
times.
number of statutory reforms that will redress
"Crime is an American epidemic — It ta k a the Imbalance between rights of the accused
the lives of 23,000 Americans, it touches nearly and rights of the Innocent." To that end, he
one-third of American households and it said, the a dm ins trail on will work with
results In at least |8.6 billion in financial Congress to achieve a sweeping revision of the
federal criminal code.
losses," Reagan declared.

NEW ORLEANS (UPI) - Calling Crime
"an American Epidemic," President Reagan
today proposed a sweeping, six-point reform
program to redress "the Imbalance between
rights of the accused snd rights of the in­
nocent."
In remarks prepared for a speech to the
International Association of Chiefs of Police,
Reagan said today's criminals "for the most
part are not desperate people seeking bread
for their families. Crime la the way they’ve
chosen to live."
He told the police chiefs they have "one of
the toughest Jobs in America" and said he will
appoint a task force "to evaluate the
num erous proposals now springing up
regarding victims (of crime) and witnesses."

Walesa Compromise Backed
GDANSK, Poland (UPI) - Solidarity leader Lech
Walesa gained grudging support from his union for a
compromise that avoids confrontation with the
government, but Polish coal miners in Silesia set a
Tuesday deadline for authorities to release a union
boss or face a strike.
At Solidarity’s national congress Sunday, Walesa
and others fought off bitter attacks to apparently turn
back a radical challenge to their compromise with the
government of e r whether the government or workers
will select managers. The new law allows Joint
■election.

Hostages Flee Hl/ackers
BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (UPI) - All 106 hostages
aboard a hijacked Yugoslav airliner escaped by setting
off a false fire alarm and slipping down emergency
chutes at Cyprus' Lam acat airport, forcing their
captors to surrender without a shot.
The three hijackers, armed with two pistols and a
knife, handed their weapons to Cyprus police Sunday
after the seven crew members and 101 passengers on
the Yugoslav Airline Boeing 7TJ escaped, the official
Tanjug news agency said.

SCA Holds Revival

CHURCHILL, Man. (UPI) The bodies of three
Montana students have been found off the coast of
Hudson Bay, and searchers have little hope the fourth
member of an ill-fated canoe trip would be found alive,
and RCMP spokesman said.
The body of 24-year-old Joseph E. Mason was found
Sept. 19, the spokesman slid Sunday. A second body,
that of Bradley W. Eatnoil, 10, was found Sept. 22. Both
were natives of Independence, Mo., and were students
at the University of Montana. Police have not iden­
tified the third body.

To keep Seminole Community Action (SCA) operating in the
manner to which they have become accustomed, the Seminole
County Ministerial Alliance will sponsor a revival beginning
Monday, Oct. 5 and all proceeds will be contributed to the
newly established fund for the SCA.
SCA Is a community service agency.
The revival will begin at 7:30 p.m. Monday and run through
Friday, Oct. 9. It will be held at the First Shiloh Missionary
Baptist Church, 1101 W. 13th Street, Sanford.
The fund was initiated almost three weeks alter Seminole
County Commissioners voted not to give the agency Its request
of *17,000 in county funding for 19*1-61 The county slashed
funding to less than half — to *6.500.

Lunches
(CoadSMd Fran Page 1A)

derstandlng about them."
In a statement, Block u id , "The president agreed the
proposed revisions should be reconsidered due to adverse
public reaction."
"It appears that the administration's intent w u not clearly
understood . . . Our task now is to study the propouls,
restructure them if necessary and again present them for
public inspection."
He u id the propouls set standards local schools must meet
(or federal reimbursement. "It did not set maxlmums or
establish school menus u critics of the measure led the
public to believe," Block added.
Stockman had told reporters at a briefing on Reagan's new
budget cut plans that the rules were withdrawn last week, and
should have been submitted to his Office of Management and
Budget for review before being made public.
Those comments came u news to officials at the Food and
Nutrition branch of the Agriculture Department who prepared
the guidelines. A spokesman u i d they had not been Informed
the guidelines should be scrapped.
An Agriculture aide said the guidelines were devised to
"increase flexibility and cost u v ln g " with the reduction of the
school lunch budget to *1.5 billion for 1962.

Contributions to SCA from schools, churches, civic
organizations, and private Individuals will be accepted at the
Atlantic National Bank of Seminole, 101 E u t First Street
beginning Oct. 12.

HOSPITAL NOTES
Svminel* M «m »ri»l H a ip ilil
W p lim b tr H
ADM ISSIONS
SA N FO R D
Jackie Deltsch
D e ity L Atwood. Deltona
Claud* H. K n lgh l, O ttren
O ltC H A R O E l
SAN FO R D
Lawrence Beaton
W illiam A Gibson
Lyle D Lavrnder
Chart*! Ready
Anthony J. Verenn*
K im O W lllla m t
R ich ard W illia m !
Helen A V a n n u l, Deltona
Carolina B Thomas. Drang*
City
Todd W Boyd. Lom bard. Ill

ADRIANNI RSINOLHAUPTKORN
A d rie n n e R t ln d l H d u p tk o rn .
daughter of M r. end M rt. Frank
W illiam R tln d l of SOM Cochita
T rail, Casselberry, h a i anilttad in
l na U n iltd H a lt ! M arina Cor p i
Hauptkorn w ill d tp arf M a rch f for
I weeks of ro cru ll training a l tha
M a r in a C o rp t R a c r u lt D tp o t,
P a r r lt 11lard, t.C . Upon com
p illio n of r a c r u lt tra in in g ,
Mauplkorn w ill b t h o m t for • Ian
day la a v t b afo rt going on for
fu rth tr technical training in a
fo rm a l M a r in a C o r p i tch o o l.
Hauptkorn t n llilt d for four y M r l
wltn a guaranftod assignment in
electronics
P rio r to tn llilln g ,
Hauptkorn w o rktd lo r Stm inolo
County T ro n ic E n g in ttrln g and It
a IT71 gradual* o l Lym an High
School. S h t co m p la tad h t r
A tt o c la lt t Degree a l S tm lno lt
Community C o lltg o In IfTS and
graduated from Florida Stata
University In 1*7* with a Bar
c a la u r ia lo
In
tn g ln t t r ln g .
H tu p lk o r n r t i l d t i w ith h t r
hut band w illia m Jo ttp h Haup
ikorn at 1101 Watt n t h Stratf,
Sanford
Q L C N N W ILSON M c K I N N I Y
C ltn n W ilton M cKInnoy, Jr., ton
ol M r. on M r t Glonn W ilton
M cKInoay Sr., of Spartanburg.
S C ., hot enlisted In lha U n iltd
S ta ftt M arino Corpt. McKInnoy
w ill d*pari October I lo r II weeks
of recruit training a l th* M arin*
C o rp t R ic r u ll D t p o l, P o r r lt
lltand, S C Upon completion of
ra cru ll training, McKInnoy w ill b*
horn* lo r a tan day l*aya bttor*
going on for further technical
training In a lo rm a l M arin a Corpt
school M cK in n e y anilttad tor
throo y ia r t and It a 1*7* gradual*
ol Samlnol* High School.

Sastamfear IT
ADM ISSIO N S
SANFO RD '
June W Burgai*
P a tll L Varnar
D o rn J. Sm all
Onada M Do Idtr
Thtnna A Thompion
AAargartl Balam an, O tS a ry
Grant R. W ilton, Daltona
Baby g irl Crempton. Sanford
D IS C H A R G E S
SANFORD
L rla M Jonet
Andraw X P a rk lm
Ja m a i E W aihington
G tra ld in a K. Lundy. DaSary
Ethal Spear, Daltona
Julia A. Piccfnlni. Daltona
Harbarl M Stager. Daltona

WEATHER
NATIONAL REPORT: Winds up to 45 mph swept the Greet
Ukaa Region, luring residents shivering In temperatures
that dipped into the Ms early today from North Dakota through
northern Michigan. Frost warnings were Issued for northern
Minnesota, northwestern Wisconsin and eastern North Dakota
along with gals warnings for lakes Michigan, Huron and
Superior. Severe thunderstorms dumped more than an inch of
rain on central Michigan, knocking out electric power and
flooding a section of Interaute 75 with up to 5faat of water. An
srrly -autumn storm dumped more than an inch of rain on
much of Oregon Sunday. Showers and thunderstorms soaked
the Appalachians, the mid-Atlantic coast, northern
MUMwHftd saitern Oklahoma and southwest Tern. The
National Weather Service in Portland iaeusd a traveler's

Randy Crowder, defensive tack k for the
Tampa Bay Buccaneers, will be guest speaker
for the first meeting of the 1961-62 school year
of the Seminole County Drug A w sreneu Task
Force.
The meeting la to be held at 7:30 p.m., Oct. 6,
at the Lake Mary High School Auditorium. ,
The organisation w u founded earlier this
year to promote awareness by parents and the
community of the drug problems of youth and
to find w ays to combat the problem.
Crowder w u an all-round athlete at his
Pennsylvania High School and at Penn State.
He w u building a career u now tackle for the
Miami Dolphins until he w u convicted of sale
and possession of narcotics in 1175. He w u put
off the Dolphins and spent a year in jail.
IfW’XvXv.'-V !•'
v ..\
^ ‘ • * » i',' »*#%•„* ***V„v**

RANDY CROWDER
. . . guest speaker for Seminole
County Drug Awareness Task Force
meeting.

Signed as a free agent in 1976 by the Tampa
Bay Buccaneers, he h u resumed his football
career and speaks to groups about the dangers
of drugs.
P atti Brantley, chairman of the event, said
the public Is invited and parents a re urged to
bring their sons and daughters to hear and
m eet Crowder. — DONNA ESTES

IN THE SERVICE

To Raise Funds

3 Students' Bodies Found

• • •

sonnel this morning at 12:50 a.m. on Dirt Lane off of Main
Street in Midway.
The vehicle, a 1976 Chevrolet M en u belonging to Edna Mae
Smith of 615 Palmetto Ave., Sanford, w u previously reported

advisory warning that snow could hit Oregon's Cascade
Mountains Sunday night, when the snow level w u expected to
drop to 4,000 feet In the north end 5,000 feet In the south.
Forecuteri called the blustery weather, which h u brought
rain to Portland every day but one since Sept. II, a normal
autumn adjustment of the stationary Pacific Ocean pressure
systems.
AREA READINGS (t a m ): temperature: 76; overnight
low: 71; Sunday's high: &gt;9; barometric pressure: 0.07;
relative humidity: M percent; winds: north at 7 mph.
TUESDAY’S TIDES: DAYTONA BEACH: Ngta, 6:41 am.,
10 p.m.; Iowa, 5:13 a.ro., 2:37 p.m.; PORT CANAVERAL:
highs, 9:31 am ., 9:52 pm ,; lows, 5:04 am ., 5:11 pm.;
RAYPORT: highs, 1:14 a.m., 3:07 pm.; lows, 9 a m , till p m
MATING FORECAST: S t AoguUae Is Jupiter brief, Out
■ Mies; Winds Northeasterly around It knots through
Tuesday. Sees 4 to I bat except higher in the Gulf 8tream.
Partly cloudy with a few rixnrtn.
AREA FORECAST: Mostly sunny today end Tueeday. Highs
in the upper Me. Pair tonight with krws near 71 Winds nor­
theast 10 to 15 mph decreasing at night.
EXTENDED FORECAST: Partly cloudy with chance of
thundenhowen mainly south part. Lows enraging In fee mid
Ms north to mid 70s aouth except upper 7b in the lower keys.
Highe mostly In the mid to upper 60s.

D A V ID P A U L V X L I N
O evId Pau l V e le tito n o f M r. and
M rt. E d w ard P au l Vaftn, Gtnava.
hat an ilttad In tha Unltad S ta ttt
M arin* Co rpt R tM fv * . Velen w ill
d tp*rt M arch I lo r It wa*kt of
racru lt training at tha M arina
C o rp t R t c r u lt D tp o t, P a r r l i
IHand, S.C. Upon completion of
r tc r u lt training, V tia n w ill b t
homo for a ta v tn day laava bafort
going on for further technical
training In a fo rm al M a rin a Corpt
tchool. V*i*n anilttad for tour
y ta r t with a guaranteed assign
mant at an A irc ra ft E le ctrica l
S y tta m t T e c h n ic ia n . P r io r to
em itting, V tia n worked for Z ayra
and It e n ro lle d a l Sa m ln o l*
Community College In lha Adult
High School
M A R C A L L ! N F O LS O M
M a rc A lla n Folsom , ton o l M r.
and M r t. W illia m C a r l Fottom ,
hat anli»i*d In tha Unltad Slate*
M arina Corpt. Fottom w ill depart
F tk ru a ry S fo r II wooka of recru it
training at the M arina Carp*
R acrult Dope*. P arrl* island, I.C.
Upon co m p le tio n *t r t c r u lt
training, Fottom w ill bo homo lo r
* tan day l**v« before going on lo r
fu rth tr technical training W g
lo r m a l M o r in * C arp* school.
Folsom enlisted tor lo u r y s o rt
with a guaranteed assignm ent In
Aviation t la c t r e n k s . P r io r to
wUiaHng. Folsom wos toM a n .
p loyed w ith C u sto m C o n c re te
ta r vie* M L a k e Helen and It a IW7
■Spn
rR
aire
dwu^w
lt*
of
D oL mmI
piw q
*v kpwwwvnR

/rt

PABLO JUAN
QUINONES
P A B L O J U A N Q U IN O N E S
P riv a l* Pablo Juan Quinones,
ton o l M r. and M rt. Juan P tb lo
Qulnon*! o l S t lf N icholM n Drive,
Orlando recently returned horn*
Irom P a r r lt lltan d. S.C atttr
completing II w«*kt of rtc ru lt
tra in in g .
D u rin g
Q uin on es'
training h* received form al Inttruction in first aid. phvttcel
l l i n t t i , m a r k tm a n t M p , d o t*
combat techniques. M arin o Corpt
hittory, cut lorn and co u rtn y , d rill
and n u c le e r, b io lo g ic a l and
c h t m lc a l w a r fa r e
Q u ln o n tf
rep o rltd to th* Truck Comp*ny,
Sth M olar T rantp orl Battalion, » s
North P r lm r e M A v m u t. Or Undo,
tor duly at a member o l th*
M arin* Corpt R *t*rv* unit there.
Quinonet It pr*t« nlly tn ro llrd al
Valencia Com m unity C o lltg* and
w ill r a c t iv * h it lo r m a l s h ill
training during th « lu m m » ro l IIS1
at Twenty nine Palm *. C* During
Qulnon**' T week* o l th ill training
a t a Hold radio oporetor ho w ill
Ita rn to la n d and ra c a lv a
m m ta g tt, Install and tun* radio
equipment end perform operator
maintenance
R O V O D U O L A IS Z A Y A S
P r iv a t e
F ir a f
C la n
Roy
O ouglatt Z ayat, ton of M r. and
M rs. Sergio Z ay at of II North
F ir s t C o u rt, W in te r S p rin g s,
recently returned home on ia days
wave Irom F e rris Island, SC .,
t ile r com pleting It w teks ol
recru it training During training
Z ayat received lorm a l Inti ruction
M flr tt aid, p h y tlca l fitness,
m e rk t m e n th ip , c lo t* co m b at
technique*. M arin* Co rpt hittory,
cu tlo m t and courtety, d r ill and
nuclear, chem ical and biological
w a rfa re . F o llo w in g h it la tv *
Zayas w ill reperl to Cam p Pan
(Peton. Ca tor about S weeks In
struct Ion at th* Infantry (raining
school There Zayas w ill study
general Infantry tactics, weapons,
scouting and patrolling, hand to
hand c o m b a t, m a p re a d in g ,
dem olition! and cam ouflage upon
completion of Intonfry training
tchool, Zayas w ill b* qua ill led to
supervise th* fra Wing, routine
fu n c tio n in g and la c t ic o l e m
ptoyment of a M arin a rltto unit.
Zayas w ill a lto ba elig ib le to be
tent c n to spec la Iliad schools to
Warn such s k ills as underwater
s w im m in g , p a ra c h u te lu m p in g
and scouting tg aid in tp o c la llia d
reconn* Usance m itt Ions

A N T H O N V N IC H O L A S V R R N A
P r iv a t e
A n th o n y
N ic h o la s
Verne, son of M r. en d M r t. Robert
L o u is V e r n s of n o t N o rth
M a itla n d
Avenue.
M a itla n d
recently returned hom e on IS days
leave Irom P o r r lt Island. S.C.
a f lt r com pleting It weeks of
recru it training. During recru it
training V erna received form al
Instruction In fir s t aid, p hytlcal
l l l n t t t . m a r k a m a n t h lp , clo t*
cam bat techniques, M a rin e Corpt
history, custom s and courtesy,
d r ill snd n u c lta r, chem ical and
b io lo g ic a l w a r fa r e . F o llo w in g
Varna's laava ha w ill report to
Cam p Leloune, N C . lo r about S
week* Instruction a l lha infantry
training school. There V erne w ill
study generol Inlontry la d le s ,
weapons, scouting and patrolling,
hand to h a n d co m b a t, m ap
re a d in g ,
d e m o litio n s
and
camouflage Upon com pletion of
Infantry tra in in g tchool, Verne
w ill be q u e lllle d Is supervise th*
training, rou tin e functioning and
tactical em ploym ent o l a M arin*
r l ll r uml. V arna w ill a lto be
e llg lb le lo h e it n t on to tp t c tt llie d
tcnoolt lo Itarn tuch s k ills a t
underw ater sw im m ing, parachute
lum ping nnd scowling lo aid In
s p e c ia liz e d
r e c o n n a is s a n c e
m its tont.

ANTHONY VERNA
JO A N N O D IL IA W R IU H T
P rivate F irs t Class Joann O d llla
W right, daughter ol M r. and M rt.
M e n hoi Dempsey Wright al l i l
E a s t j ln k ln t C lr c la , S a n fo rd ,
recently relum ed horn* tor to d ay s
laava atla r com pleting I weeks of
recru it training at tha M arin a
C o rp t R t c r u lt D epot, P a r r lt
•H and, S.C. D u rin g tr a in in g
W rig h t r a c a lv a d lo r m a l In.
struct ion In first aid, physical
litnest. m arksm anship, M arin a
Corps h it io r y , cu sto m s and
courtesy, d rill, cosmetology, and
nu cltar, c h a m k a i and biological
w a r la r t . F o llo w in g h t r la t v *
Wright w ill report to Twenty
Palm s, Ca. lo r a * week b a s k
rle ctro n lct co urt* and than b*
assigned to further tchoalW g tor
sp aclalliad train in g w ithin tlw
electronics fie ld Upon completion
o l nor form al school Wg W right wltl
become proficient w the diagnosis,
repair, *d|ustm*r* and callbrafian
of e le c tro n ic e q u ip m e n t and
ty tie m t used by Ihe M a rio * Carps
ground tore** This equipm ent and
t y s itm t include various types of
com m unication hardw are, data
term inals, crypto grap h ic devices,

sm all m its lla ty t ie m t , ground
radar and a wide ran ge ol teat
eq u ip m en t
an d
c a lib r a t io n
device*

ALAN SUTTER
JA M R S A L A N IU T T R R
P riv a l* Jam es A la n Sutler. w
ot W a lte r G e o rg e S u tter a
E v a n td a le R e a d , L n k * M a r y
retan tly returned horn* on 10 dayi
laava from P a r r lt Island. S C
alter com pleting II week* e
recru it training D u rin g trainin'
Sutter received fo rm a l Instruct!*
In tirst aid, p h y sic a l fltnasi
m a rk s m a n s h ip , c lo t * co m b *
technique*. M a rin e Co rps history
customs and courte sy, d r ill a v
nuclear, biological a n d ch a m ka
w arfare Follow ing Su tter's it a v
he w ill report to C a m p L e isu re
N C . tor 7 weeks o l lo rm a l to
ttruction a t an a lecti-k lan . Than
h# w ill be Instructed on the in
ttoiiation, operation, m« ltd enenc
and repair oI e le c tric a l powe
distribution ty tte m i, for tore*
employed in th* fle k l.

A MATTER
OF RECORD
M A SM A G I

UCtNSES

O tn ltf D. O 'Con nor, SI. MS
Senior* Av*., Sant., A Doreen A.
Richardson, to, ta m u address.
M ichael l . Stem , US. J*« Sen .
A N ancy A . G ra g o lre , St, tam e
address.
Andrew J. Chewlck., I f . R t . 'l B i
t i l l . Oviedo. A V ir g in ia L . E ckar,
» . IS ! W M T rL CA.
Desmond W. A ll-in . I f . I l l )
Conltor Ct.. W F, A Kathleen A
Lewghren, a , 401 I t l St.. L k A lary
&amp;*&gt;rs* A Hughes, Jr., a . a t. &gt;
Aa *43 A, Said.. A A la ry C . M e
Crae, a , Tie t . H a rw ta d St., O rt
E rn a ti J. F a u lin ,lr .. St. I N N
Coleman C r , Sant, a Cathy L
M in ty , m . Orange c it y .
Galen I . M illa r, to. m *
Woodland D r.. Sant A N an cy A
M cA lu m , U S t) t . 0 « k Av*.. SEW
Johnny L . Jo n e s IS, IS) Ad
A v * . Sant., A G lo ria J. H u n to r,«
MS) W. lam a . , sa rd .
Jo sep h t B o r l a n d . 71, *&lt;
Lakaviaw D r „ M a id . A

r

.iO fa
■#t 4 - *

f . a

. * » s - A a s . g ^ | ^ i - t i - f f l | r a

# * * • - * * - ■ •

m «

»«*.*■** .

• A

-MR, 1

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A

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-rev* m . i * - *

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&gt; ■ * * .* * •

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• ( * .-.neatK C + t » :

�Ev e n in g H e ra ld , ts n fs r d , F I .

NATION
IN BRIEF
Budget: Round 2 Begins
As Reagan Pushes For Cuts
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Round Iwo ot President
Reagan's budget battle is under way, with the White
House pounding away at Congress for more spending
cuts and Democrats swatting back at an ad­
ministration plan they say is unsound.
Critics contend Reagan's call for an additional $13
billion in fiscal 1982 spending cuts would rip holes In his
so-called “social safety net," dropping needy
Americans into hard times.
Budget director David Stockman disputed the
criticism Sunday and warned Congress will have to
answer to the electorate if it refuses to go along with
Reagan’s plan for remedying the economy and
balancing the budget by 1984.

Changes Due O n Thursday
WASHINGTON (UPI) - life In the United States
will change some on Thursday — the first day of the
government's 1982 fiscal year and President Reagan’s
sweeping economic recovery program.
Taxes will go down, interest rates for student loans
will go up, the cost of the food stamp program will
decline and welfare eligibility rules will tighten.
Democrats say many people will be hurt by
Reagan’s cuts in domestic sociaj programs and that his
tax cuts primarily will benefit the wealthy. Reagan
and other Republican leaders argue the charges are
necessary to reduce the size of government and bring
Its borrowing activity under control, which everyone
says will be good for the economy.

Appeals Court Split In Two
NEW ORLEANS (UPI) - The largest appeals court
in the nation, plagued by a continuing logjam of ap­
peals filed in recent years, will be split Into two sec­
tions Thursday.
The division of the 26-member 5th U S . Circuit Court
of Appeals marks the first time in more than a half
century that a new federal court has been carved from
an existing one.

The court In New Orleans will handle federal cases In
Louisiana, Mississippi, Texas and the Canal Zone. The
new 11th Circuit In Atlanta will preside over federal
appeals in Alabama, Georgia and Florida.

Cody In Blast At Media
CHICAGO ( U PI) - Cardinal John P. Cody has urged
many of the city's top lawyers and Judges to unite as
missionaries and help him combat what he calls
inaccurate reporting by the media.
Speaking to an overflow crowd Sunday in Holy Name
Cathedral at the archdiocese's annual mass for the
legal community, Cody Implored the congregation to
“help to bring to the attention of the people... that what
Is written in the p r e s 1s the Bible truth."
Earlier this month the Chicago Sun-Times detailed in
a aeries of copyrighted articles an investigation by a
federal frand Jury into Cody's handling of tax-exempt
church funds and the possibility he misdirected up to f t
million to a lifelong woman friend described as his
cousin.

Granville: Today 'Blue'
NEW YOUR (UPI) - Flamboyant stock market
Hum Joseph Granville’s latest gloomy prediction is on
the line today, which he sayi will be a "blue" day in
U.S. financial history.
After Friday's stock market bloodbath, many pin­
striped professionals on Wall Street are wondering
whether a Granville prediction can do more to shake up
the financial community than a nationally televised
presidential address.

Typhoid Epidemic In Texas
SAN ANTONIO, Texas (UPI) - A Mexican did)
made from parts of a bull’s head is the probable cause
of a typhoid epidemic that left 18 victims hospitalised
and baffled health investigators.
Health officials said Sunday the food was identified
in computer checks u barbs cos, made from the Jowls,
brain and Ups of a bull's head.

C A LE N D A R
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER t l
Seminole High School Ope* Hoaae, 7:30 p.m.,
opening session In the auditorium after which parents
will follow student's dally schedule and meet teachers.
Refreshments served In the library.
Sanford AJ-Ajm r , 8 p.m., First United Methodist
Church, Park Avenue and Fifth Street.
TUESDAY, SEPT, t l
Seminole County Cornell PTA Skate Party, 1:304

p.m., All American Skating Rink, State Road 431,
Altamonte Springs. f2 for students, parents skate (res.
Tickets at Bear Lake, Spring Lake and Lake Orients
schools.
WEDNESDAY, SEPT.»

Satfsrd AA Beftaaers, 8:30 p.m„ 1301 W. Fin* St.
Starlight Prsmrsadirs, • p.m., DsBary Community
Center. Shell Road.
Overeaters Anonymous, 7:30 p.m., Ahamante Mail,
Sears.
Ban to Win AAgrot* I p.m., Ravenna Park Baptist
Church, 1743 Country Club Road, Sanford. Closed.
Akohottes Aasajmsas. I p m , Altamonte Springs
Community Church, State Road 438 at Hermits Trail.
Cloaed.
Widen day Step AA, I p.m., Penguin Building,
Mental Health Center, Crane's Roost, Altamonte
Springs. Closed.
THURSDAY, OCT. 1
Tropical Weavers GaHd of Orlando masting, 10 s.m.
St John’s Lutheran Church, MM &amp; Orlando Ave.,
Orlando. Program - "Weaving for Christmas." Open
to those interested-in weaving or spinning.

Got A Minor Legal Beef?
Citizens Dispute Can Help
neutral, Schuckman said. “ The hearing than trying to find a solution, Schuckman
leaves you with a good feeling but with n said.
drained feeling, also."
Saving time and money are the two big
CDS handles all the problems whereas factors why Judges, and others, favor the
the court frequently must drop a ease program, Schuckman said. It costs $1,500
since there is not enough evidence or to $2,000 to lake a misdemeanor case
That is not always the best solution in
through the legal system compared to the
minor m isu n d erstan d in g s, though— cause to have a hearing, Schuckman
estimated $22 it costs in time and ad­
said.

ByBILLHORNUNG
Everyone at least one-time in their life
has probably said: "I'm not'going to let
him get away with it — I'll take him to
court and sue!"

especially in Seminole county where
there is an easier and less expensive way
out.

The Citizen Dispute Settlement i CDS)
program, begun in May, has led about 270
minor confrontations to successful
conclusions. All types of problem s
ranging from barking dogs, spouse
abuse, petty thefts, whose fence is on
whose property line or ‘why can't my kid
cross your lawn on the way to school?'
have been dealt with.
And the bottom line is the disputes are
usually settled , peacefully, without
expensive legal proceedings, and without
bogging down the already-over-burdened
courts, according to Ed Schuckman,
program director.
"We handle ail Ihe cases that you can
see a solution at the end," Schuckman
said, adding, "we don't say who's right
or wrong."
Bringing both parties together to
negotiate through an arbitrator is not a
new idea. Other counties and stales have
similar programs — but Schuckman has
blended the best portions of other a r­
bitration methods into one design tliat
has come close to having a perfect record
for finding an equitable solution.

Going all the way to a (tearing is the
last step, though. Sometimes a simple
phone call between parties — a "gobetween" — is all it takes to have the
blasting stereo turned down next door.

ministrative costs in a CDS hearing,
Schuckman said. In actual costs, CDS
probably saves the county $200,000 a
year, he added.
In addition, the hearings are held
Monday
through Thursday night in Ihe
With the threat of legal action always
looming, usually the conflicting party court building, which makes use of onceunoccupied space.
complies, Schuckman said.
“ We're going to make sure lluit they
abide by what they agreed to do," he
said.

'Som etimes
a 'go-between'
Is all It takes
to

have

And going through the courts is no
guarantee a solution w ill be found, he
said. Of the 3,000 misdemeanor cases
' filed last year, 1,700 actually went before
a Judge, Schuckman said. Of that
number, 40 went to trial with half of those
ending in guilly verdicts. The county
spent $101,000 last year for Juries and
witnesses in llic misdemeanor cases
alone, he said.
"We have all the agencies working for
one goal," Schuckman said. Judges, law
enforcement, social service agencies and
lieople walking in off of the street are
referred to the department constantly.

the

blasting stereo

I/Hated on the 3rd floor of live Seminole
County's services building al First Street
and Park Avenue, Schuckman and his
next door...
administrative assistant Cindy Czabo
Itandle most of the caseload with SchuckSo far, there's only one case that has 'man mediating about 95 percent of the
liad to be returned to authorities (or cases.
criminal prosecution, Schuckman said.
Muny n( the cases deal with restitution
The procedure Ls simple. CDS is con­ Every one else has been able to agree on a
tacted at 322-7534 and an intake interview- compromise worked out between the without prosecution petty thefts, a neigh­
bor running over the muilbox and dog
conducted. After about a week, the two arbitrator and the opposing side.
chewing up the garden cases — arc Just a
sides are called In by an arbitrator wtio
Sclmckmaii credits CDS success to matter of agreeing on a financial set­
listens lo both sides, weighs the issues
several factors. First, the arbitrators tlement, Schuckman said.
and attem pts to settle the differences.
come from all different backgrounds —
Restitution on welfare fraud is a
An agreement is drawn up and signed retired federal employees, social
recently added area handled by CDS,
w
orkers,
professional
m
ediators
—
by all participants. Periodically, Schuck­
Schuckman said. "B esid es saving
man checks up on the parties to see if anyone with "conflict resolution" ex­
money, we’re also taking money back,"
perience.
Secondly,
the
arb
itrato
rs,
everyone is complying. At anytime, each
lie said. Those accused ot making too
side can contact CDS if a problem arises. under the law, liave the power lo ride
herd on the parties and legally force much money to tic eligible for welfare or
“We can tie them up indefinitely,'1 them to comply with their agreement. (nod stamps, or who cheat the system in
some oilier way, ore allowed to pay la c k
Schuckman said.
Under a ‘mediator" system, lliere is no
the money, promise not to do it again,
such authority, he said, and people can
For the arbitrator, it's tough work, renege on their agreements. And, and be Ireed from a criminal record. It
they return lo their old ways, there ore no
Schuckman said. Each of the 30 ar­
Thirdly, lawyers ure used sparingly.
second ctiances. They go to court and
bitrators takes two or three cases a
month — all on their own time and Systems that employ legal experts olten face the possibility of Jail, Schuckman
without pay. An arbitrator has lo remain get wrapped up with legalities rattier said.

fu m e d d ow n

Carter M X Plan
To Be Scrapped?
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Sen. Paul I-axalt, H-Nev., says
President Reagan is likely to reject the Carter administration
plan to hide 200 advanced MX missiles among 4,600 shelters in
Utah and Nevada.
Appearing on NBC's "Meet the Press," U x all said, "The
MX decision will be made during the course of this week as
part of an overall strategic package ... probably Tuesday or
Wednesday."
While sayfng he did not know what deployment plan Reagan
will choose, he said, "I do know that live big system proposed
by the Carter administration of 4,600 shelters Ihi using 200
missiles — I think that will be rejected."
"I rather hope that the president adopts die recommen­
dation that Sen. (Jake) G am (R-Utah) and I made after our
hearings of taking the 200 missiles — it’s a good missile, with 10
warheads and a good guidance system — and incorporate
them within the existing Mlnuteman system and support them
with ABMs (anti-ballistic missiles)."
Today, Senate Armed Services Committee Chairman John
Tower, E-Texas, also said he did nol know what Reagan will
settle on, but added in an Interview on NBC's "Today"
program, "I think the probability is at this point it will be a
land-based mode for the MX missile."

D O N 'T O A M B L I

with your Insurance I
-C A L L -

T

o u ti i
INSUOANCI

tony

ft.

f
332-0118
LOW COST A U T O INSURANCE

CLEARAN CE
HUBBARD

SUMMER SLACKS
LARGE SELECTION

y

OFF

3

S l id 31 to M

Sens. William Roth Jr., HDel., and Harrison Schmitt, HN.M., in a letter released Sunday, urged Reagan to scrub plans
to hide the missiles and instead put them in existing
Mlnuteman and Titan silos.
The two Republicans said ‘.heir proposal would cost $15
billion less than the controversial plan to hide the missiles in
she Hers in the Nevada and Utah desert.

Is Reagan
Taskmaster
Or Leader ?

164 E. F irs t St.

I l l - I I 11

Downtown Son tor*

Legal Notice
F IC TIT IOUS N A M E
Notice it ht r e t , given the! ive
ere engaged In business at ho ■ 701
Mmneola, Ft J77SS Lake Count*.
F lorid* under Ihe lid it.o u s M in t
ot H O M E p l a n , end Ihel «ve m
tend lo register i*&gt;d name with Ihe
C le rk ol the C ir c u it C o urt.
Seminote County, Floride in ec
cordonce with the p rovitio m ol the
F ictitious Nem e Statutes. To Wit
Section IAS Of Floride Statutes
IIS7
S.g Ouy C ilr ln ile
Sig Doneld Bleck
Publish September 21. 7S. Oc
lober S. II. I t l l

NEW YORK (UPI) - Two
new opinion polls provide
contrasting readings of the
pu b lic's
p erception
of
P resid en t R eag an : He is
either a leader respected by
80 percent or an economic
taskmaster who has disen­
chanted over a third.
A Yaneklovlch, Skelly and j m i M .....______ _______
N O TICC U N D E R FICT IT IO U S
White poll, published in the
N A M E LAW
current issue of Time magazi­
N O TICE IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
Ihel
Ihe
undersigned,
desiring lo
ne, shows Resgsn doing well
at managing the economy, eng Age in business under Ihe
lic titio u i nem e of E L TORITO —
handling foreign affairs and O R LA N D O Al number 17S W
providing strong teadcrehip at Highwey AM, in Ihe C ity ot
Allem onte Springs, Floride. in
home and abroad.
"Seventy percenfhave confi­
dence in his handling of
foreign affairs and 80 percent
have confidence in his
leadership ability."
But a Gallup poll, published
In this week's Newsweek,
found only 81 percent of those
interviewed said Reagan was
doing a good Job — a 8 percent
decline ( r a n A ugust.'

’b&amp;ti'WW.

tends lo register Ihe seid neme
w iln the Clerk ot the C irc u it Court
ot Seminole County, Floride.
Deled e l Irvine, C e lito rn u , this
llt h dey ot August, I t ll.
E L T O R IT O —L A
F IE S T A R E S T A U R A N T S . INC.
By: M e rlin M . Cesry,
V ice President
Attorney lo r A p p licen l
H AT/ G RAN O F 1 P A LA H /.
A Protest ion* I Corporelion
•100 W ilshire Blvd , Suite UC
Beverly H ills, Ce 10117
Publish: September 14, II. IS,
October S. I f f l.

FREE SPINAL
EXAMINATION
I.
t
1
4
ft

Nedirtw liiiM fs UM 4 Meet
RiM Nt. TlgM Mesctee
hi* torn km . Vm H* N r
h * M i I* M l v FM
( rM
Ike

8 PWWI JtMs. Bw vw u m i

7. D m ltd. Pile, DU M r. N a torn D p
Why F R E E ? Thousands of araa residents have spina
ralatad problams which usually respond to chiropractic
cara.
This is our way ol artcouraglng you to find out It you havo a
.problem that could bo helped by chiropractic cara. It It
alto our way of acquainting you with our staff and
facilities.
Examination Includes a minimum ot 10 standard fasts for
evaluating the spine and a contour analysis photo as
shown abov*.
Whll* we are accepting new patients, no one need foal any
obligation.
Moat Insurances Accepted

SANFORD PAIN CONTROL
CLINIC
M I'S f 'Hdvctl Avi i Au m i hwn h y j Nvl WnHRt)

323-5763

DEM St

M o n d a y , Sept. 38. ) M 1 - 3 A ;

Legal Notice
AOENOA
S E M IN O L E C O U N T V I O A R O
OF A D JU S T M E N T
N O T IC E O F P U O LIC
H E A R IN O
O C T O B E R If. IN I
1 :1 1 P M
TO W H O M IT M A Y C O N C E R N :
N O TICE is hereby given Ihel ihe
Seminole Counly Board of Ad
(ustment w ill conduct e public
hearing to consider Ihe following
ile m i'
A V A R IA N C E S
I O R E O O R V 0. B A R N E S B A (10 If t l ) 1)0V
PUD,
Planned Unit Development Zone
— Rear Y a rd V aria n ce from 10 It
to J II lo r sw im m ing pool on Lol A.
Block A. Sterling P a m , Unit ], P B
II. Pg Si. in Section IS It 30
Further described as Southerly
corner lol on Hey West Court,
second lot West o l Eag le C ircle
IDIST II
/ B O O NE SION E R E C T IO N
AN D S E R V IC E , IN C. - 6 A (I0 I f
■II l? f V — C I Com m ercial Zone
— V aria nce Irom l/ I s q tt to JOS sq
M lo allow two pole signs lor proper
■denlillcetion on Ihe following
properly
T e i P arcel S7A as
shown on Property Appraiser's
Map No I f f , In Section I f II 30. al
Ihe Northwest co m er ol Semoran
Boulevard and Howell Branch
Road IDIST. I)
3 O C T A V IO A N D R A D E BA 110 I f I I I ( l e v
R •) A
R esidential Zone — Rear Y ard
v arian ce Irom JO II to II tt lor
addition on Lo l I, Block J, East
brook S D. U n it I. P B Ik Pg *1. in
Sect ion ja 11 10. on the East i kt* ot
Eattbrook Boulevard, second lot
South of Banter Drive. IDIST. II
4 W I L L A R D W. SU LT O N B AI10 I f I I I I lk V
—
R 1
Residential Zone — Rear Y ard
V ariance Irom 30 ft to II tl lo r an
addition on Lot f k W oodcreit U n ll
J. P B IS. Pg tS, In Section I S I I 30.
on me North side ot Antietam
Court East, second lot E«st Ol
Woodcrest Or ive IDIST. I)
5 JU A N IT A M. W H IT L E Y b a u d if i n l n v
a i
Agriculture Zone — LOT Site
V ariance irom 43,540 sq II to 31,400
sq tl on Lot 74, Chula Vista,
unrecorded P lat. Section 1, In
Section IS II 31. on Ihe North side
ol Groveland Drive. 'T m ile Irom
Snow Queen Drive, t O l ST II
* H A R R I S O. N O R T H B A II0 I f I I I I I I V R IA A A
Resident I* I Zone — Front Y a rd
Variance from IS ft lo IS II on Lot
I. North Cove. P B IS, Pg 4, In
Section « 70 Tt, a l the Northwest
corner ot North Cove Boulevard
and E E W illiam son Road (OIST
71
7 JO H N 1 IS L A N D - B A IlO l t
III I2SV — A I A g ricu ltu re Zone —
Lol Site V e ritn c e from 43,5*0 sq ft
to 31.ISO sq It and Lot Width
v arian ce ISO It to fO ft on L o l S.
Unrecorded S lid e 's Pten o l Rock
Leke. in Section 34 70 71, on Ihe
North lid e o l Slade. 700 tt West ot
Rock Leke D rive IDIST 21
D S P E C IA L
E X C E P T IO N S M O B IL E
HOME
A P P L IC A ­
T IO N S-A-1
AO R IC U L T U H E
ZONE
I F R A N C IS T. JO N E S —
( C O N T I N U E D ) - B A IT 21 I I I
I10T E — To park a mobile home on
the W 302 4JII ol S 1ST tt ot S 423 31
It ol N 745 34 II ol W 13 &lt;Jt th t ot
O ov.Lot 1, Seel ion IS I f TV (Parcel
A M B ), located on I M East itd e o t
Orange Avenue. ISO It North of
S R . 44. IDIST. SI
7 R O B E R T J. B R A N T L E Y BAUD I t l l ) I lf T E - To p ark 4
m obile home on the S ISSft of E 440
tl o l NW &gt;4 ot N E U ot Steflon 33
71 37. on Ihe West tid e o l Lefcevlew
Avenue. '« m ile South o l Lake
M ills Road IDIST II
J S T E V E N P. D V B - BAIIO
If III I34TE - To pork o mobile
home on Lot IS. Woodland E tle tH .
in Section 3 1 II It. 2V&gt; miles South
ot Highwey 4tf, East ot Lockwood
Road, at th t end ot Red Am ber
Road IDIST. II
4 C H A R L E S Z I E H L - BAIIO
If III 111 TE — To park o mobile
home on Lot 44, Woodland Estates,
in Section la II II, J m iles South at
S R Alt, East ot Lockwood Road
on the South side ot South Em ber
Road

mobile home [ R E N E W A L ! on the
S 1j o l Lot 10, P a lm Ham m ock,
Section I I 1011, a l ihe Northwest
com er of P a lm Way and Ingraham
Avenue. '• m ile South ot Pine
Way. IDIST. 21
IS O E O R O E S. C R O M B IE BA|I0 It It) M IT E - To park
m obile home on W 741 7S It ol Lol
111. E ure ka Ham m ock. P B I. Po
104. less W 11 S It lor road R W. in
Section I t 10II, on ihe East side ot
Sanford A vm ue, '• m ile South ol
M y rtle Street (OIST II
14 H O W A R D SH U C K - BAIIO
If 111 13STE - To park a m obilf
home on the E '&lt; of L o l 5. lets
104 tt Ol N 140 tl. in d lest W 137 4!
ft, M ecc4 Ham m ock. P B I, Pg 14
in Section If 10 II, on Ihe Soutr
tide o l M ichig an A vm u e . 1• m ill
E a tl of Sentord A vm ue. IDIST
&lt;41
17 J I M M Y O W k N S — BAIIO
It III I lf T E — To park a m obili
home on Lot 14, Seminole G ardens
PB 5, Po 17, lr&lt; Section 1 10 31.
m ile North ot Pinew ay Avenue
between B ritto n A v m u e on lha
West end Sipes A v m u e on tht
East, on Laura A v m u e IDIST 7
II P A U L L O C H N S R - B A flO
If III I40TE — To park a mothli
home on W • r o t Lo l J. ol Roykter I
Tabor 5 A c re Development. It
Section 7t 10 31. e l the end o
Cochran T rail, South ot S R 44
IDIST II
If H A R R Y L. C O L L IN S BA(I0 It 111 IJ4TE — To park
m o b ilt home on Ihe N 371 4 II o l I
f 411II Ol E 131tt o l N E ' t of SW M
le si N ISO tt of S ISO It o l E 100 I
and S SOU ot W 111 II plus S 100 N o
E 100 II Ot Section 11II 7f. locale:
300 It South o l H lllv le w D rive or
the West tid e ol M cN orton Road
IDIST II
10 D O U O LA S C. P H IL L IP S BAIIO It II I IJJT E - To park
m obile home on Ihe W 15 II of E 1
ot SE I. ot SW &lt;a of SW •« and Ihi

C S P E C IA L E X C E P T IO N S
OTHER
1 SYO
LEVY
IC O N !
T IN U E D I 6 A ( t 11 III 17E R
I0IV — C l C om m ercial Zone and
A I A g ricu ltu re Z on a— To operate
larm A Ilea m a r k tl and provide
o il street parking In tha A I Zona
and a V aria n ce from 10 percent id
3 percent lo Ihe Interior landscape
requirement, on Ihe W 44S S II Ot
SW
ol Section U 10 10. lying S o l
U S 1717 and the N 314 IS II ot W
445 47 tt ol NW M ot Section 13 701
30, located on Ihe S E ly tid e ot
Highwey 17 f l , SSO ft N ot Count*
Home Road IDIST. 21
2 D A V ID M . JOT C E - BAIIO)
If II I 14E — A 1 A g ricu ltu re Zonq
— To allow a S aw m ill on lha
following property Beginning at
th t Southwest corner ot Lot 71;
Block B ot the M itch ell Survey o l
the Levy Grant, P B I, Pg S. ruri
Ihm ce S E ly along the S boundary
line of LOI 73 and 7 f, 7JS S It. thaned
Nly and p a ra lle l with the East lind
ot said Lot 71 to Ihe centerline of
A C L R ailroad, thence N ly along R|
R lo tha Northwest corner ot L o l
71. thence South to PO B, alond
with said Lot 13 North R R. Iq
Section II 10 II, on H icks Avenue!
South ot Orange Avenue end West
ot Brantley A v m u e IDIST. II
1. ST . M A R Y . M A R D llch
A L tl
S A T R L U V * CHURCH
vhr
A N N U N C lA T IIO N — B A IW It n i l
J3E - R IA Residential Zone — Ti
allow oft slrael parking on t
fo llo w in g d e te r ib a d p ro p e rty
Beg SW corner Block A run H
741 41 It S M d egi IS min E 110 4 tl
S 3 d rg t 10 m ink W 11 S tt S I I degs
IS m in i E I I I S I deg 10 m in i E U S
It W 170 4 t l to beg. a lio , pert of
Block A. beg SE cor, run N ISO tt W
157 M t t S 104 40ft E 7 t i l l S, 741 40
It E ISO II lo beg. a ll In Sanlando
Springs. Tract 47, P B 2, Pg 4, In
Saction 1 It If, at tha Northeast
corner o l Montgom ery Road and
North Strtet (OIST II
4. J I P P T
LU BE
in !
T E R H A T IO N A L , INC. - BAIIO
It IS I H E — C I C o m m ercial Zone
— To allow au lo oil ch a n g i and
lubrication fa c ility on Lots 1, 4. A
S. less S R 434. B lo c k 4, Lakevlew
S D, P B S, Pg 14, in Section I I I I
XI, el the N E corner of Jackson
Street and S R 4M IDIST 41
S F R A N K H USTO N - BAIIO
S F R A N K A W E R N E R III If II) IJIT E - To park a mobile
BAIIO It I I I J1 E - C l Com
home on Lot II. Woodland E s la le t.
mar t i l l Zone — To allow Alcoholic
in Section 34 II 11. U m ilt East Of
Beverage Establishm ent (Beer
Lockwood Road, Its m iles South ot
and W in * ), on (he fo llo w in g
S R A lt IDIST. I)
properly
Beg 111 1/It N and 117!
4 B A R B A R A KN O W LES ~
ft E ot SW cornar of N E &gt;4 of SW
BAIIO I t l l ) I lf T E - To p ark 4
U . run N 71 degs 33' S4" E 117 Of It
mobile home on Lo l 331, Van
N 13 dtps 71' E, TOO I f H S S7 degs
A r id a le O sb o rn e
B ro k e ra g e
r £ IIS 44 It S 11 degs S3' W 111 SI
C o m p a n y ’s A d d itio n to B la c k
ft S 3/ degs 1’ E , 300 It S 11 degs S3'
Ham m ock, P B I, P g II, In Section
W 710 M fl N I I degs 44' W lo
l I I I I . on Ihe West side of Slone
beginning, along with that portion
Street, aao tt South ot F lo rid a
of Zayres Shopping Canter lying m
Avenue IDIST II
Lot l o l Fernwood P la ta , P B I), Pg
7 L O N N IE C. A L B X A N D E E IS. In Section 17 21 30 Further
BAIIO If II M 1 4 T E - To p erk a
d e s c rib e d as In tha Z a y r a i
mobile home. ( R E N E W A L ) on
Shopping C e n ta r a l th e In
L ott t l 1 t l, O P Swope Land
Com pany's P la l of Black Ham
lersectlon o l H ighw ays 134 and 1/
mock. In Section 2 1)11, on the
17, East o l Zayras. IDIST. 41
I O RANOEW OOD
PRE1BVSouthwest corner o l Canal Slrael
T E R IA N C H U R C H , IN C .- B A ( I 0
and How ard Slrael. IDIST. 1)
I
t
l
l
)
30E
-R
IA
A
t M ARV ANN BRAN AM AN BAIIO It f t II1 4 T E - To p ark a
Residential Zona — F or con
struction o l church with a lltn d a n l
mobile home ( R E N E W A L ) on the
S 1711 It ot S I I I c h k o f NW W 01
e d u c a t io n a l,
r e c r e a t io n a l
buildings and off s lr te t parking
Section II I f 33. W o l riv e r, on Ihe
E asl side ot Oscaola Road, two
and lo r construction o l p rlv a la
miles N E ly ol Seminole Counly
Christian School for grades Kin
Lend F ill IDIST. 1)
dergarlen through I7«h grade, on
t B.S. C H E S S E R - BAIIO It
Ihe following property: Tha N ly
III 1I/TE — To p ark a m obile
five acres ol that part ot SE i* of
home. R E N E W A L . on Ihe W 12.S I t ' SW '4 ot Saction 1311 If, lying
ot E l/S tt Ol E Vi o l N 1441 tt of W
East of I N . No 400 I M ) , and.
North ot Oranole Road. Further
175 It ot SW o l S tclio n I f » 31. N
ot Highw ayaa. k« m ile Weat of St.
described as North llv a acres of
Johns Bridge. IDIST. II
• parcel bordered on West by I 4 and
10 J O H N T . B E R N A R D on South by Oranole Road, lust
BAIIO If I I I l » T E - To p ark a
North of w hat would be evtenskmmobile home. ( R E N E W A L ) on the 1 ol W ym ore Road IDIST. 4)
N
o( SE ke o l IW Ik, N ot C lay
D A P P R O V A L O F M IN U T E S
Road (lass E 344 aa tt and W 414 II
» September 11, m i - Regular
Meeting
HI. in l a d Ion I M S 32. on the North
aid* o l Cochran Road, I m ile
This p ub lic hearing w ill be held
Westerly o l S R 44. ID IST. 21
5 In Room 100 of tha Seminole
II. M I C H A E L C N I L D B R I C o u n ly C o u rth o u se , S a n ford ,
BAIIO I f I1 M 1 4 T E - To p a rk a
F lorida , on October If, m i , at
m obile horn* on Lot K 10, Lake
7 ; » P M ,o r as toon thereafter as
Harney E H a it i, in Section It M
possible
31,0ft L a k e H arney Road. (O U T .
W ritten com m ents Iliad with ttw
I)
Land Managem ent M anager w ill
t l D E N E C. B E N N E T T t» considered Persons appearing
BAIIO If I1 M 3 / T E - To p a rk a
al tha public haarlng w ill bd heard
mobile home ( R E N E W A L ) on tha
H earings m ay be continued tram
following property: Begin at N E
lim a to tim e as found necessary
com er ot IW % o l SW &gt;4 of Section w F u r th e r d e t a ils a v a ila b le by
34 30 17, run South 70171 H, E 443 1 ta ilin g 111 0116, Eat. U t .
H, 704 31H, a l l 1 H to PO B. located
Parsons era ad vised m at, It m ay
IM H E ast o l Snow H ill Road, V.
oacida to appeal any decision
m ile South of Old T itu tv illa Rood
made a l th is hearing, m ay w ill
IDIST. 1)
need a reco rd of th t proceedings,
11 M A R K B U N T O N - B A U D
and M r such pur post, th ey m ay
It II I I10TE — To p ork • m obile
need ta meure that a verb atim
noma on m e I W ot Lot 141 and record of tha proceedings is m ads,
easement a c ro tt E II H o l N Vi ot w h ic h re c o r d
in c lu d e s
me
Lot M l, O .P. Swope Land Com- le st Im a n y e n d e v id e n c e
pony's F la t ot B la ck Ham m ock,
which the appeai Is ta be based
P B I. P g t t w i l l . In Section 341b
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y
l i . located &lt;4 m ile E ast o l b o o
B O A R D OP A D J U S T M E N T
Streor, m
n
South o l
In
•V i ROGER PKRRA,
dfpendance Avanwo. (O U T . t)
C H A IR M A N
U . D A V ID O. C I R B S O C I
P ub lish September a IN I
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E vening H erald

Florida had Ms of the 10 most crime ridden
dU es In America In 1N0. Of the lop 10, Miami
ranked number one and Tampa ranked number
two. "Miami haa become the murder capital of
the county."

. i o i p i 4ii not
200N. FRENCH AVE., SANFORD, FLA. 32771
Area Code 306423-1111 or Hl-6963

Wayn* D. Doyla, Publisher
Thornes Glordeno, Managing Editor
John Totn|*t, Ad vanning Dlractor

These facta are included In U.S. Sen. Lawton
Chiles' "Update" published this month. The
senator from Lakeland has been working on a
number of propoaed laws to provide "domestic
defense" — his term for the fight against crime.

Hem Delivery: Week, 11.00; Month, 04.*; 0 Month*, 004 00;
Year, 00.00. By Mall: Week, 91.30; Month, 0.20; 0 Month*,
Q00.00; Year. 07.00._________________

"As far as I'm concerned, domestic defense la
every bit as Important to our national security as
a strong national defense policy," he said.

Monday, September ai, i n i —aA

The Biggest
Pork Barrel
TYie Senate tn Washington is coopering up a new
farm price support program, America’s biggest
pork barrel, for the next four years.
Hits huge cask contains 913 billion of the tax­
payers' money.
And it is ironic that some of the Senate’s most
conservative members, notably Sen. Jesse Helms
are the strongest defenders of this giveaway.
Helms, the North Carolina Republican who is
chairman of the Senate Agriculture Committee, is
the particular champion of the controversial
tobacco subsidy program. Tobacco is a billiondollar business in North Carolina.
Many of the senators representing rural con­
stituencies will crusade for a balanced federal
budget when debating social programs that
benefit the urban poor. But they put their fiscal
conservatism aside when it comes to a budgetbusting farm price support program. The bill now
before the Senate exceeds by $1.8 billion the
spending limit imposed by Congress earlier this
year.
There comes a time for every politician to rise
above principle and cast a vote for self-interest.
And then American politics can be clearly seen
for what it is — a method of deciding who gets
what, when, and how much.
The farm price support program made sense
back in the Great Depression. Then it helped
small farmers facing foreclosures. A pitchfork
revolution was breaking out in the small towns of
the Midwest, and the government had to act to
restore order. But the program today is no longer
an emergency measure designed to aid distressed
people. It is an entrenched subsidy program
which pours millions of tax dollars into the bank
accounts of huge farm corporations, Inflates the
value of farmlands, helps to saddle farmers with
huge debts, increases the costs of farm produc­
tion, distorts the free market in farm products,
freezes uneconomic practices into the farm
economy and inflates the price of food.
"A safety net’’ for farmers it is not.
The Congress should cut the farm price support
program to safety net" proportions or allow it to
phase out entirely when it expires Oct. 1. And if
instead, as is likely, the Congress enacts a new
program that will be even more costly to the
taxpayer than the present one, President Reagan
should not hesitate to veto the measure.
This is one sacred cow Ronald Reagan must cull
from the herd.

Flying High
With all the attention being given currently to
air traffic safety, it's surprising to learn that for
all practical purposes there is no law against
drunken flying. Skilled controllers in an airport
lower are not much help if a pilot Is too befuddled
by alcohol to make tne right decisions at the
controls of a plane.
The airlines are so sensitive about drinking by
their pilots that there is no case on record where
alcohol was cited either as a cause or a con­
tributing factor to an accident involving a com­
mercial plane. But in one recent year there were
SO accidents — 46 of them fatal — involving
private pilots who had been drinking.
This suggests the Federal Aviation Ad­
ministration should not hesitate to put more teeth
into its rules about drinking and flying. As it is,
the only FAA regulation on the subject Is that
pilots can be fined or lose their licenses if they
take a plane off the ground within eight hours
after drinking an alcoholic beverage.
A new rule under consideration by the FAA
would put pilots on much the same legal ground as
drivers of motor vehicles. It would be illegal to fly
with a specified blood-alcohol content, with a
pilot's license carrying the implied consent"
that the bearer will submit to a breath test if
challenged by an FAA inspector. Under the
present rule, a pilot suspected of breaking the
eight-hour bottle to throttle" rule can refuse to
take such a test.
Earlier this year, police arrested a pilot who
bussed the tower and made a wild landing in a
private plane. He was drunk by the standards
applied to drinking drivers, but there was no
section of the state Traffic or Penal Code under
which he could be prosecuted.

stn rs

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*

In Dade County, he said, almost 24 percent of
the people don't feel safe In their neighborhoods
during the day. In the last 12 months, 16 percent
of the households polled had been victimized by
crime, he said.
Chiles said there Is a crisis of confidence in the

ability of the courts to handle their responsibility
in the criminal Justice system. Seventy percent
of the American public has little or no confidence
in the ability of the courts tn sentence and con­
vict criminals. Underlying this lack of con­
fidence is the feeling that aD too frequently the
courts are more concerned with the criminal
than with the victim or with the safety of the
community.
Chiles said a way is needed to review the
caliber and performance of Judges. He noted he
has sponsored legislation to establish a Judicial
council to review questionable actions and
decisions by Individual Judges and to take ap­
propriate disciplinary action against those who
abuse their position.
He said ball laws should be modified so that
courts will look at the danger that releasing a
person on bail poses to the community. This
proposal, he said, has been endorsed by 45 other
senators and by the President's Task Force on
Violent Crime.

JEFFREY HART

ROBERT WALTERS

A Look
At The
Past

Threat
From
Heavens
OTTAWA (NEA) - The corrosion, decay
and deterioration caused by a relatively new
phenomenon known as a d d rain already
poses a threat to the structural integrity of the
majestic sandstone buildings that house
Canada’s Parliament.

With the summer of 1961 rushing into fall,
my classes soon to start at Dartmouth, and
my book on the 1950s off to the publisher, I
decided to take a few days' vacation.
It turned out to be a wonderful few days,
beginning on the E ast Coast in Stamford,
Conn., and ending In California, on Coronado
Beach, Just north of Mexico.
That Sunday, I drove down to Bill Buckley's
place in Stamford. He has a beautiful home on
the shore of Long Island Sound, where we
transacted some National Review editorial
business and then went for a sail on his yacht.
It was a glittering late summer afternoon,
with the Sound crowded with boats and yachts
of all descriptions. People wave to each other
as the boats pass one another. People out
sailing always seem especially happy.
That Sunday night, I drove down to
Manhattan to see Frank Sinatra sing at
Carnegie Hall. In 1941, as a high school
student, I had seen Sinatra and the sexual
revolution hit the Paramount Theater tn
Times Square. The girls — called Bobby
Soxers in those days — literally tore the
theater apart. Sinatra's performance was
openly erotic, and the Bobby Soxers went
wild.
In 1970, I saw Sinatra sing at the White
House. It was a very moving occasion, with
Sinatra, now well on In his tumultuous career,
ending up by singing "The House I live In,” a
song that answers the question "What is
America to me?" "The House I Uva tn, the
people that I m eet...." The song Is drenched in
'40s'emotion — die for the Brooklyn Dodgers
and apple pie — and Sinatra believes every
word of i t When President Nixon asked him
toeing it again, Sinatra fought back his tears.
At Carnegie Hall that Sunday, Sinatra
seemed to have discovered the fountain of
youth. He’s in hU 90a but he looks 40, the old
precision of phrasing was Intact, and he made
every note, high or low. With N s assurance
and presence, Sinatra is one of the groat
showmen of our time and the packed house
cheered him to the chandeliers.
The next day It was some writing for me at
National Review, lunch with a former student
of mine who was catching a plane back to
Oxford, and then, in the evening, Lauren
Bacall and her current play "Woman of the
Year."
Bacall is another powerful presence in the
theater, a better actress than I anticipated,
despite years of seeing her in the movies. She
completely dominates the play, which is
pretty much a mere vehicle for her per­
formance.
The next day I had lunch with a former
Columbia teacher of mine, the historian
Jacques Barzun. We met a t the Century Club
in Manhattan.
Barxun is one of the leadiiuf 20th-century
h istorians, a sp ecialist on 19th-century
culture, but a man of wide ranging erudition.
He is now retired from Columbia, but active
still in a literary way.
We enjoyed recalling the past a t Columbia,
Including the Immensely destructive student
uprising of 1961. It was Barxun’a view that the
younger faculty had cavad in, failsd to sup­
port the institution against the rioters.

ROBERT W A G M A N

How Oil Spends Profits
WASHINGTON (NEA) — As anyone who is
paying $1.40 and more a gallon for gasoline
could easily deduce, the profits of the major
oil companies have skyrocketed over the past
24 months.
The oil giants u y they need the money to
search for more oil. But their critics contend
that they are using these billions of dollars not
to explore but to diversify. Now a government
study has gm errily confirmed that the
companies are pouring most of their in­
creased profits back Into the oil business.
Oil industry profits Jumped 32 percent in
1960 over 1979. Four of the largest companies
— Exxon, Mobil, Texaco and Standard of
California — reaped combined 1990 profits of
$14 billion, or 17 percent of all profits earned
by the top 500 U.S. corporations. Exxon
became the first corporation whose annual
Income reached 12 digits.
Profits are down this year — about 15
percent from 1980 — but in the first quarter
were still large enough to represent 25 per­
cent of all profits earned by U.S. industry.
Critics such as the Energy Action Foun­
dation have charged that the oil companies
are using their increased profits to build up
cash reserves for investment in the short­
term money market, to buy out their com­
petitors and to diversify into other energy
fields, including metals, coal and uranium.
The headlines seem to confirm this theory:
Gulf, Mobil and the other Nl giants have bank
lines of credit in excess of $25 billion for
acquisitions. Standard Oil of California spent
$4.3 billion in an attem pt to take over AMAX,
the metals company. Exxon bought Reliance
Electric, and Standard Oil of Ohio bought
Kennecott. Pennxoil pursued Phelpa Dodge
Corp., and Mobil 4 &gt;ent billions of dollars in an
unsuccessful effort to acquire either Conoco
or Texaco. Exxon, Phillip*, Mobil and
Oddental have built up their already huge
worldwide coal reserves to more than 80
billion tons.
The oil companies, however, are con­
tinually telling us through press releases,
television spots an d new spaper ad ­
vertisements that they a r t doing what they
said they would: plowing their profits back
Into the oil business. And the Energy

Department has decided that they are telling
the truth.
A recent study by the Energy Information
Service found that 80 percent of the capital
expenditures made by the 26 largest oil
companies In 197940 were petroleum-related.
Of their remaining spending, 2.6 percent went
into coal, 7 percent Into chemicals, 1 percent
Into nuclear, .05 percent into other energy
sources and 8.6 percent into non-energy
acquisitions and projects.
New industry figures underline the
government’s findings. Exxon plans to spend
$3 billion this year on domestic oil exploration
and drilling, while Standard of Indiana and
She 11have each budgeted $2.4 billion. Overall,
the Industry plans to put $74.8 billion Into
capital expenditures this year. And $30 billion
of that amount will go Into domestic ex­
ploration and drilling; that represents a 20
percent increase over 1960 and a 128 percent
increase over 1976.
The Denver-based Petroleum Information
Corp. reports that almost 4,000 drilling rigs
are currently operating in the United States;
that is an increase of almost 300 percent over
a decade ago. This year those rigs will sink
about 70,000 oil and gas wells, a 30 percent
increase over 1960. At this rate, 100,000 new
wells will be drilled annually by 1985.
The big question, of course, Is whether ail of
this drilling is producing more oil and gas.
The most recent figures from the Energy
D epartm ent a re Inconclusive. Domestic
production for 1960 was put at 10.796 million
barrels a day; that is up from 10.53 million in
1979 but still less than the 10.63 million In 1978
and substantially le u than the 11.56 million in
1970.
But the industry and many outside experts
u y that this is no cause for worry because it
takes at l u s t th r u to five y e a n to bring
newly discovered oil into production. So, the
results of the current upswing in exploration
will be seen in domestic production figures
over the n u t few years.
This may well be true, but we won't know
for sure until 1986 or so. If the predictions of
the oil companies do turn out to be valid, then
maybe all the billions of extra dollars that
consumers are handing over at the gas pump
will not have been spent In vain.

The problem Is especially severe in
Canada, but other architectural victims of
ad d rain can be found around the world — the
Colosseum in Rome, the Parthenon in Athens,
the Taj Mahal In India and the Lincoln
Memorial In Washington.
Acid rain's devastating impact extends far
beyond slrudural damage, however. It
already has killed hundreds of lakes, is
suspected as a cause of crop and timber
damage and could present a threat to human
health through contamination of food and
water supplies.
The Insiduous process begins with the
burning of coal, oil or gaaollne to power
automobiles and other vehicles or to operate
the massive power plants that generate
electrldty.
Released into the atmosphere during
combustion are sulphur dioxide and nitrogen
oxides. A chemical reaction with the moisture
in me air turns those emissions Into diluted
yet deadly concentrations of suphuric and
nitric addes, which later return to the earth!*
surface.
Acid rain has been an episodic and localized
problem ever since man began using fossil
fuels to provide heat and power, but It haa
attained global proportions In recant dacadaa
not only as a result of Increased use of tliose
fuels but also because of a well-intentioned
but Ill-conceived attempt to reduce at­
mospheric pollution.
To relieve the burden placed on com­
munities adjacent to power plants and other
sources of airborne emissions, environmental
officials have encouraged the construction of
tall smokestacks to widely disperse the
pollutants.
Since 1970, more than 175 stacks exceeding
500 feet in height have been constructed in the
United Slates. The world's tallest stack,
soaring almost a quarter-mile into the sky, la
located a t a nickel smelting plant In Sudbury,
Ontario,
Emissions that formerly returned quickly
to the surface now. remain aloft for day and
even weeks, becoming part of a "chemical
soup" that can travel thousands of miles from
Its source before falling to the ground.
The impact of that phenomenon can be
measured on the pH scale, ranging from
extreme acidity at 0 to high alkalinity at 145,
with 7 representing a neutral or balanced
state.
Rain normally has a pH value of 5.0, but the
rain that now (alls on virtually all o( the
United States east of the Mississippi River
h at an average pH value of 4.5 - more than 10
times as acidic as In the past.
One rainfall In Wheeling, W.Va., was found
to have a pH value of 1.5, more acidic than
lemon Juice (2.1) or vinegar (13) and only
slightly more alkaline than battery a d d (1.0).
Individual rainstorms with pH values below
3.6 have been Reported in New York, Illinois,
Indiana, New Hampshire, Massachusetts,
North Carolina and other states.

JACK ANDERSON

C IA Discussed Killing O f Qaddafi
WASHINGTON—A bizarre rendezvous
occurred In Rome last July. The top US.
intelligence official there met with a
renegade ea-CIA agent to diacua* the poerible

anamination of Libyan dictator Muammar
Quaddafl.
The former spy was Edwin Wilson, a
fugitive from American Justice. Ha Jumped
bail one year ago after being Indicted on
chargee of illegally finishing exptorivw to
Libya and conspiring to kill a Qaddafi
political rival. Ha sought refuge la Tripoli,
and haa been tiring Uare under Qaddafl'6
protection.
Among the U S . efftdato who met with
WUaan on July 1-1# w u E . Lawrence BarceBa Jr., the ela ten t U S . attorney who la

Only one out o/Him d m

*%* 4* • ^ ^

By DONNA ESTES

The statistics he has collected on crime In
Florida include: 11 crimes are committed In the
state every hour; over 803,000 crimes were
reported In the state last year. In 1980 violent
crimes in the state's rural areas Jumped by 20
percent; in Florida's suburbs, crime Increased
by 25 percent; $834,051,788 worth of property was
reported stolen last year, a 56.7 percent Increase

from the previous year; as many as one-third of
the murders in South Florida are related to
Illegal drug smuggling activities.
Chiles said the United States Is experiencing a
crime wave of massive proportions and no place
has been harder hit than Florida. He said the
number of violent crimes In the state increased
by 27 percent last year, murders by 28 percent
and robberies by 54 percent. He said there were
572 murders in Dade County last year, a 60
percent Jump over the previous year.
"The wave of crime has affected the very fiber
of our communities in Florida," he said, adding
almost 40 percent of the people tn the state said
they would feel unsafe being out alone in their
neighborhoods at night.

CIA station chtof in Rome, wboaiaanxi I haw
Inot to dtoctow,
apartmaot ationay and the
CIA apymnster had different reasons for
wanting to left with Wltoan. Barm in wa*
to perauade Witoon to return volun-

I f - e f ** *

tartly to the United State* to dean up the
government's case against him and otbsra,
either through a plea bargain or an
agreement to tell what he knew. The CIA
apparently hoped to enlist the cooperation of
Wilson or one of his mercenaries In an
anamination plot against Qnridafl, three
Intelligence sources told my ■■octets* Dele
Van Atta and Ron McRae.
One reliable source said the peculiar
meeting of Barcella and hte quarry was
initiated by Witoon'e attorney after visiting
the fugtttv* in Tripoli. BaroeQa'a emergency
travel request was ruahed through the Justice
Department bureaucracy in three days.
Meanwhile. CIA officials had hwn hatddag
a typically bizarre plan to elimtaata Qaddafi.
Their ( ta m Instrument was a lethal potoon
that was to be Injected into the deaert dictator
by mown of a tiny dart dtoptoad a t on* of the
black Otoe that Infeet Libya.
The two agwctoa' hopes of wing Witoon
culminated to tb* Rome meetings Barmfia's
role was Important: Hi arranged for the

International arrest warrant against Witoon
to be lifted—temporarily and only for Italy. If
the fugitive had tried to go almost anywhere
else, he would have been pounced upon end
extradited to the United Slates.
After Witoon arrived In Rome, his passport
was taken from him and stamped with an
expiration date of Aug. 1. This meant he was
encouraged to return to the United States by
that time to tec* federal chargea-hut he
boasted he would use one of the doaen or more
false passports he has to go elsewhere.
According to my sources, Barcella and at
toast four other UJS. officials huddled In
London to plan their moves. One of the of­
ficials wee an awbtant to Barcella, another
was an FBI agmt and a third was an agml to
the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and
Firearm*. Members of this entourage atoo
traveled to Scotland and Switzerland to check
lends in the caw before going on to Rome.
When aaked If he had been "carrying

r a te r " for the CIA, Barcella refused com­

ment In fact he declined even to
acknowledge that he had been present at any
meeting with Witoon,
At any rate, the meetings reportedly lasted
(or two days during the second week of July.
My source* u y the CIA “monitored" tin
meeting*—a spook work that could mean
anything (ram secretly bugging the m t tings
to having a representative present. It ww the
CIA station chief's Job—not BarceUa'a-to
raise the question of an asaawination attempt
on Qaddafi.
There la at least a pomifaiUty that the
government, despairing of martog Witoon
any other way, w u trying to. get him either
liquidated by Qaddafi or amokad out of hte
Libyan refuge by compromising him with an
swssstnstton discussion, Witoon was ob­
viously aware of this possibility: He put out a
story that tbs Rom* msetings wen arranged
to discuss hi* offer to blow the whlatie on two
Cuban fiigltivw wanted (or the 1971
Chilean exile Orlando LeUiter.

•

-9 6 *

�» *

SPORTS
'Tripped' Patriots
Fall Into Second

M tr« M Phot* by Tam Vincant

Seminole’s Richard Grey (third, left) takes an early lead in the Patriot Invitational Saturday at Seminole
Community College.

UCF Ends Millsops Streak
The Killer struck early Saturday in
Jackson, Miss.
Central Florida Knight Scott Redditt,
an ex-bone-crushlng linebacker at Lake
Brantley, picked a good time to blitz in
the Knights 13-6 victory over Millsaps
Saturday.
The Majors were backed up on their
one-yard line in the first quarter when
Redditt shot the gap and nailed Byrd
Hillman just as he was handing off. The
ball popped free and UCF’s Jerry
Nemethy pounced on the looee ball In the
end zone for a quick Knight advantage.
"The quarterback only took one step
before Redditt clobbered him," revealed
UCF Coach Don Jonas. "It was definitely

K»fghf»
n big play in the ball game."
After Scott Ryerson added the extra
point, the Knights had a 7-0 edge, which
as it turned out was enough to end
Millsaps' 13-game unbeaten string which
included a 9-0 record last year.
The Knights added their second big
play in the third quarter after Millsaps
liad scored on a five-yard touchdown loss
from Hillman to Melvin Smith to close
the gap to 7-6.
Junior quarterback Mike McCrary
found Jim Taylor on a 70-yard playaction bomb which put the game out of

reach for the Mnnarchs.
"We noticed In the first half that
every time we went play action, the
defensive back would be looking In our
backfield," pointed out Jonas. "We knew
if we could get the right situation, Taylor
could blow by the guy."
The situation came on the first play
after the Millsaps score. McCrary,
UCF’s third QB in as many weeks, deftly
faked to the fullback and lofted a beauty
to Taylor who caught the ball full stride
and raced into the end rone.
“This was a real big win for us," ex­
claimed Jonas. “They were ranked
eighth in the Division til" .
Saturday, the Knights return home to

face Miles College at 7 p.m. In the
Tangerine Bowl.
UCF
M illsaps
F irst downs
13
6
41 144
Rushes v ir u s
I t 114
Passing yards
113
761
6 110
Passes
It 35 1
Punts
V 36 7
7 74 7
11
Fum bles lost
7t
5 37
Penalties yards
4 34
) 11
Sacks by
7 11
U CF
1 0 4 0 — 11
M ill oafs
0 0 4 #— , 4
U C F — Redditt tum ble recovery in end
tone (Ryerson kick):
M — Sm ith S pass from H illm e n (kick
le lle d t;
U C F — Taylor 10 p e tt from M cC ra ry (kick
lelled t

UCLA, Notre Dame (Again) Drop Games

Cornwell's Clutch Catch Carries
Southern Cal Over Oklahom a
By United Frets International
If Fred Cornwell never catches another
pass, he'll always have sweet memories
of last Saturday's game to pass on to his
grandchildren.
“I Just kept on running and caught it,"
Cornwell said after a 4‘i-mlnute, 78-yard
drive highlighted by a 7-yard touchdown
pass from John Mazur to Cornwell with
two seconds left gave No. 1 ranked
Southern California a 28-24 victory over
No. 2 Oklahoma. "I'm the second
receiver on that play but this time I
became the first.
“ I don't remember what I was thinking
about when I caught i t That was just the
best thing that's ever happened to me."
USC was losing 24-21 to Oklahoma in
front of 83,681 I as Angeles Coliseum fans
when the Trojans began their winning
drive.
After a holding call created a seconndand-19, Mazur connected with Jeff
Simmons, who made a spectacular catch
on the sideline, on a 28-yard pasi to the
Sooners' 33. Then, on fourth-and-lnches
at the 28, Mazur kept the bail and barely

CoW&gt;t# Football
got the first down with 40 seconds left.
Three plays later, Mazur hit Malcolm
Moore with a 15-yard pass to the
Oklahoma 7 with 17 seconds left. And on
first down from the 7, All-America tail­
back Marcus Allen dropped a pass in the
end zone.
"When a guy drops a ball like that I feel
we owe it to him to go back to him
again," said USC Coach John Robinson,
whose team improved to 34). "So on third
down we ran the esact same play."
But Allen was tripped and hit the
ground, forcing Mazur to implement
emergency procedures. He scrambled to
his left, spotted Cornwell, and fired It to
him.
Cornwell, a 6-foot-5, 234-pound Junior,
had only caught one other pass In his
Southern Cal career.
Allen, the nation's leading rusher,
carried 39 times for 208 yards to tie (he
NCAA record of three consecutive games

still needed to stop a last thrust by Navy
of 200 or more yards rushing.
In other games involving Top 10 teams, to the 23 with less than two minutes to
No. 3 Penn State held off No. 12 Nebraska play to preserve its victory. Navy
30-24, No. 4 Texas defeated No. 151h quarterback Marco Pagnanelli scored on
Miami 14-7, No. 6 Michigan edged Navy a 22-yard run and Steve Fehr kicked
21-16, Iowa stunned No. 7 UCLA 20-7, No. three field goals.
8 Ohio Slate nipped Stanford 24-19, No. 9
Iowa, sparked by nose guard Mike
North Carolina walloped Boston College
Bortz's fourth-quarter fumble recovery
36-14, and No. 10 Alabama victimized
(or a TD, held UC1.A to 121 total yards to
Vanderbilt 28-7. No. 5 Pittsburgh was
post its second upset in three weeks. Tlx:
Idle.
Hawkeyes, 2-1, who have gone 20 years
Brian Franco kicked a school-record without a winning season, beat Nebraska
five field goals and Curt Warner rushed on Sept. 12.
for 238 yards to spark Penn State, 2-0.
Art Schlichter passed for two secondNebraska, 1-2, trailed 27-24 In the fourth
hall TDs to carry Ohio Stale over
period and had a chance to tie the game
but F-ddie Nell missed a 37-yard field- Stanford, 0-3. John Elway passed 4 yards
to Don (.onslnger and 23 yards to Mark
goal attempt.
Tolliver In the fourth quarter to draw
Quarterback Rick Mclver connected
within five.
with Donnie Little on a 43-yard scoring
Kelvin Bryant ran lor 173 yards and
toss and A.J. Jones scored from 9 yards
(o lead Texas. The pass to U ttle on third four TDs and Rod Elkins passed for Ihree
down was the winner with 11:06 more scores to help North Carolina burst
BC's bubble. Bryanl, who has 15 TDs in
remaining.
Quarterback Steve Smith ran for one three games, scored on runs of 2, 2, 39
TD and passed for another, but Michigan and 4 yards.

CfO«» Country

By SAM COOK
Hi-ralii Sports Editor
Imagine if while Paul Revere was en
route to his "one if by land, two if by sea"
emergency call, some wicked soul had
thrown a rock between Paul's horse's
legs and sent him sprawling headlong.
Well, this country Just might have
never ripped off England's apron strings.
I.ake Brantley's cross country coach Jim
M arsh all hud that fa llin g feeling
Saturday when one of his girls—Traci
Row land—became
the
"T rip p ed
Patriot."
Rowland was cru isin g Sem inole
Comm unity College’s two-mtle g irls
course In her customary position, next to
teammate Kathryn Hayward when she
was tripped, fell anil was unable to finish
the Patriot Invitational Saturday at
Seminole Community College.
Marshall feels the tumble cost the
Patriots their third running meet title
this year since Rocklcdge edged Bran­
tley 85-90 in the team scoring.
"Traci was running with a Ixid ankle
anyway," informed Marshall. "When she
was tripped that ended it for her."
Marshall had figured Howland to finish
somewhere near Hayw ard, w ho was 10th,
to give the Lady Blue enough points to
win the meet. The "trip," however,
wasn't an enjoyable one.
Senior Tracy Bonham followed home
Carmen Gardner of Spruce Creek to
place second for Brantley. Gardner ran
an 11:44 to easily beat Bonham by 39
seconds,
Ellen Stern, Bonham’s teammate, was
one second behind with a time of 12:24.
"Tracy ran her best race of the year,"
Marshal) said. "1 Just would luive liked to
see what would have liappencd If
Rowland hadn't been tripped."
Winter Park finished third, take
Howell fourth and Tampa l-cto was fifth.
Lyman was ninth and Seminole, 14th, and
Oviedo, 15th, to complete the county
standings.
In the boys' competition, Rocklcdge
mode it u sweep for the east coast
powerhouse by romping to a 4typoint
victory over Brooksville Hernando, 36-78,
"R o ck lcd g e is u nb elievab le," ex­
claimed Marsh all about the boys' entry.
Randy-Adams tollowed Winter Park’*
Brian Jaeger across the finish line and
was Joined by Billy Trainor-(sixth),
Jason Vulavanis (seventh) and Avcrett
Ennis (ninth).Lyman's Doug McBroom
was the first county finisher in 10th
place. Jaeger's winning time was 15:38
for Hie three-mile course. McBroom ran
16:51.
Bishop Moore was four points behind
Hernando in third place, while Winter
Park was fourth and Evans, fifth. L ik e
Howell was the top county school with a
sixth place, Just ahead of Lyman, Inke
Brantley came in ninth, Seminole was
12th and Oviedo, 14th.
" A ll of our tim es Im proved,"
remarked Tribe boys coach Ted Tombros. "We're right on schedule." Junior
Mike Woolen was the first Seminole In
17:50. Richard Grey was next at 18:23
with Tyler Johnson right behind him in
18:26. Woolen finished 42ml. Grey was
61st and Johnson 62nd.

In Hie girls junior varsity, L ik e Mary
freshman Kim Averill continued to win.
Averill ran 13:31 over two miles to out­
distance L ik e Howell's Lynn by 25
seconds.
L ik e llmvell continued its domination
of the J V ranks by totaling 27 points to
whip L ik e Brantley, who had 47. TrinityPrep was fourth. take Mary, sixth, and
Oviedo seventh.
In the boys junior varsity, Sean Fritz of
Bishop Moore masted in at 17:35.7 lor the
three-mile victory. Lyman’s Rusty Hill
had the country's best— a seventh place
in 18:15. Hockledge won the boys by 15
points over Lyman. Brantley, Howell and
L ik e Mary were sixth, seventh and
eighth.
Tuesday, the Seminole boys and girls
travel to D eLind to (tartake in a trimatch w ith the host school and Daytona
Beach Mainland. The running gets un­
derway at 4:30 p in . ill the Detain)
Airport.
The big match-up, county-wise, is
Thursday when the freshm an and
sophomore runners go at it in the second
Seminole County Frosh-Soph. Meet
beginning at Lyman at 4 p.m.
Patriot Invitational
At S E M IN O L E C O M M U N IT Y C O L L E G E
BO YS
Tram tc o rrt: R ocklrd u r ] l. B ro a k iv illr
Hernando 74, Bishop Moore *7. Winter P ark
100. Oak Ridge lav Lake- Howell ISO Lym an
tVS. M ainland 73S, Lake Brantley 771. Spruce
Creek J70. D rLan d 175 Semmole J77,
Colonial 37V, Oviedo JSJ, W e il Orange 1S4,
Boone 404, Trinity Prep 444
Individual; I Brian jaeger. W inter P ark
IS 17 7 Randv A d a m i, Rockledge IS JS. J
Jason Heatherly. Hernando IS 16, 4 Pat
D eiornler, B-lhop Moore 14 IS. S Matt
Pashe. Bishop M oore 14 71: 4 B illy Trainor,
R o ck le d g e I t Jt. 7 Ja io n V a la v a n lv
Hockledge It 71 t L a rry W alker, West
Orange 14 SI. V A v r re ll Ennis, Rockledge
14 SS. 10 Doug M cBroom , Lym an 14 SI
Junior V a n ity Team ic o r e i: Hockledge 67,
L y m a n 47. B uh op M oore W. Winter P ark 1)1.
Evans US. Lake Brantley 774. Lake Howell
74V. Lake M a ry 757
Individual! 1 Sean F r ill. Bishop M oorr
17 3S7.7 B rian Ball. Hernando 17 47.3 Jim
Hubek, Apopka It 03. 4 Dan G alley. Evans
II 04 S Sean Tuck, Hockledge II 13; 6
Steve Kleinnm an, Hernando 11 13, 7 Rusty
H ill, Lym an It IS. I A lia H ill. Evans II It,

Tram te a m : Rockledge U . L t i e Brantley
VO. vyintrr P ark 147, LdkeH pw jjp.lW - larg p a
L rto ' 147. DeLand 16V, Father L op e i 70S,
Bishop M o o rr 774, Lym an 7J4, Boone 747.
M ainland 770. Hernando 304. West Orange
336. Seminole 111. O vlrdo JV?
Individual- I Carmtvt Gardner. Spruce
Creek II 44. 7 Tracy Bonham
Lake
Brantley 17 73, J E lle n Stern, Lake Brantley
17 7r. 4 Juanita Segura, T a m p a t e t o l? 74.
S Catty Coltield, Tampa L e lo 17 79,4 Louise
S ch w e ilier. West Orange 17 47. 7 Ira cy
Wemhold. Rockledge I? 45, I M arie Can
dellno. DeLand 17 44, V M a r c ir Kleyer,
Mainland 17 47 10 Kathryn Hayward. Lake
Brantley 17 44
Junior V arsity Team scores: Lake Howell
11. Lake Brantley 47, Rockledge 107, Trinity
Prep IJS. Tampa Leto 140, ta k e M a ry 703.
Oviedo J 10
Individual: 1 K im A v e rill. L ake M a ry
I) 31. 7 Lyn Lucas, ta k e Howell 13 54. J
Debbie Van Orden, Lake Howell la 01. 4
K im Lubenow, la k e Brantley I4C7, S
Heather HiSCoe. Lake Howell 14 04. 4
Joanne Hayward. Lake Brantley 14 10. 1
B rlh Shilley. Trinity Prep 14 IS. I M arianne
Johnston. Lake Howell 14 16, V P ath Dost,
Lake Howell U 71, to M argaret Lyles,
Rockledge 14 ?J
Union IN Y ) 71, Georgetown 0
West V irg in ia 4V, Colorado SI J
Y ale 77. Connecticut t l
South
Alabama Jt, Vanderbilt 7
Alabama A B M 34, Albany St IS
Arkansas 37. M ississip p i 13
Dukr TV, V irg in ia 74
East Tennessee 14, M a rsh a ll 10
Furm an 31, Western Carolina 77
Gardner Webb 34. M ars H ill IS
Georgia 74, So Carolina 0
Jackson St 47. M iss V alle y 0
LSU 71. R ice 14
M aryland 34. N C Slate V
M em phis St. 31, G eorgia Tech IS
M ississippi St 71, F lo rid a 7
No Carolina St Boston Coll 14
Norfolk St 34 t i l l C ity SI 0
Southern M iss 17. R lc h m o n i 10
Tennessee 10. Auburn 7
Twin Chattanooga 10. Jackso nville J
Troy Si 74, N lc h o lli SI ?J
VMI 31. W illia m B M a ry 14
V irg inia Tech JO, Wake F re sl 14
Western Kentucky ?t, Austin Peay 0

Saturday's College Football Scores
By United Press International
Can
A llre d I). Hofstra I
Arm y 71. Brown 17
B ales 14, Am herst 0
B allo n Univ as. M am a 7
Bowdom 10. H am ilton 1]
Bridgewater St f. Fram ingham St 0
Brooklyn Coll 1). Manhattan 7
Uucknell 77. Rochester 0
Buffalo 41. Hobart 10
C alilo rnia (P a ) 14. Slippery Rock 0
Carnegie M ellon 77. Allegheny 11
Colgate 14. Cornell to
Cortland SI 41, N Y Tech 14
D e la w jre 41, Princeton I
Gettysburg 77. Muhlenberg 10
Holy t r a i l 11, H arvard IT
Ithaca 41, St Law rence 4
L ila y e tte 71. Colum bia 1}
Lehigh M, Penn 0
M a iia c h u le t ti 10, Dartm outh I
New H am pshire II. Towson St TV
Pace 71. Fordham 7
Syracu ia 71, Indiana 7

Fearless Female Picks Bring Men To Their Knees
I'm typing this missive on my knees
(ouch! I wonder if the Sentinel Star has
carpeting), because the female football
predictors have humbled me to a level
so k&gt;w I purchased a Helen Reddy
record.
She keeps repeating something about
“I am woman watch me grow In
numbers too big to ignore." Could she
be talking about Sandra Glenn, Norma
Scott and Joyce Tullis?
The coaches' wives phis one hid
some pretty good numbers Friday
night. At toast when H came to picking
football games concerning the SanfordEdgewator clad).
County Commissioner Glenn along
with Mrs. Scott and Mrs. Tullis
correctly predicted the outcome of the
41-31 Sanford victory. Mrs. Tullis even
had the audacity to foretell how the
Tribe would win the game. By an Alan
Cahill field goal. See If you ever get
invited back to this column, Tullis!

r .4 r
c W* *1

w* ■-*&lt;
w
•S * '-' • ' N'

C ) Cook
J f U f

Sports Editor

Your resident genius (until this
weekend that is), along with sportswritors Joe DeSantis and Billy Stripp
all were swayed by the Metro Con­
ference superiority. So much for
superiority. The F ive S tar boys
(Seminole, Lyman and Lake Brantley)
sent the Metro back to Orange County
with b bUck f ye.
Along with Cahill's fuur-overtime
boot to beat E d g ew ater, Lyman
stunned second-ranked Winter Park, 78, and the Patriots of Dave TulUs
disposed of the Boone Braves.
Ah, so much for the Metro. Getting
back to these fearless ladies though,

si

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e •
W• •

* - •

I've Just got to believe they had
something more going for them than
partiality for their respective teams.
Why, Scott Bnd Glenn even picked the
Greyhounds to win. Tullis, for some
unknown reason came over to the male
side and absorbed a defeat. Maybe I
will Invito you back, Joyce.
Glenn and Scott battled Into the final
game before deciding this week's ex­
pert. Scott went with the Cardinals and
Glenn went with the Bucca/leers. Doug
Williams' and Jerry Eckwood's last
quarter heroics gave Sandra an 1-2
record, the best thus far this year.
Scott and Stripp had 7-3 marks. Mrs.
Tullis was M , while DeSantis had his
usual 3-7.1 had an unusual 3-7. For the
year, Glenn is 18-12, I'm 17-13, Strip to
18-15 and "Low Joe" to 9-21.

C L IFF ’S HANGERS - Evening
Herald pro football prognosticator Cliff

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ALAN CAHILL
faultless foot
Nelson was bit by the upset bug like the
rest of pro bail. Nelson, who hit ll-of-13
picks for 18 percent marksmanship last
week, feu to 7-o(-i3 this week (or 84
percent.

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Evening Herald Photographer Bill Murphy captures the kick In
Friday night's Winter Park-Lyman football game. This kick by
junior kicking sensation David Lively was wide by four inches and
enabled the Greyhounds or Bill Scott to stun the second-ranked
Wildcats, 7*5. Hod Shaw is holding.

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�Monday, Sept, n , m i

T . j

4A—Evonlng Herald, Sanford, FI.

Williams Lifts Bucs Past St. Louis
T A M PA . Fla. (UP1) - Tampa Bay
quarterback Doug W illiams solidified the
claims of many fans who label him the
franchise by pulling off two key fourth
down plays Sunday that helped the
Buccaneers to a 20-10 victory over St.
Ixuls.
Trailing 1 M in the fourth period,
W illiams darted 13 yards on a scramble
out of the shotgun formation on a fourth
and five play. Four plays later, in a
fourth and seven situation, W illiams hit
tight end Jim m y Giles with a 14-yard
pass to St. I jou Is ' 2-yard-line.
Moments later, the Bucs took the lead
13-10 after James Owens bulled over
from a yard out with 2:41 left to play. The
carry was the first Owens has made with
Tampa. Owens was picked up earlier this
season from San Francisco.
Owens' touchdown run capped an 80yard, 16-play drive that ate up 8 minutes
and 25 seconds.

P H tft i y t i l l M urphy

Jerry Eckwood runs for
Tampa Bay touchdown.

Jerry Echwood raced 31 yards for an
insurance touchdown three plays after
linebacker Cecil Johnson intercepted
Cardinal quarterback Jim Hart at the St.
Ix&gt;uls 42.
B ill Capece, signed Wednesday to
replace his kicking Idol Garo Yepremlan,
kicked a pair of field goals of 29 and 23
yards and had both extra points in his
debut. Capece had been a student of
crowd favorite Yepremlan when he was
with Die Miami Dolphins.
St. I/iuis got a 1-yard touchdown run

from Willard Harrell in the third period
to move ahead for the only time, and had
a 20-yard field goal from Nell
O’Donoghue in the second period.
O'Donoghue later missed wide on a 83yard field goal and then had a 47-yarder
sail through the goalposts, only to be
called back on a penalty — a play Car­
dinal Coach Jim Hanlfan called the
turning point of the game.
Calvin Favron was called for tripping
on-rushing Buc John Holt, nullifying the
field goal and the Cardinals had to punt
the ball away. The Bucs' winning drive
started with that punt.
“ 1 thought that was the turning point of
the gam e," Hanlfan said. "We had the
momentum. We were running the ball up
and down the field on them. Nell goes In
there and kicks it straight between the
uprights and we've got a 13-6 lead. We're
feeling safe because it’s the start of the
fourth quarter and that lead might be
sufflcent."
"I tripped him, Just a little bit, to throw
him off," Favron said. "But 1 have done
that before and it’s never been called.
You can either use that technique or
double-bump him. I chose to trip him. It
was a bad call."
Regardless, it swung the momentum to
the Bucs and they moved on to a 1-2
record. The Cardinals are 1-3.
" th e fourth down pass to Giles was an
audible," Williams said. "I called it
because I saw they had three safeties in
the middle and two men were Dressing."

"It was originally a sneak but we
audibled," Giles said. "(Jam es) Wilder
was the primary receiver and that left
me l-oo-l with the strong safety."
In the go-ahead d riv e, W illiams
completed 8 passes for 61 yards and ran
twice far 23 yards.
The Bucs controlled the first and fourth
quarters, with the Cardinals in control in
the middle two quarters.
In the first period the Bucs rushed for
74 yards and passed for 68 and in the final
period rushed for 78 and passed for 61.
But in the second and third quarters
combined, they had only 17 yards rushing
and 50 yards passing.
By contrast, St. Louis had the ball for
only three plays and a punt In the first
quarter for nine yards rushing, and in the
second quarter had 34 yards rushing and
38 yards passing. In the third period
when the Cardinals moved ahead, they
had had 113 yards rushing and 28 yards
passing, but in the fourth period they
rushed for only 26 more yards and passed
for only 15.
"I think we played real well early, then
we messed around and played very poor
defense for s while in the third quarter,"
McKay said. "I don't know why, then we
came back and played pretty good of­
fense and won the game."
The Bucs lost defensive end Lee Roy
Selmon in the second quarter with a
sprained knee. The knee will be checked
by doctors to determine how long Selmon
will be out.

Von Scham ann Keeps M iam i
Jum ping Unbeaten Hoops
By United Press International
These Dolphins can Jump through
hoops, too.
Don Shulu’s unheralded A F C club, 8-8
last year, Joined predictable N FC i&gt;owers
Philadelphia and Dallas as the N F L ’s
only unbeaten teams Sunday with a wild
31-28 triumph In Baltimore.
Duriel H arris’ diving 45-yard reception
put the ball on llic Baltimore 26 to set up a
game-winning 28-yard field goal by Uwe
von Schamann in the final minute as the
Dolphins improved to 4-0.
In its first three victories, Miami relied
on a swunning defense Dial yielded Just
nine points per game. But on Sunday the
Dolphins had to turn to their offense since
Baltimore quarterback Bert Jones threw
for 357 yards and three touchdowns.
in raising his professional record to
197-78-5, Shula also helped forge N F L
history Sunday while watching his 22year-old son, Dave Shula, play for
Baltimore. The game marked the first
time a son has played against an N F L
team coached by his father.
"It certainly was a big deal for me,"
said live elder Shula, "I'm very proud of
Dave. I think lie showed he's a heady
(oolball player who will do all lie can to
win a football game."
That sounds suspiciously like the entire
Miam i squad.
Harris and tlie oilier Dolphin receivers
got open consistently against Baltimore,
1-3, as 22-year-old David Woodley comp­

leted 19 of 30 passes (or 309 yards, in­
cluding TD passes of 31 and 14 yards.
Rookie Andra Franklin added scoring
runs of 1 and 10 yards to offset Janes'
superb effort.
Bengali 27, Bills 24
Jim Breech kicked a 28-yard field goal
with 5:27 remaining in overtime (o lift the
surprising Bengals, 3-1. Cincinnati's Ken
Anderson and Buffalo’s Joe Ferguson
each threw three TDs as the Bills
dropped to 2-2 after winning their
opening two games by a combined 66-3.

"It was a great win for our team, but
the big tiling," said Cincinnati Coach
Forrest Gregg, "waa that we beat an
outstanding team .”
Strelrrs 27, Patriots 21
Terry Bradshaw’s 24-yard TD p a n to
Lynn Swann 3:19 into overtime lifted the
resurgent Sleelers, 2-2, past the winless
Patriots. New England drove 67 yards In
the Iasi 1:45 of regulation lo tie the game
21-21 on u 12-yard pass from Matt
Cavanaugh to Stanley Morgan.
"It was an exciting game and a great
effort by our football team,” said Pitt­
sburgh Coach Chuck Noll, "but I felt
somewhat fortunate lo get into the
overtime because we didn't capitalise on
some things we had going for us. It would
huve been a shame II New England's last
louclvlown won the gume for them."
IJom II, Raiders 0
Billy Sims turned a fumble recovery
inlo a 3-yard TD with seven minutes to

play and Detroit, 2-2, gave Oakland Just
one scoring opportunity In handing the
Ralr'ers, 2-2, their first shutout in 18
years.
"I talked to the players before the
game about how a good effort (n this
situation could be remembered for a
long, long tim e," laid Detroit Coach
Monte Clark, who lost starting quar­
terback Gary Danielson for a month with
a dislocated wrist.
Broncos 42, Chargers 24
T hirty-eight-year-old Craig Morton
threw four TD paiaea for the second
straight week lo lift surprising Denver
into a flrst-pUca Ue with Kansas O ty and
San Diego In the AFC West. The
previously unbeaten Chargers, who were
averaging an NFL-high 31 points per
game, trailed 284) at halftime.
Brown* 28, Falrous 17
Brian Sipe fired two TD passes and ran
1 yard for another score to help the
Browns even their record at 2-2 with a
trium ph over previously unbeaten
Atlanta. Steve Bartkowaki threw a pair
of TD passes to Alfred Jenkins (or the
Falcons, who were averaging an NFChigh 31 points per game.
Jets 33, Oilere 11
Richard Todd threw three TD passes,
(wo to Wesley Walker in a 95-second span
of Uie second period, and the Jets notched
eight sacks to win their first game after
three losses. Todd hit 25 of 39 passes (or
312 yards and Walker caught eight passes

(or 128 as the Oilers fell to 2-2.
Eagles II, Rediktas 12
Backup tailback Louie Giammona
scored twice and the Eagles, off lo their
best start since 1964, Improved to 44) with
a 21-point blitz in the fourth quarter
against winless Washington — off to its
worst start since 1965.
Vikings 18, Packers 13
Tommy Kramer fired a pair of TD
passes and Randy Holloway scampered
45 yards with a fumble for another score
as Minnesota improved to 3-2 despite a
fine performance by newly acquired
Green Bay wide receiver John Jefferson,
who caught s n n passes for 121 yards.
Cowboys U, Giants II
Lethargic Dallas, 441, used a 41-yard
TD pass from Danny White to Butch
Johnson and ■ safety caused by defensive
end Ed Jones to stave off the Giants in
near 100-degree heat.
4t e n 21, Saints 14
Joe Montana hooked up with Freddie
Solomon on a 60-yard TD to open the
second half and rookie Ronnie Lott ran 26
yards with a pare interception for a
fourth-quarter score to help San Fran­
cisco even Us record at 2-2.
Chiefs 29, Seahawks 14
Ted McKnlght and quarterback Bill
Kenney each ran for short TD* In the tin t
half and the Kansas City defense held off
Seattle at the 1-yard line In the fourth
period to give the Chiefs a share of the
AFC West lead.

T o m a n y , F r i d a y n ig h t's E d g c w a te r - S a iif o n l fo o tb a ll w a s a th r illin g
c o n te s t in th e T a n g e r in e B o w l. S e m in o le b a n d m e m b e r K ris
( io e b e lb e c k e r , h o w e v e r, is n ’t tu r n in g a n y h a n d s ta n d s a s s h e r e s t s on
h e r t r o m b o n e . T h e S e m in o le b a u d w a s in fin e fo rm a s it tu n e d u p fo r
th e b a n d c o m p e titio n l a t e r th is y e a r s p o n s o r e d b y th e E v e n in g
H e r a ld .
C t n t r ll

B ta m d lm g t
By

Unit**
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International
A m tflc a n
C m ftr tn i*

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0
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750
750
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1
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S u m J t y 'i

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71, Atlanta
17
Cincinnati
37, B u llalo
34
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Y ork Je tt
1],
Moulton
Philadelphia M , Washington

300
300

7
7
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7
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730
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Son
Diego
Kan
City
Denver
Oakland
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77,
Now
England
( O il
Detroit
It, Oakland
0
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30. Green
B ar
1]
M iam i
71.
B altim ore
71
K a n ia i
C ity
70.
Seattle
M
San
Franc lir a
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11.
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II.
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Bay
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74
M onday'|
Oame
Loi
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at
Chicago.
9
pm
ED T
2t

Cowboys G o Overtime To Whip Bulldogs Zinn Beck Fall League

SPORTS
IN BRIEF

O ffense Continues To Sleep,
Saints Fall To Shore crest
Tlie offense continues to slumber for Trinity Prep.
For the second time in two weeks, tlie Saints were
blanked. This lime Shorccrest ol St. Petersburg ad­
ministered the whipping - 14-0 - In Trinity’s Itomeopening football game Saturday.
Tlie Saints and St. Pete were engaged in a scoreless
tie until 10:18 remained in the fourth quarter.
Shorescresl tailback Hon Johnson llten stormed into
Uie end zone from five yards away (or Uie game's first
score. Johnson ran for 132 yards for the day. Norman
Perry added Ur - PA T for a 74) lead.

Perry Uirawted Uie Saints' bid lo tie Uie game wiUi 50
seconds left In Uie contest when he picked off a Steve
Philips' pass and raced 62 yards for the TD.
Trinity's only other threat came in the first halt when
a Philips lo SUn Fenner pass put the SalnU on the
Shorecresl ilx-yard line, but time ran out on Trinity.
Next Saturday, Uie Saints host HeriUge Prep in a
Senior Recognition Day game at 2 p.m. at Trinity.

Chicago 'Stings'

N ew

York

TORONTO | U PI) - The Chirago Sling proved to Uie
end dial they like to do things Uie hard by capping sn
18-year wall for 1U first NASL championship in Uw
franchise's history with a narrow but thrilling triumph.
The SUng, a club with a tradition of doing things Uie
Itard way, batUed the powerful New York Cosmos to a
scoreless Ue for 106 minutes Saturday night, before
finally breaking Uiruugh in Uie ahootoul lo claim a 14)
victory in the 1981 Soccer Bowl.

A ll Souls Drops 3*0 M atch
St. Margaret Mary's of Winter Park blanked All
Souls, 3-0 in soccer action Saturday in Winter Park.
All Souls will be looking for 1U initial victory Wedneiday at 5:16 p.m. when it travels to AlUmonte
Springs for a gam e with St. Diaries of Orlando,

The Cowboys, three-time defending
champs in tlie Junior Division of Uie
Sanford Recreation Department Flag
FnotbaU league, opened the 1961 season
with a victory Saturday. It took an
overtime session for the Cowboys lo edge
U r - Bulldogs 18-12.
Tiie Rams, who have finished second
each of the last two reasons, nipped the
Wildcats 134 in Saturday’s other Junior
Division game.
In the new Midget Division for 6- and 9year-oidi, Uie Bucs slipped by the
Steelers 241.
The Cowboys scored on their first
possession when Kelvin Campbell bolted
40 yards for a touchdown. The conversion
failed and ft was 64).
E a rly in Uie second half, Uie Bulldogs
tied the score on a 20-yard pare from
Patrick Robinson to Reginald Bellamy.
Tlie Bulldogs also (ailed on their extra
point try.
The Cowboys wasted no time regaining
the lead. Shortly after Uw kickoff
Campbell broke loose on an 10-yard

M o c r o a tfa a

M o w s

ramble for his second touchdown. The
conversion (ailed and it waa 124.
The Bulldogs battled back to Ue Uw
game at 13-12 in the final minutes of Uw
game. Robinson tossed a 30-yard pass to
Bobby Codie id to put Uw ball on Uw 10yard line and Willie McCloud ran It In
from there. The Bulldogs could have won
Uw game on the extra point, but failed to
get the baU in Uw end zone.
The Cowboys won it with a touchdown
In overtime.
The Wildcats scored first against the
Rams, using a 60-yard pass from Patrick
Dougherty to Fredrick Martin. The extra
point failed.
Late in Uie first half Oscar Merthie
Intercepted a pass to give the Rams Uw
ball and then he caught a 20-yard pass
from Dwight Brinson (or Uw touchdown.
The Rams made their extra point and led
74.
All but about 30 seconds of the second

half was a defensive struggle. In Uie
closing minute Brinson broke loose for a
16-yard run and a touchdown, making it
134.
The Bucs' kicking game and defense
proved to be too much for Uie Steelers,
The Steelers were knocking on Uw door
midway through the first half, but Uie
ball was fumbled Into Uw end zone and
Brett Hansen recovered Uw loose pigskin
for Uw Bucs.
The Bucs kicked off, but got Uie ball
back moments later when George Wood
Intercepted a pass. The Bucs threatened
to score In Uw dosing seconds of the half
bul Uw drive stalled Inside Uw 10-yard
line.
Wood got Uw Bucks their only two
points early in Uw second half when he
caught a Steelers runner in Uw end zone.
The Cowboys snd the Rams battle (or
first place In Uw Junior Division at 9 a.m.
Saturday at Chase Park, white the
Wildcats and Uw Bulldogs tangle al 10
a.m. In the Midget Division, Uw Bucs and
the Steelers play at 11 a.m.

Hatalsky Persistence Pays Off
PINEHUHST, N.C. (UPI) - It took
nearly six years, but Morris Hatalsky got
his erratic game together In Uw sandhills
of North Carolina to win the 8290,000 Hall
of Fame tournament — his first victory
on Uw PGA tour.
"1 really Unught I waa going to win
before this, but as it turned out It took
five years," said Hatalsky, who had a
steady par-71 Sunday to defeat Jerry
Pale and D.A. Weibrlng by two strokes.
"I g u r u all that work and faith paid
off," he added. "Who would have thought
a skinny Jewish boy from San Diego
would win a golf tournament."
Hatalsky ranks statistically as Uw
tour’s third-leading putter, averaging
just under 29 strokes per round on the

P ro Oof#
greens. But he Is 164th In greens hit In
regulation and 111th In driving accuracy.

That all changed this week when the 28year-old from Daytona Beach, Fla., led
the second, third and final rounds to
claim 846,989, nearly double his earnings
coming Into tiw tournament. The victory
also qualified him for Uw Masters
tournament and earns him an exemption
from qualifying all next year.
"I’m really looking forward to the
Masters. I'm looking forward to an
exemption. That all psilly aounds good to
me," said Hatalsky, whore bait finish
previously had been a tie for 12th at
Invtrrary earlier this year.

Playing In Uw group with Pate and
W elbrlug, H atalsky withstood the
p re a u re for a round that included two
birdies and two bogeys. Pate began the
day one shot back and. Welbrlng was
three strokes off the pace before Sun­
day's final round.
Halalaky finished Uw tournament at
nine-under. Pate, In an erratic afternoon,
shot a round that included five birdies
and six bogeys for a final-round 72.
Weibring waa h in d e r on his first nine
holes, but his challenge died early on Uw
back aide.
Pate, who u l d ha was suffering from a
stomach virus, had trouble on Uw greens.
Alone in fotrth was Keith Fergus at 6undtr for the tournament with a finalround 8L

Saturday

Sunday

FSB Blue 4, SCC 3

SCC 11. FSB Red 3

FSB Blue 2, Rollins 0 Rollins 3, FSB 1

Welcome
N EW C0M ER1
"Florida's own greeting
service" — dedicated to
welcoming new residents
Florida Owned ^
Florida Managed
A call from you will bring a
prompi trialI Irom our reprsseniative. She has bro­
chures, chrlc Information;
and to help with your shop­
ping needs, cards of In­
troduction Irom local mer­
chant*

Lets Winn - ill-1711

�Favored Tigers Hold Lead
By United Pre*i International
If a book is ever written about the
second half of the American U ague
baseball season, it could be called
“ Seven Days in September."
With only one week remaining in the
regular season, Just one game separates
the top three contenders In the A h East
and only 2 4 games separate the first
three teams In the At, West.
The Detroit Tigers regained first place
by one-half game in the A L East Sunday
by beating Milwaukee M , but the
Brewers are perhaps in the best position
to take the division title since they play
their final six games at home, beginning
tonight against the Bed Sox.
Even after Sunday's loss. Brewers’
Manager Buck Rodgers was happy with
his team's positon. After all, the Brewers
began a nine-game road trip one-half
game out of first place and returned
home for its final six games still only onehalf game behind Detroit.
“ No matter how you look at It it's going
to come down to those last three games,"
he added. “ We like our position in the
race for the wire as they say at the race
track."
'But Tigers Manager Sparky Anderson
says it's time for his club to prove it can
handle the pressure of the last week.
"We can't tell people we’re building for
the future anymore," Anderson said

ALJgM gbgH
Sunday after Dan Petry hurled a fourhitter against Milwaukee. "We can play
with anyone. It's up to us now to win it or
lose it ourselves."
Boston, which plays its remaining
games on the roast, lost to Cleveland, 6-7,
in 11 innings and w ill hifte to regroup
quickly if it is to sneak in with the secondhalf pennant.
Bo D ial, who had gone O-for-4, stroked
an HBI double with one out in the 11th off
Mark Clear, &amp;-3, following a one-out
double by Jorge Orta.
In the AI. West, Kansas City holds a
one-game lead over Oakland, the firsthalf winner, with Minnesota just 2 4
games behind. Kansas City took over
first place Sunday by thrashing Seattle
15-3 while Chicago swept a double-header
from Oakland 9-5 and 104.
With Oakland already guaranteed a
playoff berth by virtue of Its first half
chanlplonshlp, the battle is between
Kansas City and Minnesota for the
second-half playoff berth. If Oakland
wins the division championship, then
either Kansas City or Minnesota can earn
a playoff berth by finishing second.
White Sox 9-10, A's 5-3
At Oakland, Calif., Chet l«m on and
Tony Bernazard belted two-run homers

in the sixth inning to help the White Sox to
victory in the opener. In the nightcap,
Harold Baines belted a three-run homer
in the first inning and Carlton Fisk belted
a pair of homers, his first since May 15, to
help the White Sox complete a sweep.
Yankees 5, Orioles 2
At New York, Reggie Jackson hit a
three-run homer in the first Inning and
Dave Righetti allowed four hits to lead
the Yankees. Righetti, 7-4, retired 16
consecutive batters after early trouble In
the first three innings until Doug
DeCinces singled with one out in the
ninth.
Twins 5, Rangers 2
At Bloomington, Minn., Gary Ward's
RBI double triggered a three-run seventh
inning and Pete Redfem allowed six hits
in 6 2-3 innings to lead the Twins to vic­
tory. Redfem, M , struck out three and
walked one before tiring in the ninth and
giving way to Doug Corbett, who got the
last out to notch his 16th save.
Blue Jays 4, Angels 3
At Anaheim, Calif,, John Mayberry
slammed a two-run homer with one out in
the eighth inning to give the Blue Jays a
victory. Dave Slieb survived a three-run
outburst in the fifth inning and allowed
only four hits in his seven innings to even
his record at 10-10. Joey Mcf^ughlln
pitched the final two innings for his ninth
save.

Expos Streak Ends; Cardinals Creep Closer (1 '/&gt;)
By United Press International
Two days ago, the St. Louis Cardinals'
dream seemed to have faded with the
summer. They lost seven of eight while
M ontreal was w inning, winning.
Everything pointed toward getting out
the longjohns for a mini-playoff north of
the border.
Suddenly that changed. Montreal's
seven-game winning streak ended
Sunday and St. Louis beat Pittsburgh 7-5
to pull within 14 games of the East
Division lead. And now, a two-game
showdown on the banks of the
Mississippi.
"We have to win the next two days or
we can about write it off," Tom liensaid, looking to a two-game series
against first-place Montreal that begins
tonight in St. Ixuis. "Montreal's not a
good team on the road. We need to win.
That's all there is to it."

day after teammate Nolan Ryan no-hit
tiis Angeles, flirted with a no-hitter for
six innings then settled for a two-hitter to
lead the Astros, who retained their 14game lead In the West. In beating Fer­
nando Valenzuela, Sutton extended the
Dodgers' hitless streak to 16 1-3 innings
before Ken I^ndreaux singled over
second leading off the seventh.

M l ■■awhwfl

muscle. Andujar has a 9-0 career record
against Montreal.
In his place, St. t/mis Manager Whiley
Herzog w ill start left-hander John
Martin, W , against Scott Sanderson, 9-6,
wtth U r y Sorensen, 7-7, scheduled to
pitch Tuesday night against B ill Lee, 4-5.
The loss eliminated the Pirates from
the race but they can help decide the
winner. They play St. I ju u Is three limes
and Montreal twice.
Pittsburgh battled back from a 54
deficit. Dave Parker, who slammed a
three-run homer in the sixth, greeted
Bruce Sutter with a two-run double in the
eighth to cut the lead to 6-5 before Sutter
worked out of the Jam by getting pinchhitter W illie Stargell to ground out.
Sutter then retired the Pirates in order
in the ninth to earn his league-leading
2Slh save.

"This is what we've been striving for,”
said Herr, who tripled home two runs in New York t, Expos 1
the fourth Inning and stole home to help
At Montreal, Mike Scott, 5-10, and Neil
rookie Dave LaPoint record his first N L A lle n combined on a seven-hitter,
victory. “ Now we've got a golden op­ enabling New York to snap the Expos'
portunity."
seven-game winning streak before a
The Expos have opportunity, loo. St. crowd of 52,069. Former Expo E llia
Louis’ ace against the Expos, righly Valentine doubled in what proved to be
Joaquin Andujar, had to be scratched as the deciding run.
the scheduled starting pitcher for the Astros 4, Dodgers I
At Houston, Don Sutton, pitching one
opener because of a pulled hamstring

M o n d a y, S a p f. 21. I T S i - T A

E v tn ln g H tr ftld , Sanford, F I.

Finish Season At Home

Reds 4, Braves 2
At Atlanta, Tom Seaver and Mike
UiCoss combined on a five-hitter and
Ken Griffey doubled home three runs in
the second inning to pace Cincinnati.
Seaver, 14-2, surrendered two hits over
five Innings before suffering a strained
muscle in ids right (high after hitting an
infield single in the sixth.
Giants 7, Padres 3
At San Diego, Doyle Alexander picked
up his 10th victory and Ivelpcd his own
cause with a bases-loaded double during
a six-run fourth inning that led the Giants
over the Padres.
Phillies 54, Cubs M l
At Chicago, Bake McBride slammed a
three-run homer and Steve Carlton, 13-4,
fired a six-hitter and struck out 11 to lead
Ihe Phils in the opener. In (he second
game, B ill Bhcknrr and Ty Waller drove
in four runs apiece and Mike Krukow
scattered nine hits to help Chicago gain a
split.

Major-League Roundup
•tem ftefs
M ajor League Standings
By United Pre»» International
N ational League
C e lt
W L Pet. OB
Montreal
&gt;i » 565 SI. Louis
11 It .513 H«
• P hil*
It n
411 4
10 n
44s 4&gt;,
Chicago
New Y ork
I t IS 4S1 5
P ilttb rg h
11 I t 3*1 I
West
Moulton
30 14 iS l Clncl
i* ii t n
i 'y
Son Fran
14 I* S it j ' l
14 n s n
4
■ Los Ang
Atlanta
11 14 441 I'Y
13
34
111
1H|
San Diego
■ P in t h a ll d ivltle n winner
S u n d e r'! Result*
Philadelphia S. Chicago 1. 1st
game
Chicago 14. Philadelphia 0.
Ind game
New Y o rk 1, M ontreal I
Cincinnati 4, Atlanta 1
San Francisco 1. San Diego 3
St L o u il 1. Pittsburgh S
Houston 4. LOS Angeles t
T o d o r 's G a m e s

( A ll T im et tD T&gt;
Chicago
(G rlftln
14
and
Howell 1 0) at Pittsburgh
(Rhoden 1 4 and Long I t),
a OS p m.
New Y o rk (Lynch 4 41 at
Philadelphia (Holes 11), 1 11
pm
L ot Angeles (R c u si 51) at
Atlanta (M ahler 4 4), 1:35 p m.
San Francisco
(G rltlin ) at
Cincinnati (P a tto re 4 1). I l l
p m
M ontreal (Sanderson * t) at
St
L o u ll (M a rlin a SI. t:3S
pm
San Diego lE lc h e lb e rg tf 111
at Houston IN iekro M l , I IS
pm
A m erican League
I Second H all)
East
W L Pet. O B
Detroll
11 It 317 —
M ilw eu kr
71 X .314
V»
Boston
14 X S4S 1
Ball
14 11 S33 1W
■ New Y rk
14 77 s n
1
Clevelnd
1] 24 41* 4'V
Toronto
10 13 143 S'*&gt;
West
Kan C ity
15 11 513 —
&gt; Oaklnd
13 71 513 1
Mmn
13 74 l i t
7'v
Seattle
71 25 451 4
T e ia t
It 75 431 5
Chicago
10 77 414 S '5
Calif
II 11 3*4 I
■ F irs t h a ll division winner
Sunday's Results
New Y o rk S, Baltim ore 1
Cleveland I. Boston 7, It inns
Minnesota S. T e ia t 1
Kansas C ity IS. Seattle 3
Chicago I. Oakland S. 1st
game
Chicago 10. Oakland 3. Ind
game
Detroit 1. M ilw aukee 1
Toronto 4. C alifornia 1
Teday's O e m tt
( A ll Tim as ID T )
Kansas C ity (Leonard H It)
at Minnesota (Havens I S ) , 1:15
pm
New Y o rk (Reukchul 41) at
Cleveland (Brennan M l , 1:11
p m
Baltim ore (P a lm e r I S ) at
Detroit
(C ap p ulte llo
1 0),
I
p m
Boston, ITenene I t )
at
M ilw aukee
(Vuckovlch
13 a),
IX p m
California
(W itt
a t)
at
Chicago (La m p IS ) . I X p m
T e ia t
(Honeycutt 10 41
at
Seattle lA b b o lt 4 1). 10 IS pm

San Dgo
100 110 OOO- 1 11 I
A leien d er, L a v e lle (1} and
Brenly;
Welsh,
Boone
14),
L ittlefield (4). U rree (I) and
Kennedy
W - A le ie n d e r ( t o i l
L —Welsh (41) H R - S a n Fran
cisco. C la rk (11)
PISbgh.
000 003 010- S I I
SI LouM
010 401 O i l - 1 10
P e r ti. Cam acho (S), Romo
(1), Scu rry (I) and N icosia;
LaP oint, Listen (I). Sutler (It
and Porter
W -L e P o in ! (10)
L - P e re i (11). HR — Pitt*
burgh. P arke r (II.
LOI Ang
000 000 0 0 1 - 1 1 I
Hout
061 000 1 0 i - a 10
Valentuela.
N lrdenluer
(I)
and
Sctotcid;
Sutton
and
Pujol*
W -S u tto n ( I I I ) . L Valentuela
(13 4).
H R -Lo t
Angele*. S a i 111

Pacrek. Sea
tt M J 45 374
H ndrtn. Oak
103 404 14 314
Mrgrove, Clev
tt X t 41 314
Cooper. M il
too 3*5 41 l i t
Remy. Bos
14 344 S4 311
M m phry, N Y
II 310 41 110
G B r .lt, KC
II 111 17 X i
C ar.w , Cal
I t 357 S3 X I
H orn. Runt
N a lla n il League — Schmidt,
Phi
71;
Dawson.
M il
2J.
Kingman. N Y 21 Foster. Cln
X , C la rk SF and M m drick, $11

II.
Am erican League — Arm at.
Oak
and
Thomas.
M il
11.
Evans, Bos 10. M u rray, Bal,
L u lln sk l.C h l and G rlch , Cal. It

Runt Batted In
National League — Foster,
Cln
15.
Schmidt.
P hi
It;
Buckner, Chi 70. C arter, M il
45. Matthews. P hi 44
A m erican League — A rm at,
Oak
D;
O giivie.
M il
at.
M u rray. Bal 41. Evans. Bos 41
a n d W in tie ld . N Y

65

SERVICE'STORES

AMNimSARY
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Cleve

tio txoooot - 1 ti i
Boston

700 001 20200 7 It I
Barker. Lew ellyn (4), Monge
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Gedman.
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II SI. L —Clear
(111
H Rs — Cleveland. O ria IS);
Boston. R ice (14), Evans (20).

SAVE

T e ia t
000 000 001- 1 I I
Mltm
100 000 I t s - S 10
Butcher, M ercer (I). Schmidt
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Corbett I t l and Wynegar W —
Redtern ( I I ) L -B u tc h e r ( O il
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Clay. P arrott (SI. Drago (41,
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and
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orek 03).

ON ANY SERVICE LISTED!

(F irst Gam e)
Chi
00 3 004 11(3— * 13 0
On kind
500 000 000 - 3 10 1
Baum garten. Hoyt (1) and
E ts ltn . Landlord. Jones (I),
Owchinko (It, Bordi ID and
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W -H o y l
111).
L—
Langlord M l 101. H R t - C h lc a
go. L rm o n (1), B ernatard (at.
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Lube, O il
Change &amp; Filter

70

(Second Game)
Chi
401 010 700- 10 14 0
Oaklnd
001 001 M l — 3 to 1
Kootm en and F isk , Keough.
Figueroa (I). Jonas (S). Ow
chlnko IS). M cLau gh lin
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Heaverlo (*t and Newman W —
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41. HR —Baines MO). Nordhe
gen ( tl. Lem on (It, F isk 7 (I);
Oakland. C. Johnson M l).

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Month a good lim a to wmlon/e1
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Brevard Community College Friday night. The Seminole Community College
sophomore helped SCC whip BCC, 15-4, 15-ID. Toolght, the former Fighting
Seminole and her Raider teammates meet Polk City at 7 p.m. in the SCC gym.
Admission is free.

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* * * ’ *
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IA — Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Monday, Sopt. II, m i

Governors Worried About Budget Cuts
while groups of governors and staff
members talked informally of the
issues to be debated this week.

IN BRIEF

DORADO, Puerto Rico (U PI)—
The Southern Governors Conference
began today with a dozen chief
executives worried Bbout federal
budget cuts and Vice President
George Bush assuring them the
Reagan economic plan w ill work.

G raham Eyes Higher Taxes
But Is Wary O f U.S. Trend

The vice president flew into
Puerto Rico Sunday afternoon and
called for "statehood now" for the
island commonwealth of 3 million.

Bush was originally scheduled to
address the governors at their
closing session Wednesday, but his
visit was extended to include the
entire SGA convention following
president Reagan's decision last
week to cut federal expenses
another 12.5 percent.

He dined on roast pork and Carib­
bean delicacies at a beachslde fiesta
on the eve of the business sessions,

In addition to the dom estic
spending cuts, which affect virtually
every w elfare, education and

FLORIDA
T A L L A H A S S E E (UPI) -

Gov. Bob Graham is
deciding whether to buck the national reduction (ever
and ask the legislature to raise taxes as he rushes to
complete his $10 billion-plus budget by Dec. 6.
Graham believes a major overhauling of the state's
tax structure is essential if government services are to
keep pace with the population growth that will make
Florida the fourth largest state In the country in 10
years.
But Graham can't ignore the national trend, started
by President Reagan, of cutting government spending
and taxes, says Tom Herndon, the governor's director
of planning and budgeting.

Columbia Tiles To Be Reset
C A P E C A N A V E R A L (UPI) - Reattachment of 338
heat-resistant tiles on the space shuttle Columbia,
damaged last week during a fuel spill, is scheduled to
begin Tuesday, officials said.
Workmen put the finishing touches Sunday on the
platforms, electrical outlets and duct work necessary
before reattachment of the silica tiles, damaged when
nitrogen tetroxide spilled while being loaded into fuel
tanks.

'Ghost Traps' Killing Fish?
MIAM I I U P I) - Scientists in a small submarine are
searching the ocean along the Florida Keys to
determine whether wire “ ghost traps" are killing fish
after they are abandoned or lost by commercial
fishermen.
Recreational fisherm en, concerned about
diminishing fish populations, soy the "ghost traps"
should be destroyed because they continue to k ill fish
after they are lost or severed from their buoys by boat
propellers. Marine biologists say they don't know yet
whether lost traps harm fish, but they hope the
research project will help them find out.

Mystery In Helmleh Trial
JACKSONVI1JJ2 (UPI) - The presence of a man
who shakes his head when questioning edges close to
government secrecy in the trial of accused Soviet spy
Joseph George Helmich Jr. has added mystery to a
proceeding already saturated with intrigue.
The bespectacled man, who sits in the back of the
courtroom, won’t reveal his identity, saying only,
"Just call me an advisor."
The man's presence points to the unusual security
problems being dealt with at the trial ol Helmich,
accused of selling information to live Soviets (or
1131,000. Testimony in the trial resumed today.

Navy Sued O ver Vasectom y
K E Y WEST (U PI) - Chief Petty Officer Walter
Smith, who says he has neither "the nerves or the
patience for more children," is suing the U S . Navy for
refusing to give him a vasectomy.
Smith, 23, said Navy medical personnel refused to
perform a vasectomy because of "unofficial naval
policy" and suggested his wife, Virginia, have tubal
ligation instead.
Smith, an aviation administration clerk stationed at
the Boca Clilca Naval Station, recently re-enlisted, but
said lie is "disgusted" with the Navy and wants a
discharge.

Ha's A Millionaire At 3

|

m •• % % % t H * k %

t *

M l AMI &lt;U P I) - The U.S. A ir Force has made Jesse
Cliarek a millionarle at age three, but he'll never
realize it.
taut Friday the U.S. government agreed to pay $5.5
million to Jesse because U.S. District Judge James
Kehoe found doctors at Homestead A ir Force Base
hospital were negligent in allowing the birth detect that
caused his cerebral palsy and his mental impairment.
Under terms of the settlement, Jesse's parents,
A nny U . Nicholas Charek and his wife, Ros, received
$050,000 immediately and w ill be paid $00,000 annually
for 30 years. Tlie couple also will be given a payment
every five years of $100,000 to $750,000, depending upon
the increased cost of medical care.

Casselberry Pols

Ready, Set•••Run
The Casselberry City Council is slated to establish a
qualifying period for candidates vying far council seats in the
Dec. 1 election at Monday's 7:30 p.m. council meeting at the
Casselberry City Hall, 95 U k e Triplet Drive.
According to City Clerk Mary Hawthorne, once a qualifying
period is determined candidates may officially announce their
intentions to run for any of three municipal positions. Posts to
be included on the Dec. 1 ballot include the mayor's slot
currently held by Mayor Owen Sheppard, and two council
seats, now held by councilmen Tom Embree and John E ig h ty.
Embree said today he plans to seek re-election, while
Sheppard said he is "uncertain at this time if I will run for reelection." I.eighty could not be reached for comment.
Council is also slated to appoint council secretary Linda
Thomas as acting city clerk in anticipation of Mrs.
Hawthorne's brief absence from the post.

prisons programs the governors will
confront at their meeting, three
important single-slate issues which
arose with discussion of Haitian
immigration, nuclear waste disposal
and Puerto Rican statehood.
Ironically, host governor Carlos
Romero Barcelo said federal budget
cuts w ill give impetus to the
statehood effort he has been backing
for years.
As a commonwealth, Romero
said, Puerto Rico has received less

in federal funding formulas — and
will feel the cuts more.
“ We are being prejudiced
against", he said. "A s a com­
monwealth, we can't protect our
rights and interests in these budget
cuts. If Puerto Rico was a state, we
would be entitled to more of a voice
in these decisions."
Although Romero, a Democrat,
woried that Reagan's budget cuts
would disproportionately affect his
island — wtere 60 percent of the
people receive food stamps
assistance — Bush said the Reagan

Cities Being Asked To '
Local governments involved in the
Iron Bridge sewer line hook-up will be
asked by the South Seminole and
North Orange County Wastewater
Transmission Authority to "write-off"
loans they made lo get the authority
started. The funds were needed to
create and staff the local authority
office.
"Every city came up with $33.645
in itia lly to cover adm in istrative

fees," Casselberry M ayor and
Authority Chairman Owen Sheppard
said Thursday. "In addition, each city
loaned the authority the use of
property to fa cilita te its in itia l
operation needs. The C ity of
Casselberry has given the most and
we will be the biggest users of the Iron
Bridge plan'hook-up."
However, Sheppard said it is
doubtful Casselberry City Council

economic plan augurs well for the
poor.
"The prospects are good for a
bright future and a strong
econom y,", he said at the
Republican rally shortly after his
arrival in San Juan.
Gov. D ick R ile y from South
Carolina said he could only attend
today's sessions — presiding over a
meeting of the Southern growth
policies board — but wanted to get
the governors to agree on the least
framework of an interstate compact
on nuclear waste disposal.

Taking
A Break

Loans

members w ill agree to "write off" the
$726,145 in funds and property it
loaned to the authority.
"Whereas, 1 can understand a
write-off of these expenses will bring
•he cost lo the taxpayer for the sewer
hook-up down, there is no way the
council will forgive the quarter of a
million dollars loaned," he said.
D avid Johnson, W inter P a r k ’s
authority representative, said at

Wednesday’s authority meeting he
could "understand why Casselberry
could not forgive the entire loan, but
perhaps a lesser amount could be
decided upon for all concerned."

City government in Alta­
monte Springs is taking a
night off.
The Altamonte Springs
Commission will not meet
Tuesday night, because the
commissioners determined
some time ago that when­
ever a month consisted of
five Tuesday nights, no
meeting would be held.
Tuesday, Sept. 29 is the
fifth Tuesday of Sep­
tember.
This year, there have
only been two other oc­
casions where this rule was
utilized. In M a rch and
June, there were five
Tuesdays. December is the
only month remaining in
this calendar year that has
five Tuesdays.

Johnson said the authority should
agree any write-off of the loan, "has to
be all or nothing," with all entities
agreeing to participate.
- TE N I YARBOROUGH

...Desperate Mom Fighting Illness, Poverty
I Continued From Page 1A)
Five weeks ago Crystal was a
"bouncing little jtirl with beautiful
h a ir," said Brenda's neighbor
Margaret Goulding. “ The poor thing
Is Just so sick all the time now," she
said.
Goulding, 77, called the Herald last
Thursday to "tell someone" this

young girl needs help. "The girl is in
trouble and we're trying to do what we
can to help her," she said.
"She (Crystal) gets sick because of
her treatments and runs a fever. Her
face and stomach also swell up and
the doctors say the treatments can
cause fragile bones. She Just started
walking a week ago because her legs

AREA DEATHS

were weak," Brenda said.
Brian, her brother, a red-haired
active boy, plays with Crystal Just as
any brother plays with his sister. He
may not understand what the Illness is
all about but he knows his sister has it.
The family now lives in a rented
mobile home on Route 3, Box 479 A
Gardens Ave.. in Sanford but the rent

was due today and Brenda said she
doesn’t know how her landlord will
accept the news that she doesn't have
the money for rent. Her rent is *225 a
month.
“ I’ll tell you, things Just can't get
any worse. When I get out of this
mess, I’m going to help everyone I
can," she said.

*9 4 50

ADAMS PAINTING CONTRACTOR

W EEKLY
FURNISH ED BEDROOM

BU5IN ESS4 HOME

MRS. V I O U CONE
Mrs. Viola M. Cone, 53, ol
Mission Road, Oviedo, died
Friday at Florida HospitalAltamonte. Born in Magnolia,
N.C., she was a housewife and
a member of the Foun­
tainhead Missionary Baptist
Church of Oviedo.
S u rv iv o rs include her
husband, Davies Cone Sr.;
three daughters, Cteaster
Cone, of Orlando, Cynthia
Talton, C asselberry, June
Bass, Oviedo; three sons,
David, Otis and Dennis, all of
Orlando; brothers, Hen­
derson, Charles and James
M arim on, a ll of Oviedo;
sisters, The Rev. Armette
Shephard
and
V irg in ia
Meadows, both of New York,
Cara M cC la in , M issouri,
Lizzy Mae Marimon, Oviedo;
five grandchildren.
W ils o n - E ic h e lb e r g e r
M ortuary, Sanford, is in
charge of arrangements.

MRS. JA N IC E ELIZAB ETH
COOK
Mrs. Janice Elizabeth Cook,
76, ol 780 Sabal Palm Drive,
Casselberry, died Thursday in
Casselberry as the result of a
tra ffic accident. Born in
Poland, she moved to
Casselberry from Worcester,
Mass., in 1971. She was a
retired licensed practical
nurse and a member ol the
Ij k e Kathryn Estates Garden
Club.
Su rvivo rs
include
a
daughter,
M rs.
Judith
Scoville, Orlando; brothers,
W illiam and Stanley Kozmlnaki, both of Worcester;
slstera, Mra. Alice Bourque,
Worcester, Mrs. Katherine
Harbus, Long Island, N.Y.;
live grandchildren.
Baldwin-Fairchild Funeral
Home, Goldenrod, is in
charge of arrangements.

W A LTER M A X A D L E R
Walter Max Adler, 84, of 233
Tangelo Ave„ Fern Park,
died Saturday at Lakevlew
Nursing Home, Sanford. Born
in Germany, Jan. IV, 1897, he
moved to 1-ern Park from
Uncaster, Pa. in 1966. He was
a machinist engineer for the
Permutilt Water Co. and a
Lutheran. He was a member
of the Germ an-Am erlcan
Society and the LOM.
He Is survived by his wife,
Susan A dler, Fe rn P a rk ;
sisters,
M rs.
Gertrude
Bruckner, Danbury, Conn.;
and Mrs. Eraa Beyer, Oviedo.
Baldwin-Fairchild Funeral
Home, Altamonte Springs, Is
in charge of arrangements.

C O N I, M B S . V IO L S M
Funeral services lor M rs Viol*
M Coo*. SI, o* Mission Rood.
Oviedo, who died Friday *t •
Florid* Hospital Allam onte, will
M *1 I p m , !u * ld * v. *t
F o u n t a in h e a d
M is s io n a r y
Baplisl Church. Division Street,
Oviedo, with th t Rev 1 J
Jacobs officiating
Buri*l In
B o slo n 's C e m e ta ry , O vied o
Wilson Enh elb erg er Mortuary.
Sanford in chare*

HAS MOVED TO DeBARY!
Still servicing Sanford
and surrounding a ra n .
Our superior sarvica has not changad.
Only our phona number.

668-8813

Our new number is

CAVALIER
MOTOR INtl

■ M aid Service
e L a u n d ry F acilitie s
e i l Channel Cable TV
e L lv a Entertainm ent
7 N ifh ts In Leunf*
• F a m ily Raslaurant
• Laree r Roams and
E tllcle n cy A p is Available
At S llfM ly N iftie r R aft
•S p e cia l Discpunf On
Manfhty R a fts

3200 S. OHando Dr.
(Hwy. 17-92) Sanford
(305)321*0690

IIS Y B B II
II

Funarol NoHca

THE
TEAMS

p.

&gt;'

Lake Brantley — DCF

i-M

Sanford Seminole — Oviedo

15^ WILDFIRES. ^
[WASTE RESOURCES

Crooms — Lyman — Lake Mary

y ■, ^
■ '

Lake Howell — Trinity Prop

THE CHALLENGE

IF T

r

f$ Oviedo headed h r another state playoff berth?

WIU Lake Mary really he "the Beginning at The Best"?
Can Lyman bouoct keek hem leal year's 0-10 season?

It makes
a difference

Will Seminole High again eheBeege for the Fhra Star tide?
Will the Creams Panthers dew ep freshman competition?
Can Sam Weir were M l mhmdes h r Central Florida's

It helps if a family going through a time of
loss cen have e source to turn to for informa­
tion, advice, end help. We try to be that
source in a sincerely concerned wsy.

Knights? WIU Lake HoweB repeat as canhranea
champions? Can TrieBy h e p onto again rule the smaU
school division? W l lake Brantley raise Its red, white
■

4

and blue banner?

Sanford Taxes Up ?
Sanford City Commissioners after a 7 p.m. public hearing
today at city hall, 300 N. Park Ave„ will consider adopting a
$7.8 million budget (or fiscal 1981-81 and setting a property
tax rate of $5.81 per 91,000 assessed valuation, a $ percent
increase over the current year.
The new budget is to go into effect Thursday, the first day
of the new fiscal year.
The city's overall budget of 97,124,407 is up from the
current year’s 98,109,718, a 18 percent increase.
The overall budget includes general operation of
14,138,4m , up from $4,359,030; utility department, sewer
and water, 82,t33,K4, up from |1 ,174,818 and refuse *881,188.
up from *476,081
The general operating budget is up *579,434 from the
current year's *4,398,020. The proposed U s rate of *5J8 per
*1,000 aaurt valuation is up by S.6 cents per *1,000 over
the current year's *5.84._____________________________

THE ANSWERS
Evening Herald

GRAMKOW
FUNERAL HOME
tJ O W E S T A IR P O R T B O U L t V A R O
'
SA N FO R D , F LO R ID A
T E L E P H O N E 371 3213
W ILLIA M L G R A M K O W

,_______ i

YOUR

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fSPORTC

PAPER

For Immediate delivery Call: 322-2611

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OURSELVES
Evtnlng Herald. Sanford. FI.

Monday. Saot. II. I f l l — IB

Garden G ate

House Planfs Unknown ToNature
ByROSE CIRCLE
Sanford Garden Club
Would you tike to keep your house plants happy?
Home plants don't exist In nature. Most of the
cultivated plants today grew wild at one time
somewhere on this earth. When made Into house
plants — Indoor plants, they were uprooted from
their preferred climates and forced to adjust to
completely new conditions.
They are cut off from normal root development
and can’t send their roots down to life giving water
and nutrients.
Gardeners need to learn more about plants —
their native habitats and the growing conditions

thev prefer. There are many books dealing with tins
subject. Authors liavc researched and ex­
perimented with plants and give Information
needed to keep house plants alive, facts on light
water, feeding, proper potting mixture, propagation
and trouble signs.
Did you know there are differonl amounts ot
water to give your plant depending on whether it is
in a clay pot, a plastic pot or ceramic container?
House plants need "cleaning" to keep them
breathing property because they don’ t have
cieasing rain to do this in tiie house.
At one time, the luck a person had in growing
house plants was explained by listening to other

growers. Today if plants don't grow they may have
Iteeii watered too much or too little, fed too often or
not fed enough, poor potting soil or too high or low
temperatures.
Plants can survive for long periods on reserve
food, hut eventually new growth becomes spindly,
new leaves are smaller and lower leaves iurn
yellow and die.
Try new locations, li plants receive too much light
leaves will yellow and burn. It needs moving.
Study your plants and give them lender loving
care. Then watch them respond with flourishing
beauty.

Woman With
'Everything'

EVENINO

i j ) 0 L O U G R A N T Babe taut m
rove with her news source a prolesaionai baseball pla»er |R|
3 7 (3 5 ) I N D E P E N D E N T N E T W O R K
N EW S

S ' . J ' O . ' ONEW S
&lt;35} SANFORO ANO SON
10IOCEANUS
(17) ANDYORIFF1TH

,11 (171 NEWS

6 :3 0

0 4) NBC NEWS
) Q CBS NEWS
(7 O ABC NEWS
It (35) CARTER COUNTRY
ffi (10) OCEANU3
tx |i 7) o o m e r p y l e

o

1 0 :3 0

,H (35) LOVE. AMERICAN STYLE
ffi (10) LIVE FROM THE MET
•Tuning Up L i
Metropolitan Opera
the major artitta * '«
lor lhe« production
Traviata

7 :0 0

4 THE MUPPET8

o

Ij
PM MAGAZINE A pom *
th a p e d p olyu rethan e foam houee a
loo* at S o a p O p e ta Digest m ag a
lin e Lind a M am s g o es w hite water
tatting m A la sk a C h e t Tetl m a ke s
gatuc salt

7 :3 0

0 4 1 ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
} o YOU ASKED FOR IT
1 ? IO FAMILY FEUD
II (35) BARNEY MILLER
ffi (10) DICK CAVETT G o e s! B «
M o ,e ts &lt;R|

O (41 ) O NEWS

ill (3 5 ) B E N N Y H IL L

fflMOII
( 1 0 ) P O S T S C R IP T S
IX(17)4
) A L L IN T H E F A M IL Y
1 1 :3 0
(4) T O N IG H T Guest host Joan
Rivera Guests Richard Simmons
Mark Russell
1(1 O M - A - S - H
1)7 (3 5 ) S T R E E T S O f S A N F R A N ­
C IS C O
( J I ( t 7) M O V I E
Jeanne Eageis
|I957) Kim Novak. Jell Chandler
The career ol Ihe famous actress
rises and then Mas because ot a
struggle with alcohol

0

1 1 :4 5
( .7 ) 0 N EW S

8:00

Dear
Abby

4 THE HOYT AXTON SHOW

t|) o QUINCY A pregnant teen
ager Mils to her death horn a dill
and her boyfriend it accused ot
mufder

{?&gt; O

1 2 :3 0
o -41 TO M O RRO W Uuetts David
Slembeig Pat Paulsen

THAT’S

INCREDIBLE

Fe a ture d a three-year o ld wit*
walker, a ten year-old girt who
tin g s o p era a five year o ld bo dy
builder

A ll day
TUESDAY SEPTEMBER 29,
In observance of

I Photo* by M t r v o Hawkinv)

O l e l i r a l i n g Hit* HIlls a n n i v e r s a r y of H o se Of S h a r o n a r e . fro m le ft. I'.va
S te p h e n s , W .L . H a m ilto n a m i M a ry S. S te p h e n s .

12:00

A w id o w e re d c o u n try-w e ste rn
Singer retu rn s after y«Rft of c ro s s ­
country lo u rin g to fac« th« re spo n
srbiliws of biwng a fa lh w t j
, J O WKRP IN CINCINNATI Th*
staff grow s j'tlw y attar an offic«
break in (R|

It (35l CHARLIE SANOELS
ffi 1101OREAT PERFORMANCES

def ini tely
seek
psychotherapy. Don’t say you
can’t afford It. You can’t
afford not to have it.
Your local mental health
cliaic exists for people who
a re “ tired of living and
feel like (b le e p )." And It
charges only what one can
afford to pay. Please don’t
wail another day. Yon sound
like a generous, w arm ­
hearted, Intelligent woman
with som e
deep-rooted
feslertag problems to resolve.
Please get the help you need,
then write again and tell me of
your progress. I care.
DEAR ABBY: A few years
ago, I read that pigs make
good pets. They’re supposed
to be cleaner, sm arter and
m ore easily train ed than
dogs. I also heard they're
gentle with children and make
good w atchdogs. (Watchplgs?)
Can you confirm this?
Anything you can tell me
about pigs as pels will be
sppredated. We have a nice
house with a large backyard.
ROB IN AURORA. ONTARIO
DEAR ROB: I am advised
that pigs make wonderful
pets. They are highly In­
telligent, easy to train and,
believe it or not, among the
cleanest anim als around!
They’re gentle with children
and quite livable. ("Miss
Piggy” has dene a great deal
lor the pig’s Image.)
However, little pigs grow to
be big hogs, so U you're
considering acquiring one as
a p e t first find out If It's
kosher to keep one where you
live.

Triviati
The
Company and
seen preparing
ot Verdi a l a

11:00

D o d g e rs a l A tla n ta Bra ve s

0

W illie Stark 1 Timothy N olen and
Ja n C u rb s are featured m the H o u s ­
ton G ra n d O p e ra s p ro d u ctio n Of
C a rlisle Floyd t m u sical dram a
b a te d on R o b e rt Pwnn W a rre n s
novel A ll The Krng t Wen

8 :3 0

J

a

THE

0
)
7
II
ffi

TWO

OF

US

B re n tw o o d s sen.ie so cce r referee
follow s N an hom e on ih e day o f an
im portant inter**#* (R|

9 .0 0
o 1 4 1 M O V IE
th e 5 e o e 1 Love
Ot M arilyn M o n ro e (1980) C o n
sta n c e Torslund. L lo yd B rid g e s th e
story o t o ne o l A m ertce s fo re m ost
sea sy m b o ls end (he m en behind
her rise to stard o m tt d ra m a lu e d

(R)
(J) Q M - A - S - H the 1951 New
Year a celebration marks Ihe begin­
ning ol another IX months ol ear at
Ihe 407111) |R|

(7)

IH CR CD IB U
BUT TR U C!

1 2 :1 5
A B C N EW S N IG H T LIN E

o

1 2 :4 5
OD O
M O V IE
”Tha Citadel
ih W) ff9 M j Robert Donat Rosal­
ind R u sse ll

1:10

ljj Q
H A R R Y O M an y b e co m es
the p ro le c to r of a m u sicia n who has
been m a rked for d eath (Rj

1 :4 0
,1X (17) B A S E B A L L Los Angeles
Dodgers at Atlanta Braves
2 :4 5
( 1 ) 0 N EW S
3 :1 5
( 7 ) o M O V IE
The rorgo tle n
Man (Cl |!97l| Dennis Weaver.
Anne f itncis
4 :0 0
3X ( 1 7 ) L O V E . A M E R IC A N S T Y L E

9 :3 0

10:00

0 . 4 TtCTACDOUQH
5 O WELCOME BACK. KOTTER
ill (35) I LOVE LUCY
ffi (10) EDUCATIONAL PRO­
GRAMMING
1 0 :3 0

o 1 BLOCKBUSTERS
) O ALICE (R)
351 DICK VAN DYKE
,11 (35
ffi (10) ELECTRIC COMPANY (R)

11:00
0 4 WHEEL OF FORTUNE
J &gt; 0 th e PRICE IS RIGHT
(7 0 LOVE BOAT (R)
ill (35) BUD BREWER
ffi (10) EDUCATIONAL PRO­
GRAMMING)
IX (17) MOVIE
1 1 :3 0

O 4 PASSWORD PLUS
II (35) LOVE. AMERtCANSTYLE
AFTERNOON

12:00
O (4&gt;CARD SHARKS
m om ONEW s
ill (351 RHOOA
1 2 :3 0

0 4 NEWS
i») o
THE YOUNO AND THE
RESTLESS
1 7’ O HTAN S HOPE
(3 5 )m

it

1:00

1 :3 0

l X' O AS THE WORLO TURNS

2:00
0&lt;4'ANOTHER WORLD
(?) O ONE LIFE TO LIVE
2 :3 0

l i IO SEARCH FOR TOMORROW
3 :0 0

0 ( 4 TEXAS
1 )1 0 OUIOTNO LIGHT
(71 O GENERAL HOSPITAL
ill (35) BUOS BUNNY AND
FRIENDS
ffi (10) FROM JUMPSTREET &lt;R)
□ (MON)
ffi (10) FEELING FREE (TUE)
ffi (10) PEOPLE OF THE FIRST
LIGHT (R) (WED)
ffi ( 10) ONCE UPON A CLASSIC
(THU)
ffi (10) QUE PASAT(FRI)
31 (17) FUNTIME
3 :3 0

,11 (35ISCOOBYOOO
CD 10 ELECTRIC COMPANY (R)
31(17) THE FLINTSTONES

TUESDAY
MORMNQ

4 :0 0

O

m oi

5:05

3 i) (351 WOOOY WOODPECKER
SESAME STREET □
THE MUMS TERS

aZ&gt; ( 1 7 ) R A T P A T R O L (W E O |

m

4 :3 0

5:20

( | ) p HAPPY DA YE AGAIN
117(351 TOM AMO JERRY
31 (1 7) LEAVE IT TO BEAVER

3 1 ( 1 7 ) R A T P A T R O L (M O N )

5:35
31 (17) WORLD AT LAROE (WEO)

5:45
dji (17) WORLD AT LARGE (Fill)

5:50
I I ( 1 7 ) W O R L D A T L A R G E (M O N )

V a t i c a n C i t y , w h ir M - o r i g i n *
ita lr b a r k b e fo r e M 0 0

Eastern Star Order
M arks Anniversary
The 34th anniversary of the Rose of
Sharon Order of Eastern Star No. 134 was
held at Allen ('Impel AM K Church. Sister
Eva Stephens, Worthy Matron and Brnllier
W. L. Hamilton, Worthy Patron presided.
Highlighting the event an address by
Slater M a ry. S. Stephens, m inister,
evangelist and a member of Hose of Sharon
No. 134.
Out-of-town and visiting guests were
Slater Daisy W illis, Worthy Matron, and
Sister Elizabeth Tiplin of David’s Chapter
No. 36, Apopka.
Ushers were from Allen Chapel A M E
Church. The guest choir was from Morning
Glory Missionary Baptist Church.

Marva
Hawkins
U J-ilJX

You can participate In a fund-raising good
time on Friday, Oct. 8 when Dm Rawls and
Ed McMahon host the " I j &gt;u Rawls Parade
of Stars" for Ihe benefit of Ihe United Negro
College Fund.
Thousands of young people are counting
on your sup|&gt;ort. So please Join I/m on
W ESil, Channel 2 because a mind is a
terrible thing to waste.

Prince Hall Affiliated Masons celebrated
Prince Hall Day, hosted by Evergreen
ljodge No. 23.
This service was held at Trinity United
Methodist Church. Guest speaker was
Brother Tommy Dorsey, Worshipful Master
of Rudolph Bradley fatdge No. 706, Orlando.
Words of appreciation were given by
Brother George Myles, Worshipful Master
of local lodge Evergreen No. 23. The in­
troduction of the Masonic lodges of
Kissimmee, Winter Park and Orlando were
given by Illustrious George Fort 33 degree.
Observations were made by Die pastor, the
Rev. Bernard Jackson.

G ettin g

M

Engagement and wedding forms are
available at the Herald office to announce
these events. The forms may be ac­
companied by professional black and
white photographs if a picture is desired
with Ihe announcement. Wedding forms
and pictures must be submitted within two
weeks of Ihe wedding.

Rosh Hashanah

6:00
0 (4) TODAY IN FLORIDA
T)&lt; ITHE LAW ANO YOU (MON)
( )| \ SPECTRUM (TUE)
( . ) ( : BLACK AWARENESS (WEO)
(

f i M E ftV O M F T I N

m

5'30

mi-11. It's t i n ’ Nw isa ( i u a r t l in

1.4) LITTLE HOUSE ON THE

sm

(I) 0
M A R C U S W E LB Y . M O.
(T U E -F R I)

I I (1 7 1 R A T P A T R O L (T U E. THU)

iililc -kt a r m y i n I h r
l i e * li-se ( f u n
100

auoc

0 ( 4 DAYS OF OUR LIVES
7 ) 0 ALL MY CHILDREN
ill ( 3 5 m (17) MOVIE

(|) o SUMMER BEMEaTER

G e o rg e M y le s, T o m m y D o rs e y a n il G e o r g e K o rl o b s e r v e P r i n c e H all D a y .

o i l (171 MOVIE
(35) OOMER PYLE
( lO iSESAME STREET□

JI (35) ANDY GRIFFITH

4 :3 0
(11; ( 1 7 ) M IS S IO N : I M P O S S I B L E

(?) O NFL FOOTBALL Lot Ange­
les Rams al Chicago Bear a Q
OTi ( 3 5 1 T H4CROCKFC
! I
F O R D F IL E S

The
u u r ld

0:00

(4‘ HOUR MAGAZINE

O DONAHUE

10:00

6:00
O
(It
ffi
U

31 (17) BASEBALL L o s Angeles

W e will be CLOSED

5:00
0 1 4 O IL L I O A M 8 I S L A N D
T&gt; Q H O G A N S H ER O ES
d l : (3 5 1 T H E I N C R E D IB L E H U L K
0 { t o ) M I S T E R R O G E R S (R)

11 (17) THE BRADY BUNCH

5:30
0 (41 LAVERME S SHIRLEY I
COMPANY
I lia M - A 'S 'H
m o new s

(TO) P O S T S C R I P T S

0

BEVERLY HILLBILLIES

I D O T T Y M IN U T E S fT H U )

|rjFV&gt;ydT?roa«r»«l

( )1 , HEALTH FIELD (FRI)
m i |SUNRISE
(Hi (35) JIM BARKER

6:30
(X) O BEWITCHED

6:45
0 ( 1 0 ) AM. WEATHER

7:00

I fu - t r a i l i l i n n o f t h e A r m y
l ir M -r s i- in till- U n i t r i ! S t a t e *
la t r a c e d
to
Ih e c itiz e n u rld ie r o f th e R e v o lu t io n a r y
W ar T h e tra d itio n r a il* fo r
p a t r i o t * l u le a v e t h e i r j o b s
and r o m m u m t i e i t o b e c o m e
s o ld ie r s in t i m e s o f N a t i o n a l
e m e r g e n c i e i . It is a p r o g r a m
w h ic h
u
th riv in g
it i l l ,
lh a n k a t o c o n c e r n e d a n d
ro o p e ta liv e c iti/ e ru m l h r
A rm y H ra rrve

0 ( 4 ) TOOAY
WAKE UP
OOOO MORNWO AMERICA
5) TOM ANO JERRY
10 VILLA ALEGRE (R)
17) FUNTIME

7:30
(|) O MORNING WITH CHARLES
KURALT
31 (35) WOOOY WOOOPECKER
0 ( 1 0 ) SCSAM* STREET □

8:00
87(35) CASPER
31(17) I DREAM OF JCANNIE

8‘30
8Jj (35) GREAT SPACE COASTER
110) MISTER ROOCRS (R)
( 1 7 ) MY THREE SONS

THE U N SEEN
*' THE CH ILOREN

LOSE 15 Pounds
In Just 4 Weeks.
We specialize in individual w eight loss p ro g ram s ...
E very b o d y 's w eight problem is d iffe re n t We can
help you lose w eight In Ihe right places and
m a in ta in your d esired w eight w ithout im possible
dieting ... Most Im porlanily ... we help you lose
w eight safely!)

&gt;No c b b tracts
a Prevea successful for 44 yetrs
IFree coasuttetiM a Supervise* by Pie. pbytlcUn
• Sefe alffecttve

Take Control ovor the rotf of your Me

£

■*

-'V

*&lt; -

* '•

Col us todayI

Junas

beauty snom :

O P A L M O O R E Oavner Operator

Georgia Peter* O p e ra to r'

SPECIAL
PERM
in to *

quick whits tsocti,
Wsod on* cup toft b u t tar and one cup flour.
Spread in lea cubs tray, chill
wall and cut into 16 cubes.
Store in plastic beg in
frtasar. To make sauce, edd
one cube to a cup of milk
and neat slowly, stirring.

1 1 U M I. FIRST ST.
SANFORD
FH .SS-N M

r*V *

9 :3 0
,) ) o
H O U S E C A L L S A patient
Irom the psychiatric ward heads
Ann and Mr Peckier hostage ruth a
stolen gun |R|

k71Q JOKER S WILD
.11 |35t THE JEFFERSONS
ffi (10) MACNEIL / LEHRER
REPORT
TX 117) CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS

Cries, Help'
DEAR ABBY: Please help
me. My laundry basket, piled
high with untroned clothes, Is
staring me In the face. Dtshes
for the last two days are still
unwashed and setting In my
■ink. My apartment needs a
good cleaning. I am over­
weight, yet I continue to stuff
myself with more ice cream,
cookies and sweets than I
really w an t I’m so depressed
1 could cry I I’m * , divorced
and raising my t-year-old son
m yself. I have a good
secretarial Job, a nice car and
a nice apartment. So why do I
lack motivation and feel like
(bleep) moat of the time?
My friends would never
understand; they think I have
everything I could poeiibly
w ant My parents stopped
listening to me years ago.
Why la It that the only guye I
ilka are either committed to
■ormkbdy else or they don’t
like meT Why do I Juat want to
stay In bed all day when the
weekend comes? Why do I go
out and buy new clothes when
I’m feeling down?
I’m a terrific friend. I’m
always doing something for
others, but never do anything
for m yaelf. M aybe it’s
because I waa raised by a
mother who found fault with
everything I did and a father
who told me I would never
amount to anything. Abby,
am I going craiy or what?
I ’ve considered getting
prof«eioral help, but I can’t
afford it. I’ve even considered
committing suicide, but my
son needs me. Thanks for
listening.
TIRED OF LIVING A T *
DEAR TIRED: Your letter
is a eisaeic cry for kelp. First,
please see yew physician.
Y ear laek ef m etlvatlen,
feelings ef ie p reeslw aad
free seat btaftag ea sweets
a re s y m p te n s of peor
physical health. II yea are
physically fit, yea sheald

TONIGHT'S TV

18S0

G e o r g ia S p e c ia ltie s tit H ig h S tyle s

O PEN MON. THRU %AT, fe.m. • I p.m.

PH. m o m
SOI FREN CH AVE.

V i)« M
H I n i M k a i*« i
I2 f-1 4 4 1
2 12 -4 4 4 4
* Ru «Nwj».eti uei'C
A i f ■ Up*ii*#ri
J M k u e - i i W v.s
3U450S
lijrtt VhowKR(Ce-4p.

U hl C iW h U
2 4 4 -4 1 1 1

mrnmnem

H p u i g : 8 -1 »rvQ j - f M g n - F r i

SANFORD

Where Wefpht Centre! It Mere Then A Diet!

3 • «k P * ' »

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Ift—Eyanlng htrald, Sanford, FI.

legal Notice
O R D IN A N C E NO 417
A N O R D I N A N C E O F T H E C IT Y
OF C A S S E L B E R R Y . F L O R ID A .
A N N E X IN G
TO
AND
IN
C IU O IN G W ITHIN T H E COR
P O R A T E L IM IT S O F TH E CIT Y
OF C A S S E L B E R R Y . F L O R ID A .
AN A R E A OF L A N D S IT U A T E
A N D B E I N G IN S E M I N O L E
C O U N T Y . F L O R ID A . A N D M O R E
p a r t ic u l a r l y

d e s c r ib e d

AS F O LL O W S The North 110 00
leet ol the West *»5 leet and Ihe
West 5*S I eel. le w Ihe North 110
•eel end the South 4*t leel thereol
(A Ihe SE &lt;&lt;ol Ihe SW '&lt; o l Section
It, Township }l South, Renee 10
East, Seminole County, Florid*.
L n » Ihe South }M leel o l Ihe North
IIS lee l o l Ihe W e il }J0 lee l. A N D
ALSO L E S S th*l p e rl o* Ihe Wesl
)0t leel. L e t t Ihe North )IS leel
end ihe South &lt;»» leel thereol,
together with Ihe South 31 leel ol
the W etl JJS leet ol the South
ol
the N E
ol Ihe SW '« o l teld
Section It. A N D A L S O the! p erl ol
Ihe South ' , ot t**d N E ' 4 ol the SW
' i , le u Ihe W etl U S leet Ihereal
S*&lt;d p a rre l contains It t i t acres.
D E C L A R IN G A V A I L A B I L I T Y OF
M U N IC IP A L
S E R V IC E S .
D E F I N I N G C O N D IT IO N S O F
A N N E X A T IO N .
P R O V ID IN G
ZONING C L A S S IF IC A T IO N . R E
D E F IN IN G T H E C O R P O R A T E
L IM I T S O F C A S S E L B E R R Y ,
F L O R ID A . TO IN C L U D E SAID
parcel
or lan d
in -,'h e
M U N IC IP A L L IM IT S OF ; m D
C IT Y . A U T H O R IZ IN G A M E N D
M E N T OF C IT Y M A P TO IN
CLUDE
TH E A N N E X A T IO N
H E R E I N . P H O V ID IN G F O R t h e
R IG H T S A N D P R I V I L E G E S FO R
C IT IZ E N S H IP IN t h e C IT Y ;
P R O V ID IN G
S E V E R A B ILIT Y .
C O N F LIC T S A N D E F F E C T I V E
DATE
W H E R E A S . Ih ere h at been tiled
with the C ily Clerk o l Ihe City ol
Casselberry, F lo r id a .a petition lor
itnneralion signed by Ihe land
owner ol Ihe are* sought to be
a n n e ie d co n se n tin g lo and
requesting the annexation and
coning ol that parcel sp ecltically
described herein, and W H E R E A S ,
■he C ity Council ol Ihe City ol
Casselberry, F lorida . Iheretolore
al regular meeting ol Ihe C ily
Council has approved Ihe petition
signed by Ihe landowner ol Ihe
area sought lo be anneied, con
senling lo and requesting Ihe
annexation o l said parcel and has
con sid ered
th o ro u g h ly
the
feasibility ol such armeiatton and
foning lo the C ily o l Casselberry,
F lo r id a , in a c c o rd a n c e w llh
Chapter 171 OH. Law s (X F lorida,
lf/1 . and
W H E R E A S . ob|#ctlons to such
anneiatlon and zoning have been
considered and hearings held, and
d appearing In Ihe best interest ol
th eCilyo* Casselberry, Florida, to
annei and zone said property, and
W H E R E A S . Ihe C ily Council ol
Ihe City ol Casselberry, F lorida,
lias concluded Irom investigation
that all m unicipal services w ill be
available lo the a rra lo be a n n e ird
on Ihe c lle c llv e d ale o l this or
dmancr
NOW, t h e r e f o r e , b e it
ENACTED
BY
THE
C IT Y
CO U N CIL O F T H E C IT Y O F
C A S S E L B E R R Y , F L O R ID A
SEC I ION I
A N N E X A T IO N
A N D ZO NIN G — Thai Ihe C ity ol
"C a s se lb e rry,
F lo r id a .
does
lie re w ilh and hereby annei and
R esig nalr zoning ol a certain tract
ut land lying in Seminole County,
F lorida , and more p a rticu la rly
'described as lollow s. lo wil;
The North 110 00 leet o l Ihe West
**i leel and Ihe West S»* leet. less
the North 1JO leel and the South 4*4
leet thereol ol Ihe SE 14 ol Ihe SW
'c o l Section J l. Township 11 South.
Range X East, Seminole County.
F lorida , Less Ihe South 2*1 leet ol
Ihe North IIS lee l ol the Wesl 110
leel. A N D ALSO L E S S lh a l part ol
Ihe Wesl 20* leel, Less Ihe North
IIS leel and Ihe South FT* leel
thereol, togrther with Ihe South 11
leel ul Ihe Wesl US leel ol Ihe
South
o l Ihe N E 14 ol the SW '4
ol sa d Section 1*. A N D A LSO that
tiartof Ihe S o u th s ol \a&lt;d N E I , ol
Ihe SW '4. less Ihe Wesl U S leet
• liver 10I Said pare el contains 11*14
acres
S E C T IO N
It
Z O N IN G
D E S IG N A T I O N
Thai Ihe
vproperty described in Section I ol
this ordinance shall have Ihe
lullowmg zoning classification
H I O ne
and Two F a m ily
Dwelling D istrict
SECTIO N III
CO N DITIO N S
o r A N N E X A T IO N
None
SECTIO N IV
R E D E F IN IN G
L IM IT S O l D E C L A R A T IO N
Thai Ihe corporate lim its ol Ihe
City ol Casselberry, F lorida , be
and II is herewith and hereby
redefined so as lo include said
Irac 1 ol land herein described The
description herein contained shall
include a ll streets, roads, high
ways, alleys and avenues located
within or between Ihe i-iis lln g
m unicipal lim its and areas an
neied herein in Section I hereof
SECT IO N V
AM ENDM ENT
o r O l M C I A L C IT Y M A P
Thai
me C d y Clerk is hereby authorized
10 amend, alter and supplement
Ihe o llld a l Cdy map ol Ihe C ily ol
Casselberry. Florida, to include
llie a n n e ia tio n c o n tain ed in
Section I hrre ol
S E C T IO N
VI
SEVER
A B IL IT Y
II any section ot
portion ol a section ol this or
dmance proves lo be invalid,
unlawful, or unconstitutional. II
shall not be held to invalidate or
impair Ihe validity, lore*, or e lle c l
ol any other section or p a ri ol this
ordinance
SECT IO N VII
ANNEXED
AREA
R IG H T S
AND
P R IV IL E G E S
Thai upon thl*
ordinance becoming effective. Ihe
property owner in Ihe above
described anrveied area shall b*
entitled lo a ll o l Ihe rights and
privileges and im m unities as a r t
Irom lim e to lim e determ ined by
me governing authority ol Ihe City
ol Casselberry. F lcrid * . and the
provisions ol Ihe C h arla r ol Ihe
C ily ol Casselberry, F lorid* . In
accordance with Chapter 111 044.
Law s ol F lo rid a . 1*71
S E C T IO N VIII
E F F E C T IV E
DATE
This ordinance shall
become e lle c liv e th irty (101 day*
alter passage and adoption
f i r s t H E A D IN G this l i s t day
ol August. A O 1*01
SECO ND
R E A D IN G
AND
A O O P T I O N th is 141 h d a y o l
September, A D 1*11
APPRO VED
O W E N H. S H E P P A R D
M AYOR
ATTEST
MARY W HAWTHORNE.

CU V CLERX
PuRttth

September II. 21. Oc

letter S. II. INI
OEM **

Monday, Igpt. II, lt li

legal Notice
N O T IC E OP P U B L IC
M A R IN O
T H E S E M IN O L E C O U N TY
B O A R D O F CO M M ISS IO N E R S
w ill hold * public hearing In Room
100 o l the Sem in o le County
Courthouse, Ssnlord, F lo rid a on
N O V E M B E R 10, 1*11 AT 7 00
P M . or as soon th e rta tle r a t
possible to consider the following
P U B LIC
H E A R IN G
FO R
CHANGE
OP
Z O N IN O
R E G U L A T IO N S
II
JU L L IA N
H ALLER
H EZONE
FRO M
A t
A G R I C U L T U R E TO M IA V E R Y
L IG H T IN D U S T R IA L - PZ (10 7
H I M - Thai part ot the E ast &gt;*
of Ihe SW ' 4 ot the SW ' 1 o l Sec. 1*
IIS H E . lying W ly o l railroad
right ol w a y ; Subiect lo eaisting
road or roads, drainage and public
utility easem en1.il any Consisting
o l I * a c re s M O L . ( F u r th e r
described as being on the North
tid e o l SR 41*. West o l Jamestown
at Prison Hoadl (D ISTRICT No II
1)
MAHM OUD
ADEL
SH O U R ID E H - R E Z O N E F R O M
R I
S IN G LE
F A M IL Y
D W E L L IN G D ISTR ICT TO C l
R E T A IL C O M M E R C IA L PZ
(10 7 H I *0Lot I. La k e v ltw , Block
*. P lat Book S. Page 14 A lot SO It.
by ISO approalm alaly (Further
described a t on tha south side ol
SR 41*. W o l 17 *2. between P earl
Street and Lake Howell Roadl
(D ISTRICT No *1
1) T A M A R K D E V E L O P M E N T
C O R P O R A T IO N REZO NE
F R O M R 1A AA S IN G L E F A M I L Y
D W E L L IN G D ISTR ICT TO R 1AA
S IN G L E F A M I L Y D W E L L IN G
D ISTRICT - PZ (10 711) *1 Th# E ast 'v ol the SE 14 o l th# NW
'4 ol Set 1S11S10E, L E S S R W
lor D ike Road, Sem lnolt County,
F lorid* Consisting o l 10 0 77 acres
M O L (Furth er described a t on lha
south side o l D ike Road, Between
Dodd Road and lu tk a w ill* Road)
(DISTRICT No II
Further, a public titering w ill be
held by lha S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y
P L A N N IN G
AND
Z O N IN G
COM M ISSION ON O C T O B E R 7,
1*11 AT 7.00 P.M ., or a t toon
thereafter at possible. In Room 100
ot the Seminole County Cour
mouse. Saniord. F lorida , In order
lo rtv lew , hear comments and
make recommendations 10 Ihe
Board ol Counly Com m issioners ot
Seminole County on Ihe above
application!*)
Those in attendance w ill be
heard and w r lllr n comments may
be
H ie d
w ith
the
Land
Management Manager Hearings
may be continued from tim e to
tim e as found necessary Further
details available by callin g 111
41)0. E i l 1*0
Persons are advised lh a l II lhay
decide 10 appeal any decision
madp at Ih tte meetings, lhay w ill
nerd a record o l Ihe proceedings,
and lor such purpose, lhay may
need lo ensure lh a l a verbatim
record ol the proceedings l l made,
w h ich re c o rd
In clud es
the
te stim o n y and evid en ce upon
which the appeal it lo be made
Board ol County Com m issioners
Seminole Counly, Florid *
B Y Robert Slurm ,
Chairm an
Attest Arthur H Beckwith. Jr
Publish Sept 11, Oct I* Nov 2,
1(11
D E M 111_______________________
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
Nolle* 1* hereby given lh a l 1 am
engaged In b u lin t t s a l *10
Semoran Blvd A lla m on le Springs,
F la Seminole Counly, F lorida
under Ihe lic litio u t nam e o l SUN
C A SU A L F U R N I T U R E ,a n d lh a l I
intend lo register said nam e with
the Clerk o l Ihe C ircuit Court,
Seminole Counly, Florida In *c
cordance with Ihe provisions ot Ihe
Fictitious Name Statutes. T0W1I:
Section a*t 0* Florida Statutes
IN I
Sig H arry E F laic her
Publish September It, October S.
12. I*. I**l
•
DEM lit
N O TICE OF IN T E N T IO N TO
R E O IS T E R F IC T IT IO U S T R A D E
NAME
N OTICE IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
that th* undersigned. M O R SE
SHOE. INC intends lo register the
llc lllio u s tradenam e F A Y V A with
the Clerk ol Ihe C ircu it Court of
Seminole County, Florida, pur
suanl lo Section I ts 0*. Florid*
Statutes, IVS1
lh a l Ihe un
dersigned inlands lo engage In lha
business o l Ihe ratail sal* ol
loolwear and related iltm s *1 Hunt
Club Corners. Slate Road. *1* A
it* Hunt Club Boulevard. Apopka.
Flor id*
Dated this 2nd day ol Sep
irm b rr. If 11
M O R SE SHOE. INC
By Kenneth C Cum m ins
l it Secretary
Publish September 21, It, Oc
totoer S. II. 1*tt
D E M 101

legal Notice
O R D IN A N C E NO. SIS
A N O R D IN A N C E O F T H E C ITY
OF LO NG W O O D . F LO R ID A ,
A N N E X IN G
TO
AND
IN
C L U O IN G W ITHIN T H E COR
P O R A T E A R E A OF TH E C ITY
OF LONG W OOO. F L O R ID A . AN
A R E A OF L A N D S IT U A T E AN O
B E IN G IN S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y ,
ANO M O R E P A R T IC U L A R L Y
D E S C R IB E D AS FO LLO W S
W EST ISO4 F E E T OF LO T J,
LO N G W O O O
H IL L S
SU B
DIVISION. S E M IN O L E CO U N T Y ,
F LO R ID A .
PLAT
BOOK
*.
P A G E S IS A N D I*. R E D E
F IN IN G
THE
CORPO RATE
l im it s o f t h e c it y o f lo n g

WOOD. F L O R ID A , TO IN C L U D E
SAID L A N D W ITHIN TH E M U N I
C IP A L L IM IT S O F T H E C IT Y ,
A U T H O R IZ IN G
AM ENDM ENT
TO CIT Y M A P TO IN C L U D E
SAID L A N D A N N E X E D . PRO
V ID IN G FO R T H E R IG H T S A N D
P R I V I L E G E S FO R C IT IZ E N
SHIP IN T H E C IT Y , S E V E R
A B IL IT Y AN D E F F E C T IV E
D ATE
W H E R E A S , m ere has been tiled
with Ihe C ily Clerk ol the C ily ol
Longwood. Florida, a Petition
'o n lain in g lha names ol property
owners in Ihe area ol Seminole
County, F lo rid a , described as
lollows
West 1*0 4 leel ot Lot 1.
lo n g w o o d

h il l s

sub

D IV IS IO N . Se m in o le County.
Florida. P la l Book *, Pages IS and
II.
re q u e u in g a n n e ia tlo n lo the
corporal* are* o l Ihe C ily ol
Longw ood,
F lo r id a ,
and
requesting lo be Included therein;
and,
W H E R E A S , said Petition was
duly certified by Ihe Seminole
C o u n ly
P r o p e r ly
A p p ra is e r
pursuant to Ihe Charter o l the C ily
ol Longwood. Florida, Chapter 4*
11*1. L * w t ol Florida, It**, and
Chapter 712*7. Law s ol Florida,
l*7S. and Ihe certification ot the
Seminole Counly P roperly Ap
praiser a t to lha sufficiency ol
Such Petition pursuant to th*
terms ol said Charter received,
and.
W H E R E A S , the C ity Cdm
mission Ol the City ol Longwood.
Florida, has deemed It in Ihe brsl
interest ol Ihe City ot Longwood.
Florida, to accept said Petition
end lo an ne i said area.
NOW. T H E R E F O R E , b e it
O R D A IN E O BY TH E C IT Y
COM M ISSION OF t h e C IT Y OF
LO NGW O O D , f l o r i o a , a s
FO LLO W S
SECTIO N I That the following
described property, lo wit
W rit 1*0 4 feel ol Lo l 1,
Longw ood H ills S u b d iv isio n ,
Seminole Counly. F lorida, Plat
Book *, Pages IS and IB.
be and Ihe sam e l l hereby anneied
to end mede e part ot the C ily ol
Longwood. Florida, pursuant lo
Ihelerm sotth# C h arier ot Ihe City
ol Longwood. Florida, Chapter I f
11*4. L a w s ot F lo r id * . If**.
Chapter 751*7, Law s ot Florida,
1*7$. and Florida Statute 171 044
SECTION 1 Thai Ihe corporate
lim its ot Ihe C ily ot Longwood.
Florida, be and the sam e are
hereby redefined so as lo include
said land herein described and
enneied
SECTIO N 1 That the C ily Clerk
it hereby authorized lo amend,
alter and supplement lha official
cily map ot lha C ily o l Longwood,
Florida, to include th* annexation
contained in Section I hereof.
SECTIO N 4 Thai upon Ih ll
ordinance becoming etlectly*. Ihe
resident and property owners In
Ihe above described anneied area
shall be entitled to a ll o l the rights
and privileges and Im munltlas as
are. Irom lim e to lim e, determined
by the governing authority of the
Cityo t Longwood, Florida, and Ihe
provisions ol said C h arier o l the
C ily o l Longw ood. F lo r id a ,
Chapter ** lis t . Laws ol F lorida.
If**, *nd Chapter 751*7. Laws ot
Florida. I*7S
SECTIO N S II any section or
portion ol a section ol this Or
dmance proves to be invalid,
unlawful, or unconstitutional, II
shall nol be held to Invalidate or
im pair Ihe valid ity, force or ellecl
ul any other section or p ari ut Ihn
ordinance
S E C T IO N * A ll o rd in a n ce s or
p a H t o l o rd in a n ce s In c o n llic l
h erew ith be and Ihe sam e a re
hereby re p e a le d
S E C T IO N 7
This ord in a n ce
sh a ll la k e effect p u rsu an t lo the
p r o v is io n s o l F lo r id * S la lu le
S i l l 044
p a s s e d a n d a d o p t e d t h is

---- D A Y O F ------- A D 1*11
FIR ST R E A D IN G
September
14. 1*11
SECO N D H E A D IN G
----John F. Hepp
Mayor
City Ol Longwood.
F lorida
ATTEST
D L Terry
C ITY C L E R K
Publish September 21, 11. Oc
tober S. II. 1*11

IN TH E C IR C U IT C O U R T FO R
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y . F L O R ID A
P R O B A T E DIVISION
F l it Num ber 11.44* C P
Division
IN R E : E S T A T E OF
IDA M W U R Z E L B A C H E R
Deceased
N O T IC E O F A D M IN IS T R A T IO N
The adm inistration ot th* estate
ol IDA M W U R Z E L B A C H E R .
dec eased. F l it Number II *4* CP,
is pending In the C ircuit Court tor
Seminole County, Florida. Probata
Division. Hie address of which it
S rm ln o la C o un ty C ourth ouse.
Saniord. F lorida
The names and addresses ot th*
personal representative and th*
personal representative's attorney
are set forth below
A ll in t e r f ile d p erso n s a r t
required to tile with this court,
W ITHIN T H R E E M O N T H S OF
TH E FIR ST P U B L IC A T IO N O F
THIS N O T IC E
(II a ll claim s
against lha estate and (11 any
obi eel ion by an m teertled parson
lo whom notice w a i m ailed lh a l
challenges lh a valid ity ol lha w ill.
Ihe qualifications ot the personal
r e p r e ie n la llv a ,
venue.
or
lurisdiction o l lha court.
ALL
C L A IM S
AND
OB
JECT IO N S NOT SO F I L E D W ILL
BE F O R E V E R B A fiflE O
Publication ol m il Notice has
begun on September 21. 1*01
Personal Represent alive
E LM E R P W U R ZELBACH ER
IIS C Georgetown D rive
Casselberry. F lo rid * 11701
A tto rn e y
lo r
P e rso n a l
Representative
L W C A R R O L L JR ., E S Q U IR E
L A W R E N C E . W. C A R R O L L JR .,
PA
POST O F F IC E B O X 11
C A S S E L B E R R Y . F L O R I D A H747
Telephone I10S IU 4S7W
Publish: September I t SI. IN I
D E M 1(71

DEM *]
IN T H E CIR C U IT CO U R T FOR
IE M IN O L E C O U N T Y . F L O R ID A
P R O B A T E DIVISION
F lit Number II a l l CP
Division
IN R E ; E S T A T E OF
AN T H O N Y T. A U S T IN , a k a
A N T H O N Y T A U G A S lE W IC Z
Decrated
N O TICE OF A D M IN IST R A T IO N
Tha adm inistration ol the estate
ot A N T H O N Y T A U S T IN , a k a
A N T H O N Y T. A U G A S lE W I C Z
deceased. F l it Number I t 410 CP.
it pending in th* C ircuit Court for
Seminole County, F lorida . Probata
Division, lh a address ot which is
Saniord. F lorida
Th* nam es and addresses ot the
personal representative and the
personal representative's attorney
a r t set forth below
A ll in t a r a tla d perso ns are
required to HI* with this court.
W ITHIN T H R E E M O N T H S OF
T H E F IR S T P U B L IC A T IO N OF
THIS N O T IC E : &lt;11 a ll claim s
against Ihe astale and (11 any
001act Ion by an Interested person
to whom nolle* was m ailed lh a l
challenges lha v alid ity o&lt; the w ill,
me qualifications ol lha personal
re p re s e n ta tiv e ,
v tn u e ,
or
lurisd iction o l Ih# court.
ALL
C L A IM S
AND
OB
JE C T IO N S NOT SO F I L E D W IL L
BE FO REVER BARRED.
Publicotlon ot this Notice has
begun on September 11, 1*11
Personal Representative:
Thomas V. Austin
ItS L y n n Avenue
ra y e tir v ilie , N C i t i o i
A tto rn e y
lo r
P e rso n a l
Representative
Stephen H Coover
P O Dr ew er H
Telephone: ]0» 223 4BSI
Publish: September 11. M , IN I
D E M 14J

-

. f

legol Notice

Legal Notice

IN TH E C IR C U IT CO U R T . IN
A N D FO R S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y ,
N O T IC E O F P U B L IC
F L O R ID A .
H E A R IN O
C IV IL ACTIO N NO
THE BO ARD OF CO U N TY
11 111* CA I f K
C O M M IS S IO N E R S
OF
ROSCOE E O IT and
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y w ill hold a
S A R A H F OTT, hi* w ile.
public hearing in Room 700 o l the
P lain tiff*
Sem in o le C o u n ty C o u rlh o u s t.
vs
Saniord. F lorida , on N O V E M B E R
w i l l i a m d M c C l e l l a n d and
10. t i l l al 1:00 P .M , or as soon
j a n e m M c C l e l l a n d . nis w ile
thereafter a t postible, lo co n tld rr
Defendants
a specific land us* amendment lo
N O TICE OF ACTIO N
Ihe Se m in o le C o un ty Cam
TO: W IL L IA M D M C C L E L L A N D
prehenilv* Plan and R E Z O N IN G
East M cDow ell
ol Ihe described properly.
Mesa. Arizona i s m
AN O R D IN A N C E A M E N D IN G
j a n e m M c Cl e l l a n d
O R D IN A N C E
77 IS
W H IC H
East M cDow ell
A M E N D S T H E D E T A IL E D L A N D
USE
ELEM ENT
OF
THE
Mesa. Arizona IS707
YOU
ARE
HEREBY
S E M IN O L E
COUNTY
COM
P R E H E N S IV E p l a n
fro m
N O T IF IE D that an action lo
fo re clo se a m o rtq ag e on the
LOW D E N S IT Y R E S ID E N T IA L
TO P L A N N E D UN IT D E V E L O P
lollowmq property In Seminole
M E N T FO R T H E P U R P O S E OF
Counly, F lo rid a .
F R O M A I AG
East SO leef ol Lots * and 7, Block .R E Z O N I N G
R IC U L T U R E
TO P L A N N E D
17. Tier *. TOWN OF SA N FO R D .
U N IT D E V E L O P M E N T , T H E
P la l Book 1 Pages S* through *4.
F O LLO W IN G D E S C R IB E D P R O
P u b lic R e c o rd s o l S e m in o le
PCRTY
County, F lo r id a , su b je ct to
T h e S W 'io llh e S W '401 Section
easement (4 leet wide lying 7 leet
2*. Range M East, Seminole
either Sid eo l centerline ol e iiit in g
Counly, F lorida , lets the East '4
sewer line across said properly
thereof, and also lha North ’ &gt; ot
s e rv ic in g
d u p le i
d w e llin g
the
NW '4 ot the NW ’ 4 ol Section
designated as IOOIA 1U0IB E lm
IS. Township 21 South. Range 10
Avenue. Saniord. F lorida
East, less the East U thereof.
has been tiled agamst you and you
Consisting of 4] S acres M O L.
are required lo serve a copy of
(Further described as at Ihe in
your written defenses. II any, lo it
lersectlon o l Dike and Howell
on H A R R Y G R E ID . I ll o l SHIN
B ra n c h
R oad
( N o rlh e a s l
H O LS E R . L O G A N A N D MON
quadrantl I Ol ST No I)
C R IE F . Attorneys lo r P ia in litt,
A
P
P
L
I
C
A
T
I
O
N
H
A
S
BEEN
Post O lllc e Hoi 111*. Saniord.
S U B M IT T E D B Y O R S COR
F lorida 11771. and (lie Ihe original
PO R A T IO N - P Z I l t l l l l f*
with the Clerk ol Ihe above Court
Further, the P L A N N IN G A N D
on or before November 1, 1(11,
Z O N IN G
C O M M IS S IO N
OF
otherwise, a Judqment may be
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y w ill hold a
entered against you lo r Ihe rebel
public hearing In Room 100 of Ih*
demanded in Ihe Complaint.
S em ino le C o u n ly C o u rlh o u sa ,
W ITNESS my hand and Ihe seal
Sanford, F lorida, on O C T O B E R 7,
ol this Court on this ISIh day ot
l* ll at 7 00 p m , or as soon
September. I(*l
thereafter as possible, lo review,
Arthur H Beckwith, Jr
hear
co m m en ts
and
m ake
Clerk o l the Circuit
recommendations to Ihe Board ol
Court
County Com m issioners on Ihe
By Susan E Tabnr
above captioned ordinance and
Deputy Clerk
rezonmg
IS E A LI
Additional information m ay be
Publish September IS. October J,
obtained by contacting Ihe Land
12. 1*. 1(11
Management Manager at 111 4110.
D E M 11*
E i l 1*0
IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T FOR
Person* un*ble lo attend th*
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y . F L O R ID A hearing who wish to comment on
P R O B A T E DIVISION
the proposed actions may submit
F ile Number II 114 C P
written statement* lo Ih* Land
Management D ivision p rior to I ha
Division
IN B E : E S T A T E OF
scheduled public hearing. Persons
ETH EL M PRESCOTT.
appearing at the hearings may
Deceased submit written statement* or be
N O TICE OF A D M IN IST R A T IO N
heard o rally
Person* are advised that, II Ihey
TO A L L P E R S O N S H A VIN G
decide lo appeal any decision
C L A IM S
OR
OEM ANOS
made at these meeting*. Ihey w ill
AG AIN ST TH E A B O V E E S T A T E
need a record o l Ih* proceedings,
ANO A L L O T H E R PE R S O N S
and. lor such purpose, they may
I N T E R E S T E D I N TH E E S T A T E
need
lo ensure lh a l a verbatim
YOU
ARE
HEREBY
record
o l Ihe proceeding* I* made,
N O T IF IE D
th at
Ihe
ad
In clud es
Ihe
m inistration of Ihe estate o l Ethel w h ich re c o rd
te stim o n y and evid en ce upon
M
P r e s c o lt, deceased, F ile
which Ihe appeal is lo be based
Number 11 1*4 CP. is pending in
Board o l Counly
the C ircuit Court tor Seminole
Commissioner*
Counly, F lorida, Probate Division,
By Robert Slurm ,
Ihe address ol which is Seminole
Chairm an
Counly Courthouse. Post Office
Attest: Arthur H Beckwith Jr.
Drawer C. Saniord. F L 12771 The
Publish September 11 4 October
personal represenlallve ol the
SB. 4 November 7, I f f !
eslale is Edw in Leroy Prescolt,
DEM lit
whose address Is Post O lllc e B o i
*7,Longwood. F L 17750 The name
N O T IC E OF P U B L IC
and ad d ress o l Ihe perso nal
H E A R IN O
representative's attorney are se!
THE BO ARO OF CO U N TY
forth below
C O M M IS S IO N E R S
OF
A ll persons having claim s or
S E M IN O LE C O U N T Y w ill hold a
demands a g a im l Ihe estate are
Public hearing In Room 200 o l Ih*
re q u ire d ,
W IT H IN
THREE
Sem inol* C o u n ly C o u rlh o u so ,
M ON TH S F R O M T H E D A T E OF
Saniord, F lorida , on N O V E M B E R
TH E FIR ST P U B LIC A T IO N OF
tO, IN I al 1 00 P.M ., or as soon
THIS N O T ICE, to HI* with th*
lh are alie r as possible, lo consider
clerk ol Ihe above courl a w r lllr n
a specific land us* amendment lo
s la lrm rn i ol any claim or demand
the S e m in o le C o u n ly Com
they may have Each claim must
prehm slve P la n and R E Z O N IN G
be «n writing and must indicate Ihe
ol Ihe described prop trty.
h a m lor me claim , Ihe name and
AN O R D IN A N C E A M E N D IN G
a d d rrs s o llh e creditor or his agent
O R D IN A N C E
77 IS
W H IC H
or attorney, and Ihe amount
A M E N D S T H E D E T A IL E D L A N D
claim ed II Ih# claim Is not yel
USE
ELEM ENT
OF
THE
due, Ihe dale whrn it w ill become
S E M IN O L E
COUNTY
COM
due shall be staled II Ihe claim Is
P R E H E N S IV E P LA N FR O M
contingent or unliquidated, Ihe
LOW D E N S IT Y R E S ID E N T IA L
nature ol ihe uncertainty shall be
TO C O M M E R C IA L FOR THE
staled ll Ihe claim is secured, Ihe
P U R P O S E OF R E Z O N IN G F R O M
security shall be described The
A I A G R I C U L T U R E TO C l
claim ant shall deliver sufficient
R E T A IL C O M M E R C IA L . THE
copies o l ihe claim lo the clerk lo
F O LLO W IN G
D E S C R IB E D
enable tn r clerk lo m ail one copy
PRO PERTY
lu each personal r epresenlallve [
Consisting o l two parcels: III
A ll persons interested in the
The E &lt;t ol the NW '4 ol Ihe SW '4
estate lo whom a copy o l this and Ihe N E 14 o( Ih* SW '4 o l Sec.
24 IIS JOE. L E S S Iht N E &lt;4 ol lha
Notice ol Adm inistration has been
mailed are required. W ITHIN
SW ' 1 ol Sec 14 IIS 10E. and LE SS
the N 11 leel lo r road 71 Tha W &gt;1
T H R E E M O N T H S F R O M TH E
ol Ihe NW 'lO lt h e SW 'a. lest road
DATE
OF
THE
F IR S T
■n Section 14 11 10 Consisting o l I f
P U B L I C A T IO N
Ol
THIS
acre* M O L (Further described a*
NO TICE, to Hie any oblectiont
at Ihe SE corner o l Red Bug Lake
they may have lh a l challenge Ihe
Hoad and Dodd Roadl (DISTRICT
validity ol Ihe decedent's w ill, Ihe
No II
q u a lific a tio n s o l th e perso nal
A P P L IC A T IO N HAS B E E N
representative, or Ihe venue or
S U B M I T T E D B Y L O U IS P
Jurisdiction o l Ihe court
K IL G O R E . JR — P Z I I O l l U f l
A L L C L A IM S . D E M A N D S . A N D
Further. Ih* P L A N N IN G A N D
O B JE C T IO N S NOT SO F I L E D
Z O N IN G
C O M M IS S IO N
OF
W ILL BE F O R E V E R B A R R E D
S E M IN O LE C O U N T Y w i'l hold 1
Dale ol the first publication ol
public
hearing
in
Room
700
ol
the
(hit N olice ol Adm inistration
Sem inol* C o u n ly Courthouse,
September 21. I d I
Saniord. F lorida, on O C T O B E R 1,
Edwin Leroy P rrsco tl
1*11 at 1 00 P M . or a i soon
As Personal H epresenlallve
th e re a llrr a* possible, lo ravlew,
ol the E s la le ol
h ra r
c o m m en ts
and
m oka
E lh e l M Prescolt
recommendations lo the Board ol
Deceased
Counly
Commissioner*
on
Ih#
A T T O R N E Y TOR P E R S O N A L
abovr captioned ordinance and
R E P R E S E N T A T IV E
rezonlng
KENNETH M BEANE.
Additional inform ation m ay ba
E SQ U IR E
obtained by contacting lha Land
Posl O lllc e Drawer One
Management M anager al 11) *1)0.
Casselberry. F L 11707
E i l 1*0
Telephone I10S) 11* 7SSS
Persons unable lo allen d Ih*
Publish September I t 4 October S.
hearing who wish to comment on
1*11
the proposed actions may Submil
written statement* lo lha Land
- D E M W c Y IT K IU S N A M R
Management D ivisio n p rior lo Ih*
Nolle* is hereby given lh a l we
scheduled public hearing Persons
a r t engaged in business *1 SI0 N
appearing a l in* hearings m ay
17 B *1 Longw ood Sem inole
submit written statement* or be
Counly, Florida under Ih* I k
heard o rally
Idiom name ol P E R S O N A L IZ E
Persons a r t advised lh a l, il they
AU T O S A LE S , and lh a l we intend
drcide lo appeal any decision
lo register said name with the
made
at these meetings, they w ill
C le rk o l the C ir c u it C o u rt,
need e record o l Ihe proceedings,
Seminole Counly, Florida in *c
and. lor such purpose, they may
cordance with Ihe provisions Ol Ihe
need to ensure lh a l a verbatim
Fictitious Nam* Statutes, T0W1I.
record ol the proceedings is mad*,
Section 14S0* Florida Statutes
w h ich re c o rd
In clud es
Ih*
If SI
te stim o n y end e v id e n c e upon
Sig Lloyd A Story
which Ihe #pi&gt;e*l Is lo be based
L a rry L acailla d*
Board o l Counly
Publish
September I*. II, It,
Commissioners
October S. l* lt
Seminole Counly, F lo rM a
DP M A I
By Robert Sturm ,
FIC T IT IO U S N A M I
Chairm an
Nolle* is hereby given lh a l | am
A lle s l: A rth ur H Beckwith Jr.
engaged in business a l SI7 V ihicn
Road Saniord Seminole Counly. Publish September If, A October
I*. A November 1, Iff)
F lorida under lha H ctilio ut name
04 O M E G A T R U C K IN G , and that 1 D E M 117
inland lo re g u la r said n*m« with
ih t Clark o l lh a C ircuit Courl,
Seminol* Counly, F lo rid a in *&lt;
cordance w ith th* provision* ol It*
Fictitious Nam * Statute*. To W il:
Section U SD * F tor Mo Slalule*
l» V .
Sig Robm w Starnes
Publish September 11. II, Oc
to ter S. t l, 1*11
n r u ms
?A*(

A

t 1 U M■U A

0RANC1JUICE
U H l A K

a «

FIC T IT IO U S N A M I
Nolle* is hereby given mat I am
engaged in o u sln e ss at 10*
Baywood Aya. Longwood. F la.
Seminol* Counly, F lo rid a under
Ihe llctitiou* nam e o l R E P O
D EPO T , and that I intend to
register said nam e with the Clark
ol lh a C irc u it Court. Seminol*
Counly, F lo rid a in accordanc*
w ilh th# provision* o l m# F it
Iit Km* N#m» Statutes. To W it:
Section »*so* F lo rid * Slaiu tt*
l*S7
Sig W A (tollm an Jr.
Publish. September M . October A

11. It. Iff I
D E M 117

• r

• m f

p

a

* r

**

CLASSIFIED ADS

H AIR S T Y L IS T wanted
with following Immad.
C a ll Delores 111 IS M

O rla n d o -W in te r Park

S e m in o le

831-9993

322-2611
CLASSIFIED DEPT.
HOURS
1:00 A M . — 5:30 P .M
M O N D A Y th ru F R I D A Y
S A T U R D A Y f Noon

M A N A G E M E N T train** apply
in p erson fo r g re a t opportunity Casa M ia P iltie r a .
n i loot

RATES
1 tim e .......................M c s lliw
1 co nstcutivt U n its S O ca lln t
7 consBCutlvt tlm at ..........O c
10coR M cutlvt tlm a t. v c a lin t
11.00 M inim um
I t l n n M inim um

H E A V Y E q u ip m e n t o p e ra to r
Si SOper hour m inim um . M u si
be able to operate motor
grader Apply *1 Longwood
C ity H a ll I S . Mon F r l. I1SW.
Warren Av*., Longwood. Fla.

DEADLINES
Noon The Day Before Publication

T Y P I S T — M ature Fast and
a c c u ra te M e d ic a l, pension
and profit sharing plana.
United Solvenls. 212 a***

Sunday - Noon Friday

LAYOUT. F ille r . Welder. Shear

1 C a u l of Thanks
We wish to e ip re ss our deepest
gratitude lo a ll our friends and
neighbors lor th* (lowers, food
and cards ol sym pathy sent at
Iht tim e o l the loss ol our w ile
and beloved mother Aldin*
H u tch in so n
The
F ra n k
Hulchim on F a m ily.

f o r the U ltim ata in
Ch ild Care A C h ild ’s
World ’ l l 1424

*

S P U R OF T H E M O M E N T
B A B Y S IT T IN G
___________111 *3«*__________
B A B Y sillin g in our Christian
home, no weekend* or nights
Phone 111 1*71_____________
B A B Y S IT T IN O in my
home, any age
111 0451

4—Personals
W IL L Ihe g e n tle m a n school
teacher, who asked lo r a
weekend p o sitio n , please
. contact Al Dawsoh a l 111 *Sft
or 171 4*71 *

4 Brake Operators, F i r i l and
Second Shifts. Top Pay, Good
Benefits. C a ll Florida Iron
Works Inc. 227 0100__________

6— ChikJ C a re

CTlSSilled Ads a r t the smallest
big news Hems you w ill find
anywhere

iA -H N tttiftB M U ty
W H Y B E L O N E L Y ! W rit* "G et
A M a ta " Dating Service, A ll
ages P.O. B o i *011, C le a r­
water, FI. 11S1I.
L O N E L Y : W rite " B r in g in g
Peop le
Together
D a tin g
Se rvice !" A ll ages A Senior
C illie n * P O. Box 1*51. Winter
Haven. FI# I K K

5-Lost ft Found
LOST gray m ile poodle Ird area
D eltona, needs m e d ic a tio n ,
reward *04 71* 4ISI or 71* 17*5

legal Notice
IN TH E C IR C U IT C O U R T FO R
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y , F LO R IO A
P R O B A T E DIVISION
F ile Num ber 41 441 C P
Ol visien
IN R E : E S T A T E OF
R A N D A L L H RO W E.
Deceased
N O TICE O F 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
C L A IM S
OR
DEM ANDS
AG AIN ST T H E A B O V E E S T A T E
ANO A L L O T H E R P E R S O N S
IN T E R E S T E D I N TH E E S T A T E :
YOU
ARE
HEREBY
N O T IF IE D
th at
Ihe
ad
m in is tra tio n o l ih e e s la le ol
R A N D A L L H RO W E, deceased.
F ile Number l l * * IC P, is pending
In Ihe C ircuit Court lo r Seminole
Counly, F lorida , Probata O lviilo n ,
ih* address ol which Is Seminole
C o un ly C o u rlh o u so , S a n io rd ,
F lo r id a 11171. Th* p tr s o n a l
representative of Ih* estate is
C A U L E Y C C O P E L A N D , whose
address is p o Draw er Q, Cross
C ily . Florida 12*11 Th* name * 'd
ad d ress
ol
th*
p erso n al
representative'* attorney are set
forth below
A ll persons having claim s or
demand* against Ih* estata ar*
re q u ire d .
W IT H IN
THREE
M ON TH S F R O M THE D A T E OF
THE FIRST P U B L IC A T IO N OF
THIS N O T IC E , to III* with the
tle rk oi in* above courl a written
statement ol any claim or demand
they may have Each claim must
be in w n lin g and must Indicate th*
basis lor Ih t claim . Ih* name and
address o l Ih* creditor or his agent
or attorney, and Iht amount
claimed. II Ihe claim is not yal
due. Ihe dale when il w ill become
due shall be slated l l Ihe claim is
contingent or unliquidated, tha
nature ol Ih* uncertainty sh all be
stated II ih* claim is secured, th*
security sh all be described Th#
claim ant shall d eliver sufficient
copies o l Ih* claim lo Ih* clerk lo
enable the c le rk lo m ail on* copy
lo eech personal representative
A ll persons interested in Iht
eslale lo whom a copy oi this
Nolle* ol A dm inistration has been
mailed are required. W ITHIN
T H R E E M O N T H S F R O M TH E
DATE
OF
THE
F IR S T
P U B L IC A T IO N
OF
TH IS
N O T ICE, to l i l t any objections
Ihey m ay have that challenges Ihe
validity o l th* decedent-* w ill, Ihe
g u a lilic a llo n s of Ih* p e rso n a l
represenlaliv*. or Ih* venue or
lurisdiction ot Ih* courl.
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 NOT SO F I L E D
W ILL B E F O R E V E R B A R R E D
Dal* o l the lir s l publication ol
this Notice o l Adm inistration:
September 11. I f f l
C aulty C Copeland
As Personal Represenlaliv*
ol the Estate ol
R A N O A L L H RO W E
Deceased
A T T O R N E Y FO R P E R S O N A L
R E P R E S E N T A T IV E
J Doyle Thomas
P O Boi lit
Cross C ily . Florida H a lf
Telephone 1*04)4*11(00
Publish September I f 4 October S.
1*tt
D E M 111
N O TICB
U N D I D FIC T IT IO U S
N A M I STATUTE
TO W H O M IT AAAY C O N C E R N
Nolle# Is hereby given that lha
un d ersig ne d p u rsu a n t le tha
" F lc t illo u s
N am *
S la lu le , "
Chapter 1*5 Ot, F lorid* Statutes,
w ill rag (star w ith th# Clerk ot Ih*
C ircuit Court, tn and for Seminol*
County, F lorida , upon receipt ot
proof ot th# publication ot this
notk*. th* fictitiou s name, to wit:
T R A V E L W O R LD , under which
th# und trtlg n ad corporation is
angagad in bvtlnaes a l j* j| L a*
Road, W intar P a rk , Florida.
That tha p arty intarestad In said
ta r tin m anltrprts# is a* lollow s:
T R A V E L W O R L D OF O R LA N D O .
INC.
D alad at O rla n d o , O rangp
C « m iy , F lorida , S e p ltm b tr f,

mi.

t r a v e l w o rld

OF O R LA N D O . INC.
BY: C H A RLEN E FA U LE Y ,
A m (slant Sacralary
PvW Nh: September 14, i l , a
October S. IN I
DEM ■

c o m p le t e b e a u t y f a c ia l ,

B Y A P P O I N T M IN T O N L Y
l l l l f f l ar 14MISS

1 9—Good Things to Eat
Banana*
lib * I 00
7 lo r I 00
Cukes
' Peppers
1 lo r 100
each .1*
W Lopes
Green Onions
llo r . l*
Salad Tomatoes
4 lb*. 1.00
Fresh Pum pkins 7* to 1.4* **
Red Del Apple*
4 lbs. 100
Jonathan Apples
lib s . 1.00
Gold Del Apples
lib s . 100
Mutzu Apples
1 lbs. I 00
Fresh Apple Cider
'y g a l I f f
A ll Purpose Potatoes 10 lbs 100
Green*
a bunch *»
1 eil wood Corn is Ini Buy il by Ih*
b o i or by Ihe ear Fresh dally.

W tT a k # Food Stomps
L E R O Y FAR M S
S R 44
Watson's O ld F a r m

¥

¥

¥

4

¥

¥

¥

T H E B EST W AY
AAA
W E 'R E P L A C I N G
GOOD P EO P LE
JU S T L IK E YO U
W HY N O T YOU?
C A LL EA R LY
323-5175
Legal Secretaries ............. t i t
E xc Secy..............................I»S0
PT Bookkeeper................... Open
Insurance Clerk ............... Open
Cashier .................
Open
Denial A ssista n t.............
SAM
H ou sekeeper..................... HOC
B e a u tic ia n ....................... Open
Furn iture Sales
........... Open
System* Analyst ..............S ID ]
W arehouseO lspalchar ....11941
D r iv e r ................................. 5440

AAA EM P LO YM EN T
L E T US H E L P Y O U
323*5174
1717 F R E N C H
(acreai tram P in a H u ll

W AREHOUSEM AN
la c lo r y
experience a m u ll. Haavy
liltin g rtg u ira d F u ll benefits,
a p p ly In p arso n. U n ited
Solvenls 1107 A irp o rt Blvd.
------- a— ------------------------------

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

COOK

F A S T F O O D O P E R A T IO N
Good salary, hospitalization, 1
week paid vacation avory *
m o n lh s.
E x p a r le n c t
not
n e c a ssa ry . Phon* M # n*o»r
Lake M a ry t* - m i n i

11—Instructions
Tannls* instruct Ion — U .S ^ .t.A .
Certified Group o r P riv a te
lessons Children a specialty.
“ D e v i M sllcia w s* !. H t - llf t *

_H—Htk&gt;tthnhd
V ID R O B le ctran ict R tn ta l and
Salas C*. I* opening I new
stares In Central F la rld a in tha
naat ] years and is laakinB far
men and w tm tn t* staff It*
staras. Star* managers, rental
managers, secretaries, and
sales persons needed new.
Please apply In person l i t
C s m m t r c la l St. S a n la rd .
Ceilege G rads Preferred.
P O LIC E O F F IC E R - Th# City
ol Orlando w ill be scheduling
applicants lo r Ih* examination
loc P O LIC E O F F IC E R . Con
la d tha C IV IL S E R V IC E OF
F IC E , in person, C IT Y H A L L
A N N E X - 440 S BO O NE
A V EN U E, M O N DAY. SEP
T E M B E R 11 thru M O N D A Y ,
SEPTEM BER
II ,
I*t1
(W E E K D A Y S I 00 (O 5:001 10
be scheduled lo r Ih* entrance
examinations M ust be a U. S.
Citizen, l l years ol ag* by
February 11, l* t). high school
grad or slat* equivalent, good
character, no felony convlc
H ons
O R L A N D O IS A N
E Q U A L O P P O R T U N IT Y E M
PLO YER .
_____

P A R T -F U L L T IM E
R N - L P N • A IO I 1
Quality Protasslonals Naodad to
meet help need* o l Seminol*
County H o s p ita ls ■ N u rs in g
Homes.
H IG H E S T P A Y IM M E D IA T E P A Y
On Call M td lc a l Services
C all *22-1aal

II—Situations Wontid
W ILL do babysitting, washing 4
ironing In my home 21) ISM
Thurs 4 F r l *S. 1217124
anytime
ST CR IN G IT M A X E S W A S T E ­
S E L L IN G IT M A K E S CASH.
P L A C E A C L A S S IF IE D A O
NOW Call i n &gt;411 o r H I N i l .

W O M EN tired o l to hr. wk.
went lo be own boa*, choose
your own hr* M ake n e t t lent
monay F o r Information H I
I0*f, 14* 51SS *11. s p m
TWO questions: W ill you be
fin ancially indeptndtnl in 1 to
S years? A r t you paid what
you a r t w o rth ! II not c a ll 222

• • • • • • • ••••••••• •a *

GONVBMIMC!
STOW CASHins
Good salary, h o sp llailtallo n. 1
weak paid vacation every f
m onths.
E x p a r ltn c a
nol
n e cessa ry
F o r In te rv ie w
phone the manager a l:
A irpa rt lie d . M
C e il el berry *t
Celery A v i t t
Lake M ary M
I M

M

I I H M

111*151
11*1111
1114111
HUMS
I H f M

YO U N G C h ristia n M an to s h o rt
m y 2 Bdrm House with same
&gt;
1rent It »*$ M l 4144.

P R IV A T E E N T R A N C E
n i iis i

f H

N E E D good hom e! I need a
good, mature part lim a s ille r
lor my husband 111 S a il 1 11.

SAN FO RD Raas w kly. |
monthly ro ttt. U lll Inc. K it
200 Oak. Adults 141 IN I.

M A N qualified lo do carpentry A
maintenance Apply In person
100 W. llt h SI.

RN OR LPN
*11 and 111 Shift F u ll 11m*.
A p p ly In p arson S a n io rd
Nursing Convalescent Canter,
tSQ M allonvitl* Av*.
R IG H T now w t need 0 lew good
sales people who have th*
ambition and d td k a tio n lo
succeed II that * you. than
we're prepared to otter you
roal rewards and the methods
le get them. For interview,
please c a ll Century 11, Hayes
R ealty Services. Inc., Saniord
112 2059
L P N 111 1 nights per week
A p p ly L a k e v ie w
N u rsin g
C arter, t i t Ind Si , Saniord.
AVON E E P R IIC N T A T IV E I
Th* P a r i T im * Career
*44.207* - C o lle d N S US*
W O ULD Ih* Young Lad y who
answered th* ad tor a wood
w o rk in g lob. p ita s * c a ll
Seaworthy Wood Products at
222 41*4__________________ *
CO N CESSIO N 4 g ilt shop. aap.
p a rt lim a . W ta k a n d s 4
holidays * must. A p p ly Central
Florida Zoo.

jrrtU C T M l
F a m ily 4 A d u lt*
P o a ttU t | cov* Apt*, r a m r o n * a%

1 Bdrm lly bath, Firaplaco,
Form a l D ining R . M adam
Kitchen. Cent H A, Ouiet and
woodtd. I l l S411 aft S.
B AM BO O C O V E
apt*. A vaila b le
premises. 1211140
R id g e w o od A r m f . t B d rm .
Apis, tram ID S. 1 Bdrm . also
avail. Pool, tennis court. S l ­
a in

**♦»• Otyaspi* J

pm i

H U ES

MtHaNvilia Tries Apts.
Spacious, madam i asm, t
MtN apt. carpalad. Bit
aqulpped. c h b a . Naar
haapMai &amp; taka
-pats, tpa. m u g .
SSL1"."? ?

**** * * e f « e b m

D M Lacptad 17-41 (wt i m »

*

«p

�41—Houses

UnhmWvd

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

41—Houses

Lie. R eal Estate Broker
1540 Sanlord A v t

r b * m + am ,
c t r t m le
b it h ,
fu rn itu re
available, •b u ilt, U U mo i,
. M il* ]

SAN D ALW O O D V illa* Airport
ei vd , Sertord 1 Bdrm . 1 B*
T ht R to lly Start, R t t llo r t

i tn mi.

11-Aprtmantt Fumbtad
I BOR turn apt, Adults

tUS, Sec . Dep S100
Carpeted m i m

l

Alger &amp; Pond
REALTY, INC.
LOW IN T E R E S T ! Owner w ill
finance 1 bdr home with U OuO
dn at 13 percent lot lor 20 yrs
C all today lo r d etails' 53*.900
MINI R A N C H * wooded acres
surround a * bdr, 1 bth
Builders custom home Built In
bookcases. 3 screened patios,
fountain i solarium E it r a s
galorel SI7e.no

STOP A N D T H IN K A M IN U T E .
It Classified A dt didn't w ort
..
in e rt wouldn't be tny.

323-7843

31A—D uplexes
1 B O R, t l r w » carpet, tto vt,
retrlg w d nook up, no p tlt.
1115 with l e n t 1 toe. 371 1941
S A N F O R D tp a clo ut 3 bdrm , 1
M h. a ir, d r a p ti. 5)50 mo. -e
d tp l i t 154.
B - tw m

um vm nnag

A T T R A C T IV E ] bdr., IV, btti.
C H A , w a ib t r d r y t r , con
v tn itn tly loca ltd *375
33) *570

1 BDR , 1 blh, assume FM A mtg
57,500 dn S17.50O total. aaC
cond move right In 137 3174

C R E A T IV E
‘ F in a n c in g '
Academ y Manor. 1 Bdrm, 1&gt;j
Ba New carpet * pa.nl,
carport Rear tenced Big So*.
t;e.eoo h i io n _____________
SANFO RD LA N D M A R K
Spacious and lovely 7 Story
hom e * B d rm . 7 ', B a lh ,
Form al L iv in g and Dining
Room Charm ing interior 3
B d rm
S e rva n ts Q u a rte rs
L a rg e
c o rn er
lot
w ith
Beautiful Tree* t»70 S Park
SI54.700

CallBart

SENIOR CITIZENS
T n M , two M
ly u M *

WS
j u i t a r :

B L O G W X Lot Good
Terms 114.500

apart

1 LO T S Sanlord Ave
517.500
B LD G

R EA L ESTATE
R E A L T O R .m ta tp

Associaies me Realtors
131 *5*0

59 -M u lc a l

j bdrm , I B with
doublt car g arag t. In
Dtltona. C a ll S7* 1*37.
LONOW OOO I Bdr IVy B*lh,
F lo r id a Room , C a r p ttln g .
1tre e d yard, w ilb c ltru t I reel
U t ilit y R m
and C a rp o rt.
E itr e m tly clean 5350 mo plus
Security Deposit. C all between
I A 7 p m 17] MS*

C H E C K TH ISO UT
B E A U T IF U L 15*2 Royal Oaks 71
wide 1 bdr, 7 blh. garden tub.
d e lu .e c a rp e t, c a th e d ra l
ceilinqt. b rick fireplace wood
siding, shingle root, paddle
Ian and many more r .lr a s
Only 134 500 V A financing n0
money down, 10 *. down
conventional See at Uncle
Roys M obile Home Sales ol
Leesburg. U S Hwy 4*1 S 504
7*7 0)3*. Open weekdays )
7 10. Sun II t
,

FO U R TOW NES
R E A L T Y INC B R O K E R
64* tllO a n y tlm e
Don l Despair Or P ull Your H air
- U t r A Want Ad 1711*11 or
111 555)
S A N F O R D A ttractive 77 y r old
home on 7*0 II o fL a k e O n o ro .
1 Bdrm , I Bath, 3 porches,
property can be sp ill ttS.000
Low .merest Open lo o lle r i
By Owner I 751 5757

C H E C K O U T U N C L E ROYS
L A R G E selection ol 14 Wide*
prices start 1*555 V A (man
cing no money down, 10*.
conventional
Shop Uncle Roys M cbile Home
Sales. Leesburg, U S Hwy 441
S 504 7110)74 Open 7 days

S A N F O R O — 1 Bdrm — IV,
Bain. Ctnt H A, w all to w all
c a rp e tin g ,
U t ilit y
R m .,
G arag t, L a rg e corner lot, In
m e t n e igh b orh oo d . V e ry
Clean . S lid m o. +■
S tcu rlly Deposit. C all between
1 1 7 p m. 171 M M

S A N F O R D O PT. TO B U Y I
7 bdr c a ro p rt.k ld to k.5750.
Cottage, turn, no d tp 173 S
S A N F O R O U N P U R ti A P T .
• S rm s. ap p lk-. kids, STM

every

STEM PER AG EN C Y
O W N ER W ILL F IN A N C E 1
B d rm .
t
B a lh
P a r tly
remodeled Ha* F ire p la ce and
carpeting SO II on Hwy *t W.
Only S1S.500
acreage

I* A cre
7«« Acre*
S A cres
n ic e

15,000
513.500
115,500

starter

Located in good neighborhood.
Has large e illc for additional
bdrm. O nly 175,500
I t i e t s i p a y or Ntgwt

r ea lto r

S A N F O R D A partm ent*
1 Bdrm , Porch, Kids, 1750

ROBBIE'S
REALTY

S A V O N -R E N T A LS

R EA LTO R , M LS
77SI 1. French
tu lle «
Sanlord

Seminole
h s ir i
SAV ON R B N T A L S R E A L T O R

] B D R M . IV, B. sunken living
rm .. paddle Ians. 7 mo old
MSO. Attar a p m. 17J 0*41.
* BO R., I b ib canl H A Laka
M ary, Sanlord area VWO mo +
Deposit 377 105*.
] B D R , 3 M h 1150 month.
1 s t * last ♦ security
171*4*1

ho m e

24 HOUR

322-9283

A L L FLO R ID A R E A L T Y
O F S A N FO R D R E A LT O R

35 FT. M O B IL E Home on SI
Johns R iver N ear Geneva
Scenic Location Semi P rivate
D riv e
A l l U t ilit ie s p aid
Adults only S3S0 M o 1*5 M M
1 B D R M H ou ia Trailer P a rtly
furnished with a ir, I mend
patld. 171 5*55

J 7 —Business Property
F ar rant pr taa*a — 10,110 ig . It.
industrial o r warehouse. t i l
W 1st SI., Sanford. 171 HOP
SANPO RD
7.000 tg . ft It. Induatrlal or
Com m ercial Building gn 17 57
M M ft. In o N k a s p a ft Call
7T71S10 0&lt; *3*4 U3

BANFO RD
M l * . ff. It. in B u ttrial or
Cgm m arcial B uilding an I M S
M M it . ns o N k a N X * . CaR
173 ISM a r H M « 3 .
______
O ffice Space
F i r Lagoa
007771

n e w l is t in g s
h id d e n
L A K E Clean

as a
w hittle 1 Bdrm. 1 Beth Split
P lan has many e ilr a s , In
eluding Paddle Fans, homa
w arranty, clubhouse pool end
good schools Evcellent low
interest assumable mortgage
557.500

SU N LA N O Lovely 1 Bdrm , I'y
Balh, dream home can t&gt;*
yours lor LOW DOWN Cant
h a Huge oek trees, fireplace
end fa m ily rm a ll included
Great huy at 5*5.000

MSI COLBERT REALTY
IM .

313-78)2
Eve* 1710*17
707 E . 35th St
It

you ara having d ifficulty
finding a place to live, car to
drive, a |ob, or soma service
.you have need of, read a ll our
want ad* tvp ry.d ay.

I\|s ||
i;l \ i

I s i \ M

M U

Ell-8841

L A K E V I S W 1 bdr, 1 bth. Ip, Ig
yard, vag garden, ter patio,
a ilr a i. I7I.W5.

V E G E T A B L E F a rm lor L tb t a
W ith apt Ion to buy M Sam tuia
A rea Irrigation pump m pr
aut j T ractors and eg u ip m m i
Owner hasp plant and t « w «"
c o m m issio n s. A lb e r t F o rd
V o lu s ia C o un ty N 4 4 3 II4 0 J
AR . I p m
.BamtBody I* looking tor ym ir
bargain Otter it tadey In tha
CidW Hidd Ado.
P R E CONST, s a lt O e t a r y 1 Iga
water front lets. Buy now *
cheese lay out * colors
Johnny W alker
Beet E state INC. Broker
» 1 **57

L I K E TO B N T B R T A IN I bdr, I
Mb, 7 Itary, paal, rac rm , tp. I«
lot, only 5*5,505.

CHARMINO I Sdr. I bth. CHA,
work that, ter paha. washar,
dryar, gaud araa. Ml,5*.
Attar hrt. Ill lit* and 7774551
SSI-8841

r ealto r

K id s outgrow the swing set ar
sm all b k y d a l Sail thase w ia
Rams with a want ad T o p la c a
your ad. c a ll your Iriandly
Classified gal at Tha Herald,
» i m i . or u t m i .

pbff* f“ ^sr

■f

&lt;r Kt ■* 'IP

b a r g a in

51— H o u s e h o ld G o o d s
5 SETS Custom Made Drapery *1
in long Cost SHOO Sell lor
1200 Double Bed new, * 100.
Color TV Antenna S40
)7) 5751

51-A—Furniture
C ic E E N s o la k High back
chair lo match
C all a ll Sp m 1)1 *511,
W ILSON M A IE R F U R N IT U R E
111 U S E FIR ST ST
1)1 5*77
C H E C K With Sanlord Auction
before you buy or sell 171S S
French 33) 7)40 Mon Sal

U ied Car Parts all makes and
models 377 7*57 We buy Used
Cars and Trucks

F IL L DIRT *. TOP SOIL
Y E L L O W 5AN D
Call Clark A K irt 323 2580

7

6 5 — P e l s S u p p lie s

G R E A T D A N E • wks A k C
Patents. M ale Boston Blackie
Champion Blood lin e SI75
377 70*3
A N IM A L Haven Kennefl board
ing A g ro o m in g . Needed
P e k in g e se A s m a ll s ilv e r
poodle toe stud M ale Owners
call )77 5757
CF A P E R SI AN S Adult
Fem ales White. Black
*1501750 315 3415

S A N F O R D P rim e It 45 Acres w
options lor ronmg 1*7 400 w
Terms W M a lin o w s k i )3J
73*), E yes )33 )M7

REALTY, INC.
REALTOR

323-5774

Gel lu ll e .p o sjre — take thai
"For Sale” sign down k run a
classified ad Call 177 3511 or
■31 595)

wE h a v e r e n t a l s
P R IC E O R E D U C E D 12,too Now priced below appraisal,
this 1 bdrm home w beamed
ceilings A lovely, shaded lot It
la n ia rd ’s best buy at only
*15.00011

L A K E M A R Y 4 large
lots, nice trees
*15 000 each 377 4511

C O U N T R Y A T M O S P H E R E In
town P in e c rtsl area. 7 Bdrm
L a rg e L i v i n i R m . Only
5)3.50*

W E K IV A
FALLS
W OODED R IV E R
A C R E 174.000

3 '.

O STEEN 5 ACRES
TALL
P IN E S . SC R U B O A K . 114.400
TERM S

O W N E R F IN A N C IN G a y - il an
this lovely J bdrm B rick home
w -D ra p a s,
R a n g t,
R e frig e ra to r * Fam Rm an
deep la in Sia.55*

German Shepherd M ale ) Y rs
Super w ith c h ild re n e .c
Watch dog 1200 377 5757

road

Kenmore parts, service, usm
washers M O O N E Y A P P L I
A N C E S )7) 0*57
G E Gas Dryer
I year old 1150
C all 17) 71*7

1981
Tushibia m icrow ave oven, sale
p ric e 1345
1**1 c a n iste r
vacuum cleaner 155 50 See at
S a n lo rd
Sew ing
Center.
Sanlord P la ia across Irom
Burger King

53—T V Radio-Stereo
G o o d U s e d T V 's . » 7 S k up
M IL LE R S
7 * l5 0 r la n d o F r
P h 111 0143

G E N E V A 30 A C R E S W O ODED.
C O CH R AN R O AD 1) 500 P E R
ACRE M A Y d iv id e

WB LIS T AN D S I L L
M O R E H O M IS TH AN
A N V O N IIN THE
SAN FO RD A l l A

IN V E S T O R S
PLEASE'
1
T rip le i units iu ll arrived
Purchase separately or bolh
lor 1*0 000 w ilh owner holding
Call on this one! June P orn g
R eally Realtors, 377 MT*

C O U N T R Y L IV IN O 3 Edens 1
Both Hom e an I A c r a l
Sp acious
R oom s,
D in in g
Room, B ro o kle t! B ar, F lorida
Room. Porch, Wood Floors
■ring your own h o rto tl En|oy
lor
1*7.151

47— R e e l E s ta te V te n te d
CASH F O R E Q U IT Y
Wa can close In *t h rt
C a llB a rt Real E s ta tt 37! ;**•

JU ST FO R YO U 1 Bdrm 1 Both
Homo with lenetd yard, now
re a l, ran g*, r o f r lg t r a lo r ,
parch. In groat can d illanl Only

We b uy e q u ity In H o u sts,
apartment*, vacant land and
Acreage
L U C K Y IN V EST
M E N T S , P O B o. 1500. San
lord, Fig 33371. 377 *7*1

114,405.
C O U N T R Y E S T A T E . 5 Bdrm U s
Both Hama an II A t m la
Ot leant A ll tha a o lra sl Two
• r ic h llr tp ia c a s * F lo r id a
Beam, equipped Eat-In K it ­
chen, Largo polio. Fenced and
H orse i
w t lc e m o l
J e tt
t i l t AM.

it * easy to place a Classified Ad
. . . W e'll even help you word
It Call 377 3*11

ASSO CIATES n 4 « O B O I N ow
qr eiporioneed
C a ll Herb
tle n ttra m a r Loo AlOright
today A discover successl

Wa pay cash tor l i t 1 2nd
mortgages R ay Legg. Lie.
Mortgage Broker. 33* 77tf

C A L L A N Y T IM E
IM S
Far*

id —

322-2420

GAS G R I L L ft50 I maple twin
bed SIS firm 317 0*3* alter 7
P*P________________________

lo t M r babul Mil now BROADM O R E . treed i roar B E 's ,
G R E G O R Y M O B IL E H O M E S
M01 Orlando Or.
171 STM
V A A F H A Financing

f m . v

B A T H S .k tlch e n l. rooting, block,
co n crete, w in d ow s, add a
room, Iree estim ate 373 *4*3

G W A LT N E Y JE W E L E R
304 S P ark Ave
311*505

A ir Conditioning

ggs

Chris w ill se rv le t A C 's, ratrig,
Ireeiers, water coolers, m lsc
c a ll n i a r i r

Beauty Cere

TO W ER 'S B E A U T Y SALON
F O R M E R L Y H arriett'* Beauty
Nook J t t E 111 St , 371 37*2

Boarding A Grooming
A nim al Haven Boarding and
G ro o m in g K a n n e ls Shady,
insulated, screened, tly proof
inside, outside runs Fan*
Also AC cages We c a ttr to
your pets
S ta rtin g stud
registry Ph 377 5757
—TC
1 — ------------------ — M ake your Budget go lu rth tr.
shop the Classilie d Ads every
day._______________________
Snow H ill Kennel offers Cal k
Dog F le a Baths IS up. 1*
Hour, F u ll Service 34SSM1

Building Contractor
B ill C o rso, S la te C e rtifie d
B u ild in g
C o n tra c to r
Residential or Com m ercial,
New o r Remodeled 333 005*

CaremteTlIa

S E A R S refrig erator like new
5*0 Occasional
Chair S30 37) 5073

Cample** C e ra m ic T ile te rv .
walls, floors, countertops, re
model, repair. F r . est 335 0111.

F IR E W O O D

74.40. 1 B D R M , 1 Balh. IQOO
y r e o n porch enclosed w ilh
R o lla d a n t h u l l t r t .
Ito lO
u t ilit y
Rm
W a ll
and
S p rin k lin g sy ste m , m an y
M ir a s 111 Hacienda V illag e
n r n *1

•

Clock Repair

Miscellaneous for Sale

COTS. T E N T S, T A R PS
A R M Y N AVY SU RPLUS
310 Sanlord A v t.
331 5751.

42—Mottle H emes

1

Additions &amp;
Remodeling

eti-lnveelment

JU ST L IS T E D I B drm 1 Both
H om t In Pincocrost with CHA,
W all lo w all cargo* Paneled
Florida Rm. with E lectric
F P L Equipped Kitchen and
L a rg o R a o m tt V o v rs lo r
*40.550.

m iN i
17 Cu F t F reeter 1 y rs old
A m in a 1)00 E le c tric phonic I
Track Stereo, cabinet type
SlOO 322 3117

*

S

S

/

M

|

|

|

V

| |

r

1977 C H E V Y CIO P ick Up lo n g
Wheel Base. V I. 3 Speed Slick
Runs Excellent. Looks F a ir
*993 1)1 1774

IF THIS IS TH E D A Y lo buy a
new car. see today's Classilied
*d4 lor heM buys
1973 C A D IL L A C Fleetwood 4
Door Srdan F u lly rquipped
Eaceflent o rig in al condition
&gt;1194 5)1 1774
74 C H E V Y Van 3 speed
air.cu sto m plus ra lra s
M a k e o lle r 37) 7759

a StAY TON A AUTO AU CTIO N

Hwy *1. 1 m ile west ot Speed
wey. Daytona Beach, w ill hold
a public AU T O AUCTION
every Wednrsdey at I p m It's
the only one In Florida You let
the reserved price Call *04
755 1)11 for lu rth tr d rta ils

1974 O LD S D e lla 51. 1 Door V*
Automatic. A ir. power win
dows. steering and brakes
Huns eacellent, needs palnl
5494 5)1 1774
7) B U IC K Century 4dr,
PS, PH. AC. till,
clean 1IS0 371 4440

Dial 322-2611 or 831-9993

U B -L o t* A Acreage
VWnted

REALTY - REALTORS

79— T r u c k s T r a i l e r s

GOVERNM ENT
SU RPLUS
C A R S A N D T R U C K S NOW
A V A IL A B L E
th ro u g h
government sales, under *300
Call 1 714 5*90241 E a l 400 lor
tour a re c to ry on how lo
purchase

To List Your Business,..

SE1GLER R EALTY
BROKER
3765 HWY. 17-92
321-0640

Sanford's Sates Leader

S455S
SUM
12177
&gt;7055
1*595

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB

C O M M E R C IA L 7 A C R E S O N 17
52 N E A R
LAKE
M ARY
B O U L E V A R D 1150.000

W A N T E D 100 to 700 acres m
Orange or Seminola Counties,
loned lo r mobile home sub
division Send i l l details In
eluding location, to P O Bo»
11*5, Ocala, F la 31*15

14477

1570 VW BUG New stlc k rr. runs
well Needs some body repair
5*93 5)1 1774

8 6 - A u t o s f o r - S a le

Alum inum , cans, copper, lead.'
brass, silv e r, gold. Weekdays
1 4 30, Sat 5 1. KoKoM o Tool
Co *11 W 111 SI 31) 1100

14277
1)5*4
S4777

157* B U IC K Skylark Clean I
Owner. Aulo AC. PS. New disc
brakes, lilt wheel A M F M
Stereo rad'O Custom interior
V in yl lop, new Steel belled
radial* New eih aust system
*0 Mo Battery. Rust oronl
57735 303 717 35*0 o r 323*110

6 8 — W a n t e d to B u y

Antiques Diamond* Oil
Paintings O riental Rugs
Bridges Antiques
31)1101

S)490
1)79S

BUSINESS SERVICE LISTING

1)4.000

CUSTO M E X E C U T IV E H O M E
w over I7M sq It. 1 bdrm split
plan, F ire p le c f, Fam Rm . tat
in kitchen, huge scr parch 5
landscaping g o lo rt at l i t , 50*11

Top Dollar P a id for Junk k Used
cars, trucks k heavy equip
menl 31) 5550
f U F jUn k c a r s A t R b t x f Frorr) StO to S30 of more
c* n m i * i 4 . r : i*ao

1510

Hwy 4* W - 21! 4115
CASH k C A R R Y P R IC E S
Hog F Inisher Pellets
IS *0
Layer C
*5 *v
Rabbit Pellets
5*15
Beef K w k
54 55
l4 % V ita h ty Horse
P e llrt i
5* 10
10 - 'V ita lity Sweet
Feed
IS 75

1)477

Bank liaancing availab le
55 N. Hwy. 17 57
Casselberry

SU ZU KI 550
377 37*5

w ilc o s a l e s
n u tren afeed s

19*9Mustang Convertible
1977 Bu'Ch Limited
Coupe
1977 Monle Carlo
Sunroof
19*0Chevetre
7MOmiies
1969Fifebird Coupe
197*VWRabbit
197)Volks Sta Wagon
1979r irebird Formula

★

CONSULT OUR

fron tage

G E N E V A )•] A C R E S W O O DED
T O N ED M O B IL E II).S00

O V E R It** eg It in thik 4 7 with
now Cok Heal, big bedrooms,
Fam Rm , H e l l scr porch 4
heavily treed lot tor only
M t . t t t ll

CASH FO R CAR S
Running or not
135 STM

730 1573 H O N D A , r u n s g re a t,
new
t ir e s ,
c h a in ,
re a r
s p r o c k e t. K Q se a t 1*55 373
04)3 a lt 3 p m

O S T E E N 17 A C R E S W OODED
paved

Ron**" *

67— Livesto ck Po ultry

AREA,
FRO N T

O STEEN
W OODED
A C R E S SI?.500 T E R M S

EASY
A S S U M P T IO N
Law
payments 1 Bdrm Near new
H o sp ita l
70NED
CO M .
M E R C IA L . Super potential.
Only t i t . 150.

7

78— M o t o r c y c le s

43— L o t s - A c r e a g e

STENSTROM
*»» m-150*

is

W E D D IN G ring set woman 4 7
l )rd karat 1)40 or
best o iler 474 557*

★ B&amp;H Auto Sales
★ 339-7989*
1977thunderbird
197* Bu.ck LaSaore
Custom
197*Blueh775Coupe
1977 Mercury Cougar
5R7

76—Auto Parts

62— Law n G arden

52— A p p li a n c e s

G E T TH O SE 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 ANT
ADS I

niV rs

day

D A Y IN T H E W ANT ADS 327
3*11 or » l 555)

E ace tltn l Businest opportunity
In good location Corgpltte
stock Included in this priced
reduced to SMOO
754*1. French 733 0111
A lta r M au ri: M t SOS*. 1*4171

M -M o t t l» Homts

50-A—JM Ntlry

42— M o b i l e H o m e s

$ M J M otitM y

5744616

l577 P I N I 0 4 » p , runs good
new tires 5*40
37) 5*77 alter »p m

A u to

D E L IG H T F U L D eBary - e ilr a
large 1 bdr, 7 bth home w ilh
lots ot closets, on !y acre
wooded, lake front lot Dream
k it, r e fr ig , iila n d stove,
washer L dryer, cent vac
ty tlr m . w w carpel. M a li
screened porch, polio, and
cloved garage, 1*7.500

you are having difficulty*
itndmg a piece, to live, c a r to
drive, a lob. or some service
you have need of. read all our
want ads every day.

7) T B IR D Loaded. New Tires.
Blue with White Top. or 74
C u tle t! Supreme No money
down 173 mo 335 *100.1)4 4*05

C H E V Y window van.
loaded, e.ce lle n l condi
333 1119 or 177 * 650
Have some camping equipment
you no longer use? Sell It a ll
with a Classified Ad In The
Herald Call 372 7511 or S3)
555) and a friendly ad visor
wilt help you

Instruments

PIANOS 1 organ* large &amp; sm all
starting as low as 1N9 95 Rob
Ball M usic Center &amp; Western

Harold Hall
T H E C E N T U R Y 1 IS Y S T E M
H E L P S more people buy *nd tell
more real e tla le than anyone
else In A m erlcai Cell If a y
and let It work lor you Call
111 1050
Hayes Real estate
Service*. Inc
* 1 5 W lS lh S l
Sanlmd
Each office is independently
owned and operated

7* Ft Cruise A.r, Dodge Motor
H om e E v c e lle n l C on d ition
Low M ileage. 373 17*1 or
33) 0411

IB FT BOAT clean M a s ! V 5 If5
H P 1 O, Gator tra iler like New
373 1077

P LA C E

1974 M A Z D A H i i
Station Wagon 5700
371 0777
It

■9

P A R K

Fg r E s ta te . C o m m e rc ie l or
IR e tid e n lla l Auctions .1 *p
praisals. C a ll D e ll’s Auction
373 34)0
*75— R e c r e a t i o n a l V e h i c l e s

A c c e s s o r ie s

La

C d llM * Jo,.

P r ic e s
R e d u ce d !
No
R easo n a b le O tter R elu se d
Sanlord Crt Apt , Apt *«,
Sanlord Ave A A irpo rt Blvd

LOT In Country 54.500

322-7643

80

72— A u c t i o n
A P T S A L E , Couch. C h a irs ,
Tab’ t l . E la g rre s. Aquarium,
Decorator Phones, Queen Sue
Bed. Alm ost New, Much Mare,

L K M A R Y lot, D u p le i W ill trad
Equity St* 500

321 075?

M o n d a y . S e p t, 11, I N I — ) B

■ ------------------------ A.

Spring is here and Its a good
lim e to choose a new home
Irom the paoes ot our
c la siitie d ads

Terms

7 B D R M . In G rou nd Pool
Country Club M anor. Sanlord
Fenced. 5150 mo 1st. last and
5100 Deposit *J7 MOO

R EA LTO R S

A

TW OT
C A R R IE S

A C R E Near new Hospital
Good Potential P rice d Right
Terms 133.500

CALL

'u m ls h e d apartm ents lo r Senior
C lllra n t. I l l Palm etto A vt., J.
Cwnan No phont call*.

F

54— G a r a g e S a le s

• M E R E S T -

THINGS FAMILIAR,
A B O U T TME WAV

BATEMAN*REALTY

Classified ads serve the buying t
M llln g com m unity every day.
_ « I K A M t tlw m mien

E v e n in g H t r i k l , S a n fo rd , F I.

w ith M a jo r H o o p le

M E IN T Z E R i i l e
N ew or rep air, laaky showers our
sp ecially. IS yrs E t p MS B e l

1 ^ 1 * 1

?

•

Concrete Work
Concrete Work, looters. Moors k
pools la n d ic e p in g k sod
work F r t o r s l 373 7101
I M A N Q U A L IT Y O P E R A T IO N
9 yrs u p Pat-us Driveways,
He W ayne B r a l 377 |) 7 |

Electrical
Quality electrical work 77 yrs
• .p a rla n c e M inor repairs to
complete w iring 111 D ll*

When you place a Classified Ad
in The Evening Herald, slay
d o s t lo your phone because
something wonderful Is about
lo hapoen

Handyman
Painting, carp an lry, a ll types ot
homo repairs C all tor tree
estimate 713 1*73

Hauling ft
Yard Work

Landscaping

P lu r rt fn g

L A R O E T R E E IN S T A L L E R
Landscaping, Old Law ns A t
p laced 3*3 SYU_____________

La ndc(taring

Wodernulng youy Home? Sell no
longer needed bul useful Hems
with a Clast Hied Ad

Acreage k lot clearing
F ill dirt top soil
lor s a il 332 3*33

LawnMaintananca
O U N N R I T E L a w n S e rv ic e .
Mow, edge', trim , vacuum,
mulch, sod Reas 377 7311

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, Pooling, Carpentry
Lie. Bonded k O ut rani tad
P r a t Estim ates 313-IMt
J A B Hom e Improvement
Carpentry w o rt *5 any type.
Root repairs, gutter work,
painting (In itrio r ar e it t r t o r l.
plum bing, s p tc la H it In m obile
home rep airs A roof coat ing,
and wood pal la decks. Frag
estim ate m * 0 U

P O N S E C A P L U M B IN G
Con
Struct Ion, Repairs, E m arg in
cy Lie . Bonded. Ins 37) *073

Plum bing repair — a ll types
water heaters k pumps
37) 147)

Ramodaling
Masonry

tst

if *you «r*n'i utitifl yoi*
lab ir, taka a cue. and ta ll It
with a H erald classilie d ad
C all 3712*11

M in i- U - L o d t

Ram odaling Specialist
W t handle the
Whole B*ll of W ia

B . E . Lin k Const.
332-7039
Finan cin g A vaila b le

N E W Concrela Buildings, an
Silas 170 k up. At I * k SR ** I
* industrial P ark, )7 )0 M I.

Hurting Cantar
O U RRATESARELO W ER
L a h tv ltw Nursing Cantar
51* E Second S t, Sanlord
377 5707

It's lik e pennies Irom heaven
when you sell "D o n 't Needs"
with a want ad

Homa Imgrouamant

P ra d d ia R o b in so n P lu m b in g .
R e p a irs ,' fa u c e ts, W
C.
Sprinklers 37) 5510. 11)7)70*

Roofing
R O O FS, leak* repaired. Replace
rattan sayes and thing la w a rt,
lic a n sa d , in su re d . Beaded.
M ike I!) *373
Christian Rooting 17 yrs. aep.
3*5 3750, tree asi. Befooling,
sp e cla liia in r tp e ir work A
new cooling
SO U T H E R N R O O FIN G It yrs
etp . ra roofing, leak special
ill D epend ab le A honest
price Day or ntghl 337 i u j

H allm an P ainting A R epairs
Q uality work Fra* E at, Disc
la Santera 1)4 MSO Rater.

7a cal ion tim e is here get what
you naed lo r a happy lim a with
a Classified Ad

Sandbiosting
■AN D A L AST W O
OAVIS W lL D I N Q
373-4I5S, S A N F O R O

f t in t t a g t o r

TreoSorvico
No job too large or sm all
Q uality a must C all 377 0071
References F r. Est.

M A N P tR
Trim m ing,
scaping.

�lB -E v tflln a Htrald, Sanford, FI.

legal Notice

Legal Notice
O R D IN A N C E NO. O r
AN OR D l N A N C E O F T H E C IT Y
OF C A S S E L B E R R Y , F L O R ID A .
A N N E X IN G
TO
AND
IN
C L U O IN G W ITHIN T H E COR
P O R A T E L IM IT S OF T H E C ITY
OF C A S S E L B E R R Y . F L O R ID A .
AN A R E A OF L A N D SIT U A T E
A N D B E I N G IN S E M I N O L E
C O U N T Y . F L O R ID A . A N D M O R E
P A R T IC U LA R LY
D E S C R IB E D
AS F O LL O W S Th* North 1)0 00
(ret o&lt; th* West MS leet end th*
West SW (eel. less the North 1)0
teet And the South M i teet thereof
of the SE '&lt; ot the SW &lt;i ol Section
71. Township 31 South, Range 10
East, Seminole County, F lorida.
Less the South 76* teet Of the North
Its teet o l the West 330 teet. A N O
A LSO L E S S that part ot the West
30t teet. Less the North 11) teet
and the South MS teet thereof,
together with the South 31 teet ol
the West 33S teet ol the South t , ol
the N E '4 ot the SW '4 ot said
Section 31. A N D A LS O that part ol
the South '4 ol said N E '40I the SW
4 . less the West 335 teet thereof
Said parcel contains II Sla acres.
D E C L A R IN G A V A I L A B I L I T Y OF
m u n ic ip a l
s e r v ic e s ,
d e f in in g

c o n d it io n s

of

A N N E X A T IO N .
P R O V ID IN G
TONING C LA S S IF IC A T IO N . R E
D E F IN IN G T H E C O R P O R A T E
L IM I T S O F C A S S E L B E R R Y .
F L O R ID A . TO IN C L U D E SAID
parcel
of
lan d
in Y h B
M U N IC IP A L L IM IT S OF ;V |D
C IT Y . A U T H O R IZ IN G A M E N D
m ent

m

3|
t:

of

c it y

m ap

to

Monday, 3rr 1. j| , m i

in

N O T IC E OF P U B L IC
H E A R IN G
THE S E M i N O LE CO U N TY
B O A R D OF CO M M ISS IO N E R S
w ill hold a public hearing In Room
300 o l the S e m in o le County
Courthouse. Sanford, F lo rid a on
N O V E M B E R 10. IM I AT 3 00
P M . or as soon there alter a t
possible to consider the following.
P U B LIC
H E A E IN O
FO R
CHANOE
OF
Z O N IN O
R E G U L A T IO N S
It
JU L L IA N
H ALLER
H EZO NE
FRO M
A t
A G R IC U L T U R E TO M tA V E R Y
LIG H T IN D U S T R IA L - PZ (10 7
H I M - Thai part ot Ihe East i&lt;
ot ihe SW '4 ot the SW ' . of Sec. 3*
Its H E . lying W ly of railroad
right of way Subject to m istin g
road or roads, drainage and public
utility easement. It any Consisting
ol I t a c re s M O L
(F u rth e r
detcribed a t being on the North
t&gt;de of SR 47t, West ot Jamestown
at Prison R oadl (D ISTRICT No I)
31
MAHMOUD
ADEL
S H O U R IO E tf
R E Z O N E FR O M
R t
S IN G L E
F A M IL Y
D W E L L IN G DISTR ICT TO C 7
R E T A IL C O M M E R C IA L PZ
&lt;10 7 I t ) to Lot I. Lokeview , Block
t. P lat Book s. Page 14 A lot SO ft
by ISO a p p ro iim a te ly (Further
described as on Ihe south tid e ol
SR 4M. W ot 17 ?7. between P earl
Street and Laka Howell Road)
(DISTRICT No 4)
II T A M A R K D E V E L O P M E N T
C O R P O R A T IO N REZONE
F R O M R I A AA S IN G LE F A M I L Y
D W E L L IN G O tS T R lC T TO R 1AA
S IN G L E F A M I L Y D W E L L IN G
DISTRICT - PZ M O T H ) f t The East '1 ot the SE
of the NW
'4 of Sec 7S71S30E, LE S S R W
lor Dike Road. Seminole County,
Florida Consisting ot 30 077 acres
MOL ( F u rth e rd e ic rlb e d a to n th e
south side o l Dike Road. Between
Dodd Road and Tuskaw illa Road)
(DISTRICT No II
Further, a puonc hearing w ill be
held by the S E M IN O L E CO U N T Y
P L A N N IN G
AND
Z O N IN G
COMMISSION ON O C T O B E R 7,
IMI AT 7 00 P M , o r as soon
therealler as possible, in Room 300
ot the Seminole County Cour
mouse, Sanford. F lorida, In order
to review, hear comments and
make recommendations to Ihe
Roardol County Commissioners of
Seminote County on Ihe above
application!*),
Those In attendance w ill be
lieard and written comments may
be
tile d
w ith
Ihe
Land
Management Manager Hearings
may be continued Irom tim e to
tim e as tound necessary Further
details available by callin g 37)
41)0. E i t ISO
Persons are advised that it they
decide to appeal any decision
made a l these meetings, they will
need a record o l the proceedings,
and lo r such purpose, they may
need to ensure that a verbatim
record o l Ihe proceedings is made,
w h ich
re c o rd
Includes
the
te stim o n y and evid en ce upon
which the appeal it to be made
Board ot County Commissioners
Seminole County, F lo rid a
BY Robert Sturm,
Chairm an
Attest Arthur H Beckwith. Jr
Publish Sept 11, Oct It Nov 3.

CLUD E
TH E A N N E X A T IO N
H E R E I N P R O V ID IN G FO R TH E
R IG H T S A N D P R I V I L E G E S FO R
C IT IZ E N S H IP IN T H E C IT Y ;
P R O V ID IN G
S E V E R A B ILIT Y ,
C O N F LIC T S A N D E F F E i TIVE
DATE
W H E R E A S , therehas been Hied
noth the C ity Clerk ol the City Ol
Casselberry, F lorida. a petition tor
n o n u n io n signed by the land
owner ot the area sought to be
an n e re d co nse ntin g to and
requesting the annexation and
ronlng ot that parcel specifically
described herein; and W H E R E A S ,
the City Council ol the C ily ot
Casselberry, Florida, theretofore
at regular meeting ot the C ily
Council hat approved the petition
siqned by the landowner ol the
area sought to be anneaed, con
tenting to and requesting the
annexation ot said parcel and has
con sid ered
th o ro u g h ly
the
feasibility ot such anneiation and
/onmq to the City ot Casselberry,
F lo r id a , in ac c o rd a n c e w ith
Chapter 131041. Law s ol Florida.
1*71, and
W H E R E A S , objections to such
anneiation and ronlng have been
considered and hearings held, and
it appearing In the best interest ol
the City ot Casselberry, Florida, to
annei and rone said properly, and
W H E R E A S , the C ity Council ol
the City ot Casselberry, Florida,
has concluded Irom investigation
lhal all m unicipal services w ill be
available to the area to be anneied
on the effective date ot this or
d&lt;nance
NOW. T H E R E F O R E . BE IT
ENACTED
BY
THE
C IT Y
CO U N CIL OF TH E C IT Y OF
test
C A S S E L B E R R Y . F L O R ID A
D E M I I I __________________
SECTIO N I - A N N E X A T IO N
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
ANO ZO NIN G — that the C ity ot
Notice It hereby given that t am
'C a s s e lb e rry .
F lo r id a .
does
engaged in b usin ess at t)0
herewith and hereby annei and
Semoran Blvd Altam onte Springs.
designate coning ot a certain tract
Fla Seminole County. F lorida
ix land lying in Seminole County,
under the fictitious name ot SUN
Florida, and more p articu larly
CA SU A L F U R N I T U R E , and lh a l I
'described as follows, to wit:
intend to register te id name with
The North 330 00 teet ol the West
the Clerk ot Ihe C ircu it Court,
M S teet and the West Sff teet. lets
the North JW Ieel and the South **4 Seminole County. Florida in ac
rord an cew lththe provisions ot the
fret thereof ot the SE &lt;i ot the SW
Fictitious Nam e Statutes. To Wit
&gt;401 Section71. Township7t South.
Section *65 W Florida Statutes
Ranqe X) East. Seminole County,
ITS7
rto rid a , Less the South 741 teet ot
S&gt;g H arry E Fletcher
the North 313 teet ot the West 730
Publish S rp lrm b e r 7t, October S.
tret, A N D ALSO L E S S that part ol
17. I*. IMI
the West 1Ot teet, Less the North
DF-M 171
IIS teet and the South 4*6 teet
Iherrol. together with the South 33 N OTICE OF IN T E N T IO N TO
tret ol the West 7IS teet ol the
R E G IS T E R F IC T IT IO U S T R A O E
South 14 ul Hie N E '4 ol the SW '4
name
ut said Section 71. AN D A LSO that
NOTICE IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
part ut the South '4 o l said N E &gt;4 ot
that Ihe undersigned, M O R SE
the SW '4. less the W rit 77S tret
SHOE, INC intends to register the
■1her *01 Said parcel contains II TI4 lict ilious trade name F A Y V A with
acres
the Clerk ol the C ircuit Court ot
S E C T IO N
II
Z O N IN G
Seminole County, Florida, pur
D E S IG N A T I O N
That the
suanl to Section ISS Ot. F lorida
t property described m Section I ot
S la t u lr s . I t S ) ' lh a l th t un
this ordinance shall have the
dersigned intends to engage m Ihe
following toning classification
business ol th t retail s a lt ol
R 7 One
and Two F a m ily
footwear and related items al Hunt
Owetlmg D istrict
Club Corners. State Road, 41i A
SECTIO N HI
CONDITIO NS
SS6 Hunt Club Boulevard. Apopka.
OF A N N E X A T IO N
None
Florida
SECTIO N IV
R E D E F IN IN G
Dated this Tnd day ot Sep
LIM IT S Of D E C L A R A T IO N
tember, t t l l
That the corporate lim its ot the
M O R SE SH O E, INC
City ot Casselberry. F lorida , be
By Kenneth C Cum m ins
and it is herewith and hereby
Its Secretary
redefined so as to include said
Publish September 31, 31. Oc
tract ot land herein described the
tober S. 17. ttll
description herein contained shall
O E M 101
include all streets, roads, high
wavs, alleys and avenues located
within or between the ru s tin g
IN TH E C IR C U IT C O U R T FOR
m unicipal lim its and areas an
S E M IN O LE C O U N T Y , F L O R ID A
D ried herein In Section I hereof
P R O B A T E DIVISION
SE C T IO N V
AM ENDM ENT
F ile Number 11441 C P
o r Of F I C I A l C ITY M A P
That
Division
the City Clerk is hereby authorlred
IN R E : E S T A T E OF
to amend, alter and Supplement
IUA M W U R Z E L D A C H E R
me o fficial C ily map ol the City ol
Deceased
Casselberry, F lorida , to Include
N O TICE OF A D M IN IST R A T IO N
Ihe a n n e ia tio n co ntain ed in
The
e
d
m
in
lslritlo
n
of
Ihe
estate
Section I hereof
0t IDA M W U R Z E L B A C H E R ,
SE C T IO N
VI
SEVEN
deceased. F ile Number 11 le t CP.
A B IL IT Y
It any section of
is pending in the Circuit Court for
lu rtio n ot a section ot this or
Seminole County, Florida. Probate
dinance proves to be invalid,
Division, Ihe address ot which is
unlawful, or unconstitutional, it
Sem inole C o un ty Courthouse.
shall not be held to invalidate or
Sanlord. F lorida
im pair the validity, lore*, or effect
The names and addresses ol Ihe
ot any o lh rr section or part ot this
personal representative and Ihe
ordinance
personal
representative's attorney
SECT IO N VII
ANNEXED
are set lorlh below
AHEA
R IG H T S
AND
A ll In terested p ersons are
P R IV IL E G E S
That upon this
required to tile with this court,
ordinance becoming effective. Ihe
W ITHIN T H R E E M O N TH S OF
property owner m the above
THE FIR ST P U B LIC A T IO N OF
described anneied area shaft be
THIS N O T ICE
III a ll claim s
entitled to all o l the rights and
against ihe estate and (1) any
privileges and im m unities as are
oblection by an interested person
Horn lim e to tim e determined by
to whom notice was m ailed that
the governing authority ol the C ily
ot Casselberry. Flotid a, and the challenges the valid ity ot Ihe w ill,
provisions ot the Charter ot Ihe ihe q u a lilica lio n s ol the personal
venue,
or
City ot Casselberry. F lorida. In r e p r e s t n t a llv t ,
lunsdicH on of the court
accordance with Chapter III 044.
A
L
L
C
L
A
I
M
S
A
N
D
OB
I aws ot rto rid a . 1*71
JF C T IO N S NOT SO F I L E D W ILL
SECTIO N VIII
E F F E C T IV E
BE FO R E V E R B A R R E D
O ATE
This ordinance shall
Publication ot this Notica has
become e llr c liv * thirty (30) days
begun on September II, IMI
alter passage and adoption
Personal Representative
FIRST R E A O IN G this l is t day
E LM E R P W U R ZELBA C H ER
ut August. A O IMI
H I C Georgetown O ne*
SECOND
R E A D IN G
AND
Casselberry, F lo rid a 13707
A D O P T IO N th is 1tth d ay Ot
A tto rn e y
lo r
P e rso n o l
September. A D IMI
Representative
APPRO VED
L W C A R R O L L JR ., E S Q U IR E
O W EN H S H E P P A R D
L A W R E N C E . W. C A R R O L L JR .,
MAYOR
P A
ATTEST
POST O F F IC E B O X M
M A R Y W HAW THORNE.
C A S S E L B E R R Y . F L O R ID A 17707
C IT Y C L E R K
Telephone (MS) U4S700
PupllSh September 71. 31. Oc
Publish September II, M . IMI
tuber S. II. IMI
D E M 101
D E M *4

legal Notice

legal Notice
O R D IN A N C E NO. IIS
A N O R D IN A N C E O F T H E CIT Y
OF L O N G W O O D . F L O R I D A ,
A N N E X IN G
TO
AND
IN
C L U D IN G W ITHIN T H E COR
P O R A T E A R E A OF TH E C IT Y
OF LONGW OOD. F L O R ID A . A N
A R E A OF L A N D S IT U A T E A N D
B E IN G IN S E M IN O L E CO U N T Y .
AND M O RE P A R T IC U L A R L Y
D E S C R IB E D AS FO LLO W S
WEST IW 4 F E E T OF LOT 3,
LO NGW O O D
H IL L S
SU B
DIVISION. S E M IN O L E CO U N T Y .
F LO R ID A . P LA T
BO O K
1.
P A G E S IS A N D 11; R E O E
F IN I N G
THE
CO RPO RATE
LIM IT S O F TH E C IT Y OF LO N G
WOOD, F L O R lO A , TO IN C L U D E
S A IO L A N O W ITHIN THE M U N I
C IP A L L IM IT S OF T H E C IT Y ;
AU T H O R IZ IN G
AM ENDM ENT
TO CITY M A P TO IN C L U D E
SAID L A N O A N N E X E D : PRO
V ID tN G FOR TH E R IG H T S A N D
P R I V I L E G E S FO R C IT IZ E N
SHIP IN TH E C IT Y . S E V E R
A B IL IT Y AN D E F F E C T I V E
DATE
W H E R E A S , therehas been H&gt;ed
with Ihe C ity Clerk ol Ihe City ot
Lonqwood. Florida, a Petition
'onlainm g the names ol property
owners m Ihe aree ot Seminole
County. F lorida , described as
follows
West IM 4 teet ot Lot 1.
LO N G W O O D
H IL L S
SU B
D IV IS IO N , Sem in o le County.
Floride. Piet Book 1. Pages IS and
It
req u estin g a n n e ia tio n to Ihe
corporate area ot Ihe C ity ol
Longw ood,
F lo r id * .
and
requesting to be Included therein;
and.
W H E R E A S , said Petition was
duly certified by Ihe Seminole
County
P ro p e rty
A p p ra is e r
pursuenl to the Charier ot the City
ot Longwood. F lorida. Chapter SI
1361. Law s ol Florida, ISM. and
Chapter 7S7T7. Lew s ol Florida.
1175. and Ihe certification ot Ihe
Seminole County Property Ap
praiser a t to the sufficiency ul
tuch Petition pursuant to Ihe
terms ot M id Charter received,
and,
W H E R E A S , the C ity Com
mission o l the City ot Longwood.
Florida, has deemed It In Ihe best
interest ol Ihe City ot Longwood,
Florida, to accept said Petition
and to anne* said area,
NOW, T H E R E F O R E . B E IT
O R D A IN E D B Y TH E C IT Y
COMMISSION OF TH E C IT Y OF
L O N G W O O D . F L O R I D A , AS
FO LLO W S
SECTIO N I That Ihe following
described property, to wit
West IM 4 teet ot Lot 3.
Longw ood H ills S u b d iv isio n ,
Semmole County. Florida. Plat
Book 4. Pages IS and 16.
be and the sam e it hereby anneied
to and made a part Dt the City ol
Longwood, Florida, pursuant to
the terms o l the Charter ol the City
of Longwood. Florida. Chapter 4f
1761. L a w s ot F lo r id a . I t t f ,
Chapter IS 317, Law s ol F lorida,
1t7S. and Florida Statute 111 044
S E C T IO N ! That the corporate
lim its ol the City of Longwood,
Florida, be and the same are
hereby redefined so as to include
said land herein described and
anneied
SECTIO N 1 That the City Clerk
it hereby authorlied to amend,
alter and supplement the otticlal
city map ol the City o l Longwood,
Florida, to include the anneiation
contained in Section I hereof.
SECTION 4 That upon this
ordinance becoming effective, Ihe
resident and properly owners In
Ihe above described anneied area
shall be entitled to a ll ot the rights
and privileges and Immunities as
are. from tim e lo llm e , determined
by Ihe governing authority ol Ihe
C ity o l Longwood. Florida, and Ihe
provisions ol said Charter ot Ihe
C ity ot Longw ood. F lo r id a .
Chapter 6S 1761, Law s ot Florida,
leaf, and Chapter IS 7*7. Law s ol
Florida. ItlS
SECTION S It any section or
portion o l a section ot this Or
dinance proves to be Invalid,
unlawful, or unconstitutional. It
shall not be held to invalidate or
impair Ihe validity, force or effect
ut any o lh rr section or part ot this
ordinance
SECTIO N 6 A ll ordinances or
parts ol ordinances in conflict
herewith be and the same are
hereby repealed
SECTIO N 7
This ordinance
shall ta k r effect pursuant to Ihe
p ro v isio n s ot F lo r id a Statute
S i l l 044
P A S S E D A N D A D O P T E D THIS
- D A Y O F ----- A D tvtt
FIRST R E A D IN G
September

14. t t l l
SECO N D H E A D IN G
---------John F Hepp
Mayor
City ol Longwood.
Florida
ATTEST
D L Terry
C ITY C L E R K
Publish September 71. 71, Oc
tober S. 17. 1*11
DEM *)

legol Notice

IN T H E C IR C U IT CO U R T. IN
AN D FO R S E M IN O L E CO U N T Y ,
F L O R ID A .
C IV IL ACTIO N NO
11-3114 CA 0* K
ROSCOE E OTT end
S A R A H F OTT. his Wile.
P la in t itls

vs
W IL L IA M D M C C L E L L A N D and
j a n e m M c C l e l l a n d , his w ile
Defendants
N O TICE O F ACTIO N
TO: W ILL IA M O M C C L E L L A N D
East M cDowell
Mesa. A riio n a IS707
j a n e m M c Cl e l l a n d
E ast M cDow ell
Mesa. A riio n a 13707
YOU
ARE
HEREBY
N Q T IF IE O that an action to
fo re clo se a m o rtg a g e on the
tollowing properly in Seminole
County, F lorida.
East SO teet ol Lots 6 and 7. Block
13, Tier 6. TOWN OF SA N FO R D .
Plat Book I Pages 56 through 6f.
P u b lic R e c o rd s o l S e m in o le
County, F lo r id a , su b ject to
easement |6 teet wide tying 7 teet
either side ol centerline ol ousting
sewer line across said properly
s e rv ic in g
d u p le i
d w e llin g
designated as 1001A 100IB E lm
Avenue. Sanlord. F lorida
has been tiled aqam sl you and you
are required to serve a copy ol
your written defenses, it any. to it
on H A R R Y G R E ID . Ill ot SHIN
M O LSER , L O G A N AN O MON
C H IE F . Attorneys lo r P la in lllt,
Post O ltice B o i 777*. Sanlord,
Florida 37771, and tile Ihe origlnel
with Ihe Clerk o l Ihe above Court
on or before November 7. 1*11;
otherwise, a Judgment may be
entered against you tor the reliet
demanded &lt;n Ihe Complaint
W ITNESS m y hand and the seal
ot this Court on this 3Slh day ol
September, 1*11
Arthur H Beckwith, Jr
Clerk o l Ihe Circuit
Court
By Susan E Tabor
Deputy Clerk
IS E A L t
Publish September JS. October S.
17. I*, tvst
O E M 17*___ ________
IN T H E C IR C U IT CO U R T FO R
S E M IN O L E CO U N T Y . F L O R lO A
P R O B A T E OIVISION
F ile Num ber It &gt;11 CP
O ivtile n
IN R E : E S T A T E OF
ETH EL M PRESCOTT.
Dec eased
NOTICE OF A D M IN IST R A T IO N
tO A L L P E R S O N S H A VIN G
C L A IM S
OR
DEM ANDS
AGAINST TH E A B O V E E S T A T E
ANO A L L O T H E R P E R S O N S
IN T E R E S T E D IN TH E E S T A T E
YOU
ARE
HEREBY
N O T IF IE D
that
th e
Id
m inistration ol the estate o l Ethel
M
P re s c o tt, d eceased, F ile
Number It I l f CP, Is pending in
Ihe C ircuit Court tor Seminole
County. Florida, Probate Oivision.
the address ot which Is Seminole
County Courthouse, Post O ltice
Drawer C. Sanlord. F L 37771 The
personal representative o l the
estate Is Edw in Leroy Prescott,
whose address Is Post O ltice B o i
67. Longwood. F L 377SO The name
and ad d re ss ot the p e rso n a l
representative’s attorney are set
lo rlh below
A ll persons having claim s or
demands agamsl Ihe eslete are
re q u ire d .
W IT H IN
THREE
M O N TH S F R O M T H E O A T E OF
the

f ir s t

p u b l ic a t io n

of

THIS N O T ICE, to fit* with the
clerk o l the above court a written
statement o l any claim or demand
they may have Each claim must
t* in w riting and must indicate the
basis lor the claim , the name and
address ot Ihe creditor or h ii agent
or attorney, and the amount
claim ed It Ihe cla im 11 not yet
due, the dale when it w ill become
due shall be stated If the claim is
contingent or unliquidated, the
nature of the u n cerlainly shall tie
stated It the cleim 11 secured. Ihe
security shall be described The
claim ant shall deliver sufficient
copies ol the claim to the clerk to
•nable the clerk to m ail one copy
lu each personal representative
All persons interested In the
estate to whom a copy ol this
Notice ol Adm inistration has been
mailed are required. W ITHIN
TH REE M ONTHS FR O M t h e
DATE
OF
THE
F IR S T
P U B L IC A T IO N
OF
THIS
N O TICE, to tile any oblections
they may have that challenge the
validity o l Ihe decedent's w ill, the
q u a lilic a lio n s o l Ihe perso nal
representative, or Ihe venue or
lurisdictlon ot the court
At L C LA IM S . D E M A N D S . AN O
O B JE C T IO N S NOT SO f i l e d
W ILL HE F O R E V E R B A R R E D
O alr o l the lir s l publication ol
this Notice o l Adm inistration
September 71. 1*lt
Edwm Leroy Prescott
As Personal Representative
ot Ihe Estate ol
Ethel M Prescott
Decrased
A T T O R N E Y FO R P E R S O N A L
r e p r e s e n t a t iv e

IN TH E CIR C U IT CO UR T FO R
S E M IN O LE C O U N T Y . F L O R ID A
P R O B A T E DIVISION
F ile Number 11 411 CP
Oivisieti
IN R E : E S T A T E OF
AN T H O N Y T. AU ST IN , A k a
A N T H O N Y T A U G A S lE W IC Z
Deceased
N O TICE OF A D M IN IST R A T IO N
The id m in is lra lio n of the estate
Ot A N T H O N Y T A U S T IN , a k a
A N T H O N Y T. A U G A S lE W I C Z
deceased. F ile Number i t 4S0 CP,
is pending In the C ircuit Court tor
Seminole County, F lorida, Probate
Division, the address ot which is
Sanford. Florida
The names and addresses ot the
personal rep restn falive and the
personal representative s attorney
are set forth below
AH in te re ste d p ersons are
required to tile with this court,
W ITHIN T H R E E M O N T H S OF
TH E FIR ST P U B L IC A T IO N OF
THIS N O T IC E : III a ll claim s
against Ihe estate and II) any
oblection by an ird a rttle d parson
to whom n o tka was m ailed that
challenges the v a lid ity ol the win.
ihe Quaiiitcailone ot tha personal
r e p re s e n ta ilv e ,
venue,
or
jurisdiction ot the court.
ALL
C L A IM S
AND
OB
JE C T IO N S NOT SO F I L E D W ILL
BE F O R E V E R BA R R ED .
Publication ot this Notice has
begun on September II. IN )
Persona I Representative:
Thomas V. Austin
111 Lyn n Avenue
Fayetteville. N C 3IMI
A tto rn e y
lo r
P e rso n a l
Representative;
Stephen H Ccover
P O D ra w n H
Telephone: J» S )» 4 0 S I
Publish: September II, M , IMI
OEM M l

KENNETH M BEANE,
E SQ U IR E
Posl O ltice D raw rr One
Casselberry, F L 37707
Telephone (1051 33* 7555
Publish Srp lrm b er 31 A October S,
1*11
DEM U
t --------------- ----------FICTITIO US N A M E
Nolle* is hereby given that we
are engaged in business at 510 N
17 1 *3 Longw ood Sem inole
County. Florida under the lie
tillous name ot P E R S O N A L IZ E
AUTO SA L E S , and that we Intend
to register said name with the
C le rk ot the C ir c u it C o urt,
Seminole County, Florida In ac
cordance with the provisions ot the
Fictitious Name Statutes. To Wit:
Section 14)0* Florida Statutes
l*S7
Sig Lloyd A Story
L e rry Lacaillade
Publish September 14. 71. 71.
October S. 1*11
P E 6441
F ICT IT IO U S N A M E
Notice is hereby given th*t I *m
engaged in business a l SI7 Vihlen
Road Sanlord Seminole County,
Florida under th* fictitious name
o tO M E G A T R U C K IN G , and that I
intend to register said name with
th* Clerk o l the C ircuit Court.
Seminole County. F lorid* in ec
cordance w ith th* provisions ol th*
Fictitious Nome Statutes. To Wit:
Section i t s 0* F lo rid a Statutes
If S3
Sig Robin W Starnes
Publish- September It, 71, Oc
tober S. II. IN I
rsFaa m i
I 4 l t

A

4

1 U 44 , ( ) A

|

ORANCEJUICE!
B R E A K

N O T IC E O F P U B L IC
H E A R IN G
THE BO ARD OF CO UNTY
C O M M I S S I O N E R S
OF
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y w ill hold I
public hearing in Room 700 o l the
S em ino le C o un ty Courthouse,
Sanlord, F lorida , on N O V E M B E R
10. I f t l at 7.00 P M . or as toon
thereafter a t possible, to consider
a specilic land use amendment to
Ihe S e m in o le C o un ty
Com
prehensive P la n and R E Z O N IN G
ot Ihe described property
AN O R D IN A N C E A M E N D IN G
O R D IN A N C E
77 IS
W H IC H
A M E N D S T H E D E T A IL E D L A N D
USE
ELEM ENT
OF
THE
S E M IN O L E
COUNTY
COM
P R E H E N S IV E P LA N FRO M
LOW O E N S IT Y R E S ID E N T IA L
TO P L A N N E D UNIT D E V E L O P
M E N T FOR T H E P U R P O S E OF
.R E Z O N I N G F R O M A l AG
R IC U L T U R E
TO P L A N N E D
U N IT D E V E L O P M E N T , T H E
F O LLO W IN G D E S C R IB E D PRO
P E R TY
The S W 14 ot the SW '4 ol Secllon
74. Range 3Q East. Seminole
County, F lorida , lest the East '4
thereof, and also the North ' j ot
Ihe NW 14 ot the NW ' 4 ol Section
IS, Township 71 South. Range 30
East, less the East '4 1hereof
Consisting ot 4 1 S acres MOL
(Further detcribed as at Ihe in
tertection ot Dike and Howell
B ra n c h
R oa d
(N o rth e a st
quadrant) IOIST. No 1)
A P P L IC A T IO N
HAS
BEEN
S U B M IT T E D B Y O fi S COR
POR AT ION - P Z Il* 711) *4
Further, the P L A N N IN G A N D
Z O N IN G
C O M M IS S IO N
OF
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y w ill hold •
public hearing in Room 700 of the
S em ino le C o un ty Courthouse,
Sanford, F lorida, on O C T O B E R 7,
H it a l 7 00 p.m , o r as soon
therealler as possible, to review,
hear
co m m en ts
and
m ake
recommendations to the Board ot
County Com m issioners on the
above captioned ordinance and
retoning
Additional Information m ay be
obtained by contacting th* Lend
Management Manager at 77) 4330.
E it . 110
Persons unable to attend the
hearing who w ish to comment on
the proposed actions may submit
written statements to Ihe Land
Management D ivision p rior to Ihe
scheduled public hearing Persons
appearing at the hearings may
subm il written statements or be
heard o rally
Persons are advised that. It they
decide to appeal any decision
made al these meetings, they w ill
need a record ot the proceedings,
and. tor such purpose, they may
need to ensure that a verbatim
record o l the proceedings is made,
w hich
re c o rd
in c lu d e s
the
te stim o n y and evid en ce upon
which the appeal is to be based
Board o l County
Commissioners
By Robert Sturm.
C h a irm a n

Attest Arthur H Beckwith Jr.
Publish September 31 k October
I*. 1 November 7. 1*11
D E M 111
N O T IC E O F P U B L IC
H E A R IN O
THE BO ARD OF CO UN TY
C O M M I S S IO N E R S
OF
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y w ill hold a
public hearing In Room 700 ol the
S em ino le C o u n ty C ourth ouse,
Sanlord, F lorida, on N O V E M B E R
10. I f t l al 7 00 P M., or as soon
therealler as possible, to consider
a specific land us* amendment to
the Sem in o le C o un ty Com
prehensive P la n and R E Z O N IN G
ot the described property.
AN O R D IN A N C E A M E N D IN G
O R D IN A N C E
77 7)
W H IC H
A M E N O S T H E D E T A IL E D L A N D
U SE
ELEM ENT
OF
the
S E M IN O L E
COUNTY
COM
P R E H E N S IV E P LA N FRO M
LOW D E N S IT Y R E S ID E N T IA L
TO C O M M E R C IA L FOR THE
P U R P O S E OF R E Z O N IN G F R O M
A 1 A G R I C U L T U R E TO C l
R E T A IL C O M M E R C IA L . THE
F O LLO W IN G
D E S C R IB E D
PRO PERTY
Consisting ot two parcels: (I)
The E ' 1 ot Ihe NW *4 ot the SW '»
and Ihe N E
ot Ihe SW '« ot Sec.
7f 31S JOE, L E S S the N E i« ol Ihe
SW '4 ot Sec 7t 7IS 30E. and LE SS
Ihe N 33 teet lor road 3) The W fy
ot th eN W '4 ol Ihe SW '. 4 , test road
■n Section 74 71 X Consisting ot I t
acres M O L [Further described #»
at Ihe SE corner ot Red Bug Laka
Hoad and Dodd Road) (DISTRICT
No I)
A P P L IC A T IO N H AS B E E N
S U B M I T T E D B Y L O U IS P
K IL G O R E , JR - P K I O 7 |)J *3
Further, Ihe P L A N N IN G AN O
Z O N IN G
C O M M IS S IO N
OF
S E M IN O LE C O U N T Y w ill hold a
public hearing m Room 700 ol the
S em ino le C o u n ty Courthouse,
Sanlord. F lorida, on O C T O B E R 7,
1*11 al 7 00 P . M . or at soon
therealler as possible, to review,
hear c o m m en ts
and
m ake
recommendations to the Board ot
County Commissioners on Ihe
above captioned ordinance and
rrio n in g
Additional Information may be
obtained by contacting th* Land
Management Manager at 37) 4)70.
E i t 160
Persons unable to attend th*
hearing who wish to comment on
Ihe proposed actions may submit
written statements to the Land
Management D ivision p rior to the
scheduled public hearing Persons
appearing at the hearings may
submit written statements or be
heard orally.
Persons are advised lh a l. It they
decide to appeel any decision
made at these meetings, they w ill
need a record o l the proceedings,
and. tor such purpose, they may
need to ensure that a verbatim
record o l th* proceedings is made,
w h ich re c o rd
In clud es th*
te stim o n y and ev ld e n ca upon
which tha appeal is to be based
Board ot County
Commissioners
Seminole County, F lo rid a
By Robert Sturm ,
Chairm an
Attest: Arthur H Beckwith Jr.
Publish September 71. E October
If. k November 7. 1*11
D E M 117

CLASSIFIED ADS
S e m in ole

O rlo n d o - Winter Park

322-2611

831-9993

CLASSIFIED DEPT.

RATES

u /-\| io c

ltlm #.................. W c b IIb *
n V -J U K O
Ic o n » c u t lY t * lm # » . JOci llo*
1:00 A.M. - f : » P.M. 7eon*«VtlVEtrFT*M ....... MC
MONDAY thru FRIDAY TOconsgcuflv*tlriMi .M e • III**
SATURDAY » • Noon
u.oo Minimum
---------------------------------) Linn Minimum

DEADLINES
Noon The Day Before Publication

We wish to e ip re s s our deepeit
gratitude to all our Irlendt and
neighbors lo r the flowers, food
and cards ot sym pathy t t n l at
the tim e o l th* loss o l our w ile
and beloved mother Atdine
H u tch in so n
Th*
F re n k
Hutchinson F am ily

4— Personals
W IL L Ihe g e n tle m e n school
teacher, who asked lo r a
weekend p o sitio n , please
. contact A l Dawsoh at 773 ( H I
cr 777 4*73 *
W H Y B E L O N E L Y T W rit* "0*1
A M a te " Dating Service. A ll
ages. P.O. B o i M7I, Clearwater. FI. ) l) t l.
L O N E L Y : W rit* " B r in g in g '
P e o p le
to g eth e r
D atin g
Se rvice !" A lt ages A Senior
C iliie n s P O. B o i 1131. Winter
Haven. Fla 33110

S-Loat ft Found
LOST gray m ale poodle 3rd area
D eltona, needs m e d ic a tio n ,
reward *04 71* 41)1 or 71* 7745

legol Notice
IN T H E C IR C U IT CO U R T FO R
S E M IN O L E CO U N T Y . F L O R lO A
P R O B A T E OIVISION
F lit Num ber 11-441 CP
Division
IN R E : E S T A T E OF
R A N D A L L H RO W E.
Deceased
N O TICE 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
C L A IM S
OR
DEM ANDS
AG AIN ST T H E A B O V E E S T A T E
AN D A L L O T H E R P E R S O N S
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
th at
Ihe
ad
m in is tra tio n o l Ihe e sta te o l
R A N O A L L H R O W E, deceased.
F ile Num ber II 441 CP. Is pending
in the C ircuit Court lor Seminole
County, Florid*. Probate Division,
tne address ot which Is Seminole
County C o u rth o u se, S a n lo rd .
F lo rid a 1)771
Th* perso nal
representative ol the estate ls
C A U L E Y C C O P E L A N D , whose
address is P O Draw er O. Cross
City, Florida 37471 The name and
ad d ress
ol
th e
p e rso n a l
representative's attorney a r t set
forth below
A ll persons having claim s or
demands against the estate a r t
re q u ire d .
W IT H IN
THREE
M ON TH S F R O M THE O A T E OF
THE F IR S T P U B L IC A T IO N O F
THIS N O T IC E , to III* with the
clerk ot the above court a written
statement o l any claim or drm and
they may have Each claim must
be in w riting and must indicate tha
basis for tha claim , the name and
addr ess ol I he creditor or his agent
or attorney, and Ihe amount
claim ed It th* c la im is not yet
due. Ihe date when it w ill become
due shall be staled It the claim is
contingent or unliquidated, the
nature ot the uncertainly shall be
slated It the claim is secured. Ihe
security shall be described Th*
claim ani shall deliver lu t lic ltn l
copies of tha claim to the clerk to
enable Ihe clerk to m ail on* copy
to each personal representative
A ll persons interested in th*
estat* to whom a copy of this
N o tic e d Adm inistration has been
m eilrd are required. W ITHIN
T H R E E M O N T H S F R O M THE
OATE
OF
THE
F IR S T
P U B L I C A T IO N
OF
TH IS
N O TICE, to tile any ubiecllons
they m ay have lhal challenges Ihe
validity ol the decedent's w ill, th*
q u a lilic a lio n s o l the perso nal
representative, or the venue or
iwrisdiclion ol th* court.
A L L C LA IM S . D E M A N O S . A N D
O B JE C T IO N S NOT SO F I L E D
W ILL B E F O R E V E R B A R R E D
Oat* o l the lir s l publicelion ot
this Notice o l Adm inistration:
September 71. IM I
Cauley C Copeland
As Personal Representaliv*
ot the Estate ol
R A N D A L L H ROWE
Deceased
A T T O R N E Y FO R p e r s o n a l
R E P R E S E N T A T IV E
J Doyle Thomas
P O BOi 37*
Cross City, Florida 37671
Telephone (*04)4*17*00
Publish September 71 k October S.

ttll
O E M 171
N O T IC t
U N D I i F ICT IT IO U S
n a m i statute

TO W HOM IT M A Y C O N C E R N
Nolle# I* hereby given th it the
un d ersig ne d p u r lu in t to lha
" F ic t it io u s
Nam e
S la t u t i, "
Chapter i t ) 01, Florida Statutes,
w ill r t g lit e r with th* Clerk o l th*
C ircuit Court, in and tor Semlnota
County, F lorida, upon receipt of
p ro d ot th* publication o l this
nolle*. Ihe fictitiou s n*m«, to w it;
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
T R A V E L W O R LD , under which
Nolle* is hereby given that I am
th* undersigned corporation is
engaged in b u sin ess at 1D4
engagod in b u sm a n at 7471 L m
Bay wood Aye. Longwood. Fla.
Road, W in itr P a rk , Florida.
Seminole County. F lo rid a under
That th* party interested In la id
Ihe fictitiou s name ot R E P O
bus In n* anlerprls* is a t follows:
D E P O T , and lh a l I Intend to
T R A V E L W O R L D OF O R LA N D O .
register said name with the C k r k
INC.
ol the C irc u it Court, Seminole
D ated at Ot U n d o , O ran ge
County. F lo rid a in accordance
Cthinly, F lorida , September *,
with th* provisions o l th* F ic ­ IM I.
titious Nam* Statutes, To W it;
T R A V E L W O R LD
Section 165 0* n o rm a Statutes
OF O R LA N D O , INC.
1»S7
BY: C H A R L E N E F A U L E y ,
S&lt;g W A Hoffm an Jr.
A it iit a n i Secretary
Publish: September It. October S.
Publish: September U . II, I t
I). I*. I f t l
October 3 IM I
O E M 1)7
OEM S

M A N A G E M E N T train** apply
in p erson lo r g re a t o p ­
portunity C a s a M i* P illI* ra .
37) 3004
H E A V Y E q u ip m e n t o p e ra to r
14 SOper hour m inim um . Must
be abi* to op«rtf* motor
grader A p p ly at Longwood
City H a ll I 5. M on.-Frl. 173 W.
W arren A v t., Longwood. F la
T Y P IS T - — M atura F a il and
a c c u ra te M e d ic a l, panslon
and profit sharing p lant,
united Solvents. 1)31164

Sunday - Noon Friday

\ C a u l-if rhanks

H A IR S T Y L IS T w anttd
with following Immad.
C a ll Del ones 73) 7SM

6— C h ild C a r e
FO R the u ltim a te In
Child Care A C h ild 's
World '•1)1414
SPU R OF T H E M O M E N T
b a b y s it t in g

___________ 33) *3*6__________
B A B Y sitting in our Christian
home, no weekendl or nights
Phone 337 1*77_____________
B A B Y S IT T IN G in my
home, any age
371 0451
C ia tllfle d A d i are the sm allest
big news Items you w ill find
anywhere

4 A .H M t t h f t B M * y
C O M P L E T E B E A U T Y F A C IA L .
BY A P P O IN T M E N T O N LY
777 11*1 or 34* SSSS

' 9—Good Things to Eat
Bananas
lib s . 100
Cukes
7 lo r 100
7 lo r 100
Peppers
each .7*
W Lopes
Green Onions
3 lo r 7*
Salad Tomatoes
albs. 1.00
Fresh Pum pkins .7* to 1,4! fa
Red Del Apples
4 lbs. 100
Jonathan Apples
7 lbs. 1 00
Gold Del Apples
3 lbs 100
M uttu Apples
3 lbs t 00
Fresh Apple Cider
' i g a l If*
A ll Purpose Potatoes 10 lbs 1.00
Greens
a bunch **
Zellwood Corn is In' Buy It by the
b o i or by the ear Fresh dally.

W« Taka Food Stamps
LERO Y FARM S
SR 44
Watson's Old Farm

H—Instructions
Tennls'lnstruction — U . S * K Y X
Certified G roup or P r iv lt *
lessons Children a specialty.
0*ug M a iic iiw s ii. i H j j I t "

t4-HitoVW nfd
V ID R O Bt*c1rentci Rental and
S alts Ce Is opening 3 new
steres in Central F larid a in the
n a il 3 years and Is leaking l*r
men and women •* sta ll Its
i le r t i . Store managers, rental
manayer*. secretaries, and
sales persons needed new.
P le ii* apply in perspn ltd
C o m m e rc ia l I t. Ip n le rd .
College O rad t Preferred.
P O L IC E O F F IC E R - Th* City
ol Orlando w ill be scheduling
applicant* lo r the elimination
tor P O LIC E O F F IC E R Con
tact th* C IV IL S E R V IC E OF
F IC E . In person. C ITY H A L L
A N N E X - HO i
BOONE
A V E N U E . M O N D A Y . SEP
T E M B E R 71 thru M O N D A Y .
SEPTEM BER
71.
1*11
(W E E K D A Y S 1 00 to S:00) to
be scheduled lo r th* entrance
e lim in a tio n * Must be a U. S.
C itlien , 71 years ot eg* by
February 77, 1N7. high school
grad or state equivalent, good
character, no lelony con vie
lio n s
O R L A N D O IS AN
E Q U A L O P P O R T U N IT Y E M
P L O V E R ________

L A Y O U T , F llt ir , Wetder, Shear
fc Brake Operators, Ffrst and
Second S h iltl. Top Pay. Good
Benefit*. C a ll Florid * Iron
Works Inc. 317 0700__________

¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥
T H E B EST W AY
AAA
W E 'R E P L A C I N O
GOOD P EO P LE
JU S T L IK E Y O U
W HY NOT YO U f
C A LL EA R LY
323-3174
Legal S e c re ta rie s .............. U t
E«c Secy
.................. 3*30
PT Bookkeeper ............. Open
Insurance C le rk ............ Open
Cashier ......................... Open
Dental A ssista n t...................I4 N
Housekeeper
................. 3100
Beautician
.................. Open
Fu rn itu re S a le s .............. Open
Systems Analyst ..............11173
Warehouse Dispatcher . . . . f ilia l
D rive r .............................. 1*40

AAA EM P LO YM EN T
L E T US H E L P Y O U
323-3174
1317 F R E N C H
(acres* tram P in * H e ll

W AREHOUSEM AN
fa c to ry
e ip e rle n c t a mutt. Heavy
liltin g required F u ll benefits,
a p p ly In person, U n tie d
Solvents H07 A irpo rt Blvd.
------- a

COOK
F A S T FOOD O P R R A TIO N
Good selary, hospitalfiatlon, t
week paid vacation every 1
m onths.
E ip e r le n c *
not
n e c e ssa ry . Phona M a n a g e r
Lake M a ry 4b
7731)43
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • I
P A R T -F U L L T IM B
R N - L P N - A ID 1 1
Q uality Professionals Needed U
meet help needs o l Seminole
C o un ty H o s p ita ls N u rs in g
Homes
H IQ H E S T P A Y —
IM M E D IA T E P A Y
On C s il M e d ic il Services
C a ll 47) 7447

21—Situations Wkntod
W ILL do babysitting, washing B
ironing in m y horn* 171700
Thurs k F r l f S . 773 71)4
anytim e
STO R IN G IT M A K E S W A S T E S E L L IN G IT M A K E S CASH.
P L A C E A C L A S S IF IE D A D
NOW C all 171 M i l or U t M M .

W O M EN : tired of 40 hr. wk.
want 10 be own boas, choose
your own hrs. M ake eice llan t
money F o r inform ation 773
io n , 14* 3S13 alt. S p m
TWO question*: W ill you be
fin an cially independent In I to
S years* A r t you paid what
you a r t w orlh* if not c a ll H I

2B—Apt*. A

• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • a t*

C0NVBHMC!
STM ! CASHIBtS
Good salary, hospitalisation, I
week paid vacation every 1
m onth*.
E i per lance not
n e c e ssa ry
F o r Inte rvie w
phone the manager at:
A irpa rt Blvd. 44
Casselberry I t
C ite ry Av*. I t
Lake M ir y M

1)3-6331
331-1771

II7-6131
m tsti

To S la
YO U N G C h ristia n M an to share
m y I Bdrm House w ith same
&lt;* rent &gt;1 1*3 661 4311.

P R IV A T E E N T R A N C K
3)1)13)

M M IM IM IIM IM H *
N E E D good home? I need a
good, m ature pert lim p litte r
tor m y husband 33) 5471 * tl.

S A N F O R D — Reas Wkly. |
monthly rates. U til Inc. K it
300 0*k. Adults 141 711).

M A N qualified to do carpentry k
maintenance A pply in person
•00 W tlth SI

RN OR LPN

F a m ily R A d u lts
■h w
t B d r iM .
Cove Aprs. ) » 7MB O p r t a *

a 11 and I I 1 Shin. F u ll lim p.
A p p ly In p arson Sa n lord
Nursing ConvptesZenl Center,
*)0 M e llo n ville Av*.
R IG H T now w* need a lew good
sales people who have tha
am bition and dedication to
succeed It that's you. than
we re prepared to otter you
real rew ards and lha methods
to get them. F o r Interview,
pleas* t i l l Century )1, Hayes
Realty Servlets, Inc., Sanlord
173 30S0
L P N II 7 7 nights per
A p p ly L a k e y ie w N u rsin g
Center, t l* Tnd St., Sanlord.

)

Bdrm tv* bath. Fireplace,
Form a l D ining R . M odem
Kitchen, Cant H A. Quiet and
wooded. )7)S4II alt S.

B A M BO O C O V E 1
apts. A vaila ble . M anager on
premises, 33311*0.
R id g e w o o d A r m f . 7 B d rm .
Apts. Irom 177 S. ) Bdrm . otso
m a il. Poof, M rm lt court. US14)0
a

A V O N R B P R il B N T A T I V I t
Tha P a rt Tim a Career
A44 M7* - Collect a u n t
W O U L D lha Yeung Lad y who
answered in* ad tor a wood
w o rk in g iob . p le a s* c a ll
Seaworthy Wood Products at
S I8 U 4

*m .

:* M v t t w r
OlyMpfc »i, Rgol.
MR W .

M e iio ffv iu *
T ra ct
A p ts .
Spec leu*, m sdsfn 1 B drm , t
B ath a p t. C a rp e te d , h it
eq u ip p e d,
CHAA.
Near
haspftaf A laka
-pen g g » H M H R .

PwWart Village an Lab* Adt . I
CO N CESSIO N k g ill th a n e ip ,
p a rt f i m t
W t tk tn d s
k
holidays a m utt. A pply C tn tra l
F lorid* Zoo.

M |rm lr.M B ia ,* 6 - f « lrw i

IMI. Located 17-M iw*t

m

SSKuSSk-—

•“

IS
•w S iR u i w *■»'&lt;*•

* •V ^ I I a B 0 c - . n 7.V-,

y . p ,

*

w • h « a. | W

I

�/

O U R B O A R D IN G H O U S E

U n h jr a h M

B A T E M A ffR E A L T Y
r bdrm + nan,
c e r a m ic
b a th ,
fu rn itu re
available, adults, 4225 mo 1. m i is a i
Classified a d i w r y i the buying ft
ta ilin g com m unity «m r
— « * 1 - S m e mam 6111
SAN D ALW O O D V illa* Airport
Btvd , Sanford. 1 Bdrm . 1 Be
The R e a lly Stora. Realtors
i an m i

.Jl-Agortmants Fumishad
I BOR turn apt, Adults
*I*J. Sat Dap (too
Carpal ad H I 2794

1 A C R E Near new Hospital
Good Potential Priced Right
Term s SH.SOO

Alger &amp; Pond
REALTY, INC.
LOW IN T E R E S T ! Owner w ill
finance 1 bdr home with M 000
dn al II percent ini lo r 10 yrs
Call today lor details! 124 900
MINI R A N C H S wooded acres
Surround a 4 bdr. 1 bth
Builders custom home Built In
bookceses. 1 screened patios,
fountain B solarium E xtras
galore' I l l s , 900

1 B D R. a ir ww carpal, slovt,
ra lrig w d hook up. no pats
S llS w Ilh Itasa A sac 111 2941
S A N F O R D spacious I bdrm . I
b ill, a ir, drapas. 1150 mo +
dap H t lS a l.

323-7843
R EA LTO R S

SAN FO RD LA N D M A R K
Spacious and lovely 1 Story
hom e 4 B d rm , I 'y fla lh ,
Form al L iv in g and Dining
Room Charm ing interior 1
b d rm
S e rv a n ts Q u a rte rs
L a rg e
c o rn e r
lo l
w ith
beautiful Trees 1910 S Park
SI59.700

A T T R A C T IV E I bdr., t'/i bth,
C H A , w a ifia r d r y a r , con
vaniantly loca lrd tH S.
H i asio

CallBart

SO IIM CfTIZINS
Two M , two tarti

R E A L ESTATE
R F A L T O R . H I I4td

Maim I momila OT A
aj^a
WaIM
W
m

j bdrm , I B with
doubla car garaga, in
Dattona. C a iiS T a iO i.
LONGW OOD I Bdr IV» Bath.
F lo r id a R oom , C a rp a tin g .
Itncad yard, w ith citrus iraas.
U t ilit y R m . and C a rp o rt.
E x tre m ity clean USO mo plus
Security Deposit. C all between
1 1 7 p m H I alSA
S A N F O R D — 1 Bdrm — IVj
Bath, Cent H A, w all lo wait
c a rp e tin g .
U t ilit y
Rm ,
Garaga, Larg o corner lot. In
n ic e neigh b orh ood . V a ry
Clean . S1S0 mo. +
Security Deposit. Call between
I t 7 p m H I 44S4

S A N F O R D O PT . TO B U Y I
1 bdr caroprt, kid so k t7M
Cottage, turn, no dap SHS
SA N F O R D U N F U R tS A P T .
• I mss, appllc., kids. I7JJ

HITTIN LAVr'-ABiPlNC IT IZ E N S WITH
5PEEDIN’ *TtC K ET 6'

Spring n here and it's a good
tim e to choose a new home
fro m th e p ag es o l our
classified ads

322-7443

D E L IG H T F U L D eBary - extra
large 1 bdr, 1 bth home with
lots ol closets, on '» acre
wooded, lake front lol Dream
k it, r e ir ig . is la n d stove,
washer B dryer, cent vac
system, w w carpel. 14x10
screened porch, patio, and
closed garage. S47.500
FO U R TOW NES
R E A L T Y INC B R O K E R
M l tD O anytim e
Don't Despair Or P u ll Your H air
Use A Want Ad H I 1411 or
•11199)
SA N FO R D A ttractive 77 ye old
home on 140 It of Lake Onoro,
1 Bdrm . I Bath, 1 porches,
property can be split SIS.000
Low interest Open lo otters
By Own-r I 191 9197

49.000
SH.SOO
119,500

N IC E
STARTER
HOME
Located in good neighborhood
Hes large tit le lo r additional
bdrm . Only SIS.500
R E A L TO R 1114991 P a y o r NIBWT

ROBBIE'S
REALTY
, m li
&gt;141 S. French
Suite 4
Santord
realto r

24 HOUR 03 322*9283
A L L F L O R ID A R E A L T Y
O F S A N FO R D R EA LT O R

37—Business Properly
Fee rant o r lease — 10,110 sq. It.
Industrial o r warehouse. » ll
W 1st SI.. Sanford. H I I '00

Harold Hall

7,000 s r . ft tt. ind u strial or
Com m ercial Building an 11*1.
I M ft. in oft ice space Call
m i n t or 0 4 4 u i.

SANFO RD
M i SR. It. It. ind u sfrlol o r
C o m m ercial Building an I I T T
\ m fl. m off lea space CaN
m u i l a r 04-4141.
O ffice Space
P er Lease
4107771

W O H r im
V E G E T A B L E F a rm for Lebte
With option 10 buy In Somsula
A t o p . Irrlgpflon pump in or
eut. 1 Tractor* and equipment
Owner help plant and (ro w on
c o m m iss io n s A lb e r t F e rd
V o lu s ia C o u n ty 404 414 1401
A ll. 4 p m.
Semeoady Is looking lo r your
bargain Otter It today In the
Close it e d Ads
F R K CONST. Sale D e B e ry 1 Ige
wafer front lets Buy now B
chouse lay out B colors.
Johnny W alker
R eal Estate INC, Broker
» i ass i

Iv tm -1 * 4 4

N E W L IS T IN G S
H ID D E N L A K E C lt4 n as a
w hittle ) Bdrm. 1 Bath Spill
Plan has many extras, in
eluding Paddle Fans, home
w arranty, clubhouse pool end
good schools Excellent low
im ereti assum able mortgage
SS7.S00
S U N L A N O Lovely 1 Bdrm . H i
baih. dream home cars be
yours lo r LOW DOWN Cent
HA Huge oak tree*, fireplece
and fa m ily n n a ll included
Great buy »* 149.000

HAL C0LBUT REALTY
IOC.

323-7132
Eves H I 0411
107 E . ISIh SI
It

you i r e h iv in g difficulty
finding • piece lo live, cor to
drive, # lob, or torn* service
.you have need ol, road a ll our
wont ads every day

\IM l
i; l

u

f lI M M I

I s i \ 11

M L*

L A K t V I I W 1 Bdr. 1 bth. Ip. Ig
yard, veg garden, ic r palia.
e itra s . 171.444
L I K E TO E N T E R T A I N 1 bdr, !
bth. 1 ttery. peal, rec rm , Ip. Ig
let, enly 141,144
C H A R M IN G 1 bdr. I bib, CH A ,
work that, scr pah*, w ish er,
dryer, (aed a r ts . 147.444.
A lt t f br*. I l l 71M end H I 4951
8214941

II

starting as lew as 1149 9$ Bob
Ball Music Center &amp; Western
Auto

BBAATOt

KMS outgrow the swing sal or
sm all b fcycta f Sell these idle
Hems with a want ad Te piaca
your ad. c a ll your friatsdiy
Clew Hied gal a l Tha Herald.
171 m i l or u t t m

. . f m ■» •* ’ **■'

50-A—JEWblfY

42—M obile Homes
C H E C K TH ISO UT
B E A U T IF U L 1961 Royal Oaks 16
wide ) bdr, 1 bth. garden tub.
d e lu x e c a r p e l, c a th e d ra l
ceilings, b rick fireplace wood
siding, shingle root, paddle
Ian and many more extras
Only 514 900 V A financing nb
money down, 10 *• down
conventional See at Uncle
Roys M o b ile Hom e Sales ot
Leesburq, U S Hwy 44) S 904
717 0)14 Open weekdays 6
7 XI. Sun 114
&gt;

14 Ft Cruise A ir, Dodge Motor
H om e E k c e lle n t C o n d itio n
Low Mileage. H I 1741 or
) « o jii

C H E C K O U T U N CLE ROYS
L A R G E selection ol 14 wides
prices start S4995 V A tman
cmg no money down. 10*.
conventional
Shop Uncle Roys M obile Home
Sales. Leesburg. U S Hwy 441
S 904 717 0)14 Open 7 days

REALTY, INC.
323-5774

WE h a v e r e n t a l s
P R IC E D R E D U C E O 51.900 New priced below e p p ra is il.
this ) bdrm heme w beamed
ceilings * lovely, shaded le i Is
Sonlord’s best buy at only
115.6041!
C O U N T R Y A T M O S P H E R E In
town P m e c rtsl area. I Bdrm
L a rg e L iv in g R m . Only
111.164
EASY
A S S U M P T IO N
Low
payments 1 Bdrm N e ir new
H o s p ita l.
ZONED
CO M M E R C IA L . Super potential.
Only S I M M .
O W N E R F IN A N C IN G e v i l on
this lovely 1 bdrm B rick home
w O r e p e t ,
Range.
Regrigerotor 4 Fam Rm on
deep lo t ll 114.940
O V E R 1544 sq II in this 4 1 with
new Cen Heat, big bedrooms.
Fam Rm. 16x11 scr porch 4
heavily treed lot lor only
S44.6MI I
CUSTO M E X E C U T IV E H O M E
w over D M sq It, ) bdrm split
plan. Fireplace. Fam Rm . eatin kitchen, huge scr porch +
landscoping g o lo rt a l SIS.64611

Get lu ll exposure — le k e Ih4i
•For Sale" tlg n down A run e
classified ed Cell H I 7611 or
1)1 999)
L A K E M A R Y 4 large
lots, nice trees
SIS.000each H I 4111
AREA.
FRO N T

O STEEN
W OODED
A C R E S 411.500 T E R M S

l’&gt;

OSTEEN
5 ACRES
TALL
P I N E S . S C R U B O A K . 114.500
TERMS
OSTEEN
paved

road

JU ST F O R YO U 1 bdrm I Bath
Heme w ith lenced yard, new
roo t, ra n g * , r a lr lg e r a t e r ,
parch. In great cenditieni Only
II4.4M
C O U N T R Y E S T A T E , I Bdrm H i
Bath Hen a en II A cres in
Osteen l A ll the e i t r a il Twe
• r ic k fir e p la c e s ' F la r ld a
Beam , equipped B a t in Kitchen. Larg a pall#. Fenced and
N eraas
w e lc e m e l
Ju s t
tllS.444.
A SS O CIAT E S n 4 « D « D I New
er experienced. C a ll H trB
SI en strain a r Lee A lb rlg M
taday A discover w c c e ssl

C A L L A N Y T IM E
mi
P ark

322-2420
&lt;3—Mobile Hamas

le « PUT beautiful new B R O A D
M O R E , front A rear S R I .
G R E G O R Y M O B IL E H O M E *
MO)Orlando Dr
H ) 5100
V A A F H A Financing

, ,

Kenmore parts, service, us « j
washer* M O O N E Y A P P L I
A N C E S 11) 0497
G E Gas Dryer

1 year old 5150
Call H J 2aar

1981
Toshibia m icrow ave oven, sale
p ric e 5149
1911 ca n iste r
vacuum cleaner 559 50 See al
S a n lo rd
Sew ing
Center.
Sanlord P la ta across from
Burger King

80—Autos for Sale

S3—TV Radio-Slcreo
Good Used T V ’S.IIS A u p
M ILLE R S
741*O rla n d o F r
Ph 3710152

Alum inum , cans, copper, lead,*
brass, silv e r, gold. Weekdey*
I 4 30. Sal 9 1 KOKOMO Tool
Co 911 W 1st SI 11) 1100

47—Real Estate Wanted
CASH F O R E Q U IT Y
W l c a n c lM e i n l l h r i
C a llB a rt R eal Estate 111 ;« ,t
W e buy e q u ity In H s u s e i.
apartments, vacant land and
Acreage
L U C K Y IN V EST
M E N T S , P O Box 1500. San
lord. f &gt;4 H71) 171 4741
l ls e a t y to place a C las silled Ad
. . . W e'll even help you word
it C all i n m i

4 7 A - .M M lp g B A

We pay cash lo r l i t A tnd
mortgages R ay Legg, Lie.
Mortgage Broker, l i t 1709

SO—Miscellaneous for Salt
COTS, T E N T S , T A R P S
A R M Y N AVY SU RPLUS
11C Sanford Ave.
H I ST* I .
GAS G R I L L tso I maple Iwln
bed IIS tlrm 117 MS* alter 7
P &gt;0
S E A R S refrig era to r lik e new
140 Occasional
C hair DO H I 1071

F IR E W O O D
H 1 IM I
17 Cu F I F re e ia r 1 yrs. old
Am ana 5)04 E le ctric phonic I
T rack Stared, cabinet type

SIOO m ill)

I

1974 O LO S D e lla II. 1 Door VI
Autom atic, A ir, power win
dows, steering and brakes
Runs f i c t ll t n l . needs paint
1595 1)11174
7) B U IC K Century 4dr,
PS. PH . AC, lilt,
cleenltS O ) ) ) 4U0

BUSINESS SERVICE LISTING
AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB
To List Your Business...
Dial 322-2611 or 831-9993

Additions A
Re mod* ling

Clock Repair

B A TH S ,kitchens, rooting, block,
co n crete, w in d ow s, add a
room, tree estim ate H I 444)

GW ALTNEY j e w e l e r
104 S P ark Aye
111 1509

Landscaping

A ir Conditioning

T O Y fE R ’ S B E A U T Y SALO N
F O R M E R L Y H arrie tt's Beauty
Nook S19 E 1st S t, H1S747

Boarding A Grooming
A nim al Haven Boarding and
G ro o m in g Ke n n aia Sh ad y,
insulated, screened, fly proof
inside, outside runs
Fens
Also AC cages We cater to
your p e lt
S ta rtin g stud
registry Ph H I S7S1
Make your Budget go further,
shop the Classified Ads every
b a y _______________________
Snow H ill Kennel o ile rs Cal B
Dog F le a B ilh s is up 14
Hour. F u ll Service 145 5712

Building Contractor
B ill C o r io , S ta le C e rtifie d
Building
Contractor.
Residential or Com m ercial,
New o r Remodeled H I 04*4

Electrical

1

Handyman

CaramicTlla
Complete C e ra m ic TUe ta re ,
walls. Doors, countertops, re
model, rep air. F r. est H 9 02II
M E lN T Z E R t i l e
N ew er rep air, leak y showers our
sp ecially, IS y rs Exp 449 *541

* | | | | | ft A f ' % * ^ ^ *^ * * * t* *% * *

Ramodaling
Masonry

J I B
tlsm e InpfO vem eni
Carpentry work a l any type.
Roof repairs, gutter work,
painting (in terior er exterior!,
plum bing, sp e cie tiie in mobile
home rep airs B reef coating,
and wood petle decks. Free
estim ate m M M .

W t handle lha
Whole B all o l W e i

B. E . L in k Gonst.
322-7029

M inLU -Ladi

F inen cing A vaila b le

N E W Concrete Buildings, ail
sites 410 A up At 1 4 4 SR 44 1
4 industrial Perk. 11] 0041.

Roofing
ro o fs,

leeks repaired, R (p iece
reDea (ayes end eMegle week,
lic e n se d , in su re d , bedded.
M ik e m - a n .

Nuriing Canter
OUR R A TES A R E LO W ER
L ekevlew Nursing Center
f i t E Second St., Sanford
122 4707

IP* like pennies from heaven
when you sell "D o n 'l Needs"
With e went ad

Paintin g , Rooting, Carpentry
L ie . Bonded B Guaranteed
Free B stim e te i HSI44*

R am odaling Sp ecialist

If -you a r tn 'l using your pool
l ib i t , u k r a cut, and sell It
w iin a H traid classified ad
C all H I 1411

Hauling A
Ya rd Work

CENTRAL FLORIDA HOMI
IMPROVEMENTS

P lum bing repelr — e ll types
w e lrr heelers A pumps
H I 4471

D U N N R IT E L a w n S e rv ic e .
Mow. edge’, trim , vacuum,
m ulch, sod Reas )77 1594

Painting, carpentry, a ll types *1
home rep airs Call lor free
estimate. H I IT7S

Hernia Improvamant

FO N SEC A P LU M B IN G
C«l
Slrucllon, Repairs. Em ergen
cy L ie . Bonded. Ins 111 e07i

Lawn Malnt ana nc*

Quality ele ctrical work H yrs
e x p e rie n c e M inor repairs lo
com plrte w iring 111 0114

When you place a Classified Ad
in The Evening Herald, slay
dose lo your phone because
something wonderful I* about
lo haooen

M o d rrn lllng your Home? Sell no
longer needed bul useful Items
with a Classified Ad

Acreages* lot clearing
F ill dirt lop soil
tor sale H I 1411

I M A N Q U A L IT Y O P E R A T IO N
9 yrs exp Patios, Drivew ays
r lt Wayne Beal H I 1)71

Bawdy Care

P r r d d le R o b in so n P lu m b in g
R e p a irs .’ fa u c e ts, W
C
Sprinklers 111 1510. 11141704

La ndc tearing

Concrete Work, looters, llo o rt i
pools L a n d sc a p in g 4* tod
work F r r a r s t I l l / l O I

Chris w ill s t r v lc i A C ’S, rtfrlg ,
fre e je rt, water coolers, m lsc
C a ll 1114717

Plumbing

L A R G E T R E E IN S T A L L E D
Lendsceping, Old Law ns R v
p ieced M t t w i

Concrete Work

&lt; 6 B - ln v w t m * n t

IN V E S T O R S
PLEASEl
1
Triplex units lu ll arrived
Purchase separately or both
lor 540.000 with owner holding
C all on this one! June P o rn g
R eally Realtors. H I 4476.

$4995
$1)88
$2i;;
12081
SAS95

75C H E V Y Van ] speed
a ir. custom plus extras
M ake o ile r 32) 2799

;*T&gt;.•AY IO N A AUTO AU CTIO N
Hwy 92. 1 mile w e ll of Speed
way. Oaylona Beach, w ill hold
a public AUTO AU CTIO N
every Wednesday at 4 p m It's
the only one In F lo rid a You tel
the reserved p rice C all 904
2SS41II lor further detells.

Send ell d etails In

eluding location, lo P O Box
t i l l . Ocala. F la 11474

$54;;

CONSULT OUR

fro n tage

W A N T E D 100 lo 1U0 acres in
Orange or Seminole Counties,
toned lor mobile home sub

$47; ;

197) C A D I L L A C Fleetwood 4
Door Sedan F u lly equipped
Excellent o rig in al condition
51195 1)1 1774

Eaif

8)1 1734

68—Wanted to Buy
Antiques Diamonds Oil
Paintings O riental Rugs
Bridges Antiques
11)1401

u m

IF THIS IS T H E D A Y to buy a
new car see to d a y s Classified
ads lor best buys

1972 C H E V Y CIO P ic k Up Long
Wheel Base VI, 3 Speed Slick
Huns E«cpll(*n». L o o k s

14?;;

GOVERNM ENT
SU RPLUS
C A R S A N D T R U C K S NOW
AVAILABLE
th ro u g h
government sales, under 1)00
Call 1 714 549 0 741 E xt 500 lor
your d irectory on how lo
purchaye

79—Trucks. Tra i lers

ir n

1)490
u rn

1970 VW BUG New sticker, runs
well Needs some body repair
1495 1)1 1774

1990
SU ZU KI 550
377 3745

n u tren afeed s

% u r?

1974 B U IC K Skylark Clean I
Owner. Auto AC. PS. New disc
Brakes lilt wheel A M F M
stereo radio Custom interior
V m yl lop new tle e l belled
ra d ia lt N rw rih a u s t system
eO M o Battery. Rust pronl
S272S 305 147 1540 or H 1 4 II0

750 1971 HO N DA, runs great,
new
tire s ,
c h a in ,
re a r
sp rockrl. K Q te al 1995 H I
04)5 alt 5 p m

Hwy 44 W . - 11) 4474
CASH A C A R R Y P R IC E S
H oq F inisher Pellets
15 40
Layer C
IS 40
Rabbit Pellets
SI IS
Beet Kw ik
54 95
U N V ita lity Horse
Pellets
SI 10
10 N V ile lily Sweet
Feed
4S7S

SEIGLER REALTY
BROKER
3765 HWY . 17-92
321-0640

t ^

Top D ollar Pa&lt;d lo r Junk A Used
car*, trucks A heavy equip
men! H I 1990
8 U V ’j u n k c a r s b T r U E k T
Frort) 410 to ISO or morg
C e ll H I 1414,111 S440

67—Li vcstock- Pou Itr y

C O M M E R C I A L 7 A C R E S O N 17
91 N E A R
LAKE
MARY
B O U L E V A R D 5150000

14X40. 1 B D R M . 1 Bath. IOx M
Screen porch enclosed with
R o lla d e n s h u lle r i.
11x10
U t ilit y
Em .
W a ll
an d
S p r in k lin g t y lt a m , m an y
a u tra l. H I Hacienda V illag e.
i i7 m t

. k* * '* • • * « *

C H E C K With Santord Auction
twlore you buy or sell 1115 S
French
)2) 7)40 Mon Sal

★

Bank fm in c in i av ailab le
55 N. Hwy. 1791
Casselberry

78—Motorcycles

G erm an Shepherd M ale ] Y rs
Super w ith c h ild r e n exc
Watch dog 1700 )77 5757

G E N E V A 10 A C R E S W O O D E D .
C O C H R A N R O A O 5) 500 P E R
A C R E M A Y DIVIDE

d iv isio n

CASH FOR CAR S
Running or nol
159 4944

C F A P E R S IA N S Adult
Fem ales White. Black
USO 1750 )}) J5IS

W ILSON M AI ER F U R N IT U R E
) l l ]I5 E FIR ST ST
H I San

G E N E V A !• i A C R E S W O O D E D
Z O N E D M O B I L E IH.SOO

W E LIS T A N D S E L L
M O R E H O M E S TH A N
A N Y O N E IN T H E
SANFO RD A R E A

C O U N T R Y L IV IN G 1 B drm I
Beth H om e on I A c re !
S p a c io u t
R to m s ,
D in in g
Room. B r t ik la t f b ar. F lorida
Room, Porch, Wood Floors
■ring your own h o r te il En|oy
•or
541,444

A N IM A L Haven Kennels board
■ng A g ro o m in g . Needed
P e k in g e se A s m a ll s ilv e r
poodle lor stud M ale Owners
call ) H 5757

1)4.000

Sanford's Sales Leader

JUST L IS T E D &gt; Bdrm 1 Bath
Homo in Pincocrost with CHA,
Wall fo w ill carpot. Paneled
F lo rid a Rm . with E le c tric
F P L Equipped Kitchen and
L a rg e R o o m s! Y o u rs lo r
S IM M

G h E E N sola A High back
chair to match
C all a ll Sp m 1)1 1511

G R E A T O A N E 6 wks AKC
Parents M ale Boston B lackie
Champ.on Blood L in e 1175
H I 701)

II A C R E S W O O O E O

43B- Lots 4 Acra*gt
WkntEd

REALTY - REALTORS

51-A—F u m ltu i*

1977 Thundrrbirrt
1976 Buich La Sa b re
Custom
1976 B u n k 725 Coupe
1977 M ercu ry Cougar
SR7
1969 M u s i m g Convertible
1977 Buick Lim ited
Coupe
1977 Monte Carlo
Sunrool
I960 Chevette
7 000 m iles
1969 F ireb ird Coupe
1976 V W Rabbit
1971 V o lk s S la W agon
1979 F irrb ird F o rm u la

77*w du*r-;a&amp; RerniTwfl

W ILCO s a l e s

SANT ORD P rim e 16 59 Acres w
options lor toning 541.500 w
Terms W M alicto w skl )71
796), Eves )71 1147

W Ek iv a
fa lls
W O O DED R IV E R
A C R E 575.000

• SETS Custom Made Drapery 4)
,n long Cost SHOO Sell lor
5100 Double Bed new, 1100,
Color TV Antenna 550
72J 4751

B A H Auto Sales
★ 339-7989 *

★

Used Car P a ris all makes and
models 377 2192 We buy Used
Cars and Trucks

65— P e l s - S u p p li e s

SI—Appliances

43— L o t s A c r e a g e

REALTOR

51—Household Goods

!9tJ PIN 7 0 4*p , run t good,
nrw tir e s 4650
)1) 6477 alte r 6 p m

C H E V Y w m d o w v an,
lo a d e d , e x c e lle n t cond*
)2 ) I H f o r )72 6690

76—Auto Parts

F I L L DIRT A T O P S O IL
Y E L L O W SAN D
Call Clark A H ir t H ) 7540

you are having difficulty*
finding a place, to live, c a r to
drive, e |ob. or tom e service
you have need ot, read e ll our
want ads every day

71 T B IR O Loaded. New Tires,
flfu* with W hile Top. or 74
Cutlass Supreme No money
down 175 mo 119 9100 114 4405
Dealer

b -A —Vans

62— L a w n G a r d e n

W E D D IN G ring sel w o m an ! 7
I }rd karat 1550 or
best o ile r 574 S974

-

Have some camping equipment
you no longer use) Sell it all
with a Classified Ad in The
Herald Call H I 2411 or 1)1
999) and a Irlendly a d v is o r
w ill help you

P I A N O S &amp; o r g a n s la r g e &amp; s m a ll

Ev e r y
Oa y
is
b a r g a in
DAY IN TH E W ANT ADS H I
1411 or 1)1 999)

STENSTROM

SANFORD

----------- --------------

*75—Recreational Vehicles

10 f T B O A T c l r a n K M M V 6 i;§
M P l O, G fi to r tr a i l e r li k e New

Excellent Business opportunity
in good location Complete
stock Included in this priced
reduced lo SHOO
14441. French H I t i l l
A lter Hours: 4499414. # M M I

U M 4 II

1974 M A Z D A R X 4
Station Wagon 4700
H ) 0111

55—Boats &amp; Accessories

1 B D R M , In G rou nd Pool
Country Club Manor. Senlord
Fenced 1)40 mo Isl. last and
1100 Deposit 447 MOO

acreag e

t + A cre
}&lt;x A cres
S A cres

F’gr E t t a le , C o m m e r c ia l ar
f R esidential Auctions A Ap
praisals. C all D e ll's Auction
H I 5420

J23 6072

O W N ER W ILL F IN A N C E 1
B drm .
t
B ath
P a r tly
remodeled Has F (replace and
carpeting SO 11 on Hwy 44 W
Only 1)1.900

M—Mobile Homes

1 B D R M House Trailer P artly
furnished w ith air, lanced
patio, i n la st.

P r ic e s
R e d u ce d !
No
R r e to n e b le O ile r R e lu te d
Sanlord C r l Apt . Apl 44.
San lard Aye A A irp a rt B in t

Term s

G E T TH O SE L U X U R Y IT EM S
FOR A F R A C T IO N OF T H E IR
COST F R O M T O O A V 'S W AN T
ADS I

is FT M O B IL E Home on St
Johns R ive r Near Geneva
Scenic Location Sami P riv ate
D r iv e
A ll U t ilitie s paid
A d u llt only I1S4 M o I4f SII4

T H A T 4U&gt;
C A R R I E * H15
U IT A R .'

LOT in Country 54.900

321-0759

STEM PERAG ENC Y

S A V -O N -R E N T A LS

lR D R . ! b lh t ! S 4 month
I s lB la s t * security
H I 4441

IN * T E A D 2

__ ______________________ _

72—Auction
A P T S A L E . Couch. C h a irt.
Tablet. E tageret, Aquarium .
Decorator Phones. Queen Sue
Bed. Alm ost New. M uch Mare.

a b o u t t h e w av

L K M AR V lot. Duplex W ill Irad
Equity 416 MO

T H E C E N T UR Y 11 S Y S T E M
H E L P S more people buy and sell
more real estate than anyone
else In A m rrlc a i Call It.-ay
and let it work lo r you Cail
111 1040
Hayes Real Estate
Services. Inc
•ISW ISth&amp; l
SanPyrd
Each office is independently
owned and operated

Sam male
) J 9 ft* t
SAV ON R R N T A L f R E A L T O R

4 BD R .. 1 bth cant H A Lake
M ary. Santord area S400 mo ♦
Deposit 111 14t4.

B LD G

O trM K .

S A N F O R D Apartm ent
1 Bdrm , Porch, Kids, 1154

1 B D R M , IVi B, sunken living
rm ., paddle Ians, 1 mo. old
S4S0. Attar 4 p m. I l l 4441.

1 LO TS Santord Ave
I1I.S00

CREATIVE
’ F in a n c in g !
Academ y Manor. 1 Bdrm, |'y
Ba
New carpel B pa ml.
carport Rear fenced Big lot
119.900 111 &gt;031_____________

32-Hwaaa Unhmtehad

574461*

C0?£&gt; OJ3HTA BE vlA'UN
T rtW E

THERE^
EF A M lU M s

A P A R T B L D G W X Lot Good
Teems 114900

1 BDR . I bth, assume F H A mlg
S1.S00 dn SH.SOO total, exc
cond move right In H I 1114

A

$315 Monthly
Gdl IM a Jo,,

LOOK AT T A T l ’Tc HHIKE*
UP AHEAP- HE$P&lt;?ACTt:AU_&gt;
B10C.KIN THE W AD' THE

Mondby, S*pt. 71,1*11— IB

________________________ i.

W — G a r a g e S a le s

CALL

■umlshad apartm ants lor San lor
CltIrons, 111 Palm atto Ave., j
Cowan. No phono calls

31A—Duplexes

Lie R eal Estate Broker
lia O S en lo rd A ve

IC H A

STOP A N D T H IN K A M IN U T E .
II Class if ltd Ads didn't work
. , there wouldn't b t any.

Evening Herald, Sanlord, FI.

w it h M a j o r H o o p l e

•11— H o u s e s

41— H o u s e s

Christian Rooting 17 yrs exp.
149 5750, tree est Rereoflng,
sp e c le llie m rep air work A
new rooting
S O U T H E R N R O O FIN G II yrs
exp , re roofing, leak special
HI
D e p e n d ab le A honest
p rice Day o r m ghl H I m i

Fainting
H tilm a n P jin lin g A Repairs.
Q uality work Free Eat, Disc,
to Seniors 414 4490 Refer

SM dblM ting

Vacation lim e it here get whet
you need for a happy tim e with
a Classified Ad.

SANDBLASTING
DAVIS WILDING
SlSda**. SANFORD

FtolnfingAar
Prassura Cteantag

T raatarvica

No |ob loo large or sm elt.
Q uality e m u lt C e ll H I 0071
References F r Est

y

•

s * 0

■ !^ M « 1 T &gt; S « H |V tc l

T rim m ing , removing 4 LerW
seeping F re e c j
m « u

V

»

t

»

&gt;

* i
*5 e

�#1

4f t - E v t n ln f Herald, Sanford, FI.

B L O N D IE

1 e 'f

Monday, Sept. II, 1M I

by Chic Young

THIS cw y IS TOO)
MCE TO GO
INTO WORK

A R C H IE

by Bob Montana
' VO U ’R E R

ig h t

, a b c h ie /

46 Ravolutionary
Antwer to Previout Puiile
48 Part of a
lU L lU IJ
1 Law ytri
typewriter
nn 0 T 3
pitron taint 49 Chinese fabric
J
r M O JU
5 ____ "th»
S3 Pann#d
Tr| A M M
Ttrnbla"
57 Hatchet
9 Tim# ion#
58 God (Sp)
(abbr)
60 Surrounded
12 Mine#
by
13 Oltlttrout
61 Small bird
*14 Broke bread 62 Off-white
15 ?.!!!?!,fl,ncv
« Capturt"
(abbr)
64 CIA
16 Betray (tl)
predecessor
17 Adult male
65 Position in
18 Afr nation
educetion
9 Van Druten
38 Spy employed
Sierra ____
66 Emerald Isle
character
by police
20 Harmony
10 Betebiller
40 Hid
*
feature
DOW
N
Mutial
22 Bounder
knowledge
11 Tape*
24 The tun (lat)
43 Necessitated
Golden
calf
19 Orgens of
25 African land
45 Whirl
Holding
hairing
29 Pan of tpeech
47 Thew
davica
21 Lump ol eirth 4g Groupo(
(PM
3 Repetition
23 Eiptred
33 Mountain
Western allies
4 Medium's
pan
forts
^ ethlehe
ethietic orouo
group 50 SPindl« ..
34 Danommation
5 Mtntal
26 Chirged
' ,lh,n8 ".d*
38 P ill in drops
compontnt
particles
52 H*,0in» °f A
37 Anonymous
(Pi I
27 Brilliance
Dol,'» Hou«
39 Shon dtggtr
28 Tart
54 Persian poet
6 Contttttd
41 Oiheaded
7 City on tht
30 Force onward 55 Potyneeien
antelope
Rhone
42 Egyptian dim
31 Boy (Sp)
9&lt;xf
8 English
site
32 Twirled
56 Home of Eve
tdmirel
44 Oubliette
35 Pacific Island 59 Old sol

ACROSS

Walk, Don't Run
To Beat Fatigue

D EA R DR. L A M B - I
would appreciate any in*
form ation you have on
fatigue. I am a 27-year-old
female. I’ve started running
for exercise. How far and how
fast should I be going? I
average one-and-a-half miles
in 13 minutes but I’m still
tired. I run five days a week.
get out of bed often mean
Do I need any other exercise?
overdoing it or a medical
I'm 5-feet-U and weigh 143
problem. Habita affect both
pounds.
heart rate and fatigue, f ills
D E A R R E A D E R - People
includes cigarettes, coffee
who are inactive often do (eel
and diet.
tired. But that doesn't mean
that everyone who is tired is
D EA R DR. L A M B - 1 have
fatigued (rum lack of eser always enjoyed good health
rise. A person who must do and maintained it through a
heavy physical labor is tired balanced diet, proper rest,
at the end of the work day exercise and dental work as
from too much exercise and needed every six months. I
i
2
4
3
5
6
7
8
9
10 11
doesn’t need more.
was sent to a peridontal
I don’t know from your sp ecialist
12
recently
for
14
13
letter how much exercise you treatment of gingivitis. My
get from all your activities upper and lower teeth were
15
16
17
but a mile-and-a-half five scaled and most areas healed
18
„
days a week only is not with no remaining pocketa.
21
■
enough. It is strenuous for the
L
22
13 minutes you are running The doctor recommended
23 ■
"
but that is it. I would rather surgery' on three teeth to
25 26 27
30 31 32
see you walk about three remove gum tissue and create
"
■
miles a day and enjoy the a new bond of the gum to these
1
33
teeth. He mentioned bone loss
walk.
J 9 3&lt;
35 ■
N otice I said "e n jo y ,’ ’ but did not exp lain the
37
,0
which is b key word in com­ relationship of this to my
■
■
"
bating fatigue. Everyone problem of gingivitis. Should I
42
45
should do something every be getting additional calcium
T ■
day that he or she enjoys. It or make any other dietary
46
makes life more pleasant and changes?
■
1 S3
49 50 51
if you arc enjoying your self
54 55 56
D E A R R E A D E R - Your
\
■
you are less likely to be
story suggests that your
57
59
56
60
fatigued.
dentist thinks you have
\
You do need a medical
pyorrhea (peridontoclasia).
61
62
63
checkup. About one in five
persons who complains of The bone resorption around
64
65
66
fatigue actually does have a your teelh contributes to the73"
medical problem, such os loose teeth and loose gingiva
anemia, an infectious disease (gum s). Infected m aterial
or even an endocrine disease. develops in the loose pockets
and causes more damage.
People with circu lato ry
diseases often feel tired. You Tissue removal) is often In­
w ill have a better un­ dicated in such cases to
By B E R N IC E B E D E OSOL
derstanding of what causes elim inate the pockets of
fatigueand what to do about it potential trouble.
For Tuetday, Septem ber
,
after reading The Health
One of many factors that
events; you do this naturally. letter number 9-6, Fatigue:
Your Birthday
can
be
involved
Is
Today, this gift is even more Feeling Tired and Weary,
September 21, IN I
osteoporosis (bone softening)
which I am sending you.
predominant.
Personal am bitions may
which often first shows up in
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
bring out the more forceful
Don’t push for speed when
the bone around the teeth. See
Although
you're
not you run. And when you get up
you this coming year,
your medical doctor also to
necessarily a take-charge in the morning, take your
although you'll still find ways
check on this. And if that is
individual, today you can see resting heart rate before you
to be diplomatic at the same
true you might need more
ways that elude others of get out of bed. If it is slow, 70 calcium In your diet or
time. Others will respect and
accom plishing goals. You or leas, you are probably not
admire this and do all they
medical treatment to avoid
may be forced to assume the overdoing your exercise. F a it
can to support you.
bone loss elsewhere in your
helm.
*
resting heart rates before you
body.
LIB RA (Sept. 230ct. 23)
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
Your personality may be a bit
If you're willing to change,
like a chameleon, changing its
you could take advantage of a
color right before everybody’s
good opportunity today to
eyes. Yet, any lone you choose
transform something you’ve
continues to rem ain ap­
disliked. The results wiU be
percentage play* In the
pealing. Find out more of
beneficial.
trump lull. Why don’t
what lies ahead for you in the
devote some articles to this
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
NORTH
M ill
year following your birthday
subject?"
This might be the day jo u ’ve
♦
017
1
by sending for your copy of
Oswald: "We can atari
waited for to do a little
VAQI0
Astro-Graph. M ail |1 for cadi
with a hand taken directly
♦ IS
negotiating with one who can
from his book as played by
to Astro-Graph, Box 489,
♦ QMI
make your Job a bit easier.
Mary Jane Farell, one of the
Radio C ity Station, N .Y.
* m
EAST
Play your aces wisely.
really areal lady bridge
10019. Be sure to specify birth
♦ ••••
4 K J4
players.
G EM IN I (May 21-June 20)
* » I 1 »(
VJISl
date.
Alan: "The bidding was
You might get the chance
♦ tin t
♦ 1 74
simple and excellent. If
♦ t o 7a a
♦ ill
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
today to tell someone of whom
North bad shown a king it
By appealing to his or her
SOUTH
you’re quite fond Just how you
would have been the king of
♦
A
141141
emotions today you’ll be able
(eel. Don't be surprised If the
trumps and Mary Jane
tPK
would have bid seven. As it
to get another to agree to give
feeling is mutual.
♦ AKQJ
was, she settled for six.”
you something you’d like to
C A N C E R (June 21-Ju ly 22)
♦ ax
Oswald: "The careless
have on your terms.
The curious observer may be
declarer would win the heart
Vulnerable: Both
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23baffled by (he circuitous route
lead with hia king and lay
D ealer South
Dec. 21) Today, when dealing
you are using to reach your
down the ace of irampe. U
■—
Weal Nenk Eaet
the king dropped, he would
with others try to see their
goals today. To you, however,
74
make seven. When West
points of view. BenJ over
it ail makes sense.
P aw
S4
Pue
4 NT
showed out be would make
Peee
14
Past
backward to understand their
IN T
L E O (J u ly 23-Aug. 22)
Just five.”
Psse
*4
Pus
44
concepts and they'll readily
Someone you may not have
Alan: "Mary Jane woo the
Pea
Pan
Psse
accept youn.
thought too highly of might do
heart with dummy’s ace.
Then she led dummy’s three
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
something today that w ill give
Opening lead: *9
of trum ps and covered
19) Where you have authority
you cause to change your
East's six with her eight
today, you conduct yourself
mind about him or her.
Then when West showed out
exceptionally well. You're
VIRGO (Aug. 2J-Sept. 22)
she simply played her ace of
By Oswald Jacoby
adaptable, fair and Just, yet
There ia nothing wrong with
trumps and made six.”
aad Alaa Seatag
Alan: "This was a perfect
firm when necessary.
your a b ilitie s to handle
safety play. If East had been
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
fin a n cia l m atters today.
Alan: "Fred Karpin's book void of tramps, she would
19) There is nothing strange
However, it may take a
on tru m p m anagem ent play her ace and loss Just
about your being able to
challenge to trig g er your
Include* a couple of chspten one tramp to West"
perceive the outcome of
ingenuity.
involving safety and other (N IW W APOt IN T O U 1 U B ASM.)

HOROSCOPE

29 1981

E E K ft M E E K

7ME WIFE AJJD X ARE
(REBRATlOG OUR TVU6UTH
AUWWERSARY.JOHU

by Howie Schneider

rWHAT IS THE 7UJ&amp;FTH
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WITH US ITS GAU2E

WIN AT BRIDGE

P R IS C I L L A 'S PO P

by Ed Su llivan

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6 H E C A N G IV E
F L U N K S WITH
E IT H E R H A N P '

BUGS BU N N Y

by Stoffel ft H eim dahl

CAN DO -TMiS /S GIBBERISH!^
IT, W Y E GOT
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A N N IE

by Leonard Starr

by Bob Thavps

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I

•\ *

In Eastbrook Area

Nursing Home For Disabled Wins Okay
It) D A R L E N E I I A M V . s
Herald Stall VSriter
The Seminole County Commission has approved the site plan
for a nursing home for the disabled to be built on Howell
Branch Hoad next to the Kastbr •ik subdivision, south of State
Hoad CIO Construction &lt;f the Friendly Village of Florida Inc.
Nursing Home for Disabled People i- c-xjiected to begin around
tlic end of Novemlier
The structure was approved on the condition that the
developer would put up a masonry wall between the sub­
division and the nursing home
Many Eastbrook residents bceunir riled when they first
heard about the home lame built m their community because
they were opposed to a structure they believed would house
persons with mental problems in their community.
Preparing for Tuesday’s meeting, Barbara Christensen
district representative for 'tie area wlm h includes Kastbrook,
met last week with Kastbrook residents t" discuss the new
facility’s location and to try to clear up some of the misun­
derstandings about the new nursing home, she said
"The crowd was anpry. ' she added
Andrew McKuchron. developer and president of Condev

Medical Services. Winter Park, told the board at Tuesday's
commission meeting the home is designed to house 64
developmental!) disabled clients. The developer said the
description of this type of patient is one who requires constant
assistance in dressing and feeding, a patient who may be
missing litnbs, or a victim of severe birth defects.
These people's thought processes are like those of a child,"
said McEachron. "Some of them are 30 years old and still
require diapers. These people are not psyehotics and in fact
most are just the opposite — they are very docile.
"In fact, 75 percent of the home's population can't even get
out of bed," McEachron said.
According to plans submitted by the developer to the board,
the building will sit on approximately five acres, 200 feel back
from the road. The facility itself will consist of four single story
homes with stucco and wood exterior.
Each of the four buildings w ill provide a living and activityarea in a "home-like setting."
Asked by one interested resident of Eastbrook why the
developer had chosen the site which Is also near the Eastbrook
Elementary School, McEachron said the site had all the
qualifications necessary to satisfy state requirements.

"The site was already properly zoned to accommodate a
nursing home, and the property was in a residential area," the
developer explained.
State Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services
i HRS) officials have given state Sunland Centers until 1964 to
depopulate the centers. Also, as part of the HRS mandate, new
housing facilities must also be located in residential areas and
the homes are required to blend In with the area for a neigh­
borhood effect. .
The nursing home will have a 13.6 percent density of the
entire five acres. The other 67 percent of the property will be
landscaped, according to McEachron.
Mrs. Christensen said she didn't see how the board could not
approve the home. “ 1 don't see how we can legally deny this
site plan," she said. "The C-2 zoning is the correct zoning for
the home and the site is already zoned C-2. AU other auestions
about the facility have been satisfactorily answered.
The board and staff members heard the residents' concerns
about decreased property value, increased traffic flow,
wandering patients, unanticipated growth of the facility,
decreased water pressure because of the increase in water
See HOME, Page 2A

Strong Feelings
But NAACP Head Is Opposed
To Picketing African Boys Choir
By DONNA ESTES
Herald Staff Writer
"1 have strong feelings about the
nation of South Africa. These feelings can
be expressed by working against adults,
but not against kids," said the Rev.
James Hagen, president of the Senunole
County chapter of the N ational
Association for the Advancement of
Colored People i N AACP) today.
On the other hand, the director for the
N AACP in Orange County told reporters
Tuesday night that while he has no 111
feeling toward the children in the choir, it
is his opinion that anyone who permits
them to come to the United States to
perform In essence supports South
Africa's racial policies.
The Rev. Mr. Hagen made his
statement In response to questions about

reports that the N AACP is organizing a
picketing of take Mary High School at
7:30 p.m. today, where the Drakensberg
Roys Choir from Drakensberg, South
Africa, is to appear.
tast week, as part of a six-week tour of
Europe and the United States, the choir
canceled a concert at the University of
G eorgia at Athens because groups
picketed the campus against the South
A fric a n nation's white-suprem acist
racial policies.
Mr. Hagen, who has been active in the
N AACP for 30 years and has been
president of the local chapter more than
■la yean, said picketing and getting
publicity Is not always the best course to
take to solve problems.
He said It would be unusual for any
other N A A C P chapter to come Into

Seminole County for picketing activity
without first notifying him.
The 40-member choir has been on Its
latest tour since Sept. 20. It appeared at
Nice, France; London; Edinburgh
C a rd iff, Wales; New York City
Washington,
D.C.;
Richmond
Williamsburg, Va.; Charlotte, N.C.
Spartanburg, S.C.; Atlanta, and
Savannah, G a., before a rriv in g In
Jacksonville on Oct. 18.
John Blair, coordinator of fine arta for
the Sem inole County public school
system, has said, "Much too much has
been made ot tha picketing at tha
University of Georgia at Athens. He said
the choir members "through their purity
of appesrance and voice can only serve
to advance the cause of peace."

School Board To Ponder It

2nd Bus For Deaf Kids?
The Seminole County School Board, at a 7:30 p.m. meeting
today, will have Ihe choice of providing a second school bus to
transport seven deaf children to Orange County schools for
special education or to pay the parents of the students 20 cents
per mile to transport their own children.
But at least one parent—Dorothy Crumpton of Winter
Springs—says there Is no way she can afford to transport her
son to Oakridge High School in south Orlando for 20 cents per
mile, and insists a second bus is an absolute necessity.
And Fred Taylor, the Seminole school administration’s
director of federal programs and overseer of transportation,
says the problems appear to be Insoluble without spending
more money for transportation.
The problem with the current transportation via minibus is
that the seven students live in Sanford, Winter Springs,
tangwood, Forest City and the Howell Branch Road area.
Currently, the first student gets on the bus at 5:23 a.m. to be at
school by 7:30 a.m.
Mrs. Crumpton said today a 17-year old girl in the Howell
Branch area is now traveling more than four hours daily to and
from school and is thinking about dropping out. Mrs. Crump­
ton's son is on the bus more than three hours each way daily,
and that's too much, she said.
"M y son must get up at 4:30 a.m. tc get ready for school.
Because lie gets home late in the afternoon and is tired from
getting up so early, he cannot work during the week,” she said.
"I'm not a college graduate or a transportation expert," she
Herald Photo Br Tom Vor
O ritM ila A v t ’ iiu r , A lin m o n te S p r in g s , w ill h a v e
e ig h t fe w e r o a k tre e s lin in g the r o a d w a y w h e n

c it y w o r k c r e w s m o v e in to r e m o v e th e d y in g
la u r e l o a k s .

Dying Trees Facing A x
tty T E N I YARBOROUGH
Herald Stall Writer
The sun is going to shine a little
b rig h ter along O rienta Avenue,
Altamonte Springs, when eight of the
18 laurel oaks lining the roadway are
removed and another seven trees

trimmed.
The City Commission heard reports
concerning the condition o; the trees
from City Manager Jeff Elchbergcr
and Red H ill of Red H ill's Tree Ser­
vice at Tuesday night's commission
meeting and decided unanimously to
have several of the dying trees
removed as soon as possible. Com­
missioner Jim Thompson was absent.
"The trees are suffering from old
age," H ill said "Trees have a
lifespan, just as a dog or cat or
human. They just wear out. The ones

we’ve lagged need to be cut down."
H ill warned the commissioners that
if tfiey decided to cut down only a few
of the dying trees at a time they could
• run into real problems " if one of the
trees falls and hurts someone or
someone’s property.
"The insurance companies used to
say such things were an act of God,"
H ill said. "Hut we don't blame Him as
much any more."
H ill told the commission that In
recent court actions involving sim ilar
incidents the courts have ruled the
cities should know which of their trees
are bad and that they are responsible
for them.
Com m issioner Dolores V ic k e rs
voiced her concern over replacing the
felled trees.
“ You're going to be going out to do

some scalping," she said. "It's not
going to look like a haircut, it's going
to look like major surgery."
P u b lic W orks D ire cto r Don
N'ewnham told the com m ission
younger trees w ill be planted by city
work forces to replace the trees.
"We will get with the property
owners for their input," Newnham
said. ' More than likely we w ill
replace the trees with sim ilar trees,
probably oaks, because that is the
most common tree in that area."
Etchberger said the city w ill at­
tempt to maintain a policy sim ilar to
Winter Park's beautification policy of
replacing trees removed whenever
possible.
Newnham is expected to make his
report at the next com m ission
meeting.

added. ‘ T in only a mother who cares."
Mrs. Crumpton, the mother of six, said she borrowed money
to buy a car for her son so he could drive to school, but the
transportation costs for three days totaled more than 630 and
she had to stop the use of the car.
Site said she could drive three of the children to school dally
but she would have to give up her job at night because of the
late hours she w orks "I really can't afford to quit my night job
to drive for 20 cents per m ile," she said.
She said she would, however, drive her son to school daily for
two to three weeks while the School Board makes
arrrangemenis for a second bus.
Taylor said the school administration doesn't have a second
minibus for these children. A full-size 64-passenger bui would
have to be used, and its operation would be expensive for seven
students, he added
On the other hand, he noted, state Department of Education
regulations say elementary children should not be on a bus for
more than 50 minutes each way to and from school and
secondary students should nut be on a bus for more than one
hour each way "if practicable.” He said, "A t this point there
doesn't seem to be anything we can do."
To Mrs. Crumpton's recommendation that the School Board
use a station wagon, Taylor said, "We don't use station
wagons. We prefer to use buses designed for transportation
and which we know are safe." — DONNA ESTES

A United Way Agency

Grove Battles Drug Abuse
"The cost of drug abuse to all of society
is staggering," says Grove Counseling
Center executive director Charlie Fritch.
Fritch is in the business of trying to
save people from the deadly cycle of drug
abuse and crime. The effort is costly, but
not nearly as costly as ignoring the
problem.
The Grove Counseling Center, 1309
County Road 427, tangwood, Seminole
County’ s only drug treatm ent and
rehabilitation counseling facility, has a
good success rate compared to sim ilar
program s, says Ja ck E w ing, day
treatment director.
The center combines outpatient ser­

vices for adults and families with daytreatment for adolescents age 12 to 17
who are harmfully involved In drug use.
For the youngsters it provides half a day
of classroom instruction to continue their
schooling with half a day of counseling in
Individual and group settings. It also
provides a "N a rc o tic s Anonym ous"
group run s im ila rly to A lco ho lics
Anonymous.
But it costs money to be successful,
Fritch says.
The center receives funds from a
variety of agencies, including the United
Way.
Although each client is charged ac­

cording to ability to pay—from 61 to
612.50 per day for 90 days’ minimal
treatment and 61 to 625 per hour for
outpatient services—client fees will only
account for about 610,000 of the center's
nearly 6160,000 budget this year, Fritch
says.
"And this coming year la going to be
critical. We're anticipating Urge c u ll
due to federal cutbacks," he adds.
The sUte's contribution to the Grove,
he expUined, la largely part of a division
of federal funds granted to the state.
The tragedy of running out of funds,
Fritch says, Is people who seek help will
have to be turned away.

TODAY
Action .
Around The Clock
Bridge
Classified Ada
Comics
.......................
Crossword ....................

.......... «C
......... 4C

Dear Abby
Deaths
Dr. Lamb
Editorial
Horoscope..................
H capital

Nation
Ourselves
4C Sports
Television
4C Weather
JA World

.

2B

............. 1*2B

................... IA

/

�?A— EvnlnB Harold, Sanford, FI.

WtdnRsday, Oct. 71, )M1

2 M asked Men Rob Convenience Store
IN BRIEF

FP&amp;L And FPC Customers
, To Pay For Waste Disposal
TAU.AIIAS.SKK &lt;U l’ l i — Florida Power &amp; Light Co.
and Florida Power Corp. customers will soon begin
paying for the storage or disposal of radioactive waste
from the utilities' nuclear power plants.
The Public Service Commission voted 5-fl Tuesday to
let the two utilities begin to pass on expenses caused by
the disposal of "spent nuclear fuel." '

Cops On Trial Nov. 16
MIAMI 1U P I 1 — A circuit judge says two former
police officers charged in a kidnap-for-ransom plot
should be "tried as quickly us possible" bocai x of a
flurry of death throats in the case.
Circuit Judge Thomas Scott refused to delay the Nov.
lfi trial of former Hialeah Gardens Patrolman Jose
Prieto, 30, and David lingers, 30, a suspended Medleypoliceman.

Professors May Get Raises
TA l.lJM IASSKK i UPI) — The Cabinet has recom­
mended a |&gt;ay-incrcase package for teachers at the
state's nine state-supported universities that would
place most of Florida's faculty on an equal economic
footing with those in the top one-fourth of the nation's
colleges by 1985.
Officials threw their support to a plan to add $4.5
million a year above normal salary raised ap­
propriations during the next four years, with most of
the money earmarked to boost faculty pay to 12lh in the
nation.

Tax G o o f Ends Up In Court
FOIIT u U d E H D A L E ( U P li - The beleaguered
liroward County Commission tries to persuade a judge
today it is not necessary lor it to hold more budget
hearings despite the recent disclosure of an error in the
tax increase rate.
Circuit Judge George Tedder Jr. will consider a suit
filed by Hay J. Johnson of Plantation, wltn is trying to
force (tie commission to hold the extra liearings.

NATION
IN BRIEF
W hile In Mexico , Reagan

Lobbies For Saudi AWACS
WASHINGTON i DPI i - There will bo no midnight
calls from Mexico, but President Iteugan will tie
exerting long-distance pressure on senators weighing
his plan to sell AWACS radar planes to Saudi Arabia.
Iteagan will lunch Friday during the Cnncun summit
with Saudi Prince Fnhd, and although AWACS is not on
their private agenda, tile meeting ulone illustrates Hie
adiiiinistration's regard for the Arab nation

M u rd erer Says He's Sorry
ANG01.A, I-a (UPI I—A man convicted of a murder
he insists he did not commit, but who c Imisc death in the
electric cluilr over life behind bars, called a news
conference in prison today to a|&gt;ologizc to the dead
man's family.
Colin Clark, 28, a former waiter convicted of tin’
stabbing and shooting death of a restaurant manager,
lias refused to pursue un appeal and agreed to accept
Jeatli in the electric cliair on Nov. 5

WEATHER
N'ATIONAI. H K I’OHT: Biting north winds on the tail of an
Arctic cold front kept temperature! below freezing today and
dumped more snow in areas of the High Plains where up to 8
inches of snow was already on Hie ground Elsewhere, tem|H-ralurcs reached up to the 60s and 70s. Snow spread into the
eastern plains of Montana and Wyoming lute Tuesday us llie
m id front pushed south across the central portion of the nation.
Bain and snow also spread gradually across tlie Northern
Plains and into western Nebraska Snow showers dotted die
Upper Mississippi Valley and Upper Michigan. In other por­
tions of the nation Tuesday, temperutures Btrelched to sum­
mer-like hi gin as strong southerly winds warmed llie southern
half of tlie Central Plains. Dodge City, Kun., reached 82
degrees during the day while Uncoln, Neb. reported a high of
(.8 degrees. Tlie Gulf Coast states hud highs in llie 70s, but
readings only hit the 50s in New England.
A K K A HEADINGS |» a.m.i: temperature: 67; overnight
low: GO; Tuesday high: 83; barometric pressure: 30.25;
relative humidity 84 percent; winds: north at 7 mph.
THUHSDAV TIDES: DAYTONA BEACH: highs,-M2 a m.,
5:15 p m., lows, 10:40 a.m „ 11:16 p.in.; POUT CANAVKHAI.:
highs, 4:31 a m , 5.07 p m ; lows, 10:31 a m . 11:07 p m ;
IIAYI’OHT: 10:01 a.m., 11:39p m ; lows, 4:35 a m , 5:13 p m
AIIKA FO RECAST
Mostly sunny today and Thursday.
Fa ir tonight. Highs in the mid 80s. la w s in the low to mid 60s.
Wind east to northeast 10 to 15 mph today diminishing tonight.

I n v it in g I h 'n iM

•p
j*

iuwi

«t mi

Wednesday, October 71, 1981—Vol 74. No 57
Publutird Only and Sunday, •actpl Saturday by Thy laniard
Herald Inc . J*tN. French A re . Sinlerd. Fie m il
Secend C la tt P itta s# P u d el Senlnrd. Fiend* J im
Heme D e livery: Week. I I . H i Menth, M i l l * M e n th i, t l l N i
Veer, H I M By M i l l: Week I I I I , M*nlh. l i l t : * M enthi,
S J I H : Veer. I l l M

Action Reports

Ranch, Osceola Road. Geneva, sometime between Sunday and
9 a.m. Monday , police report
CARPETTH EFT
More than 1400 worth of carpet and,carpet padding was
taken from a storage building at Green Bros Hoofing, Boardall Avenue, Sanford, sometime between 5 p.m Friday and "
a.m. Monday, according to police
J K W K t.m STOLEN
Adela I. Martinez and Terri L. Graham of Sanford reporied
to police that sometime between 7:30 p.m FTiday and 7:30
p m Monday approximately 12,151 worth of assorted jewelry
was taken from their residence at 911 Elm St., Sanford
COLOR TV TAKEN
A color television sol valued at *100 was taken in a burglary
ai 1011 Pecan Ave., Sanford, sometime between 6 a.m and 2
p.m. Saturday, police report
FLORIST BREAK-IN
Someone threw a cement block through a glass door of a
Sanford florist sometime between 5 13 p.m Saturday and 8
a.m. Sunday, permitting the door to be opened.
According to police, an A.M-F’.M jxirteble radio valued at f 100
was laken from Carefree Florist. 239. French Ave
TR A FFIC F A T A L !! V
A 47-year-old Maitland woman was killed early Monday
when her car veered inio a brick wall off Garden L ik e
Boulevard, I 5 miles east of Casselberry
Mary Jackson Davis. 1621 Glndiolas Dr., died in surgery at
Winter Park Memorial Hospital, a Florida Highway Patrol
spokesman said
C im ilK C T ID N
The Sanford coin laundry which was robbed of *300 in
quarters and a .32-caliber revolver Friday evening was the
Celery Avenue Liundry al 1118 Celery Avenue, not the Nice
Day Coin Liundry as reported Tuesday . Hie Nice Day Coin
Laundry, 1118 Celery Ave.. closed a year ago and later
reopened as tlie Celery Avenue Liundry The Herald regrets
die error.

... Home OK'd
Continued From Page IA
usage in the area by the facility, and concerns
about the "category" of patients elmnging
from disabled to mentally disturbed or
retarded patients.
With each concern mentioned, the board or
staff presented what they considered to be
reasonable explanations to the citizen's
questions.
Tlie only concern Mrs. Christensen said the
hoard couldn’t address was decreased
property value. “ Property value is someone's
opinion and ttiis board can’t address
someone's opinion," she said.
Residents were concerned that the 80 staff
members working at tlie new home would
create traffic problems and increase the
danger to children walking to Eastbrook
Elementary School.
McEachron said only 25 of the 80 (tersonnel
would leave during any shift change and the
shift manager would dteck with llie school's
principal to nuike sure the shift change would
not coincide with times the children are going
to or leaving the school.
Also during construction of the nursing
borne, llie developer ottered to provide
crossing guards to lessen any potential danger
to tlie children crossing the road.
M cE achron also addresser! residents'
concerns ulxrut the possibility of patients in­
side the home wandering around tlie grounds
"These patients are not ambulatory. They
cannot move without staff assistance,"
Me Fla (I iron said.
Tlie developer also said the four building
home, which is a profit organization Itiat will

pay taxes to the county, cannot develop into a
full hospital on the other 87 percent of the five
acre property by virtue of the county’s bond
covenants.
This means the facility cannot change its
intended use or sell the home without the
county ’s prior approval during the life of the 30
years bonds
Ken Htxrper, county director of en­
vironmental services, responding to questions
about decreased water pressure said that
while East brook’s water pressure may be low,
it will not be affected by the nursing home's
waler demands.
This is so because Eastbrook is tied in with
Casselberry's water sy stem and the new home
will be tied in with tlie county’s, Hooper said.
Commissioner B ill Kirchhoff asked the
residents lo consider (hat the properly is being
used for a permitted use, and llial other C-2
zoned uses would further increase traffic in
ilie Eastbrook area.
According lo Herb Hardin, county land
manager, uses for n C-2 zoning include
amusement centers, car washes, and hotels.
Under "Other Uses" permitted with the
zoning, convenience anti retail store* could
have been built on this site. "Conditional Use"
for C-2 zoning includes liquor stores and adull
entertainment.
Kirchhoff said fie believed every con­
sideration had been at least attempted to be
discussed by tlie district commissioner, Mrs.
Christensen.
"Commissioner Christensen has tried to ask
every question to hang u no vote on the facility,
and its just not (here," he said.

R e v e n g e O f T h e Y a n g tze
"A vast majority of (he
I’ E K IN G i U l’ l i - The
mighty Yangtze look decades areas affected by rain
of abuse from inhabitants disasters this year were
forested," the
along its banks, and gave it all sparsely
liack Bus year in one summer. Communist Forty newspaper
Tlie 3,969-mlle Yangtze I’eople's Daily said In its own
river, tlie longest in China mid analysis of the flooding.
"In areas where forest
surpassed in length only by
the Amazon and (lie Nile, cover was more extensive, the
overflowed not once hut twice destruction was far lighter
even though almost Hie same
this summer.
It brought llie worst flrxxl amount of rain fell."
The fate of two settlements
disaster in 32 years to
Sichuan, tlie province where In Xindu county north of
many of its problems Chengdu, the provincial
ca p ita l, was a classic
originated
Heavy ruins in mid-July example.
Tlie Lmgmen 1‘roductlon
and again In mid-August
swelled tlie Yangtze anil its Brigade has been planting
trib u ta ries
in
Sichuan, trees since Hie 1960s and now
bringing floods to nearly 4,000 tuis an average of 38 trees for
each person During Uie flood,
square miles of land
The
affected
areas 26 houses collapsed and about
represent about Iwo-thirds of 1.2 acres of cropland were
tlie counties In tlie province, washed away.
At Changqiao, a production
with u population o( 118
brigade s im ila r In many
million.
Tlie government said 920 respects to Lingmen except
people were killed, more Hum that there are only 10 trees to
28,000 injured and at least 1.5 each person, more than 60
m illio n made homeless. houses collapsed and about 25
Damage was estimated ul acres of land were wiped out.
F'orests help Hie soil retain
*1.136 billion.
A l a recent meeting to moisture, slow down runoff
assess llie disaster, provincial and reduce erosion. latrgeleaders unamimously agreed scale depletion of trees In
a major reason (or the serious Sichuan caused 90 percent of
flooding was the destruction Hie rain lo surge down the
of forests on the upper h illsid e s as runoff with
nuthing to slop it, carrying
reaches of the river

Seminole Chamber
Gets New Lease
"T h e re ’s no place like
home" and "home" for the
G reater Sem inole County
Chamber of Commerce will
be Hie Altamonte Community
House, 291. Maitland Ave.,
Altamonte Springs, for al
least a year.
The Altamonte Springs City
Commission agreed Tuesday

night lo allow the Chamber to
rent Hie facility on an annual
as opposed to the current
monthly basis. Commissioner
Jim Thompson did not attend
the meeting.
Rent w ill be paid in the form
of physical improvements and
m aintenance of the city owned property.

with it the loose topsoil.
Numerous mudslides and
avalanches occurred in the
precipitous valley s of Sichuan
during the summer floods

JAPANESE
GARDEN

AREA
DEATH

If y o u ’ ve n e v e r been to .In p an . th is c o u ld be llie
next best th in g . C o n t e m p o r a r y C a r d e n s , 2o:i5 U .S . 1;
H ig h w a y 17-92 in M a it la n d , o p e n e d Ia si w e e k . T h e
J a p a n e s e g a rd e n is f ille d w ith
w a ll-to - w a ll
g re e n e ry , s p r in d le d w ith flo w in g w a t e r f a lls and
s la lu a r v .

Service based upon
the knowledge th a t...

R O BERT C. C AR T ER
Robert C. Carter, 69, of 417
W 12th SL, Sanfoni, died
tuday a l his residence
following a long illness. Born
in Brooker Dec. 31, 1911, lie
came to Sanford in 1932. He
was
a
retired
plant
superintendent for Chase &amp;
Co. and a member of the
Church uf the Nazarrne.
He is survived by his wife,
Ruth; three sons, Donald,
Sanford, Robert A , Orlando,
and John, T itu sv ille ; 12
grandchildren and a great­
grandchild; (our sisters, Mrs.
L iu ra Messer, Jacksonville,
Mrs Onlta Howanitz, Miami,
Mrs. leona Brown, Starke,
Mrs. Jannie Waters, U k e
Butler; and several nieces
and nephews.
Rrisson Funeral Home Is in
charge of arrangements.

NV.aV

FLORIDA

Two males in stocking masks, one brandishing a small,
black revolver, robbed the convenience store at the Phillips 66
station, 1201 Airport Blvd., Sanford, shortly after 10 p.m.
Monday.
★ Fires
According to police, the pair entered the store and told
cashier Johnnie I,. Daniels: "This Is a hold-up. Step back."
★ Courts
Whole one robber held a pistol on Daniels, the other opened
the store's cash drawer and removed approximately *100,
★ Police
police said.
GAS STATION RO BBED
Three trailers parked at the Central Florida Regional
Someone broke a window pane on the Wareco Gas Station,
Hospital construction site, U S. Highway 17-92 and
110 N. French Ave., Sanford, sometime between 8 p.m.
Mangoustine Ave., Sanford, were broken into over tlie
Monday and 3:46 a m. today and stole several cartons of
weekend and nearly *1,000 worth of items stolen.
cigarettes and beer, police said.
Thieves broke into a trailer owned by Southwest Plastic &amp;
OUTBOARD STOLEN
Drywall of Albany, Ga., and stole a desk clock, a 25-foot tape
A I9BI Evinrude outboard boat motor valued at *1,574 was
measure, a pair of locks, a 20-foot tape measure, and a 10-foot
stolen from a Sanford home sometime between 6 p m. Monday
building scaffold valued at a total of *700.
and midnight. Tlie motor, taken from a boat parked inside the
Davis Mechanical Contractors of Sanford lost a calculator
fenced yard, belongs to Mitchel E. Tindal of 807 Scott Ave.,
and tape recorder valued at *160 when its trailer was
police said.
UW N M O W ER TAKEN
burglarized.
A self-propelled lawn mower valued at *425 was taken
A *70 wall clock was taken from a trailer belonging lo
following a utility shed break-in at the Thomas B. Ball III
cement contractor G.A. Albertson &amp; Sons, ZephyrhilLs
residence, 308 W. 24lh St., Sanford.
CAR T H E F T
Police reported the incident occurred sometime between
A 1965 Chrysler two-door was stolen sometime between 8
7:30 a.m. Friday and 1:30 p.m. Monday.
a.m. Oct. 12 and 8 a.m. Thursday while parked at 1110 E. D ili
St., Sanford. The cart belongs to Nathaniel Way. 2224 l.ake
R EG ALT H EFT
A 1980 Buick llegal valued at &lt;12,000 was stolen from 116 Ave., Sanford, and is valued at *1,700.
HQHSF1S VANISH
Hays Dr., Sanford, sometime between 8:35 and 8:40 a.m.
A strawberry-colored Appaloosa mare and a gelding quarter
Monday, police report.
The car, belongs to F'arl C. Wills of Apopka. According to horse have disappeared from a pasture at 1826 Center Drive,
police, tlie car keys were left in the ignition white it was parked Casselberry,
The horses' owner, Mary M. Pounccy, 178 Tollgate Trail,
in front of Wills' sister's residence.
Lmgwood, told police someone opened the pasture gale and
LO CKER ROOM T H E F T
either let the horses out or took them.
Seminole High School's boy's locker room was broken into
sometime between 6:10 and 10:45 p.m. Friday. Taken were
The incident occurred sometime between 8 a.m. and 10 30
p.m. Monday.
wallets including an undertermined amount of money, five
football Jerseys and a pair of tennis shoes.
T IL L E R T A K E N
A red roto-tiller valued at *934 was taken from the L&gt;uis B ill’
CONSTRUCTION SITE HIT

Funeral Notice
C A R T E R .M R R O S E R T C Funeral ttrv rc e t lor M r R o o m
C Cart#., *». r l 411 W llf h St .
Sanlord. who died Wednrtday *1
h it horn*, w ill M 11 II « m
F rid ay «t th t Church of th*
S l l t r o i t , with th* R tv Jack
Hinton officiating
B urial in
O a k la w n
M e m o r ia l
P a rk
Viewing from 10 a m to I p m.
I h u rtd a y
B r it t o n F u n a ra l
Horn* P A It in c h a rg e ot
arrangem ent!

•••

Coring livSs Jbrev$r
G R A M K O W

1C*.
Dfeptoy Yard

F U N E R A L HOME
130WEST AlHPQflT bOULEVAMD *
SANFOHD. FLOHIDA
TELEPHONE 372 3213
WILLIAM l OilAMKQW 1

M w y .iM I — N m f t w t

Gm Hunt, Owner

~ k •—

�I

»r\v*.«Esaj

WORLD
IN BRIEF
Poles Take To Streets;
Strike Threat Growing
WARSAW, Poland 1U P I 1 — Thousands of Poles
battled in the streets of Katowice with police trying to
suppress underground newspapers and threats of
strikes over food shortages spread across Poland
Solidarity said 5.000 people took to the streets in the
worst violence in U months of unrest after three
unionists were arrested for distributing underground
newspapers and Solidarity bulletins The police crack­
down could signal a new hard-line stance by the
government

Leaders Discuss Poor
C A M U S . Mexico CPI.
President Reagan,
arriving today in the Mexican resort of Cancun.
arranged private meetings with 11 world leaders at a
summit to help narrow the ever-widening chasm
between the world's rich and poor countries.
The 22 invited leaders, representing 2.8 billion people
— M percent of the world's population — began
arriving Tuesday at the international airjx&gt;rt. many
decked out in colorful native dress

NATO Pushes Arms Control
G I.FN FA G LE S. Scotland t U P li - P S officials
admitted there was heavy discussion of the growing
opposition to placing new U S nuclear missiles in
Kurope but expected both endorsement today of the
missiles and emphasis on antis control talks
In recognition of the continent's growing ban-thebomb campaign, NATO defense ministers were likely
to end, their two-day nuclear strategy meeting by
stressing tlie importance of arms control talks between
the United States and the Soviet Union that began in
Geneva Nov. 30

Mubarak: Cool Rhetoric'
CAIRO, Fgypl i U P I i — President llosm Muliarak
departed sharply from the policy of Anwar Sadat,
ordering the state-controlled media today to end their
war of words against Arab governments opjiuscd to
Kgypt's peace treaty with Israel
Even Liby an leader Moammar Kbadafy, usually the
target of virulent attacks ami scathing satire, was not
mentioned in the columns of Cairo's three Arablelanguage daily newspapers

Bomb Kills 2, Injures 99
ANTW ERP, Belgium 1U P I 1 — A devastating car
bomb explosion killed two women and injured 99 other
people in Antwerp's thriving diamond district in an
attack the Belgian prime minister said was clearly
against the Jewish Community.
Responsibility for the Tuesday morning bombing,
however, was claimed by a little-known French
anarchist group tha^ had previously not surfaced in
Belgium. An unonymous caller told a Belgian news
agency the attack was not aimed against Jews but was
to serve as a "warning" to tlie Belgian government
The Israeli embassy in Brussels accused Palestinian
terrorists of setting off the Tuesday morning l&gt;omb, but
the Palestine Liberation Organization denied any
connection with the attack.

Altamonte Board Postpones
Tennis-Court Resurfacing
By TF.M 5 U tB U ltO l (.11
Herald staff Writer
The low but may not always Ik - the best bid,
and with that attitude the \ltamonte Springs
City Commission voted Tuesday night to
postpone awarding a . untract to resurface the
Westmonte Recreation t'en tir tennis courts
Recreation Director Hill James recom­
mended the commission award the contract to
resurface four tennis courts at Westmonte to
Nidy Construction Company of Winter Park
for $5,727 Ntdy originally constructed the
courts. City Manager Jeff Ftchberger s.ml
The lowest bid, 5 5 . was submitted by
Varsity Courts In. . Ding wood James did not
recommend awarding the contract to Varsity
because of negative feedback which he said
"centered on a lack of satisfaction with tin-

F vening Her aid. Sinlord, FI.

finished product and the necessity of bringing
in other companies to repair courts installed
by Varsity Courts."
Ftchberger told the commission Seminole
County recently has had to contract another
conijiany to repair its courts on Red Bug Road
constructed by Varsity
The commission voted unanimously to delay
action on awarding the contract until all
bidders could In- notified and the city's position
of not awarding the contract to the lowest
bidder could be fully justified
City Attorney Skip Fowler told the com­
mission it could award the contract to another
bidder if the low bidder proved unsatisfactory
lie said that if the city could justify why the
low bidder was not awarded the contract,
court action could be avoided

Radical Fugitive Captured
STACK.
N V
C PI
Weather
Underground fugitiu Kathy Boudin was
among four people orr. - v I Tuesday in a $11.
million armored car robbery m winch two
police officers and a Brinks guard were killed,
officials said today
Ms Boudin had been -•••iiehi ior more than III
years m a bomb explosion that leveled a
Greenwich Village townliou«e
Rockland County District Attorney Kenneth
Gribetr said the woman, who identified herself
to police Tuesday as H a r la n Fdson. 18. was
really Ms Boudin, sought by the Federal
Bureau of Investigation u connection with
interstate flight n avoid prose, ution
lie dl'&lt; lllled to &lt; its ! .I.

The Is.iiib explosion occurred shortly before
noon March 6 ,1970 and leveled a townhouse on
West llth Street ui New York's Greenwich
Village
Three people were killed in the blast, in­
cluding Diana Oughton. 28. and Theodore
Gold. 23. The third person, a male, was never
identified
The townhouse belonged to the father of
t .itblvn Platt Wilkerson, another member of
Ibe Weather Underground, who surrendered to
fan- charges from the blast on July 8, 1980
Ms Wilkerson and an accomplice. Ms
Boudin, were seen leaving the townhouse
shortly after the blast, which left enough
explosives to level an entire cilv block

I t ic h u n l I V s s , c a m p a ig n c h a ir m a n fo r U n ite d
W av of S e m in o le C o u n t y ( le f f ) a d m ir e s (n b le
la m p s o lic ite d In .la c k W e ih le (s e c o n d fr o m le f t) ,
l m i n i W ax s e c re t a r y a n d C o m m e r c ia l D iv is io n
e lia ir m a o lo r S a n fo r d - 'H ie la m p xxas d o n a te d b y
N e llie and Ito y d C o le m a n , o w n e r s o f ( l if t s D y N a n ,
lot th e ( o ile d W ay a u e tio n to be h e ld at 2 p .m .
S u n d ay in th e L a k e M a r y H ig h S e lio o l a u d it o r iu m .
H ie a u e tio n w ill lie o jie u to th e p u b lic .

LIGHTING THE
(UNITED) WAY

Flying Into Her Role
TAI.LAIIASSFI l a
I |'|
Beverly
leech i andante and sing and looks more like
Peter Pan than tlie riglnal Peter Pan did Ml
she had to do was learn I -w in a&lt; t
and fly
I Ik- Florida Slat. University senior dance
student from Houston l_i a tin leading role in
$ SI s MalUstage prodnctnin "I the |i"pu!ur
musical atauii i hlldreii t,ora's pirates and
Never Never Land without intending to
I took one theater . lass and the teacher
said we should c to general auditions for a
play to s. e ' v . i •. i , , .died bet­
ween rehearsals t r tie production which
opened Ibis week
She tried out Ior Hu purely dam mg role of
Tiger Lily, the Indian leader Peter Pan meets
in Never Never I.and WIk-ii the director
suggested she try for the lead. 1was scared to
death. I bad never even seen the show," she
said
'Hit- puckish 22-year-old coed, who once did
saloon show s in the C r y s ta l P a la c e at S ix
F la g s O v e r T e x a s, got the part w hich in clu de s
a lot o( a ctin g and a long sjicnking role as w ell
as a e ria l ballet

Director Neal Kenyon called in Flying by
Foy, the firm la-adcd by ihe New York
designer who developed the harness and wire
system tliat has outfitted professional Peter
Pans from Mary Martin to Sandy Duncan
It rents (or $1,200 a week, including the
salary of Dav id Male, un associate professor of
theater at Temple University in Philadelphia

who t ame to FSU to string the high tension
steel wires that bold up tlie l22-|mund Miss
I -each and to teach her to fly
It was scary the first tune, but now it's just
tun." said the big-eyed Texan who plans In
become a professional dancer when she
graduates next year
A 2.000 [H.und test aircraft cable controlled
by two husky stagehands pulls her up and
down .mil la ck and forth across tlie stage as
she twirls her Itody, flaps her arms and moves
her legs in grateful midair ballet routines
Sin- sings, " I ’m flying, I'm flying" in the
show, To save her voire, a recording did il
doririg month-long six hour a day rehearsals
It hurts your stomach to sing from 20 feet
up in the air and look down at the audience,"
slu- said.
11 liK.k a while to get the squeak out of the
harness and Be Miss leach to fly without
humping into the walls, fireplace and window
sills. At tim e s, slx-’j get tier feet tangled In the
wires nnd lan d on one leg, b a ck w a rd s or In a
handstand position.
"I bail to work hard to move around Ihe
stage without looking ut Ihe floor like where
am I going to Inke off from next’" she said.
"It's hard to throw your body so it will do what
you want it to do in midair."
The hardest (art, she said, was pulling it all
together to keep the technical part from
getting m tlie way and to make it belieavahle
to the audience

New Hospital Staffers To Be Honored
New members nt the
S e l.ilt in le
M e m o r ia l
Hospital stall w ill tie
honored at the |k rsoiialily

HOSPITAL
NOTES
ir m m o le M r m o n i i M o ip if a l

October 70
ADMISSIONS
SAN» OWC&gt;
K^thrr &gt;nr () Dodvon
ftiiiir Dubrnr
C»if'\topDrr | Mckirwiry
Anno l .«* Chr»\».e l)*-D.xr,
(tunny W DupuH. D**Mon*
loui\ I rank f’AVxnjt [triton*
LiHi«n It SporfcV l
M*» y
ft*rt)*r*A Hrn*n L*hrMonror
Robe*! A Seaton t.tiAvdlr
DISCHARGES
SAW ORD
ClA*rr Bart hman
Eva M Kriling
Ja$nr\ C Mitchell
M*fy C t raber Drlfona

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OF FAME

Charter Changes On Nov. 3 Ballot
Voters in Winter Springs and Altamonte Springs w ill not only
elect new officials on Nov. 3, they w ill also choose whether to
approve or disapprove new sections of thetr respective city
charters.
. . . .
In Winter Springs, only one contested election for a city
council post w ill be on the ballot. B ill Jacobs, a former coun­
cilman is vying with B.G. "B u ck" Burley, a political
newcomer, for the city council seat being vacated by Wilfred
-H ap " Arnold.
A majority of the proposed charter changes are ad­
ministrative m nature such as deleting references to North
Orlando, the former name uf tlie city, and bringing other
sections of the charter into line with state law.
Additional changes call for expanding the two-y ear terms of
councilmen and mayor to three years, changing the name of
the council to commission, giving tlie mayor tlie city
manager's responsibilities when the City Council does not
appoint a city manager and changing from 15 percent to 10
percent the number of city voters necessary to initiate a
referendum when the city's registered voter count reaches

Both Mayor Troy Ptland amt Councilman Maureen Boyd
were re-elected without opposition. Neither name w ill appear
on the ballot.
Meanwhile, in Altamonte Springs, tlie only contested race on
the ballot is for mayor where former police officer Hay
Ambrose is challenging incumbent Hugh Darling.
Tlie names of Cheney Colardo and J Dudley Bates, seeking
election to the city commission seats being vacated by Dolores
Vickers and Jim Thompson respectively, will aptwar on the
ballot without opposition.
Two projiosed charter amendments also will be on tlie ballot,
The first amendment would delete a section of the charter
requiring Hie city commission to confirm tlie city manager's
appointment of department heads Tlie section to be deleted
also calls (or tlie department heads to serve at the pleasure of
the city commission With the clause stricken, department
heads dismissed by tlie city manager would nut liave tlie right
of appeal to the personnel Administration Board.
A second proposed amendment calls for the terms of the
seven-member board to tie staggered terms.
-

7.000.

77V

v -

-r

17-W A T 27th ST.
S A N FO R D

M l L n e i s ( c i l i l i i . lie s t a lc is l ia s c il o n 7f)‘‘o id

W e 'll h e l p y o u y e t t h e m o s t
fo r y o u r m o n e y !
( n u n in 11o l.iy O n i s.w i n i j s 11 i n n s i l o i s w il l i \ | i li i in d l l
id I In i l l I. id s s i i m in i . in I. i L i . | ( | \ . iu L i( ji- i l l t h is x(ii*. it l . l \
l i r e s,iv in i| s i i |)| m ii l u n i l x W r ( . i l l s in ivy y o u c\d&lt; 11\ w li. il it
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th e i- llc i liv e

a y c ra ijc y ie ld o f o n e y r a i I ic a s m y D ills .iik I lo u c il c x c r y
lo in w e e k s

By M E D C O
E a c h year, m o re th a n 3
m illio n A m e r ic a n s d e v e lo p
u lc e rs D ie cause o f ulcers is
an excess am ount of y js tn c
loK.es w hich literally eat a hole
in tlie m em brane lining of the
duodenum or sm all intestine
Stress, one of tlie m ost
com m on c ju s e s of ulcers, rs,
of course, one of tlie major
things to avoid, along with
other irritants such as alcohol,
to b a cc o
and
c a f f e in e .
Flavorful foods often w orsen
an ulcer, and bland diets have
proven unsuccessful, unless
utilized in the very early
stages.
A
stom ach ache,
w hich w o n 't go aw ay, a
burning sensation in the gullet
when upset, a gnaw ing pain
under the ribcage are all
sym ptom s of peptic ulcer
These are all reasons to visit
your physician, and to begin,
yourself, to control som e of
the habits and fo o ds and
b e v e ra g e s
w h ic h
m ay
aggravate your condition.

The breakfast w ill begin
al 8 a til at the i hatnber at
First Street and Sanford
Avenue

w it h S e m i n o i e
A ll $ a v e r s C e r t if ic a t e s .

R e a d in g

A h . it 's to u g h to Ire fa m o u s . .1 list a s k L a k e D in u lli- v H ig h S c h o o l's T r a c y
B o n h a m ( c e n te r ) . T r a c y d o n s th e s u n g la s s e s to keep h a c k h e r a d m ir in g fa n s.
A n h o u r ta le r , the ta le n te d c ro s s - c o u n tr y r u n n e r w h ip p e d o ft a v ic t o r y in the
t w o -m ile r u n to h e lp th e P a t r io t g ir ls c a p t u r e th e Sex e n lh A n n u a l P o s t a l Itu n
at L y m a n H ig h S c h o o l. N o , T r a c y d id n 't r u n w ith h e r s u n g la s s e s . V o u d o n ’ t
h a v e to w h e n y o u 'r e out in fr o n t o f e v e r y o n e .

breakfast ol the Greater
Sanford
Cham ber
of
('om iiiortv Thursday

TAX F R E E
S A V IN G S

• S c m i n o li

THE PRICE

Wedneiday, Oct. Jb 1*11—JA

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Evening Herald
(USPS 4ri7«&gt;
300 N. F R E N C H A V E ., SANFORD, F L A . 32771
Area Code 30W22-2811 or 831-9993
W ednesday, O ctober 21, 1901— 4A
Wayne D. Doyls, Publisher
Thomas Giordano, Managing Editor
Robert Lovenbury, Advertising and Circulation Director
H one Delivery: W e d , (1.00; Month, $4.25; 6 Months, $24.00;
Year, $43.00. By MaU: Week, $1.23; Month, $5.23; 6 Months.
$ » .« ; Year. $37.00.
e

Paper Money:

^ cio&lt; *
n y T E N iY a r b o r o u g h

Good As Gold?

Someone once said, There's, nothin# new
under the sun." But, I say, cryosurgery is new
and news to me.
I&gt;et me explain.
For the past couple of months, since I left the
liallowed halls of the University of Georgia in
Athens and ventured southward to the land of the
sun, I have acquired a small growth on my right
arm. Well, this small growth never ceased to
amaze me because it cliangcd so often, from red
to normal to red - not grotesque, mind you, Just
annoying.
Not being too thrilled with doctors, I kept
putting off having it checked until Monday.
At 3:30 p.m„ Monday, I walked into the doc­
tor’s office and after the traditional 45 minute
wait, I shared my problem with the doctor.
Slie knew immediately what the little growth
meant — melanoma, a form of skin cancer
caused by Mr. Sun.

It also meant — cryosurgery .
Not being very proficient In medical ter­
minology, I asked, “ what is cryosurgery?"
The doctor explained the procedure is used to
remove warts, moles and even blemishes caused
by the sun such as mine. With a "gun" the doctor
shoots a gaseous substance into the target area
and freezes it to death, simply stated.
So, I lay down on the table and she gave me the
"big freeze." She held the gun to my arm for a
short while, and the area grew colder and colder.
She said the area would turn into a "blister" but
would eventually go away, although another
treatment may be necessary to completely rid
my arm of the small growth.
A lot lias been written about melanoma and
warnings have been issued to people to seek
medical attention if they have it in hopes of
preventing the spreading of the disease.
However, sometimes, you just aren't sure what

to look for — I di&lt;tn*t know what it was. Which
only proves if something isn’t quite right, check
it out. Doctors would much rather get the
problem under control in its early stages before
it can spread. You know, so would I.
Did it hurt, you ask? No . . . . not much.

Altamonte Springs residents, don't forget time
is drawing near for the election of city officials.
On Nov. 3 the polls will open and voters will
decide who w ill serve them as mayor for the next
term. •
Also, (he two commission candidates, Cheney
Colardo and Dudley Bates, who both won their
races by default after running unopposed en­
courage residents to show their support of the
commission by making an effort to vote.

DICK WEST

ROBERT WAGMAN

Hie United States is beginning a great gold
debate. Possible return of the U.S. dollar to the
gold standard, scarcely mentioned for years, has
suddenly become a lively topic around the
country.
One reason for the resurgence of gold talk is the
persistence of high interest rates, which have hnd
a deadening effect on economic growth and are
largely blamed for delaying or reducing expected
benefits from the Reagan administration’s fiscal
disciplines.
CHICAGO (N E A ) - Before Aug. 3, when
Interest rates have been hanging tough at all- 11,400 air-traffic controllers began the strike
time higjis because bankers and other lenders do that led to their firing by the Heagan ad­
not yet believe the inflation rate will be more than ministration, Delta — and ull the other
temporarily checked. High interest rates arc but airlines — generally lived up to tin- ad­
their hedge against being repaid with cheaper vertising claims of being "ready when you
are." But these days you have to be ready
dollars, Despite an inching down of the prime rate
when the air-traffic control system can ac­
from a 20.5 percent high in early September to 1H
cept the plane on which you are traveling. The
last week, the gold-standard advocates argue that
chances are that your flight will Ire delayed.
only a return to the gold standard will sub­
The Heagan administration is proud of the
stantially lower interest ra te s and spur
way it has coped with the strike by the
Professional A ir T ra ffic Controllers
prosperity. They insist a sound currency must be
tied to a precious metal such as gold or silver, that Organization. The Transportation Depart­
ment issues press releases almost daily
all history proves how currencies are inevitably
emphasizing lam many planes are fly ing and
debased when subject only to political
how safe air travel lias remained. But for
manipulation. The gold advocates maintain that
more and more airline passengers, long
the Reagan fiscal reforms cannot work in the delays and missed connections have become
absence of monetary reform; quality of money,
the rule rather than the exception.
not quantity is the kev to monetary systems.
The Federal Aviation Adm inistration
reports that delayed flights averaged 356 a
Giving intellectual substance to the gold debate
day nationally during a recent two-week
is the U.S. Gold Commission, which was created
by Congress last year and held its first meeting in period; that contrasts with an average of 165
July. The Commission .composed of represen­ a day for tlie same period a year ago. This
increase has occurred even though the airtatives from the Congress, the administration,
traffic control system is handling only 11,000
and the financial community, is considering, in
scheduled flights daily as compared with
the words of its statutory authority, what role gold
14,000 a year ago and even though far fewer
should play “in the domestic and international
non-schedulcd and private aircraft are using
major commercial airports
monetary systems."
Whatever gold's future role, its historic one has
Why are there so many delays? The
been enormous. By 1800, the fledgling United numbers tell the story.
States had transformed its worthless continental
The nation's busiest airport has
paper currency of Revolutionary War days with traditionally liecn Chicago's O'ilare. L ist
dollars convertible Into gold. During the life of the year 99 controllers stalled lire airport's
nation when the gold standard prevailed, except control tower and radar room; B5 of them
were fired for striking. Now the airport has
for a paper-currency period during the Civil War,
just 54 controllers, whose ranks include
prices were constant. Wholesale prices were supervisors, retirees, m ilitary personnel and
roughly the same in 1933, when President non-striking controllers transferred from
Franklin Roosevelt abandoned the gold standard
elsewhere In the country.
as they were in 1800. By contrast, during the 50
A year ago O'Hare handled about 2,400
years without a gold anchor, wholesale prices takeoffs und landings a day; tnduy that
number lias fallen to about 1,500. But delay s
nave leaped an astonishing 760 percent. More U .S .
dollars have been produced since the break down are common despite these cutbacks Before
of the gold standard than in the entire previous the strike there was a takeoff or landing at
O 'ilare every minute; now they are s|iaced
history of the republic. Never before in U .S .
history has the Treasury been obliged to pay 15 about five minutes apart. O 'ilare controllers
say off the record that half-hour delays are
percent for 30-year bonds, a sure sign of
common and that private pilots trying to lake
pessimism about the long-term prospects of
off at O'Hare in the late afternoon might liave
controlling inflation. Irredeemable paper money
to wait several hours.
has usually gone with unbalanced budgets, high
The numbers are even more striding at the
inflation, and high interest rates.
Chicago A ir Route Traffic Control Center in
Aurora, 111., about 45 miles south of Cliicago.
Under a gold standard, the Federal Reserve
The center is responsible for the rudar
would have to back the dollar with a certain
amount of gold in vaults. One plan calls for a gold tracking of planes fly ing in an airspace of
about 100,000 square miles. Before the strike,
reserve equal to 40 percent of Federal Reserve
the facility was staffed by 490 fully qualified
liabilities. The result would be that paper controllers and 100 trainees. Today there are
currency could be increased, not at political
120 controllers, including former supervisors,
convenience, but only when the supply of gold non-striking controllers, m ilitary personnel
increased. As in the past, gold advocates maintain and employees who are qualified only for
that people would not bother to exchange paper lower-level duties.
for gold, an inconvenience to carry, once the
A year ago the 490 controllers at the center
lumdled about IB0.000 "flight operations" a
dollar became as good as gold, an historic
month — or about 375 each. They worked 38regulator preventing excessive optimism or
hour weeks but spent only five hours a (by in
pessimism.
front of their radar screens. Today the 120
1/ interest rates should move downward and
controllers at lire center put in six 10-hour
stay there, signifying confidence in the dollar's
days a week. They handle about 130,000 flight
lasting value, then return to the gold standard
operations a month; that averages almut 1,100
does not appear likely. If not, the gold-backed
each, or three limes mure Ilian a year ago.
dollar may well become President Reagan's next
drastic medicine. And, by now, no one should
doubt that Mr. Reagan will reach for this if he
thinks its necessary.

Delays
Plague
Runways

Hurry,
Postal
Rates Up

JEFFREY HART

The Exclusionary Rule
When President Heagan made a speech on
crime in New Orleans recently, he proposed,
among other things, to "reform " the ex­
clusionary rule. This prohibits illegally ob­
tained evidence from being presented in
court.
Now sometimes you read an assertion in the
newspaper tluil causes you to do a doubletake. Your find reaction is uh-huh. Hut then
you react with, My Ood. 1 know -that's not
true!
Thus the following assertion by Tom Wicker
of the New York Times regarding Reagan's
proposal: "Prosecutors and other criminal
justice officials — including tlmse in the
Iteagan Justice Department — know that
eliminating the rule would bring about few
additional convictions, and that observing it
has not allowed a significant number of
criminals to go free."
As it happens, the exclusion of illegally
obtained evidence allowed accused jierpetrators of gross acts of espionage to go free.
I have just finished Writing a book on the
1950s which will be published in March, and it
contains a couple of diapters on the com­
munist issue which was so prominent during
that period.
In the course of my research, I delved into
the now largely forgotten "Am erasia" case, a
shocker.
"A m e ra s ia " was a sm all-circulatio n
magazine based in Manhattan. Its ostensible
purpose was to give infoniuttion about Asia to
an American audience. Many of its leading
figures were said to favor communist causes.
In February 1945, a member of the OSS
research division who had prepared a secret
report on conditions in Thailand was sur­
prised to find entire sections of his report
turning up in the pages of "Am erasia." The
OSS decided to investigate.
On Sunday night, March 11, 1945, several
OSS agents entered the "Am erasia" offices.
They noticed a quantity of photocopying
equipment far bey ond the needs of a modest
publication like this one.
Further search turned up large quantities

of highly classified documents.
One concerned the disposition of the
Japanese fleet after the Battle of liy te .
Another concerned the strategic bombing
program for Japan.
In a suitcase belonging to an editor, agents
found more secret government documents
Hum they could list under the circumstances.
Some dealt with the situation of the
Nationalist army tn China — Its strength, how
it was armed, where the major units were
located. Another dealt with the U.S. Navy's
counterintelligence operations. There were
copies of messages from President Koosevelt
to Chiang Kai-shek, and a briefing given at
top Navy Department levels containing the
location of 25 American submarines then in
the Pacific.
The documents came from the OSS, the
State Department, the Army and Navy
Departments, and from allied intelligence
agencies.
In short order, the FBI, which had done
further investigating, informed the State
Department that it was prepared to turn its
evidence over to the Justice Department for
prosecution.
Then, remarkably, very little happened.
The Justice Department took the position
tluil the bulk of the evidence had been
illegally obtained — in the original break-in,
and in the subsequent bugging of a hotel
room.
Nevertheless, President Truman himself
ordered that the arrests be made and the case
brought to trial. In June 1945, the FBI made
six arrests.
Because of the exclusionary rule, however,
the case was a difficult one to prosecute, and
the government ended up striking a deal with
the two most important figures in the arrests.
One paid a fine of $2,500. The other paid $500.
Nobody went to Jail. Without the exclusionary
rule, several people, at least, might have
served stiff sentences for espionage.
If the exclusionary rule thus does
sometimes result in the guilty walking free, It
also makes little sense in logic.

WASHINGTON (UP1) - The tax cut that
went into effect this month has left millions of.
Americans at a loss over what to do with the
extra money.
Fortunately for everyone wrestling with
such a problem, this year's Christmas
catalogs already have started to arrive.
My perusals of the early gift suggestions
convince me that most taxpayers can siphon
oH their surplus cash through mall order
shopping.
Does your tax cut come to about $1 million?
Then give someone on your list "a customdesigned firework display" featured by
Sakowltz of Houston.
" E le c tr ic a lly
fire d ,"
the
“ colorcoordinated and musically synchronized”
display lasts nearly an hour and Includes
"25,000 aerial shells, hl-intenslty spotlights,
lasers and dancing waters."
That certainly beats the usual Christmas
morning hangover. And it’s available for
precisely one million smackers, the apt
proximate amount of your tax saving.
Or if your reduction is in a more modest
range, Sakowitz w ill arrange for some that
special someone on your gift list "to spend the
day with the world-renowned crim inal de­
fense attorney, F. Lee Bailey."
A day with Etalley costa only $15,000, which
surely is cheap enough considering that the
eminent mouthpiece "w ill personally explain
expert techniques and tactics of trial law,
including how to pick a Jury, the intricacies of
cross-examination and closing argument
strategies."
Imagine waking up on Christmas reaming
and finding that in your stocking.
It's a way of making that special someone
very happy, especially if that special
someone is Involved In divorce proceedings.
If that special someone asks him nicely,
Bailey might provide a few pointers on how to
prevail in court fights over who gets custody
of the rocking horse.
A $8,500 hand-carved rocking horse
receives prominent attention in the 1M1,
Neiman-Marcus Christmas catalog. At that,
price, you may want to get two of them, Just to
be on the safe side.
If there Is but one In the household, I can see
a $6,500 rocking horse causing all sorts of
bitterness at property-splitting time.
A wiser choice might be a $17,500 "domestic
robot system" that performs household
chores. That type of gadget might eveq
enhance domestic tranquility.
And if the robot turns out to have an illegal
work permit and gets deported to E l
Salvador, a taxpayer can always hire F . Led
Bailey to sue for a refund.
If offered a proper retainer, Bailey might
even defend that special someone In Lawsuiti
arising from Christmas firework displays.
My advice, however, would be to settle out
of court.

PLEASE WRITE
Letters to Am editor are wele— ed
publication. A ll letters mart he
with a mailing address and, if pooaiMe, a
telephone Banker as the Identity of the
writer n a y be verified. H a Evening
Herald wtli respect the wishes of w riter!
whs dsast want their I

JACK ANDERSON

SEM Y'S WOULD

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"My problem It: You htve beeuty, setf-contidtnot v * tnloUigonco - tht throe Ihlngt we
men leer moot to women."

Millionaire Gets Defense Contracts
WASHINGTON - How docs a hot dog
vender get to be an $8.9 million-a-year
defense contractor on top-sccret jrojeets
virtually overnight? It can liappen — if you're
a minority businessman and you work
through the Small Business Administration.
Buck Wong is u wealthy Cliincse-American
and, therehee, a bonaflde underprivileged
minority businessman He is president of
Areata Associates Inc., which field the hot dog
franchise at the Stanford University stadium.
Since last January, Areata has also been
the prime contractor fur the Army Combat
Development Experimentation Command, a
top-secret facility lliat uses sophisticated
computer analysis and laser technology to
test tanks, helicopters and aircraft under
simulated combat conditions.
Wong managed to beat out a multimilliondollar engineering firm, the BDM Corp., for
the contract, even though his company's only
apparent expertise in defense work o enisled
of a maintenance contract at an A ir Force
base. (Later, Wong hired some ‘Technical
consultants” with SBA funds, including a
typist who happened to be his girlfriend.)
For five y ean, BDM had run the analysis
program, and last year It confidently applied

for a five-year, $44.5-million renewal con­
tract. BDM had the Army's warm en­
dorsement.
But it was Wong's company — with no
experience in sophisticated computer testing
— which got tiie contract. BDM subsequently
sued.
Wong slipped in tlie back door — through
the SBA’s stvcalled "8a pilot" program,
which was designed to help small businesses
stay afloat by giving them non-competitive
government contracts. It was ajmed
specifically at minority-owned companies.
Here's how it happened:
• At the lim e Wong got the defense contract,
the head of the 8a program, W illiam Dement,
was a client of Wong's business brokering
service. As part of his brokering service,
Wong placed an ad in the Wall Street Journal
seeking a business for Dement to buy. Wong’s
firm also arranged a personal loan for
Clement through New York banks and
prepared a "buyer profile" that described
Clement as a high government official who
"w ill be able to use his numerous contacts to
market effectively to the government"
Apparently, Wong expected something in
return for boosting' Clement. According to

sealed court documents reviewed by my
associates John Dillon and Ron McRae, a
former associate of Wong's, Charles Hanes,
testified that "Wong struck up a very dose
personal relationship with Mr. Clement."
Wong told Hanes that "one day Mr. Clement
owed him."
The Army objected strenuously to the
choice of Areata for the contract. But SBA —
which through ita 8a program could virtually
compel acceptance of its choice — gave
assurances that the Areata award was
aboveboard. The agency then signed a con­
tract with Areata a few days before the
Reagan administration brought in a new
administration.
• Areata didn't have anyone who could do
the Job the Army wanted done, so It sub­
contracted over half the work to Planning
Research Corp. That company in turn hired
many of BDM 's employees, who had been laid
off when their employer tailed to renew the
contract.
The net result of the m inority
businessman's entry into top-secret defense
work Is this: The subcontractor that pong's
firm hired, using employees of the old con­
tractor, is getting 35 percent of the money.

Wong's firm is getting the other 15 percent ini
management fees. The Arm y is getting
roughly the same services it got under the old
arrangement.
The SBA's 8a pilot program expired last
March and U up for congressional renewal.'
Because the Arm y objected to haviz* ltd
contracts a sign ed by the SBA, bills bw
traduced in the House and Senate require the
president to designate a civilian agency to
funnel the contracts to minority businesses. A
few legislators, led by Rep. Robin Beard, R,
Tenn., want to see the SBA put In adequate
safeguards befqre the taxpayers kick id
additional billions for non-competitive con­
tract awards.
Footnote: Wong's lawyer, Curtis Smothsra
said the government auditors who
the contract award showed an '
lack of umkrstandtag." t k also pointed ou
that a lawsuit brought by the Jihad contracta
had been settled, and noted that Areata hat
Just won renewal of the testing
Smothers feels these developments rindteatt
the choice of Wong's firm.
r

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Evening Herald. Sanford. FI.

Wednesday, Oct. 21, l f l l —SA

Trapping The World's Ugliest Bird
V EN TU R A, Calif. (UPII — On these autumn days in Die high
pastures of the San Joaquin Valley, half a dozen grown men
are hiding in hopes of firing cannon and casting a net over the
world's ugliest bird.
There is something almost sacrilegious about making fun of
the efforts to save the California condor from extinction. But
the mishaps befalling well-meaning naturalists over the past
months have a ring of comedy even in their own scientific
reports — one chick frightened to death, a 100-acre brush fire
set off by the cannon and a test bird fitted with a locational
radio transmitter only to be eaten by an eagle.
There arc only 28 to 30 California condors left, most in the
mountains behind Ventura and Santa Barbara. They are the
largest North American birds and (Lite back to the dinosaurs.
Majestic in flight, they are repulsive up close. They are of Die
vulture family who live on carrion.
Their plight divided ornithologists sharply — one camp
argued their best chance of survival w as to leave them alone.
The other said their only hope was breeding in captivity and
that theory was underwritten by the federal and California
state governments until the summer of 1980 when a 2-monthold bird died.
The bird died of a heart attack while being handled and
S a n d ra S p e lr ( le ft) a n d h e r s is t e r R e b e c c a ( r ig h t )
s h o w n w it h .M ike K y le , c h a ir m a n o f th e S a n fo r d -

S a t u r d a y at th e S a n fo r d A ir p o r t . B e h in d th e m is
tf,e a ir p la n e , in w h ic h th e g r a n d p r iz e w in n e r w ill

S e m in o le J a y c e e C y s t ic F ib r o s is B ik e -a -th o n , get
In p r a c t ic e fo r th e e v e n t w h ic h w ill be h e ld

Ke l a f r t ‘ e r ld e -

Cycling For Cystic Fibrosis; JCs
Will Hold Bike-A-Thon Saturday
The 1981 Sanford-Seminole Jaycees
Cystic F ibrosi5 Bike-a-thon will be held
Saturday beginning at 9 a.m. at the
Sanford Airport Authority building at
Mellonvitle Avenue and 26th Place,
according to chairman Mike Kyle.
It will end at 2 p.m., and refreshments
will be served during the ride. P rlies w ill
be awarded to the riders who collect the
most money to fight cystic fibrosis. In
addition, T-shirts w ill be given to every
rider who turns in at least *25. The school
collecting the most money will receive a
trophy.
Sponsors sheets are available at all
Sanford area schools and at the Stemper

Agency, French Avenue and 20th Street, hundreds ot Florida children who sutler
Committee members named recently from this hereditary disease.
by Jaycee president George Currie inelude, in addition to Kyle, Ix?s Balogh,
Cystic fibrosis, as yet uncurable, is a
Larry Blair, Ron Ryan and Dennis Wall! respiratory and digestive disease
and Jaycee-ettes Eileen Mack and Donna inherited when both parents carry the
Spcir.
recessive gene for CF. One of every 20
“ The Blke-a-thon will involve riders of persons in the United Stales is a C F
all ages who acquire sponsors for the carrier, usually without knowing It, said
number of miles they ride over a two- Kyle. Medical treatment has helped
(nj|e
w during a five-hour period," many C F patients live into their teen
said Kyle. “ It's fun, good exercise, and a years and beyond, into young adulthood,
ureut way to raise money for research AH children with cystic fibrosis are
into causes and cures for this disease." eligible for treatment at any of the six CF
Bike-a-thons are conducted by the centers in the state, Including Florida
Cystic Fibrosis Foundation on behalf of Hospital-Orlundo.

measured on a mountain ledge during an expedition led by I)r.
John Ogden of the Audubon Society and Noel Snyder.
representing the Fish and Wildlife Service.
That scientific tragedy brought the captivity and telemetry
program to a hall — until this summer when the California
Fish and Game Commission resumed the program on a
smaller scale.
The commission announced plans to catch three condors and
pul them in the San Diego Zoo to mate with the only other
condor in captivity.
Ogden and Snyder first went out to practice firing two small
mortars whose projectiles threw a 40-by-60-fool net over a
carcass bait.
Sparks from the explosive touched off a fire near L ik e
Casitas. Two netted practice turkey vultures escaped in the
confusion and firemen from all over the area brought the blaze
under control as It neared an expensive home.
Then, in August, the scientists fitted two turkey vulture
nestlings with solar radio transmitters and let them loose.
Turkey vultures are far more numerous and smaller.
They were never heard from again.

Scientist Says Radiation
Hazards Badly Understated
NEW Y O R K (U P I) N uclear
radiation is SO times as hazardous as
government and industry leaders
estimate, and the danger to chltdren is
much greater than to adults, a man who
helped develop the first atomic bomb
said today.
Dr. John W. Gofmnn, who isolated the
world's first workable quantities of
plutonium for the Manhattan IVoject
that produced the world’s first atom
bomb, said there is no evidence of a socalled safe dose of radiation, as nuclear
power advocates suggest, because
"radiation is cumulative."
"Industry and government estimates
(of radiation doses) are hardly worth the
paper they are written on," Gofmau said
in his book, "Radiation and Human
Health," which was released today.
He said nuclear radiation dangers are
understated 50-fold by the government

and the nuclear power industry.
Although there is not enough in­
formation to say precisely what effect
radiation will have on future generations,
he said there is now evidence Dial genetic
hazards to future generations are
seriously understated.
G ofm an's study also found that
children are far more sensitive to
radiation-caused cancer than are adults.
He said Hie younger the child is at the
time of irradiation, the greater the
cancer risk in later years.
He said parents, physicians, and
dentists should give serious attention to
the evidence to decide if a particular Xray examination of a child is really ad­
visable.
On the nuclear power industry, Gor­
man said "It should come as no surprise
that tlx.' doses predicted and projected by
the nuclear industry may be seriously

questionable.
"One does not promote a product by
predicting (hat it is likely to cause
serious epidemics of leukemia, cancer
and genetic diseases." Gofmnn said.
Gofmnn said a 99.99 percent degree of
containment of radioactive waste Is "not
good enough.”
"If containment is only 99.99 percent
perfect," he said, "lens of thousands of
extra cancer deaths will occur each year
in a fully developed nuclear-power
economy,”
Gofmnn, co-discoverer of uranium-233
and a physician and doctor of nuclearphysical chemistry, is professor emeri­
tus of medical physics at the University
of California at Berkeley and a member
of the faculty at the University of
California School of Medicine. San
Francisco.

Refugees
Cambodian Crisis Is Over But The Hordes Remain Amidst Squalor, Pain
A R A N Y A PR A T H E T , Thailand (UPI)
— The horror show is over at the ThaiCambodia border where not so tong ago
disease-ridden and starving refugees
staggered into border feeding stations for
* handful of life-giving rice.
The world uttered a collective gasp two
years ago as hundreds of thousands of
Cambodians streamed across the Illdefined frontier near the trading town of
Aranyaprathet, fleeing fam ine and
death.
, Pictures of stlck-Uke children, all eyes
and ribs, leaped off the front pages of
newspapers around the world, prompting

a major effort to save w hat was left of the
Cainbodlax-e after years of genocidal
rule by the victorious Khmer Rouge
guerrillas.
Today, about 100,000 Cambodians live
in "holding centers" inside Thailand run
by the Nobel Peace PrUe-winning office
of the U.N. High Commissioner for
Refugees, established 30 years ago.
Another 200,000 are clustered in unof­
ficial settlements strung out along the
border.
Instead of fixed, blank stares, children
in the camps now gaily greet visitors,
trying to sell plastic bags stuffed with

PEOPLE
IN BRIEF
Somef/mes, Maybe You
Should Snore
Gary Zuters left the driving to a friend — and now he may
have to leave the driving lo Greyhound to get home lo
Toronto.
Zuters, 25, a Canadian computer operator, traveled in his
' van through the Western U.S. and Canada for the last seven
weeks, sharing the wheel with Robbin Kikeal, 30.
Zuters was steeping In the back — silently — when Rlkeal
stopped for gas in a Cleveland suburb. Zuters awoke and
headed for the restroom without a word to Rikeal. When he
came out, Rikeal was gone - apparently unaware Zuters
wasn't aboard.
“ As long as I don’t snore, he wasn't going to know I was
missing,” said Zuters.
' Adding they had planned to reach Binghamton, N.Y.,
Monday night. "I have my wallet, but that's it. I’m going to
the Greyhound station In Cleveland."

Middle-Aged Marvels
Some women aren't Just growing older — they really are
growing belter. They are the women the current Issue of
U d ie s ’ Home Journal calls "middle-aged marvels."
Included among them: Mary Tyler Moore, 43; Shirley
Mac La lor, 47; Rita Moreno, 49; A ll MacGraw, 42; Sophia
Loren, 47, and Barbara Walters, 50.
"A full-bloom rose Is more beautiful than a bud," Miss
Moore says.
Miss Walters notes, "In my 20s and 30s I was an expert at
handling trauma. Now, I'm getting good at relaxation."
Miss Moreno adds, "I think it's terrific to be 50. Today
I'm a building with a basement. It's taken me this long to
leant where ail the faucets are, lo realize I have some
pretty solid plumbing — even a nice hot boiler . . . At 20 I
didn't even feel I had a ground floor."

Diplomatic Prize Winner
Yale Prof. James Tobin, S3, a former economic advisor to
president J o in F. Kennedy, won the Nobel Prise for
Economics last week. He found it inappropriate to use the
PCT-fdnn to c ritid M President Rental's economic policies
or any other particular views.
Well, almost.
When he was asked about the World Series, he said: ‘T i l
a policy statement on that. 1 grew up in Illinois, so I
had the misfortune to inherit from childhood a preference
for the White Sox, an unrewarding occupation.”

V fT V *

multicolored banknotes to the unwary.
The currency issued by Die proWestern government in Phnom Penh
before the 1975 Communist takeover Is, of
course, worthless but that appears to be
part ot (he game with the children at the
Khao 1 Dana holding center a few miles
inside Thailand.
Despite the laughter of children, the
mood In the stark, dusty camp is serious.
The Cam bodians, su rv ivo rs of na­
tionwide death purges and starvation,
wait quietly for resettlement in the
United States or a third country.
There is an awareness that the

refugees arc unwanted guests in
Thailand and political events could bring
a closure of the camps and their return
across the border.
A 24-year-old American nurse who
works at the Khao I Dang camp said the
most striking thing about the people Is
that "everyone has lost fam ily members.
I don't know one person who has not lost
two or three relatives."
The nurse, Celine Zldar, of SI. Louis,
Mo., works for the International Com­
mittee for the Red Cross under a sixmonth contract covering her air fare to
and from Thailand, accommodation in

Aranyaprulhct, and a $300 monthly
stipend.
Miss Zldar Is a sister of the Order of St.
Joseph, but said, “ I'm not here to
proselytize." She is one of many
foreigners and Thais working alongside

Cambodian doctors and nurses In Uw
camps.
"Training the Khmer to run the camps
is an integral part of what we're doing
here because If the foreigners ever have
to pull out they'll be left high and dry,”
she said.
The civilian chief of Nong Samel
village, which straddles (he border, is

Not Just Any Old Home Will Do
BAR HARBOR, Maine (UPI l — These are trying limes for
the very, very rich.
While sky high interest rates have pul even a modest home
nut of the reach of most Americans, the super wealthy are
caught In a housing shortage.
There simply aren't enough "suitably plush" mansions to go
around, says real estate broker Charles W. Sawyer Jr., who
has catered lo some of America's most affluent families for 30
years.
Sawyer says the headache begins when you start making,
say $5 million a year.
"The problem for Ihc very rich is not interest rates — it’s
finding houses suitably plush In satisfy them," he said. "The
very’ rich just are having the hardest time finding suitable
quarters."
Not only is the number of listings for oceanside mansions
skimpy, but the law of supply and demand is driving up prices
that swallow even a bloated pocketbook.
Take, for example, a few of the "quarters" recently up for
sale along llie Maine coast, long one of America’s most ex­
clusive hideaways:
—Blue H ill: "'Dundree,' a 22-room estate considered to be
one of the finest in this prestigious coastal area. Offers 850 feet
deep-water ocean frontage, 2’ j manicured acres with pier,
dock, sand beach, swimming pool, stone buttresses and
retaining walls. Elegant summer living at Its finest. $595,000 "

-W in te r Harbor: “ Turn of the century charm and opulence
become obvious when you enter the Impeccable grounds of Ihis
15-room Georgian style home. House contains 7 bedrooms, 7
baths, 30-foot-by-18-fnot living room with fireplace, dining
room with stone fireplace and French doors lo rear terrace
overlooking waters of Frenchman Bay and Cadillac Mountain.
Would you believe, furnished and only, $210,000?"
—Blue H ill: “ Circa 1840&gt;ear-round Greek Revival Colonial
with magnificent columns located on lull for perfect setting.
Contains 27 rooms, 6‘ i baths, 10 fireplaces, 8 bedrooms, full
basement. Bam with horse stables, 27 acres, with 2,000 feet of
granite-laced bay frontage. $375,000."
For those who want to build from Ihe blueprints up, there is
land available, however scarce:
—lia r Harbor: "One hundred spruce-covered acres — 6,000
feet ol oceanfront on the Mount Desert Narrows. $350,000."
—Gouldsboro: "One hundred and thirty acres — 7,700 feet of
deep ocean frontage. A portion suitable for moorage and i llie
resit in Isold pink granite frontage. $425,000."

^ © to

Why M EET Thousands of area residents have spine
related problems which usually respond to chiropractic
care.
This Is our way of encouraging you to find out It you have a
problem that could be helped by chiropractic care. It Is
also our way ot acquainting you with our staff and
facilities.
Examination Includes a minimum ol 10 standard tests lor
evaluating the spine and a contour analysis photo as
shown above.
While we are accepting new patients, no one need feel any
obligation.
Mast Insurances Accepted

SANFORD PAIN CONTROL
CLINIC
ze &gt;&gt;S r rtnrX A n 1A u«u Xwn PlIU Hull W n«va

3 2 3 -5 7 6 3

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said, adding that "some pecple think the
Vietnamese women injected poison into
the oranges."
I-aler, a diplomat said, "There could
be something lo 11. Refugees have
reported poisonings but the victims
disappeared before they could be
checked."

elec tr o n

RENTAL A SALES CO.

(3 0 5 )3 2 3 -7 8 8 5
IjFUrikJi*

V jK lfM i
V-TOrixi*' I'tduiml

B U Y ON OUR
RENTAL P L A N
• D E LIV E R Y
• S E R V IC E
• PARTS
•LAB O R

Bar Harbor was once the ocean playground for the very,
very rich, rivaled only by Newport, H.I., us the "in " place for
summers away from the rigors of the work-a-day world.
In 1947, a fire destroyed most of the magnificent old homes
and hotels, but the area still serves us summer residence for
many notables in the world’s of business and letters.

YOU'VE GOT CREDIT WITH USI

N O ONE REFUSED!
Coll Today • Enjoy Today
NOGIMMICKS-NOCSEO'T CHKCX
HO SECURITY DEPOSITS

N O DOW N PAYM ENT

P ln e lM d M w v — i

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7 LOT* ltd pigx Hi# Pda. Pda On

from their pons and turned dark,' He

Na. 7 Lakovtow Plazo — l i t Commercial Stroal
SantarS, Florida &gt;1771

F R E E S P IN A L
E X A M IN A T IO N

1. KMSk XN. PtlltHU. I Ml ft |lNf
Meet N x TlfM HMdM
1 Pits Own t i n Skate* rata
4 M m u Is Nm* v F «

Ttwu Thon. He spoke of Cambodians
becoming sick after eating fruit and Ices
at the border and In the neighboring
Cambodian province ot Battambang,
renowed for Its oranges.
Victim s suffered convulsions, bled

'

Admiral fV mi

Man

Home Appliances

W in t e r

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rra

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» R YOUR
PRE-SEASON
NEATINC
INSPECTION I
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ELECTRIC HEATERS-HEAT PUMPS
WE SERVICE ALL BRANOS

ax.

ASX ABOUT OUR
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SO U TH ER N

A IR

M K E O W A V IS I

UPbANFORDINC.
Mug Builnni In Sanford Area Slnco INI

PH. 3224921
100N. MAPLE AVE
SANFORD

CAU 323-7M9

�- I A

I A -lv e n le a Here ML leeterd, PI.

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8hop Orlando and Sanford dally 9:30*9:30, Sun. 12-6. Shop Ml. Dora, Ctarmont dally 9*9, Sun. 12-6. Shop Laosburg, DaLand, Kltslmmeo dally 9-9, Sun. 11-6.

C E L E B R A T IN G
The Saving Place

M
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1.27 Tube

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m 1347
Credit C a r d C a lcu la to r

Duro* Super Olue* • }

Ultra-thin calculator has
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Dries to a clear, perm a­
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D u n c a n H in e s' C a k e Mix

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Decongestant for relief of
colds and sinus congestion.

lfl'/j-ounce' ca k e mixes for
your dessert-m aking needs.
-N.I wl

1 7 .8 8

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S**l includes service tor 4, m a
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S o ld In 4*, 4* O r S - p o c k s

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Big dO-ounce* size. For all of
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Vour C h o ic e
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color print film. ASA lOO.

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Standard Spark Plugs

For many

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cars, trucks

••sister Ptugs............. «o„ 99#

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stains, moisture. 16 oz*

h o c o w n © n o t m cijO e*d

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Formula 409* With Trigger

Aerosol t p r a y ‘n W ash

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A ll-purpose, m ultisur­
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20-gotion Trash C a n

Laundry soil and stain
remover. 16-oz. nel wt

M ade of strong plastic
With lid and handles

Solid In-tank typ e
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America's favorite detergent 49
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Fantastik* household
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Helps clear carburetor and fuel
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Wilson
chamoionship
balls 3 per can

cleaner

Our Beg

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Easy to use, have trash squeezed
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1 . 6 6

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Great snack treat lor all. great
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THI UNDERWEAR THAT’S FUN TO WEARI

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M en s izod goll shirts in solid
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i Tee shirt and pair ot b n e ls o l soft
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M en s lough W rangler jeans boot cut jeans
in c la s s ic denim Fam ous W rangler styling

Boys' Izod Shirts. .1 3 . 9 7

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m en Beautiful designer styles and assorted
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26 see-thru draw ers in 3 d if­
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IA — E v m n p Hir*hj, Sanford, FI,

Wodntvday, Oc). I), m i

London City Government
Controlled By Radical Lett
: IDNDON ItlPl) - The House o[
t'oimiH&gt;ns faces the hulking headquar(ers of the Greater l/jmlon Council
pernss the River Thames in a divide that
is as much ideological as geographic.
J The council Is Western Europe's
h ip e st and most expensive city adIninislralion, and earlier this year it fell
under the control of a radical leftist
faction that is implacahly opposed to the
ponservative government of Prim e
Minister Margaret Tliatchcr.
‘ Council leader Ken Livingstone, who
has caused one political uproar after
another since gaining power last May,
makes no secret of his principal aim.
"I want, foremost, the removal of the
present government because the
government controls our p o w e r s and our
revenue and prevents us getting on with
things," he says.
The takeover of Uindon by the extreme
left tins wider implications, for what
happened in the capital could also
happen nationally, in the opinion of many
political observers.
Livingstone was a virtual unknown
when Inn don voters picked n more
m oderate Labor P a rty politician,
Andrew McIntosh, in the May local
election. H ie day alter Die election,
however, Die radical left manat;ed to
maneuver Livingstone Into the local

party leadership, automatically making
him tiead of the council.
On the national level the l-abor party
also is divided among moderates who
might carry' an election and a radical
Marxist rump that might move into
power afterwards just as easily as
Livingston did in l/mdon.
Livingstone has his national equivalent
in Tony Ilenn, who now is fighting for the
parly's deputy leadership, a Job that
could put him in line for the premiership,
Roth men have the support of Trotskyite and other extreme
left
organizations.
The divide between city hall — here it's
called County Rail — and government is
nowhere sharper than on the question of
economic policy. While the Thatcher
government is fighting desperately to
stem public spending, the livlngstone
administration is charging ahead with
socialist policies that inevitably will
result in sharply increased taxes on
l/mdon houseowners, businesses and
industries.
This month I Jvingstone is slashing bus
and subway fares in a move expected to
cost city taxpayers {250 million In sub­
sidies in a full year, lie is unmoved by
complaints that this means that pen­
sioners, for example, who now travel
buses and subways free will have to pay

indirectly for transportation
taxes on their property.

through

Livingstone aLso proposes a tax on
tourists, ami there has been a proposal to
sell old master paintings held in trust by
the city in order to get away from a
"museum mentality” and invest in
"more popular" art forms.
Some of Livin gsto ne's personal
statements have angered even members
of his own party.
He lias hailed Irish Republican Armygunmen as “ freedom fighters," received
the mother of a Maze hunger striker on
the steps of County Hall and called on
British troops in Northern Ireland to lay
down their weapons and go home.
Uvingstone has fiercely attacked the
role of the police in this year's recent
rioting in ILondon's lirixton neighborhood
and described Police Commissioner Sir
David McNee as "a man of distinct racial
views."
He actively backs the campaign for
nuclear disarmament and supports the
"gay liberation" movement He suggests
Britain should become a republic and
declined his invitation as council leader
to the wedding of Prince Charles and
la d y Diana Spencer. He has demanded
an end to private medical care.

El Salvador Agrarian Reform:
The Good, The Bad, The Ugly
SAN SALVAD O R, E l Salvador 1U P I 1 - E l Salvador's
ambitious agrarian reform program has had some suc­
cesses, some failures and a lot of bloodshed The following
are examples of how some nationalized farms have fared,
T H E GOOD
E l Transito was probably one of the best-run farms in E l
Salvador before the government seized it in March 1980
from Palorno Sol. a scion of the famed “ H Fam ilies" that
ruled E l Salvador for half a century.
Production of coffee, milk, eggs and com remained
steady and sometimes even rose when it was turned Into a
cooperative run by the 90 peasant families that live on the
1,242-acre farm, IB miles west of the capital.
The co-op pays workers the same salary as Sol — {2 08 a
day — and put income into improvements and debts, as­
signed members small backyard plots to grow their own
corn and bought zinc sheets so they could build better
houses.
When a veterinarian sent by the government's Agrarian
Reform Institute failed to show up for two months, the co-op
hired its own vet to care for 300 cows and raised milk
production from 800 to 1,200 bottles a day.
The farm tuis been almost untouched by the bloody vir­
tual civil war going on between leftist guerrillas, govern­
ment troops and right-wing deaths squads.
TH E HAD
E l Taquio had 800 head of cattle on 2.625 acres of grazing
land when it was owned by Dr. Jorge Sol, another member
of the Sol family.
But Sol smuggled out 723 tiead w hen it became clear the
government would seize his farm, 40 miles southwest of San
Salvador, and left behind 84 peasant families to form a coop
that owns 77 cows.

In April 1980 an adviser from the Institute "suggested
the co-op borrow money from the government so it could
raise every one's salaries from 12.68 to 13.20 a day and put
them to work -‘just moving rocks from here to there, and
planting corn and beans to feed 'heir families, said coop
treasurer Jose Barrios.
There's been no political violence in E l Taquio, but the
crops were hit by a plague. The co-op now owes $40,000, and
has no source of income for this year.
Institute officials say the best long-term solution in E l
Taquio is to grant the co-op a $140,000 loan to buy BOO head of
cattle for fattening - a near impossibility because the gov­
ernment itself is nearly broke.
This year the co-op asked for a $47,582 credit to plant and
harvest 140 acres of beans and corns. After spending $1,200
on trips to San Salvador to press for the loan, the co-op
received only $11,895 to plant 35 acres.

,

'

,

E l Trapichito, San Antonio and I/is Mangos are the three
parcels of a 1,463-aere sugar plantation that was taken over
by the government from Carlos Llort Fernandez, a wealthy
farmer and businessman.
l/is Mangos, the biggest parcel with 763 acres about 36
miles north of the capital, is faring well under a cooperative
made up of 36 peasant families,

,

But officials haven’t even tried to contact the 40 families
who live on the 437-acre San Antonio parcel, three miles to
the north, in an area hotly contested by the army, rebels
and death squads.
An Institute social worker made the first visit to the 262acre Trapichito parcel, two miles to the east, only in April
and found that 44 {iersons had been killed in the immediate
area in the past 20 months.

I 'l t K S I D K N T It K A G A N
. . .Ills h a ll K a tin ' to w in o r lo se

Th e H oneym oon
H as Ended N ow
For President
WASHINGTON lU I ’ l l — President Reagan's honeymoun,
longer than lor most occupants in the White House, appears to
lie coming to an end.
As some of tits policies hit home, there are signs that there is
some slippage in his popularity. In many ways, Judgment lias
tarn withheld because his administration lias been on a
prolonged shakedown cruise. But Hie critics are becoming
more vocal,
Time is running out and on Oct. 1 his economic recovery
program went intoeffect. Now it is Reagan's new prosperity or
Reagan's recession, depending on which way the economy
goes, and even the economists appear contused at this stage.
Up to now, his lop aides have been blaming Jim m y Carter
for Inflation, high interest rates, and just about every other
thing lluit ails the country.
But the hall is In Reagan's court now. lik e all of his
predecessors, he urges Americans not to expect "instant
solutions" to problems that have been so many yean in Die
making.
Ironically enough, the men of little faith have been the Wall
Street investors, his strongest supporters. Except for the
organized labor s|Hinsored solidarity march in Washington,
tlierc have been no organized protests against Ills massive cuts
in social programs that have been ingrained in the system for
decades.
But the impact of liaise cutbacks are Just beginning to be felt
by those who w ill suffer Hie loss of Jobs, food stamps, school
loans, and other benefits. The reuction is setting in and the
White House is getting more feedback from (lie disenchanted.
It appears to surprise Reagan that big business is not
completely sold on the idea tliat prosperity is Just around the
comer. He had strong words of optimism to the National
Federation of Repul lican Women in Denver last week:
"I am convinced today, us I was when we introduced the
package, that (his economic plan is us good as money In the
bank — and if I were a belting man, I would wager the rent
money on it.

n

*

/
£

C lim b in g tr e e s c a n b e
d a n g e ro u s to y o u r h e a lth *
People lire aware ot the obvious danger of
clim bing trees particularly near powerlines. But
some people are unaware that a tree could Ivcom e
accidentally chained with electricity. All it takes
is for a branch to com e in con tact with a hot
|\&gt;wer line.
11 someone g e t s c l o s e to the point of contact,
they’re liable to net a severe shock. But under certain
conditions like wet weather tor example, the electric
current can Iv carried all the way to the ground.
T h i s means it's also p o s s i b l e to net a shock trom

simply touching the trunk ot the tree.
Naturally were dome all we can to keep your
trees clear ot our lines. Bill we also know little hoys
and girls love to clim b them.
W h at were concerned about is that you and
your child are aware ot the dangers, so that it he
should clim b a tree without your knowing, you can
take comfort knowing he looked M o re he climbed.
T h is safety message has been brought to you by
Morida Power &amp; Liglu as a public service, Ivcause
serving the public is really w hat were here tor.

"Now, I've listened to those chicken tittles who proclaim the
sky is falling and those otliers who recklessly play on high
interest rates for Iheir own narrow political purposes. But this
concern uboul a plan not even in effect yet is nothing more than
' fulse labor."

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"We w ill not practice dilettante economics," he said. "WeTe
committed to llie economic plan and we're committed to
achieving it by holding to a firm, steady course for the long

dl

Electricity is a powerful servant. Respect it.

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SPO RTS
Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

THIS WEEK

Wednesday, Oct. 11, i t l l —fA

R a m s T rip

W EDNESDAY
j u n io r V a r s it y v o lle y b a ll . . .
Oviedo at Lyman 3:30 p.m.

P a n th e rs , 7 -6

Th u r s d a y
V a r s it y v o lle y b a ll . . .

By G E O F F R E Y GIORDANO
Herald Sports Writer
L ik e M ary's Jim Morrison ran six
yards for a touchdown in the third
period and Scott Underwood booted
the extra point to lift the Rams to a 7fi freshman football victory over
Crooms Friday night at L ik e Mary.
The setback knocked B ill Klein's
Panthers from the ranks of the
undefeated to 3-1. Frank Swartz's
Hams, meanwhile, are 3-0.
Crooms travels to Oviedo next
Wednesday, ljik e Mary goes to
Lyman Tuesday night.
While the third period TI) did in
the Panthers, it was Crooms.
however, that scored the first points
of the game in the opening period of
play.
The opportunity was given them
after Ham punter and quarterback
Mike Young was downed by Crooms*
Jo Jo McCloud on his own five yard
line, after mishandling u bad snap.
After two plays, the Panthers put
the k ill into the end zone. The TD
was a fluke, as quarterback
McCloud recovered the ball after it
had been fumbled forward across
the goal line. The extra point, which
proved to be a vital factor in the
Panther loss later on, was blocked
by Ham lineman Chuck Welsh.
Crooms made a threat during the
m iddle of the second quarter,
driving to the I-ake M ary 30 yard

Lyman, Seabreeze and L ik e Howell at L ik e Howell
3:30 p.m.
l,ake Brantley, Apopka and Del .and at Apopka 3 pm
J u n io r V a r s it y fo o tb a ll . . .
Dei^nd at Sanford 6 p.m.
Lyman at luike Howell 7:30 p.m.
V a r s it y fo o tb a ll . . ,
Oviedo at Rockledge S p.m.
C o lle g e v o lle y b a ll. ..
Seminole CC at Sante Fe CC 5 p.m,

F lt lD A Y
V a r s it y fo o tb a ll . . .
Lakeland Kathleen at Sanford 8 p.m.
Mainland at la k e Brantley 8 p.m.
Lake Howell at Spruce Creek 8 p.m.
C o lle g e v o lle y b a ll . . .
Seminole CC at I*ike City Tournament 2 p.m.

SATURDAY
V a r s it y c r o s s c o u n t r y . . .
some county teams at the Boone Invitational 9 a.m.
V a r s it y fo o tb a ll . . .
Trinity Prep at Florida A ir Academy 2 p.m.
C o lle g e v o lle y b a ll. ..
Seminole CC at l,ake City Tournament TBA

line, but the drive fizzled out. partly
because Welsh nailed the Panther's
second quarterback, Mike Whelchel,
for an eight-yard loss. The Panthers
lost the ball soon after as they ran
out of downs,
Crooms kepi pressing on,
penetrating a lough L ik e Mary
defensive squad. It drove to the 15
with under four minutes left in live
first half, but this time, Bam
lineman Don Meyer broke through
McCloud's protection, and dropped
him for a 10-yard loss, then
recovered the resulting fumble.
The Hams, though, lost the k ill
soon after on a misconceived pit*
chout, and Crooms had the k ill in
excellent scoring position on the
I-ike Mary 25 with 23 seconds still
left to be played in the second
quarter No score came, however,
and Crooms clung to its 6-0 lead at
the half.
Ham running back Underwood
blasted through the line (or 30 yards
on the first play of the third quarter,
taking the k ill to the Panther 30. A
pass from Young to Meyer netted 12,
then running back Morrison carried
for eight After a one-yard gain by
Underwood, M orrison charged
forward from six yards out to tie the
game, with 8:19 left in the third
period Underwood's kick slid the
Rams oast Crooms 7-6.
From thereon in, the Panthers fell

M tre to Ph eto by Tom V in c m t

Lake M ary freshm an punter Paul A le g re chases dow n a poor snap.
flat. They came up with 54 yards
total offense in the second half, held
k ic k by L ik e Mary's **D-Men,"
Ham head coach Frank Schwartz
said that, 'Our defense did an ex­
cellent job all night long. They were
just awesome.
Crooms, not yet throwing in the
towel, continued forcing the Hams to
bend, and moved the ball to the L ik e
Mary 15 another time. But this is
where the defense of L ik e Mary won
the game, ns they grew stingier

when Crooms went deeper into their
territory.
on the next Hum drive, lake
Mary moved up to the Crooms 30,
given much help by a 40-yard dash
by Morrison. Crooms' defensive
players pulled themselves together
and forced a Itain punt. .Punter
Young got off an excellent kick,
which traveled for a touchkick from
Ins own 35, a 65-yard boot.
The fourth |ieriixl finally began,
which Is exactly the opposite of what

the Panther's offense did.
The Hams pushed themselves to
the Crooms 18 this time. Underwood
was called on a little later to attempt
a 27-yard field goal, but it went wide
to the right, lliough definitely had
the distance.
C r o o m i M c C lo u d , I y a r d fu m b le
re c o v e ry in end /one (lu ck b lo ck e d !
la k e M a r y M o rm o n . 6 ru n (U n
c l e r i c a l k ic k )

6 0 0 0 -*

Croomi
ta k e M a ry

o o ; o -;

Confident Tribe, Hawks
Continue To Net Success
y S e m io o le C o m m u n it y C o lle g e
v o lle y b a lle r P a t t y C o r s o g e ts s e t
to w a llo p a s e rv e T u e s d a y n ig h t
. 'a g a in s t V a l e n c i a C o m m u n it y
C o lle g e . D e s p ite th e e x - S a n fo rd
: I llg h 's
s m a s h , S C C d ro p p e d
. th re e o f fo u r g a m e s to V C C 15-7,
-15-13, 17-19. 15-8 to f a ll to 8-9 f o r
:th e
y e a r.
Coach
lle a n a
'G a lla g h e r 's te a m t r a v e ls to
• G a in e s v ille T h u r s d a y to p la y
’ S a n ta F e a t 5 p .m .

Creek 156,156 at Imke Brantley.
la k e Howell Is 9-3. It must whip
Knrren Newman's lough Lyman team
and hapless Seabreeze on Thursday,
Ihen come buck with consecutive wins
over Apopka and Sem inole next
Tuesday at Sanford.
“ I'm very optimistic. That’s nil I’m
going to say." said Luciano, the suc­
cessful Silver Hawk skipper. “ First,
we've got to get by l.ymnn, who bent us
earlier this year.
“ Then we’ll think about Seminole.
Tony Hardy's the main problem there.
She’s the one we have to stop. She’s so
talented, she enn really change the
tempo of any game,” warned Lirinno.
While Hardy is indeed devastating, It
was Cathy Hall that broke Apopka’s
back Tuesday afternoon. The tall senior
ran off 10 consecutive service points as
Seminole swamped the Blue Darters,
156.
Hardy threw in her usuul array of
good spikes as did senior L iu ra Grace,
while Dee Hogun and Lisa Nelson

By SAM COOK
llrrnldSports Editor
Sem inole High v o lle y b a ll coach
Donalyn Knight is confident.
L ik e Howell netler coach Jo Luciano
is optimistic.
Both coaches picked up important
victories Tuesday night as the Five Star
and district volleyball competition
winds down to its usual dramatic
conclusion.
Seminole clinched at least a tie for
the conference crown by dropping
Apopka 159), 15-8 ami Daytona Beach
Seabreeze 16-14, 15-9 Tuesday al
Apopka. The Tribe is 13-1 in the Five
Star and 14-2 overall.
The L id y Silver Hawks, meanwhile,
kept pace. They throttled Sandy
Denmark's Imke Brantley squad 15-2,
15-10 and came L ic k to crunch Spruce

H e re to Phete by T«m V ln t t n l

Guy Named ClAA's Best Back
' Seminole High isn't the only place
;halfbacks are running wild.
Robert Guy, a 1981 Seminole
:graduate, had himself quite a day for
-Division II Hampton (Va.) Institute
when HI trampled Emory !■ Henry,
50-17.
Guy, who was a fine running back
and defensive back (or coach Jerry
Posey, entered the game in the third
quarter and burst up the middle for 12
yards and a touchdown on his first
carry.
He carried five more limes for 115
yards and two more TDs. His scoring
runs came on jaunts of 29 yards and
two yards.

V olleyball

5 Star Volley ball
Results
Seminole 15-15, Apopku 6-8
Seminote 16-15, Seabreeze 14-9
la k e Howell 15-15, laike Brantley 210
L ik e Howell 15-15, Spruce Creek 6-5

VCC Tops SCC

College Football
" I ’m very pleased with his per­
form ance,” raved HI coach Ed
Wyche. "But it wasn't a surprise.
After watching film s of his high school
career. 1 knew he was a runner before
I recruited him ."
For his performance, Guy was
named C en tral
Intercollegiate
Athletic Association's Offensive Back
or the Week.
Wyche recruited Guy to replace
veteran Hampton running backs
Anthony Arm strong and Dennis
Mahan. Armstrong, a senior, broke

SYBA Bids For Tourney
The Sanford Youth Baseball Association w ill make a bid
to bring the 1962 Florida Junior Major league state tour­
nament to Sanford nest August.
The board of Directors of the Florida Little Major League
Association will select a site at its November meeting and
the Sanford-based organization will bid to host the tour­
nament at Randall Chase Park on Celery Avenue.
In order to get the tournament, the Sanford group will
need a cash bid of at least *750. Members are selling minigponjorihip* to Individuals and businesses for *10 apiece.
“ We feel we have an excellent chance to get the tour­
nament,” said G ary Taylor, president of the Sanford Youth
F f - h . i l Association. "We have a nice facility and Sanford
has an excellent track record as a tournament host. A few
years ago we hosted the little major league state tour­
nament and it went off without a hitch.”
Although the tournament won't be held until next August,
the c a d i bid must be paid when the tournament is awarded,
and for that reason the group is soliciting at least 75 In­
dividuals and businesses to help them raise the money.
Everyone who donates w ill be recognized in tlie state
tournament souvenier program and all donations are tax
deductible.
Donations can be mailed to the Sanford Youth Baseball
Association, Inc., P.O. Bos 1133, Sanford, Fla. 32771.

•- . » . . •.*

■-&gt; ■ i .

A U TO P A R TS S T O R E S
Th»P»rU Pro

2950 Orlando Drive (Zayre’s Plaza), Sanford

Ticket Outlets

Everything For Your Can U.S. and Import

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the 1000-yard mark for his career
during the game.
Mahan, a junior, rambled for 68
yards as Hampton Institute rushed for
440 yards on 46 carries to break the old
mark of 347.

Tickets for Friday's football game
between Seminole High and lakeland
Kathleen High are ava ila ble at
Seminole High School, Sanford and
lakeview Middle Schools, Crooms High
School, Sweeney's Office Supply and
the downtown Flagship Bank.
The cost Is *2.25.

supplied the defense.
In the second gnmc, the Tribe fell
behind, 8-4, but rallied behind eight
points tor Hogan. Senior Jackie lin k
capped the comeback by serving point
15. Cindy Pendarvis also contributed
some key serves.
Against struggling Seabreeze, Knight
went (o tier second team and a couple of
regulars, but fell behind early.
"It was a different combination. It
took them a while to get used to each
other," Knight said about the addition
of Trichel Tnack, Tracy Gregory and
Terl Hardy. "But, we're playing well
now. I'm confident."
Teri Hardy supplied six sendee
ixiints to the eventual 16-14 victory. In
the second match, Knight went back to
the regulars, who cleaned up the Sand
Crabs, 15-9, behind four senes from
Grace.
Tlie Tribe gets back into action
Monday when the 6-4 junior varsity
plays Oviedo at 6 p.m, The varsity
match follows.
On Tuesday, Sanford hosts Apopka
and la k e Howell In a match which may
determine the Five Star race at 6 p.m. ‘

S

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Wsonevday, Get.21, i m i

Nettles' Glove Magic Bails Out Gossage, 5-3

Watson's Wallop Sets Yankee Example
N EW Y O R K (U P I ) - To go anywhere
In the 71th World Series, the Iros Angeles
Dodgers may need to follow Bob Wat­
son’s example and hit the ball where no
one can catch It.
"He must go to bed hoping and praying
he can k ill us with his glove," Dodger
Manager Tom 1-asorda said Tuesday
night after watching New York third
baseman Gralg Nettles back Watson’s
three-run homer with two outstanding
fielding plays to lead the Yankees to a S-.i
victory and a Id) lead In the Series.
"I get sick to my stomach seeing him
make those plays all the time," added
lasorda, who sends right-hander Burt
Hooton against former Dodger Tommy
John tonight In Game 2 before the Scries
moves to Los Angeles.
Nettles needed exactly one play to
remind the Dodgers what he can do.
laadoff batter Dave l/ipes sent a smash
down the line that Nettles backhanded
and turned into an out at first.
By the time the game ended, Nettles,
second baseman W illie Randolph and left
fielder Dave Winfield had combined on
enough gems to stock a Jewelry store.
"H e did a great Job," Yankee Manager
Bob Lemon said of Nettles. "Y o u ’d think
they would learn not to hit the ball to
him."
I/emon can afford to sound a bit smug.
His team controlled the game virtually
all the way after Watson’s first-inning
homer off loser Jerry Reuss gave the
Yankees a 3-0 lead.

World Series
Ron Guidry allowed one run, a Steve
Yeager homer, over the first seven in­
nings to get the victory. And when a rusty
bullpen corps sagged m om entarily,
Nettles was there.
With the Yankees leading 5-1 in the
eighth, reliever Ron Davis walked Derrel
Thomas and I/ipes, bringing in Goose
Gossage. But pinch hitler Jay Johnstone
singled in a run and Dusty Baker made it
5-3 with a sacrifice fly.
That’s when Steve Garvey sent a liner
toward third. It looked like a sure double,
and may have kicked around long enough
to allow Johnstone to score. Instead,
Johnstone hail to scramble hack to first
when Nettles made the catch.
H ie Dodgers ate only human, and
Nettles’ heroics must have reminded
them of the way it was in 1978. H int year,
with the Yankees trailing 2-0 in the
Series, Nettles backstopped a shaky
G u id ry
outing
with sensational
glovcwork and helped turn the Classic In
New York’s favor.
"The word ’cheat’ is a description we
use for the way lie I Nettles i plays," said
Dodger third baseman Ron Cey, who was
thrown mil. Winfield to Randolph, trying
to stretch a ..ingle into a double in the
seventh "With Ins expereme watching
the hitters, he knows what pitches are
going to tie thrown and lie moves ac­
cordingly.’’

If the Yankee gloves controlled the
tempo, the bats set it. With one out in the
first, Jerry Mumphrcy singled to right
I/iu Piniella, playing right field in place
of the Injured Reggie Jackson, doubled to
right. Then Watson, In his first Series atbat, sent a 1-2 delivery over the right field
fence.
lasorda said he never considered
filling the empty base with Watson,
setting up the lefthanded Reuss against
lefty-swinging Nettles.
‘ ‘ft was Iho first inning and I wasn’t
about to put three men on base for
Nettles,” the manager said, " lie ’s
capable of hitting it out with that short
porch here."
The Yankees made it 4-0 in the third
when Piniella singled in Mumphrcy from
second. They upped it to 5-0 in the fourth
on four straight walks by Bobby Castillo.
At that point, the Dodgers began looking
a little better. Reliever Tom Niedenfucr
pitched three scoreless innings and l/rs
Angeles showed the same spunk it used to
come hack in its two playoff series.
"We faltered for a second," admitted
Winfield. "But It doesn’t really matter
because we won the game. They can
come hack. They are no pushover. But if
we can win two here before we go to the
West ('oast we should be in good shape."
"P m prouil of this team and the way
we’ve battled in post-season play," said
Garvey. "When you’re 5-0 in the hole. It’s
a big tiling for a balk-tub to battle hack
against.”

mm w a t b o n
.. th re e -ru n w a llo p

Ordinarily, Watson isn’t a man who
holds a grudge. Actually, he has none
toward laiaorda although lie couldn’t
help but (cel an inner glow over what tie
did to the Dodgers in Tuesday night’s
W orld Series opener ut Yankee
Stadium. Moat ot the satisfaction he (elt
had to do with a long ago eptsodp in­
volving him and fjisorda.
W atson's first-inning, three run
homer off Dodger starter Jerry Reuss
all but wrapped things up for (lie
Yankees In their wire-to-w ire 5-3
opening-game victory before some of
the late-comers among the 56,470 had
even arrived and after it was all over,
the Yankees’ broad-backed veteran
first baseman recalled how (lie Dodger
manager had once given him the
brushoff.
lasorda didn't remember it happening at all, but Watson's memory
was quite clear. He recalled that
lasorda was scouting for the Dodgers
at (he lime and lasorda said that part
was true.
"I was born In l/is Angeles and
always was a Dodger fan ns a kid,"
related the 35-ycar-oldWatson, who also
contributed a fifth-inning single in the
Yankees' six-hit attack. "This look

Milton
Richman
UPI Sports Editor

place in I9*7| when I was 18 and playing
for Ktcciiiont High Scliool in la s
Angeles. Tommy l-isorda was then the
head smut for tin-1lodgers and tic came
out to look at W illie Crawford anil Hob
1 olan, who were playing for our school.
" lie saw me, too. 1 whsu catcher liven
and 1 wanted to In- a Dodger some day
but tic told me I didn't fit into Hie
Dodger mold,"
And what exactly wax "the Dodger
mold?"
"Well, you know, you had It* run fast
and throw hard. Watson answered. "I
remember die whole thing perfectly
because we bad just won the city
championship."
When some towm e n relayed Wat­
son’s comments to lasorda in the
Dodgers dressing imnii, lie seemed a
little annoyed
I remember Mimling Frcemonl
High bui 1 never even spoke to Wat­
son," lie an! "1 never said anything
like that to him l/.uk, I've got enough
of my own problems "
Regardless ol w lilrli version is ac­
curate, Watson':. ' i l-r.otda's, Watson
didn't have long in wail before lielng
offered a professional contract. Karl
Kueiil, si outing ioi Houston then and a

NEW YORK i UPI i - Jerry Reuss anil
Bub Watson were teammates on the
lluustiin Astros during Hie 1972 and 1973
seasons Reuss said he remembered
Watson well
"I though! he was a pretty risk] hit­
ter," said Reuss, now with the l/«
Angeles Dodgers and the starting pitcher
m Game 1 of the World Series Monday
nighi I decided in try and pitch Watson
outside because I seem to recall him as a
good inside hitter,"
Reuss’ memory failed him — as did Ihe

fastball he threw lo Watson, now a first
baseman for the New York Yankees. The
outside pitch was to Watson’s liking and
he lofted it over the right-center field
wall for a three-run homer in the first
inning. New York, buoyed by Hie early 30 advantage, went on to a 5-3 victory.
Reuss attempted to explain the un­
fortunate pitch.
•’’I know Rob likes to try and pufl the
ball but
Reuss paused a moment.
"W ell, at least lie used lo try that. I didn’t
think he would try to go to the opposite

"When you make a play like that, it
takes the steam out of the other
ballclub," said Nettles, 37, who robbed
Steve Garvey of an extra-base hit with
one on and one out in the eighth to defuse
a potential rally,

p i

Ti '
&gt; ;l

■i|
3 *

The Dodgers trailed 5-1 entering the
eighth against relievi r Iton Davis, but
two walks, a single and a sacrifice fly
made it 5-3 and brought Garvey to Hie
plate s i the tying run against bullpen ace
Rich Gossage.
Garvey lined what appeared to be n
double down the left-fleM line, but Net­
tles, leaping and lunging to his right,
snared the ball for the second out.
Gossage then retired Hon Cey on an easy
grounder to Nettle* and the Dodgers
went out meekly in the ninth.
"The play kept them from getting a
double or triple — that left-field comer is

tricky," said Nettles, who also starred
defensively in Game 3 of live 1978 Series
against the Dodgers. "I was maybe a
step closer lo the line Ihcn normal
because Goose was behind in Ilie count
and Garvey can get around on anybody,”
Watson drilled bis home run ofl Reuss
after a one-out single by Jerry Mumphrey and a two-out, ground-rule double
by I/&gt;u Piniella as the Yankees took an
early 30 lend Reuss, who was knocked
out in the third. Iiad yielded only four
earned runs in 25 playoff innings this
year.
"M&gt; knees were shaking," admitted
Watson, who is lulling .387 in the post­
season. "I Iiad butterflies. 1 talked to a
number of other people that played in
their first World Series and lliey felt Hie
same way. I was nervous, but I lunl the
presence o( mind to know what 1 wanted
lo do.

field.
"1 duln'i have very good control
tonight though my velocity was pretty
good. Honestly, I thought the pitch was
last but maybe not fast enough. He didn't
hit it well hut he did hit it well enough. I
just wish 1 could say it was Just one of
those things. At least I didn't walk
anybody."
Reuss lasted into the third inning
before tie absorbed his earliest yanking
of the year.

roach with Minnesota thus season,
came along, liked what he saw of
Watson and signed him to an Astros'
contract.
Watson spent 12 seasons with the
Astros, often being their most depen­
dable hitler, hut never came close to
playing in a World Series. He longed to
do that and ultimately told them he
wanted to be traded. They nearly made
one for him with the California Angels
in 1978, but when that deal fell through,
the Astros traded him to the Boston Red
Sox in 1979. He became a free agent at
the end of Hint season, signed with live
Yankees and finally got into bis first
World Series game Tuesday night.
By hmnertiig Series nt-bnt. Watson
became only one of 17 players to do so,
and you could tell how happy it made
him feel by Hie way he jumped up ex­
citedly as the hall disap|H'iired over the
right field fence and he held his clen­
ched fist aloft rounding the liases.
"I am not a very emotional person,"
he confessed later. "I was nervous,
though, before the game. I had those
butterflies in my stomach and my
knees were shaking a little."
Wtial made Watson feel all the better
was Hub tie knew his 86-year-old
grandfather, Henry Stew art, was
watching him on television hack in l/is
Angeles.
" it lias always been his dream to we
me play in a World Series," said the
Yankee slugger. "I call him every night
and whatever I do in this Series, I'm
dedicating to him. He muldn't come
here to see me play because he suffers
from emphysema und black bust. I
wish he could’ve been here."

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"I went w ith the pitch and with Hie ball
carrying Hie way It wus, it went uut. I
noticed in batting practice that the ball
was carrying to right field and I was
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llie Yankees, who liave outscored
opponents 32-ID since a Game 4 loss to
Milwaukee in the American league
Divisional Series, received a strong
game from starter Ron Guntry, who
allowed Just four hits in seven innings
and struck out six.
"I was strong and I could liave pitclied
Hie eightli and ninth, but who's gonna
argue w ith the manager when you've got
Davis and Gossage ready to come in?"
asked Guidry, who allowed a fifth-inning
solo homer to Steve Yeager. “ If the ball
is going to be hit somewhere, Pd rather
have it hit to G raig."

Braves, Expos , Padres:
Torre 'Wanted ' Manager
NEW YO RK i UPI i — Former New
York M els’ manager Joe Torre seems to
be a wanted man
Three teams
the Atlanta Braves,
San Diego Padres and Montreal Expos —
a ll appear lo be interested in tuning
Torre as Hieir manager.
Torre said Tue$*iay Umt lie already lias
Iiad an informal discussion with Hie
Braves, without getting Into particulars
about Hieir managerial (Hist, and also has
talked with tire San Diego Padres
Abo, U P f lias learned Hint Hie Mon­
treal Expos may be interested In Torre
as their manager for 1987.
Both Atlanta and San Diego currently
arc without managers while Jim Fan-

GOOSE GOSSAGE
... n a ils d o w n v ic t o r y

Q O O D W Y EA R

Yankees' Play Shuts Up George
NEW Y O R K (UPI) - This is how good
the New York Yankees have been over
the last five games: they’ve shut up
George Steinbrenner.
Not even the nil-picking principal
owner of the American U'ague cliamploni can rightfully complain about tinYankees' play in Hie last 10 days ami
unleu the team goes into a complete
slump, New York should be guzzling
World Series champagne for the third
time in the last five years.
In Tuesday night's Game 1 of Hie 1981
Series, a couple of old pros, Boh Watson
and Graig Nettles, combined in a 5-3
triumph over l/is Angeles. Wutson, who
walled 17 years for un opportunity to
showcase his compact swing in a World
Series setting, clubbed a three-run homer
In the first inning off a nervous Jerry
R e u u and Nettles merely broke (he
Dodgers' spirit wilti an eighth-inning
fielding gem.

H O N G U ID R Y
. se v e n s o lid in n in g s

... m a g ic g lo v e

Reuss Remembers Watson... Very Well

Watson's Blow Provides Glow
To Erase Lasorda Writeoff
NEW YORK (UPI) You break a kid’s
heart and stay on his dirty hiundry list
for life. Right there, you luive the
reason Bobby Watson never sends
Tommy LaScrda any Christmas cards.
That also could’ve been the reason
Watson picked (he time he did to tell
everyone how he a rb itra rily was
written off os a big league prospect by
the Dodger manager 17 years ago.

nit AIG NETTLES

ning, who led Mnnlrcul to within a game
of tlie National league pennant, lias
Indicated he wouldn't mind returning to
the front office.
Torre was fired on Hie closing (lay of
the regular season after guiding ttie New
York Met* for 4 'i years
"Yes, I have talked to Atlanta," Torre
said Tuesday. "I spoke with (General
Manager) John Mullen yesterday. We
did not get into particulars. We talked
about generalities. I'm not saying if the
deal isn't right I won't take it."
Torre stressed that he never was of­
fered Hie Job. But it seems clear the
Braves do want him.

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Wedntiday, Oct. 21, Itll—HA

jU p -A n d -D o w n P a ts B a ttle M a in la n d F r id a y
B y J O E D ESAN TIS
I l f raid Sports Writer
Up and down. Down and up. The
typical Friday-to-Friday lifestyle in the
Five Star Conference. Especially for
lu k e Brantley's Patriots who put their 33 record on the line against once-beaten
Daytona Reach Mainland Friday night in
lu k e Brantley's third straight home
game.
The Patriots come in off a tough 14-7
catfight loss to Spruce Creek while
Mainland enters on the heels of a 15-10
wi$ over victory-less l-ake Howell. On
the seventh eve of the season, the Buc­
caneer-Patriot clash takes on significant
district considerations. Both the Pats and
the Bucs have a single district loss. Both
need the victory to stay within hailing
distance of district co-leaders Spruce
Creek &lt;2-0) and Seminole (3-fli.
“ Everybody's chasing them," says

Jal A M

extreme quickness, its defensive unit
once again executed well, turning in
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losing effort.
"I thought we played well despite the
loss," says Tullis. I thought both teams
play ed well last week It was just a tough,
close ball game.
They got their first score with less titan
a minute left in the first half and that
came on an exceptional drive," points
out the Lake Brantley coach. "We had
our dunces to win it."
Tullis will lx* looking for a stiff
defensive effort again to stop a balanced
Mainland attack.
“ They mix it up pretty well on of­
fense," advises Tullis. “ They go mostly
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“ They 're w ell coached and they have Just
one loss. To top it off they are bigger on
defense than Spruce Creek and probably
a little quicker."
While L ik e Brantley is not possessed of

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The Patriots used Hob Brown a little
more at running back on that wide
counter a week ago. The veteran halfluick capitalized by turning one counter
into a touchdown blast and finished the
night ns the Patriot's leading rusher to

L IQ U O R -L E S S

I

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pick up Iuke Brantley's offensive player
ot the week award.
IVfensive honors went to Mac iu n tn p
who recovered one Spruce Creek fumble
and caused another. Linebacker Kyle
Davis, who blocked a Hawk PAT and
defensive back Hichie Smith shared most
valuable defensive player of the game
honors.
L ik e Brantley is looking forward to the
healthy return of wide receiver Mike
Scranton for the Mainland contest and
my possibly regain the services of twoway line standout Brian Gresham for the
Buccaneer game.

little bit out of the pro-set. They've got
some strong, hard-running backs and
they can throw the ball little too."
On the flip side, Mainland w ill most
likely get a sprinkling of a spruced-up
Lake Brantley offense. The Patriots
opened things up a little against Spruce
Creek with a couple of plays tluit paid
solid dividends when the Pats were able
to move on offense.
"We used the double pass on them for a
big gain. We saw Titusville use it against
them pretty effectively and we got some
yardage with a wide counter play," in­
formed Tullis. "But those play s aren't
really something new."

E X T R A 16% D I S C O U N T O F F O U R L O W B O T T L E P R I C E O N M O S T F U L L C A S E S O F 750 M L B O T T L E S O F W IN E . . . B U Y 10 . . . G E T 2 B O T T L E S F R E E . . . O F S A M E W IN E .

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Lake Brantley

Seminole still have to face each other.
I.yman's Greyhounds tackle both the
Seminoles and Patriots in upcoming
games. Only lu k e Howell, with three
district losses already is out of the pic­
ture.
"We're practicing hard for Mainland,"
says Tullis. “ Our kids aren't quiters.
We're not going to roll over and out of the
race. People are going to have to beat us
to get us out of the pucture."
The picture Tullis and his Patriots face
Friday night is one of a surprisingly
strong Mainland squad, last y ear's young
and mistake-prone doormat.

Patriot head coach Dave Tullis of the
front-running Hawks and Seminoles. "I
don't think we're out of it with one loss in
the district. I think what happened last
year made our kids realize we still have a
shot at the district championship."
What happened in yester-year’ s
typically topsy-turvy Five Star race was
that on the eighth week of play, no less
than five of the district's eight teams
were still mathematically alive. A week
later four remained in the hunt. And after
the final Friday night of play, three
teams deadlocked, forcing a special
three-way, tie-breaking playoff that saw
lu k e Howell's Silver Hawks emerge over
Spruce Creek and Apopka as the district
champ.
An encore performance is not beyond
the imagination of the Five Star Con­
ference, especially in view of the
remaining schedule. Snrure Creek and

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Wednesday, Oct. J1, m i

Busch Gardens' Animals Just Keep On Breeding
T A M P A , Fla. (U PI) - Wild animals,
many of Uwm on ihe endangered species
list, roam at w ill at Busch Gardens’ Dark
Continent m aintaining their natural
herding and social Instincts.
The Dark Continent has one of the
largest collections of exotic animals In
the world. It is equipped with modern
support facilities that provide medical
care and special diets to help herds grow
through proper breeding.
Reproduction has gone so well that
tigers, lions and leopards are now on
birth control programs — lions because
they are not considered rare and homes
cannot be found f x cubs, and tigers and

inbreeding of animals.
“ Preventing inbreeding is a big
problem throughout the zoo world," said
Gerald Lentz, manager of zoological
opratlons at The Dark Continent.

leopards because of the mass of federal
regulations which hinder the sale and
trade of captive tigers and leopards
between zoos.
W xkin g through the International
Species Inventory System, headquar­
tered at the Minnesota Stale Zoo, Busch
Gardens houses many animals on loan
from other facilities and has some of its
own animals on loan to other zoos, in­
cluding those in St. I/mis, San Diego,
Cincinnati and Houston.

“ In order to maintain genetic vitality
you have to have a minimum of 500
specimens available,” Lentz said. "You
have to find some new animals and you
have to make certain each zoo has
unrelated animals for propagation.”
As part of the ISIS program, each
newborn animal is permanently tagged
and information about it Is placed into
the computer hookup so that par­
ticipating zoos can tell if it is suitable

ISIS provides zoo curators with up-todate inform ation on where certain
species of animals can be obtained f x
breeding and how to prevent accidental

Bob Hope Jabs
His Lance Into
Four Presidents
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) — The most exclusive and unlikely
fraternity in the country — made up of living American
Presidents, past and present — held its second meeting
recently.
President Reagan and ex-Presidents Carter, F x d and Nixon
made 20th Century history by appearing together under one
roof, the first time four U.S. Presidents had met in this cen­
tury.
It’s not that Reagan, Carter, Ford and Nixon are thinking of
fx m in g a barbershop quartet and hitting the old KeithOrphcum circuit, although there are those irnong us who
might think it would better serve the country.
Indeed, there are those so bold as to Intimate that it might be
the most Inharmonious quartet in the h istx y of show biz, not to
say politics.
One such observer is Bob Hope, who knows all four
Presidents and who entertained them in their White House
years.
Hope was master of ceremonies at the recent USO bash
which included the families of Presidents going back to
Franklin Roosevelt, the first honxary chairman of the USO.
The Presidential foursome were, of course, the objects of
slings and barbs from emcee Hope who has made a practice of
jabbing away at exalted egos.
Hope, in fa d , warmed up by sinking his lance into Reagan,
Ford, Vice President G exg e Bush, House Speaker Tip O’Neill,
France's former President Valery Glscard d'Estaing and
other dignitaries f x his two-hour Oct. 22 TV special.
The comedian traveled to Grand Rapids, Mich., for the
dedication ceremonies of the new Gerald Ford museum, at­
tended by dozens of political bigwigs.
"It was the biggest lineup of dignitaries I’ve ever played to
and I've appeared before a lot or dignitaries," Hope said while
tucking Into a lamb chop lunch in a cheerfully sunny room of
his San Fernando Valley home.
“ This lopped even a royal command performance In Eng­
land where there were so many European members of royalty
that I told them the audience looked like a chess match.
“ Of course, it’s easier to let the lingers fly at Americans
than royalty. Actually, I think our politicians like having the
a ir Wt out ot their balloons once in a while. The bathe make
them more human.
“ In the Ford Museum show I tell a Joke and the cameras cut
to F x d x Reagan x whoever, to catch their reactions.
“ For instance, F x d laughed as much as anyone when I
talked about his golf game: 'They've named a highway here in
Michigan f x Jerry Ford. It goes straight for 200 yards and
then veers off into the woods.'
"I describe him as an ex-president and an ex-congressman
who is now a hit man f x the Professional Golfers Association.
“ The cameras picked up the reactions of Vice President
Rush and Secretary of Stale Alexander Haig when I said, 'I'm
glad President Reagan showed up because until that time Bush
and Haig didn't know who was in charge.'"
Hope ran a tape of his monologue and sure enough, Bush and
Haig laughed it up.
Nancy Reagan, also in the distinguished audience, did not
get away unscathed.
Hope said, "There's a replica of the While House o v d office
right here in the museum. It's so real Nancy has tried to
redecorate It twice."

* ■*•’(►•*

"But they’ve alleviated that somewhat
in the last year and a half by creating a
captive breed certificate," he said.
Lentz oversees a staff of 110 animal
care people and suppxt facilities that
Include a nursery for young animals who
have been orphaned x are unable to fend

L o u i e 's

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“ One of his favorites is: On one hole Ford got a birdie, an
eagle, o moose, an elk and a Mason. The other day he said, ‘Get
some new material for me.’ ”

*

"The Endangered Species Act, con­
trary to its intent, has created more

"It Impacted zoos tremendously," he
said. “ No zoo could buy or sale an en­
dangered species without getting a
federal permit. At one time it took more
han a year to hear from them.

for them-elves, a small animal hospital
and labxatory, a special kitchen for the
wildlife and a 50-acre Veldt where some
500 head of Africa big game roam free.
Food costs run about f 1,000 a day, with
medical costs about 1175,000 a year.
Lentz said.
The annual food usage Includes 600 tons
of hay, 500 tons of grain, 23 tons of fish,
8,000 cases of fruits and vegetables and 40
tons of meat products.
“ One of our w x s t problems is that
people, for w hatever reason, give
animals what they shouldn’t have,"
Lentz said. "We don’t allow people to
feed the animals and don't encourage the
animals to seek food.

are our business and our prices mean business!

“ F x d takes all my lines and tells them on himself," Bob
said, grinning. "He likes to repeat gags like, Ford made golf a
contact sp x t. His golf cart has a red cross on its side.

JA CKSO N VIU -E, Fla. (UPI) - A 63-year-old woman, not
yet a grandmother herself, luis begun a letter-writing service
f x grandparents too busy to write to their grandchildren.
"A generation ago most grandmothers stayed home and
baked pies, crocheted and often wrote to their grandchildren,"
Marie Dillon, whose firm is called Granny Ree and Granny
E m Inc., said.
“ Today's grandma is likely to be holding down a Job and is
loo busy to bother," she said.
F x f 12 a year, Mrs. Dillon will correspond monthly with a
child. A special birthday letter to Ihe child is a bonus.
The letters are signed by either Granny Ree, who Mrs. Dillon
says is her real self, x Granny Em, her alter ego.
In a letter advertising the service, Mrs. Dillon, who opened
f x business last week in a downtown Jacksonville office suite,
explained:
“ Granny Ree likes to read. She is still going to school;
reading, studying and learning.
"Granny Em likes to sit In a rocking chair and crochet. She
enjoys watching birds, looking at beautiful scenery and listen­
ing to the sounds of nature. And she loves to bake cookies!"
Married to a retired .Vrmy officer, Mrs. Dillon said she has
lived in Puerto Rico, the Philippines, Hong Kong, Japan and
Thailand as well as In Washington, D.C. She writes in simple
laiumaee of her experiences.
Mrs. Dillon said she Is e q a d a lly interested in writing to
youngsters who are hospitalised f x long periods.
Before writing her first letters, she asked the children of
some relatives if they would critique bar letters. The response
of an l-year-old g irl was not long in coining:
"Yo u r letters a rt alright," she wrote, “ but they are too
short. M y age needs to have a twowage letter. And Kevin (her
4-year-old brother) doesn't go In f x that 'love' stuff."
Mrs. Dillon said her only eon, John, a systems analyst f x a
California computer firm, la unmarried and has no children.

Busch Gardens has been credited with
a number of first captive breedings, and
has been recognized by the American
Association of Zoological Parks and
Aquariums with 13 awards recognizing
production of 50 or more individual
viable offspring of a given species.

problems for rare animals and has added
many new dimensions to zoo manage­
ment techniques throughout the world,"
lientz said.

TV# Appliances

Most of Hope's victim s are good natxed about the ribs,
especially Ford. #

Too-Busy Grannies
Get A Little Help

stock for breeding purposes at their own
facilities.
I^ntz said The Dark Continent has
3,119 specimens which Include 1,174
mammals representing 95 species, 1,843
birds representing 245 species and 238
reptiles representing 22 species.

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O U RSELVES
Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Wedneidav, Oct. l l , I f l i —ifl

Cook Of The Week: Linda Cooke

She's A Real Major In Homemaldng Arts

i n t t rCH
u nILD
nc-oc
B) LOU
ERS
Herald Correspondent
Did your grandmother ever give you a recipe that called for
"a pinch of this, a dab of that, and a sprinkle of something
else?" Well, you're not alone.
This week's Cook of the Week, Linda Cooke of Lake Mary,
has a grandmother like that who helped her learn to cook back
in Lincolnton, N.C., where she grew up.
In fact, Linda's famous Buttermilk Biscuits are made from
an old fashioned pinch-of-that recipe that she’s tried to convert
to cups-of-thls and leaspoons-of-that for more conventional
recipe followers.
Approximately 20 men who attend the First Assembly of God
church in Sanford w ill never forget the day they consumed
over ISO of Linda's homemade biscuits at a prayer breakfast.
I This was in addition to the regular sausage, eggs and grits on
their menu). Using quick arithmetic, that's seven biscuits per
man, with 10 left over — except there were none left over!
Even though that prayer breakfast happened several years
ago, the men who attended still talk about those biscuits that
were “ better than Mother used to make."
When IJnda's husband, Leonard, is not on the go as a
fireman with the Seaboard Coast lin e Hall Road, he and their
two children, Todd and Mechetle, especially enjoy the goodies
she bakes.
lik e many other women today, Linda Is employed outside
the home, and works part-time at the H EM Restaurant on S.
French Avenue in Sanford.
A visit to the Cooke home at 206 Floyd Avenue in Lake Mary
will soon let you know that Linda is a real major in the
homemaking arts.
In fact, she is working hard right now to finish the crafts she
w ill display and sell at “ Fiesta In The Park" to be held in
Orlando at la k e Eola Park the first weekend in November.
She w ill display dozens of hand-sewn quilts her mother has
made, as well as her own kitchen magnets and puppet dolls
that are made from empty commercial-type thread spools.
Unda prepared a Carrot Cake for Todd's recent 16th bir­
thday. "It is one of his favorites," and she adds, "the pineapple
in the frosting is really what makes this cake special. Most
people use cream cheese in the frosting, but no pineapple."
Linda got live recipe for this Carrot Cake from her grand­
mother who had clipped It from a North Carolina newspaper in
the 1960s. "It Isa very old recipe. I found it while rummaging
around in Grandma's clippings, and she let me bring it back to
Florida."
As a Christian, Linda is very concerned with the family unit

FIRST FEDERAL
HONORS BOSSES

Unda Cooke
learned to cook
Grandmother
style — a pinch
of this, a dab
of that...

today, and believes ll can be strengthened when mothers allow
their children to cook. "When I was young," she says, "m y
grandmother let me put the eggs in when she bilked cakes. I
was so short, I hod to stand on a chair to see into the bowl?”
You w ill find that Unda Cooke luis shared recipes that
contain "shortcuts” , like the No-crust Coconut Pie. But, you
can be assured that there will be no shortcuts on the com­
pliments received when serving these sweet treats to family
and friends. At least there never is any shortage for Unda.

Em ployc c i of Firat Federal of Seminole honored their bosses on National
Boases Day with a luncheon at Holiday Inn, Sanford Marina. Bosses honored
were Jack Hunt, left, Richard Swann, right, Vic Arnett and Tom Buckley.

Free Sewing Machine Clinic
The Extension Home Economics program w ill co-aponsor
with Sanford Sewing Center a Sewing Machine Clinic free to
the public on Oct. 26 from 1-2:30 p.m. and from 74:30 p.m.
Michael Boudreau w ill demonstrate how to clean and oil
your sewing machine. A ll are invited to bring in their
machines.
After the initial demonstration is given, the groups will be
divided according to the type of machine they have brought in
and Boudreau and the Home E c Agent w ill be demonstrating
within the specific sewing machine groups how to oil their
machines.
This clinic w ill be given s i the Agricultural Center, 4320 S.
Orlando Drive, Sanford.
The Extension Homemakers of Seminole County will
sponsor Holiday Showcase at the Altamonte Springs Civic
Center on Nov. 4, from 10 a.m. until 1 p.m. Admission price is
30 cents, for which the participant w ill receive a Holiday

Showcase book of holiday craft ideas and recipes. There will be
free food and drawings to be held. A country kitchen will be
featured with homemade foods, breads, and canned items.
On Nov. 23 at the Agricultural Extension Center there will be
a program free to (he public with the Home Economist Bar­
bara Hughes showing different types of hors d'oouvres that
can be fixed during the holiday season. This demonstration is
free to the public and will be in the Agri-Center Auditorium,
from 1-3 p.m. The same program w ill be presented from 7-9
p.m. that day.

CARROTCAKE
14 cups sugar
111 cups cooking oil
4 unbeaten eggs
2 teaspoons each, baking powder and cinnamon
1 teaspoon each, soda and salt
4 cup chopped pecans
2 cups plain flour
2 cups grated raw carrots
Cream sugar and cooking oil. Add eggs, one at a time, and
m a in well. Sift together flour, baking powder, salt, soda, and
cinnamon, and add to sugar mixture. Fold in grated carrots
and nuts. Pour into a greased and floured 9 x 13 oblong pan and
bake In a preheated 350 degree oven for 25 to 30 minutes. When
cool, spread filling.
Killing (or Carrot Lake:
1 package confectioners sugar
1 6 ounce package cream cheese
4 slick margarine
3 tuupoon* vanilla
1 can crushed pineapple, well drained
Cream together cream cheese, margarine and sugar. Add
vanilla and pineapple. Pour over cooled carrot cake, spreading
evenly (Filling will be slightly runny).
B U T T E R M IL K BISCUITS
Place 2 sifters full of sell-rising flour Into a large bowl (about
G cups of flour). Make a well In the center and place a ball of
Crisco (about l-3rd cup) there, cuttlng-ln with a fork or pastry
cutter. Pour in &gt;quart of buttermilk, stirring until mixed. If
dough is too wet, add n little more flour, but do not work dough.
Make I large ball of dough and place on a floured surface.
Roll out to 4 inch thickness and cut biscuits.
(The secret to tender biscuits is in the cutting. Do not twist
the cutter, but go straight down Into the dough and back up.)
Bake on a lightly greased sheet about 20 to 23 minutes in a
preheated 330 degree oven. Yield is 3 dozen.
FROSTED PE A N U T BU T TE R BARS
1 cup unsifted Hour
4 cup sugar
■i teaspoon baking soda
4 cup packed brown sugar
1 imp quick cook oatmeal
l~3rd cup peanut butter
•i pound margarine
1 large egg
Sift together flour and soda. Stir in sugar and oatmeal. Add
peanut butter, margarine and egg, mixing with hands until
crumbly. Press into 9 x 13 generously greased pan. Bake in
preheated 350 degree oven for 25 minutes. Place on rack until
completely cool and then frost.

On Dec. 1, from 1-3 p in. and 7-9 p.m. a microwave demon­
stration on various tallday treats to be served in the microwave oven w ill be given by Seminole County Home Economist
Barbara Hughes. This is sponsored in conjunction with E.C.
Hayes Jr., of Sanford Electric Company who Is furnishing the
microwave oven and the Sanford Chamber of Commerce
where the demonstration w ill be held.

Tom Sullivan
Coming To UCF

REGISTER

FREE

FOR

TURKEY

Tom Sullivan, singer, composer, actor, athlete, humanist
whose blindness since birth has never hampered e fierce will
to excel, will make a special appearance at the University of
Central Florida Oct. 23 In a program in which he’ll combine his
artistry with inspiration.
The evening program, presented by the UCF Counselor
Education Association, is the second in the group's annual
festivals featuring notables In their Held. Dr. Leo Busc i glis,
who drew a standing room only audience to UCF In the spring
of 1160, was the first guest.
Sullivan's I p.m. appearance, In the UCF gymnasium, will
center on stimulating his audience, using many of his own
experiences and examples from others in combatting what he
terms "inconveniences" that can be turned to advantages.
Tickets for the evening's performance are available, at |6,
and may be obtained by calling the Centralised Services office
at UCF, 275-2111, the College of Education's Dr. Lance Percy,
program coordinator, at 275-2365, or at local ticket outlets.

WITH

PERSONALITY

F R E E E A R PIERCIN O WITH
PU RCH ASE OF EARRINOS

See COOK, Page 2B

Energy-Saving Sale!
Just in time for holiday decorating.

30% O F F

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L it p t ii S|ie, !&lt;■■, im
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EVERY MAYTAG WASHER,
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Comblna (lour and sugar in ml sing bowl. Heat margarine,
Coca Cola, and cocoa to boiling, and pour over Dour mixture.
M ix thoroughly. Add eggs, buttermilk, soda and vanilla. Beal
well and add marshmallows. (Balter will be thin with mar­
shmallows floating on top!)
Bake In 9 x 13 cake pan, greased and floured, at 350 degrees
for 30 to 35 minutes. Ice while hot.
Coca Cola Irtog:
4 cup margarine
1 cup chopped nuts
3 tablespoons cocoa
6 tablespoons Coca Cola
1 box confectioners sugar
Place confectioners sugar In large bowl. Cook margarine.
Coca Cola and cocoa until boiling, and add to sugar. Stir in nuts
and mix well. Pour on cake, spreading until rairly even.
COLD O VEN P O U N D C A K E
6 eggs
3 cups flour
3 cups plain flour
2 slicks margarine
4 cup Crisco
4 teaspoon baking powder
4 teaspoon salt
2 teaspoons flavoring (vanilla, lemon, or almond)
1 cup m ilk
Cream Crisco and margarine in a large bowl. Add sugar and

M A YTA G

L O IS' PLA CE has Just
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H i ve you saen our
nsw fa ll SPO R TSW EA R
SU IT S, D R E S S E S ,
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A C C E SSO R IE S?

2 cups sugar
1 cup shortening
4 whole eggs
14 cups plain flour
l-3rd cup cocoa
*« teaspoon salt
3 teaspoons vanilla
1 cup chopped nuts
halt of a 10 ounce package of miniature marshmallows
Cream shortening and sugar. Add eggs and beat by hand.
Sift cocoa, flour and salt together. Add to creamed mixture.
M ix well. Add vanilla and nuts. Pour Into greased and floured
oblong pan. Bake for 35 minutes at 300 degrees. Remove from
oven and pour marshmallows over the top; return to oven for
10 minutes at 350 degrees. Cool cake for one hour before
frosting.
Mud Cake Frosting:
1 box confectioners sugar
4 cup cocoa
2 sticks margarine
4 to l-3rd cup canned m ilk or cream
1 teaspoon vanilla
1 cup chopped nuts
Sift sugar with cocoa. Melt margarine and add the ntgaicocoa in ixlure, mixing well while c o n tin u e to cook for 4 or 5
minutes. Stir In cream and vanilla, mixing well. Remove from
heat. Add nuts and spread on cake. Note: If this cake is loo
large for your family, you may cut it In half, freezing one
portion and serving Use other Immediately. This cake keeps
well in the freezer and retains a nice appearance when thawed.
COCA COLA C A K E
2 cups unsifted flour
2 cups sugar
2 sticks margarine
1 cup Coca Cola
3 tablespoons cocoa
2 beaten eggs
4 cup buttermilk
1 teaspoon soda
I teaspoon vanilla
14 cups miniature marshmallows

Save up to 30 % on 20 styles of energyraving fabrics. Plus, savings up to 20%
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Fait

Fatima

P E A N U T B U T T E R FROSTING
4 stick of soft butler
1*« cups confectioners sugar
2 to 3 tablespoons m ilk
1 teaspoon vanilla
4 cup peanut butter
Place all Ingredients Into a large bowl and beat well with
mixer until mixture is smooth. Frost peanut butter bars and
refrigerate until frosting is set. Cut into bars. Wrap any lef­
tover peanut butter bars in plastic wrap, and they w ill keep
several days. This is a great lunch box treat.
MISSISSIPPI MUD C A K E

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SALE ENDS OCT. 11, INI

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Wadntaday, Oct. 21,111)

Cook O f The Week

OURSELVES

Continued From Page IB
one egg at a time, beating well after each addition. Add milk
and m ix until absorbed. Combine flour, baking powder and
salt, and slowly add this to the sugar mixture. Add flavoring.
Pour into a greased and floured lube pan and place in a cold
oven. Turn oven on "hake" and set at 350 degrees. Cake w ill be
done in one hour.
N UT RO LL
1 cup Brazil nuts, chopped
1 cup walnuts, chopped
1 cup pecans, chopper!
1 small (5 ounce) Jar maraschino cherries, quartered
1 small package miniature marshmallows
1 box graham crackers
1 cup milk
1 12 ounce box raisins
Finely crush 2 packages of graham crackers and place In a
large bowl. Heal marshmallows and m ilk over low heat until
marshmallows are melted and pour over cracker crumbs. Add
nuts, cherries and raisins. Finely crush the remaining 2
packages of graham crackers and put the crumbs on waxed
paper. Divide the nut mixture into 3 or 4 sections, forming each
one into a roll, 2 inches in diameter. Thoroughly coat each roll

IN B R IE F
DeBary VFD Needs Entries
For Christmas Parade
The DeBary Volunteer Fire Department needs en­
tries for the Christmas Parade. Anyone desiring to
enter the parade is asked to contact Janet Douglas,
parade chairman, 66W804, after 3:30 p.m., or Teri
Meyer, co-chairman, G68-8455.
Those with horse unit entries are asked to contact
Wes Giles, B a r 41 Ranch, take Monroe.

PWP Costume Dance
Parents Without Partners (PW P) will hold u
Halloween costume dance Saturday at the DeBary
Fire Hall, beginning at 9 p.m. This Is an open event and
costumes are optional. There will be a band and door
prizes. Admission Is $3.50 to the BYOB event. For in­
formation, call Vince, (904 ) 734-4735, or Ray, (904 ) 7753760.

Trin/ty's Autumn Daze

' r r I r '

In the graham cracker crumbs and wrap in waxed paper,
aluminum foil or clear plastic wrap, Refrigerate or freeze
until ready to use, and then slice with a sharp knife.
NO-CRUST COCONUT P1F,
l 1* cups sugar
l i stick margarine
4 well-beaten eggs
*j cup self-rising flour
2 cups milk
1 teaspoon vanilla
7 ounce can of flaked coconut
Mix sugar and margarine. Add flour, eggs, milk and vanilla.
M ix well. Add coconut. Pour into well greased 9 inch pie pan.
Bake in a preheated 350 degree oven 25 to 30 minutes until
browned. This pie comes out beautifully when cold.
FRESH APPLECAKE
1 cup Wesson Oil
2 eggs
2 cups sugar
I cup chopped nuts
1 teaspoon vanilla
3 cups self-rising flour
2 cups chopped apples

M ix all ingredients by hand until well-mixed. Pour into
greased and floured tube pan. Bake In preheated 350 degree
oven for one hour. Needs no frosting.
WHITE C A K E WITH
W HITE MOUNTAIN FROSTING
Whites of 2 eggs
]« cup sugar
3 tablespoons water
l-3rd cup light com syrup
1 teaspoon vanilla
l l » cups fresh grated coconut
1 box white cake mix, prepared according to directions
Beat egg whites until peaks form. Set aside. Mix sugar,
water, and com syrup in sauce pan, cover and bring to boil.
Remove cover and cook until syrup spins a thread 6 to 8 inches.
Pour hot syrup very slowly over egg whiles, beating constantly
with electric mixer. Continue until frosting holds peaks. Add
vanilla. Frost top of one layer of white cake and sprinkle with
half of the fresh grated coconut. Position remaining layer and
finish frosting cake top and sides. Sprinkle top of cake with the
other half of the fresh coconut (the fresh coconut and
homemade frosting really "dresses up" a box cake).

Go Ahead And Cry; Sensitivity Is Refreshing
D EA R A BBY: What do you
child. In fact, my greatest Joy qualified group or individual.
who desperately need your
overcome this urge, but there
think of brides who come
help.
is working with children, and I have been to therapists, but
is simply nowhere to go for
down the aisle crying at their
my success in dealing with they know less than I about
J E K Y L L AND H Y D E
help.
own wedding? Or doesn't it
them has been remarkable. this compulsion I have.
D E A R J E K Y L L : I am
There are many good men
ever happen?
publishing your letter, and if I
My point in writing is to try
In prison who could also
I have the problem under
I am a 25-year-old college
to locale someone who is control, but (he desire still
hear from any qualified
contribute to society if (his
girl and I'll probably tie
doing research in this area. I rages within me, and I would
researchers who want to work
problem could be solved.
gelling married within the
know I could make an im­ like to eliminate it If possible.
with you 1 w ill let you know.
Please answer me in a
next (wo years. I cry "at the
portant contribution toward a I know there must be
Please send me your name
"confidential." I cannot lake
drop of a hat," as my parents myself such a man. Nothing
serious study.
any chances of being iden­ and address. You can trust
thousands of men like me who
could
be
further
from
my
say.
I w ill freely work with any are active and would like to
tified. There are many of us me.
I cry at sad movies and I mind than wanting to hurt a
cry when I hear a nostalgic
song. I even cried when I
round a picture of my
boyfriend's old girlfriend in
his Bible. My boyfriend's
sister had a pet raccoon that I
saw muybe twice. The thing
got hit in the Jaw by a car and
WILLA SPRINGS VILLAGE SHOPPING CENTER
died. As they were looking it
5045 RED BUG LA K E RD.
over and talking about
C A S S E LB E R R Y PH O N E 699-0781
skinning it to save the hide, I
started to cry like a baby.
Any tiling can set me off.
I am so afraid I will cry
rivers at my own wedding.
What do you make of this?
CRYBABY
I J I U J lI l lM f l l
D EA R CR Y B A B Y: So you
cry easily. It's no crime to
give In to your emotions —
such sensitivity these days Is
refreshing. You have a for­
tune In liquid assets. Don't
SCHICK
knock it.
KODAK COLOR
VASELINE
D O UBLE-EDQ E
PALMOUVE
D E A R A B B Y : I have
INTENSIVE CARE
DETERGENT
HAIR SPRAY
TOOTHPASTE
searched for help for years
» OUNCE
I OUNCE
O-OUNCI
with no success. 1 am a
lit*
it
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"pederast." t l like young
Prked . .
1
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Fof cleaner dishes A sober
Pi ut pi at 'Hum bi« d t s F Ms
boys, i I cannot tell you how
Contains fluoride p u cereAerosol I tu a Hold or Super
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handt Lim it 1
double edge razors Limit
Cpiotcf ol 3 types Lim it 1
ftects 30* o il label Limit !
M o rtio n ie t dry, rough tain
difficult it is tor me to even
write those words. For people
who read about child
3 -SHELF
S-SHELF
■LUESTRATOS
molestation, every Individual
PLASTIC
PLASTIC
TO A STM A STER
COLOGNE
ROLAIDS
BOOKCASE
who has sex with a child ranks
ETAQERE
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»M I I H
ANTACID
FOR MEN
w
TOASTER
a
among the most evil deviates
I
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BIC
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SUPER SAVER
INBIDEFROST —
RIGHT GUARD
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Abby

The Trinity Angels will sponsor a deli-lunch Friday,
at noon in the picnic area, and a pancake breakfast on
Saturday, during the fifth Annual Aulumn Daze Sale at
Trinity's campus, 8400 Aloma Ave., Goldenrod.

PTA Council To M eet
Seminole County Council PTA will meet Oct. 22 at
Dade Savings, Butler Plaza, Howell Branch Road and
State Route 436. Coffee and Registration is at 9:15 a.m.
followed by the business meeting at 9:45 a.m. State
Hep. (D-Allamonte Springs) Bob Hattaway and Dr.
Jim Stullz w ill speak on the subject "What Is
discretionary millage and how does It affect our
schools?". All parents are Invited.

Community Symphony Set
The 60 member University of Central Florida
Community Symphony Orchestra, w ill present its
opening concert of the 1981-82 season Sunday, at 3 p.m.
in the U C R F Student Center Auditorium. The concert
is open to the public without charge.
The orchestra is comprised of U CF students and
com m unity m embers from throughout Central
Florida. Manager of the orchestra is Mrs. L.W. Ragley.
The music for this occasion will be provided by a grant
from the Music Performance Trust Funds (Martin
Paulson, trustee), a public service organization
created and financed by the recording industries under
agreement w ith the A m erican Federation of
Musicians.

Tree Planting, Dance
The Uons Club of Casselberry will present a tree to
the city, symbolic of peace to the world, Saturday, at
5:30 p.m., at the new Seminole County Senior Citizens
Multipurpose Center, 200 N. Triplet ta ke DriveCasselberry.
A dance w ill be held at the center that evening, from
7:30 to 10:30. Donation is $1 per person.

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in Softs oflrf Profitt,

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in tho noil issue....

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11:05

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O 4 PA S S W O R D PLU S
II (351 INDEPENDENT N ETW O RK
NEW S

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AFTERN O O N

In a d d ition te Ih* ( h t n n t li lu te d , c e b le v itle n i v k u r l S e r i m ay tune in to in d a p e n d tn l ch a n n el 44,
J l. P r f e r tb v r g , b y tu n in g !* ch a n n el 1; tu n in g 1* ch a n n el 11. w h ic h c e r n e t ip o r l i end the C h r lit ia n
B re e d c a th n y N etw o rk tCS*t&gt;.

7:35

THURSDAY,

I] (171 S A N FO R D AN D SON
EVENING

Los Angeles
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II (35 ) SAN FO R D ANO SON
0 3 ( 1 0&gt;' rI r s EV ER YBO D Y'S BUSIN ESS

6:05
1J (I7 IA N O Y O R IF FIT H

N in e o f the w o r ld 's 10 b u s ie s t c o m m e r c ia l
a ir p o r t s a r e in th e U n ite d S ta te s . A s r a n k e d b y
the A ir p o r t O p e r a to r s C o u n c il I n te r n a tio n a l,
r e p r e s e n t in g g o v e r n m e n ta l b o d ie s re s p o n ­
s ib le f o r p u b lic a ir p o r t s , th e le a d e r is
C h ic a g o 's O 'H a r e I n te r n a tio n a l th ro u g h w h ic h
p a s s e d s o m e 43.7 m illio n p a s s e n g e r s in 1980.

Second is Atlanta's new international facility
with 40.2 million passengers. The only nonAmerican airport in the top 10 is London's
Heathrow, which placed fourth in 1980 traffic.
According to the council's count, 596 million
passengers used U.S. airports during the year
and the worldwide total was 890 million.

Jammed Refugee Camps
Are Home For Millions
Moroccan troops and Pollsario Front guerrillas In the western
Sahara, to the Horn of Africa, where Inter-state hostilities are
endemic, right down to the south of this vast continent, where
an extended South African push recently displaced about
130,000 people, the list Is staggering.
A tiny central African country Uke Burundi, population 4.1
million, is host to 234,590 refugees, according to the UNHCR.
They come from Zaire, Tanzania, Uganda, Kenya.
In Sudan, where the number of homeless was bolstered by
IJbya’s Invasion of Chad last December, the refugee popula­
tion now totals 490,000.
Worst off is Somalia, where estimates of the number of
refugees range from 650,000 to 1.5 million. Whichever figure is
right, the UJ&gt;. Committee for Refugees in New York says the
desperately poor country now has one refugee for every three
Somalis.
"It's as If the United Slates were playing host to 60 million
refugees," the committee’s executive director, Wells Klein,
said recently. "That puts our own moaning and groaning In
perspective."
The conditions in which refugees eke out their existence vary
greatly across the continent.
While Western Saharans huddle In ragged tents on the
Algerian border and Ethiopians bed down In mud huts, most
refugees In Kenya flock to the capital, NalrobL
There they have swelled the ranks of the shantytown slumdwollors of Mathart valley, a muddy deproaaion which neat loo
alongside Muthalga, the residential preserve of the moneyed
elite.
In the Horn of Africa, the UNHCR estimates 90 percent of the
children under 6 are malnourished. The bones which protrude
starkly from their taut skins and their swollen bellies speak for
themselves. Proper medical care and education often go by the
board.
But Ilunga Ngandu, the UNHCR's permanent representative
In Kenya, says that in some respects his refugees are better off
than many Kenyans.

NAIROBI, Kenya (UPI) — At sunrise at 5:30 a.m. at
Somalia’s Bo’o Refugee Camp No. 2, Zanab M a’alllan Ibrahim
rises from a bed of woven palm leaves in a makeshift, domed
shelter made of sticks and dung.
The woman, who has fled guerrilla warfare In neighboring
Ethiopia’s disputed Ogaden desert region, says her morning
Islamic prayers, prepares a meager breakfast for her three
small children, and then treks more than 3 miles in search of
enough firewood for the next day.
Like many Ogaden men, Mrs. Ibrahim’s husband stayed at
home to help tend their small community’s herd of cattle —
and possibly to take a hand In the fighting.
Breakfast Is “ njeera" — American-supplied com soya meal
fried In soy bean oil — washed down with a glass of sweetened
tea. It w ill keep her and her children going for the next 6 hours.
After eating, the eldest daughter, 12-year-old Luul, and one
of her younger brothers pick up three salvaged yellow plasUc
motor oil containers and walk 2 miles to fetch purified water
from a series of taps provided last year by a West German aid
organization.
But If the taps are too crowded, they w ill walk to the banks of
the slowly receding She belli river and fill their containers with
its muddy brown water.
Arduous as It sounds, the dally routine of 29-year-old Zanab
M a’alllan Ibrahim la not uncommon.
Locally, aha shores It with 20,000 other Inmates of her
crowded refugee camp. Continent-wide, she la just one of t
million African refugees, according to the Geneva office of the
U.N. High Commissi oner for Refugees, established In 1961 and
recipient of the 1911 Nobel Peace prize for its work.
There are now 10 million refugees In the world; every second
one Is an African.
The total number now exceeds the population of many
African countries and Is still growing.
From the northwest, where desert nomads are fleeing

legal Notice
TO W H O M IT M A Y C O N C E R N
N O TICE IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
IN A C C O R D A N C E W ITH R E
Q U IR E M E N T S OF T IT L E Jl.
CO D E O F F E D E R A L R E G U L A
TIONS. P A R T J l 14 1)1 IBM Hw
Budott lo r Iho Revenue S h irln e
T rutl Fund of tho C&gt;»v of Sdnford.
Florid*, for fiscal roar October I.
IH I to Srplem bor X . ITS) I*
available for public intpeclion al
the O fllce o l the City Clerk. C llr
H all. Sanford, Florida, and al Ihe
Seminole County Public L ib ra ry .
)M E a t l F irs t Street. Sanford.
Florida
City o l Sanford.
Florida
By H N. Tamm . Jr
City Clerk
Publish October It, IN I.

DEN II
IN T H E C IR C U IT CO U R T IN AN O
FO R
S IM IN O L B
COUNTY,
F L O R ID A
C ASS NO. 1 1 -TlBCA-et-K
G R A C E C L IN D B L O M . Trustee.
P la in t iff,
vs
HOUSTON T. D O ZIER and
O L L IE L . D O Z IE R , his wit*.
Defendants
N O T IC E O F S A L E
Notice is hereby Risen that
pursuant lo a F in a l Judgment of
Mortgage Foreclosure entered in
the above captioned case. I w ill
se ll the p ro p e rty situ a te d in
S em ino le
C o u n ty ,
F lo r id a
described as follows:
Lot A X : That parcel of land
lying in Section It, Township 7*
South. Range )) East. Seminole
County. F lorida , described as
fo llo w s : F ro m the N o rth w est
corner of u l d Section It. run South
« deg O ’ 10 * E . ) U 0J feet to a
point on the Southerly Right of
Way line of a M foot Right of Way
of Osceola Road; thence run along
the Southerly Right of Way line of
Osceola Road. North 77 deg S477" E . 41) S4 feet •• the Point of
Beginning; thence run North 77
deg M ’ IT " E . J X X feet; thence
leaving the Southerly Right of Way
line of Osceola Road, run South I)
deg ) ) ' ) ) " E . *40 00 feet, thence
run South TT deg M ) T " W . Z M W
teat, thence run North I) deg. I T
7)" W. *00 X feet lo the Point of
Beginning
The above described parcel Is
sublect lo a U toot Ingres* Egress
Eastman! on the E asterly and
Westerly line of said parcel, and a
i i tool drainage easement on the
Southerly line of said parcel
af p uttie M l* , fa the highest and
bast bidder far cash, a l the West
front dear of the Seminal* County
Courthouse in U n lo rd , F lo rid a at
I l: t 0 A M an the ITth day of
November, t t f l.
(Seal)
A R T H U R H. B E C K W IT H . JR .
CWrk at ttsa C ircu it Court
Seminal* County, F lo rid a
By: C y N M a Prdcter
. Deputy Clark
P u B lllh : October 14. II. WEI
D E N I*

L e g a l N o tic e

His figures show that while 35 percent of Kenyans live in
what are officially classed as slum conditions, the same Is true
for only 23 percent of Kenya's refugees.
Refugee children also are allowed to compete with Kenyans
for places in government schools. One result Is that while only
16.3 percent of Kenyans enjoy secondary education, the figure
for the highly motivated refugees Is 42.6.
"We have to guard very, very carefully against turning re­
fugees Into a privileged class," Ngandu said In an interview.
"Fortunately, in absolute terms, their numbers are so small In
Kenya that these figures do not make an Impact."
Kenya officially has only 3,000 refugees, but that does not
include many thousands of "displaced persons" In the remote
north of the country fleeing severe drought In Uganda’s
Karamoja region and southern Somalia. They are not classed
as refugees and the UNHCR w ill not deal with them, leaving
them to other relief agencies.
To qualify as a refugee, according to the UNHCR charter, a
person has to have fled his country because of "well-founded
fear of being persecuted for reasons of race, religion,
nationality, membership of a particular social group or
political opinion." Hunger and thirst are not enough.
Not all refugee communities are the result of recent events.
In Uganda, most of the 76,000 Rwandese and 34,000 Zaireans
have been there for between 14 and 16 years.
The Rwandese are the legacy of an age-old feud betwten the
Tutsi and Hutu tribes. The Zaireans fled secessionist violence
in the mid-1960s. Most of their children were bom In Uganda. It
Is now their home.

N O T IC E O F S A L E
N O TICE is hereby given that by
virtu* of that certain Order for
Abandonment Proceedings issued
out of and under Ih* seel of the
County Court of Seminole County,
F lorida, upon a lodgment ren
dered in the aforesaid Court onth*
10th day of September A D. IN I. In
that certain case entitled: in The
M atter of Abandoned Personal
Property Held by the Seminole
County Sheriff pursuant to FS Sec.
TO) 01. which aforesaid O rder was
delivered lo me as Sheriff of
Seminole County, F lorida, and Ihe
said property to include:
Forty F iv e (4 » Assorted Bicycle*
and the undersigned a t Sheriff of
Seminole County. F lo rid a , w ill at
II 00 A M on the 7)nd day of
October A O. IN I. otter for tale
and sell lo th * highest bidder, FO R
CASH. Ih* above described per
tonal property a l the location of
Ih* Sheriff's Impound A rea. P u b lic
Works Department, on Highway
IT *7. South of Sanford and near
F ive Points, Seminole County,
Florid*.
That M id sal* it being mad*
pursuant to Chapter T0S of Ih*
Florida Statutes.
John E . Polk.
Sheriff
Seminole County. F lo rid a
Publish October I). 71. with Ih*
M l* on October 33. IN I.
D E N I)

One of the countries most experienced at handling refugees
is Tanzania, the only African country to offer refugees
citizenship.

IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T IN A N O
FO R
S E M IN O L E
COUNTY,
F L O R ID A .
NO. ll- I T M CA-gt-K
R O B E R T L. SM ITH and
C E C IL IA G SM ITH , hi* wife.
P lain tiffs,
v.
C L IF F O R D B A IR D and D O N N A
E L IN O R E B A IR D , h it wife,
Defendants.
N O T IC E O F S A L E
PURSUANTTOCM APTBR4I
N O TICE IS G IV E N that p u r
suant to F in a l Judgment dated
Sept 7). IN I. C * M No II ITS* CA
0* K o l Ihe C ircu it Court of the
Eighteenth ju d ic ia l C ircu it In and
for Seminole County, F lorida , in
which R O B E R T L. SM ITH and
C E C IL IA O. SM IT H ,
are the
plaintiff* and C L I F F O R D B A IR D
and D O N N A E L IN O R E B A IR D
are the defendants, I w ill M il to the
highest and best bidder for cash in
the Lobby at Ih* w est door of the
Seminole County Courthouse in
Sanford.
S e m in o le
County,
F lorida , at 11:10 o'clock A M . on
November N . IN I. Ih* following
described property set forth in tho
order of tine I ludgmont.
Lot* II, I I and I I Bloch *.
M A Y F A IR , according to Ih* plat
thoreot as recorded in P lo t Book j.
Pag* )S. of the P u b lic Records of
S*mmol* County. F lo rid a .
Dated: October 17. IN I.
A R T H U R H. B E C K W IT H , JR .
Clerk * i the C ircu it Court
By C a rrie E. Bueftner
Deputy Clark
P u b lis h : O cto b e r 14. 71. 7t.
November 1 I N I
D EM *t

v - a - W - i -V * *

'1 w

A policy of giving refugee communities one year to achieve
self-sufficiency In food has led to refugee settlements being
among the most productive villages In the country.

6:30

0

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~ C S S NEW S
} B I A( B C NEW S
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II (35
(3 5 ) C A R T ER COUNTRY
It
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N ESS

63 5
d l ( l7 ) O O M E R PYLC

7:00

0

4 THE M U PPETS
J O P M MAG AZINE A No*
V Of h loNmt Agency tof Child actors
And model* boating m An itofat*on
tank to re«A6 M ama S h m et tees
*har« the tfA 's gel ine*r custom
•/od buses Of Manna Gran&lt;h on
by b*g words
b#rng intimidated
m il
1 Q J JO
C K E R S WILD
i i (35)1THE JE F FE R S O N 3
ff) (10 ) M ACN EIL / LEH R ER
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hostess
J o
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some mag*C dust to A party honor&gt;ng a beaut *tul model
JL' O B A S E B A LL l» e Coverage
01 game
ol Hi* World Ser &gt;ev
tiom the cit* of II’ * American
I eagoe champion
II (351 C H A R LIE'S A N G ELS
(D (10 ) THE HUNTER AND THE
H UNTED Jose Ferrer narrates a
report on the continuing worldwide
s e A rc h to# N a / i war crimmAls
among those interviewed are Nab
hunle# Sim on VV*esen|hai And for­
mer S S officers WAHer Reuff And
Klaus Barbie

1*0

6:05
(17 ) A L U N THE FAMILY

8:30

S O W K R P IN CINCINNATI The
stAff is Approached to organi/e a
union when the station s ratings
soar

8:35
0 (17 ) N B A PR E-SE A S O N B A S ­
K ET B A LL Atlanta H anks »s Kan
SASCdy Kings

7:05

9:00

I I (17 ) CA R O L BURNETT ANO
FRIENDS

0
MOVIE
Friendships
Secrets And lie s
(1979J Tina
1 outse Paula Prentiss Si&gt; nomen
become murder suspects nhen a
baby S Skrtelon it found m the
sorority house they lived m ?0 years
earlier iR|
S O CO UNTRY O A LA XY OF
8 T A R S Mel Tiiiis and his special
guest Sylvia trace the development
of country mus*c s*nce 1965 m a
recollection o l some ol the tt«Miar
performances during the course of
15 ,ears of the Mus.c Cdy Nen%
Country Anards programs
It (35) THE RO CKFO RO FILES
CD (10 ) W O RLD SPECIAL Food
Aid W fU . s In It F cw The U S 1 The
U S pokey of tending food abroad
and the charges that such atd is
sometimes detrimental are mvesli
gated

7:30
lOi '*&lt; ENTERTAINMENT
u
TONIOHT
“ YOU
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yc A S K E D FOR IT
1 Q FAM
FA ILY FEUO
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BARN EY MILLER
8 ) (10 ) OICK CAVETT G u u il
J a c q u e tm a B&gt;*»et

Preacher
Takes On
The ACLU
COCOA BEACH, Fla. (UPI)
- Jack Moore figures it’s
Ime again to test the mettle
&gt;f the Am erican C iv il
Jbertles Union.
A 56-year-old, self-styled
preacher and founder of the
Church of the Seventh D ay on
M erritt Island, Moore says
he's going to start offering
postart of tho Ton Com­
mandments to B re v a rd
County schools.

10:00
II (35 ) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
NEW S
CD (10 ) RIGHT TO LOAF

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10:30
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J O NEW S
&gt;11 (35 ) BENNY HILL
ED 110) PO STSCRIPTS

11:30
the

M B T OP CARSO N

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WEDNESDAY FAMILY
SPECIAL

o o p Sr y

F sciU M ao

/

550
12 (171 W O RLD AT LA RG E (TUE)

600

O 4 NASH VILLE ON THE RO AD
(MON)
0 4 M ARTY ROBBINS (TUE)
0
4 POP1 G O E S THE COUNTRY
(WED)
0
4
B A C K S T A G E AT THE
Q R A N O O L E O PR Y (THU)
0 4 PO R TER W AG O N ER (FRI)
» O THE LAW AND YOU (MON)
J O S PEC TR U M (TUE)
S O B U C K AW A R EN ES S (WED)
J O THIRTY MINUTES (THU)
J O HEALTH FfELO (FRI)
1 o SUNRISE
11 (35) JIM B A R K ER
12 (17) C A B LE NETW ORK NEW S
630

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4 TODAY IN FLORIDA
J O BEWITCHED

2:30
S O S E A R C H FO R TO M O RRO W
II (351 OO IT YO U R S ELF / L A U ­
REL ANO HAROY (TIME APPRO KIMATE)(TUE)

2:45
II (3 5 ) YESTERD A Y 8 N E W S ­
R E E L S (TIME A P P R O X IM A T E )
(MON. THU. FRI)

3:00
0
4 TEXAS
S a GUIDING LIGHT
1 O Q F N E R A l HOSPITAL
II
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FRIENDS
f f l ( 10) FRO M JU M P S T R E E T (R)
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(D (10) I AM , I CA N . I WILL (TUE)
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(THU)
I D I (O lQ U E PA S A T (FRI)

6:45

3:05

( Q ( 1 0 | A M W EATH ER

II ( 17) FUNTIME

700

3:30

0 4 TODAY
S o W AKE UP
1 a OOOO MORNING AMERICA
II (35) TOM ANO JER RY
ID 1101 VILLA ALEQ RE (R)

11 (35 ) S CO O BY DOO
ID ( 10) E LECTRIC C O M P A N Y (R)

3:35
12 ( 17) THE FLIN tS TO N E S

400

7:05
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7:30

» O MORNING WITH C H A R LE S
RURAL T
II (35) W OOOY W O O D PECK ER
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1 0 M ERV ORIFFIN
II (35 ) W OOOY W O O O PECK ER
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4:05

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II ( 3 5 IC A 8 P E R

4:30

6:05
8:30
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J O H A PPY O AYS AGAIN (MON
WEO-FRI)
t O THE BODY H U M AN THE
F A C T S FO R B O YS (TUE)
II (35 ) TOM ANO JER RY

4:35

8:35

&gt;11 (17 ) LEA V E IT TO B EA V ER

U (17 ) M Y THREE S O N S

5:00
0
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&gt; J Q H O G AN S H ER O ES (MON.
W kO -eRi)

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II (35
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5:05

9.30

1J ( f 7) THE BRA D Y B UN CH

II (3 5 ) AN O Y GRIFFITH

5:30

10:00

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LA VE R N E I

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J O W E LC O M E BA CK. ROTTER
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( D H O ) EDUCATIONAL P R O ­
G R AM M IN G

1 O M 'A 'S 'H
7 O NEW S
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5:35

10:30

II 117| BEVERL Y HILLBILLIES

O 4 B LO C K B U S T E R S
J O ALICE (R)
II (351 DICK VAN DYKE
ID 10) E LECTRIC C O M P A N Y (R|

11:00

O 4
J o

W HEEL OF FORTUNE
THE PRICE IS RIOHT
7 0 1 LO VE BO AT (R)
l l (3 5 I BUO BREW ER
CD &lt;10) EDUCATIONAL PRO-

There'* Nothing
Like The Bet!

GENERAL
E LE C T R IC
W EATHERTRON

HEAT PUMP
1*1 U M R I N G 4
H E A T I N G IN C
% SAN FO W D A V E
j it m i

IOWA
MEATS
PRICES OOOO
W ED THRU - sat.

Wb Self Only
U.S.D.A. Choice
Hsturally Agod
Watts rn Beef
• Q U ALITY

4IOMI

&gt;89

Top Round Stook
or BLo
Irofl
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n rd
wo
vn
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Ground Chuck i Lb*, o r

) J a n d 4 d r a a Fon u x IW^a a n t e d puuvuav o i l
eda ddw and 1 bwnaW

More

Our Own

|

H

Al Moot Wionors

TOEM i l THATMAM
TOE 80UTOLOVE CDGON.
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« « » » » &gt; * iic s P T P tt. a m t

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U.S.D.A. Choice

(Hwy. 17-91) M a r i

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5:40

4 ANO TH ER W O RLD
r O ONE LIFE TO LIVE

Eya Round Roast

S M lO M D r .

***• K »

200
0

U.S.D.A. Choire Naturally Aged

* Through Dec J l. I N I

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AS THE W O R LD TURNS

Sirloin Tip or tump Roait

M OTOR INN

(W)SI14t99

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U.S.D.A. Choice Naturally Aged

INSURANCE

Miami r a ato*

1:30

5:35
11 1171 W O RLD AT LARO E (WED.
FRI)

OLD I

CAVALIER

• 17 Ckaaaol C M * TV
■ Liv e iotofloM uM R l
7 Ntgkf* lo Loan#*
•Faouhr Bettaaraaf
• Lar**f B o o m * aaS
■MWioecy A»♦* AvoiUBM
A l SUfkltY Htgkor R o n

SUNRISE S EM ES T ER

V8

G u a m Pat Boon*. George Carlm.
'T ’m Just going to go from
Brenda Boorer |R|
e school to the next, to the
J Q M 'A 'S 'H
111 (3 5 ) STREET* OP BAN FRAN­
xt," he said. "People ask
me why I'm doing this and I CISCO
11:45
say ‘The Ten Commandments
1 O A B C NEW S NIOHTLINE
have done so much for my
jllfe, I want to get It to the I) O W K R12:00
P IN CINCINNATI
(children.’ The earlier they get
Arthur Carlson tu m n up *&gt;th a
Thanksgiving Dan promotional
it, the better life they will
Stunt involving a helicopter and live
h iv e .”
turkeys (Rl
Moore started giving sway
12:05
IX (17) MOVIE
BombnrsIl S?
two-foot-by-four-foot posters
119JF| Karl MjUlrui Natal* Wood
last December and soon after
12:15
found himself In the middle of
1) 0 LO VE BOAT A man falls for
controversy.
three nomen a married couple find
have changed afler a sepaia
"The last writing we had they
lion and Ino con men stage a pho
from them (ACLU officials)
ny accident mth intent to sue (H)
u ld their attorney would
12:30
confer with other ACLU of­ O I*) TOMORROW Guests
Tanya Tucker, flea Heed television
ficials lo see whether they critic Marvin Kit man filmmaker
would file suit . . . and that Robert Altman
was nine months ago. It's my
12:35
Idea that they don't have a &gt;J O MOVIE Ilk* Sunshine
(19791 Zalman King Drbotah
case," said Moore.
Winter*
So far B revard County
1:25
school officials have skirted
(f) O MOVIE
too Much Too
the matter by giving in­ S o o n ' iR rW l II9J9I Onrolhy
Malone Trrol Flynn
dividual principals the option
2:15
to accept the posters from
11 (17 ) MOVIE
Not As A Strang
Moore — s position that is fine
k
|I95J| Robert Mdcbum frank
Smatra
with the ACLU sa long as they
3:30
are not put on display.
Currently there is only one m o NEW S
4 00
poster hanging in the schools
( 7 1 O MOVIE
Come Out Come
— and that one in the Merritt
Out Wherever You Are |C|(I974|
Lynda Day George Peter Jatlrey
Island High School library.

WEEKLY
FUKNIIHID BEDROOM

• S U M ItruM*
• L

M

J a

1} &lt;1 7) MOVIE

9:00

11:16

mi
l4&gt;

1:05

5:30

O &gt;4 H O U R MAG AZINE

B N B SI
I A

5:10

11:05
&lt;1X (17 )

0

1:00
0
4 OAYS OF O U R LIVES
1 o ALL MY CH ILDREN
II ( 3 5 1MOVIE

1} (171 RAT PATR O L (THU)

II (35) ORCAT S P A C E CO A S TER

11:00

3 1 2 "B IS S

AUTO

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5:00
t
O
M A R C U S W ELRY. M D
(TUE-TRI)

(I (35 ) LO VE. AM ERICAN 8 T Y IE

• • N 'T • A M B L B
w ith your Im w a n e s I
-C A L L IP N T

MORNING

1 2 (1 7 )1 D REAM OF JEANNIE

At Ulyankulu, one of Tanzania's oldest settlements, Burundi
refugees have established a dairy farm, opened a hotel and run
a weekly disco.

T

12:30
0
4 NEW S
* O
t h e YO U N G ANO THE
R E S T LE S S
7 O RYAN S H O PE
II (3 5 IM A U O E

6:00
0
4 RE A L PEO P LE t&gt;aluM-d a
mySle»KHJS C AlifevneA rVHHjOlA*n
Q 'A d e s c h o o l s id s w ith th e n o w n TV

6:00
S

1200
0
4 CARO SHARKS
S O » ONEW S
II | J 5 ) RHOOA

|W u.

Normal

04

Loon Mooty Sport IBs

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" i l ’A -V *

NIXT TO MR. C l FRIKD CHICKEN
PHONE 0 t 0 n AHEAD
It's Rssdy When Yeu'rs Ready
3734528

-ii

�I

33— Houses Furnished
«B - E » t n ln g H w M , S a M d rd , F L

29— Room s

CLASSIFIED ADS
IN V IT A T IO N TO E IO
A D D IT IO N TO S T U D E N T
C E N T E R F A C IL IT Y
S E M IN O L E C O M M U N IT Y
C O LLBO B
SAN FO RD , FLO R ID A
Saaiad b id t irom Contractors
w ill be received by Owner, Board
o&lt; Trutteos. lo r Saminola Com
m unlly Collage al 4 :IS P .M . local
lim a. October 30, lt » l, In the Board
Room ot Saminola Com m unity
College The tallowing Is Included:
A D D IT IO N TO S T U D E N T
C E N T E R F A C IL IT Y
Bid documents are open lo
public Inspection In the o tticot ot
F.W. Dodge Plan Room *nd
C e n tra l F lo r id a B u ild e r s E « .
change In Orlande; and m ay bo
obtained or reviewed iro m the
offices o l Gutmonn A tto c la ie t.
A rchitectt. Planners, ln e „ SOS N.
Oak A v t . , P .O . D r a w t r ( M ,
S a n le rd , F lo r id a 3)731, upon
request accompanied by S2500
deposit per set.
Deposit w ill be refunded In lu ll
•or two s a lt lo contractors tu b
m illin g bona lld a bids and return
ol documents In good useable
condition w ithin ) days a lte r the
opening o l bids. Refunds fa r m i s In
eacest ol two w ill be le st SIS OP to
cover cosl o l reproduction, on the
same basts of return o* documents.
C o n tra c to rs w ho o b ta in b id
documents and do not bid I he
prolect, must return tom e a l looal
10 days betaro tha bid data, or pay
SIS 00 per te l lo defray cast ol
reproduction and handling, os sol
lo rlh above.
Sub contractors and othort m ay
obtain complete bid documents
upon deposit of ITS .00 which w ill be
refunded, less IIS 00 lo cover
reproduction cost, upon return ot
d ocu m e n ts In good c o n d itio n
within Sdoys otter opening ot bids.
P e n ia l sals w ill not be Issued due
lo su e and scope of prefect.
Each bid must bo accompanied
by • certified check or bid bond
issued by an acceptable surety
company tar not le u than S per
cent of the bate bid The successful
bidder w ill be required to furnish
performance bond and labor and
m aterials payment bond, each In
the lu ll amount oI the contract
sum. issued by o bonding company
licensed In Florida and holding an
A t (A Plus) rating. Evidence ot
said rating w ill ba rtqulrad.
The successful bidder w ill be
required to subm it o complete llt l
of subcontractors who w ilt bo
perform ing work on the protect,
prior to reloate of any partial
payment.
To bo elig ib le lo r cons War ot Ion,
bids must com ply w ith the lows of
F tor Ido. o il conditions of I he
specifications, and must be mode
on « fa csim ile of the form Included
with the contract documents. In
dupllcete, enclosed In on opaque
sealed envelope bearing the name
and address ot the bidder and
marked
A O O IT IO N TO ST U D E N T
C E N T E R F A C IL IT Y
and delivered not later than dote
and hour m ant toned above.
Owner reserves the right to
relect any or a ll bids or certain
portions ot a bid os stipulated in
the F O R M O F P R O P O S A L , and to
w o lv a an y in te r m e l il i e s end
technicalities in bidding, and te
aw ard the lob In the best tnfsroot
of tne Owner. No bid shall be wfth
drown tor a period ot 30 days from
the opening date.
President
Seminole Com m unity College
Bos t i l
Or. E a r l S. Weldon
Chairm an
Board o l Trust**!
Seminole Com m unity College
Beverly P. Lee
Publish October U . If, 70. 71, 77.
77. 75. IN I
D E N 7*
IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T IN A N D
FO R
S E M IN O L E
COUNTY,
F L O R ID A
CASH NO. (1-MS-CA-M-K
G R A C E C L IN D B L O M . Trustee.
Plain t Iff.
HOUSTON T DO ZIER and
O L L IE L D O Z IE R , h it w ilt.
Defendant i
N O T IC E O F S A L E
Notice IS hereby given lh a l
pursuant te a F in a l Judgment of
Mortgage Foreclosure entered In
ih* above captioned action. I w ill
s a il Ih* p ro p a rty s itu a te d In
S em ino le
C o u n ty ,
F lo r id a
described a t to Howl:
Lot A l l : That p arcel of land
lying in Section II. Township 70
South, Rang* 7) East, Seminole
County, F lo r id a d t ic r lb a d a t
fo llo w s
F ro m lh a N orthw est
corner ot said Section It. run South
00 deg 07' 10" E . 777 05 leet lo *
point on ih* Southerly Right of
Way line of a 50 foot Right ef Way
of Osceola Road; thence run along
th* Southerly Right at Way lln* ot
Osceola Road. North 77 dag. 34'
37” E . 7*3 (4 teat I* Ih* Paint at
Beginning, thence run North 77
deg 34' 37" E , ) » 00 feet, thence
leaving th* Southerly Right of Way
lln* ol Oscaol* Road, run South 17
deg 77‘ 7) ' E , M 0 00 leet, thenc*
run South 77 deg 3*' 77" W. 7)0 00
leet. thence run North 13 dag. W
77" W. M0 00 loot te the Feint of
Beginning
Th* above described parcel K
sub|*ct te a 75 loot ingress E g r a ti
Easement on ih* E asterly and
Westerly lln* at said p*rc*l. and a
75 fool drainage easement on th*
Southerly lin e at said parcel,
at public M l* , la lha highest and
b a il bidder lor cash, at th* W ad
front doer of Ih* Seminal* County
Courthouse In S«ntard. F lo rid a at
II 00 A M on lha 17th day ef
November. 1*01.
(Seat)
A R T H U R H R E C K W IT H , JR .
Clark at th* C ircuit Court,
Seminole County, Florida
Ry: Cynthia Proctor
Deputy Clark
FubtM t: October 14, It, IH I
DC N d t
FIC T IT IO U S K A M I
N olle* l( hereby given m at I am
e n g tg a d in b u sin e M a t 1307 French
A v * . la n ia r d , F la . Sam tnoi*
County, Florid# under th# I k
Idiom nam e ef S A N F O R D T R O ­
P H Y SH O P, end m at 1 inland ta
register m M name w ith MW Clark
ef Ih* C irc u it Court, SamlnaW
County, Florid# In accordance
with ih* p rovklan* of th* F k t it tout Nam e SI put**, T aW N :
Section M S B* F lo rid a Statvtaa
1*57.
Srg R u n ik l Inc.
R.N . W a ll J r Tra».
Publish: October 71.7B. November
A II, t*BI
D E N *5

Sem inole

831-9993

CLASSIFIED DEPT
HOURS
M O N D A Y th ru F R I D A Y
SATURDAYS

Noon

IN V IT A T IO N TO BID
A T H L E T IC T O IL E T
F A C IL IT IE S

Noon The Day Before Publication
Sunday - Noon Friday

1 8 -H e lp Wanted

L A D Y interested In meeting
g en tlem an . C a ll fo r In
form ation anytlm a 3511(4*
L O N E L Y * N ew tin g le s m ag
Stam p a dd ressed en velope ta r
tra a
In fo
Box
(SO (IS)
Boynton. F I 11415
L O N L E Y T 1(131 7*1 7777 re co rd
ed m essa ge (74 h r s l B rin g in g
Peop le Together Da lin g I

President
Seminole Com m unity
Dr. C a r l I. Weldon

C o m m u n ity

GAS A T T E N D A N T
IN SOUTH S E M IN O L E
STATION
Good s a la ry , h o s p ita llia tio n )
week p a id v a ca tio n e v e r j
m onths C a ll 371 144?

NEEDTO W O RK
D O N 'T D E L A Y I
C A L L US T O D A Y

O V E R W E I G H T m en 4 w om en
rea d y lo lose w eigh t* Jo in an
I session n u tritio n a l s lim m in g
co u rt* 4 then conduct you r
aw n cla ss e a c etlen l Incom e
37) 4757, 371 74*7

6—Child Care

SPU R OF T H E M O M E N T
B A B V S I T t IN G
37) *144

P R IV A T E
IN TER V IEW S
LOW F E E
W H EN H IR ED
WITH T E R M S
I t G E N E R A L O F F IC E I t
I t D E N T A L R E C E P T IO N IS T ,
I I C R E O I T C O U N S E L O R 11
11 C O M P U T E R P R O G R A
M ERU
11 C O M P U T E R A N A L Y S I S )
I t A S S IS T A N T M A N A G E R 1
I t I L L U S T R A T I O N A R T IS T
It SALES R E P It
MUCH MUCH M O REI

College

Beverly f . La*
Publish October 11 If, 70. 71, 77.
73, 4 U . Iff)
O ENBO

LUXURY
APARTM ENTS
F a m i ly A A d u lt s s e c tio n
P o o lsid e 3 B d rm s
M a s te r
Cove A p ts 173 7»00 O pen on
w eekends

S AV -O N -R EN TA LS

n a v e a room lo re n t? L e t l c la s s ifie d ad tm d a tenant |or
you '

E N J O V co u n try liv in g ? 7 B d rm
A p ts
O ly m p ic
si
Pool
Shenandosh V illa g r Open * 5
371 7*70

E F F IC IE N C Y ,
w it h
S lo v e .
r e f r ig , n r dow ntow n. 5175 mo
1st. la s t m o
♦ dep
Ref
d esired 377 7»f? a lt 5 p m

WE
HAVE
A p a rtm e n ts
D u p le , r s and Mouses for Rent
June P o r i.g R e a lly J77 S I’ S
(00 E L M A v e . n e w ly rem odeled.
I B d rm , 1 B a th 5775 » D eposit
1 B d rm , I B ath 5175 * Deposit.
C a ll 11* 7530 D a y s o r (31 5(45
E v e n in g s

1 B d rm L * r f * 5371 w ith Sec.
Dep No C h ild re n
H a ro ld H a ll R e a lty Inc. R e a lts r
333 5774 *

3 !A -D u p le x e s

F U L L c h a rg e doubt* f r y
bookkeeper experience lie*
fo rm s, p a y r o ll, a c c b t i
p a y a b le
4
r e c e lv ilf.
lin en cial P 4 L
Sm ell rp
located In Sanlord 173-45
W A N T E D m iddle age touc lo
live In and car* tar atfly
women Room, board, c * y
Santord,
F ie
C o p cl
Raymond L. H e ll 4445 Ike
Dr . V* Beech. Ve 7145

RIGHT now we need a few good
M ie s people who neve the
am bition end dedication to
succeed It Ih e t'l you. then
we're prepared lo o iler you
reel rewards end the methods
to pet them For interview,
pltes* c e ll Century 31. Hayes
R ealty Services. Inc . Senfbrd
375 )050

Jo d y 's Rent A M o m - On c « 4
h v 'i " W e C a ra S e rv le t in y r
H o m e " Phone 1)051 M i l s
S p e c iilit in g in S P U R O F IE
M O M E N T F U N C T I O N ll
E M E R G E N C I E S C h ild C3e,
P a re n t C a ra , H ouse O
Book now to r H o lid a y O * .

24— B u siness O pportufies
TWO Quevtionv Will yo
fin*nct*lly independent h
$ ye *r %? Are you p*id
you * r e worth* If not c *l

*********** *
TOUCH OF CLAS
R-ttaurant* Loum
4700 sq It bldg

com er 101(00
se a l, a ll (q u ip p e d (fig
operation. Liqu or llcensa
A ll I f 5.000
175.000 Her ys
C A L L BOB B IS K R ,
R iA L T O R ASSOC.
177-f*M er (10-5700
O L A S S t P F E I F F E R ,I N
R IA L T O R

********** n a
H E R A L D P A P E R ROUT
FO R S A L E
111 12)3

P L U M B I N G O lY . H a r d tr *
and E la c t r lc a t r e t a il sd
repair Business W WO a l
E ila t* . B e ll Term s. S U 10.
Wm. M a lic te w sk l H E A LS R
777 7*BJ. ( v e t 777 7M7.

v v t If A N l7 L f M E N T A L S

n u r in s a n e o r d * j
brtitti w n.w paint A carprl

best

OR

r a t in k i t
'. s u m p t i o n

at

37-B— R ental Offi

*2«5 M o.
Phone:

40— Condom inium s

O W - ll n

’' t Hun e I .nr older

■'
I ',

! (k

nf

41— Houses

hi ’

F IN A N C E

w il l

7 Bath Home in

u iron

A L M O S T new lo v e ly n e c u t iv e
h o m e in I d y llw ild e . m a n y
r i t r a s 1(3.500 C a ll 323 S*S3

H as several

H E Q U IC K E S T

G R E G O R Y M O B IL E H O M ES
3403 O rla n d o D r
333 5700
V A 4 E H A E inaneing
N E W N o b 'b ty . 1 b ar. 7 b in dbl
w id e , s h in g le ro o t, w ood
s id in g
O ct
s p e c ia l 111*95
d e liv e re d 4 set up
Open S undays
U n c le R o y s M o b ile
H o m e S ales O t
L e e s b u rg *04 7(7 0 374

To List Your Business-

IN DR IF IWOOO VILLAGE

c o n c re te
ro o m

w in d o w s ,

f r e e e s t im a t e

e

add

a

37) 1 4 6 )

Ju%t i f$trd
Sanford
CHARMING 1 Bdrm 2 t&gt;afh.
f irrplifrr r ounfr - Kitchen.
Family Mr
f nrmal D&gt;n
Rr.• fey ( fi.ft, Cf’nt A H ♦
AftBC F AM. dH.Khrd 2 car
g.ir .ig** tvi»ti office or d e a l apt
Dtji i •» '0 iinitur* iruiMrte*
Much ^Nor* A%ktng $66 900
I'MVt 1# '
11 ONI Ml ALtOR
CCNTURY;
DO 7717

•V J

^

R O B B I E ’S
REALTY
MT A| TOM M I S
3301 $ f f r n t h
Suite 4
$4n(onl

24 HOUR Qi 322-9283

ir.SOO S P A C I O U S ) bile, t* I bth
FI r m
N ew root new ly
•painted, n e a r P m e c re st Sch
— L a r g e L a rg e fenced back
yard
A A . M c C la n a h a n
» L ie R e a l E s ta te B ro k er
322 $992

Concrete W ork
Concrete W ork lo oters, flo o rs 4
p o o ls
L a n d s c a p in g 4 sod
w ork F r e n e s l 317 710)

C R EA TIV E
fin a n cin g '
•Academy Manor. ) Bdrm I
»&gt;a New c a r p e l 4 pamt.
•carport Rear tented l l g lot
JWV.fOO 331( 0)1
'41D RM . 1 bth. ca rp o rt, c r n H A
J ia r p p f. 20*20 g a ra g e fenced
• b a c k y a rd , deep w ell $M WJO
Lor m a k e reaso n ab le otter
l$ 00 dn a ssu m e m ortg ag e, no
o a lify in g c a ll 323 7$26

Dial 322-2611 or 831-9993

r o o t m g b lo c k ,

DUN R IT E Lawn Sarvlca. Mow,
edgt. trim* vacuum* mulch,
sod Raas 327 2$fl

17T IJ?|

Appliance Repair
S E R V I C E . I n s t a lla t io n , A ir
cond ,
r e t r ig . ,
w a s h e rs ,
d ry e rs, c e llin g fens, m in o r
p lu m b in g R e e s N o s e rv ic e
ch a rg e w ith re p a ir. 305 574
Lo o k in g lo r e |o b t th e C la s s ifie d
Ads w ill h e lp you fin d that job

Q u a lity e le c tr ic a l w ork ?? y rs
e i p m e n c * M in o r re p a irs lo
co m p lete w r in g 37) 0714

M q m lin g c t r p t n t r y . «l| t y p t t of
Tom# re p * ir t c * ll for f r « f
r t t f m jt e 322 !tJ$

Homo Improvement

fO W lH S B C A U T V I A L O N
F O R M E R L Y H a r r ie t t s Beauty
Nook SI* E 111 St . ]?? 5147

Boarding A Grooming

T L C W IT H " R U T H "
Dog g ro o m in g , s m e ll B reed s l (
F re e
p ic k
up. d e liv e r y
Longw ood a re a (31 1*3)
A n tm q l M««en P o j f d n g qnd
G r o o m in g K e n n e d
S lt* d y .
im u U f r d ic r e m e d fly proof
•n$tde ou ttrde run%
f *n%
Aivo A C c*gev A r c* ter to
you r pet%
S ** r tin g v fu d
reg .v tf* P b 322 $2$2

Building Contractor

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
P e m lin g , H ool.ng C a rp e n try
L ic Bonded 4 G u a ra n tee d
F re e E s tim a te s 2)31(4*
J 4 B H om e Im p rovem en t —
C a rp e n try w ork at a n y type
Root re p a irs , gu tter w ork,
p a in tin g ( .M a n o r or e a te r lc r l.
plu m b in g s p e c ia lilt in m o b ile
nom e re p a irs 4 root co atin g,
end wood p t l ie d ecks F r e t
estim a te 311405*

you e re h a v in g d iffic u lty
Im ding e p ie c e to liv e , ca r lo
d riv e , a |ob. o r som e s e rv ic e
you h ave need ol. re e d e ll o u r
w ant eds e v e ry day

S H IE L D S CO N ST R U CT IO N
A d d it io n s ,
r t m o d a lln g .
designl G uar Stele License
Prom pt estimates (77 5777

C o m p lete C e ra m ic T il* Serv
w e lls tlo o rs c o u n irrto p s re
m odel, r r p e 'r F r est 33* 0711
m f i n t / i r t il e
N r w u r rep * r. le a ky show ers our
s p e C '* d y .75 y rs E * p M * B54?

Clock Repair
g w altn ey

je w e le r

7041 P a r k A v e
777 (50*

S ta rt In d ian S u m m e r in a
•’ TeePae" o l your own. check
Reel E sle le B arg ain !

l provide representation at th*
A d m in is tr a t iv e L a w Ju d g e
Level tar d a lm a n tt who have
been turned down for recon
slderation
25) M i l
Richard A. S c h w a rll A lly .
315 M agnolia A v t.
Daytona Batch. F L 3701

N E W Concrtt* BulWIngs, all
s l m l lO A u p A t 1 4 1 SR M l
4 I n d u itir il P ark, 37)00(1.

R O O FIN G o l all kin d ! cam
m trc la l 1 residential Bonded
4 insured 7)311*7.

C h ris tia n R o oting 17 y rs t i p
34* 5750. Ire* ts t R e rao ting .
s p e c ia lilt in re p a ir w o rk A
new rooting
S O U T H E R N R O O F I N G 15 v r i
e*p . re roo fing, teak s p e cia l
'St
D e p e n d a b le 4 h o n r s t
p ric e O ey or m ght 23) I M )

F you e re lo oking lo r so m e ih ib g
to do on your own. then 51500
co uld put you in business in
th is co nsig n m e n t shop C a ll for
d e ta ils

W E L IS T A N D S E L L
M O trt H O M E ! TH AN
A N Y O N E IN t h e
1A 44f O R U A R E A

Nursing Cantar

B C A U T ir D L 2 fldrni. I B*th
Home on l *nd5C*prd lo t wifh
cent HA Din Rm . E*t in Kit .
l* iq r Utility w .uh Dry, W W
Ca ip rf Many F Rli*st $43,900
W O O D M E R E spit )!&lt;&gt; m any
e x tra s ow ner m ay hold w t h I 3
dow n 1)5000
M B L E hom e sglw 7 7 4 db lw
tu rn 7 7 4 lot w dock St Johns
' R iv e r 573.500 4 5)5.500
J lJ S t l o w v O I P C u t lo r n B u ilt 3
B d rm . 3 B ath hom e tn L o th

Heilm an Pesnting A Repairs
Quality work F r t t E st, O ilc
te Seniors 134 MtO Refer.

A*bu*. on wooded loti Energy
$4 «mg F f l l u r r Stone F R P l
*nrf totft moret 119.900

R EALT O R

OUR R A T E S A R E LO W ER
L e k e v ie w N u rs in g C en ter
*1* E Second St . S en lo rd
771 470?

S M A L L h e m e r e p a ir s , r e e l
re p a ir. Ire* est
A ll w o rk
g u a ran teed 1)1 (4 ()

C H A R M I N G I B d rm . 7 B a lh
hom e on I arg e lan d scap ed lot.
Cent H A . W W C. new roof,
screened patio, in a gre a t
lo c a t io n
lo t s of e s tra s .

tsr.ooo

Sandblasting

D E L I G H J I U L D i-B a ty
n tra
la rg e J b d r. 7 b lh h u m i w *h
reiofs o l c lo s rts . on ' , a cre
w oudrd. take ircm f lot. Dr ra n ,
k it
re tn g
is la n d s t o v e
’•Swasher 4 d ry e r, cent
vac
system , w w ca rp e t
14&gt;70
s cre e n e d po rch
p a tio
and
d o s e d g a ra g e 54? 500

M A vT A IR
V IL L A S I 7 4 3
B d r m , 1 B a lh Condo V illa s ,
n e , I to M a y la ir fo u n tr y C lu b
Select your lot, Moor plan 4
interior decor I Q u a lity con
s tru c t.d by S h o em ak er for
Stf.700 4 u p '

COMMERCIAL 7 ACRESON 17
»? NEAR
LA KE
MANY
BOULEVARO 1150 000

S E IG L E R R E A L T Y
BROKER
3765 H W Y . 17 92
321-0640

F O R S A L E to d o s e estate 1*77 4
door O ld s m o b ilr 47 000 m ir s
Cash re q u ire d C a ll * a m 5
p m 373 Was

S A LE S ASSO CIATES
NEEDED
5 openings left.

323 8940

F O R S A L E S a cre s of le n d &lt;un
developed ) ap p ro * 7 m ile s
west o l G e n e v a C a ll 373 5(4)
• « liv e c a ll 3)1 04(5

BATEM AN REALTY
NO
REASO N ABLE
o ff e r
refused 3 I by B lk E a t In K it.
F P . C a rp e r, re e d y to m ove In
Ls
A s s u m e M lg . C o n sid e r
re n tin g A s k in g IM.tOO

Ev«

322-7443

October's F lyin g . Leaves *r*
Falling: But C la ttilla d keep
Buyers calling 171 M i l

T o o m u c h h a s b e en a c ­
c u m u la t in g a n d m u st
h a v e a n e x t r a a u c tio n
to s e ll It a ll. P r o m is e s
of b a r g a in s on f u r n i­
tu re , a n tiq u e s &amp; m ls c .
L o t s o f fu n fo r e v e r y ­
one. D o n 't fo rg e t fh a t 's
W e d ., O c t. 21 a t

S3— TV -Radio-Stereo

O E L TON A
c o n d o m in iu m s
lo cated ne a r L e k e M o nro*. 1
M r . 7 b in . u n it over lo oking
s w im m in g pool 155.900 C a ll
co lle ct 31) 457 00*1

W e b u y e q u it y m
a p a rtm e n ts, v a c a n t
A c re a g e
LUCKY
M E N T S . P O Bo*
lo rd . FI* 3)771 )??

H ouses,
la n d and
IN V E S T
7500 San
4741

C O L O R TV 175 Stereo console
with re v e rb 57S. ( tra c k p la y e r
record er 37) 4470

12-64 3 B D R M . 2 bth. A H . I«10
shed in C « r n * g t C ove $7,000
322 0614 i l l 4 p m
H IM
BUDGETS
ARE
B O L l t E R t D W IT H V A L U E S
t ROM
1HE
W ANT
AD
CO LUM N S
CHECK ih is u u t
IlF A U T I F U L tv*? R o y a l O aks ?(
w ide 1 b d r 3 b lh garden tub
d e lu x e
ta r pel
ca th e d ra l
c e ilin g s b -'C k I.re place, wood
\ 'd nq sinrsQie root pad dle
tan and m a n y m o re e« tr* s
O nly 574 *00 V A I nane mg no
m oney
d o w n,
to *• dow n
co nv e n tio n a l
See *st U n cle
R o ys M o b ile H om e S a lr s o l
le e s b u r q U S H w y 441 S W4
7(7 0)74 Open w eekdays (
7 30. Sun 17 4
C H E C K OUT U N C L E H O YS
LARG E
t r l e c f ' O n o f 14 wde%
p r i c r l % f* rf $699$ V A f&gt;n*n
€*o q

no m on ey
c o n v e n t io n * !

down.

5b—M isce lla n e o u s (or Sale
L I K E new a ir condi., tools,
lo rm ica cabinets. A m isc *34
Lake Iren* Rd 3)1 *30*

X

5pm

and cab inet
14(
or
10
See a l S an lord
S a n lo rd P la ta

5 1 -H o u se h o ld Goods

5 • Cyl Pickups
Frem

17 *3 At Lake M a ry Blvd

DON PR A T T

MOTOR RANCH
323 3621

/W/SrGO/MV/

54— B ic y c le s
M O T O R IZ E D
3 m o n th o ld
DeSoto tr ic y c le , b a tte ry 4
ch a rg e r in clu d e d 1475
377 37*5

7D074A

1 9 7 7 D A TSU N 2 1 0
H • B, 4 Sp. AC AM F M

4 Sp., Sltrae, Extra Ktaan
Only

P IA N O S 4 p rqans la rg e 4 s m a ll
M a 'lm g as low as 514* *5 Rob
Ba 'I M usic Center 4 W e b e rn

*

1st Santord

5895° °

•

61—Building Materials

1 9 7 8 DATSUN 2 1 0

1 9 7 8 D A TSU N 2 1 0
H • B, 1 Sp., AC AM F M Low

B u y F o o t b a ll T ic k e t s w it h
M o ney Y o u m a k e w ith e
G e re g e S ale

M lk t

* 3 9 9 5 0 0

RB7B

Ran

1 9 7 8 D ATSUN 2 1 0

1 9 7 8 D ATSUN 2 1 0

H - B, 4 Sp., AC Stareo Can.

7 Dr. 4 Sp. AC 40 MPO.
Cttaap-To-Kaap

'

C F A P E R S I A N S A d u lt
F e m o le s W h ile. B lock
SIS0 57S0 3)3 ISIS

!

DOG training classes obedience
4 confirm ation. Starting Oct
7* (310717.

1 9 7 8 D A TSU N 2 1 0
Honey Baa, 4 Sp., 40 MPO
Chaap-TtsKaap

•

IDB4SA

1 9 7 9 D A TSU N 2 1 0
H-B, AT, Starge Can.
Reduced To

* 3 9 9 5 0 0

• 3 4 9 5 0 0
ID907A

1 9 7 9 D ATSUN 2 1 0

1 9 8 0 D A TSU N 2 1 0

1 9 7 6 D A TSU N 2 1 0

H - B AT AC AM F M (Pricad
Right At •

1 Dr. S Sp. AC Just Tradad —
Only -

H-B, 4 Sp. AC, FM Vlnyttop

4495° °

RB64

4 3 7 9 5 0 0

* 4 9 9 5 0 0

50
BAIR D -R AY
Ovar

u n its t o c h o o io fro m

U t IN 1 11 9 P .M . M O N
6 PM
SUN
T il

rood Lincoln-Mercury
M H jH W A V

*500

17

WJ

t O N (. W O O U

INSTAI

8 0 9 0

•

3 22

4884 •

&lt;&gt;l&gt;| N

N K iH

TI Y

III

&lt;4 O O S A

»

A

S t JN

III

h l»

M

•

O IM

UP TO

1982 LYNX

G e re g e M ie s e r* m season Ted
the pecpl* about It w ifh a
C la s s ifie d A d M th* H e ra ld
377 7(11. 1)1 Yjvj

• n i l

N

S U N

I J

8

•600

IN S T *

1982 CAPRI

lindscaping

Law n s

R*

Have tom * cam ping equipment
you no longer use? Sell it a ll
with a Classified Ad in The
H rre ld C e ll 77) 7(11 or (71
***) and a frien d ly ad visor
w ill help you

6»r*am O der n today
C ietadiad A d i

N A B P B B 'S T B I I I B a v it B

Trimming, removing 4 « S L

V 'w iv '

F ra* « „

w ir e : * 4 8 2 1 0 0

SS

FMCC AND B A N K FIN A N C IN G A V A I L A B L E ON PREMISES BELOW PRIME RATE.

|

D, A T S U N

4444 H W Y 17 97
(1 M I L E N O R T H O F H W Y 4)4)
L O N G W O O O 831 1318

C e n t r a l F lo r id a s s 1 V o lu m e L in c o ln M e rc u r y D e a le r

Landscaping. O ld

2695° °

RIB7

•

65— P e tsS u p p lie s

IDfSBB

• 3 9 9 5 0 0

62— Law n -G ard en
D IR T 4 T O P SOIL
YELLO W SAND
C a ll C le rk 4 M ir l 373 7S40

2 Dr. A-T, A M Excellent
Economy At Only

* 2 4 9 5 0 0

RB77

* 3 9 9 5 0 0

1 9 7 6 V W R A B B IT

3695° °

RB54

1 Dr. 4 Sp. AC AM FM Extra
Clean

W A N T E D R e sp o n sib le p a rty to
la k e o v e r p a y m e n ts on Spinet
Console P ia n o C an be seen
lo c a lly . W rit* M r . F o ste r, P.O
Bo* 541. A t lo r , F Is 37003

7D054A

R7S9

1 9 7 6 BM W 2 0 0 2

59— M u s ic a l M e rc ta n d is e

10**

%AAA

77 Old! Toronedo

M o v in g to a n e w e r h o m e ,
a p a rtm e n t? S e ll " d o n 't needs*
fast w ith a w ant ad.

f il l

S I N G E R / &gt;q / a g
Pay
b a la n c e
p a y m e n ts I? SO
S e w n g C e n lr r

*42$

ire v fh e m
Like New

U S E D e n g in e sU S O u
U sed Ire n s 150 up
F u * t ’ S aly*g*377 14*3

G U N au ctio n S unday Nov
Sanford A u ctio n
121$ S f rm e h A v e
M o re in fo 323 7)40

27? 00(4

Ural

71 Dodge Ram Charger

76— Auto P arts

57A-Guns A Ammo

IN K E L V I N A T O R electric
range, avocado 575 C a ll a lte r

Equip

!•« Full Equip

B U IL D IN G S A L L S T E E L
30 &gt;40' S3.*77; 40 &gt;40' t4 .)M
a *»o i* .4 )4. s o u s ' ti* .* * i
C e ll B ill W ebb 3)1 4445

L E V I JE A N S A JA C K E T S
A R M Y N A V Y SU RPLU S
110 S e n lo rd A v e
37)1

Wogoneer

C O M P L E T E C a m p e r O u tfit lo r
V a n o r P ic k up. Table. Bed.
Sink end Ice Bo* C e ll 3?) 7*1?

301 W

;

71 Chevy Camaro
Ptfll

75— R e creatio n al Vehicles

6 Sold
We pay ca sh lo r 1st 4 Ind
m o rtg ag es R a y L e g g . L ir .
M o rtg a g e B ro k e r 33* 774*

7* Dodge Custom
7*4 VS* V I Avt*
Tram newer Steer.
Air c«n4itiM . La
M ilts With This A i

1215 S. F r e n c h A v e .
323 7340

47-A — M o rtg ig e s Bought
42—M o b ile Homes

GARAGE
SALE

•SANFORD AUCTION*

Good U sed T V 's . 575 4
M IL L E R S
741* O rla n d o F r
Pn )

W A N T E D too to TOO a c re s In
O ran g e o r S e m in o le Counties,
toned lo r m o b ile hom e sub
d iv is io n Send e ll d e ra ils in
e lu d in g lo ca tio n , lo P O Bo*
l( M . O c a la . F la 37471

CASH FO R E Q U IT Y
W e ca n clo s e in a l hr*
C e llB e r l R e e l E s le le 7)7 74*1

1*4* R E N A U L T , ru n s good 1750
V W B U S 1*44 ru n s good 1450 or
tra d e lo r eq u al v a lu e

• T O N IG H T ? P.M .e

K e n m o r* p a r t i, te rv tc * . m r
» a th trt
MOONEY APPL
A N C E S 373 069/

we're out
to SELL

1*75 C A D I L L A C Coup* O r v ille
F u ll P o w e r. A C . low m ileage.
A M F M A s k in g 11750
37J 0(7(

you a re h a v in g o illic v ily
fin d in g a p la c e to liv e , ca r to
d riv e , a job. o r som e s e rv ic e
vou h a v e need o l, re a d a ll our
w ant a d s e v e ry day

F R I 4 S AT . 741) Iroquo is A v e
off Santa B a rb a r a D r ( 4 30
each
day
baby
c lo th e * ,
w om en 's c lo th e s 7 .9 4 14. turn
m ls c household Item s 4 toys

Shop U n c le R o y s M o b ile H o m e
Sales. L e e s b u rg . U S H w y 441
S *04 7(7 0)24 Open 7 d a y s

4 O U R IO W N L S
R E A L T Y INC B R O K E R
44( 47)0 a n y tim e

scapmg

V k 4 ('A

S17S00

G E N E V A JO A C R E S W O O D E D
C O C H R A N R O A D $ )$ 0 0 P E R
A C R E W A Y D IV ID E

A S S U M A B L E , n o q u a llfy in g 13".
rntg 3 b d rm . I bath Cent H A .
7 e * tra lots* F ir e p la c e , pool!
In town 155 000

REALTORS

No 10b loo large or sm all
O u e lily e must C e ll 777 0071
References F r Est

O cto b er is F ir e P re v e n tio n
Month Clean up and Sellout
with e H erald Classified Ad

Cara mlc Tlla

S 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 L A S S IF IE D AD
NOW C a ll 377 7411 or (31 «««]

A u lo

K .T . R E M O D E L IN G
K it, b ath 4 a d d itio n s Q u a lity
w o r k m a n s h ip in a l l h o m a
im p ro v e m e n ts
L IC E N S E D 4 IN S U R E D .
CALL K EN TAYLO R
1)11*14

s w o od ed

•17— R eal E state Wanted

S a n f o r d 's S a le s L e a d e r
S U P E R buy ta r a professional
b u ild in g
a m p le
parklnu
lo cated on w e ll tra v e le d s trre i
.149.900

E N T E R T A I N in th is poo l hom e
w e v e ry th in g ' 3 7. gem eroom .
pert cond. t « a cre , wooded,
b u rg la r d r o o lin g ' 146 500

41-B—Condom! nlu mi
For Sal*

RTAirY

Electrical

S A N O R A be tte r th an new 3
bedroom . 7 bath. 7 ca r garage,
rough ce d a r v d in g L o w dow n
$6) 900 373 1960

321-0759

t yrs r i p Pebos. Drtyeway*
,-»&lt; A a , n r B e a l

G E N E V A 71, a c r e
Z O N ED M O B IL E

L ie R e e l E s le le B ro k e r
7440 S an fo rd A v e

A L L F L O R ID A R E A L T Y
OF SANFO RD R EALTO R

I M A N Q U A L IT Y O P E R A T IO N

Air Conditioning

F o r E s ta te
C o m m e r c ia l o r
R e s id e n tia l A u ctio n s 4 Ap
p ro is a is C a ll D e ll's A u ctio n
171 5470

$49 W U k r V a r y B 'v d

g C itm tftea Ad%

B an k tm a n c in g a v a ila b le
55 N H w y l i f t
C a s s e lb e rry

T O Y O T A C o ro lla a ssu m e
paym ent 1141 per m o . b a la n ce
14000 Good ru n n in g co nd ition
1300 dow n 377 75(1

72—A u ctio n

R E N T A W asher D ry e r
R e frig e ra to r, or TV
&lt;04 775 4V*S

OS T f t N 17 A C R E S W O O D E D
PA V ED ROAD FRO NTAGE
$16 000

LAKE M ARY
J23-I9S0

frinq .s •V c v r ou*\idc ».r
jGrt p«atio find »a * n turn tu
M good pric e
ReArt

★ 339 7989*-

7*

e C o m m e rc ia l d ry e rs, see at
L a k e M a r y co in la u n d ry 1100
each 777 5574

W OODEO
II? 500 T E R M S

A B i H A u to S a le s +

M M U S T A N G hardtop
S c y l, auto. a ir.
s h a rp 1713*11

52—A p p lian ces

IA LL S
ed
R IV E R
175 000

1*74 A M C H orne t H a tc h b a ck
A uto P S A M ra d io IS m ile s
per q a lio n L o o k s and d r iv e s
lik e a new c a r SI4*5 M av
co nsid er tra d e S it 373*

73 G R A N D S a la r I w agon
ru n s good a skin g 5150
137 S550

W A N T TO B U Y A
H E A T E R 74*74
C A L L 133 0147

F O R sa le fu rn itu re , household
odds &amp; ends
1717*44. 113
C ry s ta l L a k e A v e N e s t to the
Pub

43— Lots-Acreag e

A S S O C IA U S . INC . R I A lT O R S

323-7832

1*71 C H E V Y V e g a G T Hat
ch b ack 4 C y l 4 Sp B rig h t
yellow and w h ite
A ir con
d 't'o n e r not w o rk in g SJ*5
S31 1774

73 T B IR O L o a d e d New T ire s
B lue w ith W h ite Top. o r 74
C u tla ss S u p re m e N o m oney
dow n ITS m o 13**100 134 4M5
D e aler

A L U M I N U M , ca n s, co p p e r,
'ead bra ss, s ilv e r, gold Week
days t 4 30 Sat « I k o k o M o
fo o l Co &lt;IS W 1st St 131 1100

r " i s "« 1 g a 'B n t space

OSTEEN
ALRES

:

1070 CHEVY Camaro S Cyl
Auto PS PB Stereo AM FM
light green paint, white &gt;n
tenor 53195 131 1774

H O N D A P a s sp o rt 1««0
L ow m ile a g e 1500
C a ll 131 0447 a lt 6

TS J I S R \

51-A— F u rn itu re

See obr b e a u tifu l new B R O A D
M O R E . Iron! 4 re a r B R s

w o o d

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB

k it c h e n s

ROAD

42—M o b ile Hom es

acr e

Inc

C A S H lo r C a r s o r T ru c k s
M a r tin M o to r S ales
701 S F re n c h 373 7(34

78— M o to rcy cle s

•SPECIAL AUCTION*

CONSULT OUR

M ATHS

B U Y JU N K C A R S A TR UCKS
F ro m S10 to ISO or m o re
C a ll 37? 1674 777 4460

P A P E R B A C K B ooks W estern
A d v e n tu re R o m an ce. C o m .cs
B a b , F u r n itu r e 377 *504

W E K IV A

J

• T i a Y T O N A A U T O A U C T IO N
H w y *}. I m ile w r* l o* Speed
D ayton a B ra c h A ll hold
a p u b lic
AUTO
A U C T IO N
ever* W r d n r s d a . a l ( p m l i t
the on ly one m r lo*'da Y o v te *
the r e t e r t r d p r ic e C a ll *04
355 ( I I I IOr tu rlh e r d e t a ilt

TO P D o lla r P p .d tor Ju n k A
U»od c a r s , tru c k s A heavy
equ p m m t 377 S»»0

68—W anted to Buy

•s is .o u t p la c e Only

S A N F O R D 3 bd r. 7 b lh . e p p lic .
in c lu d in g w d. no pet* 1)75
U cp req )?J (J??. J ? ; ?44t

Additions A
Remodeling

A

B U IL D IN G
L O T S S lo ts in
G en eva G ood lo ca tio n , d o s e lo
St Jo h n s R iv e r and L a k e
H a rn e y O w n er w ill fin a n c e
5* 000 E a

322 2090l« G H L A N D S 7 b d rm . 7 bth, new
) {carpet, a ll a p p li ♦ * .n h e r
• try e r O v e r look* go lf cour**»
•no p e ts « $43$ m o
O w n rr
^ R E A L T O R (4* 7*01

FSB

R lB B J N

STEM PER AGENCY

EX C ELLEN T
s t a r t e r
H O M E There s roo m to e»
pand in th is 1 B d rm t Bath
H om e C e n tra l lo ca tio n and
p rice d rig h t , at o n ly 535.500

C ab le T.V.

—

)

M UST S E L L
A O H A M a r e and
G fld m g Both found w ith g reat
d is p o s it io n s .
good
w it h
c h ild re n B est otte r o v e r 1500
C a ll 333 47SS or 371 40IS

N E E D R O O M ’ t h is lo v e ly .
B d rm 7 B ath has it N icely
lan d scap ed and settle d neigh
horhood H as Cent H A with
w a ll to w a ll ca rp e t 14* 500

ease
10 370 sq if
or ware*,oust via
Sanford 1711100

2 Bedroom, W a sh er/D ryer Hookup

H E 'S

Ig

1 37— Business Property

ADULT SECTION

6-12 Mo. Lea se

r s TAHINJ i C U i C K i
. iR E P lT ^ .

o*ncd And operated

7 B D R M house ta r ren t 1)50 mo
1100 dep No pets, c h ild re n a re
tin* C e n tra l A ir , fenced y a rd ,
c lose to tow n 177 0430 or
I *04 717 714*

M
aced MlSH
I

FLO R ID A

323 5774

80—A u lo s fo r Sale

77— Ju n k C ars Rem oved

E S )P A $ 5 E P T H E

V s^ R LP 1 C U T T IN G
HAK-KAFF.' I TRUST YJU )
CYNICS W
JN'T S C C P F AT ^ v C I H S S J H E P CLAIM
/ K
THE NEW
HOOPlZ ATHLETE PROW
ESS N
AGAIN.' CBYUU5LV FATHER 1 S / a ^ V ^ B A P E R . '
Tr-|
l "■! ISMUJH iJLPER 5
p I N f c n —e
.
VTHAN I am: J

17O ffice* Throughout
C e n tra l F lo rid a

Snow H ill K e n n e l o ile r s C a t 4
Dog F le e B e th s 15 up 74
H our. F u ll S r r y c r 345 5717

L A Y O U T , F itte r, Welder, Shear
A Brake Operators A Indus
tria l Painter. F irst and Second
S h ills ,
Tap
Pay,
Good
Benefits Call Florida Iran
Works me 777 0)00

REALTOR

j'O drm , 7 B w ith
double c a r g a ra g e . In
D e llo n * C a ll 574 141?

HAIR llylllt e i p nerdedjli
tim e.
so m e
foll oau
preferred Leke (Aery 33) (3

21—Situations Wand

RFALTY, INC.

b d rm s * goed
o n ly I I I K 0 &gt; t

w pool 1400 133 03!*

32— Houses U nfurnished

M a rin e r s V illa g e on L a k e A da I
b d rm Irom 5750 7 b d rm fro m
17(0 L o ca te d 17 f ? lu st South
of A ir p o rt B lv d m S a n ford A ll
A d u lts 3)11470

18— H elp Wanted

B O O K K E E P E R - secretary
sm ell e d ic t, typing end
10 key required 333 *50)

F U L L Y F u rn is h e d 2 B d rm . 1
Bath D o ll house
A v a ila b le
n o * Lon g fe rm lease S3 SO mo
W inter season $400 m o June
P o r M R e a lty R e a lto rs
n
322 8671

U A L COLBERT REALTY

Large Peppers
Star I 00
W Lopes
7*
Green Onions
7 tar .7*
F A I T F O O D O P E R A T IO I
E X T R A L g . Tomatoes
M lb
Pumpkin*
.7*up Good \ 6 l6 r y , h o s p if it ilA f io t
week pa d v a ca tio n r v r t 6
Red Del. Apples
4 lbs. 100
Rome Apple*
l ib s 100
m o n th s
E a p t r i t n c f ot
n e ce ssa ry Phone M a n ^ r
Winesap Apples
l ib s 100
I
a
ke
M
a
r
y
u - T?7 136$
M u ttu Applet
lib s . 100
Golden Del
l ib s 100
•••••••••••••••(a *
Yellow Squash
) lbs 100
Sm. Zuccinl Squash
lib s . 100
L« Zuccinl Squash
41b*. t.00
A V O N R E P R C I iN T A T I V ,
Fra*h AppfaCW ae
Vygat.t.**
Th* P e r t T in t* C a rv e ,
Fresh M aple Syrup
l **
ass j o ;* - C o lle ct m a r t *
M lbs Potatoes
**o
Greens
Bunch .**
MATURE
B ookkeeper
H ri
lib s Potatoes
(*
n ego tiable A p p ly In pern
Jack O' Lantern Pum pkins
S an ford N u rs in g end ti
Are in
v e le s c e n t
C e n te r
50
TVs Heeds Cabbage for
I 00
M e llo n v llle A v e
P ickling Cukat
bu.3 00
W A N T E D Iwo w ith pleent
V ibul.SO
telephone voice, a lio Iw o Ih
Bring yaur Own C e n la in trt
s m e ll c a r tar lig h t dellvy
Cukat
10 tar I 00
Phone D e le 373 ( 5(5
V* Jum Bo
W atarm eiont
* * .) ( *
Green Beans
bu 4 00

F R E E T U IT IO N - R e e l E s ta te
school A lg e r an d Pond R e a lty
INC E R A 3)3 7(4)

Arhen ,o u p la ce a C ia w t ed Ad
in The F v m .n g M rra id \tq ,
, cto%e to your phone p e ta u ie
%omHh.ng w onde rful a abo»jt
lo happen

T H E C E N T U R Y 31 S Y S T E M
H E L P S m o re p eople bu* and se ll
m ore re a l estate than anyone
else m A m e ric a C a ll today
and let ■! w o rk lo r you C a ll
373 3053
M a*es R e a l E s ta te
S e rv .ces. Inc
4 )5 W 7 S th St
Santord
E a c h o tlic e is ind epend ently

v

W
ednesday,Oct.7
1
. If l—
SB

6S — P e t s S u p p l i e s

( WHEN V ' l F H E ' - '
'| T #

&gt;

t r o a r a l,

-Qerjeva Qardeijs-----

1505 W est 25lh S tre e t—
Sanford, Florida 32771

W A N T E D m a tu re la d y to lie n
7 da ys en d 7 n ig h ts a
p re p a re m e e ls 4 c e re l; 7
I n v a lid la d ie s in S e n td
r e s id e n c e C e l l 305 3)3 (5
w eekdays

Tennis In stru ctio n — U S P T A
C e rtifie d G ro u p o r P riv a te
lessons C h ild re n e sp e cia lty
Doug M e lic te w s k i
311)3(7.

1 B O R M . ) bth. a p p l. fence,
doub le g a ra g e 705 S J rlta SI .
Sanford . I l l t i l l

S A N F O R D sp a cio u s I bdr. 1
bath. a ir . dra p e s, k it a p p li,
1)50 m o * dep 33*1143

A I R P O R T B lv d . S an tord L a rg e
7 B d rm . 7 F u ll B ath . K itch e n
equipped I 7*5 7744

TO PLAY T0NISHT! r - — ^

I] B u 'll m f f r f f l r l o r n . a ttic
s to ra q r D rlto n a A r e f
! » 3110

S A N t O R D s p a c o u s 7 bdr
I bth a ir, d rapes.
1350 m o • dep 33* (547

C L l. A N la rg e lu x u rio u s I B d rm
Apt 10 It c e ilin g
C e ra m ic
Bath B a y w indow s, ca rp e l,
k it equ ip U til p a id I blk
fro m
d o w n to w n
S a n fo rd
A d u lt s j v j pets 307 O ak A y r

FfWM f a t h e r : h e e x p e c t s

n e w e n e r o v

S A N F O R D 3 b d rm . 11*5
p er m on th C a ll
173 *115 a lte r 5 30p m

1 M 6 68M
R id g e w o o d A rry is
7 B flr rrr
Apt* Irom S 715 3 B d rm a ls o
a v a il Pool, ten n is c o u r l 131
*470

B
IGN
EW
S. 0J&gt;£W
E JUST
RECEIVE? ATELEPHONEJAIL

Harold Hall

EvtnlngHerald. Sanford. FI.

w ith M a jo r H o o p la

O U R B O A R D IN G H O U S E

41— H o u s e s

E F F IC IE N T HOME

} B D R M . I B s lh
1350 -F S350 Dep
371 4S1S

C U T E E ffic ie n c y 1160m o
&amp; L G 1 B D R M 177$ m o
U tilitie s not in clu ded

BAMBOO
COVE
A p is
A v a ila b le
1 A 7 B d rm s
S ta rlin g a l S700 171 1140

W ILL B Pb ytif in
my home weekday*
373 3613

W«Tak« Food Stamps
LE R O Y FARM S
SR 44
Watson's Old Farm

C L E A N 1 b d rm , t 'y bth. C H A ,
t r u l l tr e e s , s to r a g e sh e d ,
w asn er d r y e r S145 133 (15*

F u r n ith e d a p a rtm e n ts tor Senior
C lt lie n s IIS P a lm e tto A v e . J.
Cow an No phone c a lls

AAA EM P LO Y M E N

College

Chairm an
Beard a l Trustees
le m ln o l*

PERSON to deliver P M paf
rout* J days per week 33 3 a|
4ft 4 p m good pay

323-SI 74

S E M IN O L E C O M M U N IT Y
C O L L f lO E
S A N F O R D , F L O E ID A

Sealed bids tram Contractors
w ill be received by Owner, Board
et Trustees, tar Seminote Com
munlty College at 4: IS F .M . local
lim a, October 10, IN I , loth* Board
Room o l Seminole Community
Col leg* The fallowing Is included:
A T H L E T IC T O IL E T
F A C IL IT IE S
Bid documents a r t open to
public Inspection In the offices of
F.W. Dodge Plan Room and
C a n tra l F lo r id a B u ild e rs E x .
changa in Orlando; and m ay be
obtained of reviewed tram the
offices o l Outmann Associates,
Architects. P la n n e n , Inc., 101 N.
O ak A v e .. P .O . O r a w tr *11.
Santord, F lo r id a 31771, upon
request accompanied by SIS 00
deposit par set.
DepoiH w ill be refunded In full
tar two t e ll te contractors sub
m iffing ban* lid * bids and return
of documents In goad us* a b it
condition w tlhln 1 days attar the
opening at bids. R etundt tar t a li In
escess ol two w ill b* less SIS.OO to
cover c a ll at reproduction, an the
seme S a w *4 raturna t documents.
Contract*** who o b ta in b id
documents and da not 0 4 in*
protect, m utt return tarn* at toast
today* before the bid data, o r pay
SIS 00 par »«t la defray caat at
reproduction and handling, a t set
forth above
Sub contractors and other* may
obtain com plete bid document*
upondepoalt of STS 00 which w ill be
refunded, less SISCO lo cover
reproduction coat, upon return ot
d o c u m t n lt In good co n d ition
within S day* after opening ot bids.
P a rtia l t a t l w ill net b* issued due
to site and scop* at protect,
E ach bid m utt be accompanied
by a certified check or bid bond
Issued by an acceptable surety
company tar not lata than S par
cant ol the b ate bid The successful
bidder w ill be required to furnish
performance bond and labor and
m aterials payment bond, each in
th t lu ll amount ot the contract
turn, issued by a bonding company
licensed In F lo rid a and holding an
A i IA Flu*) rating. Evidence at
t i l * rating w ill b* required
’ The successful bidder w ill be
required to lu b m lt a complete list
et subcontractor* who w ill b*
perform ing work on the protect,
prior te r tla a i* at any p artial
payment.
To be eligible for consider at Ion,
bids must com ply with the law* at
Florid*,
a ll conditions of the
specification*, and must be mad*
on s fa csim ile ot the farm Included
with the contract documents. In
duplicate, enclosed In an opequ*
saaiad envelop* beering Ih* name
and address at th* bidder and
marked:
A T H L E T IC T O ILE T
F A C IL IT IE S
and delivered not later than data
and hour mentioned above.
Owner reserve* Ih* right te
ratact any or a il was *r certain
portions et a bid a t stipulated In
th* F O R M OF P R O P O S A L , and to
w a iv e an y I n lo r m a lllla t and
technicalities In bidding, and la
award th* lab In th* best Interest
ot th* Owner. N a b id than be with
drawn tar a parted e l 70 days from

|

DEADLINES

W H Y B E L O N E L Y * W rit* ‘ Get
A M a t a " D a tin g S e rv ic e A ll
ages P O Bo&gt; M 7 I, C le a r
w ater. E l 31511 _____

S A N F O R D . 3 M r , 1 bth. M ftppli.
sta m e d O ak flo o rs, cu stom
c u rta in s . FI R m , c a rp o rt. Ig
fen ced y a rd , ken n els. I ) fru it
tre e s S375 B e fo re * A M o r a lt A
P M 3 V I57S

iemmole
l i t 7700
SAV ON R E N T A L S R E A L T O R

32— H o jse s U nfurnished

32— Houses U nfurnished
L O C H A R B O R 3 I C H A . ca rp a l,
g a ra g e p o rch , fanca. shad*.
1450 ♦ depot'* Phone 111 50ft

SAN FO RDCO ZYCO TTAO E
P o rch , a ir . ih e d » l» d n SJJ5 mo

30 A p artm en ts U nfurnished

3 L in t s M in im u m

A rth u r H . B e ck w ith . J r .

Clerk o l tho C ircuit
Court
By E ye Crabtree
Deputy Clerk
Publish: October It, It, November
a it , m i .
D ENS)

50c a lin e
joc • lin t
d ie
37c a lin g

tl.O O M in im u m

wkl

A C L E A N tu rn roo m
C a ll 333 4 507 o r
in q u ire 47) P a lm e tto

RATES
lf lm s
3 c o n s e c u tiv e tim e s
7 c e n t « c u liv t f im « t
10 e o n w c u t iv s t l m i s

Meat

m on th ly r a le s U til inc
500 O ak A d u llt (41 7M3

O flando-W inter Pork

322-2611_________

G E O R G E T. JA R V IS , a k a
G E O R G E T. JA R V IS , SR., et al ,
Defendants
N O T IC E O F SUIT
TO: G E O R G E T. JA R V IS ,
a k a O E O R O E T. JA R V IS ,
SR.
R F O No 1
Falrhaven. Vermont 05743
C o George and Anns
AND
AN N E. CONDON,
A D O R E S S U N KN O W N
YOU
ARE
HEREBY
N O T IF IE D that an action to
fo re c lo se o m o rtg a g e on the
following described property In
Seminole County, F lo rid a , to wit:
Lot 34. H O W E L L E S T A T E S R E
P L A T , o t recorded In Plot Book IS,
pages 47 and 41, P u b ik Records at
Seminole County, F lorida ,
hat boon Iliad o go lntl you and you
a r t required to serve a copy ot
your written defenses. It any, to It
on B O R N S T E I N 1 P E T R E E .
Attorneys fo r P lo in tltf, whose
address Is 175 South Court Avenue,
Orlando, F lo rid o 33(01, and til* the
original with the Clerk o l the
above styled Court on or before
November 13. m l , otherwise a
lodgment m ay be entered ogelntt
you lo r tho r e lit! demanded In the
Complaint o r petition.
W IT N ESS m y hand and o fficial
tool o l sold Court this IS day ol
October, m i .
(S E A L )

SAN FO RD

31—A p artm en ts F u rn ish e d

1 Houses

*6129

FRI.
1? 6

:

�I
1^ -E v tn ln q H tra td , Sanford! FL

W td n tid iy , Oct.11, &gt;»I1

A MATTER OF RECORD
REALTY TRANSFERS
R ic h a rd H P a r k e r A W l B r ia n .
L to J u lia n H a lle r T r u ite c , lo r R 0I
M lg Co A m a r.. Inc , th at p a rt 0I
SVY11 of SVC &lt; N A YY 0( Sal R R r w
A W o l SI P ris o n C a m p R d . S at
19 II I t. SJ4.100
Ja m a s V O tm o la A W l Joanna
to B a rry J D a v is A W l Sandra, L o l
I I, R a m b ltw o o d . 344.000
W ar ran F . lia is o n A W l B a rb a ra
to S ta n le y T P r ic e A W l J u r e P .
Lot 1, (tm A, T r SI. Sam ando
S prings. 364.000
A n d re w J L a th a m A W l E lle n J
to M a r y L . A m e s ( M a r t I L o l 107
G ro v e v ie w VIII s d. re p l S11.000
D ana P E r ic k s o n A W l D ia n a F
to H ir a m R o d rig u e ! A W l N lls a .
L o l J7, R a m b le w o o d . 166,000
(Q C D I G a r r y A R lg g le m a n lo
C h r is t in a A R lg g le m a n , B ag
I I I ! » ' S A I L ' W o t N E cor 0I N E ' ,
d N W '« ol Sac 71 10 30 He. A100
W oodrow W
G a ly a a n A W l
K a th y lo E r a c u lr a n s , Inc. L o l I,
B lk B. C a m a lo l U N 1. la s .*00
E ie c u t r a n s Inc, to W illia m L
P r o llilI A W l S h irle y L , Lot I, B lk
B. C a m a lo l U N I, 149,MO
T e rry A S e lla r A W l M a r c e lla to
P a tr ic k H Johns A W t A lic e J , Lot
I I . B lk I, C a m e lo t U N 1. 164.400
E d w a rd P C a lv in A W l Ja n ls L
lo M le h a a lin a J C h lv e rs I M a r r I
— Beg pt M l ’ W o l S E co r o l G ovt
L o l I, Sec 19 19 3) ru n N 190 E 111'
etc, 343.300

L r o le A S w a in , sg l to C ly d e C
Sw ain. L ts 3 la . B lk IJ P in e L e v e l
4 37 A L t 7 b lk II. T ie r E . Town o l
S a n lo rd , S100
L e w is M G la s s A W l C h a rlo tte
lo Je sse P L tr e tle A W l Ja n et R..
Lot II, W e k iv a C lu b E s ts . Sec I.
1103.000
E d w a rd J B re n n a n A M a r th a H.
lo M a x J G o ra p ic . N 711.17' o l S
IkOS’ o l E la a l' W o t S i Joh n s R iv e r
ol Sec I I 19 II etc 370,000
IOC D) Ma&gt; J G a r e p lc lo M a r J
G a ra p lc A W l V iv ie n n e . N 111 17'
ot S I90S' o l E U tS ' W ot SI Joh n s
R iv e r o l Sec I I 19)1 etc 3100
C h a rle s F W a rn o ck A W l Lou P
lo K a re n E H o rto n s g l . Irom SW
co r o l E ' i o l N W 'i o l S W 'r o l Sec
17 II 31 e lc 314.300
U rb a n E r p Inc. lo B e rn ic e S
M a rs h a ll, s g l , Tru stee. L o l IIS.
blk B. W in te r G re en . 349.900
D a v id M S im s, sg l lo T e rry B
Johnson A W l M a rle n e D . L o t 44.
C y p re ss L a n d in g a l Sabal Pom !.
399.000
P a t r ic i a S
S p ra y , sg l
lo
P a tr ic ia S S p ra y , sg l A B ria n S .
s g l, U N 4, Ol B , C h crry w o o d
G a rd en s, 1100
Joseph S ch eu tlo w , R e p r
Est
H elen F G re en to L a w re n c e V A
G ild a B P e tlin a ll, Lot IS. B lk 3,
N orth O rla n d o Ind A ddn. 371.000
(Q C D I Susan S T yson lo K e ith
D Tyson. L o l I. B lk C . U N . 4.
Cam elot, 3100

Raym ond H
Th orn to n A w l
D eborah S to R o g e r H unt A wf
B e v e rly . L o l 7. B lk C . I d y llw lld t o l
L o ch A rb o r. Sec. S. 313.000
D a v id W. C la r k A w l K a n d y lo
Joseph J K a to sgl A D o ro th y E
Cooper, s g l.. L o l JS. R ic h lie ld 3 d ,
341.000

June M H a n k in s lo T h om a s J.
G ra d y , B ish o p etc F r o m S E co r. o l
Tr. 47 r e p l, T r. sa, San lan do
S prin gs. 3111,000
F ra n k j . F o x A S h irle y K ru g e r
lo C h ris tin a H M c C re a . s g l . L o l
14. B lk B. E a s tb ro o k S O U n i,
340,000

E q u ity R e a lly Inc to Ja m e s L
W h ita ke r, sg l U n 111 C. D e stin y
S prin gs. 319.900

E lb e rt D M a a w e ll Sr A i f
G re tch e n lo D a v id W C la r k A w l
K a n d y, p a r. d la n d In Sec 10 10 31
etc. lll.SO O

Janet G rim e s Howk lo W illia m J.
C h a llo s A W l Janet A ., U N I17A.
Sprln gw ood V illa g e , 144,000

UJO D j Joe R
A d k in s A w l
M a r ily n lo O d y sse y H om es, Inc ,
L d 793 S p rin g O a k s, U n 4, 3100

IO C D I E ith n e M
M u rp h y to
John M u r p h y ( m a rr I L d 10. blk
A. G lcn a rd e n , 3100

B e l A ir e H om es Inc to R ic h a rd
L B a le s A w l F ra n c e s c a G . L o l
134. O ak F o re s t, U n 1A. 374.100
B el A ire H om es. Inc lo John T
W elsh A w l M a r g a re t M , Lot 141,
O ak F o re st, U n tw o A , 370.900
Ja m es C M a h e r A wt V ic t o r ia lo
H ans P K Inn A w l B a rb a ra J . L o l
117 G a rd en L a k e E s ts U n one,
A7I.400

Ja m e s N D u n lo p E lc . Trustees
10 P o ly a k C o rp N SIO" o l N 990- 01
W ' . o l S E ' . o l S E '. Sec 33 II M E
ol H o w e ll B r. Re . 3170 OOC

IO C D I R o b e rt L . Ja n e lo R o bert
L . Ja n e A W l F lo r a P, W 340' o l 5
M 34 ch o l S W . d N W 'i d Sec
17 II 10 3100
D onald Cook, Sgl. A M a b le E
Johnson lo A lle n C L e le b v re , s g l ,
C om m en ce a l SW co r o l S W 1. ol
N E ' . o l Sec. 9 11 31 etc 314.300

H e rb e rt L u k e A wt M a r y F lo
R obert E S pears A w l H elen L .
Lot I. B lk A , L o n g a cre s. 311.000
B ra d le y S W ild e r A w l L u c ia to
P a u l W G u e v m A w l B a rb a ra D ,
L o l 144, L o n g d 4 le 1st A d d n ,
344.400
O lm A m e r H om es to E d m u n d
P a n a re llo A w! L in d a , L o l 40. B lk
A, G reen w ood L a k e s U n 1.314.900
J S l Dev , Inc. lo L in d a S lew art,
sgl L o l 43. W edgew ood Tennis
V ila s , 344.400

John F B u tle r A w l M a r g a re t lo
R o bert M B u tle r A wt P a m e la J ,
Ld
31. B lk I. Sunland E s t l
A m en ded P la t. 314.100
C a rl F O il, R e p r est B yro n M
E v e lo C a r l F O H A w l W ilm a L ,
L d 19, B lk 14. N o rth O rla n d o III
Addn. 330.300
IO C D I H e n ry J. P e rk in s lo
Je n n ife r L P e r k in s . L o l I. B lk I
Tier 7. S em in ole P a r k . S i n
N eid T Th om as to W illia m F
Daddy A w l K a y R . L o l II. b lk D.
less S 14 39- A E I01‘ Ol Slovak
V illa g e . 397.100
IO C D I E m m a A
D re v e s io
D oroth y E D reves. sgl L o l 73.
H ig h la n d P in e s, U n . I, 3100

(Q C D I Ja m e s W B e lc h e r. J r A
W l C h e ry l A . To E s le r A. A b ra m s ,
E 'y o l L o t 111 O P Swope L a n d
Co P la t B la c k H a m m o c k . 3100
W illia m
E. In g ra m
A Wl
Y o la n d a M . to R g b e rt B. B roen A
W f K a re n L . L d 11, Sleepy H o llo w
III A dd n . 3114.100
G e o r g e T. W a r r e n , S g l
to
G eorge T W a rre n A W l R o s lly n , —
N 109 94' ot S 194 94 ot E 401' o l
S E '. ot Sec 4 11 M less R W H a l l .
N ich o la s Stefano A W l A n ita to
Eu g en e L . K e lly . L o l M . O ra n ge
V illa HIS , 34.000

MARRIAGES
M a r k J . W e iity , 17. 141 S L k .
T rip le tt O r . C B . A D a rle n e G
V a n m e te r, 17,400 5 T rip le tt L a k e
Dr , CB
John B M i r g t r u m III, ) l , 41
H illc r e s l O r , O vied o, A B a rb a ra
M Jones, )7, U S N . C e n tra l A v e ,
O viedo

B ru c e M F a r r , I t. 114 B u rn s
A v a , L W , A D e b ra K F o y , I I . B*.
447 M y r t la L k H ills . L W
W illia m H T o d ritf. IT, )19 San
M ig u e l A v e , W S. A M a r y S
B a sch , U , s a m e a d d ress
Lyn w o od D ick e rs o n . I I. R l. II,
FI A v * . O steen. A D e bora h C.
H a y n e s. 17, 1309 W illia m s A v e .,
Sanl.
A lb e rt H B a rn e s . 11. II C a rr ia g e
H ill C r , C B , A M o n ic a O G a b a n y,
l l . u r n * a dd ress.
B ria n R . Scott, I I. 1110 M a n y a n
O r , M i ld . A M a r y F . R o b e rts. 10.
1141 B u ttern u t B lv d ., O rl.
Joh n C S tc o r, 11, 419 Sheoah
C r . WS. A L o is M T h om as. 41,191
S tirlin g O r.. W P
E r ic R . W a lten b a u g h . 11. 1409 A
A sh C r., C B . 1 C a ro l A. Voorhees.
19. sam e a d d ress
R o b e rt R
B o rh m a n . 14. 1141
P a rk O r . S a n l. A Susan D H ill,
l l . sa m e a ddresa.
G a ry R M o o re, n , 1107 S h riv e r
D r . O r l . A L o r i A W h it*. 19. 101
Joann C l , A S
N a t h a n ie l R o a c h e , 51. 1110
Je tw a y . S a n l, A D o ris S m ith . SI.
R t 1. Be 111 S an l
M a r k J M u sca to , 11, 104 H a m lin
C l 1 . L W . A S a ra h F M o rris . 10.
I l l W W a rre n . L W .

DIVORCES
Roger T. B a rk e r A Je a n A.
L e w is M H a le A R o xa n n e

■

CALENDAR

r

D an a A s h e r A R ic h a rd A
Booker T B la n lo rd A E s s ie B
C h e ry l L , H a r r e ll i W in ston P
Ja m e s B P ilo le n A Donna M
C h a rle s R R a in e y A B e lly M
C h a rle s M S c h o ll A R o se m a ry
W

Carl Ouval Selph, Jr. A Suianne
Spencer.
P a tr ic ia A n n S m ith A W illie Lee
S m llb .
N a n cy P H a ll 1 R o bert L ..
W ayne C . B ro ck A Jo A n n
C h e ry l L a w re n c e A W illia m A
W illia m M B a y e s A B a rb a ra L
C y n lh la
P
E arn h a rd t
A
C ra w to rd D
M ic h a e l P a u l H itte ll A D ian a
R o berta A Johnson A B illy R a y
Johnson.
G a ry E v e r e lte S w ill A B a rb a ra
ja n e .
Jo y c e A n n W illia m s A E n n is S
L a N ila K . E d o u a rd A E d o u a lu s
E d ou a rd.
D o lore s Ja n e S kates A E d w a rd
A
M a r io n L o is T im a s A Joseph M
L o u is e Ja n e B u lla lo e A R obert
L.
W illia m
H
C la r k .
Jr
A
K a th e rin e S ,
Jam es
M ic h a e l
N o b ile
A
Theresa P „
M a r y L u Scott A N elson E d d y
S to ll
R an d olp h M o rse S m ith A Jo A n n
W.

T he
s
S h o p p e r's
\
C e n te r
s—\ --------- -----------— 1

W EDNESDAY, OCT. Zl

M ic h a e l J a m e s B u llo c k A An
netle M a r ie
W illia m C a lv in C o llin s A M a r y S
C y n th ia H a r r is A T roy A llr r
H a rris
R a y m o n d W a d e S te v e n s 1
Sheila R a e (O w ens)
H ow a rd R ic k y H a r r is A Cnaem
K on m i
R ic h a rd H M o w e r A P a tr ic ia .
P a u la G a y A p p le A D a v id
Thom as — W l n am e — M o r r is
G a il D a u g h lre y A C le v e la n d R
P a u lin e G ( P o lly ) O ie le n d e rte r
A F ra n k C J r
Hose P rte rs o n A R ic h a rd W
P e l ef son
R o n a ld O B u rleson A B a rb a ra
A
R a y m o n d P e tu tsk y A Je a n I.
R ic h a rd R S ch m itt A C h a rlo lig
A
W illa r d L B y rn A L illia n
F r a n k lin D C lo sse r A D orothy
Jeane
R ic h a rd D B ru ce A C a ro lin e S.
D g lo re s l C a m p b e ll A R o b e rt
E . W l p rio r n a m e D o lls
L a u ra M C a rte r A Ja m e s A
A da Sharon F ed d e r A D a le J
Ja m e s H K e ls a y A Teresa P
J il l A n n K ir b y A C a rle n Joe
K irb y Jr.. W l lo rm e r n am e West.
W illia m A ro n M a rsd e n A L in d a
F
Joan C P h a ris A D a n o u s E . W l
lo rm e r n a m e — H e n d rix
C a rre l A n n R ic h a rd so n A T urner
W

|The Sanford
Prescription
Center
This Is national
drug abusa prevention weak
7NI 1437 WAT ro » ro r rl NOT ro 37A47

Wednesday Step AA, 8 p.m., Penguin Building,
Mental Health Center, Crane's Hoost, Altamonte
Springs. Closed.
Bom to Win AA group, 8 p.m., Ravenna Park Baptist
Church, 2743 Country Club Rood, Sanford. Closed.
O verralrrs Anonymous, 7:30 p.m., Altamonte Mall,
Sears.
Starlight Promenaders, 8 p.m., DeBary Community
Center, Shell Road.
Sanford AA Beginners, 8:30 p.m., 1201 W. First St.
THURSDAY, OCT. H
Seminole County League of Women Voters Orien­
tation Cheese and Wine Festival, 5-7 p.m., 1141Jve Oak
I-ano, Altamonte Springs. Open to all persons In­
terested In learning about league activities.
Florida Audubon Society .Seminole Chapter, 2 p.m.,
Florida Power &amp; Ught, N. Myrtle Avenue, Sanford.
I a ir y Hayes will speak on violent storms. Refresh­
ments.
Wright Watchers, 7 p.m., G i k k I Shcplicrd I Jithcran
Church, 2917 Highway 17-92; 7 p.m., Quality Inn, 1-4
and State Road 434.
Ovrreatrrs Anonymous, 7:30 p.m., Community
United Methodist Church, Casselberry.
Sanlord AA, 8 p.m., 1201 W. First St.
M-A m s , k p.m., CroMroads Hallway House, la k e
Minnie Drive, Sanford.
South Seminole AA, noon, mental Health Center,
Robin Road, Altamonte Springs.
Soulh Seminole Optimist, 7:30 a.m., Holiday Inn, Wymore Road, Altamonte Springs.
Inke Mary Rotary, 8 am ..
Crossings, (formerly Frogg’sh

Hie Club ot tiie

TIP T O P S U P E R M A R K E T

HARVESTofVALUES!
P ric e * Oood T hru T u n . , O tt. l l l h
M t a ly

P a rk

3 Down

S P A R E RIBS

lb.

Cold Klst
FR Y E R S
U.S. Choice
CUBE STEAKS
Pork
NECKBONES
Turkey
NECKS
Turkey
V/tNOS
S lbs. or more
H A M BU R G ER

99

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"GREAT DOGS"
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p r a a v c t i . L v n c k M a a i. l i m n . H a t

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07

Maxwell House
INSTANT
$A7f
C O F F E E 4 oi |ar ^
Martha White
14 ot pkg.
Long Oraln RICE

79*

P illib w ry Hungry Jack
C am p ltla. 1 lb. bax
M A C

PA N C A K E MIX

77

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P A P E R 1*0 sheets* 1

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Heritage 4 roll pack
BATH TISSUE

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or
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URGE
EGGS

D u tch H o lla n d

MARGARINE ICE CRUM

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995

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Evening Herald, Sentord, FI.

Wtdntiday, Oct. 21. it ll— 1C

Hearty Sandwich
A Party Pleaser

Football season is here! It's time to start planning menu
ideas for pre-game parties.
Our recipe suggestion — wide-mouth bagels — uses bagels,
available fresh or froien, piled high with spicy pastrami and
Swiss cheese. It's wrapped in heavy duty foil for quick heating
on the grill.
W ID E-M O U TH BAGELS
6 bagels, split

Steak

31 pound pastrami, sliced thin
4 pound sliced Swiss cheese
3 knockwurst
Dijon mustard
Divide pastrami and cheese equally among 6 bagels; place
top on each sandwich. Tear off a length of heavy duly foil large
enough lo warp the bagels in a single layer. Bring 2 sides of foil
up over sandwiches; fold down loosely in a series of locked

folds allowing for heat circulation and expansion Fold short
ends up and over again; crimp to seal. Split knockwurst
lengthw isc, cutting down, but not all the way through. Cut in
half crosswise. G rill knockwurst over medium hot coals 10 to
15 minutes, turning frequently. G rill sandwiches 10 to 15
minutes or until cheese is melted. To serve, place one piece of
knockwurst inside each bagel sandwich; spread with Dijon
mustard. Makes: fi sandwiches.

C o m e T o O u r G re a t

Pick Your Own Sale

To add tropical appeal to
your cookout, prepare Pacific
Flank Steak. The marvelous
beef flavor of the family-sized
steak picks up exotic accents
from
a
ginger-spiced
m arinade that combines
pineapple Juice, oil, vinegar
and soy sauce.
W hile the m arinade is
flavoring the steak, it is also
tenderizing it, points out the
National Live Stock and Meat
Board. To further assure
tender results, It Is recom­
mended that the steak be
cooked just to rare and that It
be carved diagonally acmes
the grain into very thin slices.
Pacific Flank Steak
1 beef flank steak (1 to l l j
pounds)
34 cup pineapple juice
l-3rd cup oil
*4 cup vinegar
2 tablespoons soy sauce
•i teaspoon ginger
4 teaspoon salt
Combine pineapple Juice,
oil, vinegar, soy sauce, ginger
and salt in a small saucepan
and cook slowly 5 minutes.
Cool. Score flank steak in
diamond pattern (
i nch
deep), if desired. Place steak
In a plastic bag and add
marinade, turning lo coal. Tie
bag securely pressing out air,
and marinate in refrigerator
for 6 hours or over-night,
turning at least once. Remove
steak
from
m arinade,
reserving m arinade, and
place on grill top 3 lo 4 inches
over ash-covered coals or on
rack in broiler pan. Broil
steak 5 lo 6 minutes, turn,
brush with marinade and
broil second tide 3 to 7 minutes
(to rare ). C arve steak
diagonally across grain into
very thin slices. 4 to 6 ser­
vings.

/

V

Say 'Open
m
Sesame'
To Veal
's

When looking for something
for a special menu, look to
veal, for veal provides Bn
"open sesame" to a treasury
of
eating
enjoyment.
Especially appealing is Open
Sesame
V e al
Cutlets.
Delicately-flavored pieces of
veal are browned and braised
to tenderness with a delicious
bread crumb and sesame seed
coating.
Cutlets are one of the most
popular veal cuts, reports the
National Live Slock and Meat
Board. They are thin lean
boneless slices usually cut
from the leg section of veal.
While adding prestige to
m ealtim e, vaal also con­
tributes significantly to the
body's nutritional needs. lik e
other meats, veal is an ex­
cellent source of high-quality
protein, the B-vltamins and
the minerals, iron and zinc.
OPEN

SE SA M E

AT PANTRY P R ID E

YOU PICK
YOUR OWN PRODUCE!

FR E SH

Cukes (GREEN)
FR E SH TE N D ER G R EEN

Pears

Cut veal into 5 to 6 pieces.
Beat egg, lemon Juice, salt
and pepper. Mix crumbs and
sesame seeds. Lightly dredge
cutlets in flour, dip in egg and
then in crumbs to coat evenly.
Refrigerate cutlets on waxed
paper for 4 hour before
cooking. Heat cooking fat in a
large frying pan. Add cutlets
and brown on both sides.
Reduce heat, cover and cook
slowly 35 to 45 minutes or until
done. 6 servings.

_

_ _

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T a n g e lo si 0 FOR9 o ?
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SW E E T TART- HALF GALLON

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SN O W HITE

Red Grapes-u&gt;0 &lt;j

14 pounds veal cutlets, cut
4 to 2-3rd inch thick
1 egg
2 teaspoons lemon juice
1 teaspoon salt
4 teaspoon pepper
4 cup fine dry bread
crumbs
2 tablespoons toasted
sesame seeds
3 tablespoons flour
3 tablespoons cooking fat

K rO &amp; rfV I

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S W E E T C A LIFO R N IA

VEAL

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P K ic t s E i r t c t i v e w e d , o c i.
t h r u i u l s .. o c t .
.
1 9 8 1 . D U E T O O U H L O W P H I C L S W t. H I S I K V I ( M E K IU H T
TO L IM IT Q U A N T I T I E S . N O N E S O L D T O D E A L E R S .
NO T H C S P O N S IIIL E I O H IY P O C H A P M IC A L E R R O R S

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iso, $ 1 2

EACH

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PKG.

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C E L L O PK G .- A S S O R T E D

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1C— Evtfllng N t fM , Sanford, FI.

Wtdtmdiy, Pel, 11 , m i

Fish T a k e s O n

lt'« that time of year again,
and there'i no mistaking it
when the air Is well saturated
with the delicious aromas of
the season. Roasted turkey
steamy dressing, thick giblet
gravy, and a host of other
delights lure diners in waiting
with their savory smells.
Who can resist?
A ll the fam ily Is home and
there’s so much to talk
about—between mouthfuls—
that the minutes sfflll quickly
into hour* Finally someone
suggests clearing the dinner
table and pdtting away (be
food, but the motion Is
overturned in favor of wat­
ching a long awaited TV
football game. "The task,"
another contributes, "can be
taken care of during com­
mercials.”

Everyone seems satisfied, but
you know the story.
The afternoon
passes
quickly into evening as the
final touchdown is made.
Stomachs begin to rumble and
the crowd moves once again
Into the dining room.
"The turkey and dressing
are s t ill on the ta b le ,"
someone observes, but their
concern is disarmed with a
fam iliar re p ly -"th e re wasn’t
room left In the refrigerator,
but don’t worry. . .It's been
covered up!" A ll Is forgotten
during a meal of turkey
sandwiches. . . until the next
morning.
After a restless night of
head-splitting aches, body
cramps and upset stomachs,
some of the family members
aren’t feeling very festive.
Food poisoning ts not an
Illness that only occurs after
eating in a not-ao-desLrable
restaurant. Unfortunately, it
can happen in the nicest
homes to people who least
expect it. That’s why so many
post-dinner sicknesses are
blamed on "the flu" or a 24hour bug." Out like most
Illnesses, prevention if the
best cure.
Here are some tips to help
you with food safety for the
coming season:
—Keep food hot. Most
germ s that cause food
poisoning are killed when you
bolt, broil, or roast foods.
However, when food stays
warm for two hours or longer,
some germs produce poisons
that are not destroyed by
reheating. So once food is
cooked, keep it hot until
served and refrigerate left­
overs at once.
-K e e p food cold. You’ve
probably heard to store m ilk
and other dairy products at 40
degrees F. or below to
maintain freshness and good
flavor. The same is true of
other perishable
foods,
(ierms are slowed down by
cool temperatures, so keep
foods cold before cooking and
immediately after serving'!
-K e e p food clean, If you
keep genus off of meat,
poultry and other foods to
begin w ith, you avoid
problem s. Keep utensils,
platters, hands, and coun­
tertops soap and hot water
clean. A casual wipe with a
damp cloth won't do.
Serving
w ell-balanced,
nutritious foods are a great
start for a healthy holiday
season. But by taking
precautions for safe food
handling, your festive meal
can have a happy ending.

Though fish is delicious baked, broiled, poached, simmered
in a steaming hot stew or chilled to perfection in a salad,
"frie d " still seems to be the all-time favorite method of
preparation.

PANTRY
AVINGS

cP tide

NO STAMPS,

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theta, aid a dtftedtataf.
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69

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I t St WHERE 8 I

HORMEL
CHILI
II I A * s \

79

t

f I SI WMI Ml H&lt;*

I I SI WMI RE 9 V

FRENCH’S
POTATOES

5 .S o l C 6 0 1 A U G R A T IN . S C A L L O P E D .
P A N C A K E S O R S O U R C R E A M fc C H IV E

COMPARE

t v im t iM

I t i mu**

GENERIC
EOOD

COMPARE

N A I ION *|

**1•***
rt* M m i •
run 1

H H AN II
PM K I

it r *4 *

Pineapple__

PWKI

Ik u i M t J t u i r m i i

* o &lt;i n

Black Pepper__6 9 c 0
Mustard______ 5 9 *

1251

0

3 /* l

79*

Deodorizer__

65*

Potatoes

|------

*1"

sh eets

•2 ‘

.------ .

Butter Syrup___ 7 9 * 0

G E N E R IC - 2 4 o t

S T E R L IN G - 4 0 L B S

Gum Drops____9 9 *

i”

G E N E R IC - 1 2 o i B A L S A M / P R O T tI N

Conditioner__ 9 9 *
..............

HOT

^

J U N E B O Y- 2 4 o i J A R F R E S H

39'

|------ -

Kosher S p e a rs -9 9 *
D E L M O N T E - I 60 1 C A N W H O L E

Whole Beets 3 / 8 9 *

l/M

------- .

Green Beans_2 / sl

P A N T R Y P R ID E - I 60 1 S L I C E D O R W H O L E

E
E

20o i

Potatoes (white)_ 3 9 *

49*

9 9 * i i”

Milk Mate.

PANTRY PRIDI 4 la i CAN UN ftW tritN IO

U o i - F A B R IC S O F T E N E R

89*

Final Touch.

99*

I S o i C A N - L IT E S L I C E D

Pear Halves___ 5 9 *

69'

Peaches (libbys)_'6 9 *

83'

M O T T ’ S 23o&lt; J A R

Apple Sauce__ 6 9 *

89*

••I RIG OR IISTV CHIVSC lot BAR Bt OUI
OR BOUR CREAM t ONION

.

Apple Sauce__ 6 9 *
.

89'

l2 o&lt; D I S IN F E C T A N T

Lays Chips____ $109 H

Lysol Spray___?189
2 2 o t D IS H W A S H IN G D E T E R G E N T

0

6 o i J A R - IN S T A N T C O F F E E

2 U N IT - F A M IL Y S IZ E

Bucket Olives—6 9 * 0

Maxwell House^293

Ivory Soap____8 9 * '96

A

h

RAGU
SAUCES
• 'I
«1 1 4 4 ' l l 4 1
t IN M l j S M N t H IM

s i l t HI

•

Dove Liquid___ 9 9 *

*

•

l.» o /

t3 $ 1 4 9

GRAPE
JELLY O
S H ^ M IIM

|

SW I I I S i l l

99

R|

•

«./ I A*!

89'

CM 1 C K E M f ,

DUMPLINGS
M A X W E L L

g

I It

AfN

Ho
Ou
U sS eE
h

S

C H E E Z IT
CRACKERS

• i"

I . Sl M il

? I it ) AN

89*
M M l Mt

I . S l A M l HI

'«'•

1.'or lit 1

1 | M

SPAGHETTI
j

Libby’s V iennas39* 0

P A R A D IS E - S .T S o i

a i i a

APPLE
.t
JUICE ® $ |
1 2 7

. 3 8 * EE

So« C A N - C H I C K E N

LiptonTea____ ? 3 89

1 | M

*9 a I It | N A | |\M A *W| •

Sweet Peas_

Solar Salt______ ! 1 " 0

• »M V | N |

1.1 M UK

ELSEW HERE

P A N T R Y P R ID E - l 6 o f B IG

,-----

------- .

H ERB MAGIC
DRESSINGS
t i
&gt; i . &gt;»•*.»
igrg

$ 1 5 9

0

Scott N apkins_?l39

W H IT E H O U S E - 2 5 o .

NORTHW O O D8 2 4 o i M A PLE FLA V O R

Mouthwash___ 9 9 *

Ik tIH IM
«"•»»
w!mc » "

Kosher Dills___$159 E

,------ ,

P A N T R Y P R ID E - I 6 0 1 C A N

Pine Sol_______ 4 9 * 0

12oi GREEN

JOO C O U N T

Grapefruit juice_ 7 9 *

6o i CLEA N ER

Kitchen Bags__7 9 *

GROCIHY

JU N E BO V. 4 LB FR E S H

P A N T R Y P R ID E - I 6 0 1 S L I C E O R

Cold Power____ *169

G E N E R IC - IS C O U N T T A L L

COMPARE

99'

Soft Soap.

Sauerkraut.

49ot BOX

89*

Meat Sauce

PHKI

ELSEW HERE
C C

w

P A N T R Y P R ID E - I 6 o &gt;

Cling Free

l i . l m j« H * O O S S I M i l * » &lt;&gt;■

pinc mi

Spinach______ 3 9 * di

16 U N IT S

7V

PINNY

i m

Hefty Bags___ 9 9 * 0

Sweet Chips___8 9 * 0

h h . l A U C R A tI N O R M . A l l D P I (&gt;

u

P A N T R Y P R ID E - I S o i C A N

J U N E B O Y - 2201 J A R F R E S H

•2 M

h i

IS CO U N T- T A L L K IT C H E N

Ja ck ’s Cookies 9 9 * L!!I

G E N E R IC - H o i R U G R O O M

co co a

------

l « a l C H O C .C H I P . B A N D W K M C R I M K . P I A N U T R O f t l l
S A N D W IC H C R IM E . O R C H O C S A N D W IC H C P I N l

Drink Mix_____?177

G E N E R IC

7.25o »

Kosher Dills__ 9 9 *

G E N E R IC . 2 1 o i C H O C O L A T E

( . I N I SIC

T°

VI A S IC 4601 J A H

C l N LH IC J 2 o i J A R

I h i H I DAY
(,

10 S n t L N t «A| M J A P O N | A P D O l D O B H H ()» N

.5 5 *

G E N E R IC 4os C A N

COMPARE

ia in i

Macaroni__

G O L D E N C H A IN

L is t -

W HERE

55*

G E N E R I C . 1 60 1 I H U M

(.1 N | R K

pinc mi m

Pepsi Cola____ ?129

.

Cocktail____

p in n y

(.H O I I HY

M PM IK.Ml Dll I PI PM OH

G L N L H IC 2 0 o i C R U S H E D

^ 7

Q

&lt; :

I

C

O

F F E E ^ ^ ^ * * ^

RINSO
DETERGENT
LAUNDRY

$ }9 9

BOX

Who's
Cooking?
Tk i Herald welcome
loggestiews far Cmk 0i
I V Week. D* yea kaaw
MMsaayaa weald like I*
•ee featured la this epe&lt;?
There la aeaiefttag ler
everyeae la the Mae ef

S U N S H IN E
KKISI'T
SA L T IN E S

SCOTT
TO W E LS

G E N E R IC
TEA BAG S
Q Q (

76oz
4'
y&gt;

Fat for frying
Parsley (garnish)
Thaw fish if frozen. Skin fillets. Sprinkle fish with salt and
pepper. Combine egg and water. Combine potato flakes and
dressing mix. Dip fish into egg mixture, then roll in potato
flake mixture. Place fish In a 10-inch frypan which contain*
about ‘ 1 inch of fat, hot but not smoking. F ry at moderate heat
4 to S minutes longer or until fish is brown on other side and
flakes easily when tested with a fork. Drain on absorbent
paper. Garnish with parsley. Makes 4 servings.

Potato Fried Mullet
14 pounds mullet fillets or other fish fillets, fresh or frozen
1 teaspoon salt
l « teaspoon pepper
1 egg, beaten
1 tablespoon water
1 cup instant mashed potato flakes
1 package (7-10 ounce) dry onion salad dressing mix or dry
mild Italian salad dressing or your favorite dry salad dressing
mix

Potato-Fried Mullet is a terrific new recipe idea suggested
by the Florida Department of Natural Resources Home
Economists. It utilizes convenience-packed Instant mashed
potato flakes to lightly coat the fillets and a dry salad dressing
mix adds a zesty flavor.

Potato Coating

Good
Eating
Guide

. 4K&gt;

ELSEW HERE 12.19

2 0 c OFF

,’ l !

HSI

FLAV-O-RICH
ICE CREAM
SQUARE- H ALF GALLON
WITH THIS COUPON GOOD
THRU WED.. OCT. 2S. I t i l .

■

I

S A V E 28

CASH

HUNGRY
JACK
INSTANT MASHED
POTATOES

30* O F F

WE CARRY A
COMPLETE LINE OF
ASSORTED

FOLDER’S
COFFEE

HALLOWEEN
CANDY

E.P., REG. OS DRIP

2So s BO X

1 LB CAN

WITH THIS COUPON OOOD
THRU WED., OCT. XS. It i l .

WITH THIS COUPON OOOO
THRU WED., OCT. ZS. ISSI.

-TR IC K OR TREA T-

SANFORD 2944 ORLANDO ROAD, ZAYRE PLAZA AT THE CORNER O F 17 92 t ORLANDO ROAD

i

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- - —f / -

.

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v - 'iA k r

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V ' 'v v-

�Easy Does It'
Is This Entree
Easy docs it" Is this entree that features a family-sire ham
suce and fried apple slices. Dinner Is ready to serve in less
than a half hour when you panbroil a "fully-cooked" ham slice.

then panfry apple slices sweetened with brown sugar. A
delicious addition is a simple sauce that's quickly nude by
stirring a can of evaporated m ilk into the pan used to cook the
ham and at&gt;oles.
A ham slice is an excellent choice when you want thr f i e
flavor of ham for Just one meal, says the National liv e Stock
and Meat Board. TTie slice is cut from the center portion of
cured, smoked ham and contains several muscles and a small
round bone.

1 "fully-cooked" smoked ham slice, cut
inch thick
3 medium-size tart cooking apples
1 tablespoon lemon juice
3 tablespoons flour
b ooking fat
l tablespoons brown sugar
1 can (5 l-3rd ounces) evaporated milk
Place ham slice in a lightly greased large, heavy frying-pan
and cook slowly U to 16 minutes, turning occasionally. Place
ham slice on a hot platter and keen warm. Core apples and cut __

h a m a n d f r i e d a p p i .e s

n

LOTS O F
CHICK EN
"I \H 4I 4 tty i,4 I’MI Mill** I,M411|

l A H L .t

TURKEY
D R U M S T IC K S
O
O c
_

i

■

( tv I R

I H
I I S I W H I HI

68

H

PORK
R IB L ET S

M

5 Ll B
b S
s

i

GREAT
GROUND

I’ l M I It

98

LB

ELSE*
W HERE

mu i

rt"

BIN* H IM

D ID

, HUNU*

ri w i

h V I HI M

rvii i

LB

U S D A. C H O IC E - C E N T E R COT

Sirloin Steak.LB&gt;2 98

I lS F
W ill HI
PI H
III

U .S .D .A . C H O IC E - B O N E L E S S B E E F E V E

S K IL L E T B R A N D - L B P K G .

Round Roast.LB^Z96

Sliced Bacon__ *1“

Baking H e n s _ L B 5 8 *
COMPARE

I MO/ I N

P A N T R Y P R ID E - I 2 o i F R O Z E N

fANIBT PBIDt ABACABOUBOOUGHOB INGlIi*

Q

Muffins____ 2 / 9 8 *

|___ |

B E T T Y J A N E - I 60 1 M A R B L E

Pound Cake___ ?109 [^|
A A A F A M O U S - 160 1

Rye Bread____ 8 9 *

_____ _

P A N T R Y P R ID E - H A L F O A L L O N

H

Ice Cream

,*&lt;&gt;../ I O AYI S
l|(|N«,HY IAt K
.(.Mill t I

PANCAKE
MIX

I’MIIII
C O F F E E

n 29

,f, ,/
1 Ml l/l N

t 1 t an

!.»•./ i t o v

l
Cgl
lS j

SUNSHINE
’
G R EEN S @

Potted Meat__4 / 8l
I O o i R I G. O R M IN I

Marshmallows-39*
Spray N’ W ash _!l89

t’

11SI WIII RI 4 1 |*»

12o/

•M&lt;M1. IIAMMI H

$ 1 9 9
1M 4H| Ml 1^1 II

1S11/ l AM

25 LBS

J ION

$ 3 8 9

1

7JO ML. LEONARD KRUERCH

I'AL M M1 Altl 1

1 IM Mill Ml 4 1 ON

PAPER g
PLATES

Llebfraumllch J
I.S LITER

A

atwwMwtw youcanr iKOLowiaiov&gt;aAu.paiczATNn
c
__________
________
wick at anyotmci
aorta
H A R U T I" YOU* LOCAL TRADINQAttA. PAfITRT PRIOC WIUOOUBUTM U F P ta C N C C I"
carn compare peter* on tnc i m i item at amt othe* *urtuaaiaet in you*
LOCAL TMDIPYC A I E A IP T H EM TOTAL U L O R E S OH I f DIET I S E " t ITEJM CCMTlHC HOI
L E M T M ^ 110 00 aaiM O YOU* P A K T IY PRIDE IT E JU U O * E O i* T E i TAPE AHD THE O T N I*

2 29 0

Real Sangria— M 59 0

/ &gt;»a

1*.
1
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r, ^
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,

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tSt.li | t&gt;t.k

.

I

4 YS

t&gt;*k

y

4 S1

► *S • • -W «

Turkey parts are more
readily available Ilian in Lite
past, la rg e ly due to the
development of the "chillpackage." The parts arc
tightly packaged und held at
28 degrees Fahrenheit during
storage and shipping.

100 C 1

89*

Th is allow s for longer
storage under controlled
conditions — but not in home
refrigerato rs, where tem ­
peratures are usually 40
degrees or higher.

3/$l

The turkey Information
Sendee, a trade organization,
recommends that fresh or
thawed turkey, turkey parts
and ground turkey be stored
in the refrigerator for no more
than two to three days.

% »•*

,

/&gt;Rlr

A •* Y •

Many
cured
turkey
products as well as their redmeal counterparts are
marked with a “use by" date,
which Indicates the maximum
storage lime for the unopened
package.

THIS WEEKS’
CAPRI FEATURE
COVERED
CASSEROLE

3

RAaura n w io n the exact luu item* to pantry prim a n u pay you double
THE DIPfiatNCIINf ‘

r n

Among Hit* least expensive
of all turkey choices are the
wings und drumsticks, which
ure now commonly offered in
the fresh meat cast, cither
fresh or thawed.

JOo/

E L SE W H E R E 3 / 1 1 .1 1

Double the Difference inCash!
1

1 1M W111 RI %1 IS

99*

lS .S o i
CAN

PANTRY PRIDE WILL RAVE YOU MORE ON YOUR TOTAL FOOD BILL OR WE WILL

Franzla Wlne»_!3M H

79’

GREEN
BEANS

Guarantee™

A A

Celia Wines__ 1499

Turkey breasts, either
whole or boneless, are often
pre-basted nnd sold frozen.
According to trade sources,
the price of breasts has been
falling relative to that of other
turkey parts.

PANTRY P R ID E CUT

PBictBerrtcmi »co .ocr ti thru vucb. ocv jv. in i our to our iob pbkpa wi biaibvi ihi rigmi voumii
QUANTITIES. NONEBOLDtODtAUBB. NOI RIBBONBlBit fOB TVBOGBABMICAI CBBOBB

silica bobavo
. lAAtauacooabianco
------------ ---------------* B

*2^*

C AR PET
DEODORIZER

WHI 11 9 IMt II

M.

E L SE W H E R E 1 4 .7 9

COM PARE

45'

Kraft M ustard_69*

DELITE
DOG RATION

IVflfOAY DI i f .
CN
PB
IN
CN
NV
IR ku
WH*B8
ERE

0

T E X IZ E - 3 2 o i R E F I L L S

89*

I 4II |AMI* 44l IN1AMI
4 14IRNII*

89*

m il i

-l"

Ml1, flNl|NS4 |Nfl li

1

1 IM RHI HI ‘ I •
a? 1 HS

OVI N C H I SP
PO IA T O ES
1 Mi i/l &gt;

99*

11INAl Ml 1
HAIR
SPRAY ■

3 1 (IN

Then there ts ground
turkey. Chris M cDerm ott,
consumer education editor for
C o r n e ll U n iv e r s it y 's
cooperative extension, points
out that "turkey dark meat is
used to iimke ground turkey,
which is packaged in 1- and 3pound tubes and may lx* sold
either fresh, frozen or
thawed."

ELSE
W HERE

23oi

Bic Shavers

I 1SI Mill Ml 1 »

LIG H TEN ER

I6 0 COUNT

C R O C !H Y

I VIMlllAV
1*1t i l
riN«HI*

IIO H M C L J o i C A N

.r

69'

48*

------

5 COUNT

* 2 39 ,2,,

•’AN I

S J4 9

Wet Wipes

------

&lt;A

KING SI ZE
BR EA D

BABY

COMPARE

K ID D

Dristan t a b l e t s .

* l 29 *&gt;"

Orange Juice

I oh

^
------

Spice Cake____ ?159 0

99*

Suave Lotion
l b C A P S U L E S O R 24 C l .

89*

M ILL LA N E - I 2 oi

3

M

IOwif BOlfN CHCtBC. BIBBfBONI OBBAUBAGI

G&amp;W Pizza

rim l

IO 01 S K IN A L O L O R C O C O A B G T T L H

Asstd. B ag els_2/Sl

BANTBYBBIDC J&gt;«« t BOlfN BURI IIOBIDA

i' A is i i n r H i D i

COMPARE

W H IR L

O
O

ELSE
W HERE

.

I b a t PKG . QTHS

Margarine____

IVIM
VItAI 1181
n nh
NKHIM W H I H I

ELSE

j

Whole turkeys are available
fresh or frozen; those under 12
pounds often command a
premium price. Hotisscriesize (4- to 8-pound) turkeys
art* available pre-cooked in
some markets.

Orange Ju ice __?128 tlJ
G O ID O CORN

Lunch Meat___ ®128

O
O

it A K l i n

IVIBtDA*
r i N il
riNCMIB
PBNI

0

u

I VIBIOAT
r iN N i
PINCMIB
PBId

----- .

BANIB? BBIDI OBMINUII MAID
HAIVGAIIONCABIONrUBI IIOBIDA

GINIBIC ItwiBAG 41Kill 441AM
I BOIOGN4
(Hill IMJKH1041 GABKI D
68'

Of course, many aUli prefer
thetr turkey tn a more
traditional form.

Cheese Singles.?I48 till

Roll Sausage__9 8 *

Turkey Ham__lb* ! 68

BANIBYBAlDf 12mBUGBIKI DAMIBICAN

8168

I 6o i

C A R O L I N A P R ID E

U S .D A . O R A D E A L A R G E

98'

B a c o n .L B

OBI1PKI D

Lunch Meat

9 8 *

.------ .

Cottage Cheese ^l48 H

l* « 4 B A G B I K I O f t A lA N I O B A B K t O

v&gt;

1"

M A R K E T STYLE- O V E R 2 LB S

COMPARE

■U H

Turkey bam is made from
pressed turkey thighs and
cured by injecting a solution
of
water,
n itrite
und
flavorings. It may or may not
be smoked.

P A N T R Y P R ID E C R E A M E D 2 4 o i C U P

Meat Bologna_^l38 m

SHENAND O AH - SM O KED

Pork Loin____u&gt;*lM
Sliced

l b

|

&lt;/&gt;

Beef Liver___

O V E R 3 LBS- S L IC E D Q U A R T E R

CUP

Cream Cheese_7 8*

FV N E TASTE- I 6 o i P KG . S LIC E D

S K I N N E D b D E V E IN E D - * S U C E P K G .

ISI

P A N T R Y P R ID E B o i P K G

Turkey Franks 9 8 *

0

One answer to these
problems is "tuntey ham,"
which iuis become one of the
most im portant of the
processed turkey products.

w i l l HI

Sour Cream ___8 8 *

Lykes Sausages*!78

^ I88

IIIN IIIA I
I 'l NN»

D A IR Y

P A N T R Y P R ID E - I b o i

Chuck Steak.Le’ Z 48 «

lb

COMPARE

H VG RAD L- 12oi PKG .

S H E N A N D O A H - l 6 o&gt; P K G .

Furthermore, man) people
simply dislike having all Dial
lefiover turkey.

LB

F R E S H B U T T - F A M IL Y P A C K O V E R 3 IM S

Hot Dogs_____ 9 8 *

Beef Chuck__

L IS E
W ill HI

pm. I

C A B IN C O O K IN O - S M O K E D I L B P K G .

U I D A IM O IC I r a r t H lT G RO UN D
9 A M IIV P A C K O V I B I I B B

An increasing number of
women are working outside
the home. They cannot — or
will not — spend hours in the
kitchen. They prefer quicker
and easier dishes.

E L S E W H E R E * 2 .1 8 P E R L B

I VI M VUVI
PI W l
PI-VI H I M

COMPARE

Pork Steaks;__ lbU 38

8 0 M I I I I R ll!

PACK

E L S E W H E R E * 1 .4 8 P E R L B

IAMU? PAdtOtm I IBS

l| f e l l A C H O I C I

98

CHUCK
STEAK
$ 1 6 8
TWIN

!1 * «

L “ !

i vi mii»«

COMPARE

High divorce rates and
increased m o b ility have
revised our concept of family.
Many of the households sitting
ilown to Thanksgiving and
Christmas dinners will be
headed by a single parent.
More and more young adults
are living far from their
extended families.

I BONUS1

E L S E W H E R E * 2 .1 8 P E R L B

h i« iii« i
n w

S K IN l I SS

B LA D E CUT

PORK
BUTTS

LB A

E L S E W H E R E * 1 .2 8 P E R L B

LIN K

E L S E W H E R E S I 38

Ifl P I H I It

FRESH

CHUCK
ROAST
$ 1 3 8

C

SI

BREAKFAST

I2oi
PKG.

hM

I I S I W i l l HI

B LA D E CUT

B E E F P A T T IE M IX

COMPARE

/It

I Ml S H

mu 7m sn&lt;;
m

P I H I It

I I SI W M l Ml

OVER
3 LBS

M

But it may not be so
traditional this year. And
much of the reason Involves
the changing structure of the
American family, say many
economists nnd. poultry
raisers.

FARM LAND
SAUSAGES

I Ml SH

i HM| ASl I I I i. 1J IMS 4IIH Il4l hN
•S|i US I «.•ItI I I I*4I *4*.IN

■

It) f.AYN O K MADDOX
Special To The Herald
it will soon be time to enjoy
that traditional turkey dinner.

3

I KO /t

New
Turkey
Form

PT
cP rfde

NO GIMMICKS!

Wednesday, Oct, at. l t l l —3C

thin slices from both ends. Cut each apple crosswise into 3
slices, dip cut surfaces in lemon juice and dredge in flour. Add
enough fat to frying-pan to nuke 2 tablespoons. Panfry apple
slices on 1 side and sprinkle with brown sugar. Turn, panfry
until lightly browned on second side and place on platter with
ham. Add evaporated m ilk to pan drippings and cook slowly,
stirring constantly for 3 to 5 minutes or until thickened. 4 to 6
servings.

4

PRIDE
ARE IN CASH
U t llt K

Evening Herald, Sanlord, FI.

QUART

Once considered a "fossil”
Uka the moon with a surface
little changed over millions
of years. Mars now is
regarded as a planet still
"under construction." Like
Earth, it may have a molten
core, a crust that shifts and
cradu and mountains that
sometimes blow their toga.

$1 199
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REGULAR PRICER 16.99

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VOULLTVliNK THE MAlO&amp;O
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B E E T L E B A IL E Y

Antwar to Praviou* Punt#
SO Accounting
agency (abbr)
m
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1 Jot*
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hearing
4 Braitha hard
SU SPEN SE 15 CTAUMITE.' I Lubnc i nt (of SS Oaraman
89 Shakedown
thon
12 Hail
62 Macao coin
13 Azuutt
63 Landed
14 Binhztona for 64 Alcohol lamp
October
65 Jewel
IB Obtiinad
66 Ralai
67 Suggar
16 Anno)id
I I Carry on
88 fitnodolUna
20 Cry of
affirmation
DOWN
21 Racant (prafii)
46 Povarty-wzr
22 African
28 Domettic
1 Security
2 Bard i river .
tgoncy (abbr)
animal
24 Diaancumbar 3 Acquire*
28 Falls behind 46 Fumith food
4 More verdant 27 Animal watte
26 Daniaft
80 Cogwheel
6 Motoring
30 Baka
chemical
SI
Spindle
tuociation
34 Noah i boat
by Mort Walker
21 Swerve
82 Americin
38 Etcaptional
8 Nimble
37 Kind of
7 Actor Fonda 29 Musical group
patriot
31 Styptic
tinging dub
6 Softly
84 Ritual
32
Evening
in
9 Above
31 florae
66 Clrry on
10 Unedomed
Italy
67
At ell tune*
40 Mutical
11 Patron taint 33 Volunteer
88 Cepitil of
initmment
of tailort
ttete (abbr)
17 Pillow
42 Fancy vats
Italia
36 Newta
material
43 Cut
60 Baseball
19 Eidemation 39 Vast eipame
46 Turk
player Mel
4 1 Ageleu
47 Nuclear
of dieguet
44
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23
Air
defame
agency (abbr)
61 Single
mtmmil
group (abbr )
49 Look at

ACROSS

by Chic Young

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HOROSCOPE
By BERNICE BED E OSOL

•

For Thursday, Oetobor 22, 1981

by Howie Schneider

E E K &amp; M EEK

I M . ITS 50TOJE... LIFE &amp;

J

~r

F0R5OME ITS
THE. CHERRIES

W
TFDROTHERS
rrs THE PH3

&lt; e» S
1—
by E d S ullivan

P R ISCILLA 'S POP

THEN WHV &lt;30
PEPRES 6 E P *

r T H IN K IT W A S
S
A L L T H E R A N T IN G
THAT W EN T ALO N G
W IT H I T /

by StoHel A Heimdahl

BUGS BU N N Y

MUSIC KEALUV
S O O T H E S "T H E

H iS BATTERIES JU S T R A N I
O U T W E D BETTER R U N

SAVAGE BEAST

J B R IT .
Q R R **Kf

YOUR BIRTHOAY
October 0 , 1911
ThLa coming year you are
likely to make friendi with
someone who poaaetaes
rather unusual talents. This
peraon could be helpful to you
In opening up a second source
of Income.
UBRA (Sept 2M)ct. 23)
Unusual or
uneipected
changes tend to work (or your
benefit today. Don’t get
rattled l( things fail to follow
the blueprint you had In mind.
Find out more of what Ilea
ahead for you in the year
following your birthday by
sending for your copy of
Aitro-Graph. Mall f 1 for each
to Aitro-Graph, Box 489,
Radio City Station, N .,Y.
10019. Be sure to specify birth
date.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
If you are an unattached
Scorpio woman, don’t turn
down Invitations today where
you have opportunities to
meet new people. Mr. Right
may make the scene.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) You're extremely
resourceful today In accompllahlng your goala.
Neither obstacles nor com­
petition will deter you from
reaching your mark.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 23-Jan.
19) If you've been pushing
yourself too hard lately, try to
break up your routines today
with activities which afford
you pleasure. The change will
do you good.
AQUARIUS (Jan . SO-Feb.
19) You’re both a planner and
a doer today. Unfortunately,
you may leave things to the
last minute and not achieve
all you are capable of ac­
complishing.

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
In partnership situations
today, be a good listener when
your associate lays out some
Ideas. They may not sound
like much at first, but they
could be quite Ingenious.
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
Be
carefu l
about Im­
p le m e n tin g Im p e tu o u s
changes today. Actions not
well thought out could sat you
back a few paces rather than
move you ahead.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Normally you like to Lake
ample time before making
decisions, but today you may
make snap judgments which
won't be up to your
caliber.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
You're easy to get along with
today If things go your way,
but should someone buck your
views you could become quite
temperamental. Keep a cool
head.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
Your possibilities for gains
are good today, provided you
don't take foolish risks.
Unwise gambles could prove
rather costly.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) A
failure to compartaon-ahop
today could lead you to pay
more for something than you
would If you looked around a
bit. Be patient, prudent and
probing.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 23)
Don’t talk about business or
money matters prematurely
today before they are
finalised. Something unex­
pected might occur to liter
the picture.

UnderstandingThose
Cholesterol Tests

DEAR READER - Don’t
get excited and run up your
LDL but what you have
suggested Is a fairly standard
practice. It Is common to
measure the total cholesterol
and then measure the HDL
For readers who are con­
fused by all this, the HDL are
the small fatty-cholesterol
particles In the blood that are
believed to help prevent the
development
of
fattycholesterol deposits In the
arteries and that Is why they
are called "good" cholesterol.
This Is Important because a
person with a low blood
cholesterol who also has a low
level of HDL may not have an
optimal level. This helps to
explain why some people with
low cholesterol levels still
develop artery
disease
causing heart attacks and
strokes. Also other people
have high cholesterol levels
but have so much good HDL
that they are protected.
The values
of
HDL
cholesterol
and
total
cholesterol are often expresaed as a ratio. This is
explained in The Health
Letter number 18-2, Under­
standing Your Cholesterol,
Tryglycerldes and Other
Blood Fats, which I am
sending you.
Others who want this Issue
can tend 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.
Thu ways to Improve your
HDL or lowur your LDL are
the same as those that have
long been recommended to

prevent heart attacks and
strokes — staying lean,
exercising and eating a diet
that Is low in fat, particularly
saturated fat and low in
cholesterol. Exercise seems
to have a positive beneficial
effect on raising the level of
"good" cholesterol (HDL).
So while the laboratory
determinations have changed
somewhat, the bottom line of
what you can do to prevent
heart disease and strokes has
not. Of course, you should not
smoke either. Smoking is also
an Important risk factor.
DEAR DR. LAMB - Can
you tell me something about
sorbitol,
(he
a rtificial
sweetener? Instead of eating
sugared candy I'd been eating
mints containing sorbitol.
After eating them I found I got
a very severe case of
diarrhea. Needless to say, I
have discontinued eating
products containing sorbitol.
DEAR READER - Sorbitol
belongs to the group of
chem icals
classed
as
alcohols. The “ol" ending
Indicates this, ju st as
"ethanol" is the name for
drinking alcohol.
It Is sometimes used as a
substitute for sugar but It does
contain four calories per
gram, the same as sugar.
Since it is an alcohol It Is
handled
differently
metabollcally than sugar and
other carbohydrates.
It also has a diuretic effect.
In this way it helps the body to
wash out normal body water.
The water loss may convince
a person that he Is losing
weight. He Is but It Is not fat, it
Is normal, needed water. Its
diuretic effect Is one reason it
Is often used In foods said to
help you lose weight. 1 suspect
your dlgesUve system Is not
absorbing It and It draws
water into the Intestine,
causing (he diarrhea.

WIN AT BRIDGE
NORTH
♦ J 107 4
NRA J 10 &amp; 4

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CAST
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SOUTH
♦ K Q III
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Vulnerable. Neither
Dealer North
Wttl
Pass
Pass

Narth
IV
30
3V

East
Pass
Pass
pasa

P«*s

Pa*s

Put

Saath
10
4 NT
40

Opening lead. 0 2

By OiwaM Jacefcy
This Jannersten hand is $
trifle different from most of
tboae la his book. You reach

t l i spades on very normal
bidding and without an
adverse (rump lead you can
try to ruff two diamonds and
s club In dummy and just
lose the ace of trumps
Unfortunately for this line
of play the opponents start
with two rounds
_______of trumps
and you have only two
trumps left In dummy. What
can you do about your third
loser?
Maybe you can set up
dummy's fifth heart. So you
take dummy's ace of hearts
and ruff a heart. Now you
p la y the a c e -k in g of
diamonds, ruff a diamond
and lead a third heart East
shows out and you can't set
up a fifth heart.
You also see that you can't
develop a squeeze against
East. What can you do
against West?
If be bolds both the queen
and jack of clubs you have
him. You simply lead and
ruff your fount) diamond. If
West chucks a b u n you can
set up ■ been In dummy so
West must come down to
two clubs. They turn out to
be the queen and jack so
your nine of clubs becomes
your 12th thek.
(N K W lP A P n E N T U P R U E ASSN I

ANNIK

i

o

n

by Leonard Starr

X

'

FIN D X C A N

K « e p W ITHIN M Y
t u M T A u yt f c r r ip
D O W N AW* M Y CHECKS
IOI|

FLETCHER'S LANDING

by T. K. Ryan

TU M BLEW EEO S

SALMON CROQUETTES WITH SPICY PIM IENTO SAUCE
2 cups salmon I No. 1 cam
2 cups soft bread crumbs
1-3 cup milk
2 eggs
1 teaspoon salt
3 drops hot pepper sauce
3 tablespoons chopped pimiento
1 tablespoon lemon juice
Bread crumbs or corn meal
Drain salmon and separate Into fine flakes. Over low heat
combine bread crumbs and m ilk and cook five minutes. Stir In
unbeaten eggs and remaining Ingredients. Let cool before
shaping Into croquettes. Make Into balls and shape as desired.
Coat croquettes with finely sifted bread crumbs or com meal,
l i t stand to dry.
Place croquettes in baking dish, brush or drizzle with melted
butter or bacon drippings. Bake In 400 degree oven until golden
brown, about 30 minutes. Makes six croquettes.
In the meantime, make sauce:
4 tablespoons butter or margarine
3 tablespoons flour
1 cup m ilk
1 teaspoon onion salt
2 whole cloves
2 bay leaves
1-3 cup horseradish
1 can or Jar, 4 oz., pimiento, cut in pieces
4 teaspoon sugar
4 tablespoons sour cream (optional)
In saucepan, melt butter, stir In flour to blend. Add milk and
liquid from pimientos, stir and cook until slightly thickened.
Add remaining ingredients except sour cream, and continue
cooking to medium consistency. Stir In 4 tablespoons sour
cream, if desired. Pour around croquettes In baking dish, heat
gently to blend flavors.

by Daualas Caffin
kXtf DON'T VA GO

HZOSf CANT STAND
lU W G fU JL NS.

ALL OUT AND * 1 *
HIM A 6TtML AND

■ ^

A d t &amp; P lN A C H

r

.5 * 0 X 0 *

Turkey breast Is ideal for serving small crowds
any lim e of the year. For a s p e c ia l louch. serve
Spicy Cherry Stuffing to dress up the turkey. Add
fresh cranberry sauce for an elegant and timely
entree.

W HOLE-W HEAT A P P L E ST U FFIN G
4 cup butter or margarine
1 cup chopped onions
10 slices whole-wheat bread, cut in 4-tnch cubes (6 cups)
2 large apples, pared, cored and finely chopped (3 cups)
&gt;« cup sliced almonds, toasted
1 cup chicken broth
1 egg, lightly beaten
2 teaspoons Worcestershire sauce
1 teaspoon salt
Preheat oven to 325 degrees. In a large skillet, melt butter.
Add onions; saute until tender; remove from heat. M ix in
bread cubes, apples and almonds. M ix chicken broth, egg,
Worcestershire sauce and salt. Pour over bread mixture; mix
well. Turn Into a 2-quart casserole. Bake, uncovered, until
apples are soft, about 35 minutes. Serve with turkey, chicken,
pork or veal. This recipe can be doubled or tripled. If desired,
spoon unbaked mixture Into the cavity of a turkey or roasting
chicken. Skewer or sew; roast following your favorite direc­
tions. This kitchen-tested recipe makes about 7 cups.

Ripe with zesty, (rosh flavor. Publix’
produce makes autumn eating a
thoroughly delicious experience. And
at these special fall savings, you'll
want to take home all your favorites,
plus sample a few new tastes!

’

“ Country Stand" Brand Fresh

Mushrooms.........S
Cherry
Tomatoes

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v -j x 2 - , ' ft* i m K v W
j J x / f t - . *’ n6iS&lt;¥4&lt;i .

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Come Harvest
the Savings
at Publix’

V E R S A T ILE LEM O N DRESSING

FallAppleSale

Ripe, Juicy, Pacific Mountain
y 6 5 Size)

lartlett P e a rs ... 10

“ Pu b lix" Brand Delicious . ,

For Your Cooking Needs
Zesty Yellow

Cooking
O nions..............3

Apple Ju ice......... S1
.','
bag

69*

Add Color To Your Salad With Fresh

For Snacks or Treats
“ Tastee” Brand

Caramel Apples

Pom egranates.... 3 to, *1
“ Fall Is Popcorn Tim e"
“ Super P o p" Brand

Yellow or
lh
White Popcorn.. 2 bag 79,

6 medium red apples
1 package (14 ounces) Ugh! caramels
t* cup light corn syrup
2 tablespoons water
' Wash and dry applet; remove items and insert wooden
i skewers or spoons Into item ends. Melt caramels In top of
double boiler. Add com syrup and water and mix until smooth.
Remove pan from heat and swirl apples, one at a time, in
cartmeLmlxture.Let excess drip off, place on waxed paper
and refrigerate. This kitchen-tested redpe makes 6 apples.

QUICK PEANUT BUTTER CANDY
4 cup margarine
4 cup milk
2 cups sugar
2-3 cup super chunk peanut butter
2 cups quick oats
Mix ogether margarine, milk and sugar ta jk q u a rt
saucepan. Bring to boll and boil 3 minutes. Remove from heat;
cool 5 minutes. Add peanutbutter and mix thoroughly. Stir In
oats. Drop by teaspoonfuls onto waxed paper. This kitchen-

•I )

;/ t i l «
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*

0 0 °

Acorn or
Butternut
Squash.

—T i v r r &gt; f ~T 2 ffWJfWiriTT i f —
X.V*

pai
pint

Excellent Baked Sprinkled
With Brown Sugar

to ted redpe makes &lt;0 ( 1 4 Inch) candies.

ra h ?

M 69

For Snacks or Salads, Tasty

FR E N C H ONION SOUP A LA FISH
1 pound fish fillets, fresh or frozen
5 cups water
2 packages (1** OR 1 3-*ths ounces each) onion soup mix
Chopped parsley (garnish)
Thaw fish If frozen. Skin fillets; cut Into 1-lnch pieces. In a 3quart saucepan, bring water to a boil. Add soup mix and fish;
stir. Cover and reduce heat; simmer for 8 to 10 minutes or until
fish (lakes easily when tested with a fork. Garnish with
chopped parsley. Makes 6 servings.

In 1-plnt jar or cruet, combine Ingredients; cover. Shake
well. Serve with salad greens.
To use as a marinade: Omit cheese. In shallow glass dish,
place 1 scored flank steak, 2 pork chops, lamb chops, or 2 spilt
chicken breasts; pour marinade over. Cover and refrigerate 6
hours or overnight, turning occasionally. Broil or grill meat to
desired doneness. Refrigerate leftovers. Yield: 1 4 cups
Tip: For large amounts of meat, double redpe.

degrees. I-et stand 10 to 15 minutes. Remove stuffing and
carve. This kitchen-tested recipe makes 4 to 6 servings.

t o l l P tv w fiu u i

Publix

Cauliflowerets (small)
Italian seasoning
Carrots, cut Into *4 Inch pieces
Powdered savory
Blanch caullfowerets and carrots In boiling, salted water.
Drain. Season cauliflowerets with Italian seasoning and
carrots with powdered savory. Thread pork breakfast strips
with alternating vegetables on small skewers, placing cooked
side of meat against vegetables. Use 2 cauliflowerets and 1
chunk of carrot per skewer. Grill, uncooked side of meat
towards coals, 3 to 4 minutes.
M E A T 'N FR U IT K E B A B S
Bananas, cut Into *« inch pieces
Undiluted frozen orange Juice concentrate
Dry mustard
Strawberries
Dip banana pieces Into orange juice seasoned with a little
dry mustard. Thread pork breakfast strips with alternating
bananas and strawberries on small skewers, using 2 pieces of
bananas and 1 strawberry per skewer. Follow procedure as for
vegetable kebabs.

** cup vegetable oil
cup reconstituted lemon Juice
2 tablespoons grated Parmesan cheese or crumbled blue
cheese, optional
2 tablespoons water
4 teaspoon celery seed
1 (0.6 ounce) package Italian salad dressing mis.

T U R K E Y B R EAST WITH SPICY C H E R R Y
STUFFIN G
1 frozen turkey breast (about 3 pounds)
t slices day-old whole-wheat bread
2 oranges, peeled and chopped
2-3 cup whole red maraschino cherries
2 tablespoons butter or margarine
cup canned chicken broth
2 tablespoons maraschino cherry syrup
1« teaspoon cinnamon
l i teaspoon nutmeg
1 tablespoon melted shortening
Thaw turkey according to label directions. Wipe dry with
paper towels. Cut bread into small cubes. Combine bread,
oranges and cherries. In a saucepan, melt butter. Add chicken
broth, cherry syrup and spices. Heat until butter is melted.
Pour over bread mixture. Toss well.
Separate ribs of turkey breast. Spoon stuffing into cavity.
l*ut a double thickness of foil over stuffing and half way down
sides of turkey breast. Press to seal. Invert turkey onto rack of
roasting pan. Brush with shortening. Bake in 325 degree oven
about 2*« hours or until meat thermometer reaches 170

Savings On Your Favorite

M E A T 'N V E G E T A B L E K E B A B S
Panfray or broil Slzzlean on one side, 3 to 4 minutes. Drain.

EASY CARAMEL APPLES

IF X DON'T W fflTl
C « »•«&gt; ■ &lt; u * « H l* e | ie *

Here s an old favorite with a unique twist—salmon
croquettes with a savory cream sauce. For color and flavor,
the croquettes and the sauce are spiced with bright red
pimiento pieces. For value, remember that canned salmon is
virtually 100 per cent edible and compares favorably in cost
with other meats. And for convenience, the croquettes may be
made up ahead of time and stored in tlie refrigerator.
Serve this dish with green lima beans and small white
potatoes which have been cooked together and seasoned with
bacon drippings, and crisp lettuce wedges topped with your
favorite salad dressing.
Send for a free colorful recipe brochure by writing:
A w d a te d Pimiento Canners. Dept. H, Box 73, Griffin Georga
iK/iul

Wtdnetday. O d . 21.1»II-3C

Stuffing As You Like It

Savory Pimiento Sauce
Enhances Croquettes

by Bob Thaves

F R A N K AN D E R N E S T

Potpourri

By LAWRENCE LAMB, HD.
DEAR Dr. LAMB Laboratories run blood tests
to determine high density
cholesterol (HDL) and low
density cholesterol (LDL).
Supposedly high HDL is good
and high LDL la bad. Why
don't laboratories add the two
together to arrive at a total
cholesterol rating? Why not
reconcile one against the
other to show good HDL off­
setting some the bad LDL?
What can a person do to in­
crease HDL and decrease
LDL?

Evening Htraid, Saniord, FI.

■ &gt; *'

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SS *1”

�*C— Evening HsrsM.ttwfsrd, FI.

Wtgnsegey,0c1.21, IWf

M icrow ave M agic
Standing Time important To Compiete Cooking O f Vegetabies
Nothing cook* vegetables like a microwave oven. Short
cooking time and little or no added water helps to preserve
nutritive value, prevents loss of color and retains crisp taxture.
Microwave vegetable cookery can be divided Into three
groups. Commerical or home canned vegetables are simply
reheated, using f i percent power, which Is reheat on some
ovens.
Froten vegetables require 8 to 10 minutes per pound, 100
percent power, 5 minutes standing time.
Fresh vegetables cook to perfection In I to S minutes per
pound, 100 percent power 5 minutes standing time. The
standing time Is Important to complete the cooking of all
vegetables, so don't consider them done until after that time.
Fierce skins of vegetables that are to be cooked whole and
unpeeled. Potatoes, winter squash and eggplants are good
cooked this method. The piercing allows steam to escape and
prevents popping.
When cooking vegetabies In the microwave, small amounts
of water (W tablespoons per pound) is all that is needed.
Rinsing vegetables before cooking is often sufficient.
Salt just before serving, not before. Salt causes bleeding of
moisture from vegetables. Cover with plastic wrap, vented on
one comer, or a tight lid for all vegetable cooking except the
whole, unpeeled kinds. You won't have to coax anyone to eat
their vegetables cooked the microwave way.
Com on the cob, fresh with husk and silk removed can be
cooked in plastic wrap.
l e a r f to ) minutes
2e a rs ) to 4 minutes
4 ears 4 to I minutes
These are approximate times, as site and temperature are
variable.
Fresh vegetables are great just microwaved and small
amounts of seasonings, but you will want to try these vegetable
combination casseroles too.

teaspoon salt
teaspoon seasoned salt
'» teaspoon pepper
In microwave, melt butter in 2-quart casserole. Add cab­
bage, stirring to coat with butter. Cover and cook by
microwave for 2 minutes. Stir in cream; cover and cook 2
minutes, stir and cook an additional minute. Sprinkle with salt,
seasoned salt, and pepper. Let stand several minutes before
serving.

Midge
Mycoff
Home Economist
Seminole Community College

covered 15-17 minutes high 650 watts. Stir 2 times lei set 5
minutes. Sprinkle with paprika before serving.

&gt;3 cup sliced onion
2 tablespoon butter
1 tablespoon Italian salad dressing mix (dry)
1 pound zucchini (thin sliced)
1 tablespoon grated parmesan cheese
Saule onion slices M minutes. Add water, salad mix and

CREAMY CABBAGE
V4 cup butter
!« cup light cream
W small head cabbage, shredded (about 1 quart)

1-LB. BAG, OLOE
SMITHFIELD HOT
OR MILO BAG

OOZ., BR EAKFAST
CLU B FLA. GRADE A

BREAKSTONE

5-LB. BAG
PURE CANE

32-OZ. JAR
HEINZ PICKLES

Large
Eggs

Sour
Cream

Evercane
Sugar

Kosher
Dills

* th O b Pwt&lt;&lt;e Stam p
Pf»ee S eve r B oo klet

BMft O b P u t in Stam p
P v iC t S eve r Book!#!

AMR O b P ufchi Stam p
PftCB S iv B f Bookie?

Sausage

N't* Or# Peth* Stamp

W ill. CM* P 1* 1.1 S la M p
Pl«4 l l i P t H t W

ZUCCHINI ITALIAN

Pr«c» S eve r B o o k le i

zucchini. Cover and simmer until tender, sprinkle with cheese
and sene.

ACORNSqUASH

1 acorn squash
1 tablespoon brown sugar
■4 teaspoon cinnamon
1 tablespoon butter or margarine
Cut squash in half, lengthwise. Remove seeds. Combine
brown sugar and cinnamon. Sprinkle half of mixture in each
squash half. Dot with butter.
Place in shallow dish. Cover loosely with plastic wrap.
Cook covered, on high for 9 to 11 minutes or until tender.
Turn dish halfway through cooking time if you do not have a
carousel.
Next week's column: Getting ready for Halloween with the
microwave- nuts and candies.

32-OZ. JAR

Kraft
Mayonnais
W«ih O b Pwtba S tam p
P n c t S e v e r Booki#»

SH-OZ., IN WATER
OR OIL, CHUNK
LIGHT STAR-KIST

j

Tuna
w.t. 0*4 P . t ' i st»i«e
P » c * S « .w B oo *M l

Hormel Cure 81

Boneless
Ham.............. 7 *31B

PnMxSavesYouMoreOn

POTATO ONION BAKE

Oscar Mayer Sliced Meat or
Beel

B ologna........ p‘ « 99*

4 medium potatoes (peeled and sliced)
1 medium onion sliced
1 teaspoon parsley
1 teaspoon salt

(12-oz. pkg............................S 1 .3 S )

Swift Premium

Hostess Ham . «« ,8 "
Switl Premium Brown 'N
Serve (All Varieties) .

2 tablespoon butter
Dash of pepper
Dash of paprika
Conbtne all but u lt and paprika. Dot with butter. Cook

;Sausage........ «*•* *1”
Swift Premium Sizzlean or
►
Firebrand

;Breakfast
|S trip s........... AT *159

Sharpen

i Swift Premium Pickle or

Olive L o a f.....*.* 75*
Lykes Sliced Meat or Beef

B ologna........1
Sunnyland Meat or Beef

Horizons

Jumbo
Franks..........

*1»

Plumrose Sliced

Cooked Ham.. »

(0 * 0 1 , p k g . ■l4ftMtt*i444444t4M

In Cheese

•V

Rich’s

Turkey
Franks.......... i T 89*
Rath

Step up and expand your horixons In the fascinating world of
cheese. There’s more to It than cheeseburgers, a few strips in a
salad or the melted topping on a ptixa.

Braunschwetger.*' 79*

In IKS, cheese consumption was 7.3 pounds per person. In
I960, the average American ate 17.1 pounds. This increase of
144 percent is due to many factors. Cheess fits the current
lifestyle with its easy -h xat, essy-to-Uke qualities.
Cheese provides substance to soups, piquancy to appetisers,
heartiness to main dishes, texture and taste to salads,
satisfaction value to desserts and makes a sandwich a full*
fledged meal.
Start with a fun food like p in s. Moaaretla Is the current
choice and that's fine. If you want variety, try smoky-flavored
Provolone or use s combination of mild Seamone and Par­
mesan.
Sandwiches offer ■ big opportunity for many cheese types.
Mlld-flavored Brick Is e favorite; so Is Muenater, which la
similar to Brick with Its numerous Irregularly ahaped eyes but
has less surface ripening. Both are creamy white, but
Muenater Is a bit more pungent than Brick.
Monterey Ja ck Is another creamy white cheese with a soft,
open texture. It has a full range of uses, even as e dessert with
pineapple, green grape*, apples, pears end honeydew melon.
Blue cheeee Is a favorite among those who have developed a
taste for this spicy food. It's marbled with blue-green mold and
comes with either a paste-like texture or a crumbly one.
Because of He piquancy. Blue cheese is great for appetlxars,
salads or their dressings, with fruit.
In spile of their French names and origins, Camembert and
Brie are made in America. Their flavors range from mild to
pungent. Wrapped In foil, theae cheeses cone In small wheels
or wedges with an edible crust. They’re elegant with fruit for
dessert.

You can't miss Edam or Gouda. They come with a red waxed
outer surface, shaped like a flattened sphere, usually aold In
weights from three-fourths of a pound to 14 pounds. Mild and
nutlike in taste, Edam and Gouda have a mealy body, are
softer than Cheddar, lasty aa an appetizer, salad or deeaart
Have you ever wondered if Pasteurised Proceee and Cold
Pack cheesea are true dairy products? Yes, they are! Process
American slices are made by blending, with h u t, ant or more
kinds of Cheddar cheeee, usually molded into loaves. Gold
Pack cheese Is made by grinding one or more chi n es and
mixed without heating Into a qmadable product packed Into a
crock or similar container. Eithsrcheesamay be flavored with
spices, fruits, vegetables, wins or nooks.
America's most popular cheese is Cheddar. It ranges in
color from white to yellow to deep orange, but its fla m
depends on how long the cheeee was cured or aged. Two or
three months gives a mild cure and bland fla m . Up to Mx
months Is considered a medium cun that produces a
characteristic nutty taste.
Aging over six month* yields a dtarp rich fla m la Cheddar
cheese. The cheeee melts readily « d blende easily with other
ingredients when und for cooking.
The second most popular ssllsr in the country la M ae.
Nutllk* and rather sweet, ii has a Ann body, elastic texture
and larga boles.
Colby, a cheeee that comae In m all or la rp cyMadvs,
random weights or slices, Is aoftsr and
than Cheddar.
Try U for sandwiches or cooked foods.
Whatever your choices, plin to iacm at Cham for variety's
cake!

y tS &amp; i

I K .-

a t S la v ic t m m g m t
TO lI4MT Q U AN TITKB COCO

pubui

U.S.D.A. Choice Beet

T H E P L A C E FOR
F R O Z E N FO O D S

Whole
Tenderloin
Freeh

a

Pork P icn ics ..........

7

Freeh

Pork Steak........... r

a

89°

• ^

v ;, $ j 2 9 I

*139

Freeh

Pork H ocks.......... :

79°

TsF

T H E P L A C E FO R
DELI D E L I G H T S

Pepper Loaf.*"
Zeety-Flevored
Cola Slaw.... !7

89*
89*

Freeh-Made

Hoafli*
h .

T

Ham A Bacon
Loaf............. T
Flavorful

79*

Ham...............7
Freeh-M ade

m

Freeh-Seked

MH

U

&lt;»•

, 1 „

V

. 2"

7

*1"

Halibut Steak. 7

Sandwich
Steaks.......... ’A?

$ 2 «»

$499

Burritos.........£?

39*

M rs Sm ith's

Coconut
Custard Pis.... *£* M 39
Mrs. P a u l's Fam ily P a c k

Fish S tic k s....

• 1"

W akefield

vv

Snow Crab
Mast H f I I H M I M I M

• •

M i.
pfc|l.

X* ••
•3*9

&lt;21.
SAVt

-M e

Yt

* H O /I N

I / ( t&lt; o u t t N A s s t )H

,«.$&lt;! 49

^

11 I)

r

if n

A

14IM| 14* l i f t

,1 itJ U h I i&lt;
/.*&lt;M l M

ti

..

Vegetable
M ixtures

Fam ily Suppers

7

»2*9

A sso rted Patio

Taco S h e lls.................. M? 79*
Taco S h e lls..................*£? 99*
Taco Dinners................ •£? *1”
Taco Seasoning Mix ....'A? 35*
Mild Taco Sauce ■M i M i i a i 7! 69*
Hot Taco Sauce.
69*

I
V

79*

Snow Kina

OLD KL PASO TACO FIXINS

&gt;m

W ine

*139

P iz z a ............ »249

Seafood Treal. Frozen

1 Pi f P4)f.

79*

Chow Mein....'£?

Totmo Combination C la s s ic

£

• f llO W W ®

Egg Rolls....... *£ 89*
Chun King Chicken

French Toast.

i£ j.

Beef Cube Steak

( 7$ 2 ^ 9

Chun King M eat wrth Shrim p

Aunt Jemima Cinnamon Sw irl
or Regular

OF L IC I O U S T A S T I N G

FuNy Cooked Glased
(Either End or Whole)

Com
Souffle

co lor p rin t film fro m
I'u h tix w ith all
I processed color
p rin t rolls.

Bay Scallops.. 7, *499

Sweet Munch#*
Ch##a#..........7 M,#

Kaieer Rolls,

Juice
C o c k ta il........'«*£ 99*

Seafood Treat. Frozen

Teety Honey or

S m k i ww it c

W e lch 's Cranberry Apple or
Cranberry G rap e
Concentrate

Pork Loin Roast

*

1

99 V

• *
• #
• «

�I

Evtning H*r«M, Sanford. FI.

Wednesday. O t L l l. l t l l —7C

Fall Dessert M agic
Lemon Carrot Cake Is Truly Supreme
When the leaves turn color and cool winds prevail, everyone
knows that (all Is here. Thoughts turn to tantalizing desserts
that complement hot meals.
A lem on Carrot Cake Supreme is just the answer; the taste
is as breezy as the fall season. Top off (his delicious cake with a
Cream Cheese Fluff, then serve with an added treat: Golden
lem on Sauce . . . made easy with reconstituted lemon juice.
LEM O N C A R R O T C A K E S U P R E M E
(Makes one 10-Inch cake)
1 19-ounce) package condensed mincemeat, crumbled
2 cups finely shredded carrots
4 cup chopped walnuts or pecans
2 cups unsifted flour
1 cup firm ly packed light brown sugar
*« cup vegetable oil
11 cup reconstituted lemon juice
3 eggs

Spoon Go/cfen
Lemon Sauce over
cake and serve
with Cream
Cheese Fluff

2 tablespoons bilking powder
1 teaspoon baking soda

c

SAVf ?9C Pit t SAURY HUNliHY JACK
(UMTFRMILK OP BUTTf HTAS1IN

S A V E 5 6 c . DAIRI-FRFSH
A S S O R T E D S W IS S S T U F

B is c u its

Y o g u rt

i 3

10 V O Z . . LIQ U ID

GOLD OR WHITE

Soft
Soap

4 *1 F

i

-

B re a k fa s t C lu b W h ite

W th O t Putb* S i »» d
Price S«*»r Boo*'#t

Sandwich
B re a d .......2

THE P LA C E FOR
DAIRY FR ESH N ESS

Margarine ......... 3

*1

Fleischmann's S oil Corn Oil
(Twm-Pk or Bowl)

89*

Pillsbury (Serve with Milk)

6or
fim

»13»

REGULAR OR LIGHT
SAVE 6 0 c. F LE X NET

O c e a n S p ra y

69*

^

cup*

K ra ft T h o u sa n d Island,
Italian, C re a m y C u c u m b e r,
F re n c h . C a ta lin a F re n c h

Cheddar........*1“

Wisconsin Cheese Bar
Shredded Sharp Cheddar or

M ozzarella....

69*

Cheddar........ T »257

Swiss............ w

99*

Wisconsin Cheese Bar Sharp

Cheddar.......*189
Dairi-Fresh Small Curd,
Large Curd, Schmierkase or
Lowfat

or

2 0 c O ff L a b e l, F le x R e g u la r,
E x tra B o d y , O ily
Conditioner , bold# 8^4#

O rv ille R e d e n b a c h o r
G o u rm e t

Popping
C o r n ......

Pop Corn
O il..........

p*«

r

II o#

$119

Stainless Steel Copper Clad
Cottage
C h e e s e ......... *5 *189 Fry P a n ........ "Ef* *3”

bottle

6

W

H
jars

( L im it 2 4 J a r s , P l e a * * )

o

FREE 8100

Prima Salsa Regular, Meat or
Mushroom

VACATION SAVINGS
CERTIFICATE

Spaghetti Sauce ...
$148
Tomatoes..............79*
See details on packages
Manwich S a u ce .’V** 89*
Tomato S a u ce ...... 4
*1
Coronet Fam ily Pak
,
Tomato Paste........ “j 69*
Napkins.........79*
Tomato Ketchup...*1«»
Coronet
4 lo ll
*219
Bath Tissue... P»* 89* Wesson O il......... .
Coronet
Suniite o il............. «259
200-ct
Facial Tissue **• 69*

S -)0 9

Ice Cream
Sandw iches.
Assorted Friskies

Dog Food ... 3

N ____ _

C O R O N E T PAPER PRODUCTS

89*

Wise Twin Pack or Light
(7 to B-oz.)
(iti

THIS AD
EFFECTIVE IN
THE FOLLOWING
COUNTIES
B ia tw d . O u f lo lU .
C lt r u i, C o lll.r
H sfn an d o , H ig h ­
la n d s, M lllib o ro .
L * h * ,L * * ,
bU n pt**. 0&gt;*ng*.
O t c t o li . P a i c o ,
P in » ll» i. P olk.
S . r u o l. A
Sammol*. u n la t i
o lh * i» i» * n o l*d

P*9

Borden's

,

J

Arrange sliced zucchini In 2-quart baking dish or six 4 cup
ramekins. Pour over cheese sauce ( 4 cup for each ramekin).
Anange egg halves In casserole (2 egg halves per ramekin).
Sprinkle with crushed basil leaves.

C o o k ie s ........UV
Potato Chips ..

(Limit 1 PI#*t# With Oth#r Pufth*b#« ot
$5 or More, Kacludmg all Tobacco item*)

■

In a small skillet melt remaining tablespoon of butter, saute
onion and mushrooms. Mash egg yolks; add onion and
mushrooms, ham, olives and 2 tablespoons cheese sauce. F ill
whites with egg yolk mixture.

Sunshine Hydrox, Oalmeal
Peanul, Vienna Finger.
Coconut Creme. Vanilla
Cromo

8

1Z pk
pkg

S-|4S

14-01
c* n t

89*

35c Off Label. Liquid
Disinfectant

wheie shopping 6 o

Pine Sol.........£ &amp; *288

pleosue

Family Size

Ivory S o a p ....

hi

79*

Cover casserole with foil. (Place ramekins In large baking
pan. Cover all with foil.) Bake in prehealed 3M degree oven, 20
minutes or until sauce Is bubbly and eggs are heated through.
Yield: 6 servings.

Banana Bread
In The Bag
A sweet bread such aa banana currant bread w ill satisfy a
craving for deaierta for brown bsggen and school lunches.
Serve with cream cheese or your favorite fruit and milk for
an afternoon pick-me-up.

Powdered Bleach

Snowy.......... *1«

BAN AN A CU R R AN T B R EA D
1-3 cup soft butter or margarine
2-3 cup packed dark brown sugar

I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I M I I I I I H I I I K I t lll

:: 200 OFF

1 tea^MXHi vanilla
2 eggs
1 4 cups unsifted a 11-purpose flour
1 teaspoon baking powder
4 teaspoon salt
I tablespoon lemon juice
1 cup mashed ripe bananas (3 medium bananai)
1 cup currants

With T h lt Coupon ONLY

Armour
Sliced Bacon

SANFORD PLAZA, SANFORD
LONCWOOD V ILU G E CTR.,
LONGWOOD

1-lb. pkg.
(E fltC lW * O c l0 b 4 f 22 • 2k. 1881)

timUlllllllllHIlHItlUlUl

in Urge mixing bowl cream butter and sugar. Beat In
vanilla. Beat In egg*, on* at a time. In medium bowl mix
together flour, baking powder and salt; bland into batter
alternately with bananai and lemon Juice. Stir in currants.
Turn Into two gresawl and floured one-pound coffee cans. Bakt
In 330-degree oven one hour, or until cake tester inserted In
center of bread cones out dean. Cool 10 minutes, remove from
etna and cool completely. Thla kitchen-tested recipe makes
two loaves.

c

rtr\
^ ;

Parboil zucchini; cool and slice crosswise. Cut eggs in half
lenglhwtje, place yolka in sm all bowl. Lightly salt Inside of egg
white; set aside.
In a 14 quart saucepan, melt 3 tablespoon* butter. Blend in
flour. Cook over low heal until mixture Is smooth. Remove
from heat. Stir In milk. Heat to boiling, stirring constantly.
Boll and stir 1 minute. Remove from heat. Add cheese and stir
just until cheese Is melted.

99

M a x w e ll H o u s e
9

U J L

Ice Milk

SAVE 35c REGULAR
ADC OR ELECTRIC PERK COFFEE

Baby Food

,

&lt;S:\.

F L A V O R S OF DAIRI-FRESH

4

CO

SAVF ?6c
ASSORTFD HFINZ STRAINED

* 1 0 9

SAVE 30c, A S SO R T E D

Small Garbage B a g s.......
Super Weight Trash Bags
Tall Kitchen B a g s ...........

THE PLA CEFO R
HOUSEHOLD ITEMS

2 - llt a r
b o t t la

U r* * -* * C r

HEFTY GARBAGE
A TRASH BAGS

$189

Soft Drinks

$189

O rv ille R e d e n b a c h e r

63*

2 0 -o z . S u g a r F r o s t e d F la k e s
o r 15-oz. F ro o t L o o p s

Kellogg's
C«r«al
eel....

JO oj

PKPSI.DIIT PIPSI.PIPSI
LIGHT, MT. OKW, T U N

THIS AD EFFECTIVE
TH URSDAY, O CT. 22
THRU W EDNESDAY
OCT. 20, 1081 . . .
CLOSED S U N D A Y . . .

PUOLIX R IS C R V F S THE RIGHT
TO LIMIT QUANTITIES 5 0 1 0

*1**

HAM AND EGGS AU FR O M AG E
1 large (or 3 small) zucchini squash
6 hard-cooked eggs
4 cup ( 4 slick) butter
4 cup a 11-purpose flour
2 cups milk
2 cups (8 oz.) shredded Cheddar cheese
v« cup finely chopped onion
4 cup finely chopped mushrooms
4 cup (approx. 3 ot.) chopped ham
2 tablespoons chopped plmJento*tuffed olives
2 teaspoons crushed basil leaves

S h a m p o o .. ,,, boll* 9f 89

1 1 i re tv m ti *1 th ii M if M f u i
new **rt*t, eeaMahtf naw el P uhii■.

W ith C h ic k e n , C h e e s e or
B u tter; U p to n

S a u c e ..........4Ar

9

2 0 c O ff L a b e l, F le x E x tra
B o d y , N o rm a l to D ry, O ily

$229

C a t Volum a 11
thta w e ak lo r Just

D rin k s ......6 7.::

Noodle

Wisconsin Cheese Bar
Sliced Natural Provolone,
Mozzarella or

' J: Di

C a l Volum a 10

Shasta

Salm on........ -

Wisconsin Cheese Bar Mild
or Medium

irom

C o la or A s s o r t e d D iet S o ft
D rin k s

R o y a l P in k N o rth P a c ific
P in k

9

THE PLACE FOR
HEALTH &amp; BEAUTY AIDS

'• ■irsmiy.'v

Cream
Cheese ..... ... pkg 99* Salad
Kratt Sliced
D re ssin g .... .. belli# 69*
Old English
S u n s w e e t P itte d
C h e e se ........ X* *1” P ru n e s ........AV
Kraft Cracker Barrel Cheese
Mellow

* 4

Ham and Eggs au Fromage Is a meal-ln-a-dish, inspired by
the French. Since France Is a country of many cheeses, it’s
appropriate this entree be called au fromage, which means
"with cheese.”
This recipe has been adapted for everyone’s use and can be
prepared and refrigerated up to the baking point. With cheese
and eggs to extend this bit of ham, there’s no lack of protein In
the dish!
There are other values, too. Caldum and Vitamin A are high
and the zucchini squash provides a generous supply of Vitamin
C. Its a nutritious luncheon or supper dish your family will
applaud!

M ake le a rn in g fun for
your ch ild re n w ith T h e

P e a s ........ 2 7.:: 88*

Philadelphia Brand Solt

i2-oi $
bottle

D el M o n te E a rly G a rd e n
i ot

i

L ib b y 's H a lve d or S lic e d

P e a ch e s......"V

Old Milwaukee
Beer
1 2 -o x . c a n s i$ 1 6 9
e -p k . c tn .

Hair Spray

Grapefruit
J u ic e .......... »129

59* P in e a p p le ....3 !«, *1

C1R

Yogurt..........4

French Inspired
Ham And Eggs

Orange, Lake, Seminole,
A Osceola Counties Only!

In T h eir O w n J u ic e , D ole
S lic e d , C h u n k or C ru s h e d

5*1

Dairi-Fresh Assorted
Swiss-Style

IO«*M

gg«

Pineapple
J u ic e ........6

&lt; i«

Margarine.. • nit

24'Of.

D ole

Breakfast Club Regular
Quarters

Cinnamon
R olls.......

»1

1 teaspoon salt
Cream Cheese Fluff
Golden Lemon Sauce
Preheat oven to 32S degrees F. In large bowl, combine
mincemeat, carrots and nuts; toss with l i cup flour. Set aside.
In large mixer bowl, combine sugar, oil and ReaLemon; mix
well. Add eggs, 1 at a time, beating well after each addition.
Sift or stir together remaining 14 cups flour, baking powder,
soda and salt; gradually add to batter, beating until smooth.
Sitr in mincemeat mixture. M ix well. Turn Into well-greased
and floured 10-lnch bundt or tube pan. Bake 1 hour or until
toothpick Inserted near center comes out clean. Cool IS
minutes; turn out of pan. S en e with Cream Cheese Fluff and
warm Golden I^mon Sauce.
G O LDEN LEM O N SAUCE
1 cup sugar
2 tablespoons cornstarch
4 cup reconstituted lemon juice
4 cup water
4 cup margarine or butter
1 drop yellow food coloring, optimal
In small saucepan, mix together sugar and cornstarch; stir
In ReaI*mon and water. Cook and stir over medium heat until
mixture comes to a boll. Reduce heat; continue cooking and
stirring 3 to 1 minutes or until thick and dear. Remove from
heat. Stir In margarine and food coloring tf desired. Serve
warm with I-emon Carrot Cake Supreme. Refrigerate lef­
tovers.
CREAM CHEESE FLU FF
1 (8-ounce) package cream cheese, softened
2 tablespoons confectioners’ sugar
2 tablespoons m ilk
In small mixer bowl, beat together all ingredients until tight
and fluffy. Serve with l-emon Carrol Cake Supreme,
Refrigerate leftovers.

L:

I II S I 'I IS A l l ! I I’ A P t H

Coronet T o w e ls

59c /
■ *****

1 I- M .C * n . ***ort»d

e*Uv#a Cat Food
7 tf

0CM4W »

&gt;• I M t|

TAKE

li

l4 -o i. Pkg.

T4 0 1 . P kg , 1204 O lf Lab*l|

2000 Flush# t
ToU#t Bowl Cl#an#r
•

..... ...

II

M n u ta K c #
S l l H M i m O i M W &lt; I M I 1*411

OclOM'll )• 1*411

r

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F L O R I D A

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B R E A K

Wei) Point
Doeaffoinat#4 Coff••
4 lfH Kln*0&lt; t***.M -!4 1*411

■• #4P#*«4B*• • • • • • • ••• • • • ■ » * • « * • • ■ *

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

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IC-Evtfilm HiraM, SitHord, FI.

WidniUiy, Oct, 21. m i

ODDS CHART
OCT. I, 1981

l__

1
}

■‘

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�</text>
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                    <text>SUNDAY EDITION
74th Y ear. No. 31—Sunday. S ep tem b er 27,1981—S anford. F lo rid a 32771

E vening H erald — (USPS 481-280)—P rice 35 Cent*

County To Reconsider Low ■Interest Housing Bonds
B yDAKLENEJENNINGS
Herald Staff Writer
Seminole County commissioners will once again consider a
housing program that would give county residents a chance to
apply for low-interest housing bonds. County staff will present
the pros and cons of thd program to the board on Monday
during a 2 p.tn. work session.
Members of the Seminole County Home Builders Association
asked the commissioners in August to pass an emergency
resolution declaring a housing emergency in the county in
hopes the county would establish a Housing Finance Authority.
However, faced with a deadline that was only several days
away for starting up an authority, the board decided not to
rush into a decision and the September 1 deadline passed
without the resolution.
During the August work session on the subject, com­

I

missioners Bill Kirchhoff and Bud Feather both expressed
disfavor with the bond issue for low-interest housing.
"The federal government sees problems with it and tlie
program is not as broad as it once was. It is being discouraged
at the national level and by informed entitities at the local
level," Kirchhoff said.
"I'm not in favor of anything that competes with legitimate
county projects and we're having a hard enough time try ing to
float bonds for our I waste water) transmission authority,"
Kirchhoff said Friday.
The low interest loans would start at 11 »•* percent interest
compared to 17-18 percent in the conventional market.
I/?on Wetherington, president of la u re l Builders, Inc., in
Fern Park, has said however, the low-interest housing bonds
would be just as good for Seminole County as they were for
Orange County.

Despite

Migrant
Kids Face
Cutbacks
By DIANE M. JEFFERSON
Herald Feature Writer
Four-year-old Anya Guess has class
every (lay inside a trailer.
She is one of the lucky ones. There
was room in the program for tier.
Thirty-five other migrant children
in Seminole County will not have the
chance to go to school this year
because cutbacks in the migrant
program have closed two trailers, a
combined unit for three-and fouryear-olds at Hopper E lem entary
School and a unit for three-year-olds
at Goldsboro Elementary.
"We now serve 35 fewer children in
the county," said Linda Terwilleger,
m igrant
teach er
at
Midway
Elementary. "T hat’s quite a few
children. It affects a lot of lives, too,
because many times the little kids
come in here while the older children
are in school. If someone has to stay
home to take care of them &lt;because
they can't get in the program) a lot of
times the parents will leave one of the
older children home with them. It
means the older child's education is
being neglected too."
Children are placed on a waiting list
after the program Is full. The
program operates on a “ first come,
first served" basis, explained Palsy
Guy, Linda Terwilleger’s teaching
assistant. Teachers expect the lists to
get longer in October, when many
migrants who have homes in Seminole
County will return to them after
working up north.
Children who cannot be placed in
the program often must work in the
fields with their parents because the
family cannot afford to pay someone
to take care of them, Guy said.
Children coming into the Seminole
County program for the first time
often do not know (he names of colors,
they cannot count and do not know
their numbers, and some cannot write
their name or recite the alphabet, said
the teachers.
"We have children that at four
years old can now write their own

"The housing authority worked very well in Orange County
and it’s good for builders and for buyers," Wetherington said.
"The program is a good one because it allows people of low to
moderate incomes, who could not afford high-interest mor­
tgages. to be able to qualify for a loan that they would other­
wise not be able to get," he added.
A Duval County Housing Finance Authority representative
also agrees the program would be a benefit for the county's
residents.
M.O. Bill Soforenko, chairman of the Duval County Housing
Finance Authority came before the board during the August
meeting and told the commissioners the low-interest bonds
would be a "real public service" for people with low to
moderate incomes who want to buy a house in today's high
interest rate market.
According to the Duval Authority, there is a standard level of
income per household guide that serves as that county's

USDAProposal

County Wont Pare
School Lunches

HtrtM Photo ■y Olino JoJIorton
W 'llh m i r r o r r e f le c tin g h e r in te n s e c o n c e n tr a tio n , fo u r- y e a r- o ld
A n y a ('.u e s s le a r n s
is th e f ir s t l e t t e r o f h e r n a m e . In th e
S e m in o le C o u n ty m ig r a n t p r o g r a m y o u n g s te r s a r e ta u g h t to
w rite t h e ir n a m e s a n d o fte n s u r p r i s e t h e i r p a r e n t s w ith th e new
a b ility .

A"

name. Their parents are surprised
they can do that. But Die training here
lias to be reinforced at home," Guy
said.
If these children were not in the
migrant program, they would enter
kin d erg arten significantly behind
other children In their class.
"The child would be behind and
would be kept another year in kin­
dergarten," Guy said. This could start
a cycle of frustration for the child
which would follow him through
school.
Besides learning colors and num­
bers, the children are taught coor­
dination through cutting and pasting
and the playing of games. They learn

biology by planting pumpkin seeds
and watching them grow; they learn
respect for themselves and other
people. For many migrant children,
their only privacy is at school, where
they have their own little cubicle to sit
in and a mat to lie on. At home they
must often compete for attention wills
five other children and two working
parents
The
three-year-old
m igrant
program is funded through a special
allocation from the stale, said Guy
G arrett, director of special projects
for Seminole County. The sta te
legislature must renew it every year.
It has been renewed for the past two
See MIGRANT KIDS, Page (A

By DONNA ESTES
Herald Stall Writer
Lunches served to Seminole County's
school children will continue to feature
two ounces of protein and supply onethird of daily dietary requirements,
despite a Ui&gt; Department of Agriculture
i USDA i movement to cut lunch sizes,
said a Seminole School Board food ser­
vice spokesman.
"We are going to try to continue the
same program we have," said Darrell
Kirkpatrick, assistant director of fond
service.
The USDA has proposed that school
districts serve smaller portions and
substitute nuts, seeds, soybean curd or
yougurt (or meat in lunches.
Kirkpatrick not only opposes the
substitutions, he also opposes cutting the
protein requirements in the meals from
two ounces to P i ounces.
"It might not be too bad for the
elementary school children, but the P i
ounces would not be enough for secon­
dary imiddle school and high school)
students," he said.
The USDA came up with the projiosal
to save local school districts money — as
much as $350 million annually — to
partially offset the $1.4 billion reduction
in Die federal child nutrition programs.
USDA officials said the public lias until
Oct. 4 to comment on the proposal. The
plan could go into effect as early as midNovember. Under the proposal, the
smaller portions would cut 8-to-to cents

off the cost o( preparing each lunch
daily requirement, Kirkpatrick said
"Tlie proposal would be cutting meaLs
Individual lunches include two ounces
a little too shy," Kirkpatrick said
of protein;a vegetable and a fruit or two
And besides, lie said, cutting the size of
vegetables; Milk; and bread, pasta or
most portions is impossible. For in­ both.
stance, the proposal would cut milk
Kirkpatrick said on some days a little
quantities which must be served with dessert is thrown in as an extra
meals, from eight ounces to six while the
Of tlie recommendations for meat
entire milk industry is geared to substitutes, Kirkpatrick said soy bean
jiackaging eight ounces of milk.
products and peanut better, are high hi
"They do not package six ounces. I protein. A tablespoon of peanut butter is
don't think the industry is going to gear equal in protein to two ounces of meat.
up to make a smaller package," he said.
"But we do not have any immediate
Tlie same holds true, he said, for other plans for using a great amount of protein
cuts the USDA is proposing.
substitutes," he said. "We’ve got to make
Currently, frankfurters weigh two the lunch plate attractive or it will not be
ounces. "If they (Tlie USDA) cut tlie bought," he said.
requirement, what arc we supposed to
Kirkpatrick said he doubU that tlie
do? Lop off one end?" he asked. "We also
USDA plan will be approved. "I expect
buy battered fish portions with certain
when Die plan gets through tlie hearings
ounce req u irem en ts and two-ounce
in Washington, there will be some
hamburgers. I don't think the meat In­
modifications," he said. "And if it does
dustry is going to cut down to a smaller
pass. I doubt it will be mandatory."
putty or that we are going to cut a half­
"They (the federal government) are
ounce off the ham burger."
Another proposed cut by tlie USDA saying now ‘since we cut off financial
would be that schools serve pasta or assistan ce, we will also cut off
bread five times weekly rather than requirements.' It's tlie back door ap­
eight. "We buy pre-made hamburger proach and the dieteary associations are
buns, but we also bake an awful lot of fighting the cuts," Kirkpatrick said.
homemade buns," Kirkpatrick said. In
Some 16,000 students were being
addition to bread, noodles, spaghetti and served lunches in the Seminole public
other grain products are served.
school system daily by the end of tlie
Tlie meal pattern used in Seminole 1980-81 school year. So far this year,
supplies one third ol a child's minimum Kirkpatrick said between 15,000 and
daily dietary requirement. Tlie proposal 16,000 school lunches are being served
would cut that to about one-fourth of the daily.

TODAY
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government. He speaks English in a soft
voice.
"After staying here for two months, I
am going back to my country with a
message from the farm ers of America to
the fanners of Pakistan,” Sher said. "Do
organic farming. Use less water, and
improve tlie soil management by giving
organic matter to the millions of tiny
insects of the soil and get the soil
enriched."
"Tlie Americans have best technology
and agricultural know ledge in the entire
world." He added, “We will appreciate
th e ir assistan ce in sharing this
knowledge with us.
"American people have been very kind
to me during my first stay here in the
U.S.A. I especially want to thank the
professors of the University of Florida
and Dr. John Darby of the Agricultural
Research and Education Center in
Sanford; Gary M. Crews, assistant
manager for A. Duda k Sons and Bill
Pilolan of Pilolan F arm s, who have gone
out of their may to help m e."
Sher said he came here to learn how to
increase yield-per-acre (it is 10 times as
much here as in Pakistan) end go back to
share his knowledge with the other
farm ers in his farm ers association.
"In Pakistan we have big rivers, huge
barges, flowing canals, a good climate

and rainfall very similar to that of
Florida. The fanners are hard working.
Even then we cannot get good crops and
the yield-per-acre is yearly decreasing,"
he explained.
"Our present government has suc­
ceeded in solving so many other difficult
problems, but maintaining tlie fertility of
the soil has proved to be very difficult.
Thousands of tube wells, open surface
drainage system, hugh heaps of fer­
tilizer, hybrid seeds, and all went in vain.
Now the soil neither absorbs the water,
nor preserves the moisture for the
plants," Sher added.
“ Here I have seen fields, nurseries,
vegetable and sugar cane farms. Tlie
owners of the farms have helped me by
showing all their present available
practices of agriculture, machines and
also the material being used on their
farm s. A fter discussing the above
problem (or days and weeks, I am sur­
prised to know that it was all our own
fa u lt We had increased the area under
cultivation and were growing crop after
crop without returning back any organic
m atter to the poor soil. The result was
that the millions of tiny insects have left
the soil. The rich virgin top soil has
disappeared, its nitrogen contents gone
and the microbial life quite vanished
from the soil," he said.

Police Officer
Needs 6 To 10
More Operations
1-ake Mary Police l-t. David Higginbotham, who was shot in
the leg with his own gun during a scuffle with a suspect Aug. 28.
has undergone six operations and will require surgery 6-to-10
more times according to City Manager Phil Kulbes.

Pakistani Farmer Leams
American Way With Soil
By JANE CASSELBERRY
Herald Stall Writer
"I have come here to seek and to
learn," said Ahmed Sher, a 73-year-old
farmer from Pakistan who has been
visiting Central Florida farms during a
two-montli stay in Winter Springs.
He is the guest of his daughter, Dr.
Hamida Battla, former Seminole County
Health director, her husband, Moham­
med, and their two sons, in their home in
the Tuscawilla area.
Dr. Battla is now on the staff of the
V eteran 's A dm inistration clinic in
Orlando, where she met Virgil “Joe"
Pavone who lives in Longwood.
Pavone told his doctor about his being
a volunteer interpreter for various
foreign groups visiting this area to study
agricultural methods. When Dr. Battla
heard about this she asked Pavone if he
would coordinate a similar tour for her
father, and he agreed. Sher, together
with member of his family, farm s a total
of 1,500 acres in Pakistan. By law an
individual is allowed to own no more than
400 acres, but family members can pool
their farm land for growing crops.
Sher carries himself straight and tall
with dignity. Before the Republic of
Pakistan was formed in the division with
India, and his land was part of the British
Empire, he was an engineer for the

guideline for awarding the low interest loans.
In Duval County, a one person household where the income is
not more than $10,500 may be eligible for a low-interest mor­
tgage. Other examples, are a three-person household where
the income does not exceed $13,000; a five-member household
where the income does not go above $15,700; and for an eightperson household, the income limit is $18,500.
To apply for a loan in that county, an individual submits his
income information, including benefits, and states his number
of dependents on an application that is studied by the
authority.
The authority makes the final decision.
Soforenko said the low-interest loans are particularly helpful
for young people.
“The program helps young people live in good, dean shelter,
and it helps the 'American Dream’ come true," Saforenko
.said.

Kulbes urged I-ake Mary city officials and residents of UKcommunity who know Higginbotham, to visit him at Room
1620, Florida Hospital-Altamonte.
"He could use some cheering up. He will be there for quite a
while," Kulbes said at Thursday's council meeting
Higginbotham, 34, suffered a compound fracture of the left
leg when he was shot with his own Smith and Wesson 357
Magnum, four days before his resignation was to become
effective. He had resigned citing stress on the job.
Tlie police report, after Die shooting, said that Higginbotham
was on routine patrol of the Southward Orange Grove on
County Road 46A at 4:30 p in., Aug. 28, when lie radioed to
police headquarters that he was checking out a suspicious
looking black van parked in front of a farm equipment shed on
the property.
Higginbotham reportedly told other officers lie saw a
suspicious male at the shed and then radioed to headquarters
lie was going to investigate the scene. Police Chief Harry
Benson said at the time Higginbotham ordered the man to
freeze and when it looked like the man was going to run,
Higginbotham pulled his weapon.
Then another male came out of the shed and attacked the
officer from behind, Benson said. In the struggle, Higgin­
botham’s gun went off and the 38 caliber shell entered his
upper left leg.
Lake Mary police officers are continuing their investigation
of the mishap.

D r. J o h n D a r b y , r i g h t , e x p la in s U ie g r o w in g of
c u c u m b e r s to A h m e d S lie r of P a k i s t a n on a v is it to
th e A g r i c u lt u r a l H e s e a r c h a n d E d u c a tio n C e n te r ,
2700 E . C e le r y A v e „ S a n f o rd .

The city council earlier this month voted unanimously to
supplement Higginbotliam's workers' compensation payment
for 30 days. Workers' compensation insurance, because
Higginbotham was injured on the Job, is paying all medical
expenses and two-thirds of his $255.21 weekly salary. The city
supplement of one-third of his salary expires Thursday. —
DONNA ESTES

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Sunday. Saot. 17. 1M1

Evening H erald , Sxnford, F I.

One-Man, One-Job Flap Arises In Lake Mary

WORLD
IN BRIEF

By DONNA ESTES
Herald Staff Writer

’

US Sergeant Killed; 4 Hurt
By Mystery Blast h Italy
BARI, Italy (UPI) — An unexplained explosion at an
Italian air force base knocked down a building, killing
one U.S. Air Force master sergeant and Injuring four
other American soldiers standing alongside it, Italian
officials said.
They identified the American killed In Friday’s blast
as Air Force Master Sergeant Andrew Shenlon, 34, of
Baltimore, Md. Tire injured were Sgta. William A.
FrankowskJ, 24. Walter Surma, 35, Denis Johnson, 22.
and Milton Crasaeller, 50; all from Michigan. Their
hometowns were not immediately available.
The Injured Americans were taken to a hospital
where doctors said they were not in serious condition,
but some could be hospitalized up to a month.
A communique issued by the Italian air force Third
Region command in Bari said: "Preliminary in­
vestigation Indicates a terrorist attack or an explosion
of war m aterial can be excluded." It did not speculate
on other possible causes of the explosion.
O u d o f

SoM arity

M e e t

O p en s

GDANSK, Poland (UPI) — The crucial second
session of Solidarity's national congress was opened
Saturday by an American bishop who delivered a
strong message of support from U.S. labor unions
Bishop George G. Higgins of Washington D.C. ad­
dressed more than 600 Solidarity delegates, Including
union chief le c h Walesa, who attended a pre-congress
mass in the Gdansk sports hall where the meeting is
being held.
"I extend to you a hand of solidarity In the name of
the social and labor movement in the United States,"
Higgins said. "Free and autonomous unions are an
indispensable element of social life In the struggle for
Justice of man."
Earlier, Solidarity leaders said at a news conference
that the Intense campaign by the Polish government
and the Soviet Union Bgalnst the union had not in­
timidated them.

Freight Trains Crash
JONQUIERE, Quebec (UPI) — Two crewmen were
killed and a third was feared dead in the fiery head-on
colllson of two freight trains with more than 130 cars in
northern Quebec, officials said.
Canadian National Railways spokesman Jean-Guy
Brodeur said the crash occurred in a remote region
northwest of Montreal early Friday and sparked a fire
that burned out of control (or nine hours.
"The cause was an infraction to the operating rules
and probably a human mistake," Brodeur said, adding
that officials expected to have a "more precise”
reason (or the crash after the surviving crewmen were
questioned.
Brodeur said both trains were probably traveling at
about 25 miles per hour when they slammed Into each
other.
.

NATION
IN BRIEF

Bill Durrenberger, seven-year veteran of
the Lake Mary Board of Adjustment and a
member of the city’s planning and zoning
commission for the past two years, is being
asked to give Up one of the positions by the
majority of the la k e Mary City Council.
The council voted 3-2 Thursday night to
Instruct City Manager Phil Kulbes to seek the
resignation.
Councilman Ray Fox, who since taking
office in 1979 has opposed the concept of one
person serving on two dissimilar city boards,
sparked the decision.
Joining with him in seeking the resignation
were councilmen Richard Fess and Vic
Olvera. Opposing the move were councilmen
Gene McDonald and Kenneth King.

WASHINGTON (UPI) - Sandra Day O'Connor, on
her first day of work as a Supreme Court Justice
Monday, will be the only woman ever to attend one of
the Justices’ most secret of conferences.
The historic event will take place when the Supreme
Court members, 191 years exclusively male, meet
privately in their oak-paneled conference room to
begin discussing more than 1,000 petitions seeking
court review. No one but Justices is allowed at the
meetings, not clerks, nor secretaries nor aides.
The conference will be held in the same room where
the 52-year-old former Arizona appeals court judge
took one of two oaths of office Friday from Chief
Justice Warren Burger, becoming the first woman
ever on the Supreme Court.

9 0 ,0 0 0 F a n s M o b S to n e s
PHILADELPHIA (UPI) - The Rolling Stones
opened their first U.S. tour in three years to the
thunderous welcome of 90,000 rock 'n rollers who
cheered wildly as Mick Jagger swung above the crowd
in a yellow cherry picker, threw flowers and drenched
fans with buckets of water — his 1960s trademark.
Many fans also got doused before the concert Friday
when police poured about five buckets of water at
people crowding the bottom of the 200-foot-long stage.
Police were trying to clear the area so people could
reach water fountains located near the 50-loot-high
stage, decked In purple-and-orange trim.
Most fans were in their teens and early 20s and
weren’t even bom when the Stones began playing
together. It appeared that the only middle-aged
rockers on hand were the Slones themselves.

Fox has also complained to the council in
recent weeks that Durrenberger Is par­
ticularly abrasive to some land developers
who appear before both bodies.
To prevent double-serving in the future, the
council voted unanimously to change city
policy to prohibit appointment of one person to
two bodies.
Durrenberger said Friday he was asked to

serve on both boards by Mayor Walter
Sorenson and his appointments were con­
firmed by the council "I have no qualms with
them changing the rule If that's what they
want to do," Durrenberger said.
He said he has not been officially notified of
the council's action. "My Initial reaction is
that there la a good possibility I might resign
from both boards," he said.
He said he was at city hall about 10 minutes
before the council meeting began and no one
discussed the m atter with him. "It will be
difficult for qualified people to serve on these
boards if they are going to be treated this
way," he u id .
Prior to the vote on Durrenberger's official
fate, McDonald asked his colleagues for
authority to speak to Durrenberger about the
problem. "Let me go to Durrenberger and

Geneva Rancher Guilty
In G rass Import Scheme
A 41-year-old Seminole County man was convicted in federal
court in Orlando Friday of participating in a scheme to import
9640,000 worth of marijuana Into the U.S.
Joe Thomas Russell, a Geneva Rancher was found guilty of
conspiracy and importation of 1,600 pounds of m arijuana. The
incident took place Feb. 6. The 12-member Jury deliberated
less than two hours before returning its verdict. U.S. District
Judge George Young set sentencing for Oct. 22. Russell could
receive up to 10 years in prison and 930,000 in fines.
He was one of five persons Indicted May 7 by a federal grand
Jury for flying a twin-engine airplane from the Sanford airport
to Colombia, South America to pick up the marijuana, and
then unload it In a secluded pasture in west Volusia County.
Upon re-entering U S. air space, however, the plane was
spotted by agents of the Drug Enforcement Administration
and Customs. The plane's two pilots and ground crew escaped,
but did not have time to unload the pot.
Four of Russell’s five accomplices lav e pleaded guilty in the
case. One remains at large.

...K M A R T HIT AGAIN
A few hours after K-Marl employees chased down one
shoplifter Thursday, another suspected thief escaped - but
this one left something rather than taking something. Her
children.
When K-Marl security officers confronted suspected
shoplifter Pamela Denis Davis, 24, of Eatonville, she fled,
leaving her 16-month-old son and 3-year-old daughter in a
shopping cart.
Davis turned herself in at the Maitland Police Department
soon after and was charged with grand theft and child neglect.
She wus being held today in Seminole County Jail under 95,000
bond.
Tlie two children were turned over to iuvenlle authorities.
JEWELRY HEIST
l^eonard Pena, 1204 Homosa Court, 1-ongwood, reported
91,623 in jewelry was stolen from his bedroom Thursday while
he was away at work.
According lo Sanford police reports, Pena found someone
had entered his home through his bedroom's sliding glass door,
ami ransacked the place.
Missing were several gold and ruby rings, a wedding band,
diamond engagement ring, two necklaces and a .36-caliber
pistol.

Flros
it Courts
it Pollet

#

Richard Short, 32, of Casselberry, Just wanted to do a little
fishing. Thieves, however, had other ideas.
Short told Sanford police that he stopped off at Lake Minnie
about 7:30 p.m. Wednesday and while he was fishing someone
smashed a window In his car and stole an estimated 91,350
worth of tools.
Police said they didn’t know whether Short caught any fish.
LONGWOOD BURGLARY
Seminole County sheriffs deputies today were searching for
a possible suspect In the burglary of a Longwood home In
which $3,425 worth of property was taken.
The home of Naomi Adam, 41, of 300 Partridge Lane, was
entered by an unknown means sometime between Monday and
Wednesday, according to a sheriffs report. Taken ware two
cameras and several pieces of Jewelry.
Deputies said Mrs. Adam gave them a probable suspect in
the
SUSPECTED KILLER ARRESTED
A Jacksonville man was arrested Thursday at the Days
l-odge, Room 119, Douglas Road, Altamonte Springs, and
charged with aecond-degree murder, Altamonte Springs police
u id .
Leonard Joseph Mazzara, 2585 S. Ponte Vedra, Jacksonville,
w u arrested at 5 p m . Thursday by Altamonte Springs police,
assisted by Orlando Federal Department of Law Enforcement
and Jacksonville Beach police agents.
According to police, Mazxara w u arrested (or allegedly
murdering Frank Ihlenfeld and Linda Parrish while they were
staying at the Jacksonville Beach Ramada Inn on Sept. 7,1980.
Police u id they believe the murders were “drug related.”
Federal agents took custody of Mazzara and transported
him to Jacksonville, police u id .

Inmates: They'll Do Windows
And Floors, But Not Ditches
Prisoners from the Seminole County Jail, participating in a
work-release program, have been willing to do auto-mechanlcs
work, painting, grader operating and a myriad of other tasks
for the city of Lake Mary. Bu. they would rather be in Jail than
clean out d ty ditches.
City Manager Phil Kulbes reported to the City Council
Thursday night that he recently look a crew of five prisoners
out to clean a city ditch. The prisoners u id ‘take us back to
jail', ” Kulbes told councilmen.
He u id this was the only Inddent of its kind to occur since
work-release prisoners began working In the city several
months ago. Noting the d ty has only a three member public
works crew, Kulbes u id prisoners have been supplementing
the work of the city crew.

He pointed specifically to an Inmate who is a master
mechanic and has been working on repairing d ty equipment
and another, who is a skilled grader operator, and has been
helping out by grading d ty streets.
Also in recent months, prisoners aided in the renovations,
painting and repair work at the d ty hall on Country Club Ro«L
But, they will not dean out ditches, Kulbes repeated.
The issue of cleaning d ty ditches was brought up by formercouncilman Harry Terry from the audience at Thursday's d ty
council meeting.
Terry u i d it Is fortunate that a heavy rain storm has not
occurred in recent weeks. Drainage ditches are so clogged, he
said nothing could get through. Kulbes said no money has te e n
budgeted this year (or ditch cleaniiy. — DONNA ESTES

_
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itiigsa=£s8fflfflffi£aa&amp;&amp;

WASHINGTON (UPI) - Congressional Republicans
are preparing for the second battle of the budget,
expected to be a tough one, with reinforcements from
the White House backing them up.
Treasury Secretary Donald Regan and White House
chief of staff Jim Baker came to Capitol Hill Friday (or
a meeting of GOP Senators, who are in control of that
chamber. They urged the senators to support a con­
troversial bill extending the national debt to |1 trillion
and to back the president's budget cuts.

* ». *'■

• •* —-

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,

: SAN LUIS OBISPO, Calif.
(UPI) — The anti-nuclear
organization trying to block
operations at the Diablo
Canyon power plant has been
sued for the $1 million
authorities estimate it has
Cost to keep the facility open
during the dem onitration,
now In its 13th day.
! Another 25 protesters were
arre ste d
F rid ay
for
trespassing at the main gate
of the 92.3 billion plant,
raising to 1,662 the number of
those who have been arrested
during the "human blockade"
to shut down the plant — the
ftiost arrests for any anti­
Nuclear demonstration In U.S.
history.
: State Assembly Minority
Leader Carol Hallett and a
Coalition of dtizens groups
(Ued the Superior Court suit
against the Abalone Alliance,
an umbrella group of 71 anti­
nuclear groups, and several
o th e r
e n v iro n m e n ta lis t
organizations.
The suit charges that the
groups "Illegally" embarked
on a plan to block operations
at the twin-reactor plant by
trapeasing, interfering with
construction w orkers and
PG4E employees attempting
to enter the plant.
San Lula Obispo County
Sheriff George Whiting said
law enforcement spent more
than |1 million to keep the
peace — and the plant open —
during
the
non-violent
demonstration.
A b o lo n e
A llia n c e
ipokesm an C arl Zuchellk
called the ault "absurd."
"It's ridiculous on Its face,"
he u id . "PG 4E should pay
for the police protection.
They're the ones who built a
nuclear reactor on an aedve
earthquake fault."

.

T hou with notary seals, paid for by the d ty , are: City Clerk
Connie Major, City Treasurer Madeleine Papa and City
Secretary Carol Spotts.
‘
Councilman Ray Fox, who Initiated the new policy,
unanimously approved by the d ty council, u I d he has no
-objections to the women notarizing documents free-of-charge
for personal friends. But others should go to one of the many
other notaries In the d ty and pay for the service, Fox u i d "
Fox u id the free notary service by staff members is com- ■.
petlng with private enterprise — persons who are deriving
income from the work.
Virginia Mercer, a former council member, currently a
member of the d ty 's planning and zoning commission and a
notary, u i d d ty staff members providing the service are
unfair competition.

Joining in filing the suit
were Consumer Alert, the
County-wide Coalition for
I.ess Government and the
California A iiociation for
Rational Energy. In addition
te the Abalone Alliance, the
Mothers for Peace, Greenpiece and the Alliance for
Survival were nam ed as
defendants.
Craig Pruitt, a ipokesman
for the Pacific Gaa k Electric
Co., u i d those taken into
custody Friday were "the
most passive group to be
arrested yet. The demon­
strators simply walked up to
the sheriff's deputies and
were led into the bujes."

" I ’m paying my own fee (for the notary seal) and helping to
pay the notary fees tor th o u at d ty hall u well," she said , '
The coundl agreed.

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The demonstrators vowed
to continue their h arassm en t
until the plant la abandoned as
a nuclear reactor, but Zuchella
predicted the demonstration
would wind down this
weekend because no workers
would be going to the plant
A group of local residents
planned a p u cefu l protest
march Sunday from Avila
Beach to the main gate of the
plant. A similar march last
Sw day drew 5,000 of the grass
roots protesters.
The plant's main gates,
which were scaled by hun­
dreds of protesters during the
first days of the demon­
stra tio n , now stan d open
although demonstrators still
tr r to block traffic.

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A follow-up letter will be sent ou! in two weeks to thru* who
have not responded, according to Frank Jasa Seminole County
Agriculture Extension agent. A personal plea will be a t­
tempted with those who still fall to send back the survey after
the follow-up letter.
The information received will be tabulated and fed into a
computer and a written report sent to the board of county
commissioners, the County Agri-Center and any others who
have use of the results, Jasa said. He said he does not expect
the report to be ready until the end of the year.
The questionnaire is a county-wide effort to determine what
citizens believe are the most pressing problems and needs
facing Seminole County now and for the next three-to41ve
years. This survey is sponsored by the Florida Cooperative
Extension Service and the Seminole County Board of County
Commissioners.
Those polled are asked to answer all the questions. If they
wish to comment on any questions or qualify answers they
may do so.

SU N D A Y

Meanwhile, the "tent city,"
in a field about 12 milea from
the plant's gate, w u down to
about 100 residents, compared
lo some 1,500 camped out at
the d em onstrations' peak
over a week ago.

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_ _

Concerned about the water shortage, public transportation,
stray animals, vandalism, or drug and alcohol abuse?
Do you think d ty and county governments should be con­
solidated? Should dtizens pay to use public parks? Are you in
favor of strong restridions being placed on the use of
agriculturally-zoned land for development purposes?
If so and you are one of 2,200 Seminole Counly residents who
received a county needs assessment survey in the mail this
week this is your chance to speak out on these and other issues
and let officials know how you feel.
In addition to members of the general public chosen at
random some 500 questionnaires were sent out lo agricultural
producers in the county to survey their needs and opinions.

$unday, left. V, it t l- I A

Shop Sonford and Orlando daily 9.30 9.30 Sun. 1?6

Nuke
Group
Faces
Suit

Three Lake Mary City Hall staff members have been In­
structed by the d ty counril to stop notarizing free of charge
documents for "every Tom, Dick and Harry" who walks Into
d ty hall.

2 n d B u d g e t B a ttle L o o m s
8:45 p-m.; lows, 1:58
2:15 p m ; PORT CANAVERAL:
highs, 8:14 a.m., 8:37 p m .; lows, 1:47 a m ., 2:88 p m .;
BAYFORT: highs, 1:91 a m .; lows, 7:59 a m ., 1:57 p m .
MONDAY’S TIDES: DAYTONA BEACH: highs, 9:08 a m .,
9:23 p m .; lows, 2:18 a m ., 2:M p m .; PORT CANAVERAL:
highs, 1:55 a m ., 9:15 p m .; tows, 2:27 a m ., 2:47 p m .;
BAYFORT: highs, 2:13 n m ., 2:14 p m .; tows, 9:31 a m ., 9:55
pm .
BOATING FORECAST: 84. A agutM s Is jRpRer W et, Out
99MBes: Winds northeast to east near 19 knots through to d a y
becoming southeasterly around 19 knots tonight and Sunday.
S e u 4 to 9 feet decreasing to 2 to 4 feet tonight
AREA FORECAST: Partly cloudy through Stmday. A slight
chance of thundsrdw w sri today and Sunday. Htghe in the
upper 8le. Lows in the tow 70s. Wind norttwaat 19 to 15 n o b
decreasing at night. Rain probability 99 p srew t today and
Sunday.
EXTENDED FO R EC A ST- Partly cloudy with a chw ce of
thundsrahowers mainly south and central sections Tuesday

_

2,200 G et
Need Survey

»e

IX TO FrOB NOtOnZlflQ
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f . jt

WEATHER
NATIONAL REPORT: Thunderstorms packing 80 mph
winds lariied Plains states Friday and tornado watches were
posted Saturday In South Dakota and Nebraska. A tornado
touched down In central South Dakota, but no injuries were
reported. Thunderstorms scattered over the Florida Peninsula
Friday and dumped almost 4 Inches of rain In M iami Record
cold was reported in Jacksonville, Fla., where the U d t p t
reading Friday morning was the d ty 's fourth record-breaker
this month. Meanwhile, Hurricane lien s grew stronger
Saturday as it swept over the open Atlantic, but forecasters
said its northwest course probably would spare North A m srks
from its 100 mph winds. Irens is the fifth Atlantic hurricane of
September, a record for the number of hurricanes in a single
month since 1580. Lets Friday, the center of Irene was near
latitude 19.5 north and longitude 54.0 west, or about 798 miles
east of San Juan, Puerto Rico. Irene was moving at about 11
mph and w u expected to continue that speed and Its nor­
thwesterly direction Saturday forecasters said.
AREA READINGS (8 a m ) : temperature: 71; overnight
low: 70; Friday’s high: ■ ; barometric pressure: 39,13;
relative humidity: 94 percent; winds: North East a t 9 mph.
SUNDAY’S TIDES: DAYTONA BEACH: highs, 8:12 a m.,

Adopting its 11.56 million budget and approving the proposed
tax rate of $3.16 per 91,000 of assessed property value will kick
off the Longwood city commission public hearing at 7:30 p.m.
Monday in d ty hall.
- The commission will also hear discussion for a petition for
annexation to the city, and hear a follow-up report of some "No
Parking" signs that were placed along county road 427 in front
Of some local businesses.
• Two weeks ago Longwood d ty commissioners held their first
hearing on the proposed budget and tax rate and the com­
mission voted to tentatively accept the proposed budget.
The proposed tax rate will Impose a 45 percent tax increase

By BONNIE OLVERA
Herald Correspoadeal
NCR Corp. and Stromberg-Carlaon are sponsoring a Fall
Festival in Lake Mary starting Sept. 28 and continuing
through Oct. 4. Proceeds from the activities will be directed '
toward the United Way and the Lake Mary CTwistmas
Fund.
The week will begin with In-plant activities Including
Merchants Day when local businesses have been invited lo
go into the plants to aet up displays and answer questions
employees may have.
On Thursday representatives from Seminole Communitiy
College and University of Florida will present educational
opportunities in the area. Friday, at 5:30 p jn ., a volleyball
match between NCR and Stromberg-Carlaon will be held.
A business-government luncheon is planned at NCR on
Oct. 3 at noon for merchants and d ty officials. At 1 p.m.,
NCR and Stromberg-Carlson will begin a Road Rally in the
city.
At the same time, a Community Festival will begin at
Crystal Lake Park. These activities will include a flea
market, games, merchants'boothsand demonstrations. The
Community Improvement Association (CIAf will provide
the concession stand.
Residents wanting to sell their arts and crafts are
welcomed to set up booths of their own. At 7 p.m., the city
will sponsor events to be announced later.
On Sunday, the final day, NCR and Stromberg-Carlaon
will compete in a golf tournament followed by a softball
game at Lake Golden in Sanford. '
The festival will conclude with the annual NCRStromberg-Carlson picnic. There will be games, contests,
entertainment, concessions and an auction with m er­
chandise donated by local businesses.
---------------------------------------

Action Reports
★

Longwood To
OK Budget

discuss the problem," McDonald said, adding
If he couldn't work things out he would bring it
back to the council.
•
King supported McDonald's request saying
he wanted to avoid any possibility of animosity
between Durrenberger and the council.
"I suggest the reward system in Lake Mary
is bad," McDonald said. "He Is not beieg
rewarded for what he has done."
Fox u id , however, he was unwilling to with­
draw his motion "to maintain harmony In this
type environment."
Fox's position that one person should not
serve on two dissimilar boards has remained
the same since he Joined the council in
January, I960.
In a memo to colleagues elrlier this month,
Fox urged that Durrenberger's resignation be
sought.
Currently, Durrenberger la chairman of the
city's board of adjustment.

Fall Festival
In Lake Mary

AUTOSTOLEN
A 1973 Ford Torino was reported stolen from American Auto
Sales, 2613 S. Orlando Drive sometime between 7 p.m. Wed­
nesday and t a.m. Thursday.
William Lipthrott, owner of the car lot, said the vehicle was
worth 9800.

FISHERMAN ROBBED
UP IN SMOKE
A Connecticut man was arrested Thursday afternoon for
attempting to shoplift 10 cartons of cigarettes from K-Mari on
U.S. Highway 17-92.
According to sheriff's reports, Jam es Dunn, 37, of Norwalk,
Conn., allegedly walked out of the store at about 3 p.m. with the
cigarettes hidden in a brown, paper bag. After store employees
began to pursue him, Dunn reportedly threw the cigarettes in a
car and ran across the street, and into a service station where
he was arrested.
Dunn was being held in Seminole County jail on theft charges
under 9100 bond.

O 'C o n n o r To B e A d m itte d
To C o u rt 'In n e r S a n c tu m '

Fox said Durrenberger could make the
choice on which board he would like to con­
tinue to serve. But, he added, by serving on
both the adjustments board, which makes
final decisions on zoning variance matters,
and the planning and zoning commission
which advises council but has no power of Its
own, Durrenberger has been required to
"serve two m asters." "I think this Is im­
proper," Fox said.

over l u t year’s tax rate if it is accepted. Residents In
longwood now pay 9117 per 91,000 of assessed property value.
A higher tax rate is necessary, d ty officials say, because
more persons will be eligible for the 915,000 Homestead
Exemption this fiscal year.
The proposed 93.16 tax rate Is expected to generate 9426.000
in property taxes, according to Dave Chacey, d ty ad­
ministrator.
I j s t week a group of longwood business owners, wltose
firms are located on countv mad 427. asked the commission to
remove the recently Installed "No Parking" signs from m
front of their establishments.
At the Monday night meeting, the board w ill hear a report on
the status of the "no parking signs" and will determine what
action will be taken regarding the signs.
One businessman told the commission that by putting the
signs up on state road 427, the commissioners had "virtually
closed down their businesses."
Discussion concerning what to do about chickens that run
around freely in the Longwood historical district is also on the
commission meeting agenda. - DARLENE JENNINGS

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Evening Herald
U JSPJ M lISO)

300 N. FRENCH AVE., SANFORD, F I A 32771
Area Code 305-322-2811 or 831-9993
Sunday, S ep tem b er 27, 1981—4A
Wayne D Doyle, Publisher
Thomas Giordano, Managing Editor
John Toen|es, Advertising Director

Home Delivery: Week, 11.00; Month, *4.25; 6 Months, *24.00;
Year, MS-00. By Mall: Week, *1.25; Month, *5.25; 6 Months.
*10.00; Year, 157.00.

Let's Pay
By DORIS DIETRICH

Military More
A consensus of Americans now favors pay in­
creases for the military. Both the Senate and the
House of Representatives want to give our ser­
vicemen and women a higher salary, but the two
bodiesdlfferastohowmuch, and to whom.
The Senate has passed a bill that would give
some pay increases to recruits — as low as 9
percent - but targets higher pay hikes — as high
as 22 percent — to non-commissioned officers.
The House of Representatives has approved an
across-the-board 14.3 percent pay increase, with
flexibility — up to 25 percent of pay — for the
services to target the increases.
Both bills cost about the some. Both have good
arguments behind them. A congressional con­
ference committee now tins the job in ironing
them out.
We hope they make a compromise that
enhances both recruitment and retention of our
servicemen so that the pay increase can go into
effect (Jet. I.
The logic behind the pay-targeting approach,
favored by Congressman Bill Lowery, R-San
Diego, is that it will send bigger paychecks to the
senior NCOs who want to stay in the service, but
leave because private industry gives them better
salaries. Hie navy has a deficiency of 21,000 NCOs
— technicians who are hard to replace and have
cost thousands of dollars in training. By offering
pay increases of 22 percent to retain this vital
group, the services can maintain combat
readiness, while not sacrificing recruitment.
Congressman Duncan Hunter, a major sponsor
of the across-the-board pay bill, doesn’t think
Congress should target the pay hikes. The purpose
of a 14 percent across-the-board pay increase is to
bring all military salaries up to speed" with the
inflation since 1972, when the volunteer army was
created. Soldiers in younger grades suffer as
badly from inflation as more senior members.
The same 14.3 percent pay increase will mean
about $200 a month more for u top E-9 grade, while
about $7() for starting E-l. Hie bill would give the
Pentagon discretion to raise or lower salary In­
creases by 25 percent among targeted groups.
Hiis would maintain inducements for both
recruitm ent and retention, while leaving
flexibility for special cases.
Servicemen and women are the most important
element of a stronger defense. Anything our
country can do to induce ambitious, hard-working
people to join the military, and to keep seasoned
and highly devoted soldiers at their posts will
benefit oil Americans. Recruits and senior grades
alike deserve the financial support of the country
they defend. We must send a clear signal to all
Americans in uniform. We need you!

High Dining Costs
One good place to start Defense Department
cutbacks would be among the ranks of the
numerous servants and bat boys who cuter to the
needs of the high Pentagon brass.
If Congress is looking for cuts in military
spending, it could do a manpower check in the
Pentagon’s executive dining rooms and start
thinning out the help.
Rep. I*s Aspin, D-Wis., says the Navy is the
higgest spendthrift when it comes to overstaffing.
He suid it costs the Navy $31 to serve a filet of sole
lunch to an admiral, but the admiral pays only $4.
Hie taxpayers pick up the rest of the check.
Hie other services aren’t far behind. An Air
Force lunch in its private dining room averages
$12, an Army lunch, $15. Too much help is the
problem. If the brass had to foot the bill for such
meals, they soon would make some adjustments.
Hie military isn't the only culprit. Some of the
civilian brass" in Washington delight in the
, private dining facilities available.
Frugality in government doesn’t just mean $1
billion cuts. A close watch on wastefulness
everywhere can add up to considerable savings,
too.

BERRYS WORLD
ti

In the dark.
The itary of my Ufe.
I refuse to lecture on the Importance of a
functional flashlight and matches in an ac­
cessible place In the home. Some day — or night
— the power may fail and there you are, blind, as
well as — er, dumb, shall we say.
Thai fuse that I feel like blowing on occasion
blew on its own one night this week and left our
household dark and quiet (for a change) until the
electrician came to the rescue the nest day.
I was alone, so I called my husband on the Job.
There waa light. I lit into him for the dilemma I
was in.
Very calmly, he told me what to do {not where
to go) and hinv to get the locked fuse bos
unlocked and open the catchy door. The darkness
outside grew darker.
I called my nest door neighbor, June Lucas,
telling her I needed her husband which she Is
accustomed to hearing after being neighbors for
22 years.

June graciously sent her husband, Bud Lucas,
over, who didn’t seem to be too charged up over
missing a favorite TV program. He recom­
mended an electrician after surveying the
Irreparable damage.
The one, lone well-worn pink candle 1 finally
managed to salvage was about to meet Its end.
I might add that we're remodeling, and are
living from cardboard boses.
I stumbled around In the still, black
surroundings trying to find matches and the
fUshllght.

sure enough, located some matches to light the
hurricane lamps I finally found. The oil was dry,
bul no problem — we had plenty more. I stubbed
a toe and fell over a chair making my way to the
walk-in pantry. Glory be. I put my hands on the
lamp oil. Bul the minute I touched the lid with
my fingers I knew I needed I-aurie to loosen thif
safety cap. I can't. But she can.
Carl came in about two hours later - a long,
long period of lime to be In the dark. He riggedup wires from the one room that was on a
separate circuit — light of my Ufe.
—I thought about many things — even'
Abraham Lincoln, and how he made his way to:
the White House with a kerosene lamp.
Bul most of all, 1 thought about President:
Lincoln's wife, Mary- How would she lav e;
removed her contact lenses in the shadows of a
lamp?

The phone rang again and It was Carl checking
on my welfare. There was light once more when I
lit in. "It doesn’t make any difference where the
flashlight is," he said, "it needs batteries. Laurie
(5-year-old granddaughter) left it on the other
night when she was pUying with it, and I have
plenty of matches in my truck (which was with
him)."

Or how would she apply her m ascara — or eye
shadow — or...?

I searched his pants pockets in the laundry and

JULIAN BOND

RUSTV BROWN

Time For |
Black
Volunteers |

She's Not
All Thumbs
I once was very disapproving when a
columnist friend of mine wrote about having a
cold. Ye gods, I thought, columnists should
read vastly, research enormously and think
deeply before coughing up their pithy
paragraphs.
Yet, I found myself reading every word he
wrote about his stupid cold because I could
completely Identify with his discomfort.
Well, now I have my own experience to
share. I’m writing this — with nine fingers —
for the thousands of you who also have
smashed your thumbs in car doors.
It happened when I was in a hurry and
upset. Doesn't it always? I was loading
umpteen things into the car for a day's outing,
including a salmon casserole and a wiggly
puppy. It probably happened when I loaded
the pup and quickly slammed the door to keep
her from Jumping out.
1 heard myself yowl &lt;md was astonished to
see my thumb caught in the latch. For a few
very scary seconds, I didn't think I could open
the door. I thought of that guy In some
Western movie who has to bring himself to
pull the arrow out of his chest. With a gutsy
yank I did it.
The thumb was slashed and the nail
.swacked. “ People do this all the tim e," I told
myself, trying to play It casual and tough. I
walked back into the house, filled a plastic
bag with Ice, tied it to my thumb and drove on
my way.
During (he next couple of days, while the
thumb was always on ice, people regaled me
with smashed thumb stories. Most delighted
in recounting how a doctor opened a paper
clip, heated one end and seared a hole in the
nail to let out the blood collecting underneath.
1 avoided that fearsome onslaught as long
as t could, but when the thumb got bluer and
bigger, 1, too, got the hole. Only mine waa
made with a battery-operated drill and my
chief concern was that the doctor wouldn't
stop in time and drill right through to the
other side. He didn't of course, and I resumed
life without the use of a left thumb.
It's been five weeks already, and 1 still
can't use II, so I have teamed many things.
Like, why the espresalon, “sticking out like
a sore thumb," came into being. That
describes my thumb exactly. It stands in a
perpetual “thumbs up" position. II will not
Join the other lingers under the washcloth to
wash the right am t. It refuaei to wrap around
the handle o( the tennis racket for my twotianded backhand so, o[ course, my game Is
ruined.
My left thumb previously accomplished
many useful services. Fastening a bra, for
one. At first, If getting dressed alone, I
allowed an extra 15 minutes “fumble time."
It was either that or stride, half naked, to a
neighbor’s house for help.
Then one day, a crushed thumb survivor
told me: “Don’t be silly. Fasten the bra In
Iron), then swing it around lo the back." It
works!
But I have found no solution lo needing both
Ihumba (or opening the halves of a cracked
egg. Neither can I do something with my right
hand and hold a coffee mug with the left.
Pressing thumb tseks and thumbing through
maguzines are out of the question.

•let them eat jellybeans I"

JEFFREY HART

About William Loeb
William l/* b , whose Manchester Union
le a d e r made him a political power In New
Hampshire, and, because o( the earlyness of
the N«w Hampshire presidential primary, a
political power In the nation, was a friend of
mine and a fascinating p m o a
In a variety of wayi, Loeb waa a throwback
to an earlier America. He went to Williams
College and he spent two years at Harvard
Law School, but he belonged to the era of
Teddy Roosevelt and the great brawling
newspaper tycoons, people like William
Randolph H earsl and Colonel Robert
McCormick.
What everyone knows is that Bill Loeb was
a commuted conservative, a rough fighter,
and that his slam-bang editorials often used
several kinds of type, big capita! letters in­
dicating the main punches being thrown.
He believed that you had to reach a mass
audience with other things on Its mind by
writing directly and vividly. He called Nelson
Rockefeller a "wife swapper" and Henry
Kissinger "a tool of the communist con­
spiracy." Jack Kennedy was a “ liar," and Ate
a “stinking hypocrite."

\

Bill Loeb m ay have w recked the
presidential campaign of Edmund Muskie
with his attacks on Muskie and hia wife —
these reduced Muskie to tears In front of the
Union Leader building in 1971 But maybe
that was useful — should a presidential
candidate be so sensitive to rough Journalistic
tactics?
Supporting Reagan in 1980, Loeb waa
merciless to potential threats like George
Bush and Phil Crane.
What people who knew Bill Loeb only

through his editorials could not know Is that
he was a courteous and courtly man, a man of
great personal warmth, who loved the out­
doors, and — like his hero, Teddy Roosevelt —
was an ardent conservationist.
boob's father had been President Theodore
Roosevelt's personal secretary, Roosevelt
was his godfather, and as a boy Loeb grew up
in and around the Oyster Bay, Long Island,
Roosevelt enclave. He always described
himself as a "Teddy Roosevelt con­
servative.” That meant patriotism and anti­
communism, of course, but also some sur­
prising things. There was a home-made
progressive-era flavor to Loeb's con­
servatism.
He was a democrat with a small “d" and he
believed in an Inheritance tax of 100 percent.
He did not think you ought to have the ad­
vantage o( inherited wealth. His will
stipulates that the employees of The Man­
chester Union Leader will control the paper
alter his death.
In 1977, Bill Loeb and his beloved wife
Nackey were aeverely injured when their rai
skidded on an icy road near Reno. Ho
recovered, but she rem ain s partially
paralyzed. The last lime I saw them together,
before the accident, he was like a college b w
In love, attending to her every need. They had
Just come back from a week of duck hunting
in Maine.
The Bill Loeb caricature was not the real
individual. Everyone who knew him will miia
him. He was a man from the time-capsule,
from a vanished and marvelous America,
brash and brawling and very much alive.

Talk about cheap! President Reagan is
getting ready to squeeze the welfare penny
like it has never been squeezed before.
Remember the safety net? The White
House now wants to reduce it lo tissue-paper
strength, thus guaranteeing that it will
dissolve under the lightest weight.
The administration has proposed to reclaim
billions o{ dollars for the national treasury by'
culling support for the school-lunch program,'
enforcing new regulations governing welfare;
recipients’ personal assets and increasing;
investigations into food-stamp fraud.
The president and his team hope that these;
actions will reassure conservative hard-liners'
that they have not forgotten their campaign
promises to crack down on the welfare cheals
and poverty professionals who Reagan
claimed were stealing the treasury blind.
In recent weeks they have sought to pare:
even more dollars from programs that are;
already languishing under the Draconian,
budget cuts made in the first half of the year:
when Congress was pliant and the president's:
popularity supreme.
It is likely this country’s nearly 4 million;
welfare families will soon face stale;
inquisitors who will tally up the value of their;
personal property and household effects. If;
the television set and grandm a's broach add:
up to more than *1,000, they will have to be;
discarded or sotd under penalty of losing;
federal assistance.
State welfare caseworkers will have to:
become experts at personal property ap;
pralsal, and welfare recipients will be
reduced to the barest essentials of daily life.
Children who eat federally subsidized
school lunches will find less on their plates
under a proposal from the Agriculture
Department. The portions will be not only
smaller but less nourishing as well. .
The familiar 6-ounce milk container will be
replaced with a 4-ounce carton. Students in
the fourth, fifth and sixth grades will see their
2-ounce meat patty shrink by half an ounce.
The limit on personal assets and the cut­
back in school lunches will require additional
sacrifices by the portion of the population that
Reagan has called "the truly needy."
Moreover, these and other new budget cuts
come in the wake of increased unemployment
among all American workers and a staggering
Jobless rate of 50 percent among teen-age
black m iles. This rise in unemployment and
social-services rolls.
Bul don’t w orry. Those greedy
schoolchildren will Just have to make do with
even less, and their spendthrift parents will
have to scrap most of the furniture at home or
be cut off the dole.
We black Americans must develop a
response to these economic hard times that is
both reactive and aggressive.
The old home-grown social-welfare in­
frastructure o{ black America — churches
and lodges, savings clubs and burial societies
—must be revived and revitalized to meet the
challenges of the austere '80s.
f

JA C K ANDERSON

Ford's Misleading Endorsement
WASHINGTON - F o rm er P resident
lerald Ford has the leds on his tail. He signed
letter endorsing the Issuance of a privately
iiinted medal commemorating the 200th
nniveriary of the Battle of Yorktown, and
ostal inspectors say the le tte r was
nlsleadlng.
No one, apparently, is accusing the
oodheartfd ex-president ol deliberately
rving to misrepresent the medal he touted In
solicitation letter sent out to productive
uyers. He's on the honorary board ol
rustees ol the prestigious Capitol Historical
odety, which Is issuing the medal, and he
imply lent his pestlge to the promotion effort
y signing a letter that was prepared by the
ociety's marketing consultant, a Wyoming
utflt called Fleetwood.
Bul postal inspectors say tlw aodety'a ads
- and Ford's letter - are misleading. Both
be ads and th e jstte r said that the society’s
ffering was a "National Medal" suthortied
iy Congress.
This is stretching it a tut. inougn uw
odety UaeU has a congressional charter, the
rorktown medal Is definitely not a "National
ledal" - it's a private lame.
What difference does It make? To coileodts,there’s a significant distinction between
private, commercially issued medal and a
National Medal" - which Is one struck by
he U.S. Mint. The Mint's medals, which must

be spedfically approved by Congress, are
more valuable to numismatists.
immediately after the historical aodety'a
test ads ran last July, investigators for Rep.
Frank Annunzlo, D-llL, pointed out the
m isleading sta te m en ts to the so ciety 's
p resid e n t, F red Schwengel, a form er
Republican congressman from Iowa and a
well-known history bull.
Schwengel told my asso ciate Tony
Capacdo that he hadn't seen the final version
of the ads before they ran, and he took steps to
eliminate references to a "National Medal"
and congressional authorization in future ads.
M eanwhile, however, the m ailed
solidtation signed by Ford went out without
these corrections. A Fleetwood spokesman
said the firm drafted the tetter and submitted
It to Ford, who made minor changes and
signed it. He had agreed to let his name be
used only if he had editorial control aver the
letter, the spokesman said.
"1 was even more pleased," the F old letter
said in port, "to know that the United Statea
Congress has authorised the United State*
Capitol Historical Society to issue national
medals and that this one is to be issued
simultaneously with a new stam p." Postal
tiupectors say the Ford tetter and the ac­
companying literature contained a t least five
addUiatal misleading statements.

* )» J . I * *

In a private letter to Schwengel on SepL 2,
the Mint's legal counsel, Kenneth B. Gubin,
recalled their conversation of Aug. 7 con­
cerning the misleading ads, reminded the
society president that he had been told to
correct the ads and reproached him for the
Ford tetter by writing: "The appearance of
the direct n u ll fliers a week after our con­
versation was quite disturbing."
The Fleetwood spokesman said about
500,000 solicitations containing the Ford tetter
had been mailed out, resulting In about 2,000
orders for the Yorktown m edal Schwengel
apologised (or the Ford tetter, saying, "I
don't know how we missed” the misleading
statements.
The U.S. Capitol Historical Society has
signed a consent order agreeing to offer
refunds to any collector who feels bilked by
the Ford tetter, which, postal inspectors said,
was a “ buslc part of the offering" far the
commemorative m edal And the postal in­
spectors ha ve filed a civil complaint as part of
the consent agreement, In case the society
n u k es any fu rth v slipups.
Footnote: Repeated requests for comment
drew no response from the farmer president's
office.
NRG COVER UP: The Nuclear Regulatory
Commission wasn't quite as forthcoming as It

might nave been during recent public
hearings on the safety of nuclear power
plants: It failed to disclose a two-year-old
report by its own Inspection and enforcement
division favoring stricter safety standards in
the wake of the near-disaster at Three Mile
Island in the spring of 1979.
Top NRC officials insisted before the
Atomic Safety and 1Jcensing Board that
critical valves and gauges - like those which
(sited at Three Mile Island —didn't need to be
placed in a special “safety-grade" category
lor regulation.
After the hearings, though, a researcher for
tha Union of Concerned Scientists discovered
an Internal NRC report which had concluded
that such reactor components needed closer
testing and evaluation. This was precisely
what the scientists' group had been main­
taining at the safety hearings.
Robert Pollard, a nuclear safety engineer
who used to work with the NKC and is now a
member of the Union of Concerned Scientists,
told my reporter Paul Marks it was im­
possible that agency officials had been
unaware of the Inapectus' report. Yet the
scientists had been unable lo extract the
report from the agency with discovery
proceedings filed by the group's lawyers
before the summer safety hearings. It was
finally located In the NRCs Phliadelpldj
regional office by researcher Steve Sholly

» • v - • -

H V1} t V

�f
OPINION
Evening Herald. Sanford, FI.

Sunday, Sept. 17, I t l l - S A

OUR READERS WRITE

'Stealing
Deserves
Arrest'
I salute all those gallant men and
women and especial!) Mr. Feather,
former school board member, who
appeared before the Seminole County
School Board to protest the increase in
taxes. How sad it has become when only
one school board member has the
conscience to vote with the wishes of
the people.
Thank you, Pat Telson, for siding
with the people who will have to pay the
bill.
Why do some of our elected officials
ignore the wishes of the people? It
doesn’t |ust happen locally. Let's
rem em ber when thousands of
Floridians asked Sen. I^iw (on Chiles to
vote against giving our Panama Canal
away and to vote against the boycott of
the then-Christian country, Rhodesia.
Sen. Chiles is now asking us to re­
elect him to the Senate.
If we want our government to be our
slave and not our master, we must
understand it, participate in it, distrust
it and control it.
Couldn't we, with proper leadership,
follow the example of the county to the
north of us? Volusia County people do
not allow their government to spend
their tax money without being ap­
proved by referendum. If they can
impose such restrictions on how their
tax money Is spent, why can't we?
For someone to lake money in the
form of taxes from you or me without
our approval is stealing and the offense
should warrant arrest. The only dif­
ference in theft from us taxpayers and
armed robbery is that the bureaucrats
steal by decrees and the pain Is
prolonged while the armed robber
scares hell out of the victim suddenly
and his action makes mention in the
crime section of our Evening Herald.
Bonner L. Carter
Sanford

Computers Require
Expert Technicians
In this Computer or Calculator age.
what are we going to do 20 years hence,
d we don’t change our educational
system?
The information has to tie put in the
unit or machine by a human being and
is withdrawn from the machine by
another human being. The machine
only records and stores the information
to be used at u later time.
Of course if you know Imw It) operate
the machine, it will perform wonders
for you. it will add, subtract, divide,
multiply Just by the touch of the right
buttons. If you don’t know bow to
operate one of these' machines and
touch the wrong button, a very grave
mistake can be made.

Lupus: The Greatest Killer Disease
I would like to thank you for
publishing "Some Interest In Lupus".
There would be much more interest in
"Lupus" — Lupus Erythematosus — if
people realized that it is the greatest
killer disease of today.
It is not given credit for being lethal
because death certifica tes usually
read: pulmonary complications or
heart failure. Nothing is said about
Lupus being the underlying cause of
these complications.
It Is a disease of young women in
their 30's. Only five percent of men
have it. Neither men nor children arc
immune, however. The article onlyspeaks of Systemic Lupus. But there is
another type — Discoid Ijjpus — which
affects the skin. Five percent of these
degenerate into System ic Lupus
Erythematosus tSI-E). Not only can It
be brought on by excessive exposure to

Ultra-Violet Rays (sunlight), but also
by allergic reactions to drugs, par­
ticularly (hose (hut Involve the heavy
metals, Gold etc. Certain plants also
can produce the reaction that ends in
l.upus.
While there is, yet, little known about
l.upus, the studies being done on im­
munology seem to be producing some
results. DLE and SLE are known as
Collagen Vascular Diseases. A Corpus
Christ! woman lias done the onlystudies I know of on ttie effects of
massive doses of vitamins. She was a
victim of the disease. Mrs. Atndjcm,
also u victim, working with Dr. DuBose
of UCLA also conducted studies. Dr.
DuBose has written a book on this
disease which is the most definitive that
I know of.
How do I know so much about 1Aipus?
I lost my wife of 49 years to it after a 13-

year battle. The article Is correct.
Doctors of die 40's and 50's knew tittle
of it.
SB . "Jim " Crow,
Sanford

'Support Sheriff Polk'
Don't you think it's about time that
you support Sheriff Polk in his efforts to
obtain funds needed lor belter lawenforcement in our County? You can do
this by writing or calling your CountyCommissioners and representatives In
Tallahassee. Wo are fortunate indeed to
have a sheriff who wants to stop crime
in our county. However, !w needs more
manpower and, of course, this means
more money.
Herb Johnson,
Longwood

It takes above averuge know ledge to
be a Computer technician or operator.
You have to bo above average in math,
spelling, English and many other
subjects.
From experience, 1 have noticed dial
even our Banking Institutions do not
have people who are experienced
enough to properly operate the com­
puters and-or calculators in their
departments.
In making several transactions at the
bonk, the clerk, who was attending to
my business, had to run the accounts
through a calculator six times before
arriving at a correct answer.
The people who are technicians and
operators of our com puters and
calculators got their education some 20
years ago when our schools and
colleges ratisl our education number
one and recreation and sports number
two.
If a student kept his grudes up to a
certain standard, he or she * was
allowixl to take part in athletics and
games; but if their grades dropped

below the standard, the student was
dropped from the learn or competition.
Tixiay it is just the reverse. That Ls
why our young high school graduates
don’t know how to properly fill out an
application for a job or |&gt;osition.
Stephen 0 . BalintSr.
Sanford

MDA Drive
Success
The Sanford Phone Center for the
M uscular D ystrophy Association
sponsored by the Sanford-Seminole
Jayceetles was a tremendous success
lor the Jerry lew is Telethon, The
Sanford center received pledges of
$4,518.46 with the heaviest pledges from
the Deltona area. This is the second
year for tlie phone center in Sanford.
The phone center was located at
Chelsea Title 4 Guaranty Company on
First Street, from Sunday, Septem bers
at 6:30 P.M. to Monday, September 7, at
7:00 P.M.
Ttie Jayceetles would like to thank
the following businesses and merchants
for their help and donations that helped
m ake the phone cen ter possible:
Chelsea T itle, Video E lectronics,
Kentucky Fried Chicken , Aggie’s
R e stau ran t, Z ayre, Poppa J a y ’s,
Discount Beverage Barn, McDonald's,
Pizza Hut, Radio Shack, Pet Animal
Supply, WTRR, Ned Yancy, Evening
Herald, and of course all those won­
derful people who called In pledges.
Tlie Sanford-Seminole Jaycees also
had a block party at the Jaycees
Building and Park with bands, games
and refreshments. Tlie Jaycees raised
$276.32 to be donated to M.D.A.
Dona R. Speir,
Phone center, coordinator

Roast Will Fill Brantley's 1982 Campaign War Chest
S tate Rep. Bobby B rantley, ItIjongwood, will begin filling his war chest
for the election campaign of 19S2 with the
proceeds from a "Roasting" scheduled
Oct. 3 at I/ird Chumley’s Pub in
Altamonte Springs.
Tickets for the event are $50 single and
$85 couple. Cocktails from a cash bar will
be available at 7 p.m. and dinner will be
served at 8 p.m.
A formidable list of high power
D em ocrats and Republicans ure
scheduled to participate in the roast, with
County Commissioner Robert Sturm, Hla k e Mary, as master of ceremonies.
Those roasting the two-term state
representative will include-. U.S. Rep.
Bill McCollum, A ltam onte Springs;
Sheriff John Polk, D-Sanford; County
C om m issioner Sandra Glenn, RAltamonte Springs; Former State Sen.
Mack N. Cleveland Jr., D-Sanford;
School S uperintendent Bob Hughes,
Longwood; Fred Streetman, Seminole's
Republican state committeeman und
Brantley's campaign manager in his last
election; JimSlelllng, Brantley’s finance
chairman during his last campaign; Carl

Selph, president of the Flgrlda
Federation of Young Republican Cubs;
Jeannie Austin, Sue lew is and Carmine
Bravo.
Tlie only question remaining open is
whether Brantley will seek re-election to
tlie Florida House of Representatives
und run for a Florida Senate seat if one is
can-cd out for Seminole County during
reapportionment in 1982. Brantley lias
filed his Intent to run for re-election to the
House.
Streetman said since the Senate seat
has not been created as yet, Brantley
cannot make a decision on whether lie
will seek a scat in the upper House.
Brantley, some months ago, said he
was considering running for the Senate.
S tate Rep. Robert H attaw ay, DAltamonte Springs, also said months ago
lie is eyeing that same Senate seat.
Hattaway is serving his fourth term in
the House.
Hattaway said at the time he would
welcome Brantley as an opponent for
that seat. "Then there would be one less
Republican in Tallahassee," Hattaway
said.

Parties &amp;
Politics
Doom Estes

Brantley is currently serving on the
House rcapportinnment committee.
Cindy Crain, assistant principal and
dean of girls at la k e Brantley High
School, must be pleased that her idea
took hold even though she got no credit
for it.
Two years ago, Mrs. Crain npiiealed to
the Seminole County L egislative
delegation — Brantley, Huttaway and
State Sens. John Vogt and Clark Maxwell
— to provide stale funding to pay for
deputies in tlie schools.
She chose that mule for funding after
county commissioners and school board
members privately told her neither could
afford tlie funding required.
Tlie deputies at la k e Brantley and

Miiwee Middle School in the $36,000 plus
pilot program, which began this school
year, are being paid from local tax
money, half from the school board and
half from tlie county commission.
Apparently Mrs. Crain was two years
ahead of her time.

The live West Volusia County
Republican clubs are sponsoring a fund­
raising picnic and rally Oct. to at
We older nmerlcons have been warned.
Valentine Park in Orange City.
Among those attending will be: Duane President Reagan is out to cut our Social
C. Schultz, representing U.S. Sen. Paula Security.
Hawkins; Mrs. Marian Bailey, director
His first step was an attempt to end the
of field representatives for the state $122 minimum benefit for poor people,
GOP; Rocky Pennington, executive Tlie Congress, playing for time, delayed
director of the congressional search the implementation of Die cut.
committee; U.S. Senate candidate, Bill
Half the recipients of the $122
Markham; Brantley, U.S. congressional
candidate, ia rry Guudet; and Warren minimum benefit will be eligible for
Goodwin, ]0th District vice chairman welfare. They may also receive food
and committeeman from Flagler County. stamps and Medicaid. But that may be
Tlie clu b s s|Kinsoring the picnic and only until Reagan finds a way to
rally to begin at noon are: DeBary eliminate one or both of tliose en­
Republican Club, Deltona Republican titlements [or ttie poor.
Tlie list o| the administration's cuts —
Club, 4 Townes Women's Republican
Club F ed erated , the O range City both actual arid proposed — gels longer
each week.

Special To Tbe Hrrald
"Bureaucracy," President Herbert
Hoover warned In 1928, "Is ever
desirous of spreading its influence and
Its power."
At that time the federal bureaucracy
was just beginning to mushroom out of
control. By the end of the war period
some fifteen y e a rs la te r, the
burgeoning bureaucracy had become a
sprawling nightmare.
Over 1,800 agencies and bureaus,
with nearly 11 million federal em­
ployees reached Into virtually every
facet of American life. Red tape and
regulations strangled business and
paralysed a once-vibrant public. Much
of the government's work was either
duplicative, obsolete, o r counter­
productive.
Then In June, 1M7, Congress and
President Harry S. Truman took the
firs t step tow ard ending the
M restricted expansion of the govern­
ment. They appointed the prescient
Hoover to h u d a special bipartisan
Commission of the OrganLution of the
Executive Branch of the Government.
The members of the Commission
y rtrt directed by Congress "to explore
the boundaries of governmental func­
tions in the light of their cost, their

• t- w.

Reorganization Act, and the broadranged Reorganization Act of 1949.

governmental functions," and analyze
their worth and effectiveness.

Together these regulatory acts ef­
fectively stream lin ed the entire
executive branch. And for over a
decade, a pattern of controlled and
efficient government prevailed.

Senate bill 10 and House Resolution
18, the Rolh-Bolling bills, have been
introduced for Just this purpose. These
bills will establish a Commission ol
More Effective Government.

In the early 1960s however, with the
advent of the Great Society and War on
Poverty, all that began to change.
From 1961 to 1973, 141 additional
agencies were added to the federal
system —an increase of more than 30
percent.
To help pay for this ballooning
b u reau cracy , the federal budget
doubled by the end of the 1960's. And In
the 1970’a It tripled.

SEN’. WII.I.IAM KOTO
usefulness, their limitations, and their
curtailment or elimination."
After two years of intensive analysis,
the Commission submitted Its report to
Congress. What resulted w u the moat
comprehensive restructuring of the
federal government ever proposed. An
astonishing 72 percent of the Com­
mission's 196 recommendations for
change were adopted. Among the
C o m m issio n ’s re c o m m e n d a tio n s
paassd by Congress were tbs Military
Unification Act, the Slate Department

In the past 10 years, (he total number
of government regulations has In­
creased fourfold. There regulations
now cost the average American family
$1,800 annually. U.S. businesses are
forced to spend over $100 billion each
year to comply with the maze of new
regulations. Last year alone, It took
Americana 1.2 billion hours Just to fill
out federal forma.
Clearly, the time has come for
Congress and the President to again
take the first step toward ending the
unrestricted expansion of government.
The time has come for Congress to
again "explore the boundaries of

-—*■

lik e Its predecessor under President
Hoover, the new commission would be
b ip artisan and include m em bers
designated by the P resid en t and
leaders of both houses of Congress.
But unlike its predecessor, the new
commission would analyze not only the
operation of the executive branch of
government, but also the relationships
between the federal, state and local
governments. It would move with all
deliberate speed towards restricting s'
patently hegemonic government that
has gained control of the people while
losing control of itself.
Over a ha!/ century ago, President
Herbert Hoover warned, "You cannot
extend the mastery of the government
over the dally working life of a people,
without at the same time making It the
master of the people’s souls and
thoughts."
The former condition Is already a
reality; the latter, an imminent danger.
Hence the need for the Cltlxena Coromission on More Effective Govern­
ment.

Take education. There liave been cuts
ol 25 percent - $1.5 billion — in federal
aid to elementary and secondary schools
fur education of the poor and tlie liandtcapped.
llihngua! education, aid to school
libraries and programs for Illiterate
adults will be cut by 20 percent. Money
(or educational television also was
reduced.
Now we come to Social Security.
The elderly poor among us *re often
totally dependent on Social Security.
Most of tlie rest of the aging population
also relies to a significant degree on
tliose monthly checks.
The lucky among us managed to save
money during our working years; we can
live comfortable, in some cases Lavishly.
But we still count on Social Security.

Growing
Older
Lou Cottfo

What about the president's 25 percent
tax cut? True, it is for rich and poor
alike.
But It will save the rich big money,
while the smaller taxpayers will be
forced lo muddle through. Inflation will
eat up tlie difference between last year’s
income and this year's.
Those of us now on Social Security
must get together with those who are
approaching retirement age. Social and
games programs for senior citizens must
be redesigned.
We must welcome 55-year-olds to our
meetings. We must elect them to office.
We must start holding our meetings In
Ihe evenings.
We musl listen to them, so Dial they
will listen to us.
Together the over 55s and those
already collecting Social Security can
put up a powerful fight. We can stop the
erosion of Social Security.
Indeed, we can restore the United
States to all its social purposes. We will
have the largest body of men and
women in the nation with us.
Will those of you who agree with this
idea suggest it at your senior centers?
l e t me know what your brother and
sister seniors think.

How safe are any of our benefits?
We've already seen that the Reagan
administration ls gunning for Social
Security; for example, there has been
talk of reducing the benefits of those
retiring at age 62. The administration
seems to see Social Security as an
enormous boondoggle.

PLEASE W RITE
Letters te the editor are wtlcoared
far pshlicstiee All M e n r e n t be
afgaed, with a nafllag i
U possible, a
tbe Ideality el tbe w riter may be
verified. Tbe E m h « Herald wfll
respect tbe wtobee el w riters wbe de
■et w aat Ibrlr Beams la p r is t Tbe
Eveafeg Herald alee reserves lbs
right U edit letters U eUmfcate libel
er
te
c e a le n a
te
apace

For a while, we older beneficiaries
may be safe s« f i r as our monthly checks
are concerned. But can anyone think that
Reagan and Budget Director David
Stockman will let that situation con­
tinue?
They will connive. Believe it. They wiU
develop emergencies. They will appeal to
our aging hearts to share our Income
with the MX missile, the Army, the
Navy, the Marine*

-

I

Fran Hill, Deltona; Earl Merrll and
Arthur Smerald, DeBary; Marge Dailey
and Irene Nardandrca, Deland.
Proceeds will go to tlie Volusia County
Republican E xecutive Com mittee
candidates' fund. Deadline for ticket
sales is Oct. 5.

A re Senior Benefits S a fe ?

Federal Bureaucracy Grows To .1 Million
By U.&amp; SEN-WILLIAM ROTH,

Republican Club and the Republican
Club of West Volusia.
The picnic menu includes fried
chicken, salad, rolls, soft drinks and u
dessert. Tickets at $5 [*er person are
available from Ken Kutter anil George
F arr, Orange City; Lillian lachost and

s

c

I

•37

T. ‘

^K ’&gt;’

�t* *

4A -«rm a«iM sraM , laniard,

p i,

ftm d sy ,6 * n .iM M i

No Breakfast For Some Children

County Migrant
Suffering Hunger Pangs

FLORIDA
IN B R IEF
Cities Will L o s t To Suburb/a

.

Changes made in Seminole County's
migrant program to deal with Inflation
are hitting three-and four-year-olds right
in the stomach.
Last year, the four-year-olds in teacher
Linda T enrilleger’a trailer which is,
p arked on Midway E le m en ta ry ’s
campus, had breakfast every morning.
The menu varied; one day eggs and toast
would be served, the next day would be
oatmeal.
For some of these children, this Is the
only balanced, nutritional meal they
received during a day. They are the sons
and daughters of migrant workers based

In Stain Reapportionment
TALLAHASSEE, FI*. (UPI) — Miami, Tampa and
Jacksonville will lose legislative seats to suburban
areas In the upcoming reapportionment process, a
study shows.
The City of Tampa has too many House seats, the
Tampa Tribune reported Friday In a study based on
district population figures released by the Legislature.
Jacksonville, Miami and Miami Beach have too many
Senate seats.
During the last two ^apportionm ents, urban areas
picked up seats at the expense of the mostly rural
areas, but the situation has changed dramatically, the
Tribune said.
Florida's population no longer Is moving into big city
areas, but Is expanding Into the suburbs and a few
rapidly growing areas like central Florida.

.

. .

.

In Sanford but who travel to Apopka and
Palatka during the fruit-picking season
to earn their wages. Although the
migrants may go as far away as
Virginia, Patsy Guy, assistant teacher in
Terwilleger’s fourth-grade trailer, says
the children ultimately return to Sanford.
"Last year we had the money in our
budget to buy groceries," said Guy. “We
had cooking lessons for the children
every Friday. They would stir cake
mixes. We had a book, “Green Eggs and
Ham" {by Dr. Seuss), that we would read
to them while they stirred scrambled
eggs for their breakfast.'

re*____i
l l ________
I J im
rn in
Terwllleger
said
inmaddition In
to liia
learning
how to cook, the sessions gave the
teachers the opportunity to introduce
lessons on manners and how to pass food
politely at the table. One child would be
selected to set the table, learn how to fold
napkins and arrange utensils by the
plates.

But the cooking lessons have stopped.
There Is no longer a grocery budget for
the migrant program. And some of the
children who received a free breakfast
and a free lunch may now have to pay.
— By DIANE M. JEFFERSON

... Migrant Kids Face Cutbacks

Wife: Kelly Net Nail Killer
WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. (UPI) - Bohdan Koily’s
wife says her husband was a member of the un­
derground resistance against the Germans In Poland
during World War II — not a policeman who patrolled
for the Nazis, killing as many as 10 Jews, as the
government contends.
"He fought them," testified Yaroslava Kozly, 56, of
her husband’s relations with the Germans.
Mrs. Kotiy w u the first defense witness In the
federal trial of Bohdan Kotiy, 66. The government Is
attempting to revoke Koziy'a naturalized U.S.
citizenship on grounds that he lied about his
background during the war.

Four-year-old Jam es Collins Is shown a game that
teaches hand-eye coordination—pushing colored
posts in a pegboard. Jam es Is a member of Linda
Terwllleger’* class for migrant children.______

(Cmtfaaed F r s a Fag* 1A)
years. The state stepped In because federal funds do not cover
three-year-olds, and the stale felt It w u Important to start
giving these children a strong foundation u early as possible,
u i d Garrett. The state has budgeted 176,000 for the 1981-1982
school year, about the same u t u t year.
Federal funding for the migrant program , which includes
migrant studenta through age 17 came to 6344,060 last year.
That figure Is derived from an original grant of 6301,720 from
the federal government plus 6315,000 In added amendments
which released more funds. For 1961-1962, the federal grant Is
6302,607. G arrett may have to ask further amendments to
obtain the funds he needs to keep the program going.
"The reduction Is not as great as had first been anticipated,"
said Garrett. "But even If the funding stays the same, we are

reducing services each year, because there is a cap on how
much we can pay out and costs keep going up.
"We used to have field trips to Circus World and Sea World,"
said Patsy Guy. "These were very Important. Some of these
kids did not even know what a train was, what a tiger was."
Teachers say their materials budget has been cut,
which provides the paper and paste used by the children to
leam coordination skills.
There are now two three-year-old and three four-year-old
trailers In operation: a three-year-old and four-year-oid trailer
each at Midway Elementary and Lawton Elementary and a
four-year-old trailer at Goldsboro.
"The migrant program has been going down," said Garrett.
“We’ve been advised that it probably won’t get any better."

Crews Will Labor Round-The-Clock On Shuttle

Boy's Killer C on fu ted ?

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (UPI) - Crews
will be laboring "every second" for the next
month to fix the damaged space shuttle tiles
and prepare for launch in late October or early
November.
Robert Gordon, a spokesman for Rockwell
International, the shuttle’s prime contractor,
said three crews will spend 24 hours a day
repairing the 338 tiles loosened by spilled
rocket propellant last Tuesday.
"They'll be working every second," said
Gordon on Friday following an announcement
by NASA that repairs will be made on the
shuttle's nceanside launch pad Instead of

LAKELAND, Fla. (UPI) - A Polk County sheriff’s
officer revealed Friday that a man charged in the
sexual assault and beating death of a 6-year-old boy not
only confessed, but told police he had sexually
molested 41 males, both minors and adults, over a 10year period in aeveral states.
Sheriffs LL Tommy Holcum said Phillip Alexander
Atkins, 16, was carrying a list of youths with him when
he was arrested Wednesday night for the slaying of
Antonio Castillo.
The contents of the list were not revealed.

rolling the orblter back to Its hangar.
The spacecraft was to fly Oct. 9. Space offlciala say they will set a new launch date in
about two weeks, "following a detailed
assessment of progress made on the work to be
completed."
The decision to make repairs on the pad will
save time and money, but even a two-week
delay could Jeopardize the tentative January
launch of the third shuttle mission, acknowl­
edged Hugh Harris, chief spokesman at
Kennedy Space Center.
Harris said besides the 338 tiles damaged by
the spill another 10 will be pulled from the

exacting tile rebonding will begin next week. A
total of 31,000 silica tiles cover the shuttle to
protect It from the searing heat of reentry Into
the E arth's atmosphere.
He and Harris said early tests on the tiles
Indicated all can be used again even though
the spilled chemical ate through the rubberbased adhesive that bonds them to the shuttle.
"A high percentage of the (repair) time Is
necessary to replace the tiles," Harris said.
"But we also need to complete our survey of
what happened to the reaction control
system."
That system, which controls the shuttle's

ability to tum and roll in space, sustained
some damage to paint, wiring and thermal
blankets protecting the small rocket thrusters
that provide the maneuvering power.
Harris said the thrusters may have to be
removed to make sure the rocket pod is free of
propellant, but he indicated engineers have
determined a way to do that without pulling
the entire two-ton unit from the shuttle.
The spill has been traced to a faulty seal in
the “quick-disconnect" system used to load
propellants Into the tanks that serve the for­
ward reaction control system in the nose of the
spacecraft.

AREA DEATHS
MRS. HANNAH KERIN
Mrs. Hannah Kerin, 61, of
397 Hacienda Village, Winter
Springs, died Thursday night
at
F lo rid a
HospitalAltamonte. Bio waa a native
of Sylvanla, Ohio, born Dec. 3,
1919. Shs bad lived In Winter
Springs for the past six years
moving there from Mansfield,
Ohio. She w as ■ retire d
cashier and a past president
of the Mother of Twins Club,
Toledo, Ohio.
She Is survived by her
husband,
John
K erin,
Hacienda Village; sons, John
P. Jr. and Michael R. Kerin,
both of Toledo; three
daug h ters, M rs. M argaret
Soley, Toledo, Mrs. Patricia
Morley, and Mrs. Julia M.
Chlpman, both of Mansfield;
12 grandchildren.
Gramkow-Galnes Funeral
Homes, Longwood, is In
charge of arrangements.
MR&amp; AMANDA E. POTTE1GER
M rs. Amanda E lizabeth

moved to Altamonte Springs
from Puerto Rico in June. He
was a barber and a Catholic.
He is survived by his wife,
Ramona, Altamonte Springs.
Batdwln-FalrchUd Funeral
Home, Altamonte Springs, Is
In charge of arrangements.

P o ttelg er, 94, of 1040 S.
Orlando Ave., Maitland, died
W ednesday
at
F lorida
H ospltal-A ltam onte. Bom
March I, 1917 in SpringviUe,
N.Y., she moved to this area
from Rochester, N.Y., In 1947.
She w u a housewife and a
P re sb y terian . She was a
c h a rte r m em ber of the
Casselberry Woman's Club
and a past matron of the
Irondequolt (N.Y.) Order of
Eastern Star.
She is survived by a
d au g h ter,
M rs.
Ethel
Schoonmaker, Maitland; son,
Robert M., Clifton Springs,
N.Y., brother, Carl Michael,
C asselb erry ; five g ran d ­
children.
BaldwLn-Falrchtld Funeral
Home, Altamonte Springs, Is
In charge of arrangements.
PAULE.SUMMA
Paul E. Summa, 62, of 642
Bonneville Lane, Altamonte
S prings, died F rid a y at
W inter P ark
M emorial
Hospital. Born In Italy, he

W h a t W o u ld Y o u S a y
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�SPORTS
Ew n lo gH trald ,San fo rd ,FI.

Sunday,Sept.37, I t l l - l B

---- W ow!----Greyhounds Stun
Winter Park, 7-5

i

By JOE DcSANTIS
Herald Sports Writer
(W inter P a rk ) — When you're
number two, you’re supposed to try
harder. When you're M and light years
away from the state’s top ten prep
football poll) you Just go out and do
your best.
I.yman head coach Bill Scott put his
young Greyhounds on trial Friday night
at Showaltcr Field against the state's
second-ranked Winter Park Wildcats.
When the Metro Conference-versusFlvc Star Conference-encounter was
over, Lyman’s young and tenacious
defense rested its case with a stunning
7-5 upset victory.
“ We came here to grow up, and
tonight we did," said fln ecstatic and
emotionally-drained Scott.
“ No play book won this game for us,
we reached way down deep inside for
some heart."
The heart of Lyman's heart throbbing
victory, which wasn't assured until Die
final three seconds of the game,
definitely beat with an uncanny
defensive throb. It was the defense that
scored Lyman's only touchdown. It was
the defense that bent, but never broke.
It was the defense that countered big
Winter Park offensive plays with a
multitude of quarterback sacks. It was
the defense that helped write Lyman’s
most brilliant football moment since
Scott took over as head coach three
years ago. It was the defense that
helped make quick memories of last
season’s unbearable 0-1D record.
"We're coming off a horrible (0-10)
year,” reminded Scott. "And after last
week's loss to Mainland everybody Just
busted their tails since last week's
practice. It was everybody on defense.
It was Just a great effort."
.Sparked by linebacker I&gt;onu Collier,
Lyman's "no nam e" defense bottled up
Winter Park’s feared, balanced attack.
Ju n ior halfback Dennis G areau
cracked the century barrier with 116
yards on 23 carries and Junior quar­
terback Mike Sweeney connected for 63
more yards in the air, but the Wildcats
couldn't gel the yardage when it
counted the most. Lyman's defense Just
wouldn't let them.
le d by Collier, who seemed to be in
the Winter Park huddle, and Jam es
Pilot, a slim defensive end, the
Greyhound defensive unit came up

Lyman
with no less than 11 quarterback sacks
for a total of 76 yards in losses to offset
the Wildcats Just as it appeared Winter
Park would parlay one of many drives
on the night into a score.
The scoreboard clock at Showalter
Field was inoperable, but for the
Greyhounds, it seemed like Winter
Park had the ball all night long.
The Wildcats did have the pigskin for
most of the night, running off a 3-1 of­
fensive play margin Bgainst Lyman.
But the Greyhound defense refused to
yield and breathed a sigh of ecstatic
relief when Mike Lively's 41-yard field
goal attempt with just three seconds
left In the game sailed Just inches wide
and sent the Greyhounds on an
emotional Joy ride that lifted Lyman's
season slate to 2-1.
The loss likewise set Winter Park's
season mark at 2-1 and will most
assuredly either drop the Wildcats out
of the state’s top 10, or possibly boost
the Greyhounds into the polls.
Redundantly, it was the Greyhound
defense that boosted Lyman into In­
termission with a precarious 7-3 ad­
vantage.
After backing Winter Park to its own
23-yard line late In the opening period,
Winter Park punter Cecil Holt got a
high snap from center on a punt at­
tempt. The next thing Holt got was a
blindsidc shot from an unidentified
Greyhound who sent the ball hobbling
around at the Wildcat 23-yard line.
Junior defensive end Jam es Pilot
found the pigskin and the end zone after
recovering the fumble with 1:25 left in
Hie opening frame and with the help of
Chris Tschledcr's PAT, pushed Lyman
out In front 7-0.
Winter Park hit the scoreboard with
slightly m ore than four m inutes
remaining In the half on a 24-yard chip
shot field goal from Lively’s lively leg.
The three-pointer culminated a sevenplay Wildcat drive that saw Winter
Park lake advantage of a Greyhound
punt from the Lyman end zone.
Scott's troops were unable to muster
much on offense throughout the third
period, but thanks to effort after effort
on the part of the Greyhound defensive
squad, neither was Winter Park.
The Wildcats notched a safety with

Just four minutes left in the game when
punter Johnny Poor was backed into his
own end zone and played it safe by
taking a two-pointer to move the
Wildcats within two points at 7-5,
Lyman.
“We almost took an intentional safetylate in the first half," pointed out Scott,
referring to a previous possession when
the Greyhounds were backed against
their own goal posts. "We decided if
that situation came up again, it was the
safest play we could go with."
By taking tin* safety, Scott had to call
on his determined defense yet one more
time. His call did not go unheeded.
Following Lyman’s free kick from its
own 20-yard line after the Intentional
safety, Winter Park appeared on the
verge of snatching victory from the
Jaws of defeat. The Wildcats marched
from their own 30-yard line to Lyman's
29 before the Greyhound defense once
again asserted itself.
With 1:07 left on Die clock and Winter
Park tackling a first-and-10 at Lyman's
29-yard line, senior defensive linemen
Rick Fredericks and Steve Gerrity
teamed up to dump Winter Park
quarterback Mike Sweeney for an 11yard loss at Lyman's 31-yard line.
Forced by the dock to go lor a last
ditch field goal, Lively booted Winter
Park's undefeated hopes and secondplace state ranking Just off to the left,
lively's miss sent the Greyhounds off
to their biggest celebration In years and
sent Winter Park from the lofty ranks
of a top 10 team back to the Wildcat
locker room with a lot of respect for
Scott's determined 'Hounds.
Lyman
7 0 0 0 -7
Winter W irt
0 1 0 I —s
LYM — J im H Pilot JJ tumble return
(TtctOrder kick I
WP — FO Lively 14
■leyMeckled In end tone
WP — SeletylAileyM
Ly m e n l

It 74
44

6]
4 HO

111
10

7 7J

Fln lD o w n t
Winter Park 14
RuWirt Yerdt
44 I I I
Petting Yerdt
4$
Return Yerdt
17
P e ttn
10 7S0
Punlt
7 J7
Tumble Lott
70
P rn e lllrt Yerdt
164

Individual Le e d m
HUSHING — Lymen, Andrew! 4 It Winter
Perk. Gerreu 7} l i t
R E C E IV IN G — Lymen. Jacobi 174
Wintry Perk. Smith, ) U
PASSING — Lymen A lle y 4 14 44 Winter
Perk. Sweeney 4 14 t )

PM4d By BUt Mvrgdy

An ecstatic BUI Scott U surrounded by determined players and adoring fans
after the Lyman Greyhounds stunned second-ranked Winter Park, 7-5, Friday
night at Showalter Field.

Hereld Phote by Tern Vincent

Seminole's Lenny Sutton (No. 44) bulldozes for a first down. The powerful fullback
scored three touchdowns as Seminole whipped Boone in four overtimes, 41-38.

Cahill Does It Again
By SAM COOK
Herald Sports Editor
TANGERINE BOWL - Seminole
Coach Jerry Posey better keep a wat­
chful eye on the big right toe of senior
place kicker Alan Cahill. There's a
stubby little white-haired man that
smokes a cigar looking for kickers that
Uve 100 miles away on a bay.
Because, alter Cahill's outstanding
performance against Edgewater Friday
night In the T-Bnwl, one would be ernzy
not to place Alan's exalted toe in the
Tribe trophy case.
For the second time in eight days,
Cahill booted a dram atic, overtime field
goal to lift Sanford's delirious Scmlnoles
luist an opposing football learn.
This tim e C ahill's victim was
Edgewater. His 25-yard beauly ended a
four-quarter tie-breaker marathon by u
final 41-38 count. Just last Friday Cahill
downed la k e Howell with a similar hoot
in the third OT.
Has Cahill grown tired of his Friday
Ikero’s role. "No way." said the modest
senior In the midst of a noisy Tribe locker
room.
"But there were 10 other guys out there
helping me. We had 10 heroes on tike field
when I kicked it."
While Cahill's boot was the difference,
it wasn't the only kick llie well-muscled
senior had to come through with. Five
times he was called on for extra points.
One a crucial overtime boot. Twice Ike
needed field goals in OT. He notched
them all which brought a smile to
Posey’s face.
Posey tiadn’l been sure Cahill could
respond consistently under pressure
since lie was rushed into the kicker’s rote
last week against Howell. He missed his
first try against the Hawks, but hasn't
missed since.
"Yeah, I guess you could say Cahill can
kick under p re ssu re ,” deadpanned
Posey. "Alan did a tremendous Job.
Every time we called on him he got It
done."
Cahill, though, was far from being
Sanford's only hero. Fullback U “nny
Sutton ran with his old reckless abandon.
He was m u rd er on short-yardage
situation. Three times Sutton bulled into
the end zone dragging Eagles with him
for touchdowns.
Sanford had gotten on tike board first
when Jeff Ullon corroborated with
flanker Joe Calloway on a sparkling 31yard TD play.

Bnmlnelet

Edgewater countered with a little
flanker magic of its own. Rodney lamg
look a pitch on a reverse and danced M
yards for the score. The Eagles Uiough,
misfired on tike kick and still trailed, 7-6.
Edgewater rectified Its deficit In the
second quarter when Marcus Slade, Just
off the injury list, scooted In from seven
yards out. Running back I*roy Fttmore
promptly hit Brian Ashford out of the
backfield for the two “ evening up" extra
points. Edgewater 14, Seminole 7.
Sutton got his act going in the third
quarter. The bull-like Senior crunched
for three first downs on a 10-play, 63-yard
drive down tire field.
Linton tossed in a 15 yard scamper to
the Edgewater 19 (or the key play. From
then on, it was alt Sutton. First lie
rambled for 15. Then It was four, three
and finally the last two.
Cahill's boot, of course, was good and
the game was tied at 14.
Tlie Tribe put what looked like the
game winner on like board with six
minutes to go. Again, it was a long,
dislingulshed drive engineered by the
improving IJttnn.
The blond-haired senior made effective
use of Sutton, a few Eagle penalties and
most importantly drew a roughing the
punter penalty when Die drive was about
to fizzle ul llie Edgewater 33.
The kick gave Sanford a firsl down on
the 17 and four Lenny Sutton's later, the
Tribe was into the end zone and out with a
21-14 lead.
Sutton went the final two and Cahill,
l what's new?), converted point 21.
Then came n play which almost killed
Posey. “ lAing, a nemesis all night for
Sanford, got loose on the sideline and
hauled In a 68 yard puss lor QB Marvin
Zanders for the touchdown. Senior
George Burkitt nailed Die PAT and tlie
Tribe was deadlocked at 21.
“ I died about 10 tim es," confessed
Posey about l i n g ’s twisting, turning
grasp. “Ttuil kid made an unbelievable
catch."
As good as tlie catch was with 4:30 to
play, it pales In comparison to the ex­
citing overtime session.
Seminole lost the toss and went first,
ikot the most-desired position in this
F lo rid a tie b reak e r m ethod. Sutton
gained five In two tries, but Victor
Seminolt
Edgwittr
Williams lost one.

’Big' Man Cries Happy Tears ...Scott calls
Few Sem inole County football
followers will argue the fact that Lyman
gridiron coach Bill Scott la a big man.
The former New York Jet offensive
lineman's physical attribute! speak for
themselves.
Friday night at Showalter Field, BiU
Scott's pesky group of bandy-legged
Lyman Greyhounds brought their big
coach to tears. Tears of )oy. Tears of
tisppiness. Tears of celebration that
easily helped erase the memory of a
bitter 0-10 season one short year ago.
Bill Scott's unheralded Greyhounds,
fresh from a 1W loss to rebuilding
Daytona Beach Mainland a week ago,
had Just put the finishing touches on their
head m an's biggest accomplishment

since taking over the Greyhound
coaching reina three seasons ago.
Lyman had completed the aeemlngty
impossible. The Greyhounds had met the
state's second-ranked team. -And the
state'* second-ranked team belonged to
the Greyhounds by virtue of an incredible
defensively Inspired 7-5 victory.
It was in a 50-yard-line huddle that
Scott finally assembled bis Joyous bunch.
But before he could speak, before he
could con g ratu late his victorious
Greyhounds, Scott had to reach Into his
back pocket, to grab a handerchlef to
wipe sway the victorious underdog's
mist from his eyes.
Praises were high. Attributes were
niany. But when an emotional Scott

finally harn essed the collective
exuberance of his football team, the
message was simple and clear.
“ No playbook won this game tonight,"
Scott told his charges. "You reached
down deep inaide, you gave your hearts
tonight, you took a page from one of the
oldest stories in the bible."
"We showed ’em the oldest story can
still come true," explained Scott.
"David can still beat Goliath. The little
guy can still win."
For Scott and the Greyhounds, it was a
lot of little guys, determined, through
four quarters of football.
“ Lyman h ai had some g n a t moments
in football," said the exhausted coach.

I

J —41
0 -JI

upset 'Greatest victory'

victory over second-ranked Winter Park
could not have come al a more curious
time. Tlie Greyhounds dropped a 194)
decision to Five Star Conference rivals
Mainland the previous week and were
considered heavy underdogs against tlie
Wildcats.
"We’re coming off a horrible year, and
we still have a lot of growing up to do,"
said Scott.
“This was our first chance to play a
really class team. 1 don't know if Winter
Park played as well against us as their
first two games, but I'll take the quar­
terback sacks we got tonight anytime."
Lyman's line contributed no less than
11 quarterback sacks to the defensive
effort, that more oftr i titan not, killed

Winter Park drives and kept the
Greyhounds in front on the scoreboard.
“ Everybody worked so hard for this
gam e," praised the Lyman coach.
"We corrected a few things at halftime
and we told tlie kids that Winter P ark had
to come out and beat us. We weren't
going to give it away. They a re a
tremendous team , but we did what we
liad to do in the second half."
What Lyman did In the second half was
stop Winter Park when it had to. And [or
Bill Scott and hla Lyman Greyhounds,
Friday night's performance was a big
step forward on the road to "doing what
you have to do to grow up." — JOE
DcSANTIS

-T -'-- — - - - -

J th W a X l

C

"I'd have to say this is my best
moment since taking over as head coach
and for these young players, it has to be
their finest moment.”
Tlie Greyhounds finest moment of
recent seasons may well have been irvspired by an injured teammate.
Senior guard Dave Seligson, sidelined
two weeks ago with an Injury, provided
the David half of the David and Goliath
story.
"He’s been our Inspiration for this
gam e." said Scott of his downed senior
leader. “ This team is really close this
year. Ttiey care. They reached back for
David and just worked so hard for this
gaitke."
Inspiration aside, Lyman's startling

Tlie Tribe got a break when an offsides
penalty moved It to the three and Sutton
broke a few tackles from three yards out
for the TD. Cahill, well you know what he
did.
Coach Dave Mosure's defense had
Edgewater throttled until fourth down
when Zanders found Filmore (or the
score. Burkitt booted.
The Tribe won the tosa In OT two. The
detenae flopped the E ag let at-‘the two
and one-hald yard line, but Burkitt
shanked a “wounded Eagle" which Just
humped over the bar for the score.
CahlU did 11 again from the 24-yard line
for Seminole share of period two for a 3131 standoff.
In session three, Frank Rowe made a
great, tumbling catch on first down for
the TD, but in his excitement spiked the
kill which drew (lags like the stuff draws
flies.
“ I was really kicking myself for that
spike,’1said Rowe. “ But I was so excited,
I couldn't help I t ”
If there would have been lime for an
intermission, Posey had a spot for his
excitable tight end. "That goal post down
there would have been a good spot to
hang him ," laughed Posey as he
dismissed his "splker" with a smile after
the game. “ That could have really hurt."
It did hurt, a little when Boone was
given the ball lialf the distance away at
tike live and promptly score. Burkitt hit a
pressure kick for a 38-38 tie.
The p ressu re, m ake th a t Byron
Washington, got to Burkitt In the fourth
extra period. After defensive tackle Bill
Painter tikade a great play to drag down
Slade at live eight for a four-yard loss,
Edgewater Coach Bob Dolce called on
Burkitt.
Defensive Coach Mosure called on
Washington. “ It was a set play," the
Tribe motivator pointed out. "It was no
accident. Tike kids did exactly as (hey
had to and blocked it."
Washington broke through the left side
and got a paw on the boot to deflect it.
Edgewater knew what was next.
Ulton ran three plays into the line and
then called for "Cool Al." Cahill promp­
tly parted the uprights from 25 and the
Tribe had an 11:30 p.m. victory.
It was Posey's first over Edgewater
since he took over the Seminole helm.
It might be a hard one to forget.

£aS.r

�•

iB -E v tn ln g Herald, Sanford, FI.

Stingy. Sept. 17.m t

Just because Sanford doesn't have a softball league
this fall, It doesn't stop some of the more interested
parties from having softball in Sanford.
Jeff Small, president of the Sanford Men’s Softball
Association, has announced plans for a gala
"Octoberfeit Sanford Men's "B" Softball Tour­
nam ent," Oct. 17 and 18.
The "Octoberfest" is a 16-team double-elimination
affair for 20-man, winter rosters only. The teams must
have matching shirts and numbers are preferred.
The tournament will held at Pinehurst Field 124th
Street and Marshall Avenue) and Randall Chase Park
(Summerlin Avenue and Celery Avenue).
The entry fee is 883 plus two brand new American
Softball Association approved restricted flight softballs. Worth Blue Dots are preferred. The deadline for
entries is Oct. 9.
Trophies will be given for first, second and third
place. Individuals will be given for first and second
place teams. A home run and batting average trophy
will also be given.
The draw will be held Oct. 12 at 7 p.m. at the Sanford
Recreation Department Youth Wing. It is located on
the corner of Sanford Avenue and Seminole Boulevard.
Checks should be made payable to the Sanford Men’s
Softball Association. Send your entries to Jeff Small,
802 W. 25th St., Sanford, Fla. 32771.
No alcoholic beverages or metal cleats are allowed.
For further information, call Small at 322-8492 (home)
or 323-1736 (work). The Recreation Department
number is 322-3161.

’Grandma* Fires 67 For Title
When’s the last time your grandmother shot a 67?
Well, if your grandmother's name is Zella Elssele, it
wasn’t too long ago. ta s t Wednesday to be exact. Zella
fired a net 67 to win the Jack Prosser Grandmother's
Golf Tournament by one stroke over Grace Sayles at
the Mayfair Country Club.
Elssele and Sayles each received a prize presented
by Mrs. Gloria Prosser, wife of the tournament sponsor
Jack Prosser of Ford fame.
The tournament was field for tie Mayfair Women’s
Golf Association which gets back into the swing of
things this Wednesday will) another tournament and a
shotgun start at 9 a.in.
Elsewhere at Mayfair, Stella Brooks fired a 38 on Ue
front nine and Margaret Butts shot a 39 on the back
nine to capture championship flight honors. Grace
Sayles was the overall winner with a 68 net. Nassau
rules were used.
In the First Flight, Diddle Webber took first nine
honors with a fine 33 und Mary Ann Williams was on
lop after the second nine wllli a 35. Miriam Andrews
had a G9 (or the overall best.
In the Second Flight, Joun Zlnn totaled a 37 for the
front nine and Grace Sauers fired a 41 for back nine
twoors. Zella Elssele look the overall award for a 87
total.
In the Third Flight, Genevive Woodruff stroked a 39
on tho front and Maude Butler scored a 38 on the back.
Dottie Sullivan shot a 76 for the best overall.

r

• v.

Brantley Defense Dooms Boone

IN B R IEF
S o ftb all Tourney O ct. 17

# t*

Cliatt's Interception Return Keys Victory

SPORTS
Small Slates 'Oetoberfest'

i

By BILLY STRIPP
Herald Sports Writer
Boone's Braves came Into Friday
night's game at Lake Brantley as a
big favorite — to lose. They did, but
it was on the short end of a hardfought 14-7 setback to the Patriots.
DaveTullis’ Big Blue Improved its
season mark to 2-1, while the
determined Braves fell to W. Next
Friday, Brantley travels to Lake
Howell for an important Five Star
Conference game with the Silver
Hawks.
Tullis had said prior to the game
that defense might make the
defense. With Brantley's offense not
putting points on the board as
hoped for, the defense again set up
the offense.
Friday night it came via a fumble
and a blocked punt.
After Brantley's opening drive
failed, the Pats booted the ball
away, only to get an early gift as
Gary Decker Jumped on the bobbled
ball by a Braves return man.
Penalties (122 yards all told) kept
the game close. After the recovered
fumble, a penalty moved the ball
back to the Patriot 35 yard line.
Senior quarterback Al Rollison,
however, connected on J-of-3 passes
to move the Pats. Two of the throws
—for 25 and 16 yards — were hauled
in by Fred Baber to keep the drive
alive.
With lime running out in the
quarter, Rollison rolled left and
found running back Rob Brown in
the end zone for a nine-yard touch­
down. Kevin Besaw’s kick gave
Brantley a 7-0 lead.
The Pals pul two more on the
board that didn't count. Boone's
Darryl Hayes, who passed for 95
Braves u! the'Patriot’ jT y a rd linT
On first down, he dropped back to
pass and threw the ball into the
hands of linebacker Kyle Davis, who
returned it 65 yards for an apparent
TD. A clipping penalty brought it
back.
On the very next play, Rollison hit
Baber for what seemed to be another
touchdown, only to find out this time,
an ineligible man was downfleld.
The drive ended when Rollison was
sacked and David Hepburn
recovered a fumble.
Branlley's defense went to work
alter both learns exchanged punts.
Senior Steve Peacock forced his way
around the Boone line to block a
punt, which Otis Cliatt returned 33
yards for a touchdown. Besaw again

H«r6H

converted to give the Patriots u 14-0
halftime lead.
With Brantley |M&gt;ssibly looking
ahead to Friday clash with ta k e
Howell, the Braves fought back to
make the Pals worry about the lead.
Brantley moved the ball down the
field, running down the clock until
Rollison was blindsided by 210pound Greg Burden,
Hayes wasted no time. He took
advantage ol another Brantley
penalty and hit J-of-6 passes to move
the Braves. Both teams were nailed
for offensive and defensive in­

terference calls during the drive.
On the first play of the final
quarter, Hayes found David Woods
all alone in the corner of the end zone
for a 12-yard scoring toss. Woods
had turned around his defender to
get wide open. Ray Mosely booted
the PAT to pull the Braves within 147.
The Big Blue defense took over the
final 14'i minutes. Neither team
generated much offense as the Pats
secured the victory.
While Tullis was pleased with his
d efense's third straig h t strong

At the right, Seminole Com­
munity College volleyball player
Debra Dyer &lt;right, No. 30) slams
a point off a Brevard CC op­
ponent as Sharon Vobornik
(lower right) awaits the return.
Below, Sanford's Batty Corso
drives a spike down Brevard's
throat. Vovornlk, just a fresh­
man who went to Lake Howell
last year, set up Corso and Dyer
with perfect sets Friday night a&gt;
SCC stom ped B revard two
stra ig h t, 15-4, 15-10. Coach
llleanu G allag h er's talen ted
girls host Polk Community
College Monday at 7 p.m.
H * fiM P ta to l kv Jim C»ngUt»n

Bob Midgett shows off a day's catch of Specks that he and Steve Spears hauled
In at Woodruff Creek off the St. Johns River.

Hungry ? Fish Sanford's Wall For Dinner

Hungry? Catching dinner might only
be a few miles ur steps away if you live
in Sanford. My sources tell me tlic
/* fishing is redimt off the wall at 1-uke
Monroe.
Take the scenic route by car or foot
and just slop off anywltere on lite wall.
The fishing has been good all along It.
Bring home a Mullet nr a Speck. Some
people have been catching Sunshine
Bass. Best bail. Grass Slirlmp, worms
or minnows. They're hillin' all of them.
At the Osteen Bridge Camp, the bass
and catfish are slow. Some fishermen
:« have been catching some school bass,
about one to three pounds.
Ttie Specks are very good near (lie
number five marker and olf Stone
Island. South of the bridge, down
toward Marina Isle if you get off the
main river into the sloughs, the blue
gills are billng. Steve Spears and his
Dad, Frank, did real well In Bass Alley.
The Spears brought In 25 Specks last
Monday. Ben Lindsey pulled in 30 Blue
GUIs last Wednesday. Also on Wed­
nesday, Gladys Johnson hauled in 40
Blue GUIs.
Turning into the hunting season, I got
a line from IJ. Col. Brantley Goodson

:■

Dell
Abemethy
IS -382!
the other day and live director of the
Division of la w Enforcement for the
Game and Fresh Water Fish Com­
mission asks me to pass along this info.
Now, If that Isn't a title, I've never seen
one. It took me two days Just to write it.
The mourning dove season gets under
way at noon nest Saturday (Oct. 3) and
dove hunters would do well (o know
more than Just the shooting-hours and
season dates.
One of the most often overlooked
regulations tlwt is of particular Im­
portance to dove hunters is that it la
illegal for two or more hunters to place
their daily bag limits in one common
spot, like an ice chest.
"Law enforcement personnel have a
difficult time determining if a par­
ticular hunter Is within the dally bag

v ih c m i

field for eight of his 53 yards on the night. The Patriots tripped Boone, 14.-7.

I

•y

kr T»»

Patriot running back Mika Frwwman (No. 24) takes a handoff from Al Rollison and heads up

RAIDER STOMP

**|
:,J

fmw

limit when a group of his companions
have put all their birds in one spot.
"Our advice to any dove hunter is not
to hold, store or transport the birds of
unother hunter in uny m anner,"
Goodson said.
He explained that regulations allow
for a hunter to place his birds in the
custody of another if the birds are
tagged with the hunter's signature,
address, total nunibcr ol birds involved
and the dates the birds were killed.
Goodson said the dove season this
year will be from October 3 through
November 1 with shooting hours from
noon lo sunset and then November 14
through November 29 and December II
through January14 with shooting hours
(or those two phases from one-half hour
before sunrise to sunset.
Goodson said the U.S. Department of
Interior has a brochure availatsk to
dove hunters which explains the federal
regulations concerning the jport.
r e r u n s interested in obtaining the
brochure, entitled, "Dove Hunting the
Right Way," can write the UJ5.
Department of the Interior, Fish and
Wildlife Service, 75 Spring Street S.W.,
Atlanta, Ga. 30M3.

showing, he wasn’t too happy with
the penalties. "I will have to look at
the films to see all the mistakes,"
moaned the easy-going coach. "But
I know our consistency wasn’t
there."
Next week the Pats go to I^ake
Howell. Despite Howell's winless
record, Tullis feels it may have the
best 0-3 team around. "They have a
darn good team ," Tullis said. "It
will be a tough game for us."

A ll S 3 )
I Z0
133
3 40
41
13 133

L ik e B r«n ll«y
t
F lr t l D o w n
36 94
y « ru !h

Receiving — L B — Baber 3 41, Freeman
3 14. Brown 1 6 Bn - Wood! 1 34, Foy 3
35. Taylor 3 II

Boone
7
32 31

y d k p * !!
return yd!
total y d i
P u n t!
turnovers
p en ally!

13 35 93 0
1 63
190
3 33
30
6 45

to
drown 9 p a u trom Rolliion [B n a w
luck I
I B Cliatt 3) interception return (Snow
kick!
Bn - Wood! 13 p a t! from H ayn
Burning
LB
Beraw 13 S3. Freeman
1)0. Brown 171 Bn — Taylor 9 34,
liurdew 6 4, Hardin a s.
P arting — L B — R o lIlK n 6 11 ) t ) . B n —
H a y n 13 35 1 93

�/

Evtnlm H rald, Sanford, Fl.

Montreal Exposed'

Sunday, Sept. 27, t t il —314

Parrish's Four Runs Batted In Keep Fold From Expo Pennant Chase
B&gt; United Press International
Down the stretch during inc last two
baseball seasons the Montreal Expos
have rightly earned the pseudonym,
“The Montreal Exposed."
They couldn’t handle the pressure and
folded like paper airplanes under the
heat of the pennant race.
At last, the Expos may have finally
grown up.
The Expos won their sixth straight
game and increased their fead in the
National league East to 2&gt;i games over
SI. f/iuis Friday night by beating the
New York Mets, 6-3.
1-arry Parrish drove in lour runs Bnd
Bill Gullickson and Jeff Reardon com-

M l B osg I m N
bined on a seven-hitter to pace the vic­
tory.
The Expos took a 1-0 lead in the fourth
on doubles by Andre Dawson and Parrish
off starter Pat Zachry, 7-13, and Parrish
added a run-scoring single in the sixth.
The Expos chased Zachry in the
seventh when they added four runs.
Warren Cromartie hit a bases-loaded
single to nu k e it 3-0 and Rodney Scott
made it 4-0 with an RBt single. Dawson
hit into a fielder's choice and reliever
Ray Searage was charged with two more
runs when Parrish capped the inning
with a two-run single.

Elsewhere in the NL, Pittsburgh edged
St. IjouIs 5-4, Philadelphia walloped
Chicago 9-2, Los Angeles blanked
Houston 3-0, Cincinnati routed Atlanta 102 and San Francisco shut out San Diego 30.
In American leag u e games, Baltimore
edged New York 1-0, Milwaukee outslugged D etroit 8-6, Boston edged
Cleveland 5-4, Seattle downed Kansas
City 8-3, Texas topped Minnesota 5-2,
California crushed Toronto 11-5 and
Chicago beat Oakland 6-2.
Pirates 5, Cardinals 4
At St. iAtuis, U'c fucy's homer
triggered a four-run fourth inning. Eddie
Solomon, 6-5, scattered eight innings
over 7 1-3 innings to gel the victory with

Rod Scurry notching his seventh save.
Phillies 9, Cubs 2
At Chicago, Gary' Matthews drove in
five runs with a single and his ninth home
run and Mike Schmidt blasted a tworun
homer. Rookie Dan I .arson, who pitched
the first seven innings, posted his third
straight victory without a loss since
being recalled from (he American
Association.
Dodgers 3, Astros 0
At jfouston, Dusty Baker knocked in
two runs with a single and a sacrifice fly
and Burl Hooton pitched a fourhitter to
lead the Dodgers to victory. Hooton, 11-6,
struck out two and walked one In posting
his fourth shutout of the season and his

third victory over Houston in three starts
this year.
Reds 10, Brave* 2
At Atlanta, Ron Oester and Ray Knight
homered in support of Mario Soto to help
the Reds ntove to within 1 4 games of
first place Houston in the NL West.
Oester hit his fifth homer In the second
inning and Knight connected for his sixth
during a three-run fifth in helping Soto to
his 10th triumph in 19 decisions.
Glanli 3, Padres 0
At San Diego, left-hander Al Holland,
((taking his first major-league start after
103 relief appearances over four seasons,
allowed five hits in eight innings in
sparking the Giants to victory. Dave
Bergman homered for San Francisco.

Yount's Shot Lifts Brewers Past Tigers
By United Press International

Morris gave up a solo home run to
Cecil Cooper in the first inning and a
three-run shot to Gorman Thomas
three batters later, but Detroit
pecked aw ay at s ta rte r Mike
Caldwell with four solo home runs,
the first time the Tigers have hit that
many this season.

Robin Yount never made a shot
like this one before, either on the golf
course or the ballfleld.
Yount hit a two-oul, three-run
homer in the ninth inning Friday
night to lift the Milwaukee Brewers
to an 8-6 victory over the Detroit
Tigers.

Trammell led off the first with his
second homer, John Wockenfuss
opened the second Inning with his
eighth, Ron Jackson hit his fifth in
the fifth inning and lx&gt;u Whitaker
tied tlte score with two out in the
sixth when he slammed a 1-2 pitch
off Pete Vuckovlch, making his first
relief appearance of tlte season.

He picked n perfect time to blast
out of his slump. The homer dropped
Detroit into a first-place tie with
Boston and enabled Milwaukee to
move within one-half game of the AL
East lead. Baltimore stands In
fourth place, 14 games back.
Jack Morris, 13-6, was one pitch
away from becoming the second AL
pitcher to win 14 games when Yount
hit a 2-2 pitch. Jim Gantner, who had
four hits, singled with one out and
one out later, Molitor was hit on a 2-2
pitch to set the stage for Yount's
home run —the seventh of the game,
Jam ie E asterly squared his
record at 3-3 with 21-3 innings of one-

R O B IN Y O U N T

...dramatic three-run shot
hit relief. Rollie Fingers pitched the
ninth to gain his 27th save.
Kirk Gibson’s pop fly RBI double
with two out in the sixth inning
capped a two-run inning that had
given the Tigers a 6-5 lead.

In other games, Boston defeated
Cleveland 5-1, Baltimore nipped
New York 1-0, Texas look Minnesota
5-2, Seattle bounced Kansas City B-3,
California whipped Toronto 11-5 and
Chicago beat Oakland 6-2.
In tlte National league, it was
Philadelphia 9, Chicago 2; Montreal
6, New York 3; Cincinnati 10.
Atlanta 2; lits Angeles3, Houston 0;

AL lo ia fc a lf
Pittsburgh 5, St. Ixtuis 4; and San
Francisco 3, San Diego 0.
Red Sox 5, Indian* 4
At Boston, Rich Gedman had three
hits, including an RBI double in the
fifth that knocked in the game­
winning run, and Carl Yastrzemski
smacked a two-run homer to lift the
Red Sox.
Orioles 1, Yankee* 0
At New York, Scott McGregor
struck out a career high 11 and
scattered six hits lo lead the Orioles.
McGregor, 12-4, walked only one and
pitched out of an eighth-inning jam
in outdueling Tommy John, 9-7, who
allowed nine hits, struck out three
and walked two.
Rangers S, Twins 2

At Bloomington, Minn., Pat
Putnam slugged a three-run homer
and Charlie Hough and Steve Comer
combined on a six-hitter to lead the
Rangers. Hough, 3-1, left after Kent

A u t o - In s u r a n c e ?

Hrbek drilled a two-run double in the
seventh.
M arlnrn 8, Royals 3
At Kansas City, Terry Bulling
drove in two runs with a double and
Tom Paciorek and Bruce Bochte
added solo homers to carry Floyd
Bannister, 8-8, and the Mariners.
Angels 11, Blue Jays S
At Anaheim, Calif., Dan Ford
drilled a three-run homer and Bobby
Grirh and RptI Cnmpaneris con­
tributed two-run doubles. Despite
giving up five runs and 10 hit. in
seven innings, left-hander Geoff
Zahn was able to improve his record
lo KM1. 1-uis I&gt;eal, 7-12, was the
loser.
White Sox S, A's 2
At Oakland, Calif., Greg Luzinski,
who earlier hit his 19th homer,
knocked in the goahead run with an
eighth-inning single and Chet Ijemon
followed with a three-run homer. Ed
Farmer, 3-3, was the winner in relief
ol Richard Dotson. Mike Norris, 119. took live loss.

CALL...

M b

„

n w w r m n iv

A u t o - In s u r a n c e
.

' &gt; ,

\ A* f

323*2454
BIug Bultdlnf. ., Cron From Sanford Plan

Major-League Roundup
iffO N C fto fS
M *|*r League SMndlngt
By United Prett Inltrnilio n al
Nallenal League
ISecend Half)
E lt t
w L P it. OB
Montreal
IS 1* S44 —
St Lout*
72 71 *17 1’ J
Chicago
70 77 .47* 4
&gt; Phila
70 73 4 0 4'*
N Y.
70 74 4*1 5
Ptlburgh
11 7* .40* 7
West
Houston
71 14 «)« —
Cinci
7* 17 *04 I»»
San Frn
74 tl 54* ) 'J
■Los Ang
14 70 S4S 4
Atlanta
11 77 41* * 'l
San Dgo
1) 77 1** t»
■F ir t l h ill division winner
Frid a y'! R etullt
Philadelphia *. Chicago 7
Montreal *. New York ]
Cincinnati 10. Atlanta 7
Pittsburgh S. SI. Louit *
Lot Angeles 1. Houston 0
San Francisco 1. San Diego 0
Saturday's Garnet
New York (H arris 141 at
Montreal (B urn * 7 71, I ;3S pm
Pittsburgh (Tiant 7 41 at St
LOU'S (For»ch » SI. 1 IS p m
Lot Angeles (Power 11) al
Houston (Ryan f SI. 1 M pm
Philadelphia (Carlton 1141 al
Chicago (Bird 4 41. 7 70 pm
Cincinnati iBercnyi 1 11 el
Atlanta (Nlekro 7 11, 7 11 p m
San Francisco (Whitton *11
at San Diego (K i* *u lu a O il,
10 01 p m
Sunday'* Dame*
New York al Montreal
Pittsburgh al SI Loun
Cincinnati al Atlanta
Philadelphia al Chicago
Lot Angelrt al Houilon
San Francisco a I San Diego
American League
ISecend H alil
East
w L FCl. OB
Boston
7* tl Stl —
7* l l 4*1 —
Detroit
(l
7* l* I I I
M il**u
74 l* 44* I ' i
Ball
77 77 soo *
i NY
&gt;1 74 4*7 S 'l
Cteve
1* 71 4*) |V»
Toronto
West
74 70 54) —
Ken City
■Oastnd
7) It 1)7
Mim
It 14 4*7 )'1
70 14 4S) 4
Seam*
It 7) 44) *
Texas
11 7* 40* *
Chcago
7
Call)
1* 74 ) l l
it ten winner
■F irs t hall
F rid a y ’* R tiu llt
Boston 1, Cleveland *
Baltimore I. New York 0
Texas 1. Minnesota }
Seem* I . Kent** City 1
Milwaukee I . Detroit *
California I I . Toronto 1
Chicago *. Oakland 1
Saturday's Oamet
(A ll Tim et BD TI
Texas (Darwin t i l al Min
netota (W illiam* * 1 ).
11:11
am
Cleveland
(W all*
7 t l at
Boston (Eckertley M l . 1 p.m
Milwaukee
(Heat
ID
at
Delroil (Wilcox I I I ) . I IS p m
Toronto
(Stieb
1101
at
California (Renko 7*1, * pm
Chicago
(Burn*
111
at
Oakland (McCatty 1 ) * ), * : »
p m.
Baltimore IFIenegan Id ) at
New York (May d i l l . • pm.
Seaiila
(Stoddard
111 al
Kam a* City (Gura 104), 1:11
pm
Sunday's Gama*
Milwaukee al Dotrort
Baltimore at New York
Cleveland al Boston
T ria l al Mmnasota

Seattle at K a n u t City
Toronto at Californio
Chicago al Oakland. 2

L lM M O r t i
Ma|ar League Results
By Unlfad P ratt Infarnatianal
National League
Phila
000 770 K l - * 11 1
Chicago
101 000 00B- J 7 1
Larton. W Raad ( I I and
Moreland; Kravec. La. Smith
111, Caudill IT). Eatlw ick i n .
Capilta ( I ) and J. Davit W—
Larton 110) L —Kravec l ll&gt; .
HR! Philadelphia, Schmidt
( I I I . Matthevn ( I I.

I Rica Alano
I ) 40
0(111 *1 «0; T i l l I I 701 1*
Second game
• LequeOla
11 (0 * *0 1*0
7 0 le * 0 y a r i
* 00 4 40
SP IIa Alano
440
0(7-1) M l *0; P it 71 )41 •«; T i l
7-1) 110* *0; 0 0 0 (1 I t II
Third g«m*
* Negui Juan
«*0 4 40 1 70
ILeg ue Alano
4 00 4 00
4 Ole* Ola
440
O il 41 I I I * ; P I4 1 I 114 «*; T U ­
M I 4i* 40
Fourth gam*
lA iu ria Ctlonn
*40 too ; *0
IG a it iO r a r l
4*0 4 10
l Aria Goiri
) *0

Toeont
000 HO 100- 1117
Calif
*10 000 0 0 .- 11 I I I
Leal, Mlrabella (1). Bomback
( I I. Garvin (7 ), Jackton ( l l
and M arlln ei; lah n . Frost (II
and Ott w -Z a h n (10 111 L —
Leal
(7 I I I .
HR- California,
Ford (11).
Chcago
100 100 040 - 4 * 0
O* kind
000 100 000- 1 7 1
Dolton. Farm er (7) and F is k ;
Norrlt. Jonct (*) and Heath W
-F a rm e r ( ) ) ) L - N o rr it (11.
t)
H Rt-Chlcago.
Lutlntki
&lt;1*1. Lemon (t).

0(11) I I 40; Pit U I II II, TO
l- ll H IM

NY
000 000 OKI- ) 7 0
Monlrrl
000 101 40a—* 10 7
Zachry. Searage ( I ) , Boltano
( I ) , Mart hall (71, Puleo I I I and
S'earnt.
Culllckton, Reardon
( I I and Carter W -Oullickton
I I I ) L - Z * c h ry (7)11.
Clntl
111 030 700-10 14 0
Atlanta
070 000 000- 1 1 1
Solo and Nolan. Boggt, Walk
( I I , Brdrotian (SI, Bradford I I I
and S.natro W -Solo (10*1 L —
Boggt (1411. H R t—Cincinnati.
O ile r (1), Knight («&gt;.
Ptthrgh
010 *00 000- 1 1)0
St Louit
010 100 010- * f I
Solomon, Tekulve ( I I , Scurry
( I I and Nicotla; Kaat, DeLeon
(4). Syktt ( I I , Bair I I I , Sutler
(*l and Porter W-Solomon (I
II.
L-K aa i
(* * i
H R t—
Pittsburgh, Lacy (11; St. Louit.
Porter (1)

Balt

000 010 000- I * 0

NY.

000 000 000- 0 *0

McGregor and Demptey, John
and Foote. W -McGregor ( I I
*) L - Jo h n ( M l . -----Treat
01) 000 0 0 1 - S I ) 0
Mirer
000 000 MO— 1 * 0
Hough.
Comer
111
and
Sundberg; W illiam *, Verhoev
ern ( f ) and Wynegar
W—
Hough O i l . L —William* (0*1.
HR—Tre at. Putnam (I ) .
Mil«*U
400 100C O ) - I t I
Drtroil
1M 010100— * f 0
Caldwell. V u c k o v l c h |« l.
Easterly ( I ) . Finger* it ) and
Simmon*; M orrlt, Saucier (*)
and Parrish W -E a tte rly 0 ) 1 .
L -M o rri*
(O il.
H fl*-M II
waukee. Cooper (111, Thomas
(111,
Yount
(101.
Detroit,
Trammell 111, Woe km tut t ( I I ,
Jack ton ( I ) , Whitaker (SI.

Ilelh game

1 Pita Vega*
1100**0 **0
4 L e in Aran*
II M i l 10
ILeo u eG o iri
4 00
0(4 1) 44 I * . PC 141 111 I I I TO
4 11 111 4*
Seventh game
I A |un*
9 10 10 40 1 10
lir a
I S *0 *00
4 G a ill
*40
0(171 I I I I ; P( 1-71 14* M ; T(l7 41 1*4 40

io l A M
A l Orlande Seminal*
Friday night rttu itt
P in t gem*
lO lea Zerreg*
1 1 (0 *1 0 *10
1 Le 1*1 O y iri
1140 110

DAY LIQUOR SALE

Lake Brantley — UCF
Sanford Seminole — Oviedo
Crooms — Lyman — Lake Mary
Lake Howell — Trinity Prep

H I MM IMS TKIMt ttTTUHl fl I I U

' "153 ABC'Sflwds

Lot Ang
100 000 070- 1 10 0
Houtlcn
000 000 000- 0 * )
Moot on and Sciotcia, Yeager
( I I , RiFile, LaCorl* ( I ) , Sam
bilo I I I and Athby W - Hooton
( I I *1 L - R u h lt (a SI
san Frn
ooo too io i - ) i i I
San Dgo
000 000 000- 0 1 0
Holland. Minton (f) and M ay;
r I r a o v I d. Lucat ( I I and
Gwotdt W—Moiand (111 L —
Fireovld (O il. H R -S a n Fran
cisco. Bergman (41.
American League
Cteve
010 )00 000- 4 t I
Boston
Ml 1100 0 « - S I I I
Garland. Lewallyn (SI and
D ial. H u nt, Stanley (41 and
Gedman W -Stanley (10 71 L —
Garland
I ) 71
HR —Bolton,
Yatlrtem tkl (7).

Filth game
) Bilbao Zubi
IS 10 7 M 4 10
I M arli Vrqat
1 *0 7 *0
7 Zale Goicoechra
110
0 (1 )1 17 71, P I ) II I f .) * ; T IM 71 111.**.

Hem* Runt
National League — Schmidt.
Phi
M;
Dawton,
Mil
1).
Kingman. NY 11; F o tlff, Cln
70. Hendrick. Stl 17
American League — Arm ai,
Oak and Thomat. Mil 11;
Lutlntki, Chi, M urray, Bal and
Evant. Bot It.

(

THE CHALLENGE

* SANFORD
Z

fs Ovlodo hoadod h r another itafe playoff berth7

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�Sunday, Stpt. 37, lt ll

Country
U s t week's predictions showed 11
winners out ol 13 (or a win average of AS
percent. My point spreads were belter
than HARRAH'S (or 13 of the 14 games.
Not bad (or a country boy!
This week's match-ups lack color.
None of the five remaining undefeated
teams are scheduled to play another
undefeated team. However, it Is still
early In the season and some surprising
upsets are possible.
MIAMI (34) AT BALTIMORE (1-2)
The Dolphins, with key offensive
players injured, reacted like true
professionals la st Sunday. They
reorganised the offense, and sparked
by ■ rampaging defense that sacked
Ken Stabler eight times, calmly pulled
ahead of the Oilers in the fourth quarter
and held on to win. Few teams in the
NFL are a match for this kind of indepth ability and sheer youthful will-towin. I predict Miami will win over
Baltimore by 3 points.
NEW ENGI.AND 10-3) ■AT PITT­
SBURGH &lt;M)
The Patriots have scored 52 points in
their first three starts this year, but
erratic playing at critical times has
kept them from a win. They arc playing
an average II points below their
predicted ability. The Sleeleri are now
even with the stats after b decisive win
over the Jets, and have the sweet smell
of victory about them. Pittsburgh
should win by 10 points.
HOUSTON ( M ) AT CINCINNATI 12-11
The Bills had a comeuppance with
Philadelphia last week. They still have
the best offensive game In the AFC
East, and will be looking forward to

Cliff
Nelson
Football
Prognosticator
salving their hurt pride at Cincinnati.
The Brngalc are playing well this year,
hut Buffalo should be able to take them
by 8 p in ts.
HOUSTON &lt;2-11 AT NEW YORK JETS
104)
Alter their upset on Sunday, the
Oilers will Ik* tougher to handle. Their
superb defense should prove ton much
for the liapless Jets. Predict Houston
will win by 4 points.
ATLANTA (3-0| AT CLEVELAND 11-2|
There are no upset indicators lor this
game, and the basic lormula simply
cranked nut a prediction ior the
Falcons to continue their winning ways
by beating the Browns 14 points.
SAN 1)1EGO 13-01 AT DENVER (2-11
This should be the best game ol the
week. The Churgcrs are simply superb
this year and have scored an astoun­
ding 114 [mints in tlieir first three
games while allowing only Ml points.
Although tough in their home town, the
Broncos can only win this one with the
help ol a couple ol miracles. Predict
San Diego to win by 8 points.
OAKLAND (M ) AT DETROIT 11-21
Certain signs pointed to an upset to
the basic formula, so pencils had In be
sharpened for this one. Detroit lost to

Minnesota by 2 points, and Oakland
heat Hint same tenm by 2fi points, so
Oakland is obviously the better team.
An upset formula was used to predict
Oakland to win bv 2 points.
KANSAS CITY (M l AT SEATTLE (I2|
Both ol these team s have had a tough
schedule thus far. Seattle is playing
right on the predictions, while Kansas
City is scoring 14 points above the stats.
Expect the Chiefs to win by 9 points.
NEW YORK GIANTS '&lt;2*11 AT
DALI .AS (3-01
This is a horrible mismatch, since the
Cowboys have not lost a home game
since Nov. 22,1979 - 11 straight wins in
Dallas. Expect Dallas to win handily by
28 points
WASHINGTON
|0-3|
AT
PH IU D E I.PH IA I34)
Tile high-flying Eagles have posted
wins against two Impressive opponents
Bnlfulo and New England, although
they are playing about 4 points below
ttieir statistical ability. They should
have no trouble in winning over
Washington by 12 points.
ST LOUIS 11-21 AT TAMPA BAY (1-2)
Both these teams need another win at
this point, Imt Tampa needs it more
than St Imuf*. The basic formula places
Tampa slightly ahead of St Imuis, but
warnings of an upset persist. Both
teams are almost dead even in the
statistics. An upset formula gives the
nisi to St biuis by 4 points.
MINNESOTA (1-2) AT GREEN BAY

11-2)
These lire two n( the NFC Crntral
Division teams ttiat are tied for first

land fasti place. Nothing spectacular
about either tenm at this point, and no
upsets arc indicated. Predict Min­
nesota to win by 10 points.
NEW ORLEANS |l - l ( AT SAN
FRANCISCO &lt;1-31
Atlanta beat (he 49ers by 17, and the
Saints. That is exactly how the formula
rales them: San Francisco to win by 10
imints.
LOS ANGELES 11-2) AT CHICAGO (1-

2l
Monday night football is generally
lietter than the Sunday afternoon
brand. May tie it Is because they are
alone in the spotlight with no com­
petition or have an extra day to rest.
This Monday night game should be a
good one. The Rams have been below
their statistical game by 9 points this
year, but the B ean are also down by
about the same amount, l-oi Angeles
won over Green Bay by 12; Chlrago lost
to Green Bay by 7. Thus, the Rams have
to be belter than the Bears. I used an
upset formula to predict a
Angeles
win by 3 points.

Cliff's Hangers
WINNING
TEAM
Miami
11
10
Pi ft* bur Qh
Buffalo
7)
Moulton
Jl
Atlanta
71
San D-pqo
71
Oakland
77
*an*a* City
74
Oalla*
4)
Philadelphia
77
St tou»%
ii
Minnesota
It
Sa n franc &lt;*co
7)
LCi\ Angelo*
11

LOSING TEAM
Baltimore
New England
Cincinnati
New York Jet*
Cleveland
Denver
Detroit
Seattle
New York Giant*
Washington
Tampa
Green Bay
New Or lean*
Chicago

16
JO
IS
IT
14
19
71
IS
IS
IS
14
9
11
JJ

Defense Totals 76 Sacks

Miami 'Swarm' Warns NFL
Dolphins*o
l

By United Press International
A swarm warning lias been posted
around the National Football league for
a Miami Dolphins defense which thrives
on gang-tackling. "The Swann" already
has crashed down upon quarterbacks for
16 sacks and has limited the trio of O.J.
Anderson, Franco Harris and Karl
Campbell to an average of 56 yards
.rushing.

Curtis Dickey and Handy McMillan give
Jones an enviable set of wea|xms. Jones
has a 6-2 record against the Dolphins
since 1975 when he began a string of three
straight AFC East titles.

L Thn Dolphins, unbeaten in three starts,
begin a stretch of three consecutive AFC
'East opponents Sunday with a 2 p in.
EDTkickoff at Baltimore. The Colls (1-2)
are capable of doing mischief to Hie
Dolphins the way quarterback Bert
Jones did in &gt;977 by overcoming an 18point deficit and topping another un­
beaten Miami contingent, 45-27.

"People are saying, ‘Are the Dolphins
(or real’ ’ We got (inked that question
alter beating Pittsburgh," he said.
"We've had a gut feeling since training
camp that we would have a good team.
TIk- Dolphins have held three straight Everybody says we’re too young or we’ve
op|H&gt;nents to 10 or few er points by ringing got too many people from other teams or
up victniies over St. Liuis (20-7i, Pitt- we don't have the experience you need.
sburgli (30-10) and Houston 116-10), and Hut we’ve believed in ourselves and we
Miami ranks second m the NFL iri total really did work hard in training comp.
defense by allowing only 2.15 yards We’re tliree-nnd-oh and we're on lop ol
pergume. What has placed exclamation the heap in Hie AFC East. We have a lot
marks on the defensive effort lias been an ol confidence, and we hope this will
aggressive |«iss rush which dungicd snowball and our confidence will grow
Houston's Ken Stabler eight times lor 61 and grow."
yards in losses. The Dolphins had 19
One tiling which alread y has
sacks in their first dozen games in Hfflt). snowballed, in tin- wrong direction, bus
and lliey an* ca liable of exceeding Dial U rn injury at running back. In each of
total in only four games n| Septemticr the first three games, the Dolphins have
1981.
lost fullback Terry Itnbiakie I knee),
"It just seemed like everything we did halfback Eddie Hill I ankle) and fullback
went right," nose tackle Bob Baumliower Woody Bennett to injured reserve.
said alter lie earned a game ball with Hobiskie amt Dennett required surgery,
lour sacks ol Stabler. "We had a gmd and Hill won't be eligible to return until
pass rush, but llau combinational things. Oct. 18 ii stretched ligaments in his left
Stabler bad to hesitate quite a lew times, ankle have Itea led. Starling halfback
which is a sign ol good coverage by the Tony Nathan suffered bruised ribs In the
victory at Houston and is a questionable
defensive twckiield.

This 24lh meeting of AFC East rivals
who have combined for nine of the II
division titles has an Intriguing subplot.
Dolphin Coach Don Shula, a former
player (195346) and coach (196349) o(
the Colts, will see the familiar horseshoe
on the helmet ot his 22-year-old son Dave,
a rookie punl returner and wide receiver
lor the Colls.
“ It'll be a strange experience," Don
Shula says. "I want him to do well, but at
the same time I make a living coaching
this football team ."
The focus of the Dolphins' defense,
however, will be No. 7 Jones, off to a
sluggish start in 1981 but capable o( a
fireworks display. His wide receivers
Ray Butler and Roger Carr and a backfield combination of speed and [lower in

Miami, ol course, tias some aerial
striking power. Q uarterback David
Woodley stung the Colts with three touch­
down [lasses in a 21-14 triumph at
Baltimore last December in Woodley's
rookie season, and the Colls have
surrendered 91 points in three games
including four TD (Misses to Denver's
Craig Morton in a 28-10 loss last Sunday.

" I iisi year we laid same problems with
our pass rush 127 sacks) and we deserved
a lot n| the heat that we look,"
Baumliower added. "I think we've done a
good job working on ii during (raining
camp, and it's really coming around.

participant at Baltimore.
Tliat left Hie Dolphins with reliever
Don Struck at quarterback and rookies
Andra Franklin and Tom Vignrito in the
backfield (nr a winning 40-yard touch­
down drive m the fourth quarter.
Franklin, who had burst 29 yards on an
earlier carry , accepted Strock's swing
[k is s lor a three-yard TI) with 6:40 to
play. Strock completed three straight
pusses to Duriet Harris on the winning
push, accounting for 31 of the 40 yards.
Strock completed 7 ol 10 passes after
relieving Woodley when Ihe Dolphins
held a 9-7 edge at halftime. Uwe Von
Schumann booted field goals of 42,37 and
27 yards for the early lead, running his
career total to 197 points and moving to
fourth place on (he all-time Dolphin
scoring chart when he surpasses Paul
Warlieid i)98i and Mercury Morris
1198i.
"I was pretty pleased that tie (Simla)
did call upon me in that situation,"
Strock said, "and I was a little surprised
that it liup[&gt;cned at tliat lime, when we're
leading, 9-7. But I've been in u lot ol
situations, and 1 just try to be ready at all
times."
Struck added, "Our defense bad eight
sacks and could have had more. It was
very impressive to watch Irnm the
sideline, and I was very thankful tluit I
wasn't in there playing against them."
Shula, now 196-784, will return to
Woodley this week as his starter. The
duel between Woodley and Jones m at­
ches two b'uisiana State quarterbacks
drafted seven years apart.

Winless
N e w England, Redskins, Jets Seek First Victory Sunday
By United Press International
Krhordl, given a ringing endorsement
Moving into Hie fourth week ol Uie NFL Friday by owner Billy Sullivan, seems
season, three teams — New England, eonlldcnl bis team will turn itself around
Washington and Ihe New York Jets —
Following last week's 38-10 rout by the
find ti&gt;eruse Ives without a victory and up
Steelers, Jets' President Jim Kensil
against formidable opponents Sunday. declared (bat Coach Walt Michaels was
The Patriots meet (lie Steelers In
still (lie man lo turn around Hie team’s
Pittsburgh, while the Jets liosl Hie
fortunes. Michaels, in iiis filth season as
Houston Oilers and the Redskins travel to
coach, lias a 23-42 record.
Philadelphia lo meet Hie undefeated
But Mieluiels, whose club lias allowed
Eagles.
"Don't get down on us; we’re not out ol 100 points in its first three games, insists
It yet," said New England defensive the Jets just have lo work harder
lineman Tony McGee after the Patriots’
The Oilers feel that quarterback Ken
35-31 loss lo Dallas last Monday night. Stabler, who ended his brief retirement
"We've got 13 games left. We can't get just before Ihe start of the season, is
down on ourselves because a lot ol teams finally rounding into form and running
have been 54 and come back."
back Earl Campbell is 100 [&gt;er cent tor
The Patriots will have lo find a solution Hie first time since the start of the
lo Pittsburgh's rushing game, which season.
produced 343 yards last week against HaThe Redskins, under first year coach
Jets. New England has yielded an
Joe Gibbs, have allowed 83 points and
average of 335 yards rushing per game.
linve lost the ball 12 times via tumbles or
Bui the Steelers may elect to throw Hie
interceptions us they search tor their
ball against the Patriots.
tirst victory. Nonetheless, Eagles Coach
"I expect them to play more man-toDick Venniel Is worried.
man defense in the secondary because
"They're No. 1 in the league in lotul
they hive five No. 1 draft choices and Hie
fifth guy ia used in their (irevenl offense and tlieir defease is very lough."
package," said PIHiburgh Coach Chuck said Vermeil. "We’ve never lined uji and
played an easy game against Hie Red­
Noll.
The Patriots secondary has not in­ skins and we’re expecting the same kind
tercepted a paaa this year while their of game."
first three opponents have picked off 11
liist week, in a 40-30 loss to SI. hiuis,
p a n e s by quarterbacks Steve Grogan the Redskins accumulated 521 yards in
and M all CavaNfeigh, who sta rted lotal offense as q u arte rb a ck Joe
Tfwlsmann enjoyed Hie finest passing
against Dallas.
Still, New E ngland Coach Hon day of his 8-year rarecr But Washington

• *-

♦’ %

lost the hall twice inside llicir own 25 and
gave up a punt return TD.
The Redskins will be without the
services ol guard Huss Grimm, running

hack Joe Washington und linebacker
Monte Coleman, all injui cd. Philadelphia
will be without running back Wilbert
Montgomery (pulled hamstring).

ANSWERED PRAYER
Kvenlng Herald Photographer Ton) Vincent catches Casselberry's
Hae Huston’s emotions from top lo bottom in a recent football game
at Seminole High School last Wednesday. In the top photo, the Lake
Howell junior varsity cheerleader urges the Hawks to a touchdown.
In the second photo, Hae salutes a score by the Sliver Hawks. In
photo three, her mood changes to concern as the Tribe J V threatens.
Later on the drive, ltae prays for assistance. Her prayers were
apparently answered. Howell prevailed, 21 -o.

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Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Sunday, Sept, 77, ttll—SB

Altamonte Towers
Beautifies Complex

BUSINESS
IN BRIEF

AI.TAMONTF. SPRINGS
A $250,000 renovation prograu
lias been completed on Executive Point Towers, a twin town
office complex overlooking Interstate 4 and S l&lt; 436
Comprised of the FKCand Dade Savings office buildings, the
center underwent a total rehabilitation and beautification
program.

G as Prices Stabilize In

Florida During Last Month

Tlie buildings, which encompass a combined 1.10,000 square
loot of leasing space, are ow ned by Altamonte Towers
Association i ATAi . a Florida partnership

MIAMI—G asoline prices across Florida have
remained stable over the last month with the average
price of all grades of gasoline at full service pumps
unchanged at $1.43 per gallon.
The motorist can still enjoy big savings at the selfservice pump—11 cents per gallon below full-service
prices.
The latest AAA Clubs of Florida report slums Fort
l-iuderdale had the highest price for a single grade of
gasoline with full service premium selling for $1,535
per gallon. The lowest price for a single grade of full
service gasoline was found at Port Richey where
regular was selling for $1,325.

•'Because ol its physical appeal, superb locution and high
visibility on Interstate 4. Executive Point Towers has been the
most dominant office complex in Altamonte Springs." ex­
plains Aaron Hudson o| Republic Funding Management
Corporation i HFMCl. management and leasing agents for the
twin buildings. •With the renovation, we've taken the
buildings and put them on |gir aesthetically with their out­
standing location, making it one of the most prestigious
executive office centers in the marketplace."

Travel Advice Begins

Since the renov ation, occupancy lias jumped from 83 percent
more than tit fiereent. with much of the credit given to the
nationally renown interior design firm of Creative Design,
Bethesdu. Mary land, and Benton-Biirton IX-sign Continuum ol
l.ongwisHl which were retained to bring the new look to the
buildings.
io

Atlanta—In keeping with Cable News Network's
commitment to provide viewers with relevant, reliable
information, CNN introduces the "Air Travel
Advisory."
CNN's "Air Travel Advisory" will give viewers an
overall picture of the nation's air traffic flow. Potential
delays and disruptions that may effect travel to and
from the nation's major airports will be reported,
whether due to equipment failure, reduced staffing or
extreme weather conditions.
CNN's "Air Travel Advisory" reports will be aired
four times each weekday morning, during the latter
half of tlie hourly newscasts between 8 a.in. and 12 noon
l ESTI. Afternoon updates will be provided when
conditions warrant.

One «f tun high-rise
e x e c u tiv e
oil if e
buildings al Kxeciltive
Point Timers, which
underwent reiiuvutinu
was the H U ' office
li ti i I d i ii g .
w li i c li
c o m p r is e s
.iit.iiiio
square-feet ol leasing
space.
Itcc cU iiig
much ol the attention
was the building's
lobby area, which was
expanded liolli ver­
tically and bori/ontally and accented
with a variety of
uinteinporary design
treatments such as tile
flo o rin g ,
an g led
m irrors,
planters,
recessed lighting and
modern artwork.

Real Estate Seminar Set
The Keyes Co., Realtors will sponsor "Career
Opportunities in Real Estate" Thursday, Oct. 1 at the
Quality Inn North, 2025 W. State Road 434, Dmgwood,
at 7:30 p.m.
Guest speakers will be Theodore J. Pappas, Keyes
Co. Chairman of the Board, who will speak about Real
Estate as a Career. Fred Stanton Smith, company
president, whose topic will be Getting Started in Real
Estate; Jack C. Faria, vice-president and general
sales manager, who will discuss Sales Management
Opportunities, Phil D. Clodgo, director of training,
discussing Profcssionalsim ill Real Estate; and Phyllis
M irm an, T raining Coordinator, explaining the
Licensing I’roccss.
There is no admission charge.

In addition to the cosmetic changes that have taken place,
the interiors of each building were redesigned to tic more
functional to handle ingress and egress pedestrian traffic.
In the five-story FKC building, that was accomplished by
expanding the entire lobby area — vertically as well as
horizontally
and making it the focal |M&lt;int of the building.
That was effectively achieved by reconfiguring the budding's
lirsl floor layout by devoting more than 700 square (cel of of­
fice space to the expansion, providing two sets of double doors
at tlu* mam entrance and accenting the elevated entry with a
sloping glass-paneled overhang and lush landscaping.
The lobby is highlighted by a 25-foot iviling, which provides
a belter feeling of depth and is accented by extensive use of
m itiois. textured wail treatments, fully tiled floor, planters,!
eontcni|iorury art and recessed lighting.
The theme of the lobby has been maintained throughout the!
common areas of the building Mirrors, planters and con-l
temporary artwork are complemented hy a rich blend of soft j
green and soothing yellow textured and vinyl wall treatments
and lush green car|ieting.
Attention was also given to the building's twin elevators,'
with interiors softened by placement of mirrors and paneling

Financial Decision-Making
Price M ea n s Nothing; Consider The 'Real' Cost
\
I

( T H I R D IN A S E R I E S

OF FIVE ARTICLES!
How much docs a tw o-dollar
magazine cost? On the magazine
cover, the price may appear tirm ; but
the real cost, measured in terms o(
&gt;our purchasing power, varies ac­
cording to your tax bracket.
If you are married and your joint
taxable income - that's what you pay
tax on after deductions and exemp­
tions - is $20,000 to $24,000, you fall in
the 28 percent tax bracket and you pay
$2.78 in (ire-tax income for a $2
publication. In the 49 percent bracket
you may |iay as much as $3.82 for that
same flossy little publication.
The difference, as explained by the
Florida Institute of Certified Public
Accounts, lies in the amount of
spendable income left to you after
meeting your tax obligations. The
higher the bracket, the more you must
earn to liave $2 available to spend.
Viewed in these terms, taxes become
a significant factor in every financial
decision you make.

The money you s|&gt;end is usually
money you have earned — and that
means you pay a tax on it. You must
earn $80 before you can spend $40 on a
dinner for two if you're in the 50
percent tax bracket. Think about how
limit it takes you to earn that much
before you decide how to spend it
Here's how you can figure out the
impact of taxes on your purchasinit
power, once you know jour taxable
income. Divide the cost of the item
you want to purchase by "one" minus
your tax bracket. For instance, if jou
want to buy a $20 ticket to a concert
and jour taxable income is in the 43
percent marginal tax bracket,do this:
Divide 20 by one minus 43. This equals
20 divided by 57 and that comes to
$35 09, so that's what you need to earn
before sfiending the $20.
The difference between just getting
by or becoming rich cun lie attributed
to the (inanciul wisdom exercised,
CPAs say. Here's an example that
may be extreme, but it's a clear
illustration of how this wisdom - or
lack of it works One can earn $ftn,oou

a year, hul wind up with no capital,
while others with the same income
grow wealthy. If you are among those
few who are in the 50 percent tax
bracket, a $12,000 automobile would
cost you $24,000 of income. In five
years, its value would Ik1 $2,000 If
instead ol buying a car you hud
purchased a tax shelter, investing the
whole $24,000 with only a 10 percent
return, ttiat would grow to $38,040 over
live years There are two options —
one leads to $2,000 and the other leads
to $38,040, or 20 times as much.
Tax planning should Ik* a con­
sideration in all of your spending. Not
only do you need to calculate your
purchasing |lower according to your
income tax bracket, you slmuld
consider other ways to reduce your
tax liability. For instance, wlien
buying durable goods, consider the
future value of the item. Quality
clothing can usually be donated to
thrill shops, then claimed us a tax
deduction, whereas clothing of lesser
value may simply wear out and lie
discarded Spending more initially

may actually result In more value to
you in the long run. The same may
apply to a piece of furniture. Before
buying it, ask yourself whether it is
likely to appreciate in value or
become a valuable antique.
The easy credit of our former "buy
now, pay later” society encouraged
people to buy more "things' then they
really needed. Quality, future value,
or tile tax Implications were not
considerations in the throw-away
society. Today, we are more con­
cerned with ways to gel more from
our money.
I.et’s say you buy a $45 pair of shoes,
which really cost you $82.50 in income
because y ou are in the 28 percent tax
bracket. Now add the finance
charges. Then, figure the tax
deduction for the finance charge
Obviously, you won’t go through these
computations every time you fiay the
baby sitter or get a shoesliine, but us
CPAs say, the more carefully you plan
discretionary spending, the more you
will have for the future

T0NITE

TOW IT

lit

PLAZA ANNIVERSARY SET
I’laus are underway for the 17th anniversary of the Sanford l*la/a scheduled
lor Oct. Hi-17. Dave Fouls, manager of II.I.S. clothing store and publicity
cliaiiman for the event, said drawings, refreshments and entertainment are
on lap lor the celebration.

AREA BUSINESS SPOTLIGHT
Rollins Elected To Post
PAID BEAUTY

Winter Park - Continental Group announced the election of
Thomas W Rollins as executive vice president of Continental
Group and president of its energy subsidiary, Continental
Resources Company.

Dean tlrrmuii. Miss
Florida. receives Sail
Series i:i: Itnnil from
Flagship's .lack Ifyril.
manager of the Smith
Seminole Office, as
one ol her prizes for
winning the slate
pageant. Dean stopped
by the office on her
way to Atlanta to
participate in .Miss
I’.S.A. pageant.

Mr Rollins was senior vice president in charge of tlie on­
shore region of Pennzoil Exploration and Production Com­
pany . a division of Pennzoil Company of Houston. He succeeds
Kenneth I.. I«iy, who became president of Transco Couqianics,
Inc. of Houston in April. In the interim, J.B. "Brick" Goldman,
president of Continental Resources Company's Florida
Exploration Company unit, has served us acting president
Mr. Rollins joined Pennzoil in 1968 after 15 years with Sliell
Oil Company, serving as exploration manager of Pennzoil
International until 1974. From 1974 to 1977 lie established ami
managed u planning and evaluation group for the company 's
domestic ami international oil and gus operations. He sub­
sequently was manager of tlie Gulf Coast Division and vice
president of Pennzoil Producing Company, and regional
manager, domestic onshore U ii A. exploration and produc­
tion. In November 1977, he became a vice president of Pennzoil
Company. He assumed fits most recent post in May 1979.
A native of Missoula, Mont., Mr. Rollins received a degree in
geological engineering from the Colorado School of Mines in
1953.

Lloyd Gets VP Nod

MWA

Florida Federal Savings and I/ian Association lias promoted
Branch Manager Jack A. Uoyd to regional vice president in
charge of the association’s operations in Orange-Seminole,
Volusia and Duval Counties.
Uoyd, who has been an assistant vice president and
manager of Florida Federal’s Altamonte Springs Branch for
die pas', year, joined Florida Federal as a branch operations
trainee in mid-1977 after graduating from the University of
Notre Dame with a degree in business administration. He also
lias served as an assistant branch manager at St. Petersburg
Beach and manager of Florida Federal's Casselberry Office.

tOPENS
O
ST

ll was (fraud opening time Thursday . Sept. 17 ul the Fayva Slmc store in the
Zayre shopping center, 29:W Orlando Drive. .Mike Crantim &lt;left), manager of
the store, and Sue Larkin, assistant manager, prepared for the opening by
stoekiiiff the shelves with the Fayva shoe line.

Crime Does Pay For Thief Catcher
Crescent City — getting involved pays off,
and for Austin Wilson, 24. of l.ake Mary,
getting involved made lum $50 richer.
Tom Miller, executive vice president ol
Miller Enterprises, Inc., gave Wilson a $50 gift
certificate for his efforts in helping to apprelwnd u thief, who had taken money from
the cash register of the la k e Mary Handy Way
Food Store, Sunday .
According to a re|x&gt;rt from die fak e Mary
Police Department, Wilson had just pulled into
the store's parking lot when the clerk came
running from (lie store saying some money
had been taken by a thief.
Wilson saw die suspect leaving, and began
pursuit of die vehicle. During die pursuit,

Wilson Bagged down Chief Ben Butler of die
Sanford Police Department, who also joined
die chase.
After pursuing the suspect for ubnut four
miles, die suspect's vehicle was pulled over
and die arrest was made by l.t. Scott Fyfe of
lie h ik e Mary police l)e|iartment.
1,1. Fyfe had been dispatched by die la k e
Mary Police Department alter being notified
by the clerk, Nora Douglas, who said the
suspect liad taken some money from the cash
drawer during a transaction
"When citizens get involved, like Mr.
Wilson, it sure makes our job a lot easier,"
said IJ. Fyfe.

&gt;

,-•

# • r -

I

�1 *f ,1
:;v

4D—Bygnlnf HtnM, Sanford, FI.

Sunday. Sapt.27, in i

CALENDAR
SUNDAY. SEPTEMBER 27
Sanford B l| Book AA, Florida Power building,
Myrtle Avenue, Sanford, open dloans!on, 7 p.m.
Seminole AA, I p.m., Halfway House off Highway 1792 on ta k e Minnie Road.
"Y oant-at-H esrt" dance, 8 p.m., DeBary Com­
munity Center, Shell Road, DeBary. Open to public.
Ballroom and round dancing, 8 p.m., Temple
Shalom, Providence and Elkcam boulevards, Deltona.
Reboa and Live Oak AA, Rebos Gub, 220 liv e Oak
Center, Casselberry, 10:30 a.m. open discussion, and 8
p.m., open meeting.
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 21
Seminole High School Open House, 7:30 jffn.,
opening session in the auditorium after which parents
will follow student's dally schedule and meet teachers.
Refreshments served in the library.
Sanford Al-Anon, 8 p.m., First United Methodist
Church, Park Avenue and Fifth Street.
Free dating service for mature adults, 1 p.m.,
Deltona Public lib rary , 1691 Providence Boulevard.
TUESDAY, SEPT. 21
Seminole County Council PTA Skate Party, 6:30-9
p.m., All American Skating Rink, State Hoad 436,
Altamonte Springs. |2 for students, parents skate free.
Tickets at Bear ta k e , Spring la k e and la k e Orlenta
schools.
Sanford-Breakfast Rotary Gub, 7 a.m., Sanford
Airport Restaurant.
Daybreakers Toastmasters, 7:15 a m ., Sanford
House Restaurant.

lJ - ^ t p J V s n t e L -

Legal Notice
IN TH E C IH CU IT COUNT SON
SEM INOLE COUNTY. FLO RID A
PRO BATE DIVISION
F lit Nvmbtr I I 110 CP
Division
IN R E : E S T A T E OF
JOSEPH BURTRANO SMITH.
Ok m i N
NOTICE OF ADM INISTRATION
TO A LL PERSONS HAVING
C LA IM S
OR
DEM AN DS
AGAINST TH E ABO VE ES T A TE
AND A L L O THER PERSONS
IN T E R E S T E D IN TH E E S T A T E :
YOU
ARE
H EREBY
N O T IF IE D
that
the
«d
m inistration ol Ih t to ta l* ol
Joseph Ourlrand Smith, dectAttd.
T ilt Numbtf I I 110 C P, It pending
m Iht Circuit Court lor Scminolt
County, Florid*. Probate Oivition.
Iht *d d rrtt ol which it Seminole
County Courthouse. Pott O llict
Dr ewer C. Senlord. F L 11771 The
personal representative ol Iht
estate It Sandra Smith Cardinal,
whose address is P . O Boa 1101.

.K f v r ia h iis a .r A

personal representative's allorney
B u t set forth below
* All persons having claims or
demands against the total* a r /
required.
W ITH IN
TH REE
MONTHS FROM TH E DATE OF
THE F IR S T PU BLICATIO N OF
THIS N O TICE. 10 III* with ID*
clerk of I he above court a written
statement of any claim or demand
they may have Each claim must
be in writing and must indicate the
basis lor Ih t claim, Ih* name and
address ol the creditor or hit agent
or allorney. and Ih* amount
claimed II Ih* claim it not yet.
due. the date when it will become
due shall be slated II the claim it
contingent or unliquidated, the
nature ol Ihe uncertainly shall be
staled It the claim it secured. Ihe
security shall be described The
, claimant shall deliver suttlcienl
■ copies ol Ih* claim to the clerk to
m abl* Ihe clerk lo mail on* copy
lo each personal representative.
All persons interested In the
•* eslal* lo whom a copy ol this
Notice ol Administration hat been
mailed ar* required. WITHIN
TH R E E MONTHS FROM THE
DATE
OF
TH E
F IR S T
P U B L IC A T IO N
OF
TH IS
N OTICE, to (lie any objection*
they may have Ihal challenge Ihe
validity ol Ihe decedent's will. Ihe
q u a lilica lio n s ol the personal
representative, or the venue ol
I'jritdiclion ot Ih* court
A LL CLAIM S. DEMANDS. AND
O BJECTIO N S NOT SO F IL E D
W ILL BE F O R E V E R B A R R ED
Dale ol lir t l publication ol this
Notice ol Administration Sep
tember 17, 1*11
Sandra Smith Cardinal
As Personal Representative
ot Ihe E s la l* ol
Joseph Bur trend Smith
Deceased
A T T O R N E Y FO R P E R S O N A L
R E P R E S E N T A T IV E
Kenneth M Bean*. Esquire
Pott Ottic* Drawer C
Casselberry. F L 11107
Telephone I10SI I l f 7SSS
Publish September 17. October a.
If 11
DEM 111

why the company notified its
customers it will Increase its
monthly fee by $1 without (lie
council's prior approval.
The l/mgwood-based firm
is operating in ta k e Mary
under a non-exclusive fran­
chise with the city requiring
city council approval of rale
changes.
Fran Durrenberger, a city
resident, complained to the
council Thursday night that
she received a bill from

Legal Notice
NOTICE
UNDER FICTITIO U S
NAME STA TU TE
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN:
Notice is hereby given that the
undersigned, pursuant lo Ih*
" F ic titio u s
Nam*
Statute"
Chapter US Of. Florida Statute,
will register with Ih* Clerk ol Ihe
Circuit Court in and lor Seminole
County. Florida, upon receipt ol
proof ot the publication ol this
notice. Ih* llctitloue name to wit:
MONEY M A R KETIN G SYSTEM S
OF FLO R ID A under which I am
engaged In business al 100
- Bwebtwafer Square In the City at
Longwood. Florida
That the party interested in
said business enterprise is as
follows P A R K E R . SM ITH 1
HAMMOND. INC.
Dated at Longwood, Seminole
County. Florida, this fth day of
September If t l
Publish: September I I . 10. 17.
October 4. t f ll
OEM 4S
IN TH E C IR C U IT COURT OF
THE E lO H T E E N T H JU D IC IA L
C IR C U IT .
IN
AND
FOR
SEM IN O LE COUNTY. FLO R ID A
CASE NO: I I tU CA «« E
IN R E : The M arriat* *1
M ARIA SOLEOAD DONES.
AND
H EN R Y DONES,
Rrtpondeflt
AM EN DED
NOTICE OF ACTION
TO H EN R Y DONES.
Lett known address
Broni. New York
YOU A R E N O T IF IE D that
Petition lor Dittolution ol
Marriage hat been tiled againtt
you and you ar* required lo terve
a copy ot your written dHemet. It
any. to ANA TANGEL RODRI
G UEZ. E S Q U IR E .o l I l f 111 North
Magnolia Avenue. Orlando,
Flo rid a 11101 Ihe Petitioner'*
allorney, on or before October I f ,
t f l l . and III* the original with the
Clerk ol Ih lt Court either belore
teevlce on Ih* Petitioner* at
lorney or immediately Ihereetter,
otherwit* a Judgment may be
mtered egalntl you lor Ih* reflet
demanded in the Petition
W ITNESS my hand and official
teal, Ihlt ]4th day of September,
I f l l . a l Senlord. Seminole County,
Slat* of Florida
(Seal)
ARTHUR H B EC KW ITH . JR
Clerk ol Circuit Court
By: Eleanor F . Buratlo
Deputy Clerk
Ana Tanqet Rodrlguei. Etq
l i t 111 North Magnolia Avenue
Orlando. Florida 11*01
Publith September 17, October 4.
It. If . TfOl
DEM IIS

NOTICE
S E R V IC E TO PERSONS U N ABLE TO PA Y T H E R E F O R
On the batit ol Regulation* ol the U. S Department ol Health,
Education and W ellar*. (41CF R Part 1040) Ih* turn of S14.000 hat been
ettebiithed at ih* level ol uncompentated services to ba mad*
available by Ih* F loe.da Living Nurting Center in Ih* period October I,
it* 1 lo September X . I f t l
The level tH forth above meet* Ih* presumptive compliance
quidelmet ol the federal regulation* and It 1 percent ol total operating
npente let* Medtcar* and Medicaid reimburtemenl
The lacllity will provide in p*tl*nt ter vice and tervicet provided tor
an M*d&gt;caid pallenlt which it not covered by Ih* Medicaid program
Service* to per ton* unable lo pay will b* provided on a first request,
first served basis in *qual quarterly amewnt*
To be eligible lo receive u.tcomp*nt*ted car*, fam ily income mutl b*
below KO percent ol Ih* current CSA Poverty Income Guidelines
Person* in Ih lt category may receive uncompentated ter vices bated
on the following schedule
INCOME
Non Farm
Farm
Percent ol Charges

g

1
a
0

$
m

.

100 pet.
S I.440
N olloEiceed
sa.no
47 pet.
11.4*0
4.150
4,144
S4.H0
11 pet.
4.150
A0M
7.sal
4.144
ISpct
4.010
MW
1.410
7.14}
For each Additional
11.170Fam
ily Member
im tiy
Ifttin w t Add
rww SI.MO
f'teev
-* The Florida Living Nursing Center will provide uncompentated
' services to all persona who are *l!g&gt;bf« tor service* unlll Ihe compliance
level lor the llacal year at staled above is me! Services w ill be provided
without discrimination to a ll persons regardless ol race, color or
a national origin.
* Publish: September 17. I SOI
DEM 111

Sem inole

M
f ip

* *

RATES

Itim # ......................... JOc* line
H O U RS
1 consecutive times, soca line
1:00 A .M . - S : 30 P .M .
rconsecutlvBtlmai .......... 41c
M O N D A Y thru F R ID A Y It consecutive tim es. $7c a line
S A T U R D A Y 4 Noon
$2.00 Minimum
----------------- 2 Lines Minimum

STOfff CASHIBB
Good sila ry . hospitalliatlon. I
week paid vacation every 4
month*. E ip e rle n c * not
n ectssa ry. Fo r Interview
Chon* th* manager at:
m -a isi
s it in s
m am
HMS4S

AlrparTBlvd.M
Casselberry 44
Celery Av*. *4
Lake Mary U

DEADLINES
Noon The Day Before Publication
Sunday - Noon Friday

1 Cats! 'll H u n k s
We wish to enprest our deepest
gratitude to ell our friends end
neighbors for the llowert. food
and cards ot sympathy tm t at
the time ol the tost ol our wile
and beloved mother Aldln*
Hutchinson
The
Fran k
Hutchinson Fam ily.

4—P erso n als

•

LE O A L A D V ER TISEM EN T
BOARDOF COUNTY
COMMISSIONERS
SEM IN O LE COUNTY
Sealed bid* for Group Life A
Health Insurance lor County
employees and dependents. FC I I ,
will be received in Ihe O lllc* of
Purchasing. Seminole County
Services Building, Ind Floor. I*t
Street and Park Avenue. Sanlord.
Florida H77I until 1 00p m . local
lime. Wednesday, October I I .
I N I . al which time and place, b&gt;dt
will be publicly opened and read
aloud Bidt submitted alter Ihe
1 0 0p m deadline will be rHurned
unopened
Only bids Irom lirm t which have
received written notification ol
positive prequalificalion will be
accepted Prequalilicalion criteria
hat been previously advertised
and vendors of record to notified
IN TH E C IR C U IT COURT OF
Rid specifications have been
THE E lO H T E E N T H JU D IC IA L
forwarded to a ll prequalified
C IR C U IT .
IN
AND
FOR
bidden Copies ol specification*
SEM IN OLE COUNTY. FLO RIO A. are available lor review only In the
CASE NO SI 1*11 CA I I K
Olfice ol Purctiatinq
COMBANK W IN T E R
PARK,
Upon award, tuccettlul bidder
T R U S T E E . I k a COMMERCIAL will benolilied mwriting Contract
BANK AT W IN TER PA R K , a tobeeltective at toon at practical,
Florida Banking Corporation, and with anticipated start dale on or
PAN AM ERICAN BANK OF OR
belore January I. IN I
LANOO. N A . AS T R U S T E E
The County reserves Ihe right to
UNDER TRUST NO 4S 011110 0. a re|ect any or all bidt, with nr
National Banking Corporation.
without
cause.
to
waive
Plaint lift, technicalities, or lo accept the bid
vs.
which In lit ludgemvnl best serve*
B E T T Y JOHNSON LAWSON, II the interest ot the County. Cost of
alive, and if dead, her unknown submittal ot this bid it considered
tpoute. heirs, devisees, grantees, an operational cotl ol the bidder
attlg n eet, lie n o rt, Iru tle e t. and shall not be pasted on to or
creditors and all other parliet borne by Ihe County.
claiming by, through, under or
Person* are advised that, il they
agintt her. the unknown tpoute. decide to appeal any decision
h eirs,
devisees,
grantee*, made at this meeting hearing,
attlgneet. lienort. Irutleet. and they will need a record ol Ihe
creditor* ol S B LAW SON, proceedings, and. lor such pur
deceased, and all other parliet pote. they may need to ensure Ihal
claiming by. through, under or a verbatim record of the
agamit him. Ih* unknown tpoute. proceedings it made, which record
h e irt.
d e vite e t.
grantees, includes Ihe letlim o ny and
attlgneet. lienort. Irutleet. and evidence upon which Ihe appeal it
creditors ol FRAN K LAWSON, lo be bated
deceased and all other parliet Publish September 11. 17, IN I
claiming by, through, under or DEM 14
againtt him, Ih* unknown tpoute.
heirs.
d e vite e t.
grantees,
FIC TITIO U S NAME
attlgneet, lienort. Irutleet. and
Notice is hereby given Ihal I am
creditors ot EMMA ADAMS LAW
engaged in business al P O Boi
SON S P IC E R , deceased, and all
1174 Oviedo. F lo rid * 1174S
other p a rlie t claim ing by,
Semmolr County, Florida under
through, under or agtmtt her: Ihe
Ihe lic tilio u s name ol J P
unknown tpoute. heirt. deviteet.
G O R E E . B O O K S E LLER , and Ihal
q ra rle e t. a ttig r.e rt. lienort.
l intend lo register said name with
Irutleet. and creditors ol H. F.
the Clerk ol the Circuit Court.
LAWSON, deceased and all other
Seminole County. Florida In *c
parties claim ing by. through,
cordance with Ihe provisions of Ihe
under or againtt him and all
Fictitious Name Statutes. To Wit
unknown natural persons il alive,
Section I4S 0* Florida Statutes
and il dead or not known lo be dead
ITS7
or a liv e , their te ve ral and
Sig John P Goree
re tp e d iv e unknown tpoutet.
Publish September 17. October 4.
h e irs.
d e visers.
grantees,
II. II . IN I
attignees. lienort, Irutleet. and
DEM 114
cred ito rs, or other parties
claiming by, through, or under
Ihote unknown natural persons,
IN THE C IR CU IT COURT. IN
and all claimant*, persons or AND FOR SEM IN O LE COUNTY.
parliet. natural or corporate, or
FLO R ID A
whose eaact legal t la lu t is
CASE NO. I I 1447 C A 4 I E
unknown, claiming under any ol
IN R E : THE M ARRIAO B O F:
the above named or described
FRAN C ES K M AY.
defendantt or parties claiming to
Respondent Husband,
have any right, till* or Inleretl in and
and lo the lands herealter
B E T T Y J M AY.
described.
PHitioner Wile
Defendant*
NOTICE OF ACTION
THE STATE OF FLO R ID A TO
NOTICE OF ACTION
FRAN CES K M AY. whose last
TO: B E T T Y JOHNSON LAWSON,
known residence and m ailing
il alive and all parties claiming
■nteretlt by, through, under or address it 1100 Burkett. Boa 7,
Wa,cross Georgia I I SOI :
ag aintt.
BETTY
JOHNSON
YOU
ARE
H EREBY
LAWSON, if deceased. S. B
N O T IFIE D that a proceeding lor
LAW SON, deceased: FR A N K
dissolution ol your marriage hat
LAW SON, deceased; EM M A
been tiled against you and that
AOAMS LAWSON
S P IC E R ,
Petitioner. B E T T Y J M AY. seeks
deceased, and H F . LAWSON,
other relief against you effecting
deceased, and all parties having or
Its* following described personal
claiming lo have any right, till* or
proprrty, to wil
interest in the property herein
A IS' Twin Hull, serial number
described
RRS4II I;
YOU A R E H E R E B Y notified
A 10 horsepower Mercury Motor,
that an action lo quiet Ih* till* to
serial number IM I0 II.
the following described real
ANO the following described
property In Seminole County.
real property, to wit
Florida
Lot 11. BH Ridge. Farmington
SW '&lt; of Ih* SW ' &lt;of the NE ' . o l
AND you are required to appear
Section 11. Township I I South.
and til* your Answer or oilier
Rang* I I E a tl.
defense or pleading with the Clerk
hat been tiled aoalntt you in Ihe
of Ih* Circuit Court in and tor
above styled cause and you ar*
Seminole County, Florida, and
required to serve a copy of your
serve a copy thereof on
written detent*, if any, lo It on
Petitioner's attorney. RO G ER L.
Curry, Taylor 1 Carls. Suit* 1110.
B E R R Y , ISO E Com m ercial
100 E a tl Robinson Street, Orlando.
Street, P O Drawer O. Sanlord.
Florida » I0 ) . and til* Ih* original
Florida 11771. on or before Its* lis t
with Ih* Clerk of Ih* above styled
day ot October. IN I. or otherw.se
court on or before Oct. 14. IN I;
a dHault will be entered against
otherwise a judgment may be
you
entered againtt you tor relief
W ITNESS my hand and official
demanded in ih* complaint or
seal ol this Clerk of Ih* Circuit
petition
Court on the laih day of Sep
W ITN ESS my hand and the tea!
I ember. IN I
of Mid Court on September 10th,
(Seal)
IN I.
ARTH UR H. B E C K W IT H .JR
(S E A L I
C L E R K O r TH E C IR C U IT
Arthur H. Beckwith J r .
COURT
lle rk ot the Circuit Court
B Y : Susan E Tabor
Carrie E BuHtner
D EPU TY C LER K
Deputy Clerk
Publith: September M. V . Oc­
Publish September I L N . 17 A Oct
tober «. I I , IN I
4. IN I
DEM *7
OEM S4

Legal Notice

831-9993

CLASSIFIED DEPT.

Legal Notice

Superior notifying that rates
beginning Nov. I are going up
from $7 monthly to $8.
In the notification to
h o u s e h o ld s ,
S u p e r io r
Sanitation said the increase is
necessary because Seminole
County Commissioners have
increased dump fees at Use
sanitary' landfill from $6.25
per load to $9.85, a 57 percent
increase.
M ayor W alter Sorenson
advised Mrs. Durrenberger to
refuse payment.

Orlando-W inter Park

322-2611

O vereaten Anonymous, 7:30 , mh „ Altamonte Mall,
S ean.
Born to Win AA group, 8 p.m., Ravenna Park Baptist
Church, 2743 Country Club Road. Sanford Gosed.
Alcoholics Anonymous, 8 p.m., Altamonte Springs
Community Church, State Road 436 at Hermits Trail.
Gosed.
Wednesday Step AA, 8 p.m., Penguin Building,
Mental Health Center, Crane's Roost, Altamonte
Springs. Closed.
THURSDAY, OCT. 1
Tropical Weaver* Guild of Orlando meeting, 10 a.m.
St. John’s tath eran Church, 1600 S. Orlando Ave.,
Orlando. Program — "Weaving for Christmas.” Open
to those interested in weaving or spinning.
Senior Citiiens trip to Cypress Gardens leaving
Sanford 8:30 a.m. from Sanford Gvlc Center. Pick up
at ieed s In Casselberry, 9 a.m. Lunch and boat ride
Included. Call 322-9148 for reservations.
Senior Citiiens Tour to Cypress Gardens. leave
Sanford Civic Center, 8:30 a.m.; pick-up at Seminole
Plata, 9 a.m. Return C p.m. Call Doris Rogers for
reservations at 322-9148.

Garbage Fee Hike Irks Lake Mary
The owners of Superior
Sanitation Service arc being
asked to appear before the
la k e M ary City Council
Thursday night to explain

CLASSIFIED ADS

Winter Springs Sertoma, 7:30 a.m., Big Cypress.
Longwood Rotary Gub, 7:30 a.m., langwood Village
Inn.
Sanford Lions Gub, noon, Holiday Inn on la k e
Monroe.
Longwood Sertoma, noon, Quality Inn, 1-4 and State
Road 434.
Al-Anon, noon, Mental Health Center, Robin Road,
Altamonte Springs.
WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 30
United Way of Seminole County Kickoff Breakfast, 8
a.m., la k e Monroe Holiday Inn, Sanford.
Sanford AA Beginners, 8:30 p.m., 1201 W. First St.
Starlight Promenaders, 8 p.m., DeBary Community
Center, Shell Road.

il—Instructions
A PPRO V ED Salesmen Course
Oct 5 to 17th Evenings ATI 00
Includes Books end review 17
ol th* best local companies
otter tuition rebates Bob Bait
Jr Sch.of Real Estate 111
4111
N EED A SER V IC EM A N ? You'll
find him listed In our Business
Directory.

ABORTION *

1st Trimester abortion 7 11 wktk
tUO -M edicaid 1110;. 1)14
whs. S i l l —Medicaid S11S; Gyn
Clinic SIS. Pregnancy test;
male
t t e r liia llo n ;
free
counseling Professional car*
sO pporttir* atm o sp h e re ,
confidential
C EN T R A L FLO R ID A
W O V A N 'SH EALTH
ORGANIZATION
kOT Colonial Dr , Orlando
*N or? i
Toll Free 1100 111 1141
W IL L Ih * gentlemen school
teecher. who esked lor e
weekend position, please
contact Al Dawson at 1)1 *944
or 11) 4471
WHY BE L O N E L Y ! W rit* "Get
A Mate" Dating Service All
ages P O Boi *071, Claar.
water. FI l l l t l
LO N ELY
W rite "B rin g in g
People
Together
Dating
Service!" AM ages A Senior
Citiiens P O. Boi last. Winter
Haven. Fla 11*40

5-Lost A Found
LOST oray male poodle Ird area
Deltona, needs m edication,
reward «04 74* 44SI or 74S 174}

6—Child Care
rO R the Ultimate in
C hildCareA Child s
World 1114414
SPUR OF TH E MOMENT
B A BYS ITTIN G

n isiaa
B A B Y Bitting in our C h riilio n
homo, no Ntvkpndt or nightt
Phono 372 9971

BA B YS ITTIN G in my
home, any «ge
37104SI
A L L o r Part of the
Da * School Pic* up
A v A i l A b l e 373 314S

AA-HM tttlABM Uty
CO M PLETE B E A U TY FA C IA L.
BY APPO IN TM ENT ONLY
111 10*4or MS SU1

9—Good Things to Eat
Bananas
lib s 100
Cukes
7 for I 00
Peppers
7 lor I 00
each 74
W Lopes
2 lor 74
Green Onions
4 lbs I 00
Salad Tomatoes
Fresh Pumpkins 74 lo I 4» e*
Red Del Applet
4 lb t1 0 0
Jonathan Applet
lib s 100
Gold Del Applet
lib s t 00
Mutru Apples
lib s 100
Fresh AppleClder
'.g a l I N
All Purpose Potatoes tOlbt 100
Greens
a bunch 44
Zeflwood Corn It In' Buy it by the
boi or by the ear Fresh daily

WaTaka Food Stamp*
L E R O Y FARMS
SR 46
Watson's Old Farm

11—Imtnjctioni

TY PIS T — Mature Fast and
accurate M edical, pension
end profit sharing plans
United Solvents. I l l 4444
DECORATING SA LES lull or
part time career opportunity
to work with art end ac
cessor.es in decorating field
Work in local area, will tram
Call Laura Stapleton 471 1054
Mon lith t i m 4 p m
LAYO UT. Filte r. Welder. Shear
A Brake Operators. First and
Second Shills. Top Poy. Good
Benefits. Cell Florida Iron
Works Inc. 117 0100
S C A L E altendanl starling
sa lary S IS ) w eekly. High
school grad with t year e i
perienc* in clerical function
which includes handling
money The ability to repair
heav,
truck
scales
Is
pr .r r r d Apply Seminole
County Personnel Court House
N Park Ave . Sanford by Oct
4. IN I Mon F rl I 10 a m till
noon EO E M F H V

H E A V Y Equipm ent operator
S4 50 per hour minimum Mutt
be able lo operel* motor
grader Apply at Longwood
City Hall 4 5. Mon F rl 17} W
Warren Ave , Longwood. Fla
ACCOUNTING C L E R K eiperl
meed lull charge bookkeeper
needed with ability lo typo,
post. code, input computer
data, and perform general
o lfice duties A ccu racy In
accounting and spelling a
must High school grad with
minimum 1 year accounting
courses and 1 years general
accounting and typing eiperl
ence Sa lary 14.400 110.400
EOE Send resume to Boi 114
C O Evening Herald. P O Boi
1457. Sanlord. Fla 11771
PART TIM E work from home on
new telephone m erketlng
program Select your own
hours earn tlStlOO a wk.
depending on time available
I l f 4741
OATA P R O C E S S IN G MAN
A CER
eager
individual
needed lo menage agency
Data Processing operation
Altamonte Springs area Data
processing, tto listlc o l A
systems analyst A writing
ab ility needed
Business
Adm inistration Degree or
related Held plus minimum ]
years Oata processing rip e r
•ence required Salary 111.400
SIB. 100 EO E Send resume to
Boi IIS C O Evening Herald.
P O Boi 1457. Sanlord. FI*
11771
VIDEO Electronic* Rental and
Sales C*. I* opening 1 new
start* In Central Florida in th*
n a il 1 years and Is laakinq tar
men and wtmtn t* stall Its
stares. Store managers, rental
managers, secretaries, and
salts person* needed new
Pleas* apply In person l i t
C em m trcial St. S a n ltrd .
Cottage Orads Preferred
M ANAGEM ENT trolnoo apply
in person lor g rto t op
portumty Cota Ml* PUitero.
1111004

legal Notice

F R E E TUITION - Real Estate
school Alger end Pond Roolty
INC E R A 111 7S4]

FIC T ITIO U S NAMB
Notice is hereby given that I am
engaged in busMeu ol I I Us
French Ave Sanlord. Flo 11771
Seminole County, Florid* under
th*
fictitio u s
name
ol
PRO FESSIO N AL PO LISHIN G A
WINDOW TIN T OF SANFORD,
and that I intend to register U id
name with Ih* Clork of th* Circuit
Cuurt, Semtool*County, Florida to
accordance with th* provision* of
Ih* Fictitious Nam* Slolufoa. To
W it: Section 1*4 os Flo rid a
Maiuto* test
S*0- Lo rry O Jackson
Publish: September 11, n , V .
October 4. m i
OEM 4»

w-« • • • t f f f f l * #

SEC U R ITY Guards 11 Hrs per
Week Midnight. Lake Mary
Are# Prater retired or semi
retired Call 111 *150 E it 5*0

TRACTOR T R A IL E R
D R IV ER S
OIVISION ol m*|or U S Corp I*
seeking D O .T . qualified
drivers tor Its over the road
private carriag e operation
based in Sanlord. Fla
Qualified applicants must hava
two man team experience and
a minimum ot 1 years O.T R
eiperienct. Good references
end proven safety record
required
interested ap
piicanfs pleas* call ta ll) M l
01ft
Equal Opportunity
Employer.

RN OR LPN
4 1} and 111 Shift. Full tlm t
Apply In parson Sanford
Nursing Convalescent Center,
NO Mrllonvillt Av*.
RIGHT now w* need a lew good
sales people who h*v* th*
ambition and dedication to
succeed II that's you. then
we're prepared to otter you
real rewards and Ih# methods
to get them For Interview,
please celt Century I t . Hayes
Realty Service*. Inc., Sentord
1111050
LPN 117 1 nights per week
Apply Lekeview Nursing
Center. *14 Ind St., Sentord
AVON R E P R E S E N T A T IV E !
Th# Part Tim# Career
*44 1074- Collect MS4700
WOULD the Young Lady who
answered th# ad tor a wood
working job. please call
Seaworthy Wood Products at
H 20I4I

COMMUNICATION specialist I
starting salary SI77 weekly
High school grad with 1 year
experience in public safety or
law enforcement
Apply
Seminole County Personnel
Court House I N Park Ave .
Sanford by Oct 1. IN I ap
plications accepted Mon F rl
4 » till noon EO E M F H V

Tennis instruction — U S P .T .A .
Certified Group or Private
lessons Children a specially
Devs M aliclew iaj. H U M ).

FIC TITIO U S NAM*
Notice is hereby given that I am
engaged In business al 1140
Orleans Ways. Apopka, Fla 11701
Semmol* County, Florida under
thellctitiousnem t of A R C TIC AIR
and that t intend lo register said
nim# with Ih# Clerk of tho Circuit
Cfk/et, Seminole Court y, Florida in
accordance with th# provision* of
tho Fictitious Namo Statutes. To
W it: Section las 0* Flo rid a
Statutes 14S7
Sig Robert W Kampar
Publish: September 4. I). 1C. 17.
IN I
OEM n

N E ED good home? I need o
good, mature part time sitter
tor my husband 111 5471 » 11.

H A IR S T Y LIS T wonted
with following Immod
Call Delores H I ?no
CT1IS It led Ads are the smallest
big new* items you w ill I ind
anywhere.
B EA U TIC IA N S WANTED
with following ! } ] 1*50.
501 French Ava.
PO LIC E O F F IC E R - Th* City
of Orlando w ill be schoeultnq
applicants tor th* omamlnallon
lor P O LIC E O F F IC E R . Con
tact th* C IV IL S E R V IC E OFF IC E . In porton. C IT Y H A LL
AN N EX - *40 S. BOONE
A V E N U E . MONDAY. S E P
T E M B E B i l thru MONDAY,
SEPTEM BER
II,
IN I
(W E E K DAYS 1:10 to S ; « l to
b* scheduled lor th* ontronc*
examinations M ull be a U t
Clllion, I I years of ago by
February a . IN S. high school
grad or Mai* equivalent, good
character, no tetany convic­
tions
O BLAN DO I I AN
EQUAL O PPO R TU N ITY EM
PLO VER.
PONY Ride Attendant E«p
with
Pony
or
Horse*
prefer red P a ri time M to­
wage Call Sharon 014471

¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ * ¥ ¥ ¥

AAA EM PLO YM EN T
C A LL E A R L Y
323-3174
LOW F E E -T E R M S
YOU DON'T
PAY TH E F E E
T IL L WE G E T
YOU TH E JOB
JuitaFewalmany
Legal Secretary
Local! Challenging!
Good

Sale*
Local Company
Good position
Machinist
Good Spot, good pay
Drivers
Local Firm Steady Work
Auto Counter Person
Niceplece Start immediately
Many Many Mere

AAA EM PLO YM EN T
333-3176
Itl7 French Av*.
*

W ANTEO tO carefor
tick to my home
373 1394

24-Business
Opportunities
WOMEN tired of 40 hr wk
want to be own boss, choose
your own hrs Make eicellenl
money For inlormation 111
1041. 144 SS55 alt S p m
P LU M B IN G D IY . H ardw are
and E le c tric a l re ta il and
repair Business W WO Real
Estate Best Terms. 5141,000
Wm MaliCIOWSki R EA LTO R
111 7441 Eves 1)2 1117
II you ere having difficulty
lindmg a place, lo live, car to
drive, a lob, or some service
you have need ol, read all our
want ads tvery day.
TWO questions Will you be
financially independent In 1 to
5 years? Are you paid what
you are worth? II not call 111

34—Apts. A Houses
To Stars
YOUNG Christian Man to share
my 1 Bdrm House with same
&lt;&gt; rent is S*S 441 4144
f | i fln n w a
ZT- K O O fn l

P R IV A T E EN TRAN CE
1)1 1151

F a m ily A Adult* tact*
Pootsld* 2 Bdrms. M*R*r-4
Cove Apt*. 111 7400. Open on
wtaktnoi
Somebody is looking for your
bargain Offer il today in th*
Classified Ads
BAMBOO COVE 1 bedroom
apt* Available Manager on
premises. H I 1140
Ridgewood A rm * p Bdrm
Apt* Irom S775 1 Bdrm. also
avail Pool, tennis court 111
4470
Bator c#»Mry living* 1 Bdrm
Apt*. O lym pic l l . Peel.
Shtnandaah Village. Open f-A
m a w .
____________________
M eltonvlll*
T race
Abu.
Spacious, modern 1 Bdrm, I
Bath apt. Carpatad, kit
equipped,
CH AA .
Near
hospital A taka. Adult*, no

.pat*, s i n i n tin ._________

Ottic* Clerk
Will train il you type
Opportunity

*

Spring is here and It's a good
time to choose a new home
Irom the pages ot our
classified ads

a m ?*? ~ frrtutTM EN gjj|

CONCESSION A gilt shop. eip.
part lim e
Weekends A
holidays a must Apply Central
Florida Zoo

*

CHRISTIAN womandesire
light house cleaning
l i t 1411

Unfurnished

Evening Herald

*

W ILL do babysitting, washing A
ironing in my home H I 7S10
Thurs A F rl * J. 1117114
anytime

30-AtaitTTiBnts

CIRCULATIO N D E P T .

*

21—Situations Wanted

SANFORD — Reas wkly. A
monthly rates (Jtll Inc. Kit.
500 Oak Adults 141 7at]

BOYS 4 GIRLS
AGES 13-17
EARN EXTRA S$
AFTER SCHOOL
CAU 372-2611

*

Stao P tr Week Pert ..,n * at
Home. W ebster, A m erica 's
foremost dictionary company
qeeds home worker* to update
local malting lifts. A ll agas.
experience unriece'**'* r * n
1 71* 141*000 E a t. 5070

*

Mariner * Village on Lake Ad*. 4
bdrm tram SISO. 1 bdrm from
SI40 Located 17 41 lust South
of Airport Blvd. in Sanford. All
Adult* m ta io .
Classified adsaeevelh* buying B
selling community every day.
J u t i Mtt.mnn a im .
SANDALWOOD Villas Airport
Blvd.. Sanford 1 Bdrm. 2 Ba
Th* Really Stort. Realtor*
I *71 1411
- I' bdrm ♦ gw
ceram ic bath, furnitur
available, adults, t i l l mo
*41 7M1

31-Apartmint* Furnished
*

DAY Shift immediate Opening
tor F«nc* Assemblers, Saw
o p tra te rt. G eneral Labor.
Apply between hours 1 S pm
American wood Products. Mill
O llic t IRC M arvin A v * .,
Longwood
WOMAN D E P E N D A B L E A
M ATU RE,
G EN ERA L
FA C T O R Y W O R K. SOME
LIF T IN G F U L L TIM E

n i tu t
JOB INFORMATION
Alaskan and O v a rtta s am
ptoyment. Great Income
potential. C all *01 441 4014
Dept. 1400. Phan* Call
Relundabl*.
STORING IT M AKES W ASTE­
SELLIN G IT M A KES CASH.
PLA CE A C L A S S IF IE D AD
NOW Call 111 M il or H I 44*1
W AREH O U SEM AN
factory
eiparitnc* a must. Heavy
lilting required. Full banatltt.
apply In parson, United
Solvent* IN 7 Airport Blvd.
D D 'D D B D D D D D D D D D D D D D

COOK
P A IT FOOD OPEN ATION
Goad salary, hoapitaliiation. I
weak paid vacation every a
months.
Iskp arlanc*
nat
necessary. Phan* Manager
Lake Mary Id — m (M S

P A E T - P U L L T IM E
■N • LP4I • A ID ES
Quality hr oft* sion*!* Needed tg
matt h * ., needs at Semmol*
County Hospitals . Nursing
H IG HEST P A Y IM M ED IA TE PA Y
On Cad Medical Service*
Call O l 1447

- -j.—■-*»?

I BDR turn apt, Adult*
SUS. Sec Dep 1100
Carpeted 111 114*
STOP AND THINK A M IN UTE
II Classified Ad* didn't work
lhar* wouldn't b* any.
furnished apartments tor Senior
Citiiens IIS Palmetto Ava., J.
Cowan No pnon* calls.

J1A—Duplexes
SANFORD new ! bdrm.,
2 bath Lake Av*
tat i l i a
SANFORO spacious 2 bdrm. I
bth. air, drape*. US0 mo a
dep l i t ISO
1 BDR, air ww carpet, *tovi
refrig w d hook up. no pen
1275 with lea** A tec. i l l 14a:
U K P E R MONTH Modern. A ir,
Carpet, Nice Area Ktdsok .no
pats. First A Last /Months
Rant. 150 Damage Deposit
Lawn C ar*, u iim i** a pn i
Control Pd Call H I M il Days
ask tor Carl.

32—Houses Unfurnished
A T TR A C TIV E 1 bdr , l&gt;* bth.
CHA, washer d ry e r, con
vanlanfly located U75
H I 4570
1 BORAX, I Bath Sloe mo SI
Sacurlty Deposit Rttaranc
require* N* pet* call t
U ll.
DREAM WOr £D
BRAN DN EW
1 bdr. 1 bath 1400 ma
H .P. R E A LT Y , INC.
REALTOR
011106

- 5. J . - • W

�H-Howa» linfumlsha&lt;r

SENIOR CITIZENS
Two bod, two both
Now homo in Deltona
$325 Monthly
Coll Undo Jo,.
5744686
took.ng lor qardrn equipments
8 '•■»&lt;) today %classified ads lor
good tm •*.
* J bdrm . 1 B with
double cor garage. in
Oeltona C all 474 14)1

SANFORDOPT TO B U Y I
7 bdr caroprt. kidso k * 7)0

41—Houses

R O B B IE ’S
REA LTY
R E A L T O R . M LS
2)01 S French
Suite 4
Sanlord

24 HOUR G3 322-9283
kid s outgrow the swing set or
sm all bicycle? Sell these »dle
•terns with a want ad To place
your ad. c a ll your friendly
Classified gal at The Herald.
322 2611. or 8)1 9993

ALL FLORIDA REALTY
OF SANFORD REALTOR

Ib d r.u tl WO On $190

Excellent Business opportunity
•n good location Co up let*
stock included n this priced
reduced to SHOO

SA N FO RD U N FU RN APT

)H 4 S. French 171 02)1
A lter Hours- 149 *M&lt;| ) j , o u t

Collage turn nodep » ) ) )

SA N FO R O FU R N A PT

5 4 - G a ra g e Sales

ViANT 7 O Bu&gt; \ P ^3 E V b u R COMPTROLLER 6AV6 ]
IN CUR 5C H JJL YE^RBCJK,) THAT CNLV
IN
&amp;ANKEK BRCVvN? T h e
ESTABLISHED JOURNAL*
P R C .1 E E P 5 B U &gt; FREE
ARE PROFITABLE1BUT
VEARBCCKf. R ? R Hir£» 1
MAKE PERSONAL
WHO C A N T A PFC R P
/ T r - f CONTRIBUTION.'
t h e m : B E S ID E S .
-----r—

D E L IG H T F U L OeBary - e&lt;tra
large 1 bdr. } bth home with
lots ol closets, on
acre
wooded, lake front lot Dream
k it , r e t r ig , isla n d stove,
washer A d ryer, cent vac
system , w w carpet. 14.20
screened porch, patio, and
closed garage 142 )00

it *

&lt;3cav

J
\

M OVING Sale Sat and Sun
la m p t Dishes M ite . Fu r
n.turn Under S)0 204 V nrwood
Dr Lo th Arbor

&lt;$4

i f a m i l y garage &amp; yard safe
b g va rie ty . F r i ruon thru Sun
1914 Magnoha Ave

j y .) i

for

b u s i n e s s

^

^

U

iiS ft\j/A

J

T

r lV

i - v

• OUR tO W N ES
R E A L T Y INC B R O K E R
441 47)0anytlm e

SA N FO RD A ttractive 22 yr old
Iw m r on 240 It ol Lake Onoro,
1 Bdrm I Bath, ) porches,
property can be split I t ) 000
Low interest Open to otters
its Owner t 29) 9292
T H E G E M E lN H A R D T f lu f f
••ecellent con ditio n, se llin g
price 5199 R etails at 5)50 Call
671 574) atl 4 p m

Harold H all

) B D RM . t ' j B, sunken living
rm . paddle tans. 7 mo old
14)0 A lter 4 p m ) ) ) (J441

4 HDR . ) bin cent M A Lake
M a r ,. Sanlord area 1400 mo •
Deposit ) ) ) 1074
) B D R ,2 b t h t ) ) 0 month
1st A last • security
1 )) 4441
G E T THOSE L U X U R Y IT E M S
FO R A F R A C T IO N O F T H E IR
COST FRO M TO D A Y'S WANT
AOS'

W—Mobile Homes
75 F T M O Q llE Home* on St
Johns P iv r r Near Geneva
Stenic Location Semi P rivate
D riv e
A ll U tilitie s paid
Adults only |?50 Mo 349 S i l l
2 BD RM Houle T raile r P artly
furmshed with a ir, fenced
patio 322 5659

37—B usiness P roperty
Fo r rent or lease - 10.1)0 sq It
m duslrial or warehouse 911
W 1st S t . Sanlord 1)11100

SANFORD
7.000 sq It It Industrial or
Com m ercial Building on I ) 91
1.000 It in office space Call
U ) 1110 or 114 414)

. R ed Estate Breker 1
1111411
I r e 111 1914

SUN LAND Lovely 1 B drm . I 1j
Bath, dream home can be
tours lor LOW DOWN Cent
HA Huge oak trees, fireplace
and la m ily rm a ll included
Great buy at *49.000

BA TEM A N R E A L T Y
L)C Wral E sta ir R ro *rr
7640 Sanford A vp
I ACME N fAf ne w Hospital
fauod Potential PftCrcl Might
Jv f ms 577 500
APAMT B LD G W X Lot Good
T«fm \ 5)6 900
J LO T S Sanford A vc
517.500
BLO G
IK

T nr ms

LOT .n Country 56 900

V AM Y lot. Duplet W ill fr Ad
Equity 516 500

321-0759

322-764 J

ALM OST n rw ) bdr. 7 bth.
double qaroqr fully rQv p kit,
m rrg y HftCtonf 18 500 on.
■nsumr l ) ' i % 147 000 prtn
c tpais only 37) 5097

SA N FO RD
)000 sr ft It Industrial or
Com m ercial Building on I ) 91
1.000 It. in o flic t space C all
11)1110 or 114 414}
O flic t Space
Fo r Lease
U0 m i
ASSOCIATES. IN C . REALTORS*

S7CPor L m m

41—Houses
C R E A T IV E
r » n an c tno I
Academy Manor. 3 Bdrm . I* y
Ha New carpet k paint,
carport Rear fenced B-a lot
529.900 331 10)1
P R E CONST tale D cB ary 2 ige
Witter front lot* Buy now k
(boost* lay out 1 colon
Johnny W alker
Real E%late INC Broker
J22 6452
B E A U T IF U L J Bdrm 2 Bath
Home L a rg e F a m R m .C e n t
HA Outstanding shady lot and
a most prestigious location
Only 554 500 This you must
see

17 Office* Throughout
Central Florida

LAKE MARY
323-1940
149 W Lak e M ary Blvd
J N D R IF T WOOD V IL L A G E
A T T R A C T IV E 3 bdrm . I'» bath
tor sm all fam ily Large yard
with p riva cy fence Clean and
prefly 549.900

CUSTOM built brick on 7’ a
acre* Great room, fireplace.
•*land kitchen ) bdrm *. }
bath* Reduced to 519 500
2 HDMM
in Ground Pool
Country Club Manor, Sanford
Fenced 5)50 mo 1*1. last and
linn rvp o *.t a j ’ psioo

323-7132

K J S lI
i;i

\ i

i v i

\ 11

i:

MLS.

L A K E V lE W 1 bdr, ) bth. fp. I«
yard, veg garden, scr patio
e it r a t *71.009
L I K E TO E N T E R T A IN 1 bdr, 1
bth. 2 story, pool, re t rm , Ip, Ig
lot. only 149.990
C H A RM IN G 1 bdr. I bth. CHA.
work shot, scr patio, w a th tr.
d ryer, good area S4T.990
After h rt 1)1 TIS4 and 1)14911

J 2 1-0041

R EA LTO R

Alter h rt 122 49)2 and 11) TIM

S T E M P E R A G EN CY
O W N ER W IL L FIN A N C E 1
B d rm ,
I
B ath
P a r tly
remodeled H at Fire p lace and
carprting )0 It on Hwy 44 W.
Only 111 900

I . Acre
) ' . A cres
S Acres

19.000
117.500
119,)00

N IC E
STARTER
HOM E
Located n good neighborhood
Has large attic lo r additional
bdrm Only I2S.S00
M A L T O R 1)74991 Oay or Night
O P E N H O U SE I I 4
O R EA M W O LD
Osceola A E l P ortal ) Dr. ) ba ;
cent « ir h e a t, e at In k it .
S49.S00 Owner w ill c a rry mlg
with tlO.OOO down at 1) &gt; m
teresi tor l i mo or F H A . VA
M ichael R Capko
Lie R eal Este te Broker
149 IT I4 .1 1 1 T IS J

J « r j4

WE H A V E R E N T A L S

RO YS
L A R G E selection of 14 a d r*
prices start 549V5 VA hnan
enq no money ctoAn 10%
conyont.onai

OPEN HOUSE
O P E N HO USE
I la C O U N TR Y C L U B D R .
C O U N T R Y C L U B MANOR
SU N D A Y I I
JU S T FO R YO U I B d rm . I Bath
H t n .t an A ttra c tlv o land
scaped loti E i t r a t mcludo
Cent H A . W all to w all c a rp tl.
Paneled Flo rid a R m . E a t in
Kitchen and m a rt! L ik a New
conditionl C m tra lly located I t
shopping, schools, etcl Yours
tor ivst S IM M l Como visit
Rose Payne R ealtor Associate
and see it this cavld b* your
new home I

C A LL A N YTIM E
IU I
P a rt

3 2 2 -2 4 2 0

G R E E N sofa k H qhbach
cha r f j mafeh
C all aft 5 p m • )) 6511
— —— — ————— ———r~
A iL S O N M A lE R F U R N IT U R E
311 315 t f IR S T ST
377 5677
C H E C K With Sanford Auction
before you buy or sell 1715 S
French
37) 7)40 Mon Sat
B E A U T IF U L 68 1round table
hand made 1775
*77 1587 1Q4 Brentwood Dr

c h ec k out u n c le

C O U N TR Y A T M O S P H E R E in
town Pm ecre*! area 3 Bdrm
L a rg e L iv in g Rm
Only
5)2.500

Shop Uncle Roys Mobile Home
Sa'e* L^esh'irn II S Mwv 441
S 904 787 0)74 Oren 7 days

EASY
A S S U M P T IO N
Low
payment* 2 Bdrm Near new
H o *p ital
ZO N ED
COM
M E R C IA L
Super potential
Only 577.500

Every

oav

is

b a r g a in

IN t h e WANT AOS 377
7611 or 831 999)
day

OW N ER FIN A N C IN G av I on
thi* lovely ) bdrm B rick home
w D ra p e *
Range.
Reqngerator ♦ Fam Rm on
d *rp lo t" 5)1 900

43—L o tv A crcag e
t A K I M A RY i la rq r
•uts n»cr trees
I H i r j ; t 277 1*17

O V E R 1509 *q It in thi* 4 7 with
new Cm Heal biq bedroom*
Tam Rm f la t? *cr porch 4
neavily treed lot for only
*4* 900!t

W E K IV A
IA IL S
W O O D ED R I V E R
A C R E $2)000

CUSTOM E X E C U T IV E HOME
w over 1700 *q ft. ) bdrm *plit
plan Fireplace. Fam Rm eat
in kslcht-n huqe *cr porch *
landvcapmq qalore at *15 900"

A REA .
I WONT

O STEEN
) A CRES
P IN E S SC R U B OAK
TERM S

i ow SAK l
flu* undervgned Special Master
a II sell to the highest and best
offer lor cash the property
evser ibed as follows A ll offers
to be received no later than
October 20. 1981 Sale subiect
to Cmcuit Court approval The
North 157 feet of Lot 71 of
F L O R ID A LA N O AND CO
LO N l/A T ION
CO M P A N Y ’ S
C E L E R Y P LA N T A T IO N , ac
cordmg to the Plat thereof, as
recorded in P la l Book I, Page
179. ol the Public Records ol
Semmole County. F lorida. less
the West 100 feet of said North
157 feet of said Lot 71 Further
c v s c ribed as three ()» house*
located on the Southwest
corner ol R iverview Avenue at
N arcissus Street
W Garnett White.
Special Master
Case No 80 75)1 CA I ] L
Suite A
Flagship Hank Building
Sanlord Florida 37771

52—A ppliances
Ken more parts service us^i
washers M OONEY A P P L I
A N C ES 37) 0697
Gfc Gas Drver
i year o u * t&gt;u
ca n J7J 2887

1981
fothibut m icrow ave oven sale
p ric e 5749
1981 ca n iste r
yacuum (leaner 559 SO See a»
Sanford
Sew ing
Center
Sanford P ia ia across from
Burger King

S3- T V R a d ta Stereo

O STEEN
W O O D ED
A C R E S S 12 )00 T E R M S

Good Used T V s 575 k up
M IL L E R S
7619 Orlando F r
Ph 377 0)57

2 'r

54—G a ra g e Sales

TA LL
SI4 SOO

O S T E E N 12 A C R E S WOODEO
P A V E D ROAD IR O N 1 A G E
1)4.000
G E N E V A 2 , A C R E S WOOOEO
TO N ED M O B IL E 112)00
G E N E V A 20 A C R E S W OODED
COCHRAN HOAD S ).SOO P E R
A C R E M A Y D IV ID E

i C A R P O R T sale lots ot plants
S'fHjer sew nq machine, in
(ab&gt;net. clothes, odd* k ends
sat 76 9 fill 114 E Airport
Blvd
A P T S A L E . Couch. C h a ir* .
Tab irs. E ta g rre s. Aquarium .
Decorator Phones. Queen Sue
Ded Almost New. Much More.
P ric e s
R e d u ce d !
No
R easo n ab le O ile r R elu sed
Sanlord C rl Apl . Apt 64.
Sanlord Ave k Airport Blvd

PIANOS K organs large k sm all
sfarl nq as low as 5149 95 Bob
B all Music Center k Western
Auto

German Shepherd M ale 3 Y r*
Super w ith c h ild re n e«c
Wa'ch nog 5700 377 5757

W ILCO SA LE S
N U TREN A FE E D S
Hwy 44 W . - 11)4(10
CASH A C A R R Y P R IC E S
Hog F tntshrr P rllrfs
55 60
l .ly rf C
55 80
W.9bl).f P r llf t s
56 15
H rrf K w k
54 95
14 •• V ita lity Morsr
Ft*|irfs
16 10
10 *• 'Vitality Sw rrt
f red
55 75

68—Wanted to Buy
Antique* Diamond* Oil
Paintings Oriental Rugs
Bridges Antiques
373 7801
Alum inum, can*, copper, lead,
bras*. * ilv e r. gold Weekday*
• 4 30. Sat 9 1 KoKoMo Tool
Co t i l W 1st St 373 1100

W A N TED 100 to 700 acres m
Orange or Sem.nole Counties,
zoned for mobile home Sub
division Send etll defail* in
eluding location, to C O Hoe
1868 O cala. F la 37671

!4B-lnvestment
Property
IN V E S T O R S
PLEA SEi
7
Triple* unit* iu sl arrived
Purchase separately or both
tor 580 000 with owner holding
Call on this one* June Porftg
Realty R ealto r*. 377 8678

W l L IS T AND S I L L
M O R I HOM ES THAN
A N YO N E IN TH E
tA N F O E D A R E A

47—R eal E sta te W anted
CASH FO R E Q U IT Y
W e c e n c lo t e m ilh r t
C e llB ir t Reel - I
We buy e q u ity in M o u .cv
ip A rlm m lk . v .H jn t u nd and
Acreage
L U C K Y IN V ES T
M E N T S . P O B o . 2)00. San
lord F I . 12221 127 4211

F A M IL Y 'S D E L IO H T 1 B d rm . 1
Bath H orn, with beautiful
enclosed pool *nd patio a m i
Cent H . A i S p in o u t roomt.
lo ti ol e a lr a il S4I.004
B E A U T IF U L N tw 1 Bdrm . 1
Bath H orn, in Ram bltwood an
lo vtly landtcaptd lot A ll Ih t
v .l r a t l C rn l H A W all to w all
ca rp rt. tp lit bdrm plan, la rg ,
F la rm .. dining room, and
m o r, $49,100

B A TH S, kitchens, roofing, block,
co n cre te , w in d ow s, add a
room, tree estim ate 37) 846)

Air Conditioning

Chris w ill se rv le t A C 's, rttn g ,
Ir e t t t r s . water coolers, misc
Call 322 4227

TO W ER S B E A U T Y SALON
F O R M E R L Y H arriett's Beauty
Nook S I , E 1st St , 111 5742

We pay cash lor 1st k 2nd
mortgage* R ay LeQg Lie
Mortgage Broker 3)9 7769

SO—M iscellaneous for Sale
COTS T E N T S . TA R P S
A R M Y N A V Y S U R P LU S
110 Sanlord Ave
12)1291
GAS G R IL L 1)0 I maple twin
bed 12) firm 122 00)9 alter 2
pm
SF AR S refrig erato r like new
S40 Occasional
Chair 1)0 121(022

Boarding 6 Grooming
Anim al Haven Boarding and
G ro om in g K e n n e l) Sh ad y,
insulated, screened, tty proof
inside, outside runs Fans
Also AC cages We caler lo
your p e ls
S ta rtin g stud
reg istry Ph 122 S7$2
Maktr your Budgi-t qo further,
shop the Classified Ads every
day
Snow Hitt Kennel otters Cat A
Dog F la t Baths IS up 34
Hour. F u ll Service M SS2I3

FIREW OOD
12)1111

C A LL AN YTIM E
IM S
P a rt

Additions &amp;
Remodeling

47A-Mortgages
Bought * Sold
t ■■■■ it t - r ‘ ------

A SS O C IA TE S N E E D E D I New
or e.p erienced
C all Herb
Stenttrem er Lee AlbngM
today A d itetver tu ccestl

12 Lu F t F re e je r 2 yrs old
Amana SJO'J Eleclr-cphonic I
Track Stereo, cabinet type
SI00 122 )1(2

3 2 2 -2 4 2 0

42—Mobile Horn**
r ~ ■ ... .

XLA—Jawklry

Sea our beautiful new BRO A D
M O R E , front A re a r B R 'i
G R E G O R V M O B IL E HO M ES
JS01 Orlando Dr
121)200

•

VA A FH A Finenrinq

-

/

- ^ e

Top D o llir P*&lt;d tor Junk 1 Used
C ,r ) . tru ck ) A hekvy equip
ment IT ) 1990
_______________
F 'J Y JU N K C A R S * T R U C K S .
F rom 110 to 1)0 or more
C a ll 132 1*34. JM 4M 0

2)0 192) HONDA, ru n ) greet,
n rw
t ir e ),
ch a in ,
re a r
vprockrt. K Q (r a t 199) 112
041) alt 1 p m
I HO
S U 2 U K I 1)0
122 129)

T rucks-T railers

1977 C H E V Y CIO P ick Up Long
Wheel Base. V8. 3 Speed Stick
Runs E xce lle n t. Looks F a ir
5V95 8)1 1774
I9SS l H E V Y pickup, sound body,
m gme needs work, wida lira * ,
chrome reverse. 3 spd on
floor, new eth ausl 5650 Day*
3)9 3957. eva* 377 70)9.

1(22 Thundrrb.rd
1(24 Puick L a la b r r
Custom
1924 Ou'Ck 23) Coupe
1922 M ercury Cougar
SR 2
1949 Mu)f4ng Convertible
1.22 Bu'Ck Lim ited
Coupe
1.22 Monte Carlo
Sunroof
I9M Cheveite
2 000m ile )
1949 Fire b ird Coupe
1924 VW Rabbit
197) V o lk) Sta Wagon
1979 Fire b ird Form ula

13422
1)490
1129)
$4222
lle e i
$4222
1)422
$499)
S ill)
$717?
S20M
14)95

Rank lintncm g a v t ilib le
IS N H w y. 1191
Casselberry
1974 B U IC K S kylark Clean t
Owner. Auto AC, PS N rw d ilc
brakes, tilt wheel AM FM
Stereo radio Custom Interior
V inyl lop new steel belted
ra d ia l) New e .h a u st ty .te .n
*0 Mo Battery Rust proof
1272) MS 2(2 1)40 or 12)4110
1970 v W BUG New sticke r, runs
w ell Needs some body repair
$49) t i l 1224

GO VERN M EN T
SU R PLU S
CA RS AND T R U C K S NOW
A V A IL A B L E
th ro u g h
government sales, under S100
Call I 214 149 0241 E . t 100 lor
your directory on how to
purchase
IF TH IS IS T H E D A Y lo buy a
new c a r. see today s Classified
ads tor best buys
197) C A D IL L A C Fleetwood 4
Door Sedan F u lly equipped
E .c e lle n t original condition
SII9S 111 1224
71 C H E V Y V a n ) speed
a ir, custom plus e .tra s
Make otter 12) ?2»9
1974 O LD S Delta l ( 2 Door V I
Autom atic. A ir. power win
dows. steering and brakes
Runs e .ce tle n l. needs paint
1)91 t i l 1224
72 B U IC K C a n tu ry4 d r,
P S . P B . A C. tilt,
c le a n l? )0 17)4140

B ill C o rto . S ta te C e rtifie d
B u ild in g
C o n tra c to r
Residential or Com m ercial.
New or Remodeled 322 0*94

Landscaping

Clock Repair
g w a ltn ey

or 8 3 1 -9 9 9 3

je w e l e r

704 $ P a rk Ave
222 4)09

L A R O I T R R I IN IT A lL C R
Landscaping, Old Lawns R ,
placed MS HOI

Landctaaring

Concrete Work
Concrete Work, looters, floors A
pools La n d sca p in g A tod
work Frew est 3117102
1 MAN Q U A L IT Y O P E R A T IO N
9 .r s u p P alio s, D rivew ays.
H i Wayne B ra l 127 l ) ) |

Acreage A lot clearing
F ill dirt topsoil
lor s a lt 131 24)1

Quality electrical work 71 yrs
e .p e rie n c e Minor rep airs lo
complete wiring 132 0211

When you place a Classified Ad
In The Evening Herald, stay
close lo your phone because
something wonderful it about
to hapoen

F re d d ie R obinson P lu m b in g .
R e p a ir !.' fa u c e ts , W
C
Sprinklers 12)1)10, 231P204
Modernuing your Home? Sell no
longer needed but useful Items
with a Classified Ad
P O N SEC A P LU M B IN G
Con
struct ion. R ep airs. Em ergen
cy L ie , Bonded. Ins )3 )t0 7 S

Lawn Maintananet
DUN N R I T E L a w n S t r v lc e .
Mow. edge', trim , vacuum ,
mulch, sod Reas 122 2S9t

Electrical

Plumbing

Plum bing repair — an types
water heaters fc pumps
21)147)

Ramodaling

Masonry
^ oT
table, take a cue. and ta ll It
with a Herald cla ttifia d ad
Call 1)11411

Mini-U-Loc*

Ramodaling Spaciallit
Wt handle the
Whole Ballot Wat

B. E . Link Corat.
311-7029
F mane Ing A vailab le

N EW Concrtta Buildings, all
s ifts 130 A up AI I 4 A SR 44 I
4 Industrial P a rk . 221 0041.

Handyman
Painting, carp entry, a ll types ol
home rep airs C all lor Ire *
estim ate 111 I9?J

Nursing Cantor
O UR R A T E S A R E LO W ER
L a k tv ie w Nursing Canter
» I9 E Second S l„ Sanford
» ! 4207

Hauling*
Yard Work
It'S like pennies from heaven
when you sell "Don't Needs"
with a want ad_

Horn* Improvamant
C E N T R A L F L O R ID A HOME
IM P R O V E M E N T S
Painting. Rooting. Carpentry
Lie Bonded A Guaranteed
Free E stim ates X1S1*49

Painting

Roofing
R O O PS. leeks rep etrtd . Replace
reflee eaves and sM egit w a rt,
I I c o r i W . le ie r e d . l a a d i .
M ika IU - &lt; m .
Christian lo o tin g 1? y rs eap.
149 1710. tree est R (rootm g,
tp e c ta liit In rap elr w ork A
new rooting
SO U TH E R N R O O FIN G IS y rs.
i»ak special
lit
D ependable 4 honest
price. Oey or night 173 t ) | )

Hallm an Painting 4 R ep airs.
Quality w o rt. Free t i l . Disc,
la Seniors IS4 14(0 Rater.

Vacation lim a Is h a rt get what
yog need for a happy lim a with
a Classified Ad

SA N D ILA STIN O
DAVIS W ELD IH O
« M J t 9 , SAMPOaO

__
Complete C eram ic T ile Serv.
w all*, floors, countertops, re
model, re p air F r est 119 0211.

I S E T S Custom Made D rapery 4)
•n long Cost SHOO Sell tor
1200 Double Bed new. HOC.
Color TV Antenna ISO
12) $211

r &gt; v r ig ,

Building Contractor

Cara mic Tilt

51—ftouseboM Goods

24.40. 2 B D RM . 2 Bath |0&gt;J0
Screen porch enclosed with
R o lla d rn
sh u tte rs
ISalO
U tility
Rm
W ell
and
S p rin k lin g s y s te m , m any
e it r a t l i t Hacienda Village
ITT 2MT

-

'~
WE D O IN G ring set woman S t
l )rd karat SISOor
best otter S74 )92(

-

CASH FO R CA R S
Running or not
:io ( h i

D io l 3 2 2 - 2 6 1 1

Beauty Care

R iO G t WOOD A C R E S I Duply,
lo ll Toned, all utilities, paved
r e a d ).
N ear
SH Al
W ill
tubord inalr tar buildert Buy
newt Build now or la te rl Ju tt
I I tell I Fram Stt.lTSt

77—Junk O p Remcrwd

79—

★ B6H Auto Sales *
★ 339-7989*

T o L is t Y o u r B u s i n e s s . . .

If * easy to place a Classified Ad
We ll even help you word
•! C all 377 7611

JU S T
L IS T E D
SpiCiO U l
rrm o d .lrd 1 Bdrm . I Both
horn, on la r g , thadrd loti
Firep lace. C rn l HA. Wall tg
w a ll c a r p a l. F lo rid a rm .
porch, plut ) rental units.
St II.too

I9 2 2 P IN T 0 4 S P . runsoood.
n rw tires 14)0
12) (422 alter 4p m

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB

43B-Loti&amp; A creage
W anted

REALTY - REALTORS

Used Car P a rt* a ll m ake* and
model* 377 7697 W# buy Used
Car* and Truck*

78—Motorcycles

67—Livestock Poultry

2) T B IR D Loaded New Tire s.
Bine with White too or 24
Cutlass Supreme No money
down 12} mo 1)9 9100 134 440)
Dealer

BUSINESSSERVICELISTIN6

3765 H W Y. 17-92
321 0640

Sanford's Sales Leader

C H E V Y wmdow van.
loaded e.cellen t condi
t l ) 1129 or 12) 4490

76—Auto P a rts

U A P t R SI AN S Adult
Fem aies White Black
SIVM N C H I 3515

te ilM A T D A R X 4
Station Wagon $200
322 0222

CONSULT OUR

S E IG L E R R E A L T Y
BRO KER

STEN STR0M

73-A—Vara

65—P etsS u p p lie s

ANIM AL H i.e n Kennel) board
,ng A groom ing . Needed
P e k in g e .e A » m a ll ( liv e r
poodte tor dud M ale Owner)
(a ll 122 5212

Hwy 92. I m ile west ot Speed
w ay. Oaytona Beach, w ill hold
a public A U TO A U C TIO N
every Wednesday at I p m IP s
the only one m Flo rid a You set
the reserved price C all 904
2SS 1)11 tor further details

11) 1)4(

F I L l D IR T A TOP SOIL
Y E lL O W SAND
Call Clark k H rt 37) 7580

G R E A T D A N E ( » k . AKC
P .iri'n K M.2IF Bmton B lic k ir
C h im p ion Blood Line $12)
122 201)

% 3A YTO N A A UTO A U C TIO N

•SANFORD AUCTION*
t i l l S French

Have some camping equipment
you no longer use? Sell it all
with a Classified Ad in The
Herald C all 122 2411 or 111
999) and a friendly ad visor
will help you

62—Lawn Garden

C O M M E R C IA L 2 A C R E S O N 17
92 N E A R
LA KE
M ARY
B O U L E V A R D 11)0 000

G R E A T IN V E S T M E N T N k * I
Bdrm . I 64th **ch unit!
Lovely londtcaped loll Super
lo&lt;,Iron Both rented 1)1.too

E v e s 1)2 0412
202 E . )5th St

321-0041

A CREAG E

323-5774

P R IC E O R E D U C E D 52.900 Now priced below ap praisal,
tint 3 bdrm home w beamed
ceiling* k lovely, shaded lol i*
Sanlord * be*f buy at only
*75.00011

HAL COLBERT REALTY

1 HDR . I bth, assum e FMA mlg
S7 )00 dn 1)2 )00 total, etc
cond move right in ) ) ) 7174

T H E C E N T U R Y 21 S Y S T E M
H E L P S m orepeoplebur and sell
more real estate than anyone
else in A m erica Call today
and let it work for you Call
12) 1010
Hayes R eal E state
Services. Inc
41) W ))lh St
Sanlord
Each o llice i» independently
owned and operated

REA LTO R

O S T E E N Brand New Log Home
on 7 3rd* acre CH A . 38 ft
front pch Move right in and
(Y3|Oy country living at 549 900

CallBart
REAL e s t a t e
R E A L T O R .) ) ) )49f

REALTY, INC.

n e w l is t in g s

H ID D E N l a k e Clean as a
whistle 1 Bdrm . ) Bath Split
Plan has m any e it r a t . in
cludmg Paddle Fa n s, home
w arranty, clubhouse pool and
good schools Excellen t low
interest assum able mortgage
117.500

37-B—Rental Offices

V E G E T A B L E Fa rm lor Lease
With option to bur in Samsula
Area Irrigation pump m or
out } Tractors and equipment
Owner help plant and grow on
co m m issio n s A lb e rt Fo rd
V o lu sia County 904 4)8 1401
A lt 4 p m

51-A—Fumitur*

C H tC K TH ISO U T
B F A U T IF U L 1987 Royal Oaks 78
Aide I bdr 7 b*h garden fub
delude c a rp e t, ca th e d ra l
filin g * hftek fireplace wood
s.&lt;l nq Ntunqie roof raddle
tan *nd many mure **«tra*
Only 576 900 VA I inane mq nb
i« uney down
10 % down
conventional See at Uncle
Roy* Mobile Home Sales ot
l reSbu'q U S H a v 441 S 904
787 0)74 Open Aeekday* 8
7 10 Sun 17 6

H ) m g itA irr

SAV ON R EN TA LS REA LTO R

Gel lu ll e .p o w re — take t h ii
"F o r Sale" dgn down t run a
classified ad C all 122 2411 or
(11 999)

DON T S T O R E IT S E L L IT with
a low cost Classified Ad

JUKI

))« 7700

Fo r E ) t a t e . C o m m t r c u l or
R rd d rn lla l Auction) 6 Ap
p ra iM ll C all Dell'S Auction
121 (420

AUCTION

42—Mobile Homes

SAV-ON-RENTALS

72—Auction

M O N D A Y. S E P T . 21. 2 P M
A N TIQ U E S AND M O D ERN
A N T IQ U E S R E P R O D U C T IO N
S E V E R A L N IC E
H O U SEH O LD S
S11CASH VISASSS
SSSAM ERICAN e x p r e s s s s s

LONGWOODHANDYMAN
SP E C IA L

Sr mmole

S a le S a tu rd a y and
Sunday 9 ) 61) SffitA St
(Behind the Burger Chef)
Couch lovrseat Mi*c

yard

Don I Despair Or Pull Your Hair
Use A Warn Ad 122 2411 or
9)1 999)

J im s applic . kids. 1774

)rm h o u se . k.ds, pels. 1)4)

Evening H trtld , 5&gt;nlord, PI.______ Sunday, tapf. 37,1WI—7B

wilh M ajor H o o p le

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

41—Houses

+

f

*r

M E IN T / E R T IL E
New or re p a ir, leak r showers our
sp ecialty. 31 yrs E .p la * IS * 3

.y *a r *« j*# ,*

J A B Home Improvement •
Carpentry work ot any type.
Root re p airs, gutter ««rfc.
painting (Interior ar e .ie rfo rl,
plumbing, sp e c ia lll* in m obllt
and wood patio decks
estim ate )3)*0$4

Free

itoinglar
uraClaani
to iob tee Urge er sm ell.
Quality a must. Cali 132M21.
Rrfurcnres F r . Eat.

TraaSarvka
Trimming, ramq.m g 4 . M

-------

Ergg | M.

'

•

�t

i*

I * —Evtfling B i n Id, tontord, FI.

SumUy, t t pt. 2 M 981

Deputy Contract OK'd

Seminole Broadenina Educational Horizons
When Seminole High School moved in 1960
from its old location, which Is now Sanford
Middle School, it became a school of 10th, 11th,
and 12th grade students.
This year, we have ninth-graders attending
some of the classes at Seminole. Some
students come over first period to take a I-alin
d a is . Others come sixth period and join tn
band and a German class. There are a total of
44 students Joining in classes Bt SHS.
Because of its presence, Seminole has the
largest band tn the county. "The enthusiasm
that has been created by thetr induction and
development ts sure to nurture positive future
development for the S1LS band," said Mr.
Polk, SHS band teacher.
Mr. Epps began the program to give the
riinth-grade students, with special talents, a
chance to Join in at Seminole while using their
talents here also.
Along with the 44 ninth-graders attending
classes at SHS, there are also two eighthgraders from takcvlew taking geometry
class. These two boys have completed all of
Ihc required math courses at takevlew and

are now using their math abilities at Seminole.
When asked bow be fell about the
arrangement, Mr. Epps said, "I am very
happy that we can make these courses
available to ibe younger students. They now
have Ihc opportunity to broaden thetr
educational horizons and better prepare
themselves for the challenges of the future,"
lie said.
The teachers of these younger students have
nothing but good reports on their conduct and
their abilities.
“ I believe that this program will be a
tremendous success. Assisting these students
will be a benefit to them and to the entire

PEOPLE
IN B R IEF
M rs. Reagan Shocked;

So Is Miss Lillian
(.lllian Carter doesn't think much of First tad y
Nancy Reagan's tastes.
In an interview in the October issue of McCall’s
magazine, Miss Lillian said life in the White House
with her son, former President Jimmy Carter, wasn't
all that exciting.
Responding lo reports that Nancy Reagan was
shocked when she saw the condition of the White
House, Miss Ullian replied: "I was shocked when I
saw Mrs. Reagan! I wonder what kind of taste she has?
Hollywood kind of taste, I suppose."

A Late Starter
Texas billionaire Nelson Bunker Hunt docs things in
a big way. This year his Bluegrass Stud Kami in
Kentucky produced 97 yearling racehorses worth about
120 million.
Hunt has formed a syndicate to own and race them
as n group, and it’s said to be (lie largest yearling
syndication In history.
The 97 animals will be flown Oct. II to the Riverside
Thoroughbred Kami In Riverside, Calif., for training.

Pr/nce A n d re w A Llfesaver
I

educational program at SHS," Mr. Epps said.

A round
SHS

Ttie Royal Navy ts proud of Britain's lurndaome
Prince Andrew, younRer brother ot Prince Charles, for
his air-sea rescue of a sailor swept overboard from a
submarine.
The prince, training to be a helicopter pilot, was on a
training exercise In Scotland when a seaman was
swept overboard by a freak wave.
Andrew, 21, hovered his Sea King helicopter over the
spot while his crew winched him from the sea
unharmed.
“ Prince Andrew acted very cooly and his poise was
quite rem arkable," said a senior naval official. "He
bundled the incident us If it was as simple as a pleasure
trip around a lighthouse."

Sw ords And Sorcery
Until now, outer space lias had the edge In electronic
gamesmanship. But there's a new fud catching on —
the medieval fantasy world of swords and sorcery.
That’s the wave Milton Bradley hopes to ride with its
new "Dark Tower” combination board and electronic
game, while Multel has an electronic version of
"Dungeons and Dragons."
George Dltomasii, senior vice president of
marketing for Milton Bradley, says the really hard­
core fans of the old "Dungeons and Dragons" game —
not the electronic version — dress up In leather and
really gel lnlo fantasy and role-playing. Eleclronlc
games are for the le u vigorous.

Mrs. Swain, one of the Senior Class spon­
sors, would like to remind everyone this ts the
last week of the Senior Calendar drive. If
unyonc has not turned In their money, please
do so.

.ONGWOOD MEDICAL ARTS BUILDING1
cz^nnounec.1
its opening at 1385 SR 434, longwood
For Your Complete Medical Core
C harles G . Adkins M .D., P.A .
r a d io l o g y

3394231

Patriots Win 1st; Lyman Next
The la k e Mary High School Junior
varsity football team has earned its first
victory of the season. On, Sept. 17, the
Rams defeated their arch-rival the
Patriots at ta k e Brantley's stadium, by
ascore of 14 to 13. The team ’s next game
will be against Spruce Creek High on
Sept. 30 at Lyman High.
The 1981-82 LMIIS Volleyball team
m em bers a re as follows: Michelle
Swartz, Lisa Simkins. Cheryl Decker,
Amy Kantarjian, ta u ra Glass, PeggyGlass, Alex Mihclic, Jolene Beckler,
Marianne Colley, Robin Christensen,
Chris Oiaffee, Kim Malir, Jill tawis,
Dawn Wcekley and Mae Ravenel.
TryouLs were ticld almost every af­
ternoon after school, for the past two
weeks, and names were posted Sept. 18.
Their first match will be on September

Around
IM H S
By
Jolene
Beckler

28, against Seminole High.
On September 21, the school ran on an
activity schedule providing for a
homeroom after sixth period. During this
tim e, each homeroom elected a
representative to be part of the IA4HS
House of Representatives.
There will also be a Senate, consisting
of officers from the entire student body
and officers from the freshman and

Thomas J. Brodrick M.D./John F. Schaeffer M.D.
OtrHORAtCXC SURGIONS
3317300

sophomore classes.
The Ram cross country leant members
are presently getting ready for their next
meet which will be Oct. 1 at Lyman High
at 4:00 p.m. The head coach, Michael
Gibson, has his 20 team members
practicing every afternoon until about
3:30. Everyone is proud of Kim Averill
who is currently ranked 12th in the
county and holds the girl’s two-mlle
record for the school. The other runners
are: Mark Blythe. Andrea Benrdslee.
Brent Blakely, Andrea Fenning, Jim
Shepherd, Michelle taudermilk, Mike
Young, lis a Gregory, Derek Turney,
Sara Karen, Malt Palumbo, Cindy Mill,
David Krlvan, Grace Roegner, Philip
Kircher, Robyn Plnnick, Joshua Robbin,
Mark Blackman, and Mark Volchko.

Charles C. Park Jr. M.O./ H. Gorrett Dotson Jr. M.D.|
GENERAL AND VASCULAR SURGERY
331-*979

L. J. Edgemon M.D.
EARS. NOSE &amp;THROAT . FACIAL FUSTIC SURGERY AiltRGY
3315740

Robert A. G a y M .D ./C .F . Cordoba M .D.
FAMJir practice
134-5300

Jorge G om ez M .D ., P .A ./ S .K . Joshi M .D ., P.A.
INTERNAL MfDfCLNf S CARDIOLOGY
831-3222

G o n za lo Huaman M .D., P.A .
UROiOGT
3398534

N. Nito M.D.
GYNKOLOGV A OUTETRICS
8304140

First It Was The Wall
HONG KONG IUPI) — Peking lias quietly opened a second
front in Us battle to silence critics of life in China.
The crackdown on dissent in the mainland began In 1979
when the Peking government closed down the wall in l)ie
capita! used as a billboard for protest posters. Then the
authorities moved in on “underground" editors and warned
foreign correspondents stationed in Peking to end their con­
tacts with dissidents and cease writing about their works.
The voice of dissent continued to find a platform through
publications in Hong Kong, but now the ax has fallen.
"Peking started an overall campaign this year to plug the
leaks which have spotted Its efforts at Ideological purification
inside the country and tarnished China's international linage,"
said t a Kong, editor of a Hong Kong magazine who has been
jailed by both Communist and Nationalist governments for his
outspoken views on China over the past 30 years.
I.U and other China watchers In Hong Kong believe the
crackdown on "bourgeois liberalism " lias the backing of top
bureaucrats In China, including the military, who object to
criticism of their special privileges.
Tile bureaucrats blamed "IJberallzation" as a cause for the
rising crime rate In China as well as a departure from Com­
munist doctrine.

Vann Parker M.D.
FfDttTRICS
339 5313

The most important target tn Peking’s offensive In Hong
Kong has been the daily newspaper Zheng Ming which on July
30 printed an announcement saying, "We must temporarily
cease publication... certain 'poisonous leftists' will not permit
us to continue... and we are at a loss to fight them."

R. J. Zullo D .D .S ., P .A ./A rt W . Ryder, D.M .D.
FAMILY DENTISTRY
834.1011

"Tim e is money for me,and now
diat my bank has consolidated statewide,
fdon't have to wait around for
long distance answers''

D O N 'T O JU K B L I

73 And Proud Of It
Bette Davis didn't liesilatc wlten TV talk stiow host
Jnlm Davidson asked Iter age.
"Seventy-three," she replied. “ It's so stupid In lie
about your age. 11 you have any kind of facility left at
73.1 think you can tie very encouraging to the young."
Miss Davis got a standing ovation from the studio
audience. “ I guess uudicnces may be still surprised
that f can still walk," site said.

This Saturday ot 12: JO p.in. Seminole High
School’s Fellowship of Christian Athletes will
be leaving for the annual kickoff of the year at
Wet and Wild.
Every year, FCA reserves the park for its
meeting. More than 1,800 people attended last
year’s meeting and it is estimated that even
more will attend this year.
FCA Is for everyone; not Just athletes. The
first meeting was Monday evening at Cindy
Whelchel's house. But if you didn’t attend this
meeting, it is not too late to Join FCA.
The cost for the Saturday trip Is 15. Be at the
school by 12 noon. There will be chaperones
going.

Next week’s activities:
MONDAY: Sophomore election speaches —
fourth period in the auditorium. Open house
for parents at 7:30 in the school auditorium.
J.V. volleyball game at 6 p.m. The game will
be played in the Seminole Gymnasium.
TUESDAY: Balfour ring assembly — third
period in the SHS auditorium. Voting for all
sophomore class officers during lunch. At 11
p.m., a Senior G ass picture will be taken at
Ihc SHS stadium. Volleyball match against
ta k e Howell and Dctand. The game starts at 6
p.m. at ta k e Howell.
WEDNESDAY: Volleyball match at New
Smyrna. The game starts at 6:45 p.m.
T1IURSDAY: J.V. football game against
ta k e Mary. The game starts at 7:30 p.m.
FRIDAY: No football game.
SATURDAY: Volleyball game at Ft.
tauderdale. This is the Colonel's Invitation.
They will be playing all-day long. FCA will be
going to Wet and Wild.
If there are any questions concerning any of
these activities, contact the school.

The Seminole Counly School Board has approved a
contract with the county commission for the “deputy in the
schools" pilot program at I&lt;ake Brantley High School and
Milwee Middle School.
Two deputies-Charles Reynolds at Mllwee and Pate
Wagner at B rantley-have been on lire job since the first
day of school in late August.
Beginning Oct.l, costs of the program. S37.426 annually,
including salaries, fringe benefits and other expenses, will
be borne equally by the board of the county commission
through Sheriff John Polk's department.
For the past month, funds for the program have come
solelv from Polk’s budget.
__________________
- DONNA- ESTES

w ith y o u rlm u ra n c a l
-C A L L -

, vI s s s r

&gt;'

321*0118

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he only bank where
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U y uniting our separ­
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N o w Atlantic B an k can serve
Florida as it has never been
served before. N o w you can
make deposits at any Atlantic O ffice. N o w if yolir business has
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And should you expand or
relocate, your account num­
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The 52 billion assets o f
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increased lending power.
Each Atlantic Office has
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Evening Herald
CIR CU LA TIO N D IRT.

Atlantic National Bank of Florida
Sanford Office*

Spring! Office*

I reach Avenue Motor Hank

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t

OURSELVES
Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Sunday, Sept. 27, 1 7 II- IC

■ M M N M M I

Florence Glaxlor has been working
her way to a higher education for
13 years. The 49-year-old mother
of five children, Is pursuing a
degree In accounting at the
University of Central Florida. By
the way, she rides a motorcycle
back and forth to the campus.

H rrald Photos by Tom Vincent

'Graying O f The Campus' Opens Careers
ii) ixmis DiKTiuni

f

OURSELVES Editor
Hie image of ihe college coed is not
what it used to be.
Time was when a sweet young thing
was sent packing to attend college
where she was to major in some form of
education.
Or she attended college to land a
husband, maybe, or because it was the
thing (or girls from upper class families
to do.
Hut nowadays, women ultend college
to learn — and to use what they learn.
No longer are diplomas framed as
status and trendy wall decor, but they
are used to acquire jobs to earn a living
in fields unopen to women several years
ago.
The graying of the campus is
sweeping the country.
Sources at Hie University of Central

Florida say there are «y, women
enrolled over age 35 — compared to 495
men — attending classes on a full or
part time basis. Students over 25
comprise nearly 40 percent of the UCF
student body.
“ In engineering, many of our older
students are here to update their
-knowledge because they work in fields
■where technology Is developing
gradually," says George Schrader,
associate dean of the College of
Engineering at UCF. "They are among
our best students because they relate
well to subject material. They are more
highly motivated because they have a
clear idea of their goals, unlike many
new high school graduates."
On the national scene, 72 percent of
students 25 and over attend college part
time, compared with 17 |&gt;ercent of
younger students.

Florence Glazier ol Sanford, not only
is among the older enrolled students at
UCF, hut site was aLso in one of the first
classes when the campus opened.
For 13 years, Florence, 49, has been
studying toward a degree in accounting
while working full time In the library at
UCF. Her education has not been
lumded to tier on a silver platter and
was Interrupted while she raised live
children, now 18 to 29.
Hut Florence was not about to give
up. She makes light of the severe
hardshi|is site encountered as a single
parent — and keeps on plugging
Explaining that the evening classes
at UCF are filled with older working
students und "even college professors
still learning," Florence says she still
has more than two years of evening
classes before receiving a B.A. degree.
Hut she is patient — will wait — work —

and study.
The energy crisis ami inflation left its
mark on the pleasant, enterprising
grandmother of three.

work week at the university. The
am bitious student com pleted ICS
School, a two-year course in Digital
Computer Programming in 1909

Hut Florence found a solution to the
gasoline situation.
"This last summer, I took a 4-11
M otorcycle Foundation course at
Seminole Community College lor a
novice rider to learn to ride a motor­
cycle. Then I bought a Kawasaki 250,"
Florence says.
Today, d riv ers on the highway
probably wouldn't recognize the at­
tractive cyclist In the gear and getup
she dons to ride iter bike hark and forth
to Ihe UCF campus daily.
Tlte motorcycle is equipped with u
box “for my purse and a change ol
clothing. I wear dresses to work,"
Florence says.
Florence is on a 10-hour, four day

And Florence has increased lier
artistic skills through a cake decorating
course she completed at Seminole
Community College to the extent that
site decorates wedding cakes. " I’m
delivering one Friday," she laughed —
not on tier motorcycle, but In her car.
Florence's hobby, needlework, lias
l&gt;aid off too. She says she sells
"Creative Expression" needlework in
her s|w re time. "I have so many
projects started," she said, "that I have
to discipline myself and not do any­
more."
Wlienever anything needs repaired
around her home, Florence does Ihe
work — from rewiring lani|is to
repairing faucets. "My latest fix-it has

ended in over a 2-year |&gt;eriod of
replacing my sewer line," she said.
About her work, Florence says she
runs the Gilts and Exchange section ol
the library at UCF. "I receive the
books, magazine etc. that people donate
to llie library. It involves checking to
see if we have the article already in the
library ami if wc can use it. If we can't
use It, I offer It to about 00 other
libraries. U’a a lun Job. Very In­
teresting and I meet n lot of nice
people."
Florence is active in the Cassia
Baptist Church, Eustis, where she is Hie
church clerk, teaches a .Sunday school
class and prepares the weekly bulletin.
While Florence Glazier works during
tlie day and attends college evenings,
she is doing what site enjoys best —
working hard f»r what she wants.
And Florence probably whistles while
she works.

Jaycees
Fishing
Rodeo
Y t’c h , "
L 'g h ,” u n d s q u e a ls of d e lig h t w e re
r e c o r d e d ul Ih e S a n fo rd J a y c e e F is h in g H od h i a t
l.u k e C o ro lla w h e r e m o r e t h a n 50 c h ild r e n
g a t h e r e d to t e s t t h e i r e x p e r tis e in th e no f is h in g ”
f a c ility . T h e la r g e s t c a tc h o f th e d a y w e n t to
D e r e k W ilson w ho a ls o w on f ir s t p la c e in Ih e 11-13
u g e g r o u p . H uy I’i c k le s im r r w a s th e f ir s t p la c e
w in n e r in th e 7-lt) u g e g r o u p , w ith S c o tt O b ria n
w in n in g in th e 3-6 u g e c a te g o r y . A c c o rd in g to
J a y c e e p r e s id e n t ( le o r g e C u r r ie , th e p o p u la r
fis h in g ro d e o w a s r e v iv e d a f t e r s e v e r a l y e a r s ’
absence.

Connie Demons, her son, Trevis, and Jaycee Jerry Cornell weigh In.”

( ie o r g e C u r r ie m e a s u r e s th e c a tf is h TYacy M itc h e ll c a u g h t.

C h ild re n , y o u n g a n d y o u n g - a l- lie u rt, lin e u p a t th e
la k e e a r ly to b a il t h e i r p o le s fo r th e fis h in g ro d e o ,
le ft p h o to . C a r r i e H y a n , r ig h t, 4 -y e a r-o ld d a u g h t e r
of K d H y a n , ro d e o c h a ir m a n , a r r i v e s o n th e s c e n e
lik e th e ( i i r l S c o u t — p r e p a r e d . C a r r i e is a ll
b u n d le d u p f o r Ih e co o l m o r n in g w h ile c h e c k in g
o u t th e s itu a tio n s it tin g on th e c o o le r b r o u g h t
a lo n g to h o ld h e r c a tc h .

HtroM Pholot by Tom Vmcont

/

&lt;

�IC -E y e n ln g Herald, Sanford, FI.

Sunday, Sapt. 17,1711

OURSELVES
IN BRIEF
PTA Skate Benefit
To Fund Activities
Seminole County Council ITA is sponsoring a skate
party Tuesday, from 6:30 to 9 p.m. at the All American
Skating Rink on Highway 436, Altamonte Springs. Cost
is $2.00 per student, parents skate free.
Tickets are available at Bear I.ake, Spring I j k e and
l^ike Orienta Elementary Schools. Proceeds will be
used to supprt Seminole County Council PTA activities
including leadership training, aid to local PTA units,
delegates to state convention, printing newsletter and
the annual Seminole County PTA Art Show.

GED Tests Offered
The GED test leading to a Florida High School
Diploma will be offered at Seminole Community
College on Oct. 26. 27 and 28. Eligibility for taking the
tests must be completed by Oct. 16.
GED Test Orientation will be held on Oct. 22, at 4
p.m. and 5 p.m. Students qualified to take the tests are
encouraged to attend Uiis class on "How to Take and
Pass the GED Exam s".
For Information on GED’s free study program, call
Seminole Community College and ask for the GED
Office.

In And Around Lake M ary

Guiheil Elected To Federation Post
Al and his wife, Grace, have lived in the
Forrest since 1975. Al is also on the Board of
A djustm ents, Community Im provem ent
Association and a member of the Chamber of
Commerce.

Oct. 14 at the Presbyterian Church. Jim I&gt;ec
from the Florida Department of Environ­
mental Regulation will be the guest speaker
with a slide presentation. New members are
welcome.
The Garden Club is finishing the land­
scaping for the elementary school and is
asking for donations of aluminum cans to help
finance this project. They are also in need of
hanging plants and flower pots. Anyone
having donations may contact Barb Worman
or Mary Jane Duryea-

Bonnie
Olvera

Al Guthcil has been elected vice president
of the Federation of Senior Citizens of
Seminole County, heading 16 clubs throughout
the county. He will take office Oct. 1.
The federation handles Meals on Wheels,
Congregate Meals and transportation for
senior rilizens.

la k e Mary

Correspondent
323-73M

prise birthday p arty her 11-year-old
daughter, Renee, held for her. Several friends
and neighbors were there to help Andrea
celebrate. Renee baked her mother a pound
cake, decorated with pink icing.

The Homemakers have changed their
meetings to the Agricultural Center. The next
meeting will be Oct. 13, beginning with coffee
at 9:30 a.m. The meeting and program will
begin at 10 a.m.
Jackie l,ockwood will speak on “Family
Ufc; Children and Drugs."

Mnriam Darby, postmaster, says October
has been designated as National Stamp
Collecting Month. Tlie theme for the month is
"Discover stamp collecting-The hobby of a
lifetime."

Andrea Wise was guest of honor at a sur-

The Garden Club will hold its next meeting

Hick Olvera is visiting with his parents Mr.
and Mrs. Vic Olvera. Rick is from Port
Huron, Mich.
He plans to bring his wife, Janet, and
children Bobbi and Ricky down from
Michigan Jo reside in the I jk e Mary area.
Rick is supervisor at Better Plastics in So.
Orlando.
The Community Improvement Association

(CIA) is happy to announce a profit of ap­
proximately $1,000 was made on the flea
market and pizza day held at Cafe Sorrento.
The Wooden Nickle Band provided the
entertainment for the many residents that
attended.
Linda Paine celebrated her 21st birthday
Sept. 18. Linda is a police officer for the City
of Ijikc Mary and teaches karate once a week
al the fire hall.
Marcia and Bob Lippincott and daughter.
Marcia Kay, returned from four days In New
Smyrna Beach. They stayed at the Sunrise
Condominium. The trip was so relaxing, they
say they’d like to go again, Marcia said.
The C ham ber of Com m erce rem inds
residents of the Oct. 5 meeting at city hall.
The meeting is open not just to Chamber
members but to any resident wanting to at­
tend.

Engagements

Church Scholarship Recipient
Over 110 students attending Carson-New man
College, Jefferson City, Tenn., this fall are recipients
of the Church Matching Scholarship Program.
Kenneth Dareell Williams of Oviedo First Baptist
Churrh Oviedo, is nnp of this year’s recipients.
The Church Matching Scholarship program at C-N
was begun four years ago to aid Baptist students at­
tending the E ast Tennessee B aptist school
Approximately 400 students have received matching
scholarships from Hie churches since the program
began.

C’A K O I.Y N
I ’ K A I'IIA
M O O ItK

DeBary Blood Bank Open
A blood drawing will be held Thursday In Hie DeBary
Community Center, Shell Road, DeBary, from 4 to 7
p.m.

Children’s Music Workshop
It's lime again for area parents to register kids from
kindergarten through sixth grade in UCF’s annual
Children's Music Workshop, to be conducted this year
on three successive Saturday mornings beginning Oct.
31.
Tlie 9 a.m. to noon sessions, under the direction of
Dr. Mary Palmer, associate professor of music
education, will consists of "m ini" classes of 8-10
children, by age group. They'll sing, dance, compose,
play ukeleles, ring bells and Just plain listen.
"And lots m orel", promised Dr. Palmer, who has
also planned live music performances for the program.
Enrollment is limited, and early registration is
encouraged. Palmer noted. The deadline for payment
of Hie $12 registration fee Is Oct. 20. For information
contact Dr. Palmer, at 275-2161, or the UCF College of
Extended Studies, at 275-2123.

ftiitgeftlmd

H’ AttTkoi
Recently. we've beer) feeling like
me White R a b t.t *n Alice Mi Wen

decland:
•’We re l»te. we’re Is le toe a very
im portant d a le '"
The date •% Thursday 0 (1 1, when
A CM H ISTM A S SHOP toil! open $ 1
In sid e O u tsid e Mouse on W est
O w e * Avenue *n long wood
For w t t k i Mr U P S the % Santa
Clous «n o Drown uniform ) has boon
D r ^ n g packages from oil Over the
world ond w e've been open ng rt
as I os I os wo con i f s mo oon
end eh tng that %to timo consuming
Thon. t h e r e » the problem of
where *0 put what M aking I hoSO
decisions is nof o iw «rS t e x t .
every now ond »hon. « now A rriva l
|uSt has to go w here something olso
already is
N e v e rth e le s s . we a re m a kin g
progress and we w ill bo ready on
mo d ale October I
We have a great assortm ent of
Ornaments, stocking stutters and
w him sies We COn t decide whether
m il ts the year of the * p«g" or the
• Door.** so we have lots of bom
O uf advent calenders ore from
G ar m any, A u stria and Denm ark
F ro m Russ&lt;o. we hove the m efruske
d o lls , and fro m G e rm a n y , the
authentic N u tcrackers and blown
g lass ornam ents
Some of the most delightful things
a r t from our own country The
h a n d c ra fte d wooden o rn a m en ts
mad# by our fr&gt;ends ot m« Christ
m as V illag e ouf m jjn esb o ro A rk .
a re unique If you are ono of those
who “ g ive an ornam ent each ye a r,
you Should see them
Our paper goods, includ ng turn s
Coloring hooks and an a rra y of
b tou tiful gift w rap are from Red
F o rm Studios up »n Rhode island
The im agination and c re a tiv ity of
fhoir a rtis ts »l tru ly wonderful
And "lu st because m oy'ro cute.'*
wo have mo bone (M n a m iniatures
tr a m
H ag en R e n a k e r
out
COfiforma W e've been »©*d m at our
selection is better m an m at at la k e
uena V ilt a and D 'tnay World
We could goon - ond on - ond on.
but wo lust don’t have lim e You n
have to come and see
T u rn west on Church Avenue m
trgnt of me lo n g wood Post Office
Y o u 'll see Santa and h&lt;% ft a n on our
upsia»rs porch bannister
p a n I tar*a«. you ca«
luntti
tram I I H I » I t n a m b aterr and
K I a l Ttia Nuncibia Ip aan Taa
■♦am a l t r e o M r 'i i o n . « n .c n &gt;t
ria n t ban.na * C M R ilT M A t I h o p

Bow
/

*UMM r T IA tO O M —

MrvMg Hnk * afet
w nUag m i aW n iiM
IM r t t .

JMWPAVa.

2

CtMQ

PftONI

&amp;

General Mills
Collection
On Display
Ten paintings and three
sculptures have been chosen
from the extensive General
Mills collection for display in
Hie Inch Haven Art Center
beginning Oct. 4.
Tlie works urc primarily
20th century with the em­
phasis on current art and the
newer a rtists. They are
exhibited throughout the
corporate offices of Generul
Mills, Inc. in Minneapolis and
liave not until this time been
loaned to any museum. The
works are of monumental
scale, in keeping with the
corporate environment.
largely through Uie efforts
of Joseph It. Inc, president of
the General Mills Restaurant
Group, Inc., the parent
com pany chose the Loch
Haven Art Center for the
premier show ing of its works.
The restaurant group lias its
home offices in Orlando.
Some corporations liave a
long history of supporting the
arts in tlieir communities.
The General Mills Foundation
was organized in 1954 as a
channel
through
which
General Mills, Inc. might
contribute to causes in
com m unities p articu larly
where tlie company lias a
significant number of em­
ployees.
Tlie foundation is funding a
generous portion of Hie Paul
H arris S culpture, C ertain
Pieces, 1958-1960 exhibition,
which ts running concurrently
with the G eneral Mills
collection.
P arap h rasin g the John
Donne classic sermon “No
Man is an Isla n d ," the
Inundations’ belief is that no
corporation is an island and
dial business must take the
responsibility to support the
com m unity in which il
o p erates.
Modern
cor­
porations are considered
persons under the law.
Persons are citizens, and
responsible corporations seek
to t» good ciUzens, sensitive
to the needs of the changing
society w hirh surrounds
them.

Moore-Brown
Sanford Mayor and Mrs. U-c P. Moore, 3456 Mellonville
Ave., announce the engagement of tlicir duughter, Carolyn
Peacfui, to William Francis Brown, son of Mr. and Mrs.
William A. Brown of Tangerine, Fla.
Born In Sanford, the bride-elect is the maternal grand­
daughter ol Hie late Mr. and Mrs. M. S. Wiggins, Sanford. She
is the paternal granddaughter of Mrs. Lois Taylor, Sanford,
and the lute Mr. Jam es M. Moore.
Miss Moore ks it 1979 graduate ot Seminote High School
where site was u member of (lie National Honor Society,
Anchor Club and Student Government.
Site attended Hie University of Central Florida and Hie
University of Florida. Site is employed us Customer Service
representative at Flagship Bank.
Her fiance, born in Berlin, Germany, is the maternal
grandson of Mrs. Frunces G. Cain, Panama City, Panama.
He is the paternal grandson of Mrs. Andrew E. Brown, Sioux
City, Iowa.
Mr. Brown is a 1974 graduate of Mount Dora High School,
Mount Dora, wliere lie was president of Interact Club. He
utlcnded I-ike Sumter Community College and is a 1979
graduate of the University of Central Florida where he was
a member of Pi Kappa Alpha. He is employed as a salesman
for Hie Sunniland Corp.
The wedding will be an event of Feb. 20, 1982 at 7 p.m., at
Holy Cross Episcopal Church, Sanford.

COUNCIL
ON AGING

Adcle Orahum, First Lady of Florida, greets some of the Seminole
delegation of the Itetired Senior Volunteer Program (HSVP) attending the
opening session of the Florida Council on Aging at the Sheraton Twin Towers,
Orlando. In celebration of the 10th anniversary of HSVP, Mrs. (iraham
personally awarded HSVP a Certificate of Recognition for outstanding
volunteer service.________________________________________

G ir lf r ie n d N o t E x a c t ly J e a lo u s , B u t...
DEAR ABBY: I'm a 21-year-old single female in love wiUi a
26-year-old male (I’ll call Freddy) whom I hope to marry one
day. Freddy and I have been dating for a year and liave talked
about marriage, but there is nothing definite yet.
T7ie problem Is Freddy’s roommate, Ralph. Ralph's
girlfriend, Debbie, moved In with him and Freddy. I’m not
exactly jealous, but I hate Hie idea of the three of them living
togeHier in that little apartment. It's only big enough for two,
and il must be very crowded and uncomfortable. Freddy says
Debbie is only staying there until she and Ralph get married,
but no date has been set yet, and they don’t seem in any hurry.
Abby, if Ralph and Debbie want to live together, don’t you
think they should get their own place? All my friends think It's
the pits, and they keep asking me how I can let it go on. I'm
really upset and don’t know what to do. Is there some way I can
get Debbie out of there? Or should Freddy move out? Please
advise.
IN THE MIDDLE
IN MIDLAND
DEAR IN: As I see it, you are not In Hie middle. You are
more appropriately on Uir outside — Freddy is in the middle. II
he's crowded and uncomfortable, be should move out. The
decision Is his, not yours.
DEAR ABBY: I am a college freshman. I drew a girl’s name
for Hie freshman mixer. When I called for her at her dorm, I
was pleased to find a nice-looking girl with a friendly per­
sonality. After one dance she suggested we go somewhere and
"talk." We spoke liardly 10 minutes when she was all over me.
I spent most of Hie evening trying to talk her out of what she
was trying to talk me into. Abby, I want to be pure for the girl I
m arry, but if this one is any example of what I have to put up
with, I urn going to have some (ighl on my hands. How can a
fellow act like a gentleman with college girls without getting
the reputation for being a square or a cold fish?
SAVING MYSELF
DEAR SAVING: Don't identify all college girls with the miss
you got mixed up with at the mixer. Haag on to your grnUemanly Instincts and your reputation will lake rare of Itself.
DEAR ABBY: I am getting married soon and have a
problem with Hie seating of a certain guest. She is my father’s
girlfriend. After my mother died, she moved in with my father.
Where should she be seated at Hie wedding dinner? Should
she sit next to my father at Hie head table? Or should we put
her with the rest of Hie guests? Perhaps I should mention that

Dear
Abby
she isn't very well-liked by family members.
WONDERING
DEAR WONDERING: The fewer hurt feelings, the better.
Ask your father where he wants his live-in lady to be seated,
and abide by his wishes.
DEAR ABBY: Concerning inappropriate questions asked of
u widow at the funeral of her husband, I think mine tops them
all:
At Hie funeral of my 67-year-old father, my poor grieving
mother was approached by an officer of the burial society to
which my parents belonged, und instead of offering her solace,
he asked, "Would you please give me a deposit on the grave
next to your husband so I can reserve il for you?"
VIVIAN OF BAYSIDE
HIIJJ5.N.Y.
DEAR VIVIAN: Your story lakes Hie prize. In spades.

NOTICE L*
TO ALL OUR CUSTOMERS
AS OF SEPTEMBER 18,1981
Juna Jones And Her Staff
Susan Wheaton, Diane Johnson,
Annette Perdalta
Are No Longer Employed
Or Responsible For
Service Rendered At

CLOGGING
LESSONS

TKHKSA FAYE HAMPTON.
MITCHKI.L SCHACTKK

Hampton-Schacter

Beginner Classes
Starting Oct. 6

Mrs. Bonnie Hampton, Old Geneva Road, Geneva, an­
nounces Hie engagement of lier daughter, Teresa Faye, to
Mitchell Schactcr. son of Mr. and Mrs. Gary Schacter. 756
Gretna Court. Winter Springs.
Born in Orlando, the bride-elect is a June 1M1 graduate ol
Oviedo High School, Oviedo, where she was a member of Hie
Keyettes, Dance Corps and National Honor Society. She is
employed in the bookkeeping department of Flagship Bank,
Sanford.
Her fiance, bom in Abington, Pa., is a June 1981 graduate of
Oviedo High School wliere he was a member of Hie swim team.
He is in Hie Military Police, United States Army.

CSchool o f Q )ance Shirts
10 Wook

503 French Ave.
Sanford FI.
Juna And Her Staff Are
Fretently Employed At

Evelyn's Salon
IMS. MAONOLIA AVENIIC
SANFORD. FLA.SU M92

S ttilo n t

•25.00 Single

Junas Beauty Shop

*40.00 Couplo

REGISTER NOW I
Per Mere Intermetiee Cal I Or Stop By

THANK YOU
JUNA And STAFF

S22-19M
The wedding will be an event ol Dec. 26, at 4 p.m., at the
Geneva Church of Christ.

2SMS.KLMAVE.

SANFORD

t

�/

E vtn h g Htraid. Sanford. Ft.

Sunday. Sapl. 27, 1MI—1C

S th icW

T T

Su p
Q•
■ er***■!»

H»r«ld Photo by Tom V m ctfit

An ol(l-riishiont‘il ico cream social. Sundae in the
Park." is being planned liv SIKTKIt nieniliers.
from left, Vivian Muck, Vivienne Sweeney and
Corinne Campliell. Door prizes include a wee

one" doll and a l-year meniliersiilp. each in
Seminole Mutual Concert Association and Central
Florida Zoo.

The name of the game is for patrons to build a luscious
sundae according to their whims. ProctHtls will benefit
SISTEIt Community Improvement Project — the sprinkler
system and landscaping at Lake Corolla near the Sanford Civic
Center.
Vivian suggests bringing a lawn chair and relax while being
entertained by clowns, music and Die Dixie l-and doggers.
Door prizes will include a "wee one" doll, a 1-year mem­
bership in Seminole Mutual Concert Association and a 1-year
membership in the Central Florida Zoo. The drawings for the
prizes will be held at 4 p.m.
Candidates for King and Queen of the Sanford dirislm as
Parade will also be on hand.
Tickets are available from SISTEIt metibers, Flagship
Banks, Uiis’ Place, Knight's Shoe Store, ItoJby, (lifts by Nan
and Buck's Bestaurant.
I.uticia and Jam es l&lt;ee were surprised on their 35th wedding
anniversary by their children, Kathy Dingle, Linda Oxford and
Jim !&gt;eo and their families.
The buffet dinner party was held at the Inane of Linda arxl
her husband. Jay Oxford in the old Ia*e hooiesite where the
children grew up ami where Linda ami Jay now live.
About 30 family members and a few friends helped I.uticia
and Jam es celebrate. The children presented their parents
with an orchid corsage and boutonniere and a modern
sculpture.
Tlte secret did not get out, and according to Linda, the U*es
were "really surprised."
They were married Sept. 11,1046, at the (lain First Methodist
Church of Sanford.
Several members of the Woman's Club n| Sanford attended a
portion of the Florida Federation of Women's Clubs Full Board
Meeting ut Dutch Inn Resort, Like Buena Vista from Sept. 1823.
In the official capacity was Vida Smith, FFWC District VII
Director. Others attending were club president Jean Fowler,
Melba Cooper, L'urine Messenger, EstcDc Davis, Peggy
Deere, Bill Giclow, Pat Foster, Emy Bill, Jerri Kirk and Ann
Brisson.
L nda and Bill Beck are getting settled li.rk in Sanford, the
home town they missed while living in N «lh Carolina.
Their younger daughter, Mary, atteids Pace School,
Maitland. Daughter Terry, a former dancer with Ballet Guild
of Sanford-Scminole, is enrolled at Western Carolina
University, according to Linda.
Edith Itoyal of Ballet Itoyul, Winter I kirk, will conduct
auditions for Ballet Guild of Sanford-Semini fe dancers Sunday
at the School of Dance Arts.
According to the BGS president Pat Scutt, the board ami
parents of dancers will join Edith for dim er following the
auditions.

SHAMPOO

D o ris
D ie trich

16-O U N C E 3 T Y P E R

4 29

1/ 99*

SISTER Sponsors Annual
'Sundae In The Park'
According lo SISTER president, Vivian !iu&lt; k, festivities will
get underway at 2 p.m. and the fun-filled a Iter noon will end
about 5

CONDITION

C A R TR ID G ES

In And Around Sanford

"Sundae in the Park" is coming up Sunday, Oct. t, when
SISTER Inc. stages the third annual old-fashioned ice cream
social in Centennial Park, between tth and 5th Streets on Park
Avenue in Sanford.

CLAIROL

SCHICK
SUPER H

P r o te in e n r ic h e d
fo r m u la . L im it 1

P r ic e re fle c ts 20* o ff
la b e l. L im it 1

\

.

TRONOLANE

4\

SUPPOSITORIES

A

OURSELVES

10'S .................................................. M.

Editor

CREAM
4
1-OU N CE............................... I

H e lp s re lie v e p a in d u e to
h e m o r r h o id s . L im it 1

higher education to women founded in 1869 at Mount Pleasant,
Iowa.
Nancy is among the 1,500 delegates to tin* convention from
Sept. 27 to Oct. 2 at the Hadisson Muehlebaeh Hotel and Con­
vention Center Plaza in Kansas City , Mo
The PEO Sisterhood lias an education Itmd that lends
thousands of dollars annually to worthy students. Since 1949,
PEO tuts awarded International Scholarships to thousands ol
foreign students to pursue graduate study in tlie U.S. and
Canada

D ETER G EN T

B A T T E R IES
R egular 1.60
PACK
OP

99*

P r ic e r e fle c ts 1 3 ' o ff
la b e l. L im it 1

PARSONS
TA B LES
o /-Q 0
3-COLOR8
2/ # MW
R e g .4 . t t

FOR

■

1 6 " x 1 6 ". A s s o r te d c o lo r s .
P la s tic .

pn

P ET BED
Reg. 1 2 ,tt
Save 4.00 .......................

L o w n o is e &amp;
h ig h o u tp u t
b la n k te p e e .

2 1 ” x 3 0 " . P la s tic w ic k e r lo o k w ith c u e h lo n .

i 2 Mx i e M

JOHNSON
A JOHNSON

PED ESTAL

HIBACHI

DENTAL
FLO S S

Regular 17.M
Save 4.00

50-YAR08
3 TYPES

13"

JA M

PHOTO
ALBUM

C a s t Iro n . A d
ju s ta b le g r id
&amp; d r a fts .

77*
F o r d a ily o ra l

No.eoz

Regular S.N . .

h y g ie n e . L im it 1

4 0 -p a g e , 2 0 -s h e e ts . P r o te c ts
p h o to s w ith m a g n e tic film .

PED
SPO RTSO CKS

Jean Jones ami her husband, Donald It., had a wonderful
time, she says, in Dallas where they attended tlie wedding of
their son, Jam es Whigham Jones, and Penelope Elizabeth
Koch.

Regular 1.3S

79*
O n e s iz e fits a ll.

It was like "keeping up with the Joneses, lor sure." Tlie
bridegroom's father was best man and his brothers were
groomsmen.

M ELNOR O SC ILLA T IN G

SP R IN K LER

N y lo n o r te rry .
L im it 2 p a ir

-m i

D AIWA 402
R E E L A ROD

No. SI
Regular S .S t .................. T T

Sale P ric e d ..................

E v e n w a te r d is tr ib u tio n f o r
d e e p r o o te d g ra s s .

M e ta l g e a rin g . 2 - p c . f ib e r ­
g la s s ro d .

The United Methodist Women ol D m- First United Methodist
Church, Sanford will sponsor a benefit luncheon Friday, Oct. 4,
from noon to I p.m., in the church fellowship hall.
According to chairman Hubye King, tlie proceeds will help
liquidate a debt on tlie reno-ating of tlie church |«irlor, a
project of tlie churchwomen. A Hawaiian theme will I*- carried
out and a fashion show will highlight Hie festivities. Fashions
are from l/iis' Place.
Hubye says there are no reservations and no tickets will be
sold at the door. Ticket donations. $3 50 each, an- available
from Mrs. Roger (Lm ise) Harris.

LEAF

B K K .T 0 . J C H 0 0 1
Excuse us please, but the gremlins were .it work in the date
for the Seminole Mutual Concert Association membership
reception.
The reception will be held at the Lmgwoodhomeol Patti and
Bobby Brantley on Oct. 17 ... not Oct. 7.
Those interested in subscribing to tin* SMCA and attending
the reception are asked to call Mrs. Frederic (Ituth) Gaines,
membership chairman, in Sanford.

STUDENTS UP TO AGi 14
•EXAMINATION
• X-RAY
T
I
• CLEANINO
Thru s«p* 10. IN I
f l u o r id e TREATMENT
M*«rt By tM U H lnnl

1 3 -O Z .R e g .tr

73*

H I IlM s r ZZMIM

Good Thru Oct. 3

9S°° Off
THE PERM O F
Y O U R CH O ICE
(Long Hair Extra)
•tfty Norwood!)

W HOPPERS

*

9

.M M HIAW ATM A A V I ., SANFOBD

M ALTED MILK

12-OZ. R eg.M *

• 1 5 with
* * J « '» «

Who's Cooking?

m

8N A PG A 8
TREATM ENT

CHECKUP

Nancy B. Terwilleger says she is excited aver attending the
international convention of the PEO Sisterhood, a philan­
thropic and educational organization inteiested in bringing

The Herald welcomes suggestions for Cook Of The
Week. Do you know someone you would like to sec fea­
tured ia this spot? There is something for everyone la
the Use of cooking.
Notice cooks, as well as m aster chefs, add a dif­
ferent dimension to dining.
Please contact OURSELVES Editor Doris Dietrich
aboat your news and views
cooking

15”

H e a v y d u ty s ty le r d r y e r .
2 s p e e d s &amp; 4 h e a ts .

Regular 4.SI
SO-MINUTE

W ICK ER -LO O K

L im it 1

Held Sept. 16-18 at the International Host Hotel, festivities
began with a gala wine and cheese reception followed by
workshops, "how to" sessions and guest speakers.

Regular 1S.M . . .

CA SSETTE
TA PE MEMOREX

H ig h s tr o n g th
a n a lg e s ic in
c a p s u le fo r m .

Carmen Dominguez, president-elect oi the Seminole County
Medical Society Auxiliary, ami Mary Beth Wcigand attended
the annual Florida Medical Association Auxiliary Inc. Fall
Board meeting and conference on leadership legislation and
public relations in Tampa.

HAIR
DRYER

M EM OREX

-J9 9

Each local chapter can send a delegate to the convention
only once in eight to 10 years. This delegate rcjiorts in person to
the other in the area which Nancy will do u|*xi her return.

VIP PRO
1500 WATT

EX TR A S T R E N G T H
BOTTLE OP 50

Nancy adds, "Tlie opportunity to attend live convention as a
delegate is a privilege."
Stic will be representing local chapters in Seminole, Orange,
Brevard and Volusia Counties. Thirty-five delegates will at­
tend the convention from Florida.

U s e d fo r to y s , r a d io s
&amp; c a lc u la to r s .

TYLEN O L
CA PSU LES

Nancy says, "As a prerequisite (or this grant, live women
must agree to return to their native countries upon completion
o| their education. Tlicse women liavc proved to be excellent
Ambassadors of Good Witt lor the United States."

"A A” TRANSISTOR

22-O U N C E

rrUTl

*

EV ER EA D Y

DAWN

Ph. 322-7684

flin g s of JjHair
STYLING SALON

1911 FrendiAvt.

Sanford

C h o c o la te c o v e r e d
m a lte d m ilk b a lls .
L im it 2

1
l*

A
&lt; le

You've Going to Like
EckercTs Pharmacy Service.

O P E N D A IL Y 9 t o 8 ,
8 U N D A Y 1 0 to 7
S o lo P r l c o t g o o d t h r u
W o d . S o p t. 3 0 t h

U l t i f f ^M, l*|&gt;nedp«o(miDn«it aN)4'6|)(hng
t o m e * e »U'F» you f t

COP* t ele&lt;y M M '&lt; t d

Tr.ey |4 i t (on k h u rfif)

•Ouc At-on cow* »e» to m t n f e f i
up to dale e no*t«(Jge of d eve top
m e r it * ) «jr og i ?t&gt;e» a i* 4 y » t*» in l i r e r uu m oney !•» &lt;4fer.ng S e h x x
C&lt;WAO
e n g gere'H . d ’*g % • * t n e v e r p o t t U e th e y *41
AtM&gt; W i t fOu l*m# t)y c o * is ' a o tty chtrta m g M o t t t lo heej the d ru gs

row

o#i hand'

FREE'CO U PO N S W ORTH W jOS
ID B O M H G iR D B B Ic fe ,
js a a s a ts r

•/

We reeerve the rij N to UmH quantities

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...THE HOPE OF OUR COMMUNITY,

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Sunday
( Timothy

A Talk With God

1:15-20
Monday
Hebrews

10:35-39

T h is is a v ery s pecial m o m e n t in K e n n y 's day. He is a b o u t to have
his ta lk w ith G od.

Tuesday
Hebrews
12:1-11

K e n n y has these ta lk s w ith G o d every day. H e k n o w s th e y are
im p o r ta n t. . . to G o d as w ell as K enny.

Wodno'/Jay
Jam es
11-8

Have th e re been a n y very sp ecial m o m e n ts in y o u r da y lately?
Have y o u th o u g h t a b o u t h aving a ta lk w ith G od?

Thursday
II Polor

IftMIMOCft MftlAMTI
ftftPTIIT CHUftCM
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C o n g re g a f/o n a l
CONQRCOATIONAL
CHRISTIAN CHURCH
1*411 RerfeAve
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l i N f M.

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CHURCH OF CHRIST
l i l t Re*h Avtowe
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I.N f f t

( If t lT CHUftCM
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1:1-9

It w as J e s u s w h o p o in te d to a c h ild 's h u m b le fa ith as an e x a m p le
for all C hristians.

Friday
RovetaUin

L e a rn h o w im p o rta n t a ta lk w ith G o d is to y o u B o th , M ake p ra y e r a
vital p a rt o f every day.

13:1-10

K e n n y has!

Saturday
Psalms

37:1-7

IN I K»«H* Adftditmg k r t l
P O Boa KU* CMrtoft»«*M Wgion 2 J V *

SafUrc MV.T-4b, theA/moroIW.OS.. O'-I

ll f t l * .

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MITMODI1T CHUftCM
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ft M arr|, It

Rev E RwtNOrfM
Ret»#r
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tlNem
Merrung #fert*np
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r Mp m
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Presbyterian
( ' • I T P R I l f t Y t l f t l l N CHURCH
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TOU CAN (IftTU ftl
rOUtCHURCH
taut iPACi roa
II t t P t f a m
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in

*

liM f.m .

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TRANMISSION

Mark and E»ttiorPorry
2523 Park Drive

OSBORN'S BOOK
and BIBLE STORE
2599 Sanford Ave.

PANTRY PR ID E
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A PAINT CO., INC.

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J e r r y &amp; E d S e n k a rik
a n d E m p lo y e e s

Ed Hemann and staff

WILSON M AIER FU R N ITU R E CO.
M r . a n d M r s . F r e d W ils o n

WINN D IX IE STORES
a n d E m p lo y e e s

SEM INOLE CO U N TY A REA CHURCH DIRECTO RY
h iim h v

or ooo

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RELIGION

Sunday, Sapt. 71.to ll—JC

Evtnlng Herald, Sanford, FI.

Briefly
Roots And Fruits' Is
Church Rally Day Theme
"Roots and Fruits" is the theme for the annual Rally Day
and 36th anniversary' celebration at Community United
Methodist Church. Highway 17-92, Casselberry, this Sun­
day. Speaker for the day will be the Rev. William J. Carter
of Johnson City, Tenn., a national mlssloner with the United
Methodist Board o( Disclpteship and specialist in leader
development.
Carter will address the Methodist Men’s Breakfast at 7:30
a.m. in the fellowship hall on "Growing in God's Service."
At 9:30 and 11 a.m. services, he will speak on “Three
Movements of the Spirit." At 2 p.m„ he will conduct a
workshop open to all on "Feeding the Body."
There will be a covered dish dinner at 5 p.m. followed by
music by "The New Hope Singers." At the 7 p.m. service
Carter will speak on the topic, "Everybody Hurts."

Discover Your Gifts
"Discover Your Gifts," a film from the Institute for
American Church Growth of Pasadena, Calif., will be
shown Wednesday at 7 p.m. at Community United
Methodist Church of Casselberry In place of the usual Bible
study groups. At 6 p.m., prior to the film, a catered dinner
will be served in fellowship hall. Call 831-3777 for reser­
vations. There will be classes for children.

Preparing For Adolescence
"Preparing for Adolescence: The Origins of Self-Doubt"
will be the topic of the Focus on the Family film to be shown
this Sunday at 7 p.m. at First United Methodist Church at
419 Park Ave., Sanford. There will be separate programs
for grade school children and nursery provided. The film
series featuring noted author and lecturer on family life is
open to the public.

Sunday School Preparation
Seminole Heights Baptist Church, Sanford, will observe
Sunday School Preparation Week beginning this Sunday. In
the morning worship service at Seminole High School
auditorium there will be a commissioning of Sunday School
leaders for the church year starting Oct. 1.
Using the theme "Building on Basics," in a special
session at 6 p.m. on Sunday in Room 509 at Seminole High
School, leadership and class members will hear about
opportunities for the coming year, be asked to set growth
goals, and plan other projected emphasis.
Beginning at 7 p.m. on Monday, there will be an informal
session at the home of Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Pearce, 204
Jdyilwilde Drive, during which a film will be shown.
Workers will then have opportunity to prepare fcr October
teaching activities. The rest of the week’s emphtsls will be
on outreach.

San Pedro Pathfinders Series
The Rev. Bona venture Midlli, T.O.R., director of San
Pedro Center, Dike Road, Maitland, announced this week
the details of the "Second Annual Pathfinders Series" to be
conducted at the Center.
The series of talks are titled, "The Desert Experience:
Encountering God In-tfre Dryness of Our lives." The series
will explore the desert experience of significant Biblical
figures as well as the spiritual dryness in our lives and how
others have handled this dryness in their lives too.
The talks presented by the Rev. Guy Noonan, T.O.R., the
Rev. Nino U Stella, T O R . and Father "Bonny", will be
held each Tuesday evelng for six consecutive weeks star­
ting Oct. 13 at 7:30 p.m. Cost will be 112 for series or *3 per
session at the door. All faiths are welcome. For more in­
formation, call 671-6322 l Mon.-Fri.) 8:30 a.m. - 4:30 p.m.

Victory In Jesus Rally
There will be a "Victory In Jesus Rally” held at luike
Eola Park on Saturday, Oct. 3. The event is sponsored by
Victory In Jesus Ministries, Inc., in cooperation with Good
Shepherd Ministries, Flrewind Ministries, Whole Armor
Ministries, The Rock Church, and Tlie Sons Of Song and Bill
Durant's Traveling Calvary Choir. The trend is interdenominatlonal, Christ centered, with wholesome
Christian music and entertainment, a dynamic gospel
message, coupled with an evangelistic outreach. The
festivities will be centered at the bandshell and will kickoff
at 2 p.m. with entertainment by The Sons of Song, the
program will continue throughout the day and conclude at
10 p.m. after a Praise and Worship Service.

ScholarshipsAwarded
Kenneth Darrell Williams and Sheryl Field of First
Baptist Church of Oviedo are among the 110 CarsonNewman College students who are recipients of the Church
Matching Scholarships. The program was begin four years
ago to aid Baptist students attending the East Tennessee
Baptist school.
The local church is asked to contribute f2QD during the
first year the student Is at Carson-Newtnan aixl the college
matches the church gift for a total of &gt;400 In financial aid.

Christian Education Seminar
A Christian education training seminar aad workshop
will be held by the St. Johns Presbytery on Sunday, O d. 4
from 2-5 p.m. at the St. Marks Presbyterian Church, 1021
Palm Springs Drive, Altamonte Springs. The (vent will be
held (or new and experienced teachers as will as church
school planners and administrators. Course Biles Include
"Teaching Elementary Classes". "Youth Education,"
"Adult Education," "Creativity In the CIa*room" and
"The Enlistment, Care and Feeding of Volunteers."

Brotherhood Leads Service
This Sunday is Brotherhood Day at First Baptist Church
o( Sanford with members of the Brotherhood in charge of
the 11 a.m. worship service. BUI Colbert.’ the 1NM1
Brotherhood director, will give the Invocation ynd words of
welcome. The scripture reading and prayer will be fad
by George Willis. Billy Wells will lead the congregational
singing and Andy Denmark will direct the Meg's Chorus in
"The Donger I Serve Him." Dick Holtxdiw wil sing "Trust
in Him." Newly elected Brotherhood director, Julian
Stenstrom, will bring the message an "Stewardship after
Death."

Consecration
As Bishop Set
For Local Priest

Florida Council
Of Churches
Sets Assembly
"The Caribbean Whirlpool"
will be the major theme ol the
Florida Council ol Churches
Annual Assembly in Orlando,
Oct. 20-21. The event Is open to
the public ns well us official
rep resen tativ es of FCC
m e m b e r c o m m u n io n s .
P articip atio n from every
local church is invited, in­
cluding members of faiths or
denominations not members
of the Florida Council.
"What really is happening
in Haiti and (he Caribbean" is
ilie issue to be broached by
the Rev. Claude Cagogan of
the Caribbean Conference of
Churches. As a long time
Caribbean
citizen
and
renowned church leader in
this p art of the world,
Ca(logon will speak first hand
about the conditions and
causes of massive Haitian
migration and likely future
developments in this region.
Mrs.
M arie
P oltlcr,
chairperson of the Haitian
Refugee Center Steering
Committee in Miami, wifT
address the Haitian situation
from the U.S. |&gt;erspecllve.
The refugee’s plight in the
U.S., the consequences of
such a refugee im pact,
especially in South Florida,
and Florida's future dilemma
as the bridge between the
Caribbean and the U.S. will
all be addressed by her.
These p resen tatio n s and
other opportunities for par­
ticipants to dialogue with the
speakers and each other will
constitute the first phase of
the Assembly, and will be held
from 1—5 p.m. on Oct. 20 at
the First United Methodist
Church in downtown Orlando.
Dr. David Hortin, pastor oi
the church, will welcome
participants and lead a abort
meditation to begin the day.
Another fea tu re will be
display
tables
and
re p re s e n ta tiv e s
of
organizations and ugencies
cu rren tly working with
Haitians In Florida so that
p articip an ts can quickly
peruse what others are doing.
A Haitian art display will
make available Haitian art
(or sale. A television film
showing detailed coverage of
Haitian refugees will also be
seen.
In tlie evening there will be
an ecum enical worship
service,
a
E ucharistic
celebration in the Anglican
tradition at the Episcopal
Cathedral of St. l-uke in

downtown Orlando. Beginning
at 7:30, the celebrant for this
service will be the Right Rev,
Calvin O. Schofield, J r „
Bishop of the Episcopal
Diocese ol Southeast Florida.
Tlie preacher will be the Rev.
Robert P. Douglass, D.D.,
Stated Clerk and Treasurer,
Synod
of
F lorida,
P resb y terian Church, U.S.
Music will be led by the
Cathedral Choir under the
direction of M urray F.
S o m m c rv llle , C a th e d ra l
Musician.
Alter the se n 1ice a reception
will be hosted b&gt; the
Episcopal Church Women in
the G reat Hall at the
Cnlhedrul. The evening will
conclude with a Piano-Violin
Concert by l-ev and Zalina
Gurevich, Russian refugees
who arc internationally
renowned musicians.
Tlie third and final phase of
the Assembly will occur the
morning of Oct, 21 Irom 9 to
noon at tlie First Presbyterian
Church, also in downtown
O rlando, w alking distance
Irom the other churches
utilized for this Assembly.
During this morning an of(icial Council meeting will be
held including the three of­
ficial representatives from
each of the particip atin g
judicatories in tlie Florida
Council.
Council commissions in the
are as ol Aging and the
Elderly, Criminal Justice and
Crime, Farm Workers and
Agri-Industry, Racism and
Human Rights, Refugees and
the G lobal Community,
Quality of Mto and Florida
Growth will present succinct
reports as to their progress in
the first six months of their
existence.
For those interested in the
ecum enical m ovement la
F lo rid a, in the a re a s of
concern to the Florida Council
commissions, in the Carib­
bean challenge facing Florida
and Florida churches, this
event promises to be an in­
tense, fast-paced opportunity
to get in touch not only with
Die issues ut hand.
Registration
for
this
Assembly is $12. P re ­
registration before October I
will allow live Council to mail
re g istra n ts a "C aribbean
C h a lle n g e " b ac k g ro u n d
packet including several
papers which poignantly
describe
the
exciting
challenge lacing Florida

Bible Translation Day
How many languages are
spoken in the world?
More than 5,000, according
to figures com plied by
Wycliffe Bible Translators.
And of Dial number, some
3,000 language groups have u
need (or Scripture in their
own dialect.
Wycliffe and other Bible
translation organizations are
pointing up that need in their
Sept. 27 observance of the 14th
annual Bible Translation Day.
One of those 3,000 un­
tran slate d languages has
special significance this year.
Wycliffe tra n sla to r Chet
Bitterman wanted to go to the
Carijona people of Colombia
and provide Bible portions in
their unwritten language. Bui
on March 7, he died a m ar­
tyr’s death (or His God and his
work.
But Colombia was also the
scene of another significant
W ycliffe-related event this
year, when the first New
Testament translation into
another formerly unwritten
language was distributed.
Some 2,000 believers among
the 40,000 Paez people are
using the Scriptures as a
guide (or their daily lives, and
(or (heir church life In some 50
congrega lions.
The Paez New Testament is
one of about 60 to be com­
pleted by Wycliffe translation
teams in the two years since
the organization m arked
publication of its 100th
T estam en t. Work Is con­
tinuing in some 700 other
languages.
Like other groups of its
type, Wycliffe Bible Tran-

slalors has been observing
Bible Translation Day since
1967, when tlie U.S. Congress
first proclaimed the special
observance.

Tlie Rev. Dismas Markle, priest ol Our Lady Queen of Peace
Chapel in Sanford, will be consecrated bishop of the Eastern
Orthodox Catholic Church in America this Sunday at n 10 a.m.
service at St. John's Eastern Orthodox Church on Highway 1792 In Fern Park. Tlie new bishop will officiate over the
Southeastern Diocese which includes churches in New York,
Missouri and Florida.
Consecrator will be the Most Reverend John Adair, Bishop of
the Eastern Orthodox Catholic Church in America, from
Coyle, Okla.
Other priests participating in the service include the Rev.
Michael Kirkland, Orlando; tlie Rev. Paul Zelly, Ormond
Beach; the Rev. Mark Schulz, who will be flying In from
Kentucky, tlie Rev. Daniel Slerner of Sanford, priest of St.
John's, and tlie Rev. Walter of Ocala.
A dinner will be served ut noon on the church grounds in
honor of the event.
Two members at St. John’s will be elevated during the
service. Shawn Molihan, ol Sanford, will be set aside as a
reader and Joseph Morse, of longwood, will be dedicated as an
altar boy.

R e v . D is m a s M a rk le lo b e c o n s e c r a te d b ish o p .

Originally from Pennsylvania, Fattier Markle moved lo
Sanford from Fern Park eight years ago. He received his
training at St. Francis College, lo retta, Pa., Sacred Heart
N'ovlatc, Winchester, Pa., Ohio Christian College and Three
Hierarchs Seminary, Fern Park, He formerly served at St.
John's Eastern Orthodox church in Fern Park anti SI.
Dismas Eastern Orthodox Chapel, Sanford. He lias been a
priest for nine years, part of which time he was affiliated with
the Syrian Antiochian Church.
Father Markle suiil he will continue to maintain residency In
Sanford ami serve the small duipcl In Sanford.

Religion A Laughing M atter?
Cartoonists — particularly political cartoonists — are
allowed more liberties than most other journalists in
caricaturing the foibles of society's leaders or its prominent
citizens.
But can they sometimes overstep the bounds of what is
proper?
Tlie Albuquerque (N.M.) Tribune recently was deluged with
letters Irom offended readers nfter it published n political
cartoon that used the ta s t Supper as its motif.
Tlie drawing shows Jesus und his disciples silting around u
table. A waiter comes up to Jesus and says, " I ’m sorry, sir,
there's no wine. Tlie City Dmncll rejected our liquor waiver
application."
Tlie paper's artist, Murk M. Taylor, says he was merely
"using a religious metaphor to get in a dig at the City Council"
which had refuted to grant waivers (or liquor licenses In a
section of Albuqurcque known as Old Town.
"The cartoon was trying lo gel across the point that if the
I.ast Supper had been held in Old Town, there would have been
no last Supper because of the arbitrariness of the city council,
says Taylor.
But many readers who may have agreed with Taylor that the
council was wrong in its decision found the vehicle he used for
making Ids point offensive.
Here are cxcerpls from some of the letters:
"Mark Taylor has more than exceeded tlie boundaries of
good taste. Tlie laud Supper is a very solemn and sacred oc­
casion for Christians. To make a mockery of it, as Taylor lias
done all over a ridiculous liquor waiver — is unforgivable,"
"Your blasphemous and sacrilegious cartoon on the last
supper strikes at the heart of Catholic worship — the most holy
sacrifice of the mass."
"Tasteless , . . sickening."
"Very gross, o poor way to gel u point across."
"Using the picture of the I j i s I Supper was about tlie lowest
the Tribune could get."
Tlie paper says it received only one letter praising tlie Tuylor
cartoon.
Taylor feels there is nothing wrong with using religious
themes in cartoons so long os they don't make lun ol religion
itself or ridicule it.
If his laist Supper cartoon doesn't ridicule religion, tlie same
cannot be said ol an anti-Catholic comic book, "Alberto,"
being circulated on the Ohio State University campus and

Film To Be Shown
“Tlie Galilean", a 30-minute color film on the life of
Christ filmed entirely in Israel, will be shown this Sunday at
7 p.m. in the sanctuary of the First Baptist Church of
Sanlord, 519 Park Ave. Tlie film ends with music written by
John W. Peterson with tlie promise that Jesus is coining
again. Open to the public.

G u e st Priest At Holy Cross
Tlie Rev. Joseph A. Maher will substitute lor the Rev,
I^roy I). Soper Jr., rector of Holy Cross Episcopal Church
of Sanford this Sunday. Maher is a graduate of Villanova
Catholic University and earned his PtiD at New York
University. He lias had four articles on commjjnication
published in national journals and serves as executive
director of Services for Seniors in Seminole County.

Nigh# Fires Service
The Rev. K.D. While Jr. will be the speaker at 7:30 p.m.
this Sunday when the Night Fires service is held at St.
Jam es AME Church, Sanford.

Church Honors Pastor
Bethel African Methodist Episcopal Church, Midway,
will honor its pastor, the Rev. Marcus Burk al appreciation
services this Sunday. Attorney Jam es Golden will be the
speaker at the 11 a.m. service. The Rev. Tommie L Jenkins
and the St. Matthew Missionary Baptist Church will con­
duct the 3 p.m. service and the Rev. J .L Denmark and the
Ward Chapel AME Church of Winter Park will be in charge
at 8 p.m.

Frlonds Day
Friends Day will be held al Zion Hope Missionary Baptist
Church, Sanford, this Sunday at 11 a jn . Guest speaker will
be Carl Eudeil of St. Matthews Missionary Baptist Church
and Mattye Cherry will be the mistress ol ceremonies.

SAINTS AND
SINNERS
G*org« Plagenz

elsewhere throughout the country'Tlie comic book suggests sexual promiscuity between priests
and nuns. One strip shows an underground tunnel connecting a
rectory and a convent.
There Is nothing lunny about bigotry even when It appears in
a comic book format.
Humor of course has a place In religion. We may even need
more of It.
ih
If a good laugh is good lor our bodies — as Norman Cousins
says In his book, “Anatomy ol an Illness," and repeats In his
latest book "Human Options" — it may also be therapeutic for
our souls.
Cousins tells how tie used laughter to help overcome a
serious illness that made doctors despair of his recovery.
Could it be that the soul responds similarly to a good joke?
"In laughter os well as in repentence," says one Christian
writer, “sin is purged, guilt is relieved and shame is taken
away,"
But many people still think that humor In church —
especially Jokes and laughter — amounts to disrespect for the
sacred.
Many of the ancient church fathers thought so too.
Chrysostom told the church people In Antioch, "We are
assembled not to burst into peals of laughter but to weep for
our sins.”
Those who would like to see more humor In church arc not
unaware of the danger it poses if It gels to the point where
matters of ultimate consequence are treated as trivia.
"Humor should be an interlude," cautions Conrad Hyers, "a
periodic suspension of seriousness." Hyers is the author of the
book, "Holy laiughter."
As for humor that is intended to hurt or ridicule, that is never
a laughing matter.

No Food Shortage There
Jvrrm lah 33:3. Call unto me and I will an­
swer thre, and shew thee great and mighty
things, which thou knowest not.
Several years ago I was silting on a bench on
a lazy summer afternoon along with several
cracker barrel philosophers in Iron! ol a gas
station in a small rural town in soutliern
Mississippi. Directly across tlie street from
tlie gas station was a small shot gun house
complete with a dilapidated root, a sagging
[wrch, surrounded by a dirt yard.
For Uie benefit ol Uie readers of this column,
a shotgun house generally consists of tiirec
room; with each room located behind the
other, giving tlie house a elongated effect,
hence tlie name shotgun.
While my friends and I were sitting lliere
discussing the weather (what else is there to
talk about?) we watched Intently as a battered
old Ford drove up. II parked in front ol the
shotgun house and people got out of the car
carrying groceries inlo Uie house. I watched
with amazement while they made several
trips back to Uie car and got more bags of
groceries. It was hard (or me to believe that
anyone could get so many groceries Into one
car.
I wondered, as perhaps you are wondering,

B yFR ED L NEAL
Pastor
Ceagregattoasl

how could anyone possibly pay for Uial much
food, but the one Uioughl that lias remained
with me, enabling me to recall that incident is
self-evident. H anyone in that home went
hungry it would be their own fault, for there
was enough food to feed a proverbial army.
Jerem iah 33:3 assures us as children of God
dial all Uie riches, resources and rewards of
Heaven are available to us for the asking. It is
far more tragic for a Christian lo go without
the necessities of Ufe which he needs for hU
physical, emotional, and spiritual well being
than II would be (or a person to go hungry in
the little shotgun house laden with food.
I fully realize that there are certain
stipulation! which much be met if we expect to
have our prayers answered, but the fact
remains God is more willing and able to give
than we are to receive, and the tragedy which
so often characterizes our Christian Uvea is
that we have not because we ask not.

Assistant Pastor Installod
Trinity Assembly of God in
Deltona, Uie Rev. Charles
Evans, pastor, recenUy in­
stalled Michael Modica as
their new assistant pastor. As
the assistant pastor, Modica
wiU take on Uie responsibility
of youth ministries with Uie

purpose of directing spiritual
growth and planning various

church.
He and his wife Renee'
came from Uie Pennington
re tre a ts and rec re atio n al
F irs t A ssem bly of God
outingi. He trill also assist the
Church, in Pennington, N.J",
p asto r In a re a s of a d ­
While in Pennington, Modica
ministration and overseeing served as youth pastor and
some of the o u treach d irec to r
of
C h ristlab
ministries and (unctions of Uie Education.

I
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IC—Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

by Chic Young

Sunday, Sept. V, 1WI

ACROSS
I Trapdoor
S Float port
office |ib6r |

I Etelamitlon
of annoyinco
12 Droidful
13 Nuclear
agency (abtor)
U The imallett
bit
15 Mark
16 Batrayor (al)
17 Raging

by Mort Walker

B E E T L E B A IL E Y

(Si6M) if I'pKNlOWlsI
TMFM WHAT I KMOW
NOW ...

Aniwer to Prrvioui Punle

4 Around
(prefix)
5 South Dakota
city
6 Pod vegetable
7 Gasoline
rating
8 U m a phone

nnn
□no
□□□

9 Capital of
Italia

□ no

U

n
n

□ I1C7/K1
Sunflower
state (abbr)
New Veer's
dnnk
Compata
point
Womans
patriotic
society (abbr.)
Unclothed
persons
Bluisfvwhite
metal
t

guideline!
11
46 Egga on
52
__________"tha

TH E BORN LO SER
H U R R ia w e T O L D M e N bU B R O K ^

THAT R0TTEU. J .
AWO T'THIWK

THAT WMOOW l^ lH e

I fcAtfe HER

DOWN

A PI ME TO
K E E P HER
MOUTH
SHUT l

For Sundoy, S»pf«mbAr 27, 1951

□on

10 Sourca of
power
11 Capture
19 Environment
agency(abbr |
21 Drug agency

t

45 Elliptical
46 Hub o&lt; a
47 California
county
49 Contribute
50 City in
Oklahoma
51 Read
54 Epoch
56 Southern
itats (abbr)
t

V

1)

It

It

If

It

11

Terrible"

By BERNICE BEDE OSOL

□LUD

1R Motion
picture light 23 World organi20 Burning
nlion |2 wda. 39
22 Baat
abbr)
24 Fata
24 Child
40
40
28 Clota at hand 25 Sums
32 Inkling
26 Varna Wa
441
t
33 Suffn
27 Central
35 Normandy
American
mraiion day
Indian
36 Contamporary
43
29 Travel
punter
30
Skiff
Suanchoa
37 Qu
44
31 Noel
Ditcouraga
41 On
oh fair 34 Title
through
42 Cape Kennedy
a &lt;
• i
rockat
44 Land ut*
11

53 Actor Sparki
55 South
Amancan
Indian
57 Flaat of ahip)
56 Raw metal
59 Small bonfa
60 Nila quaen,
for abort
61 Vapor
62 Noveliil
Ferber

H O RO SCO PE

L’Jf.lI 1
□□□

w

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10 11

21

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1 Collaga
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2 Men a name
to
3 Spokan

■
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W IN A T BRID G E
by Bob Montana

A RCH IE

by Howie Schneider

E E K A M EEK
«rOU K U O U W H A T T H P r'S R C . 1/
ODURMET M e a l

VCCHHt HOUUCAUMXI
THIS STUFF?

WEU. WHO'S THE GUV

■out M M J S

THAT AUUtfG GETS

liMJOIHERMAWSRDSCXJ"

MV GOUPMCT HAEAL?

N()«Hi
aiaii
♦ Kqs 4
9(1
♦ 10 7 S2
♦ K7 J
WEST
EAST
♦ AJM
O109S
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0» J
SQJtl
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Ogjio
S im
SOUTH
• 72
• axqjiii
• K*
• Al l
Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South
Wnt N*«1t Eail Sm U
to
Pin }♦
Piu 40
Paw Pan Pau
Opening lead: IQ

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alia Sealag

by Ed Sullivan

P R ISC ILLA 'S POP

OH.OH/ IT JU6T
HIT A,6NAG ‘

This has been “Be kind to
East and Weat Week."
Somehow or other, they
have managed to beat every
contract.
Today's hand la taken

from a match-point game.
Practically every declarer
got to four hearti and prac­
tically every declarer won
the tint trick with his club
ace and then started pro­
ceeding! by drawing
trumps.
When a ipade would be
led to dummy. At those
tables where West took hU
ace right away, South
scored two spades tricks to
come to the magic number
of 10. At those tables where
West ducked that first spade
South had to lead a diamond
to try to get back to his
hand. West would take his
ace and lead a second club
and South would be down to
one.
The really careful South
players drew Just one trump
and then led a spade.
West would duck and
South would be able to get
back to his own hand with a
trump, draw tha rest of tha
trumps and lead a second
spade while dummy still had
the king of cluba entry.
Of course, this line of play
had postponed the drawing
of trump#. But the risk of a
ruff was more than compen­
sated for by the chance to
use a trump to return to the
South band for a second
spade lead.
i w m i m ENTtamu u m

by Larry Wright

K IT *N ' C A R L Y L E

For Monday, Sopfombtr 28, 1981
YOUR BIRTHDAY
SeptenberK , 1961
This coining year looks
extrem ely prom ising for
you. You'll be exposed to new
people who are both far­
sighted and en terp risin g .
These associations will not
only
bt
personally
beneficial, kpt fun aa well.
LIBRA (Sept. 2W)et. 23)
You’re at your best and
brightest today when dealing
or working with large groups
of people, especially if you
feel you have some influence
over them. Romance, travel,
luck, resources, possible
pltfBlls and career for the
coming months a re all
discussed In your AstroGraph that begins with your
birthday. Mail 11 for each to
Astro-Graph, Box 469, Radio
City Station, N.Y. 10019. Be
sure to specify birth date.
SCORPIO!Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
This is one ol those days when
you respond well to challenge,
yet you're not remiss in let­
ting another bat for you if you
feel he swings better.
SAGITTARIUS I Nov. 23Dec. 21) Your concepts are
broad today and you can
grasp even ctfficult precepts.
With this ability, you'll be
able
to proceed
with
progressive plans.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) You're likely to meet
someone important today. Do
everything you can to develop
this contact. It can be of
repealed future benefit.
AQUARrU'6 I Jan 20-Feb.
19) The answers you seek can
be found today by talking your

by Stotlel A Heimdahl

BUGS BUNNY

i

liberal ideas. Now is the time
YOUR BIRTHDAY
to make plans.
Sept flu ber 27,1981
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20 \
Projects for which you have
You might run Into an in­
the helm, especially if they
dividual today who can fur­
a re m aterially oriented,
should be destined for success nish you with a valuable point
in the year ahead. The fact of view you hadn’t considered,
listen to all whom you en­
that your high rank is
counter.
deserved will be am ply
ARIES I March 21-April 191
proven.
LIBRA (Sept. 2M)ct. 23) Your innovative ideas could
Through p artially veiled catch the interest of another,
circum stances, conditions and the term s you’ve been
that prevented you from being seeking. P roceed at full
your own person In the past speed. Don’t look back.
a rc changing today. This
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
should afford you more In­ Someone with whom you’re
dependence. Find out more of involved
socially
will
what lies ahead for you In the stim u late your thinking
year following your birthday
today. As a result, you might
by sending for your copy of come up with a belter method
Astro-Graph. Mail tt for each for doing an old, repetitious
to A stro-Graph, Box f89, task.
Radio City S tation, N.Y.
GEMINI (May 21-June 201
10019. Be sore to specify birth Those little everyday chores
date.
i
will get done quickly today,
SCORPIO (Oct. 2f-Nov. 22) freeing you to take advantage
The concerns and needs of of some fun. The change of
others are on your mind routine will do you good.
today. You can be of great
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
help to them. Don’t sit on your Some unexpected company
impulses. Act on them.
which you'll enjoy immensely
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23- could make the scene at your
Dec. 21) You won't hesitate to house today. However, by
respond to your Instincts evening, tim e with your
today, and that’s good. They family is all you'll need.
could lead you to places where
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) After
interesting people dwell.
CAPRICORN I Dec. 22-Jan. you’ve successfully fulfilled
19) Your best opportunities your obligations to your
for gain today come through family today, relax a little
your more progressive ideas. with some of the lighter things
If you need some stimulating life lias to offer.
conversation, seek out for­
VIRGO I Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Someone within earshot
ward-looking individuals.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. thinks yo u 're sm a rt and
19) The ctrances arc others clever. This person may even
will be totally In accord with offer you Bn opportunity for
your thinking today, Including personal gain you couldn’t
even some of your more obtain on your own.

problem over with one who
solved n similar situation.
She'll be glad to help.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
You could resurrect an old,
discarded project and moke it
pay off today with a dab of
ingenuity here and a touch of
elbow grease there.
ARIES (M arch 21-April
19) Being accepted by your
peefs is no problem for you
today. Because you're ad­
mired so much you might
even get two special in­
vitations, both of which will be
fun.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
It won’t be all lucky choices or
breaks that make your work
go so smoothly today. You’ll
help things along with oldfashioned hand work.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
Y ou're
ex trem ely
en­
terprising today and you’ll be
willing to run risks in areas
from which others will shy
away. You’re lucky, bul don’t
push things too far.
CANCER (June 21-July 221
Conditions a re taking a
favorable turn regarding a
family situation you might
have been quite skeptical
about. Aren't you glad you
kept trying?
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Take
c a re of im portant com ­
munications today. You'll be
fortunate in getting in touch
with people you may not have
been able to reach last week.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Olliers lend to treat you with
exceptional generosity today,
even one who never has
before, one you thought didn't
give a hoot.

ANNIE
PRANK AND E R N E S T

p y sy ©

by Bob Thavot

u b r a io t

(H I

is

it

A u

R ia * * r

T b UfiT THl*
MAN HAVE 5*&gt;m E
H £M i N 6W A V ?

f»J -WITH THOSE WHALERS

WRL.TWS

CHANNEL AIN’T
A5H0RE,WE HAVE TO TARE
A CHANCEON ONE OF
GONNA 00 ITf
THESE CHANNELS LEABNG
WE’LL HAVE T’
US OUT OF THIS (CE-PACR- RfKEKSf AN^

omoom

1H

by T. K. Ryan

TU M BLEW EED S

FLETCH ER'S UNDING

by Douglas Coffin

T H IS M O N T H TH E C O VETEE BLAC K H O W S TH IN G S A T T H E P W K E f^ T I ?
F E A T H E R G O E S TO T H E T H l P E 'S r
—
v r
w n w p fw w n i that chaff 7
6RA FTIN f RAFTER O STB FF CRAFT; 7
’n tlV A f lV R 1 &amp; A P , I N A M E VOL)

m

N

INPIAN OFTHE MONTH!
I

r-u

f*jf*.

*

�S u n d ay. Sept. 17, t i l t — 7C

Evening Herald. Sanford, FI,

TONIGHT'S TV
[S A T U R D A Y ]
1:30
O SOLID OOLO

(TO) fa m ily ro rtra it
(17) THIS WEEK W BASIBAIL

2:00
O

J l

LOOK

lA K t U L

AM M M X

8 ) (101UVMQ ENVIRONMENT
M
(17) BASEBALL Cincinnati
Radi al Atlanta B u m
*
2 :1 5
O (?) BASEBALL Lot Angmus
Dodgma at Houtton Astros

2:30

da O MOVIE "Zappahn" (C)
(t»7l| Mchaal York. Elk. Sommw
During World War t. a British apy
taarnt that tha Oar man* are planrang lo us* a giant dirigible to Ileal
the Magna Carta and thereby erode
Bntiah morale
O (10) TEACHING AMERICA TO
SMO "Tha Fred Waring Music
Workshop Eighty-year-old Fred
Waring n teen at work khanng hit
tacrati with high i t hod itudentt
from all across tha country

3:00
(U (35) MOVK "Stowaway To
Tha Moon" (C) (1974| Lloyd Bridg­
et. Michael Link Unknown to
Ground Control, a young boy tudat
onatoacatrap
CD (10) PRESENTE

CZ) O

3:30
WIDE WORLD OF SFORTS

15-round WBC Light Heavyweight
Championship bout between

detender Matthew Saad-Muhammad and Jerry Marin (WoL The
Fifth Avenue Mae. featuring many ol
the world a lop nutert racing down
New Yorks tamed avenue (Vve)
8 ) (10) HOT SHOTS Keen Brophy narratea a look al the history,
lechntques equipment and peraonaktiea ot tkaleboardmg. featuring a
foeue on pro ndera Tony Alva and
David Hackett (R)

Nasi works to tmeovor aw tndancr
rwcoswry to trap I loading bank
fobbar

5:58
IX (17) COLLEGE tCOREBOARO
EVEMNQ

4-00
Vic Braden thowa you how to
reduce unnecessary strata during a
match and how to put more tun
back mto your game |R |g

4:30

(E O SFORTS SATURDAY 10round super wettarweighl bout
between Roberto Duran and Luigi
MmcNAo (kve trom Laa Vegas I
8 ) (10) vie BRAoers terms
FOR TNI FUTURE "Wrap-Up" Vic
Braden answers viewers' questions
and reviews key points on strokes,
strategy, conditioning and the srmnmg power ot laughter. |R )g
U (17) RAT FATROL

4:85
(D (17) COLLEQE SCOREBOARD

8*0

EMERGENCY
J NCAA FOOTBALL
35) OROZLY ADAMS
- I (10) SOCCER MADE M OCRMANY • Champions Cup Final"
Liverpool vs Real Madrid

IX

(17) UNTOUCHABLES Ekot

Disney: 10
Years A fter
LAKE BUENA VISTA, Fla. (UPI) - Ten y e a n ago on the
eve of the opening of Walt Disney World, a local newspaper
story predicted a new era for central Florida — "the Disney
E ra."
Time has proved the story prophetic. In the last decade no
individual or Institution lias influenced the character of central
Florida as much as the giant (heme park on 27,000 acres some
20 miles southwest of Orlando.
The land of Mickey Mouse, Donald Duck and Pluto is the
region's largest employer, biggest taxpayer and most
gregarious host, ft anchors central Florida's tourism Industry,
(tumps millions into the local economy and is more or less
responsible for putting Orlando on the map.
On the darker side, it's sometimes blamed for spurring the
growth that has strained county services and brought traffic
jams, transients and rising crime to an area that has grown by
31 percent to 700,000 residents since 1971.
Next week, on Oct. 1, Walt Disney World will mark Its
"Tencennial” with the first of a year-long series of special
parades and events that will culminate with the opening of the
new W00 million EPCOT Center on Oct. 1,1962.
Former Orlando Mayor Carl ijtngford says the people of
central Florida ought to be celebrating too. He believes most
have profited from Walt Disney World and its ripple effect.
"1 doubt if any of us realized that we would achieve the
tremendous growth that baa occurred since they epened up out
there," saya Langford, who Is something of a lagend himself
having commanded city hall for more than a decade. "Orlando
used to be a seasonal place for winter tourists. We get people
all year long now."
l*ured by the "Disney magic” — a benign combination of
fantasy and family fun — visitors arrive every day from all
over the world.
Their impact is evident in statistics showing:
— Tourism soaring from 800,000 visitors a year In 1970 in the
Orange-Osecola region surrounding Disney World to 6.5
million visitors in 1979.
— The number of motel rooms Increasing sixfold, from 5,000
in 1970 to 31,000 today.
— Dramatic increases in retail sales, up 300 percent over 10
years in the Orange-Osceola area.
Moreover, the growth in tourism has created some 50,000
Jobs in the central Florida area, according to Economic
Research Associates, and Disney visitors are estimated to
have pumped some $14 billion into the area.
They've purchased everything from groceries to gasoline,
and tennis balls to tickets to the tourist attractions like Sea
World Bnd Circus World that followed on Disney World’*
coattails.
"I knew tiiat Walt Disney World would be a good thing for
this part of Florida," says Langford. "But it's been better than
I imagined. It’s been a bonanza."
While most In the business community would agree, not
everyone believes Mickey Mouse doubles as the goose that laid
the golden egg.
These modem day Jeremlaha look at the homing develop­
ments, fast food store strips, crowded Jails and low water table
and wonder If central Florida has bitten off more than it can
chew.

6:30
■ (T) NBC NEWS
ID 0 C M NEWS

0:65
0 (1 7 ) COLLEQE SCOREBOARD

7.-00
■ £ ) M SEARCH O F_
T O HEEHAW
OX (35) WILD. WILD WEBT
• (10) UNDERSEA WORLD OF

4ACOUEB COUSTEAU
0 ( 1 7 ) WREETUNQ (COHTD)

7:30
■ CT FlOROA't WATOJNO

*-00
• (D BARBARA MANORSU ANO
THE MANORSU MBTERS Ouasts
Kanny flogara. AndraaCroucb (R|
(X) O WALT OMNEY "Tha Lova.
Bug' A human-kka vqtktwagan'
nanwd Marbw adopts a IOfmar proNational raca drlvar. and togathar
I hay baconw a facing aantation
I Fart t|

C E O LOVE BOAT A husband and
wiN try to hnd (await 'hat Ihay
atathad aboard on a prior crulaa. a
chaatiaador atlamptt 10 aacapa tha
attactioni ot bar boytrwnd. and a
man rants a larraty to knpraaa hw
boat (RIO

an (35) MOV« "Tha Marrtaga Ol
A Young Slockbrokar" (C) &lt;1BM|
Richard
Ban|amln. Joanna
Shlmkut A young buamaaaman
borsd with Na lot In kN daci Jsa that
bacommg a "Pooping Tom" might
add aoma aptca to hit daily ailtlanca
■

(10) EVEMNQ AT FORt
Tools Thltltmtna" Toots Thwtamana (oma John VYIkama and tha
Boston Pops lor an tw an g oI gUtar strumming, harmonica blowing
and vtrluoao (an wfaalkng (R)
&lt;a (17) HABMVXXI AUVE Host
Ralph Emory Co-hoat Jimmy
Daan

*00
■ ( S H A M Quasi AndyQibb
ili 0 MOW
"Matilda (1B78)
Efcotl Gould. Robsn Mil chum A
Isal-tawing booking agsnt gmdat
tha ctraar ot a prttatighling kan­
garoo toward a hatvywaighi bout
■
(10) MYSTERY "Sargsanl
Cribb Abracadayar" Sargaant
Crtbb and ConitabN Thack arty gat
Into tha act whan malevolent and
dangerous practical (okas art ruin­
ing tha carters ot Victorian mualc
hat trusts (R)g
O (171 FOOTBALL SATURDAY
Moat Bob Naal Paul Hornung.
Alai Hawkms. Norm Van Brockkn.
Debt Segura art Na lured

10:00
•
(X) SHAUN CASSOY Shaun
C aaeidy N (omad by Lora Anderson
and Jack Albert ton In Na Mat law-

FROM
Down” (1173) A young
man'a lather torcaa Nm to abandon
Nt hopes ot Studying arl and lake a
tut-low (ob at conductor on tha
local Bombay tram kne

|Q(17)NBWE
10:30
III) (35) THE BAXTERS

E X PR ESS-M iddle and
Scalar High Only
Hat B ed Sandwich
PoUta Rounds
Freak Fruit
Mflk
FRIDAY. OCT. 1
ALLSCHOOLS
Hers Submarine

M O W "That Mammon
Woman " (1941) Laurence Oemer,
VNmnlmgh Tha tragic, scandalous
lova alia* between Lord Horatio
Helton and Lady Emma Mammon it
portrayed

10:30
(71 Q r r s A UVtNO A skimN*
party at Lots t house it misrrupted
S f l f ^ l M ItAKKER
0 ( 1 0 ) THE OOOO NEIQHBORS

11:00
(0 (3 ) 0 ( 7 ) 0 n e w s
(10) SNEAK PREVIEWS Mora
Qu*ty Pleasures R o g e r E b e rt and
Dana SrskN ramaw soma movies
thay'rt ambsrrtttad to admit they
kkid (Rl
OX (17) CARMBEAN NtOHTB
Guattt Yolanditl Mon|a. Marian
Pabon. Jack's Steal Band

8

raduca unnecessary tlraat during a
match and how lo put more tun
back mto your game (R)g

-Blondiet
Sacral ' (B/W) (1941) Penny Singleton. Arthur Lake Counterfeit mon­
ey and an attempted luggage rob­
bery its* tha Bumtteadt' vacation

8

Braden answers viewers' questions
and reviews hay points on strokes,
strategy, conditioning and tha win­
ning power ol laughter (R)g

12:00
) BOBBY BOWDEN
J JOHN MCKAY
(D O COLLEQE FOOTBALL ‘SI
Weakly htghkghts ol key NCAA
contests are preeented

WORLD

17) MOW "Fathom" (tMT)
Tony Frandoaa. Raqual Watch A
criminal Nrsa a NmaN parachutitl
to recover a pnceitti pwca ot
(awaky under the prateri that aha la
looking lor a bomb-triggering

1130
•

GD SATURDAY MQHT UVE

Host: Chevy Chase Quests Junior
WaPar and the Al Stare (R)
(TIM BO UO O O LO
® 0 M O W "The Dark At Tha
Top Of Tha 8lo*s" (C| (1M0) Rob­
ert Preston. Dorothy McGmrt
Baaed on the play by WbMm Inga
Mambara ol an Oklahoma famOy m
tha ISZOa struggle with tha prob­
lems ot everyday Me
OX (35) M O W
"Thank Your
lucky Stare’- (S/W) (1943) EddW
Cantor. Dmah Shore An Imperso­
nator hopes to rates money trom a
latent show by posing aa a pro-

.

1 2 J0

(X) ■ MOW -The 0*1 Moat
Iksty To " tC) (1972) Slockard
Charming- Edward Aaner

1M

1*0

O

i

6:45

35J8COOBTDOO
10 ELECTRIC COMPANY (R)
17)twE FUHTSTONE8
4:00

a GD LITTLE

HOUSE ON THE
PRAIRIE
(I) o RtCHARO SIMMONS
(flQMERVORIFTtN
35) WOOOY WOOOPECKER
__(10) SESAME STREET g
,u ( i 7 ( them unsters

11:30

41 PASSWORO PLUS
1! (35) LOVE, AMERICAN STYLE

0 ( 10) AM WEATHER
O (A' to d a y
If) D WAKE UP
(J) a OOOO MOANINO AMERICA
It (35) TOM ANO JERRY
0 ( 1 0 ) VHUA LEO RE(R)
11 (17) FUNTIME

12:00

5:00
0 14 OILUOAN S ISLANO
&gt;I ) P HOGAN S HEROES
tip (351 THE INCRfDISH HULK
to MISTER ROGERS (R)
(17) THE BRADY BUNCH

12:30

7:30

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IX ) 17) I DREAM OF JCANN1E

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It (35) 1 1 (1 7 )MOVIE

______________ * 3 0 ________

5:30
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COMPANY
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Daytona Beach

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4:30

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i it r si t te

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12:30

"DiRECTLY ON THE OCEAN"

FALL A WINTER SPECIALS
5 Days/2 Nights 6 oays/5 Nights 18 Days/7 Nights

$108

$48

I $140

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----------------------------------• FEB 1.1982

200 Rooms Available For specials Rate,
surfsioe inn $5 Additional Per Night.
Efficiencies $3 Additional Per Night.

ALL SPECIALS INCLUDE: • oouut occupancy
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3:30

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6:30

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OX (36) MOW "Doctor Domtm"
|C) (1M7) Res Harrison. Samantha
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IX(17)FUNT1ME

11:00

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London

.... THE CHILDREN .

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Inc (R)

BI7DDAY

® ( 17) RAT PATROL

2.-00
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phins at Baltimore Cons
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tioned aa a Navy nurse on Hawaii
durmg World War II
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Rads al Atlanta Braves

GETOURFAMOUS3-PIKE
DINNERFORONLY$2” .'

3.-00
(CO B A SEB A LL

Al Famous Ki*ci|x*, we'recdebnitiiiK
our 15th anniversary by offering
1981 chicken at low prices. For
only $2.09 . you k c I three pieces of
Kolden brown Famous Recipe fried
chicken, mashed |x&gt;tatoes and
gravy, creamy

4:00
3 ) O NFL FOOTBALL Naw York
Giants tl Danas Cowboys

ax (35) BIO VALLEY

4:30
ax (17) UNTOUCHABLES Whan
Ekot Naas cuts oft tha source ot
supply, ha torcaa tha mobsters lo
adopt other measures lo oblam
strata staves

and fresh, hot biscuits. So bring
the family into Famous Recipe. And
get our delicious 8 piece dinner at
a price that's sure
to have you flock­
ing in for more.

too

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17) M C I PEOPLE

OPEN 10:20 A.M.. 10 P.M. EXCEPT FRI. A SAT. CLOSINO 10:20 P.M,

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10:30
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1 I (35) DCK VAN DYKE
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5:50

2:20

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5:30
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5:45
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Lamarr
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Lova" (C) (19771 Richard Boone
Mcheer Dunn
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Brainstorm tB'WI
(I9C5I Jett Hunter. Anna Francis
IX (17) MOVIE Action In The
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Bogart. Raymond Massey

AFTERNOON

(10 )

5:35

2:30
SEARCH FOR TOMORROW

3:00

10:00

IX (17) WORLD AT LARGE (WED)

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TEXAS
OlKOfNO LIOHT
GENERAL HOSPITAL
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0 (10) PEOPLE OF THE FIRST
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(THU)

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9:30

5:30

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(11 (35|ANOYQRIFmH

(1) O SUMMER SEMESTER
I I (17) RAT PATROL (TUE. THU)

0 3 ) THIS WEEK IN ENTERTAIN­
MENT
1 .1 )0 SATURDAY NIGHT
(7) O CIRCLE OF STARS
(35) IT S YOUR BUSINESS
(17) OPEN UP

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5:20

7:00

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FOR THE FUTURE ' Psychology
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1:30
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8:00

5:00

8:30

Ox (17)

11:30
FACE THE NATION
DON JOSSAS

(7) O MARCUS WELBY. MD
(TUE-FRI)

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THE JE F F E R S O N 8
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10:30
(I) O BLACK AWARENESS
1.71 0 FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH

*

11.-00

School Menus
EX PR ESS-M iddle and
Senior Hlgk Only
Beefburgers
Point* Rounds
Freak Fruit
Milk
THURSDAY, OCT. 1
ALLSCHOOLS
B ad Entree
Whale Oven
Baked Potatoes
Savory Turnips
Fresh Fruit
Sckool-Madt Bread
Milk

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0 1 10) MISTER ROOERS(R)
I I (17) MY THREE SONS

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ANNIVERSARY SPECIAL Johnny
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McMahon and Ooc Saver intan
mark tha 19th anniversary ot tha
Tonight Show wtth highlights trom
previous shows
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perform m tha catmo (Part 71(R)
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to ttramhlan out a dance hall gnl
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melon through drugs, surgery,
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3 )0
NFL FOOTBALL Atlanta

■ (2)1

MONDAY, SEPT. 26
A U SCHOOLS
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Buttered Splnarfe
Corn NlbleU
Freak Fruit
Milk
E X P R E S S - Middle and
Senior Hlgk Only
Coredog
Potato Rounds
Freak Fruit
Milk
TUESDAY, SEPT, t l
ALLSCHOOLS
Turkey and
Paata Combo
O f r ^ a Paps
Teased Salad
School-Made Bread
Milk
EXPRESS— Middle and
Senior Hlgk Only
Hot Beef Sandwich
Potato Rounds
Freak Fruit
Milk
WEDNESDAY, SEPT.«
ALL SCHOOLS
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P etals Raeeda
Mised Garden
« r |c w w n
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Milk

8:30

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8:15
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No Compromise
County Commission Rejects Sheriff's Figure O f $ 1 8 0 ,6 1 9
R
D A D I T V !.' I l ' W i v r i :
Byt DARLENEJENNINGS

Herald Staff Writer
Sheriff John Polk sent a letter to the Seminole County
Commission offering a $180,619 budget compromise figure, but
the board rejected the compromise at the Monday work
session. Both sides said they will now return to Tallahassee for
a final decision on the sheriffs budget appeal.
Polk said Monday evening his compromise offer to the board
should not be misinterpreted. "Offering a compromise to the
board was not a sifjn of weakness for my case." lie said, "we
were asked by Tallahassee officials to make a compromise
offer, so that’s what we did."
Polk offerer) the compromise based on $95,000 of new money
that has been discovered in the sheriff's budget. This money,
the sheriff said Monday, is due to an overestimate of fuel usage
for last year, and the sheriff offered to return this money to the
county.
As Polk figures It, the county could combine the $95,000 in
new money with $85,600 in additional funding that the board
"could approve" for his budget.
In the letter to the board, he said. ", . . This compromise

■

__________________

I’ o lk
(left)
wanted a com ­
prom ise.
but
Neisucnder
• r ig h t )
said
county taxp ay­
ers would feel
the " f u ll eff e e t " of the
proposed deal
next year.

would only require the Board of County Commissioners to
approve additional funding of $85,619, which is less than the
board offered in its compromise agreement of $110,000.”
During the budget hearings the board offered the sheriff
$110,000, but he refused, maintaining he needs the additional
$330,000 over the $5.79 million granted him by the commission
to fight crime in the county.

Polk said Die $180,619 would allow for phasing in of needed
personnel during this fiscal year.
The sheriff also indicated that in return for his compromise
offer he wanted the county to guarantee that it would include
additional personnel in the sheriff's budget in subsequent
budget years.
County Administrator Roger Neiswender, told the board the
problem with the compromise offer made by the sheriff was
that the county would see a "minimized effect" this year with
the proposed agreement, but that next year the county would
feel the "full effect" of the proposed deal.
"This offer means that next year the sheriff could have the
$330,000 he lias requested. But you can't count on $95,000
coming back to you again." Neiswender said. "And the board
would have to come up with another $85,000 again next year."
After tiie budget hearing in Tallahassee last Wednesday at
the state Office of Planning and Budget tOPBi, state Hearing
Officer Glenn Robertson asked both sides to consider a com­
promise agreement between themselves before the OPB
makes a recommendation to the cabinet's aides before Nov. 4
Now that die county has rejected the sheriff's compromise.

both sides says they will be meeting in Tallahassee to allow a
third party to deride on the sheriff's ap|&gt;ent
Ti'e board had the option of nuking a counter offer to the
sheriff's compromise, but did not follow through
If the sheriff should win the appeal in Tallahassee, his
budget will have increased around 13 8 percent with the ad­
ditional $330,000, according to Eleanor Anderson, county Office
of Management and Budget director
Commissioners W.G "Bud" Feather. Barbara Christensen
and William Kirchhoff readily agreed not to accept Polk's
offer, while Commission Chairman Bob Sturm and Com­
missioner Sandra Glenn considered offering the sheriff a
$110,000 compromise.
Feather said he didn't think the taxpayers "could afford"
the sheriffs original $3.10.000 request in light of an alternative
to raise taxes to pay Polk the amount he has requested
Feather also said he wished the $95,000 in unspent fuel
money had been made available to the county during the
county's budget hearings so the lax rate could have been
See COMMISSION, Page 2A

SHS SAT Scores
Tops In County
While overall SAT scores went down by
10 points over the previous year coun­
tywide, Seminole County's 909 score was
higher than Orange County’s 886, higher
than la k e County's 892, higher than the
national average of 890, higher than the
average of those states south of the
Mason-Dixon line and east of the
Mississippi River (854), and higher than
the state average of 887.
Seven points of the 10-point loss was in
the mathematics score of 475, down from
last year’s 482. The English portion was
down by three points, from 437 to 434.
Dan Dagg, superintendent of In­
struction, and Robert King Jr., testing
assistant for the public school system,
initially blame the lower score on two
facts — 109 more students than last year
look the lest, and more girls than boys
took the test.
King said that generally as the number
of students taking a lest increases the
number score goes down. And as another
general rule, females do better on the
English portion of the test and males do
better on the math portion. He said males
generally seem to understand the more
abstract math better.
It happens that for these tests, 436
males and 506 females took the test. On
Die English portion, boys and girls both
scored 434, down from last year's 437.
On the math portion, boys scored 493,
girls 459. The average was 475. The
average last year was 482.
King said Dagg and others are
examining test scores to see if a tendency
exists for achievement-test scores to go
down.
Other statistics came out of the test
scores. The students who take the tests
usually are those who plan to go on to
college. Satisfactory SAT scores are a
requirement for admission to most
universities.
While 942 students took Die test, there
were 2,200 students in the 12th grade in
the high schools of the county. King noted
that this means 43 percent of the 12th
graders planned to go to college. Since
about 2,050 students graduated, the
percentage of those graduates planning
to go to college climbed to 47 percent.
King noted that the general rule is that
33 percent of high school graduates go on
to college. Since community colleges do
not as a rule require incoming students to
take the SAT, it's likely that more than 47
percent of the graduates will go on to
college.
"T his shows the

com m unity

is

academically oriented," King said. He
also pointed out that Seminole County
ranks first in the state in the percentage
of students going on to college.
Seminole High School students of the
graduating class of 1981 ranked first,
with the highest average grades, among
the students at the five county high
schools who took the Scholastic Aptitude
Tests (SAT), according to Robert King
J r„ testing assistant for the county’s
public school system.
While the average score of the 959
students who took the test countywide
was 80S, the average of the Seminole
High students was 975.
Countywide, girls and boys scored, on
the average, identically in the English
portion of the test, at 434, while boys
scored higher at math, with 493 com­
pared to the girls' score of 459.
At Seminole, where 79 college-bound
students of 420 in the graduating class of
1981 took the test, girls did better in both
categories. Seminole’s average score
was 473 in the English portion, with boys
scoring 459 and girls 480. In the math
portion at Seminole boys scored 501 and
girls scored 502.
Of the 79 students who took the test, 28
were boys and 51 were girls.
Meanwhile, the average scores at the
other four county high schools were as
follows: la k e Brantley, 914 — 433
English and 481 math, with 360 students
taking the test; l.yinan, 906 — 435
English and 471 math, with 220 students
taking the test; Oviedo, 884 - 427 English
and 457 math, with 103 taking the test;
l-ake Howell, 881 - 420 English and 461
math, with 197 taking the test.
Seminole High Principal Wayne Epps
said today, “ It is no secret that advanced
classes do well at Seminole High School,"
but he udded that only the really good
academically oriented students take the
SATs. Only those students who plan to go
to college take them. "It is a purely
voluntary test," he said.
Epps said Seminole offers the same
basic college preparatory program that
all the county's high schools do. "The
scores reflect the upper academic-level
students," he said.
The college-bound students in the
graduating class of '81 did better at
Seminole than the graduating class of '80
in the SAT scores.

At the same time, the scores of high
school students countywide dropped by
10 points from the 1980 to the 1981
graduating classes. - DONNA ESTES

The Drakensberg Boys Choir

South African Boys Were Picketed

Controversial Choir To Sing Here
B
Byy DONNA ESTES
Herald Staff Writer
The Drakensberg Boys Choir of South
Africa, which canceled a performance
last week at the University of Georgia at
Athens after the school was picketed, will
be performing in concert at la k e MaryHigh School at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday.
John Blair, fine-arts coordinator for
the Seminole County public school ad­
ministration, has issued an invitation to
school children and adults to attend the
free concert.
The 40-member choir, one of three
choirs at the Drakensberg Seunskoor,
built and financed by the Tungay family
of Natal, South Africa, has been on its
latest tour since Sept. 20. It appeared at
Nice, F ra n c e ; London; E dinburgh;
Cardiff, W ales; New York City;cW ashlngton,
D.C.;
Richmond;
Williamsburg, Va.; Charlotte, N.C.;

Sanford, City Chemicals
Reach A Tentative Pact
A tentative agreement between Sanford, the
sta te D epartm ent of E nvironm ental
Regulation (DER) and City Chemicals Inc.
was reached Monday, and it could result in the
rem oval of hazardous chem ical w astes
currently stored off Jewett la n e on a two-acre
site within six months.
DER and Sanford filed suit against City
Chemicals last November, asking the court to
order removal of 3,264 barrels of waste.
In exchange for dropping the contempt
charge, City Chemicals' lawyer, Mike Jones,
said he would drop an appeal over the default
order now pending before the Fifth District
Court of Appeals in Daytona Beach.
According to Monday’s agreement. City
Chemicals will agree to a 22-week schedule for

removing the hazardous wastes at a minimum
rate of 7,000 gallons per week.
Sanford City Attorney William Colbert
amended the agreement to provide for the
removal of storage barrels from the site within
48 hours of being emptied, thus allowing
flammable wastes to receive top priority for
removal.
Disposal of the hazardous wastes will be
funded by $50,000 from the state's Hazardous
Waste Management Trust Fund, Bottcher
said. Additional funds- are available if
necessary, he added.
The actual removal of the wastes will be
performed by City Chemical personnel with
the company to pay all coats incurred in the
clean-up.

9&gt; W • *♦
f

t

S avannah, G a., before arriv in g in
Jacksonville on Oct. 18
The choir perform ed at English
Estates Elementary School, Fern Park,
on Monday night. Blair said he urranged
the ap p earan ces in Seminole with
assistance from music teacher Debbie
Clifton and Principal Freeman Baggett
of English Estates.
He said a former band parent, Ed
Tristram , from l.yman High School,
where Blair served as band director for
some years, contacted him about finding
a host school in Die county for (lie choir's
appearances here.
The protesters in Athens picketed
against the racist policies of the South
African nation.
Blair said today, "Much too much has
been made of picketing." He said the IIto 15-year-old singers, through their

__________ ___ s . ;

.

purity of appearance and voice, can only
serve to advance the cause of peace.
The English Estates fifth grade choir
has been Iwsts for the Drakensberg
group, and the P aren t-T each er
Association provided them with housing
for tile night Monday. Two children were
given sleeping accommodations at each
home. Drakensberg choir members are
visiting Disney World today. Tonight Die
English Estates parents and students arc
giving a pizza party at the school for the
choir members.
The choir will make an appearance
Wednesday at Conway Junior High
School in Orange County before their
la k e Mary concert. They will tie spen­
ding the night with Conway families
before leaving on an early flight from
Orlando to New York via Miami and then
on to Johannesburg, South Africa.
Blair said that at the la k e Mary High

.

School concert the boys will perfurin
under the direction of Lionel van Zyl,
senior conductor. The selections to be
performed include folk and |&gt;opu!ur
music. Announcements of die concert
have been made through the music
departments at all 42 public schools in
the county.
The Drakensberg Seunskoor in tiie
Drakensberg Mountains was founded in
1967, and since that time choirs from tinschool have performed all over the
world, from Westminster Abbey in
England to Versailles Cathedral in
France and the Cathedral of St Michael
in Belgium to the Great Hall in
Jerusalem and the Mann Auditorium in
Tel Aviv. Tiie choir was acclaimed as the
outstanding group at (lie World Festival
of Choirs in Israel in 1973, 1975, 1977 and
1979.

A U nited W ay A gency

TO DAY
Artioo Reports
Around The Clock
Bridge
Calendar
Classified Ads
Comics
O ossoord
Dear Abby
Deaths
Dr. Lamb
Editorial
Florid s
Horoscope
Hospital
Nation
Ourselves
Sports
Television
Weather
World

&lt;Cn:irfunhiir&gt;t
P • Ailunin
S p artan b u rg , CS.C.;
A tlanta, nn.l
and

Home Society Places Adoptees
3B
4-SB
$B
IB

IB

The Children’s Home Society, a United Way agency has
been in Florida since 1902. In 1963 the Central Florida Division,
serving Seminole. Orange, Osceola, la k e and Sumter coun­
ties, was incorporated to serve this area. Since iU inception
the society has placed more than 21,000 children into adoptive
homes.
.
Statewide, in 1980 the society placed 444 children - more
than any other adoption agency In the country. The Central
Florida Division placed 84 children, 18 of whom were placed in
Seminole County. Of the 84,39 were hard-to-place or "special
needs" children — handicapped, retarded, blradal, black,
older, or sibling-group children for whom adoption fees to the
society were minimal but expenses were high.
It is only because of United Way funds that the Children's
Home Society is able to work with these hard-to-place children
provide them with medical care, and find permanent homes’
with adoptive families. How much better off these children are
in homes. How much more humane it is to give them families

so they can have love and security and a chance to grow into
emotionally stable adults. And how much more financially
sound it is to place them in adoptive homes rather than to raise
them in institutions or in a series of foster homes. Wlwn one
considers the fact that it costs $100,000 to raise a child on
welfare, one can see the tax saving that results from like ser­
vices the society provides the community.
There is a lot more to the society than being "Just an
adoption agency." There is no way the adoption fees paid by
the patents of the easy-lo-place child can offset tlte costs of the
hard-to-place child. An analysis of expenditures for direct
assistance (hospital, doctor, board, etc.) to the individual
clients showed that expenses for the hard-to-place children
accounted for 52 percent of expenditures, whereas the adoption
fees for these children accounted for only 10 percent of the
adoption fees received by the agency.
The society offers counseling to natural parents wiio are
trying to make decisions about and plans for their children

�2A—Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

T uesday, O r i. jo ,m i

FLORIDA
IN BRIEF
2 Agency Heads N am ed
A m id Personnel Shakeup
TALI.AHASSEE (UPI) — Jacksonville accounlant
Samuel "Buddy" Shorstein is the new head of the
Department of Profeealonal Regulation, and David
Pingree will return as secretary of Health and
Rehabilitative Services, the state's largest agency.
These were part of a continuing personnel shakeup,
unparalleled in a two-month period In any recent ad­
ministration.

5276 A1////on... M o re O r Less
TA1J.AHASSEE ( U PI) - Florida Power &amp; Light Co.
wants its recent rate case reopened and so does Public
Counsel Jack Shreve, but for different reasons.
Miami-based FP&amp;L asked the commission late last
week to reconsider Its 1276 million rate Increase,
claiming the boost was about (260 million less than
justified. Shreve asked the PSC to reopen the FPliL
case Monday, but he argued that the (276 million rate
hike authorized in September Is too much.

Shark A tta cks S w im m er
JUPITER (U PI) — A shark estimated at six to eight
feet long struck a 19-year-old swimmer In waist-deep
water Monday, slashing open most of the youth's left
hand and forearm in the 15th shark attack reported in
Florida this year.
Attendants at Martin County Memorial Hospital In
Stuart reported the victim, Van Horn Ely, in stable
condition following several hours of surgery. Doctors
said Ely was in shock when he arrived at the hospital,
but they said there was no danger he would lose his
hand.

A Fem ale G ove rn o r?
TALLAHASSEE (UPI) - State Rep. Betty Easley
says she is weighing the possibility of running for
governor, but definitely will not campaign as "a
housewife from Clearwater.”
The wife of an attorney and mother of four girls, Mrs.
Easley said she is encouraged by the election last year
of another Republican housewife, Paula Hawkins, to
the U.S. Senate from Florida.

Closing Legal Loopholes
TALI.AHASSEE (UPI) — Florida's top law en­
forcement officials are behind a drive to change the
state Constitution so less criminal evidence Is thrown
out of court because of Illegal searches.
Attorney General Jim Smith and Florida Depart­
ment of Law Enforcement Director Jim York will
appear in Miami Thursday with Hollywood Sen. Ken
Jenne and Miami Rep. Dexter Lehtinen to kick off a
statewide campaign to weaken the “exclusionary
rule."
Jenne and lehtinen are proposing a constitutional
amendment saying, basically, that evidence gathered
as result of a technically improper search will still be
admissible in court if it meets the standards for
reliability and relevancy and was seized "in good
faith."

WEATHER
NATIONAL REPORT: Ught winds and clear akles whisked
unseasonably cool weather into the southeastern portion of the
country early today, dropping temperatures to the 30s as far
south as southern Mississippi. Kentucky and southeastern
Indiana were under frost warnings and slmiliar conditions
were In effect for the higher elevations of Maryland. Virginia
and South Carolina. The National Weather Service predicted
temperatures would dip into the 20s in southeastern Kentucky
and the mountains of Maryland before dawn. Temperatures
dropped into the 30s as far south as South Carolina and
southern Mississippi. Northwest Florida also reported mer­
cury readings in the 30s. Readings in Ihe 40s and SOs were
commonplace along much of the Gulf Coast. In Ihe nor­
theastern states temperatures were generally in the 30s as well
as in Ihe higher elevations of the Rocky Mountain and Plateau
Region. Temperatures hovered in the 60s across southern
Florida and the southern tip of Texas. Reading were in the 60s
and lower 70s In the Southwestern deserts and Cautomiu
valleys.
AREA READINGS (I a.m .): temperature: 63; overnight
low: 53; Monday high: 76; barometric pressure: 30.21;
relative humidity: 78 percent; winds; northeast at 7 mph.
WEDNESDAY TIDES: DAYTONA BEACH: highs, 3:38
a.m., 6:15 p.m„ lows, 9:35 a m , 10:22 p.m.; PORT
CANAVERAL: highs. 3:30 a.m., 1:07 p.m.; lows, 9:28 a.m..
10:13 p.m.; BAYPORT: high 8:08a.m., 10:51p.m.; lows, 2:39
a.m., 1:02 p.m.
BOATING FORECAST: SL Augustine to Jnpiicr Inlet, Out
» Miles: A small craft advisory remains in effect. Winds
north to northeast around 20 knots today and mostly northeast
around 15 knots tonight and Wednesday. Seas 5 to 8 feet today
and 1 to 6 feet tonight and Wednesday. Partly cloudy.
AREA FORECAST: Generally fair today and partly cloudy
Wednesday. Highs mid to upper 70s today and lower Ms
Wednesday. Lows tonight upper SOs to around 60. Winds nor­
theast 15 occasionally 20 mph today and northeast to east 10 to
15 mph tonight.
EXTENDED FORECAST: Generally fair weather through
the period. Cool northern Florida with lows In the mid Ms
to low sus and highs near 70 to the mul 70s. Seasonable tem­
peratures remainder of the aUto with lows Imostly in the 60s
except low 70s southeast beaches and the keys and ths highs
will be in the 80s.

E tw iln g H cv u kJ

(uses « i-i« &gt;

Tuesday, October 30, 1881-Vol. 1L No. 81
P v M tih a d M U y M S iM S s y , t i t t f f t Is Iv r S s v b y T h s ta a lo rd

titrate, lac. US N. Preach Am ., iMtarS. Sts. tin t.
Stcm s c iM t

n u w

Ptie si tM ts rc aurtst w r

Mans IMWtrvi Wats. li.N i Maat*. M.tSt a MeMbs, MSN:
Ytar, Mias Sr Mall: WtfS IIS Il Matrts. SMI: S
SiaJit vaar, m s s ____________________________

» 8*3 * 1

Bondit G ets $300, Gun, Keys

It Wasn't
Sanford's Nice Day Coin Laundry was taken to the cleaners
this weekend.
Laundry owner Carl H. Klein told police he was at (he con­
venience store next door for just a few minutes. But while he
stepped out, a bandit stepped in . . . to his office.
When Klein returned from the store a t about 9 p.m. Friday,
police said, he discovered a white moneybag containing 8300 in
quarters was missing along with a .32-caliber revolver and
keys to the business, and laundry machines. Klein estimated
the value of the loss at 8800.
At the time of the incident, witnesses reported seeing a male
carrying a white canvas sack get into a 1980 or 1981 brown
Oldsmoblle Cutlass and leave in an easterly direction, police
said.
DRUG SUSPECT JAILED
A 27-year-old Winter Springs man is being held at the
Seminole County Jail In lieu of 810,000 bond on charges of
possession of a controlled substance and possession of a
controlled substance with intent to distribute. But Winter
Springs police say they still don't know jast what the substance
is.
According to police, Michael Harrison, 103 Trina tane, was
observed by officer Alan Curtis selling some type of pill from a
brown plastic bottle at Dino's Pizza, State Road 131, Winter
Springs.
Just before Harrison was to be loaded into a patrol car, he
reportedly threw a bottle of pills into the woods, police said.
The bottle was retrieved and is being analyzed by the Seminole

6 H

A Nice Day A t Clea
at the Seminole County Jail In lieu of 85.000 bond.

Action Reports
*

Fires
* Courts

★ Police
County Crime lab.
Following his arrest, Harrison gave permission for police to
search his apartment, police said. The March reportedly
(umed up a bottle of marijuana seeds, drug paraphernalia and
a white powdery substance believed to be cocaine.
SILVER HEIST
A glass cutter was used lo remove a dining room window
pane permitting thoives lo enter the home of Leo H. Gadaree,
102 Cedar Oak Trait, I&gt;ongwood, Oct. 9.
Police said sometime between 2 p.m. and 1:30 p.m. the
burglars made off with candlesticks and several other items of.
silver. No value was immediately specified for the missing
items.
THEFTCHARGED
A 19-year-old Lake Monroe man has been arrested in con­
nection with the Sept. 29 theft of 8300 from a residence at 1601
Gilbert Street, Lake Monroe.
Jeffrey Bernard Campbell, 1111 Dunbar S treeU s being held

Commission Takes Hard Line

Continued From Page 1A
reduced with this additional value added to the tax rolls.
Asserting the sheriff would still “ get everything he wanted"
by his compromise offer anyway, Mrs. Christensen said Polk’s
offer was "no compromise," adding that she was not prepared
to be blamed for any increase in county taxes next year.
"We made a decision, and if someone else in a higher office
wants to give the sheriff his money, then let someone else take
the blame for higher taxes,” Mrs. Christensen said.
Kirchhoff said he didn't see how "throwing money at crim e"
would help decrease crime in Ihe county. He said some of the
sheriff’s priorities for personnel are "mixed up" and that he

(Kirchhoff) has emphasized a need for county detectives, as
opposed to the deputies Polk says he needs.
Neiswender said the sheriff had set his priorities not on the
basis of community needs but on what was best for his appeal.
If Polk is awarded the entire 8333,000 he will be able to add an
additional 12 personnel to his department this year, he says.
Neiswender commented, two years ago, the board com­
mitted to a three-year program of hiring corrections officers.
Suddenly those eight deputies and the corrections people go to
dead last on the priority list. The board Is confused about the
sheriff's constantly changing his priority list."

Publicizing Drug Dangers
JACKSONV1IJ.E, Fia. (UPI) - When
the Federal Drug Administration orders
the recall of a potentially dangerous drug
already on pharmacy shelves, there’s
Utile it can do beyond publicizing the
danger.
“One of the hardest things the FDA has
to do Is track down a Class 11 hazardous
to health) drug, especially after It gets
outside the manufacturer's plant," said
Christopher Smith, an FDA spokesman
in Belheada, Md.
"We can’t tend people around lo corner
drug stores to check that a drug has been
taken off the shelf and pharmacists
generally do not keep adequate records
on the patients the drug Is sold to," Smith
said.
But a new computer system developed
by Jacksonville -based Medical Infor­
mation Systems Inc. may alleviate that
problem In the future. The program,
designed for doctors, Includes a
prescription drug tracking feature.

“One of the things we observed when
we were developing our system," said
MIS president Edward Markson, "is that
doctors had a requirement for deter­
mining, long after the fact, who had been
on what drugs and for what period of
lime."
Although no law requires them to keep
track of prescription drugs, Markson
said, the proliferation of "drug warning
situations" created a moral obligation
for many doctors.
Last year, the FDA ordered the recall
of two Class I drugs, butorphanol tar­
trate, a narcotic antagonist analgesic,
which had a non-sterile solution of water,
and a potassium chloride solution,
mislabeled as containing 10 percent
potassium instead of 20 percent.
Fortunately, these drugs were seized
before being distrib u ted to re ta il
estab lish m en ts. But the esse of
thalidomide, the sedative that caused
severe birth deformities several years

ago, still haunts government regulators.
"This definitely sounds like a good Idea
to me,” said Smith about the drug
tracking computer system.
Markson said he knew a physician who
saw more than 27,000 patients over a fiveyear period. He knew he had proscribed a
drug, later found to be potentially
dangerous by the FDA, to three patients.
“He had found two of them. But the last
time I saw him he was still looking
through charts and notes for the third
one," he said.
The tracking of prescription drugs,
part of-a program with 19 subsystem!
ranging from patients' medical histories
to their payment records, allows the
doctor to see in seconds on a video
display terminal which patienta are
taking drugs, what the dnigi are (In­
cluding the doaage), how long the
patients ore supposed to take them and
how many refills they can g e l

WIRE MESH MESS
Donald Wayne Whaley, 27,822 Maslon St., Apopka, Is bein
held at the Seminole County Jail In lieu of 85,000 bond on :
charge of grand theft.
Police report Whaley was discovered at about 5:15 a.m.
Sunday allegedly loading rolls of wire mesh Into a van at a
construction site at UR. Highway 17-92 and Lake Mary
Boulevard. Whaley had loaded about 8110 worth of wire
estimated at 870 each before being caught, police said.
MORE ARRESTS IN GUN HEIST
Jeffrey Hunter, 28, of 1101 W. 11th St., Sanford, and David
Morgan, no known address, are being held at Ihe Seminole
County Jail In lieu of 88,000 bond each charged with burglary
and grind theft.
The charges stems from the 2 a.m. Friday theft of 81.H5
worth of firearms from Seminole Sporting Goods, 2181 Sanford
Ave., Sanford.
Hunter and Morgan were arrested about 2 p.m. Friday after
being Identified by Kelvin Miles, 2200 W. 13th St., who was
arrested shortly after the Incident following a police chase.
Miles ti charged with armed burglary and grand theft.
When arrested, Hunter and Morgan had weapons stolen
from the sporting goods In their possession, police said.

Long wood Mapping
Strategy For
Taxation Suit
The Longwood City Commission Is attempting to set up a
work session for all cities in the county Interested in suing
Seminole County in a double-taxation lawsuit.
Mayor John Hepp Instructed Deputy Mayor June Lormann and City Administrator Dave Chacey to begin
meeting with other d ty officials in the county to determine
the cost of the suit and to find out which cities will definitely
be participating.
Hepp also said Monday he wants to see the cost of the
initial study to determine whether Longwood has a case
against the county.
At Monday night's meeting, the cost of the suit for
longwood was estimated to be between 82,000 and 85,000.
According to Mrs. Lormann, the cost of the study per city
won't be finally determined until It Is determined exactly
how many cities will loin in the action.
Also Monday, the commission considered, but took no
action on, an Orlando firm’s proposal to fluoridate the city’s
water. Chacey said Boyle Engineering will be putting up a
display booth about fluoridated water at the Orlando
Sheraton Twin Towers on Oct. 23-21.
Chacey said the d ty should at least listen to the firm’s
offer at that time.
Passing an emergency ordinance to prohibit erecting off­
site billboards In the d ty until Nov. 11, the commission was
following up on lost Monday's decision to pises a
moratorium on all billboards of 872 square feet or larger
from being placed within 15 feet of the d ty ’a roadsides.
The d ty poised the emergency ordinance so the ban
would be on the books earlier, because this way the d ty
does not require a public hearing.
On Ndv. 11, Hepp announced, the d ty will be receiving a
new flagpole from the dty '* Bicentennial Committee. The
Longwood Veterans of Foreign Wars (VFW) will be
presenting the d ty with a new flag st that time, he said.
The flagpole ceremony will take place a t 10 a.m. In front
of City Hall.____________
- DARLENE JENNINGS

Council Recommends Hospital Expansion
By DIANE PETRYK
Herald SUH Writer
Florida Hospllal-Altamonte has cleared an
important hurdle In Its efforts to conslrurt a
815.5 million, 50-bed addition to Its facility.
The Seminole Subarea Counril of the Health
Systems Agency of East Central Florida
tHSA-ECF) voted 8-7 Monday to recommend
approval of the expansion.
At the same time, the counril voted to reject
two proposal* lo construct a hospital in
longwood, opting instead lo request 8-10
months for further study, according to Kim
Beaton, HSA-ECF executive director.
Although all three proposals must still come
before the HSA Projeri Review Committee
and HSA Regional Board before a final
recommendation Is made to state officials,
Beaton said both groups will probably be

guided by the local council's decision.
"It Isn’t very often the Project Review
Committee or Regional Board goes against the
local council," he said. “Their decision will
probably stand all the way through."
The HSA-ECF is part of a federally-funded
network of health advisory groups. It serves
five central Florida counties and makes
recommendations to the state concerning
expansion of health facilities and services. The
state retains final authority In granting ap­
proval for such proposals, however.
The USA’s five-year plan for Seminole
County has determined (he county will need on
additional 56 hospital beds by 1965. If Florida
Hospltal-Altamonte’s expansion Is approved,
ihe bed-need will be cut to six, according to the
plan.
But Seminole County officials and others

have challenged HSA’* means of determining
the county's future bed needs. Ih e study time
would be used to scrutinise that methodology
said Subarea Council member Teri Buratti.
Seminole County H ealth D epartm ent
Director Dr. Jorge Deju earlier criticised
USA’s methods as one designed to perpetuate
the past, not plan for the future.
For example, Deju sold, 75 percent of
Seminole County's women who have babies
deliver their children outside the county.
There is a dire need for maternity services
in the county, be sold, yet the HSA beam Us
bed-need estimate on current usage, assuming
it will stay ths same. But 75 percent of the
women having babias would probably not
choose to deliver outside of the county If
facilities were available in Seminole, he o ld .
Deju sold Florida HoapitaLAltamonte Is

expected to offer obstetrics and mat emit)
services in the early part of 1982.
The So^jIUl’s request f o ri 50-bed expaniloc
will Include a radiation therapy unit to tree
cancer patients.
Citing tremendous growth in south Seminole
County, two hospital groups have proposed to
build facilities in the Longwood area.
Hospital Corporation of America, of Nosh
villa, is seeking the go-ahead to build a 822.3
million, lto b ed hospital near State Road IX
end County Road 127. Hospital Management
Associates of Ft. Myers la proposing a 81(
million, 100-bed facility to be built in Wlntei
Springs.
The HSA Project Review Committee will
consider the two proposals and the Florida
Hospital-Alta monte expansion issue at s
meeting Ort. 22. The HSA's full regional board
will mnWrire all three on O ct 29.

Casselberry Wants
Its Money Back
A resounding "no" was the Casselberry City Ooundl's
decision Monday night concerning a request by the South
Seminole and North Orange County Wastewater Transmission
Authority to "write off" loans made by the d ty to the authority
to get the authority started.
"I cannot see how we can pooslbly oak the resident! of
Casselberry to forgive approximately 8550,000 In loaned
equipment, facilities an d 833,611 (anadvance to the authority),
espedtlly when they will not even benefit from a reduction In
debt service," Councilman Frank Schutte sold.
Casselberry Is one of five local governments Involved In the
Iron Bridge sewer line hookup, spearheaded by the authority.
Iron Bridge, the regional sewer treatment facility in Oviedo, la
owned and operated by the d ty of Orlando. When the facility Is
fully operational, cad i government's sewer lines will be
connected to Ihe facility.

HOSPITAL NOTES
SMiiMie Mewsrtoi Meiettsi
A O M IS S IO N S
SANFORD:

E ls ie O. I

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Oort E. SMS*
A n n * O. H ifin
J u t t in * C . H a r r e ll
D o n a te P . H a i l
J a m a * W . O J a v In t, D a S a ry
A im e d * J . N n t l* . O a O s ry
J o h n E . M o u lt r t a , D a lto n *
R u th I . H e k o n tb , L a fc t M e n r o *
R ic h a rd w K r a t A a r, O tla a n

o iiC H saa e s
SANFORD:
L u la P . A itv a n d a c
A n rrfa C * m p h * 11
M a r r y L . C o tto n
v in e a n t I . F o t t a r
E l l i s K ln e
K a ra n K . M a ty In
C a r t o t J O la r h e lln l, D a lto n *
ja a n n ta L . R lto a d a t 4 b a tty b e y ,
K lm b tr ia * L H a v e r 4 ba by ba y.

- #*P * » — ■r* -

17 YIAJIS OLD
John Mercer, (left) hanking center manager for
Sanford Sotathenet Bonk; Sanford City Manager,
Warren ’Pete” Knowles, (catting cake); and
Dave Fonts, vke president end promotional
chairman for the Sanford Plata's week-long 17th

A

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MrtMay last week. Urn plasa, located on U.8.
Highway 17-B evened on October 17,1M4 and at
tho time, wai the flrat chopping center o fk i kind
la Sanford. The shopping center b scheduled to
get a facelift to the next tew weeks.

�V -V

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Evening Herald, Sanlord. FI,

Tuesday, Oct. 30, l t l l —)A

Defending Sign M orotorium

NATION
IN BREF
Reagan Plans M eeting W ith
Senate AW ACS Foes
WASHINGTON (U PI| — Senate foes of President
Reagan’s proposed Saudi arm s deal seem to have
enough votes to kill the package, but that could change
before next week’s showdown vote.
Reagan is making a final push to turn at least a few
Senate opponents into supporters. He has gained
ground In recent days and today planned to meet
privately with several more senators on the $8.5 billion
package.

GOP Seeks Budget Changes
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Senate GOP leaders, In
consultation with the White House, are seeking an
alternative plan to the $16 billion budget package
proposed by President Reagan.
Although Senate Republican leader Howard Baker
denied it, sources say Baker gave the White House
possible revisions aimed at easing widespread
congressional opposition to Reagan's proposal.

Tax Revolt Closes Schools
TAYUJR, Mich. ( UPI) — Residents of a blue-collar
Detroit * suburb Joined a growing statewide tax
rebellion and voted down a new school levy — a
decision that will force the town's 30 schools to close
next month.
Voters in two other Michigan cities, Alpena and
Pontiac, also have refused to approve new school taxes
this year. Schools in Alpena shut down Friday, the fln t
time since the Depression that a Michigan school
district was forced to close. G asses In Pontiac may
stop in January.

Elvis A W alking Pharmacy
MEMPHIS,Tcnn. (UPI) — A toxicologist at the trial
of Elvis Presley's personal physician testified he had
never seen as many drugs in a body as he discovered in
the remains of the king of rock 'n' roll.
Dr. Norman Weissman, a toxicologist at the Bio
Science laboratory in Van Nuys, Calif., testified
Monday he found H different drugs — most of them
depressants — In Presley's body. Among them, he said
was 10 times the normal therapeutic amount of
codeine.

W O RLD
IN BRIEF
China Peeved W ith Reagan;
M a y Talk To Soviet U nion
PEKING (UPI) - China played a "Soviet card”
against President Reagan today, announcing it was
studying Moscow's proposal to resume talks to their
disputed 4,500-mile border for the f ln t time since 197$.
"We have received a note from the Soviet Union
about the resumption of the Sim^Soviet border
negotiations," a M inistry of Foreign Affairs
spokesman said in an announcement apparently timed
to show anger with Reagan.

No-Nukers W orry NATO
GI.ENEAGI.ES, Scotland (UPI) - NATO defense
ministers were sharply divided over U.S. warnings
about the danger or Europe's mushrooming anti­
nuclear movement before the start or today's heavily
guarded nuclear strategy meeting.
The disagreements arose as the North Atlantic
Treaty Organization officials arrived Monday for the
twoday meeting in this remote Scottish Highlands
village, under intense security because of fears of IRA
terrorist attacks and demonstrations by a pro­
disarmament group.

Egypt: 'No Concessions'
CAIRO, Egypt (UPIl — President Hosni Mubarak
indicated today Egypt will take a hard-line stance In
the first negotiations with Israel on self-rule for
Palestinians in occupied territories since the
assassination of Anwar Sadat.
Mubarak was quoted in today's editions of the semi­
official Al-Ahram newspaper pledging "intensive
efforts" to make the talks succeed, but said Egypt is
not prepared to make concessions regarding the
Palestinian question."

W arsaw Seeks Labor Peace
WARSAW, Poland (UPI) - Poland’s government,
ordered by Moscow to end unrest, sought an agreement
with Solidarity today to halt an eruption of wildcat
strikes and strike threats by workers defying the union
and authorities.
.
In Paris, Solidarity leader Lech Walesa said Monday
the unprecedented concentration of powers in Gen.
Wojdech Jaruielskl may help solve the crisis and
pledged "we always are ready to ait down" with the
new Communist Party chief.

AREA DEATH
CHARLES J. FORD SR.
Charles J. Ford Sr., 54, of
f
Debby
D rive,
uelberry, died Sunday at
residence. Bom Sept. 4,
7, in Bay Shore, N.Y., he
ved to Casselberry from
bylon, N.Y., In 1971 He was
equipment operator for the
mlnole County R efute
pariment and a member of
Auguatine
Catholic
jrch.
urvivora Include hit wife,
ephlne; four daughters,

Michele, Laura and Debra
Ford, all of Caaaclbeny, and
Mra. Jo Ann Munnlnga,
Winter P a r t; a ton, Charles
J . J r ., C asselberry; two
bro th ers,
G erard
and
Thomas, both of Lindenhurst,
N.Y., two sisters, Gertrude
Bohm, New Hyde Park, N.Y.,
and Mra. Mary Kelly, L i*
d enhurst, N .Y .; and a
grandchild.
Bsldwln-FairchUd Funeral
Home, Altamonte Springs, is
in charge of arrangements.

Casselberry To 'Scratch, Claw And Bite'
ByTENIYARBOROUGH
Herald Staff Writer
"The city of Casselberry is not going to roll over and play
dead," City Altomev Ken McIntosh said. "W e're going to
scratch, claw and bite with regard to the Peterson Outdoor
Advertising Co.’s action.”
The "action" is a lawsuit against the city Building Official
Frank Broyles stemming from the city's refusal to issue
permits to the advertising company allowing it to erect off-site
advertising signs along State Road 436.
An Aug. 3 1 120-day moratorium banning the erection or use
of off-site signs for advertising in the city is the root of the
lawsuit, according to the company’s lawyer, Jerry Livingston.
The City Council voted unanimously at Monday night’s
meeting to direct McIntosh to defend the city in the action. The

council members said they felt the company’s request for
three 672-foot signs was against regulations with or without the
city-imposed moratorium.
According to Councilman Frank Schutte, the company's
request is "three times what is allowed in the city anyway.”
McIntosh said he frets the city has a “definite leg to stand
on" and the city is prepared &lt;o file a counter action and if
necessary’, lake it to the Filth District Court of Appeals and file
a brief with the state Supreme Court.
"Peterson is saying state law pre-empts Casselberry's
power to regulate sign use along federally funded roadways,”
McIntosh said. He said the city Is not "pre-empting” the law
but "satisfying” it.
"I talked with some people in Tallahassee who said, without
taking one side or the other, that our stand of satisfying the law
by regulating in the best Interest of the residents of the city is a

unique one and one that could prove interesting," he added.:
Peterson maintains the city docs not have the right, under
stale law, to regulate sign use along federally funded road- *
ways such as SR 436.
Councilman Jim Lavignc, also a lawyer, said he feels the
company's lawsuit is "full of holes, allowing the city a strong
position to defend Itself."
I^vigne said that if the signs requested by the company find
met regulated site specifications, he would not have supported
defending the suit.
I-avigne was the lone dissenter in the action by the council to
impose the 120-day moratorium banning additional off-site
signs in the city, saying he did not want to "buy a lawsuit and
preferred to wnlt until the courts have decided a current case
concerning a simillar situation.

Trees' Fate May
Be Decided Tonight
"To cut or not to cut” will be the question
before1 the Altamonte Springs G ty Commission tonight, concerning the fate of at least
nine of 18 laurel oaks lining Orienta Avenue,
The council will meet at 7 p.m. at City Hall,
225 Newburyport Ave.
According to Red Hill of Red Hill’s Tree
Service, the trees are suffering from "old
age,” but prior to their removal, the City
Commission has requested G ty Manager Jeff
Etchberger to report on the possibility of
salvaging them.
Etchberger is slated to give his report at
tonight's meeting.
Also slated for discussion tonight is the lease
agreement between the city and the Greater
Seminole County Chamber of Commerce,
located at the Altamonte Community House,
at 291 Maitland Ave., currently housing the
Chamber of Commerce.
The proposed rent to be paid by the Chamber
is $5,172 per year, with an option to renew on
an annual basis, if desired. However, In lieu of
cash, the rent will be "paid" through "services to the public" Including, physical improvemenls to the building, producing and
distributing area maps, a visitors guide, a
business directory, initiating a telephone
inquiry service promoting Altamonte Springs
and referring callers to agencies or Indlviduals who can best serve their needs, and
establishing a Better Business Bureau.
According to the proposed agreement, the
Chamber will be responsible for paying all
utility bills including those for power,

telephone, gas, sewer Bnd water, and garbage
collection.
Etchberger said if the Chamber wishes to
renew the agreement after one year they will
enjoy a "residual” for the physical improvemenls to the building. If they choose to
relocate, the city will benefit from the
building's improved marketability,
The City Commission is also expected to
discuss the final adoption of a National
E lectrical Code ordinance at to n ig h t's
meeting. The code was tentatively approved at
last week's commission meeting.
However, newly appointed Community
Development D irector Jon M artin has
recommended that the city not adopt the ordinance without some revision,
In a letter to Etchberger, Martin said the
ordinance is not necessary because the
Standard Building Code now in use adequately
covers electrical matters, the proposal substitutes the "verification of a Master Electrician or Electrical Contractor" for technical
evaluations by city staff, and the proposed
ordinance will require continuous monitoring
because of rapid area growth in residential
areas.
Martin also said the ordinance, as prepared,
lias several administrative flaws,
Martin has recommended the ordinance be
reworked by the Building Board of Adjustments and Appeals which would consult with
the city’s building official and fire chief. —
TENI YARBOROUGH

GETTING THERE
United W ay of Seminole County Cam paign C hairm an Itich u rd Kess checks
progress tow ard 9305,000 goal with A rt M ay hr u, president of the Sanford
Kiw anis Club, host to United W ay volunteers. The most recent report shown!
993,050 has been collected. The cam paign ends Oct. 29.

In R e vo lu tio n a ry Re-enactm ent

Cornwallis Surrenders, Yorktown Remembers
YORKTOWN, Vs. (UPI) - Scott Brodnax
of the Elh North Carolina Brigade leaned
against his musket, one leg up on a log, his hat
cocked, dreaming of a long-ago battle that
gave birth to a nation. Victory was his.
"You can get wrapped up in this," said the
Kings Mountain, N.C., native.
Brodnax, a hixtory buff and six-year
member of the brigade, was one of 4,000
players who recreated the surrender of
Britain's Lord Cornwallis at Yorktown 200
years ago Monday.
The pomp and pageantry was punctuated by
bayonet-spiked muskets swaying in cadence to
the fife and drum as 18th century' soldiers
paraded before the reviewing stand where the
presidents of the United States and France
renewed their 2-century-old alliance.
Lord Hailsham, the British [&gt;ord Chancellor,

once again conceded defeat while reminding
the more than 60,000 spectators that the three
nations now stand together as defenders of
freedom In the world.
"We command a power for good, physical
and moral, far beyond the dreams of those
whose lives and deaths we celebrate at
Yorktown today."
In the crisp October air, British soldiers
"grounded their firelocks" in surrender at the
command of their conquerors, breaking into
scattered chants of “God Save The King," the
British national anthem, much as they must
have done on Oct. 19, 1781.
Detachments of while-clad French troops,
the soiled and scruffy Continental Army, and
townspeople in 18lh Century garb ringed the
vanquished Redcoats as they laid down their
swords and furled banners.

"If you're a good American, boy, you
couldn't help but be moved by that," said Ken
Garrison, a Yorktown resident. "I think you
really felt something in this."
"It makes me proud lo be an American,"
agreed Bill Carpenter of Scotia, N. Y., who was
vacationing with his wife, Jean. "It was really
very moving."
While visiting battlefields can be an uplifting
lesson in history, Major Tonie Holt and his
wife, Valmal, of Kent, England, both military
historians who travel frequently to bat­
tlefields, said (he tours are also sobering
experiences.
"We always make n point of visiting
cemeteries," said Mrs. Holt. “ You have to
realize that the cost of war is the dead bodies
of young soldiers... If we want to avoid that In
the future, we have to look back and try not to

Referendum To Bo Hold Doc. 3

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firefighter-paramedic team, including salary and equipment,
Stone said. The revenue needed would be gained through an
increase in property taxes of 11.25 per $1,000 assessed property
valuation.
Casselberry residents currently pay property tax of $1.95 per
$1,000 of assessed valuation, the lowest property tax In the
county. - TENI YARBOROUGH

^ «"•■«- • ♦

The participants immersed themselves in
history, living the lives of their 18th century
counterparts In encampments for several
days.
"Yes, you do feel like you become u British
soldier," said Robert Snow, 42, a machine
repairman from Traverse City, Mich., and a
member of Ihe Royal Guards, 1st Guard
Grenadiers. "You do feel like you lost a battle
today."
When (lie crowds left the battlefield with the
sunset, tlie campfires of the 74th Argyle
Highlanders grew brighter with song and
stories of battles won and lost.

SPECIALI

Paramedic Proposal Enters Final Rounds
The proposed advanced life-support (paramedic) program
for Casselberry will enter the 14th round Monday night, when
residents will be given an opportunity to review and question
the proposal at a public hearing prior to voting on the
referendum "in the final round" at the Dec. 3 election.
After about two hours of heated debate, the City Council
came full circle at Monday night's meeting and decided not to
pais the proposal as is but leave it up to the voters.
"We're not asking you to approve it as is, nor are we asking
you to approve it in a revised form," Firefighter Frank Slone,
the paramedic committee representative, said. "We're asking
that you leave the decision up to the people and let them decide
whether they want the program. If you were to approve the
program tonight, making it law, I would oppose your decision,
because 1 feel the people are paying for it and they should be
the ones to decide."
Councilman Frank Schutte told Stone he, too, wants the
people to decide in a "binding referendum," but that all the
questions should be answered to give the people the benefit of
knowing exactly what they are voting on.
The council asked Stone, at last week's council meeting, to
provide answers lo numerous questions raised prior lo the Oct.
I t public hearing.
During the discuaaion of the proposed program, Gty
Attorney Ken McIntosh advised the council, "You, as
legislators, are engaged In an exercise in futility." He said the
committee la not asking for the council's approval but only its
input and counsel to present a d ea r, feasible referendum to the
public on the Dec. 1 ballot.
Councilman Jim Lavigne, who has worked previously with
the committee to develop Ihe proposed ordinance, said he
would be willing to work cloeely with the panel to “Iron out any
problems with the present ordinance."
Stooe said he welcomes the council's advice and Input and
would take any considerations under advisement when
redrafting the proposed ordinance.
McIntosh warned the council not to "take on the charac­
teristics of the council vs. the committee.” He said that if there
are proponents or opponents of the program they can "put up
(hair bumper stickers saying, ‘Vote No to Paramedics,' or
‘vote Yse to Param edics.' Let's not get in a oppenent-orproponent portion with lha com m ittee," be laid.
The proposed program would coat 9150,000 for a six-man

do it again."
Nearly 500 British soldiers fell before the
musket balls of the allied troops at Yorktown.
The French and Americans lost 262.

N EW /

BUSINESS LUNCH
AT THE

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American t Chinese Buffet
Menu Change*
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Including

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INCLUDES CHOICE OF ANV 3
•French Fries Meshed Pots tees
• Calc Slew • Baked teens
And Het Roll
Regular 12.11

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ON

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Sanford

32MM0

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Evening Herald

It’s been a long, hard trip — but a successful
one.
Sanford's first place Fighting Seminoles
return home Friday after being on the road or
idle for the past five weeks. During that time the
Tribe was unbeaten.
After suffering an opening-season loss to
Titusville Astronaut (who is 5-1 by the way),
coach Jerry Posey's team has reeled off four
consecutive wins.
Senior place kicker Alan Cahill was parUy
responsible for the first two. His field goal in
overtime dropped Lake Howell, 9-6, after three
extra sessions.
The following Friday, his field goal nipped
Edgewater, 41-38. This Ume it took the Tribe Just
four overtimes.
Gose or not, the Seminoles have been able to
capture the tight ones, which is a mark of a
championship team. The next win, two weeks
ago at Apopka, though, wasn't too close.
In their best offensive showing of the year, the
Fighting Seminoles rolled up 309 yards on the
ground to stomp the Blue Darters, 26-13.

(U S P S * 1 IK ) )

300 N. FRENCH AVE., SANFORD, FLA. 32771
Area Code 30M22-2611 or 831-9993

*

Tuesday, October 20, 1981—4A
W ayne 0 . Doyle, Publisher
Thom as G iordano. M anaging E ditor
R obert Lovenbury. A dvertising and C irculation D irector

Home Delivery: Week, 11,00; Month, *4.25; 6 Months, 824.00;
Year, *45.00. By Mail: Week, 11.25; Month, 15 25 ; 6 Months,
830.00; Year. 857.00.

Feds Give Mixed
Money Supply Signs
Has the Federal Reserve Board been keeping
too tight a lid on the money supply? Is that why
interest rates are so high and why there are signs
of a recession?
And, if this is the case, why doesn’t the Fed
simply relax its tight fist and lessen these
problems?
Such questions are being asked these days in
forums and financial circles across the country.
And they deserye some straight answers.
But Washington’s conflicting response has
served mostly to compound the confusion about
the direytiqp of administration monetary policy
and to raise new questions about how tight the
Federal Reserve's policy is or ought to be.
Recently in Dallas, Treasury Secretary Donald
T. Regan, in his strongest statement to date, said
the Fed's monetary policy was too tight and that
the nation's central bank would have to increase
the growth rate of the money supply to avoid
prolonging a recession. He pointed out the basic,
narrowly defined money supply has been growing
at only 1.7 percent for the 12 months ending in
August, about half of the Fed's own minimum
target of 3,5 percent. In Washington, however,
David A. Stockman, (he budget director, in­
dicated the Fed should continue on its present
course.
Federal Reserve Board Chairman Paul A.
Volcker lost no time in rejecting Secretary
Regan’s call for a loosening of the money supply.
Within 24 hours, he told the American Bankers
Association convention in San Francisco that
"inflating the money supply now would only
aggravate the situation.” As for Mr. Regan’s
complaint that the Fed was lagging behind its own
targets, Mr. Volcker said other broader measures
of money supply, which include savings deposits
and certificates of deposit, are running above
their growth targets. Overall, he said, the Fed is
on track.
Later, the administration rushed up rein­
forcements. Secretary Regan was given fresh,
open backing at a conference of leading corporate
executives at Hot Springs, Va., by Commerce
Secretary Malcolm Baldrige and presidential
counselor Edwin Meese III. Mr. Baldrige warned
of a recession and Mr. Meese said President
Reagan feels the money supply can be gradually
increased without risking a resurgence of in­
flation. But earlier, the President came out in
support of the Fed chairman after he had com­
plained to the White House about the public
pressure.
To complete the confusion, Vice President
George Bush told the National Press Club in
Washington that the administration feels the Fed
"...is doing the right thing."
All of this, understandably enough, moved Mr.
Volcker to wonder aloud why the "unusual public
communications from the secretary of the
Treasury” had not been mode directly to him
during their weekly meetings in Washington.
Why not indeed? U the administration feels the
Fed has helped to induce the money crunch and
high interest rates by squeezing below its own
targets, this would be a legitimate reason for inhouse inquiry. But by applying public pressure to
the independent Federal Reserve Board, the
administration appears to have succumbed to the
same temptation as its predecessors, which too
often succeeded in turning on the inflationary
money faucets.
Although the Fed's tight money policy has
undoubtedly contributed to the high interest rates,
the basic reason is the prevailing belief among
money lenders that Washington doesn't really
have the stomach for controlling inflation — that
deflation is too painful politically to be sustained.
Financial institutions are still convinced they
must hedge against being repaid down the road
with cheaper dollars by charging abnormally high
interest for the money they lend.
Meanwhile, many of the nation's largest banks
in recent days have lowered their prime rate a
whole point, from 19 percent to 18 percent — the
lowest level since May. Leading economists are
predicting that the momentum for lower interest
rates wiU now carry them down to the 16-17
percent level by the end of the year.

BERRY'S WORLD

The heroes were many. Senior linebacker
Antonio Davis made 12 tackles and assisted on
th ree m ore. Fellow lin eb ack ers Byron
W ashington and G reg R egister stran g led
Apopka's running attack with help from tackles
Bill Painter and Cahill. Vince Williams and
Butch Carter continued their impressive pass
defense.
And Freddie Howard, all Freddie did was
break open the game with a 92-yard kickoff
return.
Sutton, as usual, was over 100 yards rushing.
Johnnie Littles tossed in his usual 70. "Quick
Vic" Williams shook out of a season-long slump
and ran like he did in last spring’s Jamboree.
Quarterback Jeff Litton continued to run the
show and boom long punts.
While the offense had Its best outing against
Apopka, the defense saved its premier showing
for last Friday against DeLand.
Davis again was awesome with 16 tackles.
Painter recovered two fumbles. Edwards in­
tercepted a pass to seal the victory. The Bulldogs

could manage Just 77 yards rushing and 56
passing. Seminole won its fourth straight, 7-0.
The victory loomed Sanford on top of the Five
Star Conference and district race. The Tribe is 30 and has the advantage of playing three of its
last four games at home.
This week, Lakeland Kathleen invades for a
nonconference m atchup. S tarting Oct. 30,
however. U k e Brantley and Lyman come to
town on successive Fridays.
After going to Daytona Beach to play Mainland
Nov. 20, Sanford closes the season with Spruce
Creek. The Creek Hawks are Just one-half game
behind Seminole with a 2-0 Five Star record. The
game may determine the champion.
The Seminole crowds have not been over­
whelming. Posey has put a good team on the field
this year as the record indicates.
Reserved season tickets are still available for
the last four home games for 117. Advance game
night tickets are also going for 82.25. See you
Friday night.

ROBERT WALTERS

ROBERT W A G M A N

Billions
Go Down
The Drain

Claims
Drag On,
And On...
CHICAGO (NEA) - The agreement that
led to the return of the American hostages
from Iran stipulated that the millions of
dollars in claims filed against the Iranian
government by hundreds of U.S. citizens and
corporations would be handled in an orderly
manner. But now it appears that the set­
tlement of these claims will be a complex and
protracted process.
Take, for example, one small case here in
Chicago.
The shah's government bought a couple of
condominium apartments for Its consular
officials in the ultra-swank Harbor Point
development on Chicago's lake front. One of
the apartments ended up on the Cook County
tax rolls even though the U.S, holdings of
foreign governments are not supposed to be
Used. The resulting lax bill for 11,422 was
overlooked by the new Iranian government
until It was too late to protest the assessment.
The county eventually foreclosed on the
property for non-payment of taxes.
The condominium was sold to the local realestate firm of National Indemnity Corp. for
the Bmount of the unpaid tax; that was a good
buy considering that the apartment was
worth several hundred thousand dollars. But
the county allows previous owners to redeem
propeAy sold at auction within a specified
periodof time. The Iranian government had
until Oct. 28.1980, to buy back the property for
the amount of the unpaid tax plus interest — a
total of 82.269. And it did so on Oct. 27.
Then things began to get complicated.
National Indemnity contested Iran's ability to
r e d a m the condominium on tha grounds that
all Iranian aaeats In tha United Slates had
been frozen, (xtcal law stipulates that only the
property owner — in this case, the Iranian
government — can redeem his property.
Since Iran officially had no money In this
country, argued National Indemnity, the
funds used to buy back the condominium
must have come from another source. The
company sued to have the redemption in­
validated.
The hostages were freed before the suit
could be heard. The agreement for their
release called for the unfreezing of the
Iranian assets; a portion of those funds was to
go to The Hague for distribution by an ar­
bitration tribunal to those with claims
against Iran. The United States agreed at that
time to unfreeze a small amount of "consular
funds" so that the Iranian government could
pay some small obligations In this country.
Chicago lawyers representing Iran quickly
reached a settlement with National Indem­
nity — which, incidentally, liad been reim­
bursed by the county after Iran had redeemed
the condominium. The firm agreed to drop Its
suit for 82.000.
But Iran's attorneys suddenly found that no
money was available to pay this small set­
tlement. The United States had re-frozen all
Iranian assets left in this country when Iran
refused to give back the UJ5. Embassy in
Tehran after the hostages were freed.
If you multiply this small case by the
number of similar actions pending across the
country, you will begin to see why claims
disputes against Iran are likely to drag on in
U.S. courts for many years to come.

JEFFREY HART

Let's Call It Bennism
The term "fascism " has almost befcn
emptied of meaning, being routinely used to
mean something one dislikes, but the word
does mean something specific and it might
well be worth rescuing it.
If wc wish to use it accurately, fascism has
a number of specific characteristics. It In­
volves rule by a single charismatic leader. It
is hostile to representative democracy. II has
a core ideology and Is Intensely nationalistic.
It exercises central control over the economy
and attem pts to stam p out non-governmental
sources of economic, political, or social
power. It Is military In style.
England, of all places, now has a fascist
movement in every respect by the military
style. Tony Benn came within one percentage
point of seizing the deputy leadership of the
la b o r Party, losing by the narrowest of
margins to the more traditional Denis
Healey. But Benn's support is well organized,
militant, cure of its goals, and determined to
take over the Labor Party. It would be foolish
to bet that the Benn-ites cannot do so.
B ennlim is hostile to rep resen tativ e
democracy. It intends to rule not through
Parliament but through trades union bosses
and leftist militants organized at the local
level. Bennlim views Parliament not as a
deliberative body but as the instrument of
extra-parliamentary ideological will.
Benn's agenda lias already been embraced
by the la b o r Party. It calls for unilateral
disarmament, sweeping nationalization, the
abolition of private schools, withdrawal from
NATO and from the Common Market.
Both In its program and in its rejection ot
trad itio n al p arliam e n tary governm ent,
Bennism is genuinely revolutionary. It
represents a minority within a minority, but
that does not make It any le u menacing.
Benn's prolo-fasdsts stand today where

Hitler’s Nazis stood in 1930: a militant anti­
democratic minority on the threshold of
power.
The opinion polls may be deceptive about
all of this. The new centrist coalition of Social
Democrats and Liberals appears to attract a
plurality of support. But while this coalition
appears attractive to many, and though it
does retain allegiance to parliamentary
democracy, it does not have a plausible
economic or political agenda.
Bennism does have an agenda. The Social
Democrats and Liberals offer only more of
the same.
Though Margaret Tha Lcher does not face an
immediate election, her policies are in deep
trouble, her Conservative constituency Is
restless, and her party stands third In the
polls.
If this political chaos seems un-English,
that may be because we have believed a kind
of Victorian myth about British politics.
H istorically, E nglish politics, has not
exhibited great stability. Before atxmt 1730,
English politics had about the stability of El
Salvador. Shakespeare's history plays record
a succession of murders, usurpations, plots
and counter plots.
In 1649, In the wake of a civil war, the
English beheaded Charles I. In 1688, they
threw out another king. In 1715 and 1745,
claimants to the throne launched invasions
from France.
All of a sudden, for complex reasons,
England achieved a stability that lasted for a
century and a half, but It now appears to he
unravelling.
Tony Benn waits in the wings. If the British
hope to retain their democratic institutions,
they are probably going to have to fight for
them.
The British situation smells Weimarish.

WASHINGTON (NEA) - This city abounds
with stories of government money being
wasted, but here’s a tale of public funds
literally being poured down the drain.
ft's also an account of how President
Reagan, frequently portrayed by his critics
as being hostile to the needs of the country’s
big cities, sought to provide assistance to the
urban areas of the Northeast and Midwest —
but found his efforts being thwarted by fellow
Sunbelt politicians.
At issue is the future of the massive federal
program that provides grants to the states to
pay for construction of sewage treatment
plants, the nation's second most expensive
civilian public-works program.
Ranking behind only the federal highway
program, the sewage treatment program
ad m in istered by the E nvironm ental
Protection Agency has cost 833 billion since
its inception in 1972 and eventually could
involve expenditures of 8120 billion.
As in the case of too many other govern­
m ent p ro g ram s, federal largesse has
spawned a constituency dependent upon the
continued flow of federal funds and thus
determined to sustain that spending at un­
justifiable levels while ignoring mounting
evidence of its shortcomings.
Those “ clients" Include hundreds of city,
county and state sanitation officials whose
empires have been vastly expanded by the
program, thousands of workers for whom
jobs have been created and scores of com­
panies whose sales of equipment are linked to
the future of the program.
Like most other federal Initiatives, the
program wss Inspired by noble goals — to
clean up the country's polluted waterways,
provide fishabie and swimmable rivers by
1983 and elim inate all contam inated
discharges by 1985.
Communities throughout the nation lunged
at the opportunity to secure 75 percent federal
funding for new sewage treatment plants. The
program promptly became the country's
most popular manifestation of "pork barrel"
politics.
Federal, state and local officials agree that
if expensive new wastewater treatment
facilities were to be constructed, it made
sense to include reserve capacity far future
population growth rather than have the plants
overburdened soon after they were com­
pleted.
But that provision in the law allowed fastgrowing communities in the South and the
West to vastly expand their sewage treatment
capacity, which then became a catalyst for
unplanned growth and urban sprawl.
According to one organization representing
wastewater agencies in large cities, the
country's major metropolitan areas — where
70 percent of the “sewered” population Ives
- have received only 32 percent of all
program funds.
The federal law doesn't even require that
the plants operate properly, EPA follow-up
and enforcement ranges from little to none,
and nobody is held responsible for the
numerous instances when the facilities are
inoperable.

JACK ANDERSON

Egyptians Lied To Mask Arms Deal
WASHINGTON A flurry of coded
m essages between Egyptian and American
businessm en rev ea ls the backroom
manipulations by high Egyptian officials that
gave a small company with Palestinian
connections exclusive control ot billions of
d ollan worth of U .S arms shipments to
Egypt.
The cables between Cairo and Warfdngkm
from May to December 1979 trace the
progress of the businessmen's state of mind
from stupldon through alarm to final con­
firmation that they had been royally tied to by
the men who now run Egypt. Copies of the
cables were obtained by my a u o d a le s Indy
Badhwar and Dale Van Atta.
The m essages used code names for the
principal figures and institutions involved In
the aim s deal: "Fathers" for the U.S.
Congress; "Plasma" for the U.S. aid
program; "Wedding" for the arms dripping
contract; "C age" for the Pentagon;
"Umpire" for Kamal Hessen All, now
E gyp tian deputy prim e m in ister, and
“Shortstop" for Abu Ghaxala, now (hi
defense minister.
In addition, there were uncoded references
to Hoenl Mubarak, the new president of

Egypt, and his brother-in-law, Mounir Sabet,
now chief of military procurement. There was
no stupidon that Mubarak was actively In­
volved In the secret deal, only that he w u told
about It but apparently failed to take action
because of his brother-in-law, who was deeply
involved.
The background of the scandal starts with
the Camp David accords, signed in March
1979. To sweeten the pot for Egypt, President
Carter promised billions of dollars in UiL
military aid. Several prominent American
and Egyptian firms submitted proposals for
the lucrative contract to ship the arms to
Cairo, and were assured by Ghasala, All and
Sabet that they were being given favorable
consideration.
A ctu ally, an e x c lu siv e contract w as ,
secretly awarded to a Geneva-baaed com­
pany named T enant in April 1171. Yet the
Egyptian officials continued to pretend that
the bidding was still open — a charade that
became more and mare apparent to the
frustrated legitimate businessmen as the
months rolled by.
In early May, a cable from one East Coast
b u sin u a n u n to i Cairo la u d a t o g iv e no hint

* • »* ^4

)••••

—• •

that anything w u wrong: "Contacted key
Fathers (congressmen) and btstctDy a blank
check for both countries to draw upon . . . 2
billion to Egypt next two years . . . Umpire
(Alt) must hare strong Washington support to
fight for Egypt's fair share (of e m u con­
tracts) . . . Fathers and Cage (Pentagon)
agree centre! procurement will save millions
and assure quality control. . . "
The first note of alarm cam e In a cable from
Washington to Cairo on May IS: "Our people
u y S a lem (H a u a n S alem , T e n a n t's
Egyptian front man) h u exclusive contract
with Umpire'* signature on It. D this trua?)"
This, of course, w u all too trua.
But the response from Cairo w as
reauuring: “Position (till strong u secured
(by) Umpire Saturday. . , Umpire office wiU
arrange a ll n ecessary Instructions for
registration at once. We are in the n o t In
advanced position. Umpire Insists on fact that
no wedding (stripping contract) without our
prior knowledge." This assurance from All,
who w u then defense minister, w u given a
month after the secret deal w u made with
T enant.

Next, from Washington: “We have found

. *.

out from Army Security Assistance Center
that a company headed by H aaun Salem of
Alexandria, Va., haa been given the authority
by the Egyptian government to do all freight :
forwarding. . . We have all been made out to
be fools . ,
From Cairo: “ D etailed report w as
delivered to the Vice President ( Mubarak) by
hand. Mentioned all high standing persons by
name u presented from Cage (Pentagon) ,
and Fathers (Congress). Umpire recognised
and promised to change all matters."
From New York: "This project Involves the
national security of Home Base (Egypt) and
Umpire h u placed It In the hands of y o u r;
declared enemy (Palestinians). If this v ita l.
disclosure does not get an Instantaneous
ru ction , all Is for nothing."
From Cairo: "Authorities insisting that'
report to Vice President Is not true and that
there is no ex dust vs contract signed with.
Tersam."
But the cat w u out of the bag. Letters from
Ghasala and from All's office acknowledged |
that the Tersam deal had been cut months
before. Both these letters are in my
possession.

..

k

s *

�SPORTS
E vtn ln g HarakJ, Sanford, F I.

Tugsday. Oct. 10, I H I - J A

A iV l\S \V

Lyman, Pats Win Postal

J e f f M o n so n ( le f t) , S a n f o rd r e c r e a ti o n s u p e r in te n d e n t, a n d S a n f o rd O p tim is t C lu b M e m b e r T o m
W h ig h a m g e t to g e th e r to d r a w u p t h e p la n s fo r th e
F irs t
( to
be
a n n u a l)
S a n f o rd
R e c r e a tio n
D e p a r t m e n t a n d O p tim is t C lu b of S a n f o rd J u n io r

T e n n is T o u r n a m e n t. A n e n t r y b la n k is a t ta c h e d
b elo w th e s to r y . T h e to u r n a m e n t b e g in s N ov. 7.
T h is b a t tle d e t e r m in e d lo p b illin g , w h ic h , a s y o u
c a n s e e , h a s W h ig h a m on th e d e f e n s iv e .

Sanford Recreation, Optimist
Tennis Tournament On Tap
Sanford’s first junior tennis tour­ nament.
nament Is right on schedule.
The entry fee Is IS for singles and |3
The First (to be annual) Sanford each for doubles. No entries will be
Recreation Department &amp; Optimist accepted without the fee. Entries will
Club of Sanford Junior Tennis Tour­ be closed Monday, Nov. 2. The draw
nament will lake place Saturday, Nov. 7 will be held Thursday, Nov, S. Call alter
and Sunday Nov. a at Seminole Com­ 1 p.m. for Information. The phone
number la 122-1111 .
munity College.
Play will begin Saturday, Nov. 7 at
The tournament Is the brainchild of
Sanford R ecreation Superintendent the SCC Tennis Complex at 8 a.m.
Jeff Monson and Optimist club member Awards will be given to champions and
Tom Whigham. "We think there is a lot runners-up in each division and also to
of Interest in the tournament and we the champions and runners-up of Ihe
hope this is the beginning of something consolation division.
All divisions will be limited to 32
big," said Monson about the tour­

singles players and 16 doubles players.
The 12- point tiebreaker system will be
used. The divisions include boys age 16
and under, age 14 and under and age 12
and under singles and doubles. The
same is true for Ihe girls’ dlvlson
breakdown.
Penn yellow balls will be used for the
tournament.

By SAM COOK
Herald Sports Editor
It may have been a little shorter
distance, the results, nevertheless, were
the same In the Seminole County Postal
Run at t,yman High School Monday
night.
The Postal, in its seventh year of
operation under Lyman cross country
coach David Huggins, places no
premium on the order of finish, but adds
together the best five times of each team
and then compares them to the other
team. The lowest time determines the
winner.
The winners — Lyman's boys varsity
and junior varsity along with ta k e
B ran tley 's girls v arsity and ta k e
Howell’s girls junior varsity — were the
same as have been most of the year.
Individually,
L ym an's
super
sophomore Doug McBroom cruised the
two-mile boys route on the Greyhound
track in 9:46 6. His time was the eighth
fastest ever.
ta k e Brantley senior Tracy Bonham
claimed the girls varsity’s best time of
5:23 for the mile on a night when Huggins
honored the senior runners in the county.
Bonham's time was the fourth best ever
recorded.
Lyman's Mike Grant had the best JV
two tnile in 10:45.2. The Greyhounds
swept the first three places as lin e
Anthony (10:47.6) and John Nattale
(10:49.1) followed Grant home.
ta k e Mary freshman Kim Averill ran
away from the field in the JV girls mile
C l r l iV o r t l t y ll M ilt )
1 L a k r B r a n t lr y
71 IS 4
7 Lym an
71 47 0
) T r in it y P re p
79 00 )
4 L a k r H o w r ll
79 IS 9
NTT
5 O v ird o
4 San lo rd
NNT
1. T r a c y B o n h a m ( L B ) 5 JJ, 7 A d ria n rv e
P o llto w ic t I T P I S I ) 4, } E l l m S l t f n (L O
5 7 T » . 4 D a w n B m d e r 1 L V I $ )J 1 S L o r i
C a r ro ll I L ) 5 3 ) 7. 4 K e r r i R y t r r I L H ) 5 I I * .
7 K a lh y H a y w a rd ( L B ) ) 3 f ) i t
S u ile
B r in g e r d n e r ( L ) S 40 1. t K a lh y C o m p to n
( L H I 5 4 1 1 . 10 T r t c y Jo h n s o n ( t P ) W M
J V O lr Is &lt; 1 -M ila 1
1 L a k r H o w r ll
)1 I I 4
jt.n 1
7 L a k r B r a n tls y
37 44 1
5 T r in it y P r r p
4 L a k r M rry
) ) 14 5
N TS
5 Lym an
1 K im A v e r ill ( L M ) 5 5 1 4 . 7 Jo a n n a
H a y w a rd ( L B ) 4 00 1, 1 H e a th e r B iaco e ( L H )
4 .04 01 4 D a b b i V a n o rd e n ( L H ) 4 :0 4 Si S. K im
L u b a n o w ( L B ) 4 :5 1 4

Cro«« Country
with a time of 5:51.4. ta k e Brantley's
Joanne Hayward was second in 6:00 2.
McBroom's performance coupled with
Adam DeMino's second (10:03.3) and
Craig Stapleton's sixth place finish
(10:14.6) along with a ninth from Carl
Schmalmaack (10:20,0) and a 10th from
Brian Hunter (10:20.5) swept Lyman
past ta k e Howell for the boys varsity
title.
The 'Hounds accumulated time was
50:44.9 compared lo the Silver Hawks
52:07.0. ta k e Brantley (52:43.6), Oviedo
(54:17.5) and Trinity Prep (55:23,1)
made up the rest of the field. Seminole
did not compete and ta k e Mary Just ran
JV.
One of the best showings was by Trinity
Prep freshman Tommy Matthews, who
ran a 10:03.7 and was Just 4-100th of a
second behind second place flnishe*
DcMino.
In the varsity girls, the ta d y Patriots
continued to dom inate. Along with
Bonham 's first place, Ellen Stijrn
(5:29.0) took third and Kathy Hayward
(5:39.30, seventh.
Brantley ran a combined 28:15.4, which
was almost 32 seconds better than
Lyman's 28:47.0. Dawn Bender (fourth,
5:3J.3) and ta ri Carroll (fifth, 5:33.7) led
the 'Hounds surprising second. Susie
Bringarilner was eighth in 5:40.1.
“The girls really ran well," confirmed

Huggins. "We knew the high Jumper
ICarroll) could run, but she hasn't been
out that long. They had some super
times.'*
Trinity Prep, paced by eighth grader
Andriannc Politowici's second place
(5:25.6) showing was third with a time of
29:00.3. Sanford's Tracy Johnson was
10th [or (he Saints.
"Yeah, [ guess you could say that was
a record for an eighth grader,” laughed
Huggins. "Although we don’t keep them.
Polltowicz ran a nice race." It was the
fifth best time ever.
ta k e Howell (29:13.9) was fourth.
Oviedo and Seminole did not tia ve enough
girls for team scores.
Lyman ran away with the boys Junior
varsity by over four minutes with a time
of 55:10,2. ta k e Mary, headed by Mark
Blythe’s fourth place (11:07.9) finish,
look second place with an accumulated
effort of 59:13.8.
ta k e Brantley (59:14.7), ta k e Howell
(59:27,7) and Trinity Prep (64:32.7)
completed the field. Oviedo didn’t have
enough for a team score.
In one of the closest races, the Silver
Hawks Junior varsity edged Utc Patriots
by 3li seconds for Ihe JV title. The
liawks' time ws 31:18.6, while the
Brantley total was 31:22.1 Trinity Prep
(32:44.1) and Lake Mary (33:16.3)
completed the field. Lyman did not have
enough runners for a team score.
Heather Biscoe’s third place (6:16.0)
and Debbl Vanonlen's fourth place
(6:06.5) anchored the Howell victory.

B o y i V e r s ify (1 M i l t )
1 Lym an
50 44 f
7 L a k r H o w r ll
SJ 07 0
) L a k r B r a n t lr y
5 1 :4 )4
4 O v ird o
54 17 J
5 T r in it y P re p
55 73 1
1. D o u g M c B r o o m &lt; L ) T 44 4. 7 A d a m D r
M ln o ( L I 10 03 3. ) T o m m y M a tth e w * ( T P I
10 0 ) 7 . 4 J o t C o d rro I L H ) 10 1 0 1 , S T o m
P a lm e r ( L B ) 10 17 4 : 4. C ra ig S ta p le to n ( L )
10 14 4 , 7 M a r ty P h illip * (O ) 10 1ST. I D an
M c D y e r ( L H ) 10 14 4. T C a rl S c h m a lm a a c k
( L ) 10 TOO. to B r ia n H u n te r ( L I 10 TO S
J V B a y s [ I M ila )
1. L y m a n
55 1 0 )
) L a k r M a ry
St 1 )1
5T 14 7
3 L a k r B r e n lle y
4 L r k r H o w r ll
i f 27.7
S T r in it y P r r p
' 37 7
4 O v ird o
N TS
I. M ik a G ra n ) ( L I 10:45 J i 1 L in e A n th o n y
IL 1 10:47 4 , ) J o h n N a t t i l t ( L t (0 :4 4 .1 : 4.
M a r k f ily lh a ( L M ) I I 0 7 .f i 5 B o b J o n *k ( L H )
1 1 .5 )4

Fill out the below entry form and
mail with your check or money order to
City of Sanford Recreation Depart­
ment, P.O. Box 1778, Sanford, FI- 327710212.

KIM AVERILL
. . . girls’JV winner
PHONE

NAME
ADDRESS_
C ITY

BIRTHDATE

21P

STATE

PLEASE C IR C LE EVENT ENTERED:
D oubles

S in g le s
BOYS:
16 A Under

16 A Under

16 A Under

14 A Under

12 A Under

12 A Under

16 A Under

16 A Under

16 I Under

14 A Under

12 I Under

12 A Under

O IR L S :

RANKINO

DOUBLES PARTNER

Hippie's 6-Touchdown Debut Bombs Bears
TONTIAC, Mich. (U PI) - Second-year
quarterback Eric Hippie had Die kind of
debut every bench-w arm er dream s
' about.
Hippie, Ihe team 's third-string quar­
terback until last week, made his fln t
pro start Monday night and passed for
four touchdowns — three consecutively
— and ran for two more to lead the
Detroit IJons to a 48-17 nationally
televised ‘‘m u st" victory over the
Chicago Bears.
••We had to win to gel back in the race
of things," said Hippie, who completed
14-of-25 passes for 336 yards in helping
Detroit break a two-game losing streak
and up its record to 3-4. Chicago is now 18 in the NFC Central Division.
"1 can’t think of anyone whoever broke
in with this kind of performance,"
Detroit Coach Monte Clark said. "Hippie
really came through for us — and against
a very complex defensive scheme. He
had tome very tough things to learn in a
week’s time."
"Hippie did a good Job and even
without (star running back Billy) Sims,
Detroit did a tine job of moving the ball,"
Chicago Coach Neill Armstrong said
after the Lions rolled up their highest
point total since 1954.
Sims, the NFC rushing leader with 882
yards, stayed on the sidelines with a
Jammed left big toe that caused him to
miss his first game in his two seasons
with Detroit. He could have played if

necessary.

**W.

■*—

Pro footbail
" I t ’s e x h ila ra tin g ," said Hippie,
Detroit's fourth-round draft choice from
Utah State in 1980 who sat on the bench
his rookie season. "Once a quarterback
geta the system down, he needs ex­
perience.
"They told me during the week I would
be throwing the ball," he said. “They told
me to prepare myself mentally, don’l let
it be a shock to you when It happens
during the gam e."
Hippie inherited the starting quar­
terback's job when the Lions lost two
straight games with third-year man Jeff
Komlo s t the controls, losses in which the
team was crltirited for showing a runoriented offense that relied heavily on
Sims.
Komlo had been handed the starter's
job when regular Gsry Danielson suf­
fered s broken left wrist in Detroit’s 16-0
victory over Oakland.
"Anxiety, that’s it right there," said
Hippie, who was four for 15 for 102 yards
in limited playing time the previous two
weeks. "I wasn’t nervous. I was a fouryear starter in college so i knew what to
expect
"But I was anxious to get into the
game, get Into whst I wss going to do,”
he said. "T hat’s where the anxiety came
in — I was anxious lo find out how I was
going to do."
Hippie let the Bears know ho-r things

r /&gt; r

*

were going lo be on the very first play of
the game when he unloaded a 48-yard
pass to wide receiver Fred Scott that
carried the bail to the Chicago 31.
A 15-yard pass to l^eonard Thompson
look it to the 5 and the mobile quar­
terback dove in from the 1 for the first
score of the game.

Rams, Panthers
Clash Tonight
Seminole County's two remaining
undefeated freshman football teams —
Crooma and Lake Mary — get together
tonight at 7:30 at Lake Mary High
School.
The Panthers of coach BUI Klein are
3-0 for the season. They have posted
narrow victories over Lake Brantley
and Lym an, while blowing sw ay
Osceola-Kisatmmee, 51-8.
Lake Mary’s young Rams, under the
tutelage of Frank Schwarts, are 34) and
fresh from a victory over tough Lake
Howel) last week.
Crooms’ 9.9 sprinter Deron Thomp­
son heads the Panther attack along
with linebacker Donald Grayson and
dual quarterbacks Jo Jo McCloud and
Mike Wheldiel.
The Rams are led by running back
Scott Underwood, defensive back and
punt-return specialist Charlie LucarelU
and running back Patrick Murray.

H t r a M P h o to B y la m C ook

Heather Biacoe (left) finishes ahead of an
exhausted Debbi Vanorden for Lake Howell.

MIKE GRANT
. . . boys’JV winner

Penn State Vaults To No. 1
Arkansas, No. 14 Wash mg ton State and began lla ratings in 1950, (wo Eastern
teams are 1-2 In the nation.
No. 15 Brigham Young.
"F or someone who has been a long­
Also, Missouri is rated 16th, followed
by No. 17 Oklahoma, No. 18 Washington, time advocate of Eastern football for
No. 19 Michigan and No. 20 Florida Slate. m any reaso n s, I'm p le a se d ," said
Texas, which held the No. 1 rating Patemo. "I'm pleased regardless of
before suffering an embarrassing 43-11 which team is No. 1. It's great that two
loss to Arkansas last week, w u the E u te rn teams and two Pennsylvania
fourth team to be knocked out of the top teams will be ranked one and two. I think
spot this year. Penn Stale, which has the that ^teaks well for the kind of football
most difficult part of ita schedule yet to we are playing in the East, and that In­
play, n e st faces once-beaten Weat cludes our opponent this week, West
Virginia, a team it h at not lost to since Virginia."
1965 (14431).
NEW
YORK
( U P I)
The
U n ite d
After that, It's Miami (F la.) and North F re e * In te r n a tio n a l B o a rd o t C o a c h * * T o p
»
c
o
iit
g
*
to
o
l
b
a
ll
r
u
i
n
g
*
,
w
ith
f ir s t
Carolina State on the road, Alabama and
P 'a c# v o l t * a n d r a c o r d t In p a r a n t h t t t t .
Notre Dame at home and a season- 1. P a n n I t . 1)41 1 ) 0 )
*»
ending game at Pittsburgh.
1. P itts b u r g h IS ) ( 5 0 )
wo
) . N o r th C a r o lin a l i f t
ua
Michigan, now 4-2 after a 9-7 loaa to 4.
S o u th e rn C M It. (5 1)
*))
Iowa, took the biggest tumble among the 5. Clemton (4 01
450
jji
Top 30, dropping 14 places while 4 Georgia (AD
7. Iowa (AD
mi
A rkanau, (-1, Jumped into the No. 13 spot I. T i m MD
7)4
after a three-week absence.
t Alabama (A I D
m
tfl Mi**t**ippi )t. O il
uo
Washington also returned to the Top 30 It. Nebraska 14))
,,,
while Wisconsin and Miami (Fla.) fall I). Iowa At. M I D
i&gt;o
.J
out of the ratings. The only unbeaten I). Arkansas (AD
M. Washington St. (SS-II
teams in the Top 30 are Penn State (5-0), 15. t r t » o m Y o u n g (A 1)
Pittsburgh (LO), North Carolina (SO), M M is s o u r i (5 D
Clemaon (80) and Washington State (SO­ I f . O k la h o m a d i d
I I W a s h in g to n ( I I I
In the second 10, Nebraska is rated IL
I f M ic h ig a n ( 4 ) )
11th, followed by No. II Iowa State, No. 13
For perhaps (he first time since UPI fc . F lo r id a t l . ( 4 ) )
I’

NEW YORK (UPI) - For Just the
second time in Its history, Penn State
University was named the No. 1 college
football learn in the nation today in
balloting by U Pl's Board of Coaches.
The undefeated N lttany Lions,
overlooked last week when Texas bulled
its way from the No. 3 spot to No, 1,
collected 38 first-place votes for 623
points. Penn State, which w u rated No. 1
for the first time on Nov. 13,1978 before
kiting to Alabama in the Sugar Bowl and
finishing at No. 4, easily outdistanced
in tra -state riv al P ittsb u rg h , which
totaled 590 points and received the
remaining tlx first-place votes from the
41 coaches who comprise U Pl’s Board.
Undefeated North Carolina, which
rallied from a 10-0 deficit to beat North
Carolina Stale 21-10 last week, moved
into the No. 3 spot behind Pittsburgh with
538 points.
Southern California, which held the No.
1 spot for th ree weeks before
relinquishing it to Texas last week,
moved up to the No. 4 position, followed
by No. 8 CUmson (6-0), No. ( Georgia,
No. 7 lows, No. I Texas, No. 9 Alabama
and No. 10 Mlssiisippi State.

�1A—EvenlngHeriM^Sinford, FI.

T m d iy , Oct. JO, IMI

Raines Scores Lone Expo Run

Blue Monday For Montreal
MONTREAL ( U N | - Fernando
Valenzuela, whose talent and calm do not
seem appropriate In 200 pounds of baby
fat, and Itick Monday, a scar-tissue
veteran, are heroes today after a day of
storybook baseball.
Valenzuela, uritty beyond his 20 years,
tossed a three-hitter for 8 2-3 innings ami
the forgotten Dodger outfielder clubbed a
two-oul ninth-inning homer Monday to
give Ixis Angeles a 2-1 triumph over the
Montreal Expos and the National league
Championship.
The Dodgers meet the New York
Yankees tonight at Yankee Stadium to
open the World Series. Ron Guidry faces
Jerry Heuss in (he Hlh meeting of
baseball's most illustrious World Scries
rivalry, while the Expos wonder If what
happened to them will be believed by
their grandchildren.
They were beaten on a brutally cold
day in baseball's only French-speaking
city by a Mexican rookie for whom snow
is a foreign substance and, by a 38-yearold part-time outfielder, who is thinking
of retirement and is still not sure he saw
the ball he hit as it left the park. All this
after they lyad Jaken a 2-1 lead
Just too much.

ML Playoff
The Dodger-blue p latitudes, hard
enough to listen to at any time, were
rolling in streams along with the
champange in the locker room.
‘ Tliis is the greatest comeback ever by
a major league team ," said Dodger
Manager Tommy l^isorda, who may be
forgiven for that exageration.
Valenzuela allowed three hits, struck
out six and walked three before getting
relief help from Rob Welch on the final
out.
Valenzuela, unused to Dodger emotion,
said the experience was "nice."
“ I feel very glad that in my first major
league season I have done so well, he
said. "I feel nice to have started on
opening day for the Dodgers and started
the All-Star game and now be going to the
World Series."
Monday, in his 14th season, lias a
medical record almost as long as his
playing days, having battled shoulder,
leg, back, and groin tnjulries since 1977.
lie had been thinking he would retire at
the end the season to take up a career in
broadcasting. Rut Steve Rogers, who

started the ninth after eight innings by
Ray Burris, threw a hanging slider and
suddenly Monday was rethinking his
plans, even as he turned the bases.
The Dodger veteran drove a solo shot
through the power alley in right center on
a 3-1 count.
"When I hit it, 1 did not know where it
had gone until I saw the outfielders at the
wall," he said.
"1 don’t know why I did it, I admit that
it sounds a bit ridiculous, but it flashed
through my mind that 1 have a big
decision to make when the World Series
is over — whether to play ball or go into
broadcasting.
“This may change things a little."
The loss marred Rogers’ splendid
October record of four straight wins,
including three in the playoffs.
"I think the fact that we have now won
a division championship will help smooth
over the loss," Rogers said. "I don't
think it will have any lasting effect, but
right now it seems like Death Valley."
Expos’ manager Jim Fanning took the
loss graciously.
"I have a terrible feeling for Steve
Rogers," Fanning said. "He carried this
club. He has now gained a reputation as a

big money pitcher. By that I mean he
wins when the chips are down."
F anning’s personal feelings, afte r
taking the team from a 14 gqme deficit
on Sept. 8 to the best finish in it's 13-year
history, were simple ones.
Montreal seemed to have Valenzuela
reeling in the first inning when Tim
Raines doubled leading off. Raines then
beat the throw to third as Valenzuela
chose to try for the lead runner on
Rodney Scott’s sacrifice bunt to the
mound.
Scott Invited, and eluded, a rundown
between first and second, in an effort to
shake the rookie. The Dodgers started
their bullpen.
But Valenzuela got Andre Dawson to
hit into a double play and Gary Carter
lofted a routine flyball to center.
I^sorda said the Dcdgers succeeded
by shackling the Expos' speed at the top
of the lineup.
"Those three big guns, we kept them
off bases from stealing and that is what
beat the Expos. We kept Andre Dawson
from doing any damage to us. I feel badly
for him, though. A lot of people don't
realize what a great ballplayer he is."

Rogers I ost, But He's Not A Loser
MONTREAL (U N ) - The un­
commonly patient and positively
marvelous Montreal baseball funs laid
looked forward to this day ever since
they got a major league franchise 13
years ago. And now that they were so
close to their first World Series that
(hey could taste it, they luiil to sit there
in the cold and watch It all turn to
ashes.
It liad happened to them twice before,
last year when Mike Schmidt's homer a
day before the season ended knocked
them out of the division title and gave it
to the Philadelphia Phillies, and tinyear previous, when the Phillies also
finished them off on the final day.
Rut this was the first time they liad
ever made the playoffs and after Steve
Rogers beat llie Dodgers 4-1 here, the
Expos needed only one more victory,
only 27 more outs, to reuch the
Promised land.
Alas, they never mode It. They wound
up one pitch short.
Hick Monday, the Dodgers' 38-yearold part-time outfielder, ruined it all for

Kids Wait,
Old Folks'
Series Set

the Expos by sticking a pin in their
beautiful bubble with his two-out, ninth­
inning homer off Rogers, who had
relieved starter Ray Rurris ut the top of
the frame.
That was (lie blow that gave the
Dodgers their 2-1 victory Monday and
pul them, Instead of Hie Expos, into the
World Scries against the New York
Yankees.
Jim Fanning, who had taken over the
E xpos' m anagership on Sept. 8,
replacing Dick Williams with the club a
game and a half out of first place,
conducted himself like the perfect
gentleman he is right until the very end.
He made the long walk to (he
Dodgers' dressing quarters in the chilly
catacombs of Olympic Stadium to
congratulate their manager, Tommy
Iasordn, and as many of the la s
Angeles players ns he could find.
On llie way back to his dressing room,
Funning was usked to describe his
disappointment. Typically, he did not
■peak about htmaetf but about Rogers,
who not only defeated the Dodgers
NEW YORK (UPIl - The kids will
have to wall fur another day. Tills Is u
World Series for the "old folks."
A pair of veteran teams, the la s
Angeles Dodgers and Hie New York
Yankees, in Game 1 of the World Series
tonight as Hie curtain rises for the 11th
lime on two clubs whose names have
become synonomous with October and
romanticized in baseball lore.
"G raig N ettles (Y ankees' third

Friday night but also beat Steve
Carlton twice during the mini-series
with the Phillies and was the Expos'
most consistent performer with his 12-8
record during this strike-torn season.
"1 have a terrible feeling for Steve
Rogers," Fanning said slowly. "He
carried this club. He has now gained a
reputation for being a big money pit­
cher. By that. I mean he wins when the
chips are down.
"I admire him for many reasons,"
Funning went on. "He volunteered his
sendees the very day he beat the
Dodgers on Friday night. Then be
volunteered again yesterday and today.
1 feel badly that he had to wind up being
the toser. He is not a loser with me. He

is a winner,"
"I hurt, 1 hurt, but that's the way its
supposed to b e ," he com mented
thoughtfully. "But 1 feel good for this
team because they're so close to being
where they want to be. One of the best
teams in baseball beat them in as
dramatic a ninth Inning as f have ever
seen. If that's how close this team is,
then 1 have to believe It's darn good. I
didn’t expect the season to end this
abruptly."
Few people were aware that Jim
Fanning was a one dollar a year man.
In other words, that's all he got for
taking over the club from Williams last
month. He will be substantially
rewarded for the fine Job he did during
the six weeks he liandled the club, but
the question of whether he will manage
the Expos again next year ar return to
his front office Job as vice president of
player development is still up in the air.
lie would rather return to his old Job,
but he says he will continue managing if
club president John Mcllale asks him to
do so.

basemanj has been saying 'save the
veterans,’” said Hick Monday, whose
ninth-inning home run Monday against
Montreal gave the Dodgers the pennant.
"We have some old goats here, too, and
we're going to do our best to save them."
A pair of left-handers, Ron Guidry for
the Yankees and Jerry Reuss for the
Dodgers, will pitch the opener, which is
starling at a later date than any World
Series game in history.

The Yankees, who have been waiting
since Friday to find out their opponent,
beat the Dodgers in the World Series in
1977 and 1978 and expressed confidence
-they would do it again.
"From the guys I talked to who played
against the Dodgers in those series, they
feel they can beat Hie Dodgers anytime
they want," said Yankees' pitcher Rick
Reuschel, appearing in a World Series
for the first lime.

Rick Monday gets set to swat game winner.

Mets To Name Bamberger Today
NEW YORK (U P I) - George
Bamberger, claiming he has "no
problem" with his health, will officially
be named manager of the New York
Mets today,
Bamberger, who had been the first
choice of Mets General Manager Frank
Cashen after Joe Torre was fired, said
he would accept Hie position in a phone
conversation from his home In St.
Petersburg, Fla. His contract will be
for an estimated $200,000.
The Mets scheduled a news con­
ference for 2a.m. EDT today to in­

troduce their new manager.
Torre, after managing the Mets for
44 years, was let go on the final day of
the season, Oct. 4. Cashen approached
Bamberger, who left the Milwaukee
Brewers last year because of heart
problems, wheh the Brewers were
knocked nut of the American league
pennant race.
Following his major heart surgery,
Bamberger claims he is now in good
health, saying, “There Is no problem
with my health. I feel fine and the
doctors sav I'm in excellent shape.”

Evening Herald Scorecard

D O N 'T O A M B L I

with your iniursncel
— CALL —

JAI ALAI
A l O rla n d o S e m in o le
M o n d ir n l | h l re s u lts
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1400 7 40 &lt;60
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10 60 i 10
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A — 1,717; H i n d i * 1114,111.

Z IN N B E C K L E A G U E
R o llin s C o lle g e
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F o rm e r
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D u n la p p itc h e d A n o h it , n o ru n
BA m e lo r S t m in o l* CC a g a in s t
F lo r id a B a ir b a ll S ch ool B lu k .
D u n la p , l a t h in g a ip o l In th a
H a id e r r o ta tio n , s t r u c k o u t i l l .

LOMOWOOD

SOFTSA It
LO N O W O O D ■ •C R E A T IO N
DEPARTM ENT
S O F T B A L L ST A N D IN O f
W o m e n 's B L e a g u e
W
L

Antonio Davis (middle), Seminole's outstanding
linebacker, accepts the Sanford Optimist Club
(’layer of the Week award along w ith Lake Mary's
Ned Kolbjornsen (left) from Dick Aiken,

treasurer for the Optimist Club. H ie players were
feted by the Optimists at a luncheon last Wed­
nesday at the 1-4 Holiday Inn.

L o n g w o o d M e r c h a n t!
L it t le R o s e a u
R ic a r a C o rp o ra tio n
L o n g w oo d T r a ile r
J a n e 's A u to
In te rn a tio n a l L o u r

6
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W y n d h a m W oods
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TO N Y

IN S U R A N C E

FOOT1ALL
N a tio n a l F e a tb a ll L a a g u t
B y U n ite d P r e i t I n l t r n a l l o n t l
A m e r ic a n C o n fe re n c e
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7 S D
764
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1 4 0
141
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C tn c i
S 7 0 .714
P itts
4 1 0
*71
H o u sto n
4 1 0
571
C le v e la n d
3 4 0
476
w est
D enver
S 2 0
714
San D ie g o
1 7 0
714
K a n sa s C ity
1 7 0
714
O a k la n d
J 4 0
47t
S e a ttle
l
14)
4 0
N a tio n a l C o n fe re n c e
East
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L T P e t.
P h i la
4 1 0
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1 7 0
714
N Y G ia n ts
4 3 0
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1 S a
714
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1 S 0
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1 7 a
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4 1 0
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3 4 0
471
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I
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5 7 0
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4 1 0
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4 3 0 .571
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1 6 0 .14)
S u n d a y ‘1 R e i u l t i
N e w Y o r k J a i l 11. B u ffa lo 14
N e w E n g la n d J t , H o u tlo n 10
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C in c in n a ti 34. P it t ib u r g h T
A tla n ta 4 tt L o u d 70
San F r a n c is c o I X G re e n B a y

3
C le v e la n d 70. N e w O rle a n s IT
San D ie g o 43. B a lt im o r e 14
K a n t a i C ity 21, D e n v e r 14
N e w Y o r k G la n t i 37, S e a ttle 0
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M ia m i I X W a rn in g to n 10
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M e n d e y 'i R e i t il l
D e tr o it 41, C h lc a g o -1 7

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You're Invited

TO N IG H T’S TV

Come to Ballet Guild's G old Rush G a la
By DORIS DIETRICH
OURSELVES Editor
The rush is or — the Gold
Rush, that is, to the Ballet
Guild Gala Saturday night at
the Sanford Civic Center,
beginning at B p.m.
The annual event is to honor
sponsors and supporters of
the dancers forming Ballet
Guild of Sanlord—Seminole,
The BGS Board of Directors
extends an open Invitation to
all current Bnd past sponsors
and others who would like to
sponsor a dancer.

6:35
1} (1 7 IO O M E R P V L E

7:00

7:05

\
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' A '. ; /
. ”

I ) (1 7 ) CARO L BURNETT AND
FRIENDS

••.V
•

0 4 ENTERTAINM ENT TONIGHT
1 O YOU ASKED FOR IT
7 O FAM ILY FEUO
I I (3 5 ) BARNEY M ILLER
CD 1 10) OICK CAVETT G u e tl Srd
ney L um el

12:35
J O M C C LO U D M cC loud g o e t
u n dercover to intuit ra te a loan shark
o p e ra tio n |R |

Halle! Guild hoard member Kd Korgan and
Valerie Weld, co-arlistlc director und
choreographer of Itallet Guild of SanfordLeslie C rab tree. Lynne
Dickey and Mary Ann Duxbury.
Also, Gina H attaw ay,
Heather Hoffman, Tymothl

Seminole, are getting in the mood for the Guild's
Gold Hush Gala Saturday night.
Howard, T am m y K aleel,
Eddie Korgan 111, Holley
Kuhmai and Missy Ijiwson.
Also, H eather Malloy,
Charm ly Mann, V irginia

Mayo, Erika Mills, Sandra
orwig, Brady Sapp, Janet
.
, , ., „
S-twt*zuk, Robin Si nit und
Christine Tillis.

prom iscuity. The article
lllled, “ Sex - A Weighty
Problem— In Your Head or in
Your
B ed?"
deals
rea listically
with
this
problem. I urge you to read It!

she smokes. She says there is
nothing wrong with letting
him "pretend." I say it will
encourage him to smoke
eventually.
Abby, wouldn't you say my
daughter is guilty of child
abuse? I love that little guy so
much, I hate to see anything
happen to him. What can I do?
HEARTSICK GRANNY

DEAR
ABBY:
This
ning to think he was right.
problem really bothers ,me.
BIG AND HURTING My only grandchild is 3'v.
When he sees his mother and
1NN.J.
her boyfriend drinking, which ~ DEAR GRANNY: Yes, I
DEAR HURTING: Don't is nearly every night, he agree, your daughter la guilty
fall Into that trap. Many grabs for their can or glass of rhlld abuse. And if you
heavy women suffer from low and they lei him drink a “ love the little guy,” don't
self-esteem and are Inclined swallow or two. 1 am so afraid risk alienating his mother,
to lake anything they can gel thal (his will turn the boy into because the child needs as
tirrausc they're lonely and an alcoholic. His m other much of your love, conrem
their chances are few. ,
disagrees. She says II will and wholesome influence as
keep him from drinking later he can gcL
Please get IT’S ME — an
on.
excellent new m agazine
She also lets him walk
especially fur Ihe big woman.
DEAR ARHY: 1 am en­
The rurrenl issue addresses around with a cigarette in his closing a copy of your column
mouth
iunlighted)
so
he
can
itself in particular lo the
I have kepi for nearly 20
problem of w eight-related pretend he's "smoking" while years. This column was a
constant help during a very
difficult period of my life
when I often felt l just
couldn't m ake it through
another day.
"Very Poor" gave me the
courage lo do so, and perhaps
if you print it again it may
help others us il did me. 1 still
carry a copy in my purse and
reread it when the going gets
difficult.
J.J.1NN.Y.

DEAR J.J.: I agree. "Very
P o o r" richly drserve* a
rerun. And here It Is:

What I am trying lo say,
Abby, is if a person can gel up
In the morning and go lo work
on his own two legs, hr should
gel down* on his knees and
thank God, fur without health,
you have nothing — even if
you are rich.
VERY POOR
Everybody nerds friends.
For some pracliral tipi on
how lo be popular, gel Abby’i
Popularity bookleL Send ft
plus a long, sell-addressed
stamped |3S rents) envelope
lo Abby, Popularity, 120M
Hawthorne Rlvd., Suite 3000,
Hawthorne, Calif. 90230.

DAR Reviews Battle
FAMOUS RECIPE S CHICKEN DINNER
3 pieces of delicious famous Recipe, mashed potatoes and
gravy, cole slaw and 2 biscuits

Mrs. Wm. S, Brumley hr.,
Regent,
presided
and
welcomed Mrs. Zoe Stanley of
Sanford as a new member and
the return of Mrs. Thomas H.
Williams of DeBary.

ALL FOR ONLY* 2 ° 9

H I ( 3 5 ) THE R O CKFO RD FILES
0 ( 1 0 ) OOYBSCV The Kirghiz Of
A fgha nistan ’ The B o w e l take over
o f A fgha nistan has fo rc e d th e K ir­
ghiz pe ople to a b ando n their m oun*
tarn plateau ho m e la nd en d no m a dic
way o f life for ever IJ

10:00
0 14 REVENGE OP THE O BEY
G ANO F iy * Mm tor d ti/* n &gt; u h lh *tr
u n iq u * a b -ltlm la b u tt • do gn«p .
pm g ring
11 (3 5 ) INDEPENDENT NETW O RK
NEW S
CD &lt; 10) THE DUCHESS OF DUKE
STREET Your C o u n try Needs
You A Belgian war re fu gee Louisa
em ploys tu rn s out to have a num ber
o f s u rp ris in g ta le n ts . C h a rlie
arm ounces that be h a t en listed
( P a r t6 ) ( R ) t;

1:45

AFTERNO O N

i l l ( 1 7 ) M O VIE
Hom e B efore
D a rt ( Iflfrg i Jean S rm m on t Rhon
da Flem ing

3:10
ii. Q N E w a

3:40

i J l Q M OVIE
th e lin e r t Edge
(C l (19571 Ray M JIand A nthony

Outnn

12:30
O 41 NEW S
()| O
the y o u n o
7 o

4:35

11:00

^

o

4 1D AYS OF OUR LIVES
7 Q A LL M Y CHILDREN
I I (3 5 1 M OVIE

1:05
I I (I7 IM O V IE

1:30

5:00

M ARCUS W ELBY. M O

J O AS THE W O RLD TURN9

(TUE-FRI)

2:00

5:10

0 , 4 ANO THER W O RLD
7 O ONE LIFE TO LIVE

42 1 1 7 1 RAT PATROL (THU)

2:30

5:30
} o

SUNRISE SEM ESTER

5:35
I J ( 17 ) W O R LD AT LARGE (W ED.
FRi)

5:40
.1 1 ( 1 7 ) W O R LD AT LARGE (THU)

5:50

l ) O SEARCH FOR TO M O RRO W
I I ( 3 5 ) DO IT YOURSELF / LA U
REL A N D HAROY (TIM E AP P R O X I­
M A TE ) (TUE)

2:45
I I ( 3 5 ) YESTERO AY'S N EW S­
REELS (T IM E A P P R O X IM A T E )
(M O N . THU. FRI)

3:00

|(2 ( 1 7 ) W O R LD AT LA R O E (TU E )

6:00
O i l N A SH VILLE O N THE ROAO
(M O N )
O ' 4 M ARTY R O BBIN S (TUE)
0
4 ) PO Pt G O ES THE COUNTRY
(W ED)
O
14
BACKSTAGE AT THE
Q R A N D O LE OPRY (THU)
o ( 4 1 PORTER W AGONER (FRI)
“ I THE LAW ANO YOU (M O N )
) SPECTRUM (TUE)
| B LA C K AW ARENESS (W ED)
) THIRTY M INUTES (THU)
| H EALTH FIELD (FRI)
J SUNRISE
U L (3 5 ) JIM BARKER
I t 117 ) C A B LE N ETW O RK NEW S
0 14. TODAY M FLO RA) A
(D O B C w rrc M C D
• 45
8 1 ( 1 0 ) A M . W EATHER

0 1 4 1 TEXAS
) O O U lD fN a LIGHT
7 a G ENERAL HOSPITAL
ill
( 3 5 ) BUGS BUNNY AND
FRIENDS
( D (1 01 FR O M JUM PSTREET |R )
□ (M O N )
® 110 ) I AM . I C AN . I W ILL (TUE)
® ( 10) PEOPLE OF THE FIRST
U Q H T (R) (W EO)
( D ( 1 0 ) ONCE UPO N A C LA S S IC
m r f o ) DUE P A SA7 (FRI)

3.05

4 2 ( 1 7 ) FUNTIM E

3:30
411 ( 3 5 ) BCOOBY DOO
® ( 10 ) ELECTRIC C O M P A N Y |R)

3:36

® ( 1 7 ) TWB P U N T B T O N tB

4:00
0

7:00
0 ( I ) TO D AY
1 J ) Q W AKE U P
[J) a OOOO MORPHNO A M ER IC A
(111 ( 3 5 ) TO M A N O JERRY
® ( 1 0 ) V ILLA ALEO R E (R)

7:05

4 2 1 17 ) FU NTIM E

I J) o R IC HA RD B IM M O N B
( 7 1 0 M ERV G RIFFIN
4 1 ( 3 5 ) W OOOY W OOOPECKER
S ) ( 1 0 ) S E SAM E STREET g

4:05
4:30

7:30
I J ) O M O RNINO W ITH C H AR LES
K U R ALT
I I ( 3 5 ) W O O D Y W O O O PEC KER
® f 10 ) SESAM E S T R E E T g

I J I O HAPPY OAYS A G A IN (M O N.
W ED-FRI)
D O THE BOOY H U M A N THE
FAC TS FOR BOYS (TUE)
41 ( 3 5 ) TOM AN O JERRY

8.00

4:35

l(); (3 5 y C A 8 P E R

I I ( 1 7 ) LEAVE I I TO BEAVER

5:00

I I I ( 3 5 ) G REAT SPACE COASTER
( D J 10 ) M IS TE R ROQERS (R)

0 14 1O IL U O A N B ISLAND
J . Q H O G A N 'S HEROES (M OH.
W EO-FRII
I). O
THE BO D Y H U M A N
B EC O M ING A M A N (TU E|
11 ( 3 5 ) THE INCREDIBLE H U LK
® (1 0 ) M ISTER ROOERS (FT)

5:05

0:00
0 14 1HOUR M AG AZIN E
1 J O DONAHUE
(ftQ M O V IE
(1 1 .(3 5 ) O O M E R P Y LE
® ( 1 0 ) S E SAM E S T R E E T g

11:15
11 O NEW S

11:30
O f 4 &lt; THE BEST OP CARSO N
Gu*&gt;1&gt; Tony (I*n ri*t1
A rin a *
( ju lo a k i B t ft m * Z * n * (H|
. J . Q M 'A 'S 'H
I t ( 3 9 ) STREETS OF B A N FRAN­
CISCO

(4 ) LITTLE HOUSE O N THE

1 )2 (1 7 1 THE M U NSTERS

8:35

12 (1 7 ) ALL W THE FAM ILY

RYAN S HOPE
M AUDE

35)
ai iTs

M O RNINO

4 2 (&lt; 7 ) M Y THREE SONS

11:05

the

1:00

J llD N B O W

8:30

O f ) a NEW S
11 (3 5 ) BENNY HILL
CD i &lt;0) POSTSCRIPTS

and

restless

4 2 1 1 7 ) 1 D R EAM OP JCANNIE

10:30

The DAR celebrated the
Bicentennial of the Victory at
Yorklown, Va. this week of
Oct. 13 thru the IBlh. Mrs.
T.K. Wiley gave a colored
slide presentation and lecture
on the Battle of Yorktowm and
Ihe Restorations of Yorklown
by the National Park Service
and (he Rockefeller Foun­
dation.
Refreshments were served
to 15 m em bers by Ihe
hostesses, Mrs. Brum ley,
Mrs. Kelly and Mrs. Stanley.

11:45
17 O A B C N EW S N IO HTU NE

«

42 ( t 7) THE BRADY BU N C H

O

5:30

f 4 1 LA VERNE A SHIRLEY A
CO M PAN Y
) O M ' A ’ S 'H
17 0 NEW S
( 0 ( 1 0 I1 POSTSCF
POSTSCRIPTS

0:05
4 2 ( 1 7 ) M OVIE

0:30

5:35

4 1) ( 3 5 ) ANOY ORIFFITH

4 2 ( 1 7 ) BEVERLY H ILLB ILLIE S

“ Florida's own grw tktg
m M c *" — dodteotad lo
wolcomlng now m aldontt

1

Florida Owned ^
Florida Hanagod
A c a ll f r o m y o u w i l l b r in g a
p r o m p t v ia l) f r o m o u i r * p r o a a m a tiY * . S R o h a a b r o c R u ro a , c iv ic I n lo r m a tlO R ;
a n d l o R o lp w iiR y o u r a R o p p ln g n a a d a . c a r d a o t I n ­
t r o d u c t io n f r o m lo c a l m a r c h a n t a.

\*i

MAT.

W ID .

,rH

QQ(

ALL SHO W S

PLAZA I

Welcome
NEW COMER!

C ALL TO LL FR E E
1 - M tM M U I

a o

) 1.41 O N LY

L a lt Winn — 211-2712

M T H IM I Y

( p Ta T a T P I m s o n lt. B

S a a th

Sf

t

a s ts

Laura S aha— 22»- IMS
Ceardinatac

%
"•I tl»Jl 1111(11

F flC D C H C X E N

PATRICK DttfUMU,

TH E TA S TE TH A T M ADE
TH E SOUTH LOVE CHICKEN
J 1

TUESDAY CARLOAD
m*
n it e
$ 1 7 5 N r Cap
?,u

IMS HIAWATHA AVI.

***** 1

Sanford

(ffty

O.D.S.

- U p .m . E X C E P T F R I . « ( A T . C L O S IN O I B iK p . m .

110V S. F rench A ve. ( Hwy. 17-12)

12:00
0 41 CARO SH ARKS
j O T O new s
l i t (3 5 IR H O O A

8:05

10:15

11 (3 5 ) LOVE. A M ER IC AN STYLE

T a jh w sfo c p e
—'

11:05
13 ( 1 7 ) M OVIE
O 4 PASSW O RD PLUS
M (3 5 1 INDEPENDENT NETW ORK
NEW S

6'30

0:00

12 ( 1 7 ) M O VIE
The C om an
th e r m ( 1961) John W ayne Stuart
W hitm an

Epsilon Sigma Omicron of Ihe Woman's Club of Sanford will
meet Wednesday at the home of Mrs. Ralph A. Smith, 2021 S.
Park Ave., at 10 a.m. Guest speaker will be the State Chairman
of the E.S.O., Mrs. Wilma Bussey of Holmes Beach. She will
review the book “The North Runner" by R.D. fjiwrence which
Is listed in H-30 New Non Fiction in the "H " Series Addenda.
She has served the Florida State Federation in three chair­
manships.

The October meeting of the
Sallle H arrison C hapter,
Daughters of the American
Revolution, was held at the
Florida Power and IJght Co.
Sunshine Room, Sanford.

U ( 1 7 ) M OVIE
The P roud And
The Profane (1956) W illia m H o l­
den D eb ora h Kerr P roblem s arise
when a young w idow fa ils tn love
w ith a M arin e

11:00
Q A W HEEL OF FORTUNE
1 o THE PRICE IS RIGHT
7 O LOVE BO AT (R)
I t ( 3 5 ) BUO BREW ER
CD ( 1 0 ) EDUC ATIO N AL P R O ­
G R A M M IN G

11:35

ESO To Meet

RECIFE

5:00
0
4 M OVIE
The Day The
W om en G ot Even (19001 B arbara
R hoades G eorgia f rigel Four s u b ­
u rb a n h o u s e * ! v e t a tte m p t to
e ip n fie an un scrupu lo us talent
ag eni (fit
% 0 VALLEY OF THE DOLLS
1911 C atherine H icks Lisa H a rt­
m an and Veronica Ham el star in an
up d a te d version o f Jacquebne
Susann * novel ab out thre e young
wom en stru ggling to m ake it tn H oi
ly *o o d (P a ri? )
t 0 B A SEBA LL liv e coverage
o f gam e one o f the W orld Series
fro m the city o f Ihe A m erican *
League ch am pion
M (3 5 ) CHARLIE S ANG ELS
m (1 01 C O SM O S Heaven And
Met! Dr Cart Sagan shows how
E arth and other plan ets in th e solar
system have suffered tro m cornel
bo m b ard m ent and e x a m in e * the
evidence o f such im p a cts on then
surfaces (H tlJ

I I ( 1 7 ) NEW S

4 BLO C KBU STER S
O ALICE (R)
(3 5 ) D C F VAN D YKE
( 1 0 ) ELECTRIC C O M P A N Y (R l

11:30

1:25

(71 o

8:05

DEAR ABBY: I've been
reading the “ problems" sent
to your column, and I hope
you print this because it might
do a lot ul people some good.
Pm In a charity hospital
with a rth ritis , T B , h ea rt
trouble, and I am gradually
losing my ryesighL Pm only
38, but I can't remember
bring free from pala in 22
years. If I could wake up one
morning feeling good again I
wouldn't care if my wife I If I
had one) flirted with another
man.

10:30
0
&gt;
II
CD

M O VIE
So Th.s is lo v e
(C | (1953) K athryn G rayson M erv
G riffin

7:35

1} ( ) 7 ) SANFORO AND SON

WEDNESDAY FAMILY
SPECIAL

i • • «« 1 1
i • •
i
r» * i
• &gt; ,* 0 * . * o , •
^ «•_».* # a i

0
(4 TO M O RRO W G uests Jev
B u tm a n and Nett B og art, p ro d u c e r*
o f the Broadw ay m usical
The
F ust M rs Rachel R obinson

11 1 17 ) M IS SIO N IM P O SSIBLE

7:30

H t n l t f P h o to b y T o m V ln c M t

4 TIC TAC DO UGH
1 O W ELC O M E B A C K , KO TTER
I I ( 3 5 ) I LO VE LUCY
CD 1 10 ) e d u c a t i o n a l p r o ­
g r a m m in g

w o m a n searches fo r the pe rfect
m an an d a m ar me b io lo g ist is
le m p te d by ih # love o f a m erm a id
(R&gt;

J o

0 4 THEM UPPET8
1 O P M M AG AZIN E O ne o t the
w o rld s m o il sought-after' m akeup
i t I H U M et B ro o ks lo u rs S in Fran
Cisco. Ltnda H a m s looks at A la s­
k a ! incre d ib le g la c ie r* C hef Tell
m a ke * a p e rfe ct pie c r u ft
f O -JOKER'S W ILD
i t (3 5 )I1THE JEFFCRSONS
CD (1 0 ) M AC N EtL t L IH R E R
REPORT

jr n

0

12:30

6:30

DEAR ABBY: I’m 32,
single, and all my life I've
been just plain big! (I'm 5
feet, 10 Inches and weigh 200.)

OPEN

12:15

O ' 4 N BC NEWTS
1 O CBS NEW S
I O A BC NEW S
I I ( 3 5 ) CARTER COUNTRY
CD ( 1 0 )
U N D E R S T A N D IN G
H U M A N BEHAVIOR

Heavy Woman Nurses Low Self-Esteem

, I like him, but I'm afraid he
is Just out for what he can get.
Not long ago, a man 1 hardly
knew propositioned me, and I
said no. Then he said, "Don't
hold oul loo long, Honey. A
girl your size doesn’t gel
many chances." I’m begin­

} O FAN TASY ISLAN D A young

6:05

rese rv atio n s with Mrs.
Theresa Kenis, 322-4247, no
later than Wednesday.
Each dancer needs spon­ through audition by Edith
sors.
Royal of Ballet Royal are:
The 1981-02 dancers ac­ Linda Atkins, Tona Bell,
cepted into the Ballet Guild of Rebecca Burkhead, Lisa
Sanford Seminole company Clontz, Jennifer Cowley,

There's a single man who
Just started working where I
work and f think he finds me
attractive. He hangs around
my desk and greeU me every
morning with, "Good mor­
ning, Beautiful!" Abby, does
he really mean It, or is he
making fun of me? Are men
really ever attracted lo big
women, or do they think we're
desperate?

6:00

IJ (1 7 ) A NOV GRIFFITH

Dress code to attend the
gala is plain or fancy — do
your own thing — from
diamonds to denim. An or­
chestra will provide the music
for dancing, hors d'oeuvres
will be served and an open bar
will be available.
Those planning to attend the
gala are asked to make

EVE NINO

I t O ALICE Ai.ce I r w t In e ip lu n
Ih e fe c it o l life lo he i to n Tom m y
|R)

0 * &gt; 0
7 0 NEW S
I I ( 3 5 ) SANFO RO AMO SON
(D
I 10 1 U N D E R S T A N D ! N O
H U M AN BEHAVIOR

This year, each company
dancer is required te have at
least 20 sponsors at 110 each to
be used toward production
expenses for the non-profit
organization.

10:00

12:00

TUESQW

Queluig Qekwc 3 m .

BO D E R E K

TflRHtlM

8AM P O M , F L A .

Homa Off ico
804-734-8031

M O tM l B Y A P P O M T M M T

n i-M M

C A V K

323-1174 or 3234115

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T u ttd a y , Oct. 24, 1441

J t — Evanlng Herald, Sanford, FI.

FOR WALLPAPER 4
LET US SOLVE YOUR
WINDOW TREATMENTS
DECORATIVE
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PROBLEMS

SANFORD

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Evening Herald
Herald Advertiser

PLAQUIS — T R O P H III — DISK SITS
DISK RLATKt - NA M I TAOS - P IN SITS
M ID A L S - R IS a O N I- K IY CHAINS

3 2 3 -6 0 0 3 1

v a n u i la w ia n .

Prepared by Advertioing Dept, of

PH311-S1M
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2640 HIAWATHA, SANFORD m id X S it iv n

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Review

I N V E N T O R Y SALE

REIIDCNTIAL

D O N 'T ■ ■ s o r r y l a t h
C ALL OATORI

|

r

W v A r #• W» r n iK lf l m q A n d
M u s t R f d u f f O m In v p n ln f y

&amp;

50% .f f • » ,

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r« | M

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pVjwi Twice 9» nice
A

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466-4111

DEEP

N { W L U S E D C O N S l G N M f N T SMC
O P E N M O N T M W U S A I 10 4
P H 1? i 0040
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Steam

Spacializina In Sarvlca 4 Parts For
V.W .'i, Toyota and Datsun

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(Corner 2nd 6 Palmetto)

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114.44 Each Additional Room

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S IN G L E ................................................» 74.00
F U L L ....................................................... • *6.00 u t
Q U E E N ...................................................4144.00 Wt
K I N O ....................................................... 4171.00 s.i
in n e r l p r in o a f o u n d a t io n

O o fto n d J im m r
124-446*

2444 L A K E V IE W In FE R N PARK

%

( Bnftind B a r M t l ’i U ia d A a a ll in c t t l

MON.*FBI. IM . SAT. IS-I. SUN. I S

FREE SPINAL EXAMINATION
O n ,* Signal, ,1 flndw ,
* O iltic u ll B iu lh in g
S L o o I f Back Pam.
Hip Pam.
Pain Down la g s

I H c jd J lM t
? N K k Pam
1 S ho uld*! Pam

SANFORD PAIN
CONTROL CLINIC
M i l I . Prone* A m ., I i r N H
t r M i P I U A HUY)

3 2 3 -5 7 6 3

O r. T kn m at Ynnanll. o - r a a r a c lK PkgsHlaa
Irag Ita a Igm RR w in N I aggg m ti

Sonny West and Nila Williamson, business partners in Sanford Trophy Shop, display photo
plaque and Jersey.
•
•
•
•
•

S E R V IC E
R IB B O N S
R E B U IL T T Y P E W R IT E R S
T R A IN E D T E C H N IC IA N S
CO N TRA C T OR P E R CALL R ATES

V0LT0LINE BUSINESS EQUIPMENT

3 2 3 -7 0 1 1
SALES A SERVICE

mupwniincnmc ishere

Ask About Our SENIO R C IT IZ E N DISCOUNT
2.fa ^ ! t i 0m T .n u .» .n
P IN A N C lM D A V A ILA B LE
A IR C O N D ITIO N IN G
m rr dow n
R E FR IO E R A TIO N
’ # L u J as 24 Me. Te Pey
Cr«#d

Save Money!
Save Energy!

NON PATBNTBD 7.00
G E R A N I U M S ................................... M S
A N N U A L S .............................
7*c
A Z A L E A S ............................... 1.50
AFRICAN VIOL1T STARTRRS
m in ia t u r e a TRAILBRSl.ll

CARRIER
AIR CO NDITIONINQ

JC A N NO RRIS

SOUTHERN AM OF SANFORD

F E R N 5 6 E X O T IC PLANT5
tpaciaiiiMei-

established 1*41
144 North Maple Avenue
PtL (MS) 2214221

" r u n t , H a n g in g B a lk a n , A ir le a n V l a l t n

OPEN MON. TH R U 5A T .4a.m ..5R .m .
441 Celery Ave.
Ph. 111 1476
4anlerd

A froid of Parms
A nd The
"Frizzies"??

Med-Car# Surgical
and
R espiratory Clinic
RENTALS A SALES
• w n a a ic n a ir t
• R w p ir a fo r y T h a ra p r
• C o to tto m y l u p p l t t t
E q u ip m e n t
d IH o tp H a l B M t
# B re a th in g M a c h in e *
V M a t ta c lo m y S u p p lla a • O i y p t n

•Crutch**

Phona (MS) Ml-SSIS
MS E. First Straat
Sanfard, Pie. S int

ACCIDENT o r INJURY
D a you N o te A Cbhxl
• FREE CONFERENCE
a N O RECOVERY, N O FEE

WALLACE W. HARDY
1
••

\:

ATTORNEV-AUAW

l
J-K JJ n
: • yr*

I I I N. lala Or.
Qrteoifc FI. S M I

42S41M

duplicated.
Sanford Trophy now has a new line of silver
trays, goblets and other items suitable for gifts,
prizes and awards. They also have desk sets.
Planning on crowning a queen or a beauty
contest winner? Sanford Trophy has sparkling
crowns and tiaras and scepters.
For organizations and businesses Sanford
Trophy makes, desk plates, plaques, license
plates, plastic name tags and professional
badges.
Sanford Trophy gives you a choice of diamond
engraving, electronic engraving or photostatic
engraving.
They also have metal luggage tags, metal
business cards, and plastic directional signs and
will make rubber stamps.
Sanford Trophy Shop is open from 9:30 a m. to 5
p.m. Monday through Friday and 9 a.m. to noon
on Saturday. Call 323-5106.

Disttnetivu Mirror Detigiti

U N IC U R L
M T O J C S K lC n iU l

IYvxhiets
* Z J fi£ .

GLASS

Curl Lasts 4 Weak.

FOR EV ER Y
PURPOSE

*20°°

Ph. 122-4422

^ J ^ a m fie .r e A .H o o k
HOURS
T U I I SAT «|
Iv e e R y A j *

/A V W PVA/A
SAM OMO

Sfjdtaiijt
323*7530

Fl o

r id a

I I I M lg n g lig . S a n N f*

p a t ie n t a i d s

0 . 0 B L A IB

10W1SI f’RICIS
C0MPARI OUR PRIGS

Si

n i V I BLAIB

d e&gt; ** • ^ ,

• MM • «

3 2 3 -1 5 7 0

»* P-4 I

(1 I)
*

fd£C- xto fi In a n d xee ux - one o f o u t
t-xfi txLtn ce d xtyClxtx

114 SANFORD AVE., SANFORO

* m m 40lo l * r #%/•*

- |J|
tth 4 SANFORD AVEPH 322-S060 -SANFORO

f l t ’x tim e fo x yo u x n ew Cook fo x

• WHEEL CHAIRS BWALKERS
• CRUTCHES ^HO SPITAL BEDS
• COMMODE CHAIRS
•PRESSURE BED FADS
•B A T H EQUIFMEN1
• MISC. SICKROOM SUPPLIES

{•&lt;11

123*7710 « r 323*3144

9 *

C M . u r , Inc

SALKS AND RINTALS

PHONE

ICeraar el I . Per* *«e. a OeRl

OA YNiLLi’S ANTIQUiS

O K U A F lin t

F B I ! O I M V R R Y . . . W * B I L L M B D IC A B C O B O IB R C T
" O v a a d • « * O p t r a lt t f fry la n ia r d S n n la r C l t t l M t '*

l - -

DOZEN

FLOWtRS I Y GAYNFLLl
AND

B L A IR A G E N C Y
SPECIALISTS IN
AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE
S R ll's FILED
e IMMEDIATE TAO
INSURANCE
• SPECIAL PACKAOE RATE
FOR PEOPLE OVER M
Serving Sanfard far IS Years

Baautiful Florida

FOR EV ER Y OECOR

NOT A SET
NOTA PERM

1414 A OAK A V I.
SANFORD

SSRSTo

T-shirts and caps imprinted with the design or
photo of your choice arc now available at Sanford
Trophy Shop located at 2109 French Ave., San­
ford. Shirts with a picture of a favorite grandchild
would make a great gift for proud grandparents
for Christmas.
Sanford Trophy Shop can take care of your
team’s needs from T-shirts and Jerseys to trophies
and plaques in-shop with 24-hour service on most
orders. Whether your sport is soccer, football,
basketball, bowling, swimming or whatever you
will appropriate trophies of all sizes. They also
stock medals and ribbons.
Nita Williamson, shop owner, now has as her
new partners In the business, Sonny and Kitty
West.
They can put your favorite photo on a metal
plaque or preserve for life on metal your birth
certificate, diploma or anything you wish

GET A

M E D IC A R E A P P R O V E D

Everything for homa patient cart
»WE DELIVER"

T-Shirts To Trophies
At Sanford Trophy Shop

....

can fieCfx y o u

m

,

PERM ANENT

SOLUTION
fpmlLj kali cake o&amp;zlei
driftw o o d v illa g e

»j*m

Open Daily* }

�I

)

Evening H erald, Sanford, FI._______ Tuesday. Oct. 3 0 ,1 M I— 3B

Business
Review

HANDCRAFTED ITERS
•

P re p a re d by A d v e rtis in g D e p t, o f

Evening Herald
Herald Advertiser

Colt 322-2611 Howl

• PUT TOUR BUSINESS ON THE MOVE
A D V E R T IS IN G

A D V E R T IS IN G

Decora ling Id t a i Witts A
Country T o u ch . . . Specie 111!ng
In O A K A P IN E F U R N IT U R E
Q U IL T S -O O L L S
C O LLE C TO R S IT E M S

CALENDAR
TUESDAY, (KT. 30

T lu C O U N TRY CO RN ER
M i n i Ite v e n t. O w ner
P H .( M S I S I) S IM
IS ItS A N F O R D A V E .

Ijingwood-l-alie Mary Uons, 7 p.m.. Quality Inn. 1-1
and Sit 434.
S&lt;*ulh Scmlnnlr Masonic l/&gt;dge. 7:30 p.m., Triplet
Drive, Casselberry.

SANFORD

A D V E R T IS IN G

ion

;

PER MO

FRO M

OWN FOR LESS
THAN RENT
M O B IL E H O M E M O O E L S O N D IS P L A Y

• LA R G E POOL • A D U L T CLUB HOUSE
• T E E N C E N T E R • L A U N D R Y F A C IL IT IE S
• C IT Y W A T E R A N D S EW ER IN C L U D E D
T O N LY A N D F A M IL Y SEC TIO N S
4J7 S A N FO R D , J M l. E. OF 17-11
ON. SAT. * a .m .-I p.m . J J J IU 0

REGISTER FOR FREE DRAWING
A GENUINE MINK STOLE
IU THE
Ink LUCKY
LULKT WINNER
WINI
TO
‘

MUST

\

SOIM IIIIM ASI

■ ■ 7^. -

Hi

M l

APSO»

Af,l

N K IS S A N V

Q

■

s
S e ec coo nn dd

I

m a g e

C O N S IG N M E N T C L O T H IN G
O l'E N M i l S M E D IH U R S SAT
r m io i
H O IS S A N I U P D f l V l l»M I I I *4 JI
( iim i i i r i A itp n r l H l.r l A S ^ntortJ Aw*1
SANT OWL)

THURSDAY, OCT. 12
Seminole County League of Women Voters Orien­
tation Cheese and Wine Festival, 5-7 p.m., 114 IJve Oak
b u ie. Altamonte Springs. Open to all persona In­
terested tn learning about league acUvltles.

BATTERIES
* AUTOS
★ TRUCK
★ MARINE

★ G O IF CARTS
★ LAW N MOW ERS
★ INDUSTRIAL

Florida Audubon Society .Seminole l Da pier, 2 p m
Florida Power &amp; Light. N. Myrtle Avenue. Sanford!
Uirry Hayes will speak on violent storms. Refresh­
ments
SATURDAY, (KT.24
Fall Frolic, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., First Pentecostal
Church of Sanford, 16th Street at Magnolia Avenue.
Food and game booths.
Pioneer Days Pine Castle Center of the Arts 5903
Randolph St., Orlando. Folk art, crafts, Bluegrass
Street Dance, 8:30-9:30; fish fry, 4-7 p. m. Chitdren
free.
Pancake Day sponsored by Methodist Men, 7 a.m. to
6 p.m., Community United Methodist Church
fellowship hall. Highway 17-92, Casselberry.

f/um cM f
B A T T E R IE S
201 N. P A R K A V E .

PH . 333 1134

Ready For Winter? See

SANFORD

HOUSEHOLD PERSONAL

NUTRITIONAL
PRODUCTS
For B atter
H ealfli

PRODUCTS

CARE

Biodegradable
Non-Polluling

In Harm ony
W ith N ature

C ALL E L A IN E 333-4257

REALTY TRANSFERS

LO U IS E 323-IM2

FR EE
N U T R IT IO N A L - S U M M IN G C L A S S E S

Ace Auto Radiator Shop
I

b your car ready for winter? Make sure you are
ready for the cold months ahead. Your radiator,
heater and hoses should be checked before adding
anti freeze. Come in and have a free cooling
system check at Ace Auto Radiator.
Ace Auto Radiator at 711 French Ave., Sanford,
is owned by Bill McCalley. His shop is able to give
complete radiator service. This includes cleaning,
repairing, recore and new complete radiators and
heaters for cars and trucks.
All work is guaranteed. Bill has been in business
since May, 1960. Before this he worked with his
father, who originally opened Ace Auto Radiator
at the same location in 1965.
Ace Auto Radiator can service large and small
radiators, heaters and gas tanks. It has Inland
equipment including Flo Tester.

A T T H E S A L V A T IO N A R M Y O Y M
TOO W .1 4 T H . ST. S A N F O R D
7:70 A M . E v e ry
Ip o n u rtd b f
Ih u t d e v B .e n ln f
Loud* A H u m

Senior citizens will receive a 10 percent discount
any time on work done at Ace Auto Radiator.
Bill would like to thank all his customers who
have come into his shop in the past and would like
to continue serving them in the future. For his
customers convenience the shop is open Ba.m. to 6
p.m., Monday through Friday and Ka.m. to noon
Saturday. Call 322-0235 for one-day service and
pick up and delivery.

*34*

3394969

Goad Thru Ocl, 11

• truck mount*d unit
• W t H KAT T N I W A T IR

I n i do no t u fti yo u r
* L IC T R IC IT Y

*16

• NO WAT t R M l * * IN
YOUR M O M I
• W l DO NOT U U IH A M P O O

(Long Hair Extra)

M ake Appointments
E arly For F all
And Holiday G a in in g

Ph. 3 3 2 -7 6 0 4

STYLING SALON

H IT F ra n c h A v * .

STANLEY STEEMER

The carpet (leaning company women recommend.
Sanford

»»t «*■!
Scotchm an) »&gt;•«.**•. »• ».«•*» 2 a
M e m b e r S a n fo rd C h a m b e r of C o m m e rc e

The fellaw who tells yea
h e ll pet his cards oa the
table profcably has aoe la
the sleeve at the coat oa
which he's Icaalaf.

(Includes 3 cans of freon)

G U Y S &amp; GALS
HAIR S TY LIN G S TU D IO

John's Sew 'N'-Vac
a « n , OH, Adjust Your Sewing $ C 0 0
M adibe Or Vacuum Cleantr
J
F R illlP A IR OF SCISSORS SHARPENED FREEI

- ; •&amp;

ta

w-w

*• f

*g' % % .

O il. ASlast A flttta r
Oti. A ilu s t WfcaaU
0«l. A i|v s t M t4 fM Control
Rett
Bag Haastag
AAetar i n i Brushes

T u T m T o N O L IA A V E N U E - S A N FO R D - 22J-T7W
141W . N E W Y O R K A V E N U E — D « L a n d — 734 0900

iUARANTIED ON SALES, SERVICE A SUPPLIES
T R A D E S A C C E P T E D - F IN A N C IN G A V A IL A B L E
H O U R S: M onday-FrldayO 5:30 Saturday * 3:00
J 0 Y e a r s E x p trla n c a — 1 Day S a r v l c t - F r a a E stlm alas

n . b .c . a ir
l

COMMERCIAL

rn

it as

* 2 0 YEARS EXPERIENCE*

305/322-0793

*3.95

a*, m

Claaa.
Clean.
Claaa.
Ckecs
Coach
Chech

M l * . T a a tle * I T * , a n . Oanam l
« a |» * M alar S tir
in ta a tr M alar W lrl-0
C a in .H a O tiin* CM M ackina
C u t . Han* anO F a * . A taam N *
Cfcecl W a t* . Ta CantrM t
en act Macke a t T im d .

name none save am commute dollars/
T a llF r a a :
••8 -0 3 3 8 or 3 2 7 -1 5 7 7

Call N.B.C. Air
Today!
M IM M M M M f

41M Highway 17 W, Safwaon Sanford A Longwood
M a n .F rl.l:O e a .m .to J :M p .m ., S a t.l:0 0 a .m .to tp .m .
3314741

O V T .W

Vacuum Oeaner
Value

flttOH I p u t CHARMS U IR A

JIM LASH'S N U II OOOK
SIRVICI CKNTU

^ • * ’a*
-----------------------

A *19.50

A *21.50
Sawing Machine
Value

Service Call f' ilO0 a S5 B

FR E E COOLING SYSTEM CHECK IN C LU D E D

Make the b«u aen ea s.
Smile all day. and h ell law
sleep w e a d e r la i what
yae've beta i f to.

v . . . :&lt; /•

3 2 2 -8 9 9 1

RESIDENTIAL

OCTO BER SPtCIAL
Want to puule a young­
ster? Ask him what Ihc
"trick" in ’Trick or Treat"
means

a m e m b e r o f o u r s ta ff

PHONE

REFRIGERATION A A/C ‘window Typo)

You Don't H ava To Buy A Car
From Jim Lash To G a t Q u a lity
W orkm anship A nd Fair Prlcas A t

CHARGE AIR CONDITIONER

• 1 1a S a *

S Y L V IA

r

’I . v

\

Air Conditioning {
H e a tin g &amp; C o o lin g «

Jim Lash's Blua Book Sorvlca Cat ta r

v

W e p ro u d ly a n no un ce

70f

SAVE MONEY ON
AUTOMOTIVE REPAIRS

All thinii are relative. To
Mr. B i| Bucks. bein| down
to his last Rolls Royce
means austerity.

~

SANFORD

IMPORTANT NOTICE! H

Phil Pastoret

'

113 WEST 27th ST.

( M * and haw

S P E C IA L

nf jBair

TO

S P R IN G S P E C IA L
l* | Mt

W t Work Saturday* Too

Rty. Ill

WE HAVE MOVED

R IC K G O ETTSC H , O w nar-O paralor

Any customer will receive a 10 percent discount
on a clean and repair, if you bring in this ad before
Dec. 1, 1981. Make sure your car is ready for
winter.

CO LO R

For W om en
A M on

th a t S ylvia Is n o w

“Some stains had been on our
carpet all winter long. I didn’t
think they’d come out but they
did... and Stanley Steemer did it”

^

% rn % % m * ■m’v -- v

* -

%* V

*

%

..

-* -

Weight W atrhen.
7 p.m., Summit Apts.,
Casselberry.
Seminole AA. 8 p.m., open discussion. 391 U « e
Minnie Drive, Crossroads, Sanford.
Workshop (or parents on “Child Happiness and
Discipline, You Cnn Do It,” 7:30 p.m., Forest City
Elementary School media center, 980 Sand U k e Hoad.
Altamonte Springs, Open lo the public. Speaker I.a nee
Woodworth.
WEDNESDAY, OCT, 31
Cnlled Way report luncheon, noon, Holiday Inn.
Interstate 4 and State Hoad 46. Hosted by Sanford
Optimist (Tub.
Sanford-ilrrakfant Rotary Ctub, 7 a.m., Sanford
Airport restaurant.
Casselberry Rotary, 7:30 a.m., Woman’s Club, 250
Overbrook Drive, Casselberry.
Oviedo Rotary, 7:30 a.m., the Town House
Res taurant.
Sanford Optimist, noon, Holiday Inn.
Recovery, Inc., 12:30 p.m., Scars, Altamonte Mall.
Sanford Klwanis, noon, Sanford Civic Center.
Starlight Prom enadm , 8 p.m., DeBary CommunityCenter, Shell Hoad.
Sanford AA Rrglnnrn, 8:30 p.m., 1201 W. First St.

COMPARE THESE FEA TU R E S

William Billy" If.
McCalley, owner of
Ace Auto Radiator in
Sanford k a radiator
specialist.

O verpalm Anonymous, 7:30 p.m., Florida Power &amp;
Light.

j

i
»
$
I
I
I
I
$
I
*
$
I
I

‘

H a n e y L e v ie L h b J a m e s C lo
A llr e d P P a r t ig i t , t g l t o R a lp h
S ta n le y W ilt o n I I I l w l P a t r ic ia
E H u t t o n 4 W m R . W ilt o n , b o th
D . Lol U l l r t t W V l i W V ol Lot
t g l . W 4 I ‘ o t L o t 14 4 E 47' o l 17.
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D a v id A . S t o ll • w l V a lm a lo
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a c re s , E &gt; , o l S W '. o l S W '. See I I
A b e l. U n 700 S a n d y C o y * C on do ,
70 JO, l e t t p i, (70.000
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H . C a m e lo t U n 7. 4100
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G a rd e n L a k e E t t , U N . 141,100
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The H u s k e y Co to G a lllm o r e
w ; wo
H o m e s In c , L o t IT , B lk B
G H F lth b a c k . ( B i l l R ile F I
S w e e tw a te r O a k t. Sec I I . lU . f o a
H o rn e t I d iv s o o
lo S a m u e l T
A r th u r L R e e d lo C o n s ta n c e L
R a n d o lp n . J u lia R C h lle t. J a n e l
C a m p b e ll. Sgl , L o l a ]. B lk E . L a k e
U E d w a rd s A J o y te P D o le ie, L o t
K a th r y n P a r k 4 lh A d d n . 1100
4 less N 70'. L I * less S 70 A L o lt S.
r . SOI to C h a rle s
a. I. I I . I I A IT. B lk 17, S a n la n d o , W B Ke nllyu tsJo n F4u lle
W t S u ta n L . L o t 77
1100
B lk J , M o b il* M a n o r Tnd Sec .
T e rry A K u lp . t g l lo H a r r y M
111.400
Jo rg e n se n A w l C a ro ly n K . L o t 7A.
J e t t * L L e d b e tte r 4 W l J o te ta
S u ite r t M il l U n O ne. Ut.TOO
E to K a th le e n P h e la n . S g l . L o *
R o b e rt E
B e r r t h e lm A w l
1TI W e k iv a H u n t C lu b . F o i H u n l
B a rb a ra J lo G a r y K B e re s h e im
Sec I , 114.S00
A w l E lis t a A , L o l } ] re p l p a r i o l
S uda, In c lo N a b rl K a n a w a ll 4
S p o rts m a n P a r a d ite , D 7.S00
W t O ia r m t C , L o t 70. B lk A ,
John K L o w e r A w l M a r th a L lo
F a ir w a y C o v e . 4110.000
J W H ic k m a n , L o t I t . L a k e
E q u ity R e a lty In c lo R o b a rt E
M a r k h a m E t t t , MO 000
B rig g s . S gl 4 K im b e r ly S M a r tin ,
M a ro n d a H o m e s Inc lo W e t C
t g l U N 71 E D e s tin y S p rin g s .
C o g in . t g l
A K a lh tr ln * A.
411.000
W a lla c e , t g l . L o t 7 ], B lk K ,
F o im o o r U n ] , SSS.OOO
E q u ity R e a lly In c lo Joseph
Ja m e s P H o p k m t A w l P a u lin e
In b o rn o n # 4 W t P a t r ic ia , U N T4C,
lo R a lp h S D ic k in s o n A w l L
D e th n y S p rin g s , 171.100
M ild r e d . L o l I . B lk G , N o rm a n d y
J o s e p h B F r it s 4 W l V ir g in ia to
A d d n C B . 110.700
S am uel D P ra tt 4 W l M a ry S , L o t
R u s tic W o o d s L i d
P tr
to
4, M a r k h a m R id g e . 117),000
A b ra h a m J M e n d e ls o h n fc w t
C h a rle s S tg u in 4 W t B e lly M lo
C e lia L , L o l A. C lu s te r F , W ild
J im m y A M in e r 4 W l D a r le n e W ,
w ood P U D . 144.100
L o t 7T0 F o re s t B ro o k a th Sec ,
W m g lie ld D e v lo T h o m e t M
144.000
E n te n te J r A w l C a ro l A , L o t 17.
D a n W a y In c to A llo n t o J a m e s
W m g lie ld R e s e rv e . P h . I , 140.000
4 W l B e v e rly T . L o t 1, S o n o ra So
R ic h a r d A
R agunt A w l
U N O ne . 444.W 0
K a th le e n lo R o b e rt G A l b u r y A w t
B e l A ir e H o m e s In c lo V ic t o r
A n n L . L o l 14. B lk O . S w e e lw e le r
V a n D i r L e e n d e n 4 W l M a r ily n .
O a k t. Sec 4. M S 000
L o t 1)1. O a k F o re s t. U N T w o .
J e rr y H G le e to n A w l C h e ry l lo
4)1,700
L o le M E w m g . G e o rg e A E w in g
i l l O e v . In c to J o se p h J
Jr . A C a ro l J E C e llit o n , L o l 7,
H a n r a lly 4 W l M a r y J ., L o t 4
B lk E . S u n la n d E t l l , 170.100
W edge w ood T e n n is V illa s . 171.000
T h e S p rin g s l o A m e r il l r t l D e v
JS I D a y
to R a y m o n d
B
Co . Ir o m SW c o r o l SE&lt;&lt; o l N E U
S a v a re s e 4 W l N a n c y H . L o t SO.
ol S K 7 71 71 e tc . 1704400
W edge w oo d T e n n is V illa s . 171,000
H a g e n H o rn e t. In c lo O o n e ld B
JSI D e v l a M a r y V D w y e r
N e w to n A w l S e re h P , L o t I I ,
( M a r r I M ia m i, L e t 7. W e d g e w o o d
B r a n tle y P o in t, 140.100
T e n n is V illa s . 471.000
F I R e t C o m m lo F r a n c is W
F r a n k C P u t t y 4 W l L i l a R lo
S e y le r 4 w l H a r r ie t R , U n A , B l 7
R o b e rt B M ille r ( M a r r . I 4 R o b a rl
w e k iv a F a i r w a y T o w i i h o m t t ,
L M ille r I M a r r I B e g U l t U ' W
144.000
o t SE c o r o l L o t at. S p rin g
O ak w o o d B ld r t t o R o n a ld M
H a m m o c k , a le 11.100.
F e ld 4 w l M a r g a r e t R , L o t 70
IQ C D ) S ta y * H a r d in 4 W illia m
T u n aw,111. U n I , 1111.000
to G a r y H e lto n . C o m m e n c e a l N E
IO C D I A c tio n B a ll B o n d s, In c lo
c o r o l L o t I , B lk D , S lo v a k V illa g e
L e t l t r W R a w lin s , L o t t I I 4 71
S D e tc 4100
B lk I I S a n la n d o I h t S u b u r b
IO C D I W m
H a rd m 4 G o ry
B e a u tifu l, 3100
M e llo n to S t t v * H a r d m . C o m
A n d re w M c C a w , T r lo C V ic t o r
m a n c a a t N E c o r. L o t I , B lk D .
R o m a n o 4 w l C h a rlo tte , L e t I. B lk
S lo v a k V i ll S O e tc 4100
B. S p rin g V a lle y E t t t , 11S5.004

-------------

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Tvasday, Oct. &gt;0. IN I

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Legal Notice
---------FICTITIOUS N A M E ------

Census Figures Show

N o tic e is h e re b y g iv e n th a t I a m
e n g a g e d In b u s in e s s a l S lip C l ] ,
M o n r o * H a r b o u r M a r in a , S e n lo rd ,
S e m in o le C o u n ty , F lo r id a u n d e r
Ih e f l c l i l l o u t n a m e o f J O S E
0 ‘ G R A D Y ‘ S IR IS H M E X I C A N
C A F E , a n d th a t I in te n d lo r e g is te r
u l d n a m e w ith Ih e C le rk o&lt; th e
C lr c u il C o u rt, S e m in o le C o u n ty ,
F lo r id a In a c c o rd a n c e w ith Ih e
p ro v is io n s o t Ih e r ic f iU o u * N a m e
S ta tu te s , To W it: S e c tio n M S 0 *
WASHINGTON (UPI) - During Ihe l»70s, the number of
F lo r id a S ta tu te s 1«S7
divorced persons In the United States doubled, the number
Sig, K im O . A n d e re c k
of unmarried couples tripled and the median age of those
P u b lis h : O c t o b e r 70. 27 A
N o v e m b e r 3, 10, I N I
who married for the first time increased by more than a
DENT2
year.
N O T IC E O F P U B L IC
The figures compiled by the Census Bureau reveal
H E A R IN G
T H E S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y
changing lifestyles — a trend toward the single life, more
B O A R D O F C O M M IS S IO N E R S
broken marriages Bnd an increasing number of relation­
w i ll h o ld a p u b lic h e a rin g In R o o m
ships without wedding vows.
200 o l Ih e S e m in o le C o u n ly
C o u rth o u s e . S a n lo rd , F lo r id a on
The number of divorced people living alone rose from 1.5
N O V E M B E R ia , I N I a t 7 00 P M .
million to 3.4 million from 1970 to 1980, according to a report
o r as so o n th e r e a fte r as p o s s ib le to
released today. The number of unmarried couples soared
c o n s id e r th e fo llo w in g ;
P U B L IC
H E A R IN G
FO R
from 523,000 to 1.5 million.
CHANGE
OF
Z O N IN G
And the median age at first marriage for men rose from
R E G U L A T IO N S
23.2 to 24.6, and the median age for women rose from 20.8 to
M A R IO N D E V E L O P M E N T REZONE
FRO M
A t
22. 1.
A G R IC U L T U R E TO R I S IN G L E
Almost two-thirds of the unmarried couples, said the
F A M I L Y D W E L L IN G D IS T R IC T
- P Z I I t i l l ) *4 - T h e S outh i n
report, were under 35; and 20 percent were under 25. About
le e t o f L o t D o t C h a se a n d D e n ia l's
three-quarters of the unmarried couples had no children, an
R e v is io n o l is le w o r ln C o m p a n y 's
Increase of almost 250 percent over the decade.
F ir s t A d d itio n lo lh a T o w n o t
G e n e va , P la t B oo k 1, P a g e I t ,
The number of unmarried couple households with chil­
S e c tio n 71 10 11, S e m in o le C o u n ty ,
dren, 424,000, doubled in the past three years but at 27
F lo r id a . ( F u r t h e r d e s c rib e d a s 12
percent was still a smaller proportion in 1980 than In 1970,
a c re s m o re o r less In m id to w n
G eneva,
near
lh a
G eneva
when it was 38 percent, It said.
E le m e n ta r y S c h o o l) (D IS T R IC T
The report also estimated there are 116,000 unmarried
No I I
F u r th e r , a p u b lic h e a rin g w i ll ba
couples aged 65 and older, up by only 1,000 over the decade.
h e ld b y I h t S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y
They represented just 7.4 percent of all unmarried couples,
P L A N N IN G
AND
Z O N IN G
down from 22 percent in 1970.
C O M M IS S IO N O N N O V E M B E R 4.
I N I a t 7:00 P M . , o r as soon
Most Of the increase in tfw number of people living alone,
th e r e a fte r a s p o s s ib le , in R o o m 200
said the report, is among divorced or never-married per­
o I th e S e m in o le C o u n ty C o u r­
th o u se , S a n fo rd , F lo r id a , in o r d e r
sons and among those under age 35. Most who lived alone,
to re v ie w , h e a r c o m m e n ts a n d
II million, were women. But the number of men living
m a k e re c o m m e n d a tio n s to th e
alone, 6.8 million, rose 92 percent in the decade.
B o a rd o l C o u n ly C o m m is s io n e rs o l
S e m in o le C o u n ty o n Ih e a b o v e
Being widowed accounted for 7.3 million of the 17.8
a p p lic a llo n ls ) .
million persons living alone, and those who never married
Those In a lle n d a n c * w i l l ba
h
e a rd a n d w r it te n c o m m e n d m a y
totaled 5.6 million. Persons over 65 accounted for 7.1 million
b
e
f ile d
w ith
Ih e
Land
of those living alone.
M a n a g e m e n t M a n a g e r. H e a rin g s
m a y b e c o n tin u e d fr o m t im e to
lim e as fo u n d n e c e s s a ry . F u r t h e r
d e ta ils a v a ila b le b y c a llin g 121
4130. E l l 140
P e rs o n s a r e a d v is e d th a t it th e y
d
e c id e to a p p e a l a n y d e c is io n
N O T IC E O P A P P L IC A T IO N
F L O R ID A S T A T U T E S If) Ut
m a d e a l th e s e m e e tin g s , th e y w ill
F O R P E R M IT
N O T IC E O F A P P L IC A T IO N
n e e d a r e c o r d o l Ih e p ro c e e d in g s ,
S t.
Johns
R iv e r
W e le r
FOR T A X D E E D
a n d lo r s u c h p u rp o s e , Ih e y m a y
M e n e g e m e n ! D is t r ic t h e t re c e iv e d
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N .
need to e n s u re th a t a v e rb a tim
A p p llc e tlo n N u m b e r 2 7*41 fr o m
Ih a t C D S E S T H E R V W IL D E R
re c o r d o l th e p ro c e e d in g s Is m a d e ,
H o w e rd T . P o w e ll lo r th e co n
th e h o ld e r oI 111* f o llo w in g c e r
w
h ic h
re c o rd
In c lu d e s
Ih e
title a te * h a * H ie d M id c e r tific a te s s u m p tlv e us e o l g ro u n d w e le r In
t e s t im o n y a n d e v id e n c e u p o n
Sem In o le C o u n t y t o r th e p u r po se o t
lo t a t * i d e e d to be issu e d th e re o n
w h ic h th e a p p e a l Is lo be m a d e
The c e r t if ic a t e n u m b e rs e n d v e e rs a g r ic u lt u r a l I r r ig a t io n
B o a rd o l C o u n ty
T h e O is t r lc t w i ll e e l lo a p p ro v e
ot is s u e n c e , th e d e s c r ip tio n o l Ih e
C o m m is s io n e rs
o r d e n y th e a p p lic a tio n In its
p r o p e r ly , e n d th e n im e s In w h ic h
S e m in o le C o u n ty , F lo r id a
r e g u la r m e e tin g e l 7 :30 p m on
it w a s essessed e re e s lo lio w s
B Y : R o b r r t S tu rm ,
N o v e m b e r 10, I N I a t St. Jo h n s
L e r lilic e t e N o 1304 V e e r o l
C h a irm a n
R iv e r W a te r M a n a g e m e n t D is t r ic t
Is s u e n c e l f i t
A tte s t: A r th u r H . B e c k w ith J r.
H e a d q u a r t e r s B u i ld in g , S ta te
D e s c rip tio n o t P r o p e r ly L O T I I
P u b lis h O c to b e r 20 A N o v e m b e r 7.
I1LK A G R O V E T E R R A C E P B 7 H ig h w a y 100 W e s t, n e a r K a y
14,
IN I
L a r k in A ir p o r t , P a la tk a , F lo r id a .
P G 47
P E N Ji
A tte c ta d p e rs o n s m a y t il e a
M em e
m
w h ic h
essessed
I N V IT A T IO N T O B ID
w r it te n o b le c tlo n lo Iss u a n c e o l
H O S K IN S R U T H S £ T A L
A D D IT IO N T O t T U D R N T
s u c h p e r m its w ith th e B o a rd o l
A ll o l v o id p r o p e r ty b e in g in th e
C E N T E R F A C IL IT Y
C o u n ty o t S E M IN O L E . S le te o t G o v e rn o rs o t th e S t. J o h n s R iv e r
S E M IN O L E C O M M U N IT Y
W a te r M a n a g e m e n t D is t r ic t In
Hondo
CO LLBO E
p e r s o n a l its o ffic e s o n S ta te H ig h U n le s s s u c h c e r t lt ic e t e o r c e r
S A N F O R D , F L O R ID A
w a y too W e s t. P a la tk a , F lo r id a , o r
l i ll t e le s s h e ll b e re d e e m e d ec
S eated b t d t f r o m C o n tra c to rs
b y m a ll t a P .O . B a a U N , P a la tk a ,
c o r d in g I d le w t h e p r o p e r t y
w i ll b a re c e iv e d b y O w n e r , b e a rd
p ie r M a , n a n ,
d e s c rib e d In s u c h c e r t lt ic e t e
o
t
T ru s te e s , t o r S e m in o le C o m
Such o b lt c t lo m
m u ll
ba
t e r lilic e t e s w ill b e s o ld to Ih e
m u n lty C o lle g e a t 4:15 P M . lo c a l
h ig tie tl b .d d r r e l th e c o u r t house re c e iv e d b y I h t B o a rd n o la te r
lim e , O c to b e r X , I N I, in th e B o a rd
th a n N o v e m b e r 3, 1911 A n y ob
d o o r o n th e » lh d e y o* N O V E M
R oo m o f S e m in o le C o m m u n ity
le c tio n s so H ie d s h o u ld se t fo rth
H E R . iv e l. A T I I 00 A M
C o lle g e . T h e fo lk w v in g Is In c lu d e d :
re a so n s to r th e o b i a c t Ions en d
D e le d th is n t h d e y o l S E P
A D D IT IO N TO S T U D E N T
m u s t be s ig n e d b y Ih e o b ie c lln g
ie m h e r . I t ll
C E N T E R F A C IL IT Y
p a r ly e n d s fio u ld H it Ih e m a ilin g
A r th o r H B e c k w ith J r
B
id
d o c u m e n ts a re o p e n lo
C le r k o t C i r c u it C o u r t o l an d re s id e n c e a d d re sse s o f th e
p u b lic in s p e c tio n in th e o lllc e s o l
o b ie c lln g p a r t y . The o b le c tlo n
S e m in o le C o u n ty , F lo r id a
F w D o d g e P la n R o o m a n d
s lio u ld a ls o se t f o r t h re a s o n s w h y
By T h e re s a M e c e k ,
C e n tr a l F l o r id a B u l l d t r s E i
I h t o b ie c lln g p a r t y w o u ld ba a d
DEPUTY C LER K
c h a n g t In O rla n d o ; a n d m a y ba
v e r s e ly a H e e le d b y p e r m i t
(S e e ll
o b ta in e d o r re v ie w e d fr o m th e
Issu ance .
P u b lis h O tlo b e r 4, I I . TO. 27. I N I
o ffic e s o l G u tm a n n A s s o c ia te s .
R e q u e s ts lo r h e a rin g m u s t ba
D E N 74
A r c h ite c ts . P la n n e rs , In c ., 19} N.
m a d e in w r it in g to th e E a e c u tlv e
O a k A v e ., P .O
D ra w a r 9 U .
D ir e c to r a t la a s l s e v e n 171 d a y s
S a n lo r d , F l o r id a 12 771, u p o n
p r io r to th e d a ta s c h e d u le d fo r
re
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s
t
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o
m
p
a
n
ie
d b y I2 5 t0
G o v e rn in g B o a rd a c tio n on th e
d e p o s it p e r se t.
p e r m it. H no p u b lic h e a rin g is
D e p o s it w i ll b e re fu n d e d in l u l l
re q u ts le d , th e B o a rd w i ll a c t on
fo r tw o s e ts to c o n tra c to rs su b
th e m a t te r a s s c h e d u le d h e re in .
m illin g b o n a l i d * b id s a n d r a lu m
I I re q u e s te d a n d g r a n te d b y Ih e
o l d o c u m e n ts In g o o d us e a b ia
B o a rd , Ih e h e a rin g d a te w i ll be
c o n d itio n w ith in $ d a y s a t t a r lh a
a n n o u n c e d a t 7 :1 0 p . m . o n
o p e n in g o l b id s . R e fu n d s lo r s e ts in
N o v e m b e r 10. I N I a n d s c h e d u le d
■■cess o f tw o w i ll b e le ts 111 00 lo
w ith in 30 d a y s . A t th e h e a rin g , th e
G o v e rn in g B o a rd o t th e S I. Jo h n s c o v e r co st o f r e p r o d u c tio n , o n th e
s a m e b a s is o f r e tu r n o t d o c u m e n ts
R iv e r W a te r M a n a g e m e n t D is tr ic t
C o n t r a c t o r s w h o o b t a in b id
w i ll c o n s id e r ih e a p p lic a tio n and
d o c u m e n ts a n d d o n o t b id i h t
a lt w r l l t e n o b le c t lo n t , h e a r
p r o te c t, m u s t r e t u r n u m t a l la a s t
le s lim o n y
and
r e c e iv e
19 d a y s b e to r t I h t b id d a le , o r p a y
d o c u m e n ta r y e v id e n c e
111
00 p e r set t g d e fr a y co a l o t
Such h e a rin g m a y ba re a s o n a b ly
re
p ro d u c tio n a n d h a n d lin g , as sa t
c o n tin u e d to a tim e a n d d a ta
Safely is a family affair.
fo r th a b o ve
c e rta in a n n o u n c e d a t th e h e a rin g
Sub c o n tra c to rs a n d o th e rs m a y
w ith o u t lu r lh e r n o tic e
o b ta in c o m p le te b id d o c u m e n ts
- FLORI DA*
T h e a p p lic a tio n Is o n t ile a t th e
u p o n d e p o s it Of I I S 00 w h ic h w i ll be
D is t r ic t o t l ir e a n d a v e lla b lt lo r
re fu n d e d , less SISCO to c o v e r
In s p e c tio n a t a ll re a s o n e b i* tim e s
re p r o d u c tio n c o s t, u p o n r e tu r n o l
V ic k i W . C u r tis
d o c u m e n ts In g o o d c o n d it io n
R e c o rd s
M anagem ent
. SUNSHINE STATE ,
w
ith in 5 d a y s a fte r o p e n in g o t b id s .
T e c h n ic ia n
P a r tia l s e ts w i ll n o t ba is s u e d du e
O iv ls lo n o l P e r m ittin g
lo s i t * a n d s c o p * o t p r o it e t .
St. Jo h n s R l v t r
E a c h b id m u s t ba a c c o m p a n ie d
W a te r M a n a g e m e n t
b y a c e r t if ie d c h e c k o r b id bo nd
D is tr ic t
Issued b y a n a c c e p ta b le s u re ly
P u b lis h O c to b e r 20. I N I
c o m p a n y t o r n o t la s t th a n S p a r
D E N 74
c a n t o f th e b a s t b id T h * s u c c e s s fu l
b id d e r w i ll b * r e q u ir e d to fu rn is h
p e rfo rm a n c e b o n d a n d la b o r and
m a te r ia ls p a y m e n t b o n d , e a ch In
•h e f u ll a m o u n t o f t h * c o n tra c t
s u m , is s u e d b y a b o n d in g c o m p a n y
lic e n s e d In F lo r id a a n d h o ld in g a n
A t ( A P lu s ) r a tin g . E v id e n c e p i
s a id r a tin g w ill b * ra g u lra d .
The s u c c e s s fu l b id d e r w i ll b *
r e q u ir e d t o s u b m it a c o m p le te lis t
o f s u b c o n tr a c to r s w h o w i ll b *
p e r fo r m in g w o r k on Ih e p ro te c t,
'
p r io r t o re le a s e o f a n y p a r t ia l
p a y m e n t.
T o b e e lig ib le f o r c o n s id e ra tio n ,
b id s m u s t c o m p ly w llh lh a la w s o t
F lo r id * , a ll c o n d itio n s o l th a
s p e c ific a tio n s , a n d m u s t be m a d e
o n e fa c s im ile o l th a t e r m In c lu d e d
w ith th a c o n tra c t d o c u m e n ts . In
d u p lic a te , e n c lo s e d in o n o p o g u a
se a le d e n v e lo p e b e a rin g t h * n a m e
a n d a d d re s s o l t h * b id d e r a n d
m a rk e d :
A D D IT IO N T O S T U D E N T
C E N T E R F A C IL IT Y
a n d d e liv e r e d n o t la ia r th a n d a ta
a n d h o u r m a n tio n a d a b o v e .
O w n e r re s e rv e s lh a r ig h t to
ra le c t a n y o r a ll b id * o r c a r ta ln
p o rtio n s o t a b id a t s tip u la te d In
t h * F O R M O F P R O P O S A L . * N | to
w a iv e a n y i n f o r m a l i t i e s a n d
te c h n ic a litie s in b id d in g , a n d lo
a w a rd lh a lo b in th a b e s t In f w M l
o f t h * O w n e r. N o b id S h a ll b a w it h ­
d r a w n lo r a p e rio d o f 10 d a y * f r o m
t h * o p e n in g d a l* .
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N O T IC E O F P U B L IC
H E A R IN O
THE BO ARD OF COUNTY
C O M M IS S IO N E R S
OF
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y w i ll h o ld *
p u b lic h e a rin g In A o m TOO o l th e
S e m in o le C o u n lf C o u r th o u s e ,
S a n lo rd . F lo r id * , on N O V E M B E R
14, I N I a t 7 00 P M , o r a s soon
th e r e a fte r a s p o s t h i * , t o c o n s id e r
a t p * c l f k la n d u s * a m e n d m e n t lo
th *
S e m in o le C o u n ty
C om p re h e n s lv e P la n an d R E Z O N IN G
o f th e d e s c rib e d p r o p e rly .
A N O R D IN A N C E A M E N D IN G
O R D IN A N C E
77 25
W H IC H
A M E N O S T H E D E T A IL E D L A N D
USE
ELEM EN T
OF
THE
S E M IN O L E
CO UNTY
COM
P R E H E N S IV E P L A N F R O M
L O W D E N S IT Y R E S ID E N T IA L
TO
M E D IU M
D E N S IT Y
R E S ID E N T IA L
FOR
THE
P U R P O S E O F R E Z O N IN G F R O M
R 1A A S in g le F a m ily D is t r ic t TO
R P
R E S I D E N T I A L
P R O F E S S IO N A L .
THE
F O L L O W IN G
D E S C R IB E D
PROPERTY
A p o rtio n o t L o ts 14, 17, a n d I I .
B lo c k 47, S an la ndo lh a S u b u rb
B e a u tifu l, P a lm S p rin g s S e c tio n ,
P la t B ook 1, P a g * 45 * i. P u b lic
R e c o r d * a t S e m in o le C o u n ty .
F lo r id * , S e c iio n I I I t 29 ( F u r t h e r
d e s c rib e d a s la s * m a n o n * a c re .
T h * f ir s t h o u se o n m e r ig h t h a n d
s ld t o n C a n te r S tre e t, o i l P a lm
S p rin g s D r iv e l (D IS T R IC T N o 41
A P P L IC A T IO N H A S B E E N
S U B M IT T E D
BY
D E N N IS
R A IN E S - P Z d l i l l l f )
F u r th e r , t h * P L 4 N N IN O A N D
Z O N IN G
C O M M IS S IO N
OF
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y w ill h o ld *
p u b lic h e a rin g In R to m 200 o t t h *
S e m ln o l* C o u n ty C o u r th o u s e ,
S a n lo rd . F lo r id a , o n N O V E M B E R
4, I t l t a t 7 00 P . M , o r a * soon
th e r e a fte r a s p o s s la l*. to ra v le w ,
hear
c o m m tn t*
and
m ake
re c o m m e n d a tio n s t * t h * B o a rd o f
C o u n ty C o m m is s io n e rs o n th e
a b o v e c a p tio n e d o rd in a n c e a n d
r t t o n in g
A d d itio n a l In fo rm a tio n m a y be
o b ta in e d b y c o n ta c tin g th e L a n d
M a n a g e m e n t M a n a g tr a t 1214110,
E i l . 140
P e rso n s u n a b le t t a tte n d t h *
h e a rin g w h o w is h lo c o m m e n t on
t h * p ro p o s e d a c llo n i m a y s u b m it
w r it te n s ta te m e n ts to th a L a n d
M a n a g e m e n t D iv is io n p r io r lo th e
s c h e d u le d p u b lic h e a rin g . P e rso n s
a p p e a rin g a l t h * h t a r ln g i m a y
s u b m it w r it te n s ta te m e n ts o r be
h e a rd o r a lly .
P e rso n s a r e a d v is e * th a t, it th e y
d e c id e to a p p e a l * n y d e c is io n
m a d * a t th e s * m e e tis g s , th e y w i ll
n e e d a re c o r d o l th e p ro c e e d in g s ,
a n d , lo r s u c h p u rp o s e , th e y m a y
ne ed to e n s u re th a t a v e r b a tim
ra c o r d o f lh a p ro c e e d in g s Is m a d e ,
w h ic h
re c o rd
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th e
t e s t im o n y a n d t v I J t n c a u p o n
w h ic h i h t a p p e a l is
be b a sed
B o a rd o f C o u n ty
C o m m is s io n e rs
S e m ln o l* C o u n ty , F lo r id a
B y : R o b e rt S tu r m .
C h a ir m a n
t
A tte s t: A r th u r H . le e k w ith J r .
P u b lis h O c to b e r 20 l N o v e m b e r 1
1 l * . l » l l ___________
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N O T IC E O F
P U B L IC H E A R IM G
THE B O AR D O f C O U N TY
C O M M IS S IO N E R S
OF
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y w ill H o ld a
p u b lic h e a rin g in R o o m 200 o t Ih e
S e m ln o l* C o u n ly C o u r th o u s e ,
S a n fo rd , F le n d * . o n N O V E M B E R
24. I f l l a l 7 00 P M . . o r as lo o n
th e r e a fte r a s p o s s ib le , t o c o n s id e r
a s p e c ific la n d use a m e n d m e n t lo
th *
S e m ln o l* C o u n ty
Com
p r e h e n s iv * P la n a n d R E Z O N IN G
o t t h * d e s c rib e d p r o p e rty
A N O R D IN A N C E A M E N D IN G
O R D IN A N C E
77 21
W H IC H
A M E N D S T H E D E T A IL E D L A N O
USE
ELEM EN T
OF
THE
S E M IN O L E
COUNTY
COM
P R E H E N S IV E
P LA N FRO M
L O W I N T E N S IT Y U R B A N TO
L O W D E N S IT Y R E S ID E N T IA L
FOR
THE
PURPOSE
OF
R E Z O N IN G
FROM
A I
A G R IC U L T U R E
TO
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S IN G L E F A M I L Y D W E L L IN G
D IS ..
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F O L L O W IN G
D E S C R IB E D P R O P E R T Y .
A ll t h a t p a r t o l SW ' • o t t h * SW
&lt;&lt; o l Sec 10 2 0 1 0 ly in g S o u th o t
L o n g w oo d H ills R o a d a c c o rd in g to
m e p la t o l l a i d ro a d re c o r d e d In
P B I . P g. 94 P u b lic R e c o rd * o l
S e m in o le C o u n ty , F lo r id * , I M t
beg in a t t h * SW c o rn e r o l t h * SW '■*
of Sec r u n N o rth 197 t f. th f n c e
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ru n th e n c e W e st 442.21 I I. lo P O.
B. ( F u r t h e r d e s c rib e d as 4 7 a c re s
m o re o r le s t ly in g s o u th o l
L o n g w o o d H ills R o a d ! (D IS T R IC T
N O 21
A P P L IC A T IO N H A S B E E N
S U B M I T T E D B Y B R U C E J.
BRESSLER
P Z I I t 4 I I I 97.
F u r th e r , th e P L A N N IN G A N D
Z O N IN G
C O M M 'S S IO N
OF
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y w i ll h o ld a
p u b lic h e a rin g in R o o m 200 o f lh a
S e m ln o l* C o u n ty C o u r th o u s a ,
S a n lo rd , F lo r id a , o n N O V E M B E R
4, 1911 a t 7 00 P .M ., o r a t to o n
Ih e r e a lle r a t p o tt lb la , to r t v la w ,
hear
c o m m e n ts
and
m ake
re c o m m e n d a tio n s to t h * B o a rd o f
C o u n ty C o m m is s io n e rs o n th e
a b o v e c a p llo n e d o r d in a n c e a n d
re to n in g
A d d itio n a l in f o r m a l io n m a y b t
o b ta in e d b y c o n ta c tin g t h * L a n d
M a n a g e m e n t M a n a g e r a t 111 4110,
E d . 140.
P e rs o n s u n a b le lo a tte n d ih e
h e a rin g w h o w is h to c o m m e n t on
Ih e p ro p o s e d a c tio n s m a y s u b m it
w r it te n s ta te m e n ts to t h * L a n d
M a n a g e m e n t D iv is io n p r io r t o th a
s c h e d u le d p u b lic h e a rin g P e rso n s
a p p e a rin g a l th e - h e a rin g s m a y
s u b m it w r it te n s ta te m e n ts o r be
h e a rd o r a lly .
P e rs o n s a r e a d v is e d t h a t. It th e y
d e c id e to a p p e a l a n y d e c is io n
m a d e a t th e s e m e e tin g s , th e y w ill
ne e d a re c o r d o l Ih e p ro c e e d in g s ,
a n d , lo r s u c h p u rp o s e , th e y m a y
ne ed to e n s u re th a t a v e r b a tim
re c o r d o t th e p r o c e e d in g * Is m a d e ,
w h ic h
re c o rd
In c lu d e s
th e
t e s t im o n y a n d e v id e n c e u p o n
w h ic h th e a p p e a l is to be b a se d .
B o a rd o l C o u n ty
C o m m is s io n e rs
S e m ln o l* C o u n ty .
F lo r id a
B y R o b e rt S lu r m ,
C h a ir m a n
I N V IT A T IO N TO B ID
A lle s l: A r th u r H . B e c k w ith ,
A T H L E T IC T B IL B T
J r.
P A C IL IT IIt
P u b lls n : O c to b e r 20 A N o v e m b e r
S E M IN O L E C O M M U N IT Y
1. 14. 1911
tO L L E O t
D E N -44
S A N F O R D , P L b R tO A
N O T IC E O P P U B L IC
S eated b id s fr o m - C o n t r a c t o r s
H B A R IN O
w ill b e re c e iv e d b y O w n e r. B o a rd
THE B O AR D OF C O U N TY
o f T ru s te e s , t o r S e n lr to l* C o m
C O M M IS S IO N E R S
OF
m u n lty C o lle g e a l 4: IS P .M lo c a l
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y w ill h o ld a
lim e , O c to b e r X , I N ) . In th e B o a rd
p
u
b
lic
h
e
a
rin
g
In
R
o
o
m
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l
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S e m ln o l* C o u n ly C o u r th o u s e
C o lle g e T h e fo llo w in g Is In c lu d e d :
S a n lo rd , F lo r id a , o n N O V E M B E R
A T H L E T IC T O IL E T
24. 1911 a t 2 00 P M , o r a * soon
F A C IL IT IE S
t h e r e * it e r a s p o s s ib le , t o c o n s id e r
B id d o c u m e n ts a re o p e n to
a s p e c ific la n d u s * a m e n d m e n t to
p u b lic In s p e c tio n In lh a o ffic e * o l
th e
S e m in o le C o u n ly
Com
F .W
D o d g e P la n R o o m a n d
p r e h e n s iv * P la n a n d R E Z O N IN G
C e n tr a l F l o r id a B u l l d t r s E i
o
f
t
h
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p
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p
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rty
.
c h a n g e In O rla n d o , a n d m a y ba
A N O R D IN A N C E A M E N D IN G
o b ta in e d o r re v ie w e d fr o m t h *
O R D IN A N C E
77 IS
W H IC H
o ffic e * o t G u tm a n * A s s o c ia te s ,
A M E N D S T H E D E T A IL E D L A N D
A r c h ite c ts , P la n n e r* . In c .. 10} N.
USE
ELEM ENT
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S a n lo r d . F l o r id a 12771, u p o n
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PLAN FRO M
re q u e s t a c c o m p a n le * b y S2S00
L O W IN T E N S IT Y U R B A N TO
d e p o s it p e r se t.
L
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D e p o s it w i ll b e re fu n d e d in l u l l
FOR
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FROM
41
m illin g b o n a H d a b id s a n d r e tu r n
A G R IC U L T U R E
TO R I A A A
o t d o c u m e n ts in gsod u s e a b le
S IN G L E F A M I L Y O W E L L IN O
c o n d illo n w ith in S d a y * a lt a r lh a
O l S T ., T H E
F O L L O W IN G
o p e n in g o f b id s . R etu n d s f o r s a ls in
D E S C R IB E D P R O P E R T Y
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s a m e b a sis o l r e t u r n o f d o c u m e n ts .
147 4 f t . , th e n c e S 71 d e g 14 W
C o n t r a c t o r s w h o o b t a in b id
M 7 41 I t, th e n c e S 2)0 I t. to th e
d o c u m e n ts a n d d o t o t b id t h *
P O B , a n d b e g in *1 t h * N W
p r o la c t, m u s t r e tu r n s a m e a t le a s t
c o m a r o f Sec . 11 21 X ru n E to E
10 d a y s b e fo ra lh a b id d a le , o r p a y
l i n t of M lc o u * S D (a ls o W R W
S I ) 00 p a r se t t o d t l r a v co st o t
lin e o l T u s h a w lll* R o a d ), th e n c e I
re p r o d u c tio n a n d h a n illn g , a * sa t
OS
de g W . 1,717.71 &lt;1 . th e n c e N I I
fo r th a b o v e .
de g W . 1,179 4 t t . to t h * W s e c tio n
Sub c o n tra c to rs a n d o th e rs m a y
lin e , ih e n c e N lo Ih e P O B ; IM S
o b ta in c o m p le te b id d o c u m e n ts
th e M lc o u * S O , P B 1, p g 7, a n d
u p o n d e p o s it ol [ i n 00 w h ic h w i ll be
Im s b e g in n in g a l t h * SW c o m e r o l
re fu n d e d , le ss S I) Of lo c o v e r
L o t 4 o l M ic o u s S D , ru n N W ly on
it p r o d u c lio n c o s t, up on r e tu r n o t
th e e a te n s io n o f t h * S lin e o f s a id
d o c u m e n ts In g o o d c o n d illo n
L o t 4 200 I t . , th a n e * N p e rw ith in ) d a y s a tta r o p e n in g o f b id s .
p
e n d lc u la r to th e N t in * o t Sac. I I ,
P a r tia l s e ts w i l l n o t be issu e d du e
lh
a n c a E to t h * W Una o f L o t 4.
to s it e a n d s c o p * o l p r o te c t.
lh a n c t S W Iy lo lh a P O B
E a c h b id m u t t b a a c c o m p a n ie d
A ls o lo ts I a n d 2 o f M ic o u s S O as
b y a c e r t if ie d c h e c k t r b id b o n d
re c o rd e d In P la t B ook i . P a g e 7. e l
issu e d b y a n a c c e p ta b le s u re ty
t h * P u b lic R e c o rd s o f S t m ln o it
c o m p a n y t o r n o t le ts th a n S p e r
C o u n ly . F lo r id a
c e n t o t t h * b a s e b id . T h * s u c c e s s fu l
( F u r t h e r d e s c rib e d a s 1 ) t e r n
b id d e r w i ll b e r e q u ir e d to f u r n is h
m o re o r le ss lo c a te d b e tw e e n L it t le
p e rfo rm a n c e b o n d a n * la b o r a n d
L
a
k e H o w e ll a n d T u i k a w l l l *
m a te r ia ls p a y m e n t b o n d , o a c h In
R o a d ) ( D IS T R IC T N o. 2)
t h * f u ll a m o u n t o l In * c o n lra c t
A P P L IC A T IO N H A S B E E N
s u m . Issued b y a b o n d in g c o m p a n y
S U B M IT T E D B Y A L L A N E.
lic e n s e d in F lo r id a a n * h o ld in g a n
K E E N - P Z I I I 4 1 1 ) 91.
A t ( A P lu s l r a tin g . E v ld t n c * o l
F u r th e r , th e P L A N N IN G A N D
u l d r a tin g w i ll b * ra g u lra d .
Z O N IN G
C O M M IS S IO N
OF
T h * s u c c e s s fu l b id d e r w i ll b *
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y w i ll h o ld a
re q u ir e d to s u b m it * c o m p le te l i l t
p u b lic h e a rin g In R o o m 200 o l lh a
o f s u b c o n tr a c to r s w h o w i l l be
S e m ln o l# C o u n ty C o u r th o u s a ,
p e rfo rm in g w o r k o n t h * p r o la c t.
S a n lo rd , F lo r id a , o n N O V E M B E R
p r io r t o r t l o a t * o t a n y p a r t ia l
4, 1911 A T 2 :0 0 P .M ., o r a s soon
p a y m e n t.
! h e re a fte r a s p o s s ib le , to r e v ie w ,
T o be e lig ib le lo r c o n s id e r a lig n ,
hear
c o m m e n ts
and
m ake
b id s m u s t c o m p ly w ith th a la w s o t
re c o m m e n d a tio n * to th a B o a rd o f
F lo r id * ,
a l l c o n d itio n s o t t h *
C o u n ty C o m m ls s lo n a ri on th e
s p e c ific a tio n s , a n d m u s t be m a d e
a b o v e c a p tio n e d o rd in a n c e a n d
o n a fa c s im ile o f t h * te r m In c lu d e d
re ro n ln g
w ith lh a c o n tr a c t d o c u m e n t* , in
A d d itio n a l In fo r m a tio n m a y b *
d u p lic a te , e n c lo s e d In a n o p a q u e
o b ta in e d b y c o n ta c tin g t h * L a n d
M a te d e n v e lo p e b e a r le g m * n a m e
M
a
n a g a m a n t M a n a g e r a t X I 4110,
a n d a d d re s s o l lh a b id d e r a n d
E s t. 140
m a rk e d :
P e rso n s u n a b le to a tte n d t h *
A T H L E T IC T O IL E T
h e a rin g w h o w is h to c o m m e n t on
F A C I L I T IE S
th e p ro p o s e d a c tio n s m a y s u b m it
a n d d e liv e r e d n o t la te r th a n d a le
w r it te n * 1*1 e m e r y 4 to th o L a n d
a n d h o u r m a n tio n a d a b o r t .
O w n e r re s e rv e s t h * r ig h t to M a n a g e m e n t O iv ls lo n p r io r l o th a
s c h e d u le d p u b lic h e a rin g . P a rs o n *
re le c t a n y o r a ll b id i o r c e rta in
p o rtio n s o f a b id a t M ip u la t td In a p p e a rin g a t t h * h e a r in g ) m a y
lh a F O R M O F P R O P O S A L , a n d to s u b m it w r it t e n s ta te m e n ts o r bo
(w a rd a r a lly .
w a ly a a n y I n l o r m i l i t i a s a n d
P e rs o n * a r e a d v is e d th a t, II th e y
la c h n lc a iltla s in b id d in g , a n d to
a w a rd t h * lo b Vi t h * b a s t in te re s t d e c id e to a p p e a l a n / d e c is io n
m
a
d * #1 th e s e m e e tin g s , th e y w ill
g l t h * O w n e r. N o b id M i l b * w ith ne e d a re c o r d Of th e p ro c e e d in g s ,
d r a w n l o r * p e rio d o f X d a is fr o m
a n d . h r s u c h p u rp o s e , th e y m a y
It* .
n e e d to e n s u re th a t a v e r b a tim
ra c o r d o t Ih e p r o c e e d in g * is m a d e ,
S e m ln o l* C o m m u n ity
w h ic h
ra c o rd
in c lu d e s
th e
D r . E a r l S. W e ld o n
t M t l m o n y a n d e v id e n c e u p o n
w h ic h th e appea&lt; is t o b a b a s a d .
C h a ir m a n
B o a rd g f C o u n ty C o m m is s io n e rs
B o a rd g l T ru s te e s
S e m in o le C o u n ty , F lo r id a
S e m ln o l# C o m m u n ity C o lle g e
B y : B o b e r! S tu r m , C h a ir m a n
B e v e rly p . L e e
A H *9 1: A r t h u r H . B e c k w ith . J r .
P u b lis h O c to b e r IS. I t . I B I t , I t
P u b lis h : O c t. X . N o v . I 14. M l
I I . 6 IS , ISBI
D E N 74
D E N B0

to

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24—Apts. A H o u m
To!

CLASSIFIED ADS
Seminole

Orlando-W inter Park

3 2 2 -2 6 1 1

8 3 1 -9 9 9 3

S IN G L E o r C o u p le t o s h a ra 1 1
p o o l h o m e . S a n lo r d N e a r
H o s p ita l a n d d o w n to w n . C a ll
r v t n l n g t a ft 4, I X 119)

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
RATES
H im *
................M e * lln*
HOURS
Ico nsacurtvo tl mgs S O c a llM
I 00 A M - S : 10 P M
M O N D A Y th ru F R ID A Y
S A T U R D A Y 9 N oon

7 com a cuti v a il mas ..........41c
10 cons# cu tivt t l i M l 17c a lino
11.00 M in im u m
■1 Lines M in im u m

W H Y B E L O N E L Y ? W r it* "G a t
A M a la " D a tin g S e rv ic * . A ll
ages P O Boa 4071, C le a r
w a t r r . F t 1 1 ) 1 9 _______
L O N L E Y T (111) 7917277 r e c o r d
* d m e n a g e (2 4 h r t l B r in g in g
P e o p le T o g e th e r D e lin g !
L O N E L Y ? N e w s ln g lM m a g .
S ta m p a d d re s s e n v e lo p * to r
Ire *
In to .
Bo*
1 1 0 (1 4 )
B o y n to n . F la . 1141).
O V E R W E IG H T m a n A w o m e n
re a d y lo l o t * w e ig h t? J o in an
4 S M tlo n n u tr it io n a l s lim m in g
c o u n t A th a n c o n d u c t y o u r
o w n c la s s t ic e l le n t in c o m e .
127 42 )7, 171 7492

L A Y O U T , F it t e r , W e ld e r, S he ar
A B ra k e O p e ra to rs A In d u s
t r i a l P a in te r . F ir s t a n d Second
S h u ts ,
Top
Pay.
G ood
B e n e llt* . C a ll F lo r id a ir o n
W o rk * In c . 177 0200
E X P E R IE N C E D m e a l c u tle r
F oo d B a r n In c ., 15th SI. P a r k
A y e . S a n fo rd
E X P E R I E N C E D S h o rt o r d e r
c o o k a p p ly F o o d B a r n In c . 2Sth
S I. A P a r k A v a .

9—Good T hings to E at

S to r 1 00
L a rg # P e p p e r*
.79
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1 l o r .7 *
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.79 u p
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4 lb s . 10 0
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l i b s . 10 0
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lib s . 100
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l i b s . 1.00
M u t tu A p p le *
lib s . 100
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l i b s . 100
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lib * , to o
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4 IbS. 1 0 0
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v , g a l. 1.99
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1.9*
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4 90
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G re e n *
*9
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1 ' ■ H e a d s C a b b a g e (o r
1 00
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bu. 100
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10 f o r 1.00
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**. 1 if

C IR C U L A T IO N O R P T .

E v e n in g H e rald
*

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We Take Food Stamps
LER O Y FARM S
SR 44
W atson's Old F a rm
•L U S C H A B IL IV S
OR D B I I S I O
7 D A Y S 9 4 . 44AIS14.

11—Instruct Ians

*

*

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*

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J O B H U N T IN G ?
HUNTUSUPI
EA SY TO F IN D
S E N D IN G P E O P L E
TO WORK
T IT L E C L E R K
D E N T A L A S S IS T A N T
D E N T A L R E C E P T IO N IS T
SALE SC LER K
LABO R ER
VENDER
E L E C T R IC IA N A T R A I N E E
ROOFERS
M UCH M U C H MORE1

R id g e w o o d A r g i l I B a re r*.
A p l i f r o m STS) 1 B a r m a ls o
a v a il P o o l, t tn m s c o u rt X I
*4 X
________
E N J O Y c a u n lr y liv in g ? 1 B d rm
A p ts . O ly m p ic i f .
P o o l.
S h e n a n d o a h V illa g e . O p e n 9 1 .
I l l 2921
WE
HAVE
A p a rtm e n t* .
O u p lo e s a n d H o u S M fo r R e n t
Ju n e P o r jig R e a lty 177 S*7*

too E L M A v t . , n e w ly r t m o d t la d ,

C L E A N la r g * lu iu r lo u s I B d r m .
A p t 10 t t c t llln g . C e ra m ic
B a th B a y w in d o w s , c a rp e t,
k it . e q u ip . U t il. p a id . I M k .
fro m
d o w n to w n
S a n fo r d .
A d u lts no p e t* M l O a k A va .
A IR P O R T B lv d .. S a n fo rd L a rg e
1 B d r m . 1 F u ll B a th , K itc h e n
e q u ip p e d 1 X ) 7744
M a r in e r 's V illa g e o n L a k * A d a 1
b d r m tr o m S7S0, ] b d r m fr o m
S I X L o c a te d 1 7 *1 l u l l S o u ln
o t A ir p o r t B lv d In S a n lo rd A ll
A d u lts . 1 2 )4 *7 0
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A p t*
S p a c io u s , m o d e rn 1 B d rrr), I
B a th a p t
C a rp e te d , k it
e q u ip p e d .
CHAA.
N ear
h o s p ita l A la k e A d u lts , ho
p e ts 4170 1 X 9 1 S 1

1 B d r m u n ta rn is h e d S IN . w ith
Sac. D a p . N * c h ild r e n
i B d r m D u p le i u n fu ra fs h a d S X *
$#C. D tp .
H e r a ld H a ll R e a lty I m . R a a lfa r
X 4 -1 X 4

AAA E M P L O Y M E N T
324-5174

31—Apartments Fumlshe

1917 F re n c h A v * .

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W A N T E D : m a tu r e la d y t o l lv a in
7 d a y s a n d 1 n ig h ts a w e a k ,
p r a p a ra m e a ls A c a r * lo r 7
I n v a li d la d le s In S a n lo r d
f M ld e n c a . C a ll 19 4 1 I 1 4 1 S I
w eekdays.

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t B d r m , 1 B a th S X ) 4 D e p o s it.
1 B d r m . I B a th S X ) 4 D e p o s it.
C a ll 1 )9 7)10 D a y s o r 111 SMS
E v e n in g * .

BOYS A GIRLS
AGES 13-17
EAM EXTRA $$
AFTER SCHOOL
CALL 322-2*11

E X P . M O T H E R . T L C In m y
h o m e . A n y d a y o r h o u r.
R e a s o n a b le R a ta 2211179

SPUROF THE M OM ENT
B A B Y S IT T IN G
1219144

LU XURY
APARTM ENTS.
F a m i l y A A d u lt s s e c t io n
P o o ls id e 7 B d r m s . M a s te r
C ove A p ts 121 7 9 * O p e n on
w eekends

P E R S O N lo d e liv e r P M . p i p e r
r p u l* 1 f l i y i p e r w e e k X I 4241
a lt 4 p .m g o o d p l y .

F O R th e U ltim a t e in
C h ild C a re A C h ild 's
W o rld 111 1414

D A Y lim e b a b y s illin g in m y
h o m e , n o w e e k e n d s , h a v e re f
111 0411

30-A p artm en ts U nfurnishc

14—Help Wanted

6—Child Care

SANFO RD R * a ) w k ly A
m o n th ly r a le s U l ll In c K it.
SCO O a k A d u lt * 441 7141
R O O M S fo r R e n t
P r lv it * E n tra n c *
122 31)1

DEADLINES
Noon The Day Before Publication
Sunday-Noon Friday

4—Personals

29— Rooms

F A S T F O O D O P E R A T IO N
G ood s a la r y , h o s p lta llta tio n , I
w e e k p a id v a c a tio n e v e r y a
m o n th s
E ip e r ltn c a
not
n e c e s s a ry P ho ne M a n a g e r
l a te M « ry 4* - H U M S

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S A N F O R D C O IY C O T T A O R
I r . s h e d l ia O d n . U U m o .
C A S S R L B R R R Y F U R N A F T I.
I b d r m , u t il, S7S d r. 4250 m o .
I b d r m , 2 a c re * , u t il, U S w k .

S A V -O N -R E N T A Li
S e m in a l*
119-7X 4
SAV ON R E N T A L S R B A L T O R
F u r n is h e d a p a rtm e n ts fo r S e n io r
C lllia n s . I I S P a lm e tto A v # ., J .
C o w a n . N o p h o n o c a lls .

NOTICE
B IN 6 0

A V O N R E P R E S E N T A T IV E S
T h * P a r t T im * C a re e r
044-M 7 9 - C o lle c t M l 1704

T e n n is In s tr u c tio n — U S P T .A .
C e r tifie d G ro u p o r P r lv a l t
lessons C h ild re n a s p e c ia lty
D a u g M a lic ta w s k l
2211X7.

M A T U R E B o o k k e e p e r. H o u rs
n e g o tia b le . A p p ly In p e rs o n .
S a n lo rd N u r s in g a n d C on
v a la s c t n l
C e n te r .
9S0
M e llo n v illa A v * .

K N IG H T S O F
C O LU M B U S

1 1 -H e lp Wanted

W A N T E D tw o w it h p le a s a n t
te le p h o n e y o k e , a ls o tw o w ith
s m a ll c a r t o r lig h t d e liv e r y .
P h o n o D a l* X 1 4 N I .

Thursday 7:M
Sunday 7:30

R IG H T n o w w * n e e d a le w go o d
s a le s p e o p le w h o h a v a lh a
a m b itio n a n d d e d ic a tio n lo
su cce e d I t th a t's y o u . th a n
w e re p re p a re d to o ile r you
re a l re w a rd s a n d lh a m e th o d s
lo ge t th e m F o r In te rv ie w ,
p le a s * c a ll C e n tu r y 21. H a y M
R e a lly S t r v ic t * . In c ., f a n lb r d
111 10M

Ltgal Notice
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
N o lle * I t h e re b y g iv e n th a t w *
a r * e n g a g e d In b u s lrw s s a l n l
R o s a lia O r ly * . S a n lo rd . F lo r id a
X 7 7 1 , S e m ln o l# C o u n ty , F lo r id a ,
u n d a r th * f lc llllo u i n a m e o f
C R E A T IV E
IL L U M IN A T IO N - '
S .and th a t w a In la n d t o r e g is te r
s a id n a m e w ith th a C la rk o f th a
C ir c u it C o u rt, S e m ln o l* C o u n ty ,
F lo r id a , In a c c o rd a n c e w ith t h *
p ro v ls lo n a o t lh a F i c t lt lo u t N a m *
S ta tu tM , To w i t : S e c tio n 1 4 )0 9 ,
F lo r id a S ta tu tM . 1 9 0 .
J e ffr e y S. J a c k s o n
K a n t 4. Ja ckson
P u b lis h ; O c t o b e r I I , 1 4 , 17,
N o v e m b e r 1, I N I
DENSJ

C IT Y O F L A K E M A R Y
F L O R ID A
L I O A L N O T IC E
P U B L IC N O T IC E
S u m m a r y A v a lla a a * « | F V
194119*2 B u d f t t
A ll In ltr a s la d p a rs o n * a r *
h e re b y n o lilfa d t h a t a s u m m a r y a t
t h * F is c a l Y e a r I N I 41 b u d f M o t
t h * C ity o f L a k e M a r y in c lu d in g
th a In la n d ad u s e * o f F e d e ra l
R evenue
S h a r in g
fu n d *
li
a v a ila b le f o r p u b lic In s p e c tio n
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d o c u m e n ta l Io n
n te n s a ry
to
s u p p o rt
th *
s u m m a ry
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a v a lla b t t d r a m 4 :0 4 A M . t * 4 : M
F .M . a n M o n d a y s th ro u g h F r id a y s
X : C ity H a ll, 1S4 N o r th C o u n try
C lu b R o a d . L a b * M a r y , F lo r id a
1174*.
C IT V O F L A K S M A N Y ,
F L O R ID A
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D A T E D : O c to b e r IS . I N I
P u b lis h : O c to b e r X . I N I
DEN *4

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1IE 4 O a k A v t . ,

W in 42S-I100
'H a llo w e e n G h o s ts ' C a n 't S c a r*
A w a y C la s s ifie d A d R a s u lts
H e ra .
C h i p ie r
X
H w y . 1? n

O et

p le n ty - o l
p ro s p e c ts
A d v e rtis e y o u r p r o d u c t o r
s a r v ic * in th # C lM S ifle d A d s

'H A IR s t y lis t a a p . m a d id f u ll
lin t,
som a
f o llo w in g
p r e fe r r e d L a k e M a r y X I 4 X 1

31— SftuBfiom Wtartftd
J o d y 's R a n t A M o m — O n c a ll 14
t r ? " W a C a ra S e rv ic e In y o u r
H o m e " . P h o n e ( M ) l 94 2 *0 7 4
Spec l a i d b ig In S P U R O F T H E
M O M E N T F U N C T IO N S A
E M E R G E N C IE S . C h ild C a ra ,
P a re n t C a r t , H o u se C a re .
Booh n e w ( o r H o lid a y D a tM .

2 4 -B u s in m O pportunity
TW O q u e s tio n s
W ill y o u be
I in a n e t a lly in d e p e n d e n t in i to
S y e a rs ? A r t y o u p a id w h a t
you a r e w o r m ? I I n o t c a ll X I

4 M O N E Y S F D R C H R IS T M A S
T w r it e w a y for w o m a n to e a rn
m o n e y f o r C h r is tm a s o r y e a r
r o u n d . C a ll t o d a y f a r In
le r v t t w , i x X I *

* * * * * * * * * * * * *
TO UCH O F C U S S
R ts ta u ra n t - Leung*
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s e a t,

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o p e ra tio n . L iq u o r I k w w * .

C A L L B O B B O SK I ,
R E A LT O R ASSOC
S t-9 44 4 a r BM . 1M *
O L A S S A P F IIP P Ir / in c .
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H E R A LD PAPER ROUTE
FO R S A LE
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S tu ff) a f S e n f j r ^
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1st Tuet. 7 .M
C ocktail Lounge open Mw
thru fat. I I N aanIIU 9
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w ttfc T TDM is a n W aal w a y
fa u n a rm lh a p u M k a f y g y r
d u * a cihriU aa.

^ * 7 p &lt;POLISH

N A T IO N A L

ALLIAI
LO D G E X U
N an
fa r
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p m . e v e r y 4 th S urW l
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C L A U IF IID
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31—A p artm e nts Furnished
E F F IC IE N C Y , w ith
s to v e ,
r e lr ig . n r d o w n to w n . *17$ m o
l i t . la s t m o
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OUR BO AR DIN G HOUSE

41—Houses

41—Houses

!

w ith M a jo r H oopla

» I L L D IR T 4 T O P S O IL
Y E LLO W SAND
C a ll C la rk 4 H r t 371 75*0

R O B B I K ’S
REALTY

H arold H all

R E A LT O R . M LS
m i S F re n c h
S u ite 4
S a n fo rd

• * • » * ® ro o m lo re n IT L e t i c la s s ifie d t d l,n d a I r n a n t to r
ro u t

24 HOUR

322*9283

REALTOR

m in t

323-5774

WE h a n d l e r e n t a l s
B E S T B U Y IN S A N F O R O ! 2
b d rm w n e w p a in t A c a rp e l,
s e p a ra te D R . e a t in k it . Ig
b d rm s * qood a s s u m p tio n a t
o n ly 424,to o t 1

31A—Duplexes
t . S A N i O R D s p m io u s ? b a r.
' l b th . a ir . d ra p e s
• • 1140 m o . d r p J]» ( n ;

32—Houses U nfurnished

R E D U C E D S U O M I ) b d rm . I
b a th h o m e to n e d R e s tr ic te d
C o m m e r c ia l w ith 135 le e t on
h ig h w a y fo r p r im e e ip o s u r e
N o w iu s t 441 t o o l ■

J B D R M h o u se t o r r e n t SJ50 m o
SI00 d t p N o p e ts , c h d d re n a r e
tin e C e n tr a l A ir . fe n c e d y a rd ,
d o t e to to w n 123 0410 o r
r,
I *W 2*2 71at

2

STORY
APT HOUSE C o m p le te ly r r m o d e le d w n e w
w i r i n g , p lu m b in g , s m o k e
a la r m s . 3 p a d d le Ia n s + la rg e
ro o m s P o s itiv e c a s h H o w 4
e i c e l l e n t f in a n c in g ' Y o u ’ d
b e lte r h u r r y o t o n ly S47.40011

j'o d r m . 2 B w ith
d o u c ilt c a r g a ra g e , In
D e lto n a C a ll Sti 1432

_______ 333-5774

n Ew Energ y
e f f ic ie n t h o m e

a lh c

W hen y o u p la c e a C la t s ilie d A d
.n T h e E v e n in g H e r a ld , s la y
clo s e to y o u r p h o n e b e c a u s e
s o m e th in g w o n d e r fu l is a b o u t
to h a p b fn

L O C H A R B O R I 3 C H A . c a rp e l,
g a ra g e p o rc h , le n c e . shade.
- S450 » d e p o s it P h o n e 111 JOT*

A

SANTORO LAN D M A R K
S p a cio u s a n d lo v e ly 2 S to ry
H o m e 4 B d r m , 3 ' , B a lh .
f o r m a l L iv in g a n d D in in g
R oo m
C h a rm in g in t e r io r 7
B d rm
S e r v a n ts Q u a r t e r s
L a rg e
c o rn e r
lo t
w ith
B e a u tifu l T te e s 1220 S P a rk
SI 54200

S A N F O R D . 1 b a r. I b th , M a p g ll.
t ta m e d O a k llo o r s , c u s to m
c u r ta in s , F I R m , c a r p o r t. Ig
' fe n c e d y a rd , k e n n e ls . 13 t r u it
tre e s 1125 B e fo re t A M o r a ft t
P M J22 « 2 »
1__________________________________
L E A S E o p tio n to b u y , n ic e 2
b d r m . H i b th . A C h o m e 117}
131 4S70

Cal I Bart
R EAL ESTATE
H F A L T O R 172 f w *

S A N F O R D 1 b d r , 3 b lh . a p p lic .
in c lu d in g w d . n o p e ts 1375
D i p re q 121 H 77, ] J 2 3*a»
M AKE
C L E A N 1 b d r m , H i b th , C H A .
t r u i t t r e e s , s lp r a g e s h e d ,
1 w a s h e r d r y e r SU S 123 l i s t

your

ro o m
to
sto re
w in 1 e r h e m s

s e ll

DON T

NEEDS”

FAST w it h a w a n t a d
P h e n e 122 3*11 o t *11 992) and
a f r ie n d ly A d V is o r w i ll h e lp
rOu

1 B D R J b in *140 m o n th
1st A la s t * s e c u r ity
131 44*1
] B O R M . H i B a th , C e n t H A .
W a ll to w a ll c a rp e t 1350 m o *
sec D e p 121 415*
B D R M . 2 b th . a p p l. le n c e .
d o u b le g a ra g e 205 S a r ila S t.,
S a n lo rd , 122 1IS1

T H E C E N T U R Y 21 S Y S T E M
H E L P S m o te p e o p le b u y a n d s e ll
m o re f r a l e s ta te th a n a n y o n e
e lse in A m e r ic a C a ll to d a y
a n d le i .1 w o r k lo r y o u C a li
121 1040
M a ye s R e a l E s la le
S e rv ic e s . In c
*14 W 2 S in S I
S a n lo rd
E a c h o f fic e is in d e p e n d e n tly
o w n e d a n d o p e ra te d

2 B D R M , I B a th
1250 * 1350 D ep
131 4*1*

4 b d r m . H v b lh , w w c a rp e t, co n .
H A a p p il, la r g e fe n c e d y a rd
w po o l 1400 133 0 2 U

P R IC E re d u c e d 1 B d r m , I B a lh ,
Lo w do w n p o ym e n *. No
c lo s in g c o m L o c a te d a t 1107
S u m m e r lin A v e . C a ll o w n e r
(1 4 2*11

33—Houses Furnished
D E L T O N A — E x e c u tiv e ty p e
h o m e 2 b d r. I 11 b lh . s e p a ra ta
d in in g a re a , w w c a r p a l. Irg
lig h te d c lo s e t* , m o d e rn k it .
c e n H A . d o t e d g a ra g e N o
.p e ts 1134

ALL FLO RIDA REALTY
OF SANFORD REALTOR
1 B D R M . 2 b lh , s p ill p la n . A I
c o n d it io n
P r ic e d
SS1.T00
o w n e r fin a n c in g

574*1040

S U P E R b u y lo r 0 p ro fe s s io n a l
b u il d i n g
a m p le
p a r k in g ,
lo c a te d o n w e ll tr a v e le d s tre e t
141.900

j 37—Business Property
F p r re m o r le a s e — 10.120 sq I t
, I n d u s tr ia l o r w a re h o u s e 0t |
W l i t St . S a n fo rd 12 ) 110(1

IF you a r e lo o k in g to r s o m e th in g
to d o o n y o u r o w n , th e n SI 500
c o u ld p u l y o u m b u s in e s s in
I h i l c o n s ig n m e n t Ih o p C a ll lo r
d e ta ils

37-B— Rental Offices

1144 1 F r e n c h
111 o u t
A lte r H o u r s ; 1 4 * « 0 0 0 .122 077S

O tflc o S pa ca
F o r Lease
*10 77J1

L K H A R N E Y e s l I t l m n f 2 a c re
Ik I r n l I t 1, w p o o l a n iio u s

| D O C T O R S O l li c t lo r t e « lo In
f I c h o ic e o re a n e a r H a t p ila l.
A lio s id e S I. O tlic a sp aca
‘ a v a ila b le . H a r o ld H a ll R a a lty
j In c . R a a lta r 11 ) 1774._________

1121.000
W O O D M E R E s p it I P , m a n y
a i l r a t o w n e r m a y h o ld w ilh I 1
d o w n 115.000

J U B le a s in g s m a ll a re a In
i. S a n lo rd , lo c a te d n a a r h o s p ita l
1 ; F o r lu r t e r I n lo r m e lto n c o ll
* S ie ve .B a rn e s 111 0*00
- f J - -----------

M B L E h o m e s g lw 3 3 4 d b lw
lu r n 2 2 4 lo t w d o c k SI Jo h n s
R iv e r 171.500 4 SIS.500

-------------------N G A 4 N C m m lo t i
SANFO RO REALTY
R EALTO R
123-117*
A ll. H r * . 113-4SS4.11) 4)41

K JsH
i

!

;i

1

\ i

114041
M fe r h r t

M LS
111 2114 a n d 111 4213

• U i 1-0041

^

{T E M P E R AG ENC Y

\ i»

m

REALTOR

PARK p l a c e

t

l i p s . n g t o r a io b T T h e C la s s ifie d
$ d t w i l l h e lp y o u h n d Ih e t 100

In c
E v e s 122 0*12
207 E IJ I h S I

F in a n c in g !
( t f C A T lI V E
4 c a* d remm y M a n o r. 1 B d r m , H i
ba
N t w c a r p e l 4 p a in t ,
c a r p o r t R e a r la n c e d B ig lo l

9».»00 111 1011
l a p RIRNM . 1 b lh . c a r p o r t , c a n H A ,
c i ir
r pp ee l, 2 0 i20 g a ra g e , la n c e d
, b * c k y a r d , d e e p w a ll. SM .500
m a k e re a s o n a b le o tte r
J 500 On a s s u m e m o r tg a g e . n o
go a I ily in g c a ll H I 5500

L A K E F H O N T 20 Acres Deilona.
T e rm s 1 M 000
W M a lic io w s k i R e a lto r
127 72*1

43-B— Lots &amp; Acreage
_______ Wanted

B E A U T IF U L F o r m r r 2 B d rm . 2
B a th M o d e l H o m e in D e lto n a
M a n y O e c o r to u c h e s ! A ll th e
e i t r a i P lu s lo ts m o r e l O n ly
H i Y r s O ld ! 1*4,*00

W A N T E D 100 to 200 a c re s in
O ra n g e o r S e m in o le C o u n tie s ,
to n e d to r m o b ile h o m e su b
d iv is io n Send a ll d e ta ils m
c lu d m g lo c a tio n , to P O B o *
l l * ( . O c a la . F la 17*71

C O N D O 1 B d r m , I B a th in
S a n d a lw o o d V in o s . C o n t H A .
W W C a rp e t, E q u ip p e d K it.
c h in , W a s h e r a n d d r y e r a n d
m u c h m o re . C o m m . P o o l a n d
C lu b h o u s t. 134,foo,

46B- Investment

__

C A LL A N Y T IM E

FO U R TOW NES
R E A L T Y IN C B R O K E R
* * 1 4 2 ) 0 a n y tim e

w » z fc » f4 trr

214 S a n lo rd A v e a d jo in s a b o v e
p r o p e rty 3575 sq te e ! o tte rs
m a n y b u s in e s s p o s s ib ilitie s

BATEM AN REALTY
NO
REASO NABLE
o ile r
re fu s e d 1 I ' , B lk E a l in K it
F P . C a rp e t, re a d y lo m o v e In
L g A s s u m e M tg
C o n s id e r
re n tin g A s k in g Sle.200

47—Real Estate W anted

W e b u y e g u i ly m H o u s e s
a p a rtm e n ts , v a c a n t la n d a n d
A c re a g e
L U C K Y IN V E S T
M E N T S , P O B o . 2500. San
lo r d . F la 12771 177 4741

41-B—Condominium*
For Sale

T h e s o o n e r y o u p ie c e y o u r
c la s s ifie d a d . th e s o o n e r you
g e l r e s u lt !

d a n k financ ing a v a ila b le
S IN H w y 17-22
C a s s e lb e rry
1270 O L D S C u tla s s ,
c o n v e rt P o w e r. A C F M
I o w n e r 17500 12 ) 2002

G et o n Y o u r B r o o m s tic k — C le a n
U p ! S w ee p U p ! a n d L i l t y o u r
• 'O o n 't
W a n ts "
In
th e
C la s s ifie d !

V a c a tio n tim e is h e re g e t w h a t
you n e e d lo r a h a p p y tim e w ilh
. C ta s s itie d Ad

127) F O R D T o r in o M 2 PS. a ir ,
n e w tir e s , ru n s g o o d B od y
ru s te d 1600 J2 J» W 4

P * * '7 lC t '

‘

‘

A l

,&lt; V

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB
To List Your Business...
Dial 322-2611 or 8 3 1 -9 9 9 3

M iscellaneous fo r Sale

L I K E n e w a ir c o n d i , to o ls ,
fo r m ic a c a b in e ts . 4 m il e 224
L a k e Ire n e R d 1)1 23OT

42—Mobile Homes

P riy b d ld ru t* %6t
ur
10
P d V m cflt% i/ sg Si-r* 4»t S.irrtord

'y t'w n y C e n te r. S a n fo rd P ia ia

51—Household Goods
S IO R IN G IT M A K E S W A S T E S E L L IN G IT M A K E S C A S H
P L A C E a C L A S S IF IE D A D
N O W C a ll 122 2*11 o r 111 2221
R A D IO Control airplane. SI7S.
la rg e wood b d r m l e t 1125 .
waterbed m a l lr e t * U S . green
v e lv e t c h a ir |J ), solid m a p le
end and c o ffe e t a b le t S75,
c a lc u la to rs and m lt c items
121 6*50

S L IM
BUDGETS
ARE
B O L S T E R E O W IT H V A L U E S
\ ROM
THE
W ANT
AD
C O LU M N S
c tt e c K t h is o u t
12*7 R o y a l O a k s 7*
w id r 1 b d r. 7 b lh . g a rd e n tu b
d c lu n e c a r p e l, c a t h e d r a l
c e ilin g s , b r ic k fir e p la c e , w ood
S id in g . S h in g le ro o t, p a d d le
ta n a n d m a n y m o re e i l r e t
O n ly 124.200 V A fin a n c in g nO
m oney dow n.
10 •• d o w n
c o n v e n tio n a l See o t U n c le
R o y s M o b ile H o m e S a le s o t
L e e s b u rg . U S M w y 441 S 204
7*7 0574 O p e n w re k d a y s I
7 X) Sun 17 a

52—Appliances
2 C o m m e r c ia l d r y e r * , te e a l
L a k e M a r y c o in la u n d r y | lo o
e a c h 172 517*
S E A R S m ic r o w a v e
• • c e lle n l c o n d itio n
P h o n e 227 72*0

A ir Conditioning

S E R V IC E , I n s la lla lio n , A ir
cond .
r e tr ig ,
w e th e rs ,
d ry e rs , c e d in g Ia n s , m in o r
p lu m b in g R e a s N o s e rv ic e
c h a rg e w ith r e p a ir 105 57*
* ia a
______________
L o o k . n g lo r e io b * The C lis t if ie d
A ds w i ll h e lp you f in d th a t |ob

A n im a l H a v e n H o a rd in g an d
G r o o m in g K e n n e ls S h a d y ,
in s u la te d , s c re e n e d f ly p ro o f
•n tid e
o u ts id e r u n t
Fans
A lv a AC c a g r t W e c a te r to
yO ur p e ts
S f a r lih q s tu d
r e g is t r y ’ P h 32JL5/)J_
S n c i* N il I K e n n e l o M rr» td rt A
D og t i e d B d t m
IS u p 74
H o u r. F u ll S e rv ic e SASSM?

O c t o b e r is F i r e P r e v e n t io n
M o n th C le a n u p a n d S e ll ou t
w ith a H e r a ld C la s iilie d A d

C a m p ie te C e r a m ic T i l t S e rv
w a lls , llo o r s . c o u n te rto p s , re
m o d e l, r r p e ir F r r s t J l V O i ll

11*000
C O L O R T V S 7) S te re o c o n t o l*
w ith r e v e r b 1 7 5 .1 t r a c k p t a y t r
re c o r d e r 1 7 )* * 7 0

C O M M E R C IA L 1 A C R E S O N 17
21 N E A R
LAKE
MARY
B O U L E V A R O 1110.000

S E IG L E R R E A L T Y
BR O KER
3745 H W Y. 17-92
321-0440

I L E V E R a c tio n 1 0 ) 0 r if le s , )
p is to ls . I b la c k p o w d e r r t t to , i t
H P w tw o l h o n e t r a c to r » )
0753 a f t S p m

m %m

R e m o v a l, c le a n u p s ,
s m a ll tr e e r e m o v a l,
w o o d c u t t in g . 12 1022 *

L A W N c a r * to l u l l y o u r needs,
r u b b is h
r e m o v a l.
C a ll
e v e n in g s *71 7 5 **

B. E. Link Const.
322-7029

Home Improvement
C E N T R A L F L O R IO A H O M E
IM P R O V E M E N T S '
P a n lm g R o o fin g C a r p e n tr y
L ‘ ( B o n d e d 4 G u a ra n te e d
F re e E s lim a t t s 321 l i s t
j 4 B M o m * im p r o v e m e n l —
C e rp * n , r Y w o rk 04 e n y ty p e
Root re p e ir s . g u lle t w o rk ,
p a in tin g l in le n o r o r o t a r i c r l ,
p lu m b m g . s p e c ia l'! * in m o b ile
h o m e r e p a ir s 4 ro o t c o a tin g ,
a n d w o o d p a tio d e c k s F r e t
e s tim a te 52) *0 5 *

It

I

Clock Repair

y o u e r a h a v in g d if f ic u lt y
tm d m g a e x a c t lo liv e , c a r lo
d r iv e , a fo b , o r s o m e s e rv ic a
you h a v e n e e d o t, re e d a ll o u r
w a n t e d s e v e ry d a y

S t a r t I n d ia n S u m m e r I n a
’ ’ T e e P te ” o t y o u r o w n , c h e c k
R e e l E s ta te B e r g q m t .

F in a n c in g A v a ila b le

Roofing
R O O F S , le a k s r e p a ir e d . R e p la c e
r a tte n e a v e s a n d s h in g le w e r k .
lic e n s t 'd . in s u r e d , b e n d e d
M ik e 111 « ) t l

l p r o v id e r e p r e s e n ta tio n e l th e
A d m in is tr a tiv e L e w J u d g e
L e v e l t o r c la im a n ts w h o h a v e
b e e n lu r r ie d d o w n lo r re c o n
s t d t r e tlo n
» ) an i
R l c h l r d A S c h w ir t l A lly .
I l l M a g n o lia A y * .
D a y to n a B e e c h . F L 1201

R O O F IN G o l *11 k in d s c o m
m e r c U l 4 r e it d e n lle l B on d e d
4 in s u re d 17) 35*7

C h r is tia n R o o tin g 17 y r s r i p
142 5750. tr e e e s l R e to o lin g ,
s p e c ia lilr in r r p * i f w o r k 4
n e w ro o tin g

Mini U-Lock

S O U T H E R N R O O f IN G IS v M
r ip
t r ro o tin g , t e a l s p e c ia l
ill
D e p e n d a b le 4 h o n e s t
p fite D a r o r m g h l 27 1IM I

‘ N E W C o n c re te B u ild in g s , o il
siiesSTO 4 u p . A l 1 4 4 SR 4 * I
* I n d u it l r o l P a r k , 22) o u t .

SindblaitinQ
Nursing Center
IA N D B L A S T I N O
O A V IS W IL O IN O
H I *1 *2 . S A N F O R O

OUR R ATES AR E LO W ER
L t k t v i t w N u r s in g C a n te r
2 )2 E S econd St , S a n fo rd
3)7 *7 0 f

Small Homo Repair

Painting

S M A L L h o m e r e p a ir s , ro o t
r e p a ir , tre e e sl
A ll w o rk
g u a ra n te e d 1 1 1 I4 *S

P a c n tin g 4 R e p a ir s
Q u a lity w o rk F r t a E s l, D isc
lo S e n io rs I M 1*20 R e le r

H e ilm a n

Sodding

O c to b e r’ s F ly in g . L e a v e s e r e
F a ilin g B u i C la s s ifie d k e e p
B u y e rs c e llin g 122 7*11

C 4 J L A W N C A R E . N o io b to o
s m e ll R es. e n d C o m m F r e e
ESI 11 4 *0 5 1 o r 712 4)20

Painting A or
Pressure Cleaning

Sprinklan
IN S T A L L
and
R e p a ir .
R e s id e n tia l a n d C o m m e r c ia l.
F re e E s l. S74 *0 5 * o r 212 *220

N o to b lo o U r g e o r s m e ll
Q u a lity a m u s t C a ll 137 0071
R e fe re n c e s F r E s t
It

y o u e r a h a v in g d if f ic u lt y
l i n i n g a p la c e , t o liv e , c a r to
d r iv e . * io b , o r s o m e s e rv ic e
yo u h a v o n e e d o l. re e d *11 o u r
w a n t ads e v tr y day.

K it, b a th 4 a d d itio n s . Q u a lity
w o r k m a n s h ip in a l l h o r n *
im p ro v e m e n ts
L IC E N S E D 4 IN S U R E D
C ALL K E N TAYLO R
U I I2S4

Tractor Wark
BUSHHO G m o w in g
G R A D IN G
&gt;7) 5717

Plumbing
FONSECA
P LU M B IN G
R e p a irs , e m e r g e n c y s e rv ic e ,
s e w e r d r a in c le a n in g . U ) *075

Landscaping
LAR G E T R IE i N I T A l l I t
L a n d s c a p in g . O M L a w n * R e
p f a t M la s s s o i

G W ALTN EY j e w e l e r
734 5 P a r k A v a
172 * 502_____________

W e h a n d le in *
W h o le B a llo t W as

SOCIAL SfCURITV
DISABILITY CLAIMANTS

G a ra g e s a le s a r e m se aso n T e ll
th e p r o p le a b o u t it w ith a
C la s s ifie d A d m th e H e ra ld
377 7*1 f i l l Y r v j

M f iN T Z C R T lL I
N e w or f r p * r, le a k , s h o w e rs o u r
spec a i f f 75 yvs E « p I * * 45*7

57A-O um AAm m o
G U N a u c tio n S u n d a y N o v
S a n lo rd A u c tio n
I2 IJ S F r e n c h A v e
M o r e w ife 22 ) 71*0

P a m im g c a r p e n lr y , e ll ty p e s o t
h o m e re p a ir s C a ll lo r I r e *
e s tim a te 177 t f f S

K .T. R E M O D E L IN G

Ceramic T1la

G E N E V A 20 A C R E S W O O D E D .
C O C H R A N R O A D I1 .M 0 P E R
A C R E M A Y D I V ID E

Rem odeling Specialist

trash

S H IE L D S C O N S T R U C T IO N
A d d it io n s ,
r e m o d e lin g ,
d e s ig n s G u a r S ta le L ic e n s e
P r o m p t e s tim a te s
*77 5)27

G o o d U ta d T V ’s . S2S 4 u p
M IL L E R S
2*12 O rla n d o F r .
P n 127 0)52

G E N E V A 7 'r A C R E S W O O D E D
Z O N E D M O B I L E U7.S0O

D U N R IT E L a w n S te v lc a . M o w ,
e d g e , t r i m , v a c u u m , m u lc h ,
sod R e a s 122 252*

L e g a l S e rv ic e !

Handyman

fO W E R S B E A U T Y S A L O N
M J R M L R l Y H a r r ie t ! s B e a u ty
N ook 512 E I t l SI . 377 5742

53—TV- Radio- Stervo

O STEEN U ACRES W OODED
PAVED ROAD FRO NTAG E

)? ' | j ; i

Q u a lity e le c tr ic a l w o rk 72 y r s
e « p e r te n c e M in o r re p a ir s lo
c o m p le te w it in g 577 0712

Beauty Cart

2FO O TCHEST
FREEZER
P H O N E 277 72*0
K e n m o re p a r ls . s e rv ic e , u tv o
w a s h e rs M O O N E Y A P P L I
A N C E S )7 7 0*27

TALL
1 U .5 0 0

A c t* n r H eal

H auling*
Yard Work

Building Contractor

.

I M A N Q U A L I T Y O P E R A T IO N
* its i*«p P a fto s. D r it e w a y s
sic

R E N T A W a s h e r D ry e r .
R e fr ig e r a to r , o r TV
2 0 . 775 *225

FRONT

OSTEEN
W OODED
A C H E S 117.500 T E R M S

C om re f r
A in c f iiA s a d d a
ro o m tr e e e s tim a te * k m i m i

C o n c re te W o rk fo o le rs , llo o r s L
p o o ls
L e n d ic e p ’ n ? L sod
w o rk f r e w e s t J2J M 0J

T L C W IT H "R U T H
D o g g ro o m in g , s m a ll B re e d s SI
F r*«
p ic k
u p . d e liv e r y
L o n g w o o d a r e a 1)1 12)3

W IL S O N M A IE R F U R N IT U R E
111 U S E F IR S T ST
122 S672

43—Urts-Acraage

It A f H S fctfchE-nv fo o lin g block,

Boarding A Groomi ng

51-A—furniture

R a m o d tlin g

L a w n M a ln ta m n o a

Appliance Repair

L E V I J E A N S *. JA C K E TS
A R M Y N A V Y S U R PLU S
310 S e n fn rrl A y e
W l S7*1

121*4 1 B D R M . 7 b th . A H . I i l 0
sh e d in C a r r ia g e C o v e 17.000
122 0414 a l l 4 p m

C oncrete Work

C h ris w i ll s e rv ic e AC s. r e fn y ,
ir e r i e r s , w a i r r c o o le rs . m i$ c
f a ll! i l l SSI)
_________

SiNGEH /*g Zsn find (jb-rv!

N E W N o b ility , } b d r. 2 b th . d b l
w d e . s h in g le r o o t . ' w o o d
S id in g O ct s p e c ia l H i . 225
d e liv e r e d 4 se t up
O pen S unday*
U n c le R o y * M o b ile
H o m e Sa le s O t
L r e s b u rg Y O i 717 0J74

Additions A
Remodeling

Electrical

SEW AND SAVE

See o u r b e a u t if u l n e w B R O A D
M O R E , I r o n ! 4 r e e r B R 's
G R E G O R Y M O B IL E H O M E S
J*01 O rla n d o D r
1 2 )12 00
V A 4 F M A F in a n c in g

OSTEEN
S ACRES
P IN E S . S C R U B O A K
TERM S

_ J l

* B &amp; H A u to S a le s *
★ 339 7 9 0 9 *

H O N D A P a s s p o rt 12(0
L o w m ile a g e S500
C a ll 17 ) 0*47 a lt *

W A N T TO B U Y A
H E A T E R 74*24
C A L L 27 7 0147

X L

W e p a y c a s h to r 1st 4 2nd
m o rtg a g e s R a y L e g g . L ie .
M o r tg a g e B r o k e r 1)2 77(2
SO—

a r e a

i7i ana

W hen y o u p la c e a C la s s ifie d A d
in The E v e n in g H e r a ld , s la y
close lo y o u r p h o n e b e c a u s e
s o m e th in g w o n d e r fu l is a b o u t
lo h a p p e n

T O Y O T A C o r o lla a s iu m e
p a y m e n t l i s t p e r m o . b a la n c e
S4C0Q G o o d r u n n in g c o n d itio n
1)00 d o w n r n 75(1

CONSULT OUR
V )

%
V

72
YAMAHA

47-A—M ortgages Bought
&amp; Sold

D ELTO N A
c o n d o m in iu m !
lo c a te d n e e r L a k e M o n ro e . 1
b d r . 2 b tn , u n it o v e r lo o k in g
s w im m in g p o o l 111.200 C e ll
c o lle c t 111* 12 00*1

f a lls

1

S p rin g .* M o le o u l*&lt; d e t im e "
G et p a tio a n d la w n f u r n it u r e a t
a g o o d p r ic e
R e a d tn e
C la s s ifie d A ds

400CC. low
m deaqe
lik e n e w A s k in g
SI00 57) 7.116

127a

W A N T lo b u y a g o o d
u s e d s lid e p t o ie c to r

4»

-

fO P D o lla r P a id lo r J u n k 4
u s e d c a ts , tr u c k s 4 h e a v y
e q u ip m e n t 17 2 5 220

78—Motorcycles

P A P E R b a c k B o o k s W e s te rn .
A d v e n tu r e R o m a n c e . C o m ic s
B a n y F u r n it u r e 577 2504

C A S H F O R E Q U IT Y
W e c e n c io s e m a th r s
C e llB a r t R e a l E s la le 172 7421

321-075V Eve 322-7443

W O O D E D R llf E R
A C R E 175.000

B U IL D IN G S A L L S T E E L
10 *4 0 ' S3,272. 40 *60 S* 392
4* *1 0 S9.43*. 40 *1 15’ StV.221
C a ll BUI W e b b J i t 4445

^ ^ A V T O N A A U T O A U C T IO N
M w y 22. I m ile w e s t o4 Speed
w a y . D * y to n a B e a c h , w i l l h o ld
a p u b lic A U T O A U C T IO N
e v e ry W e d n e s d a y a t I p m U s
th e o n ly on e in F lo r id a Y o u set
th e re s e rv e d p r ic e C a ll 204
7 S S IH 1 la r tu rlh e c d e ta ils

BU Y JU N K C A R S 4 TRUCKS
F r o m S lO to S 5 0 o r m o re
C a ll 122 1*74 172 44*0

A n tiq u e s D ia m o n d s O il
P a in tin g s O r ie n ta l R u g s
B rid g e s A n tiq u e s
1 2 )2 *0 1

A L U M IN U M ‘ ca n s, c o p p e r,
le a d b ra s s s d y e r. g o ld W eek
d a y s * 4 10 Sa! 2 1 K O K 0 M 0
Tool Co 21 a W 111 S* 13) 1100

60—O ffice Supplies

S a n fo rd R e iu v e n a lio n A re a
710 717 S a n lo rd A v e r n c e lle n l
lo c a l.o n lo r r e t a il b u s in e s s o r
o ffic e s 7 *1 * sq tr e t b u ild in g

A L M O S T n e w lo v e ly e ie c u t lv e
h o m e m I d y llw ild e . m a n y
e i t r a s C a ll 22) (Y51

w e k iv a

Property

' R e * R e a l E s ta te B r o k e r X *
E v e 17) 22*4
113 147*

122 12)0

W A N T E D R e s p o n s ib le p a r t y to
ta k e o v e r p a y m e n ts o n S pine t
C on sole P ia n o C a n b e seen
lo c a lly W r ite M r F o s te r. P O
B o * 5*1, A s fo r. F la 12002

60—Wanted to Buy

61— B u ildin g M a te ria ls

.

ll'iW
F A M R M . a s s u m e S25I
m o w l 114.000 d o w n

M o v in g lo a n e w e r h o m e .
a p a rT m e n i* S e ll d o n I ne eds
la s t w t h a w a n t a d

CASH FO R C A M
R u n n in g o f n o t
D * (H *

—

,

S M IT H C o ro n a ty p e w r ite r in
case,
B u rro u g h
a d d in g
m a c h in e C a ll 372 72*0

322-2420

Shop U n c le H o y s M o b ile H o m e
Sales. L e e s b u rg . U S M w y 441
S 204 7*7 0114. O p e n 7 d a y *

D E L I G H T F U L D e B a ry - r i l r a
la r g e 1 b d r. 2 b th h o m e w ith
lo t* o f d o * e i i o n
a c re
w o o d e d , la k e (r o o t lo t D re a m
k i t . r a f r i g , m e n d s to v e ,
w asher 4 d ry e r, cant vac
S ys te m , W W c a rp e t, I4 a 2 0 .
s c re e n e d p o rc h , p a tio , a n d *
d o s e d g a re g e . 1*7.500

1 i/kOO S P A C IO U S » b d r , 1 '* b th
F I. r m
N e w r o o t - n a w ly
Jt a i n t e d , n a a r P w w c re a i » c h .
j
L a r g e L a r g e fe n c e d b a c k
* y a rd .
{
A . A M tC ie n e h e n
J Lie. R aal Estate BrcAar

,

F O R S A L E 1 a c re s o t la n d lu n
d e v e lo p e d ) a p p ro * 7 m ile s
w e s t o l G e n e v a C a ll 1 2 1 5 (4 ]
a tt liv e c a ll 111 04*5

127* A M C H o rn e t H a tc h b a c k
A u to PS A M r a d io I I m ile s
p e r g a llo n L o o k s a n d d r iv e s
lik e a n e w c a r 1142} M a y
c o n s id e r tr a d e *11 12)2

F O R S A L E to c lo s e e s ta te 1*77 4
d o o r O id s m o b d r *7 000 it- les
C ash r e q u ite d C a n 2 a m 5
p m 121 17*«

77—Junk Cars Removed

F U R N IS H E D 1 B d r m , I B a th
H a m a in B e ll A ira . w ith n e w
c a rp e l, F I. R m . D in in g R m ,
S p lit B d r m P la n . F r u it T r a t s
in B a c k ! 1)1.400

IM S
P e rk

U S E O e n g ln e tS IS O u
u s e d t r a m . S50 up
F u e l ’ S a lv a g e 177 2*23

M UST S E LL
A Q H A M a re and
G e ld in g B o th fo u n d w ith g re a t
d is p o s it io n s ,
good
w ith
c h ild r e n B e s t o t t e r o v e r SS00
C a ll 327 472* o r 1 7 1 *0 1 *

7 2 G R A N D S a fa r i w a g o n
ru n s g o o d a s k in g 1)50
137 *550

IY7J C A D IL L A C C o u p e O e v .lle
F u ll P o w e r, A C . lo w m ile a g e .
A M F M A s k in g 11750
371 0(71

76—A uto P arts

66— Horses

LO T S O F E X T R A S N e w J B d rm .
3 B a lh H o m e in H id d e n L a k e
w ith C e n t H A . w a l l to w a ll
c a rp o t. S p lit B d r m P la n . E a t
•n K itc h e n . F lo r id a R m a n d
M u c h m o re . J u s t 151.90*

7) T B IR D L o a d e d . N e w T ire s .
B lu e w ith W h ite Top. o r 74
C u tla s s S u p re m e N o m o n e y
d o w n 171 m o 112 2100 1)4 4*05
D e a le r

» * M U S T A N G h a rd to p
* c y l , a u to , a ir ,
s h a rp 1711*11

R e a p y o u r o w n F a ll H a r v e s t o t
F a ll C ash - U se H e r a ld W a n t
A d s O t le n 377 7*11
___

F R E E k itte n s . J a d o ra b le * w e e k
o ld k itte n s . 3 m a le s . I fe m a le
372 l i t )

N E E D R O O M Y T h is lo v e ly 4
B d r m 2 B a lh h a s it. N lc a ty
la n d s c a p e d a n d s e ttle d n e ig h
b o rh o o d H a s C e n t H A w ith
w a ll to w a ll c a rp e t 14T.500

S a n fo rd
ju s t L ilte d
C H A R M IN G 1 B d r m . 2 b a lh .
F lr t p la c a , C o u n tr y K itc h e n ,
F a m ily R m ., F o r m a l D in .
R m . S c r. P o r c h , C a n t A M ♦
A t tic F a n . d e ta c h e d } c a r
o a ra g e w ith o t f ic a o r Id e a l a p t.
O b i. L o t. IS m a t u r e f r u i t I r a n
M u c h M o re A s k in g 1*4.200
P H Y L L IS C A P P O N I, R E A L T O R
CENTURY II,
H Q 7717

313-7133

C O M P L E T E C a m p e r O u t f it to r
V a n o r P ic k u p . T a b le . B ed.
S m k a n d Ic e B o i C a ll 1717217

w e l is t a n d s e l l

M O RE HOMES THAN
A N Y O N E IN T H E
SANFOROAREA

C H E C K O U T U N C LE HOYS
L A R G E s e le c tio n o l 14 w id e *
p ric e s s t a t ! 1*225 V A Im a n
c m g no m o n e y d o w n . 'O ',
c o n v e n tio n a l

R E A L T O R *22 4221 O a y o r N ig h t

1 COLMXT BtALIT
,I

Sanford's Sales Leader

B U IL O IN G L O T S a lo ts in
G e n e va G o o d lo c a tio n , c lo t e lo
SI J o h n s R iv e r a n d L a k a
H a rn e y . O w n e r w i ll fin a n c e .
12.000 E a

EXC ELLEN T
STARTER
H O M E T h e re 's ro o m lo n
p e n d in th is I B d r m I B a lh
H o m e . C e n tr a l lo c a tio n a n d
p r ic e d r ig h t . , a t o n ly StJ.SOO.

A s s o c ia te s In c . R e p iio r s
12 ) *M O

75—Recreational Vehicles

DO G t r a in in q c la s s e s o b e d ie n c e
4 c o n f ir m a tio n S ta r tin g O c l
22 111 0717

b e a u t if u l

41—Houses

I t

REALTY - REALTORS

L ie R e a l E s ta te B ro k e r
3*40 S a n lo rd A v e

W IN T E R S p rm q s ta m h o m e 3
b r. 2 b a ir c, c a rp e l, d ra p e s
la m r m . fe n c e d n o p e ts
045 1124

1

STENSTROM

HANDYMAN
S P E C IA L
S u rro u n d e d By m u c h m o r e
e x p e n s iv e h o m e s , th is 1 2 is on
a h u g e lo t in P in e C re s t ♦
p r ic e d t o r q u ic k s a le a t S17.500

S A N F O R D s p a c io u s 7 bar, \
b a th , a i r . d ra p e s , h it a p p il.
S350 m o . ■&gt; d t p J J t |S42

]

C F A P E R S IA N S A d u lt
F e m a le s W h ile B la c k
1150 1750 121 IS IS
A N IM X E H a v e n h e n n e ry b o a rd
no 4 q ro o m m g
N eeded
P e k in g e s e 4 s m a l l s i l v a r
Chrodie lo r s tu d M a le O w n e rs
ta ll 172 5752

REALTY, INC.

40-Autos

F o r E s t a t e C o m m e r c ia l o r
R e l'd e n t ia l A u c tio n s 4 A p
p r a i M lt C a ll D e ll'S A u c tio n
37 ) 5*20
-I
it (O u a r e h e v in g u if f t c u ily
Iin d m g a p la c e to liv e , t a r to
d r iv e , a jo b . o r s o m e s e rv ic e
y o u h a v e n e e d o t. re a d a ll o u r
w a n t a d s e v e ry d a y

65—Pels-Supplies

I B d r m L a rg e t i l t w ith Sec.
D t p . N o C h ild re n
M tr e ld H a ll R e a lty In c R e a lto r

T u e s d a y , O c t . 20 , ) * I 1 — S B

72—A u ctio n

B u y F o o t b a ll T ic k e ts w i lh
M o n e y Y o u m a k e w ith a
G a ra g e S a le

C U T E E ffic ie n c y S120 m o
4 LG I BD R M 172Sm o
U t ilitie s n o t in c lu d e d
i n tw t

I I Bui•It in e r e r g y s a v e rs
s to ra g e D e ilo n a A re a
121 J i l l )

E v t n ln f l H e r a ld , S a n fo r d , F I.

67—Law n-G arden

H a v e s o m e c a m p in g e q u ip m e n t
you n o lo n g e r u se? s e ll It o il
w ith e C la s s ifie d A d m T h e
H e r a ld C a ll 377 2*11 o r U I
* t f ) e n d a I n e n d ly a d v i s o r
w ill h e lp yo u .

TraaSarvica

F r e d d ie R o b in s o n P lu m b in g .
R o p a ir s / t a u e tt s , w
C
S p r in k le r s . 1 2 1 (1 1 0 . 1 2 )0 7 0 *

JU N G LE
J im
T re e
S er
T n m m m g . lo p p .n g 4 r e m o v a l,
, r * a e s lim e l* (a ls o r u b b is h
r e m o v a l I 1 1 * 7*22

IF T H IS IS T H E O A Y l a b u y a
n e w c a r . s a * to d a y ’s C la s s ifie d
ed s t o r b e s t b u y s

S o m e b o d y t l lo o k in g t o r y o u r
b a rg a in O tte r it to d a y in I he
C ia s s itia d A d s ___________________

H A R P E rs T a i l iiR v ic a

P lu m b in g r e p a ir - a ll ty p e s

T n m m m g . r e m o v in g 4 La rW
s c a p in g F r e e E s l n i O M l

w a te r h e a le rs 4 p u m p s
»1M 7)

i

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t f lk o n io f a a t r * *

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�4B— Evtnlng Harald, Sanford, FI.

BLONDIE

Tuesday, Oct.M, m i

ACROSS
M in i
mcknimi
Fstrolaum

38 Europe**

capital
40 Billboards
41 Warm up a

43 Clothing
Pigpon sound 46 Old World
12 Camaroon
50 Chargad
tnba
Pamelas
13 Employi
51 Woman'a
nama
14 Singla bma
15 Oreu atyla
52 Tima tona

Answer to Previous Punls
U U U l l JITiEJULL ■ U U U

□m o I nniJU Li | lkdh

□ n o ■ fin n a n ■ n n u
noun nnn uoan

■ m n u n iin H D
l iu b o ii

nnonnn
□□□nun

n o

For Most, Walking
Good For Fitness

□□□
nnn

DEAR DR. L A M B -I want
to get back In shape and
iir u o n u iiij
Improve my fitness. I have
n unn n
not
been doing anything for
□
□
n
o
n
Ubbr)
nuunu
■
years. I'm 56 years old and a
16 Lafnmant
53 Ballot
n n n ■ n n n n n ■ u n u little overweight.
17 Tug
54 Catchat
16 Ragti
55 Povertywir
9 Regarding (2 31 Actions
I had planned to start a
20 Implores
agancy (abbr)
w d i. Lai.
32 Infirmitias
walking program. Now my
21 Batabail
56 Biblical
abbr)
3B Vapors
neighbor tells me th a t
playar Mai
10 College
39 Eggs
walking will not help my
57 Eya infaction
______
athletic group 41 Football in
22 Author of
58 Prectoui jewel 11 Barrels
circulation and I really have Radio City Station, New York,
England
"Tha Raven"
19 Doll
42 Scratch out
to Jog. He Is something of an
NY. 10019.
23 Oleegtnout
DOW N
20 Armad band 43 lily Pons.for
expert
on
this
subject
and
26 Oiaataambla
Walking can train your
one
. iiu
22 tn«,',h
asys you have to Increase
30 Ftih aggi
1 EOQS*
statatmin
44 Space
heart and as you Increase
your heart rate to 60 or 80 your distance and speed it will
31 Soria •
2 Woodwind
23 Vocal
45 Inner (pref )
33 Cowboy
instrument
24 Smallast bit 46 Midaast
percent of Its maximum or train it to a higher exerdae
Rogari
Roundad lump 25 Ogla
seaport
around 140 beats a minute to level. It can help to lower
34 Broka bread
Should
26 Hauling
47 City problem
do
any good.
35 Mika gay
Ait
blood pressure, cholesterol
wagon
48 Phrase of un­
Now
I am wondering if he is and to keep your weight down.
36 Mr. Van
Sediment
27 la human
derstanding |2
Compass
Winkla
right and I won't get any That goes a long way toward
21 Wind about
wds)
37 To a great
point
29 Secretary’s er­ 49 Mighty mita
health benefits from walking.
improving your health.
artant
ror
lots
51 Ones (Fr )
I surely won't have a heart
DEAR DR. LAMB - 1 have
rate that high with walking
1
4
2
5
6
7
T "
9
6
10 11
a ganglion cyst on the back of
alone and I'm not so sure it
my hand and have had it
would be good for me to do
12
13
14
drained three times. Cor­
that much exercise. What do
15
you think? Will the walking be tisone was injected, which
16
17
gave some relief for brief
such a low level of exertion
periods of time.
19
19
that it can't help me?
The cyst la back again and
j
■
10
DEAR READER - Stuff
22
and nonsense. Let your neigh­ my doctor said that he would
■
bor keep his rigid rules; start not drain It again but would
23 24 25
27 21 29
your walking program. And I prefer to perform surgery and
I
think you should limit your remove the "Joint capsule." I
30
31 32
33
walking
speed to the point am a secretary and It has
,
■
■
that
you
don't
get a high heart become Increasingly difficult
34
36
3,
to type; also this has been
rate,
paricularly
at first.
1
I
Of course you can get keeping me awake at night. Is
37
31
benefits for your circulation there an o th er method of
m
"
40
41 42
from a walking program. p erm anently rem oving or
Such rules as having to have a dissolving this cyst other than
■
44 44 45
4 } 48 49
high heart rate are terrible surgery? I have had this for
"
j ■
oversimplifications that do more than three years.
50
51
52
not apply to everybody. If you
DEAR READER - Most
had been at bed rest for four such cysts are really a little
53
54
55
weeks, Just starting walking bag of tissue, like a plastic
down the hall la a training bag. D raining it doesn't
55
57
SI
step. Each time you Increaee remove the bag and It tends to
your exercise above the level fill again with fluids and
you are already adapted to, it g e l a t i n o u s m a t e r i a l .
is a training experience. If Obviously, when It continues
you were already trained for to recur it is a good idea to
the Boston Marathon, a walk remove the sac-like structure
By BERNICE BEDE 060L
wouldn't raise your fitness and that is probably what
level much, but for most your doctor intends to do.
people who have not been that Such cysts can be painful If
For Wednesday, October 21, 1981
active it is a wonderful way to they press on nerves but
start and even maintain a others cause no pain.
good level of fitness.
YOUR BIRTHDAY
treated, your possibilUiee for
I am sending you The
putting lasting agreements
October &gt;1,1911
Health Letter number 18-4,
Your ambitions and earning together are excellent today.
Walking to Health, which will
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
ab ilities will be g reatly
tell you how to do it and the
¥
enhanced this coming year. If Work well done should prove
benefits
you can derive from
exceptionally
rew
arding
making money is your goal,
you should have a tidy ac­ today, both from the pride it for your health. Others who
cum ulation by your n est you'll take In your tasks and want this issue can aend 75
the rem uneration you'll cents with a long, stamped,
birthday.
Pour brandy ovw vanil•eif-addraaaad envelope for it
LIBRA (8apt. U-Oct. 21) Bo receive.
la lea cream and «pr in ­
ARIES (March 21-April 19) to me, In care of this
hopeful and poetlive today
kla w ith coarsa ground
and dare to think big. By Your popularity la ascending newspaper, P.O. Box 1551,
applying yourself, things for and you srlU be the standout at
which you've been srtahlng any social gathering. This
can now be brought into should be s fun day for you.
TAURUS (April 30-May 20)
being. Romance, travel, luck,
resource*, poatible pitfalls Tasks you take on today will
and career for the coming be performed properly. You
clubs m ining the ace of
months are all diacuaaed in •re Imaginative, reaourceful
trumps and an almost sure
spade loser. You can't do
your A itro-G raph which and unlikely to leave half­
NORTH
m an
anything about the ace of
begins with your birthday. finished anything you un­
♦ Q ll
trumps. How about the
Mail 91 for each to Astro- dertake.
spade loser?
GEM mi (May 21J u n e 20)
Graph, Boi 419, Radio City
♦ KJ9I
Forget about a singleton
♦ K J 1041
Station, N.Y. 10019. Be u r e to This la a good day to put your
king. That is too small a
chance. Now you are down
affalra in order. You have
specify birth date.
EAST
to an end play. If West holds
♦ J it
♦ K 10141
organisational
SCORPIO (O ct 24-Nov. 23) excellent
ace and one trump and the
♦ J 1007I
♦05411
In areas where you are un- abilities. That which was
king of spades you can lead
♦ 161
*74
aelftah and thinking of ad ­ previously hard to handle will
a low cltrb and hope he will
♦ 14
♦A
duck. Give that ooe up West
vancing the interests of others be easy now.
sown
isn't going to duck. He hi*
CANCER (June 21J u ly 22)
along with your own, you
♦ AT
heard*bout end plays
should be extremely lucky You shouldn't have any dif­
♦ Alt •
Now we get down to ooe
♦ AQI01
ficulty today getting material
today.
chance. One opponent must
♦
Q
I
7
1
1
bold the singleton ace of
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23- support for projects in which
(rumps, not more than two
Vulnerable. Neither
Dec. 21) Any dealings you you're Interested. Others will
diamonds and that king of
Dealer South
have today with groups, clubs aee their value and want to
apades. Now you are ready
for the ooe chance.
or large organisations should hop on the bandwagon.
Wait N«rih East
Discard one of dummy's
work out beneficially for all.
LEO (Ju ly 23-Aug. 22)
apadei on your second-high
Paw »♦
Paw
Give these areas top priority. Handle personally today
heart.
Then cash the ace and
Paw Paw Pan
CAPRICORN (Dec. 23dan. m atters important to you.
king of diamonds and lead a
trump.
19) This is a good time to set Even though you may find
Opening lead: V j
La and behold everything
•elf-im provem ent
goals. able delegates, they're not apt
has come up roses. East
W h a te v er
c o n s tru c tiv e to do as well as you could.
must take his ace and lead a
VIRGO (Aug. 23Sept. 22)
changes you want to
heart or a spade. He leads
can be accomplished sue- You're the type who always
the spade. You play Jow and
By Oswald Jacehy
your spade loser Eta diupgoes out of your way to be
ceaafully.
pea
reo
AQUARIUS (Jan. 30-Feb. helpful. Today, peraone
Luck^, but you made your
19) Because you are willing to you've aided will try to
treat others u you'd like to be reciprocate.
(NxwirAna D a n tm a t a w )
nnoB Q

□□

HOROSCOPE

. . A U D W O W ,m X L ( *TDW\V5 / C R DOES fT, IK/ FACT,
EDUCATE. U 5 A U D M A K E
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MARIUS U5 IIUTD A MORE. US M O R E AMJAfiE O f THE

W E R E Q O IU G T O O F E /U
TH E P H C X JE 5 TO (S E T
V O O R CD M M D U T

VIOLEJJT SOCIETY?

WIN AT BRIDGE

by Ed Sullivan

BUGS BUNNY

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SAM S 6 SZSA T.

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�</text>
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It $ Been A Big Success

Deju's Reorganization Of Health Dept. Wins Award
B&gt; [HANK PETKVK
He rald Staff Writer
When Or Jorge Deju was hired as Seminole County Health
Department director in July 1979. he began to plan a total
reorganization of the department. His reorganization was put
into effect gradually during the following year.
Today, Oeju is able to say the reorganization has been an
unqualified success.
Things that used to fall through the cracks get caught
now, he says. "It's worked even better than we expected.”
What did the departmental reorganization do’
It took apart disciplinary hierarchies and developed
program-oriented units, Deju explains. That means that in­
stead of a nursing section, dental section, nutrition section,
sanitation section and so forth, the department is organized
into five units identified by the services they provide. Those

units are personal health serv ices, community health services,
environmental health services, special grant services and
administrative support services.
Each unit is supervised by a section head, with the five
section heads working under Deju.
Deju says this organization consolidates many programs so
the director can work closely with five section heads instead of
spending less time with many different supervisors.
In the past, for instance, nurses were concerned Just with
nursing functions, Deju says. Even while working in different
departments, nurses were supervised by the same director of
nursing.
"With the new style of organization, there is more emphasis
on the goal of each service, rather than on the professional
division types of personnel," he comments.
Now no one's going to refuse a task "because that's not a
nursing duty," for instance, Deju says. "Everything gets

done,"
Recently Deju's efforts at departmental reorganization
were recognized by the National Association of Counties when
he received the group's County Achievement Award The
award in the form of a plaque, is given in recognition of
distinguished and continuing contributions to the cause of
strong, modern county government in America
While the year's changes caused some upheaval of normal
routine. Deju says employees have been flexible enough to
"hang in there" until the operation ironed itself out
In fact, he attributes most of the success of the program to
the dedication of employees. And he says that, in turn, has
brought about an Increase in the quality and quantity of ser­
vices provided to county residents.
The Health Department serves the community by providing
preventive health services, as well as treating medical
problems.

Contempt
Citation
Sought On
Waste Site

M U SIC
MAKERS

Sixteen Seminole High School choral students left Friday by bus to attend a
weekend "Honor Choir" for high school students ul Stetson University,
DeLand. The choir, conducted by Jam es Itoss Beane, gives good students an
opportunity to perform with other singers from the Central Florida area.

Fire Damages Longwood Condos
By DARLENE JENNINGS
Herald SUtl Writer
A fire starting in a garage and spreading to one con­
dominium and heavily damaging another in The Springs
residential development in Ungwood around 3:40 p.m.
Saturday is estimated to have caused $250,000 in damage.
There were no injuries reported, however.
Tlit- Seminole County Eire Prevention Division report says
the fire started under "suspicious" conditions, and the cause of
the fire is under investigation.
Three people escaped from the burning condominiums,
including one woman and an 11-year-old boy who had to
maneuver from a second-floor balcony and around a wall to an
adjacent apartm ent's balcony to escape.
One car in a garage was destroyed

Kdilorlal
Ourselves
Sports
Teles isloii
Weather
World

4A
IB
VIA
IB
3A
3A

A United Way A g e n cy

Catholic Services
Assist The Needy

i

Tlie flexibility of its programs enables
it to respond to local needs us they arise,
he said. For example, tlie everincreasing divorce rate has prompted the
agency to beef up its m a rriag e
prep aratio n program , which helps
couples make wise decisions about their
future and their readiness for married
life. Increased demands for low-cost
professional m a rria g e counseling
resulted in the addition of another
counselor this year.

V f.r

*7

♦»

w ith a w a r d p la q u e .

Longwood’s Lormann

4A
3A
2-3B
411
IB
IB

Catholic Social Services i CSSi first
opened in Central Florida 19 years ago
this month. Thomas Agho, director,
reports an enthusiastic optimism for tlie
delivery of increased services during
19R2. the 20th year of operation.

D e ju

No Opposition For

TODAY

Professional counseling, problem
pregnancy services, emergency finan­
cial assistance, foster care of children,
resettlem en t of refugees, m arriag e
preparation, placement of infants for
adoption, coordination of community
services for the poor are some of the
varied programs a local United Way
agency offers to all who live and work in
Seminole County.

Jo rH e

Reelected?

The slate Department of Environ­
mental Regulation i DER i is scheduled to
usk Circuit Judge Kenneth Ixjffler to
issue a "contempt of court" citation
against City Chemicals Co of Orlando at
a 4 p.m hearing today.
The DER is saying the Orlando-based
firm failed to comply with a decision by
L-ffler ordering the company to file
certain financial documents with the
state agency and to begin the process of
removing 3.2C4 drums of chemical waste
from a Sanford site.
Tlie twiKicre site is located off Jewett
l-ane and Airport Boulevard in Sanford
and lias been in operation 11 months.
City Attorney Bill Colbert, who is
working with the DER on the court ac­
tion, said today DER officials were to
come to Sanford today, meet with City
Chem icals officials and visit the
chemical storage site. Colbert said that
since today's court hearing was set City
Chemicals has furnished some financial
information to the state and begun some
degree of activity at the chemicals
storage site.
"If substantial progress lias been
made, maybe some type of agreement
can be reached with City Chemicals," he
said. “ If substantial progress lias not
been made, the court will be asked to
impose sanctions against the firm."
List week motions were filed with the
court seeking the replacement of Royce
Pipkins us lawyer for City Chemicals by
Michael I) Jones of Altamonte Springs
Jones also has filed a notice with the
court that City Chemicals will uppeal
I e f tier's decision imposing a default
against the firm to the fifth District Court
of Appeal at Daytona Beach
In his order. U-ffler said the chemical
w aste represented fire and health
hazards - DONNA ESTES

Around The Clock
Calendar
Classified Ads
Comics
Crossword
Dear Abby

M#r»u Phois b* Oxno PotryS

D r.

Catholic Social Services is licensed by
the state and funded principally by the
Catholic Diocese of Orlando. It has been
a member of tlie United Way of Seminole
County since 1973.
Realizing its commitment to serve the
entire community, the agency serves all
people
reg a rd le ss
ol
religious
preference. Tlie majority of the clients
are not Catholic. Several members of the
board of directors and staff live in
Seminole County.
The main offices of CSS Bre in Orlando
at 3191 Maguire Blvd., across from
Fashion Square Shopping Mall. Inter­
views are arranged in Seminole County
for those unable to go to Orlando. A staff
of 17 offers a variety of professional skills
and expertise in the many areas of
response to human needs. Quality ser­
vice is provided by trained personnel; for
example, all counselors must have at
least a m aster’s degree for employment
at CSS. Appointments are scheduled by
calling 894-8888.
Fees for m arriage and family coun­
seling are on a sliding scale based on
income. No one is denied service because
of inability to pay a fee.

*« »«

Approxmialely 40 firefighters from four county fire stations
and two from Altamonte Springs stations fought the blaze
more than an hour before it was finally contained.
Firefighters reported they arrived at the scene five minutes
after the call was received, but by then the flames had
destroyed the garage and had already spread to the con­
dominiums.
According to fire Investigator Ray Pippin, the blaze started
in the garage and spread into the condominiums. Pippin said
the fire was allowed to spread because some of the occupants
of the building had left their doors open, permitting the flames
In move more quickly .
"No accidental cause for the fire has been determined,"
Pippin said.
One condominium resident reported she heard an explosion
prior to discovering the garage was on fire

By IHINNA ESTES
Herald Staff Writer
Line wood City Commissioner June
Lormann lias been virtually reelected to
a fifth consecutive two-year term When
the candidate qualification period for the
Dec 1 city election closed Friday, only
Mrs. Lirmann had qualified for the
District 2 seat on the City Commission
City Clerk Donald Terry said Mrs.
Lormann’s name will appear on the
ballot, according to city ch a rter
requirements And state law thus year
also requires that write-in candidates be
given a week after the reg u lar
qualification period ends to qualify. He
said the period for write-in candidates
will end Friday.
In the recent past Longwood lias not
had any write-in candidates.
Mrs. Ixirmann lias had opposition only
once In contests for the City Commission.
That was in 1973, when she ran suc­
cessfully to oust an incumbent com­
missioner.
Two other contested races will appear
on the Dec. 1 election ballot. District 1
City Commissioner Steven Uskert is
being challenged by John Crystal, a
newcomer to politics and a city
businessman, while Mayor John Hepp's
seal is being contested by Churles S
Pappas in District 4.
Pappas ran unsuccessfully lor the
commission in the past. The mayor is
chosen from the commissioners in a vote
among themselves
Meanwhile, in Casselberry , where an
election also is scheduled Dec. 1, no one
has yet qualified for the twoopen seats on
the City Council and the mayor's post.
City Clerk Mary Hawthorne said today
The seats open are held bv Mayor
Owen Sheppard and Councilmen Tom

Enibree and John Leighty The can­
didate qualifying period will close Oct
30
In Like Mary, where the qualifying
period will close at noon Oct 29. the three
City Council seats held by Ray Fox. Vic
Olvera and Gene McDonald are up for
election Dec B Only Olvera and Bill
Durrenberger, former member of the
city's Planning and /fining Commission
and Board of Adjustment, have qualified
In Winter Springs, Mayor Troy Piland
won a sixth consecutive term in office,
while Councilman Maureen Boyd won a
second term , when no one qualified
against them for the Nov. 3 city election.
Former Councilman Bill Jacobs and
political newcomer B.G. "Buck" Adkins
ure vying for the council post held by
Wilfred "ilap " Arnold, who did not seek
reelect Ion.
Several charter amendments also will
uppear on the ballot
In Altamonte Springs, which lias an
election scheduled Nov. 3. Mayor Hugh
Darling is being challenged by Ray
Ambrose, a city police officer on leave of
absence. Although the names of Cheney
Colardo and Dudley Bates will appear on
the ballot, they have no opposition for
first term s on the City Commission.
Mrs. Colardo will replace two-term
incumbent Dolores Vickers, while Bates
will replace Jim Thompson, a one-term
commissioner. Neither Mrs. Vickers nor
Thompson ran for reelection.
Two charter amendments also will
appear on the ballot. City Clerk Bobbi
Floyd said today. Mrs. Floyd said one
amendment will give City Manager Jeff
Etchberger the power to hire and fire
city employees, while the second calls for
staggered term s on the city's Personnel
Board

Juvenile Arbitrators Honored
By TENIYARBOROUGH
Herald Stall W hirr
"There’s a product in America that is
mass-produced by unskilled labor, and
it's called children," Chief Circuit Court
Judge Frances Ann Jamieson said at
Friday’s ceremony honoring the ap­
proximately 30 juvenile arbitrators at the
Seminole County Courthouse. She told
the group it is "people like you who care
that make a difference with these
children needing help.”
The Seminole County Juvenile Com­
munity Arbitration Program, begun in
1978, is a program in which first-time
juvenile offenders who committed minor
crimes are allowed an alternative to
court action, according to program
manager Gayle Hair. Mrs. Hair ex­
plained that at the lime of the arrest the
police officer decides whether or not to
refer the case to arbitration. If he does, a
hearing is held enabling the child, victim,
the arresting police officer and an a r­
bitrator to listen to the facts of the case
and work out, (collectively, i a suitable
punishment for the child.
But, according to Mrs. Hair and other
officials working with the program, Die
arbitrator is the backbone of the
program.
“ We're here because of youth. . . that
we have to help get through to
adulthood," C ircuit Court Judge
Dominick Salfi, an original program tusk
force member, said. “In 1978 we had
13.000 youths on probation in this state,
and that's when the idea of arbitration
began. Arbitration has taken the idea and
come up with a recidivism rate of six
percent, and that's outstanding."
Salfi said, that today the number of
youths on probation has dropped from
13.000 to 6,000.
"I believe we're helping younger

Hrrold Phot* br Tom Vinconl

Irving (iussow (right), a volunteer juvenile arbitrator, is
congratulated by Juvenile Court Judge Vernon Mize (left) after
receiving a special arbitration award from program manager (iail
Hair (background).
jieople to be more responsible wiUi
them selves, because we have a
responsible program which you are
making work," he said.
Paul Snead, district administrator for
Hie state Department of Health and
R ehabilitative S ervices, also com ­
mended the work of the community
arbitrators, saying, "I think we're
getting back to where we used to be, and I
don't think that's bad. We're back to
community involvment."
Snead also praised the Seminole

•A • e • w • •

County judges for their support of Hie
program.
"These Judges took the lead in Hie state
in a program th at w asn't very
fashionable," he said. "With their sup­
port und the work of the community
members involved in the program, it's
working."
One major problem was cited con­
cerning the program's future, however.
"Our elderly are getting Hie money
they need and even our four-legged
friends are getting Hie money they need,

•

but our young people are not getting Uieir
money, because the government is
pulling back," Salfi said "Wltere are the
youth going to be if someone doesn't get
up and talk for them?"
Snead said there is a "very real
problem" with the cutbacks in federal
funding and il will be "up to the com­
munity" to decide the fate of the youth
"We've got some greut people," Mrs
Hair said "People who have stuck with
us from the very first day and new ones
who are officially joining us today.
Without you, tlie community, Hiese
children wouldn't liave a chance, and I
thank you all very much for making this
program work."
Mrs Hair presented third-year cer­
tificates of appreciation to Mrs. Verna
Moore, Kenneth Morse and Stanley Stone
for their conUnued participation in the
program. First- and second-year parUcipants also were recognized with
certificates
Special arbitrator awards were given
to Irving Gussow, Lee Hoover, Cynthia
Hutchinson, Richard Mamele, Gerald
Kutberg, and Thomas Scarpello for Uieir
contributions to tlie program.
Mrs Hair also recognized vanou:
police and public institutions that liave
supported the program from the onset.
Arbitrators are volunteers from within
the community who have a degree in law
or behavioral social science or who lave
training in conflict resolution, Mrs. Hair
noted. Seminole Community College
offers a course in conflict resolution for
$13 for those who lack other formal
training.
According to Mrs. Hair, not everyone
who applies is guaranteed a job as an
arbitrator. Final approval of the position
is given by Hie Seminole County Judges
and the state attorney's office, she said.

�lA -E vtnln g HsrsW, Sanford, FI.

Monday, Oct. 1*. m i

FLORIDA
IN BRIEF
Gov. Graham Puts Out
The 'Help Wanted ' Sign
TALI-AIIASSEE (UPI) — Gov. Bob Graham 's ad­
ministration has been hit with a rash of resignations,
and more may be on the way.
Republicans are fond of interpreting this as a sure
sign the administration Is disintegrating, and while It
may not be that serious, the governor does face some
big problems ahead.
New directors must be found for three critical
agencies, and If new chief of staff David Pingree
returns as Department of Health and Rehabilitative
Services secretary, there will be a fourth big ap­
pointment.
And as If that Isn't enough, the secretary of the
Department J Professional Regulation, Nancy Wit­
tenberg, has come under harsh verbal fire and there Is
the chance she may resign soon. That would leave the
governor with yet another critical vacancy.

Space Shuffle Fueling Up
CAPE CANAVERAL (UPIl - Space agency
le ch n ld q p carefully loaded a highly toiic rocket
propellant Into the space shuttle Sunday, the same
delicate, exercise that q*nt afoul last month and
postponed the Columbia’s second launch.
The six-day operation, which began Saturday night,
continued through the weekend with no problems.
More than half of the oxidizing substance, nitrogen
tetroxlde, had been loaded by late Sunday.

NATION
IN BRIEF
Crime Wave Against Clergy
Continues In N ew York
NEW YORK (UPI) — Two gunmen bound and
gagged a Catholic priest and stole |700 from his
church's collection plate — the latest attack In a crime
wave against the city's clergy Dial began with the
rape-mutilation of a nun.
The robbery Sunday afternoon at SI. Anthony of
Padua Church In the Bronx was the latest incident in
an eight-day crime wave, which Included assaults on a
priest and a Catholic brother, lootings of three chur­
ches and a synagogue, and the rape of a nun who had 27
crosses scratched into her body by her assailant.

More Schools May Close
TAYUJIt, Mich. (UPI) — A second Michigan school
district could close next month If rebellious voters In a
Detroit suburb do not approve a 30 percent Increase in
school (axes today.
"We're going to close," said Simon Kachaterian,
superintendent of Die Taylor school district, which has
15,900 students. "There just isn't any money."
Schools for n.BOO students In another Michigan
community, Alpena, closed Friday pending a vote Oct.
30 on a promised lax increase —a hike already rejected
three times In the past five months.

Sierra Club Vs. Watt
WASHINGTON (U P I) - The environm ental
movement Is taking Its "dump Watt” campaign to
Congress, appealing to sympathetic legislators to help
them oust Interior Secretary James Watt for his prodevelopment policies.
Tlie Sierra Club, the country’s third largest en­
vironmental group, and its Friends of (he Earth off­
shoot today were to present anti-Watt petitions to Sen.
Alim Cranston, C-Callf., and House Speaker Thomas
"Tip" O'Neill, D-Mass.
They hear Die names of at least 1.1 million
Americans who want to sec Watt removed from office
us a laid steward of the nation's precious natural
resources, said Doug Scott, u Sierra Club official.

REALTY TRANSFERS
W&lt;lh«m Hm ntlh.l. Tr to W .tl.r
Winkler S *&lt; Inyetxjig M . lot ]],
lonydale Ind Pklk. 111 100
Wm S Woirnlhnl. Tr to M
Scott Ad.rm A wt I A lr.lt, Lott It
A II, long it. 11 Ind PS, 111. 000
M «nolt* Svc Corp to Co.
Corp , lot 14. Wrklva Club E t l t .
Src ■ IIV.DOO
D rv r., Inc to Rodney R Smith,
\gl, Lot It. Criltin Woods. tvl.OOO
Mdler E n lr , Inc to Henry
Olmgrr. Inc . beg SE cor ol SW'*
id NE'&lt; ol Src II 70 JO H e,
tIJO 000
H Invrttnim ti. Inc to t i n *
OAmato A nt Mtry, Un III the
Allrmonlr Condo , 143.300
Lekr Pickett Prop Ltd toElmon
L Ingram A w1 Shrlby J , Lot 11,
Lali* I'n .H i Wood! I tc . I TV,300
Medlcrld Enlr , Inc to Grren
i’ roirclt. Inc &lt;i ml Lot It]Stro m
NW cor ol S'? ol S E '. ol SW'&lt; of
Src It It TV «tc . 1)0.000
Jerome M Wetter men A wt
Eleanor to flm iim ln H Zuk A *t
Hetriel J , Un III. Village ol
Wmdmrtdcnvt No I. t SO.000
Spaceport. USA Inc to National
Chemical Corp, Lot J. Blk C,
Third Sec I t Indutlr Pk. tU.KO
NtlioneiChrm Corp to John K
Lower A *1 Merthe. Lot ). Blk C.
Third Src I 4 Indut Perk, tej 100
U S Steel Errctort, Inc to John
h Lower A wt Merthe L . Lot !!
Shadow Lake Woods l i t 000
FI Ret Comm to Elizabeth R
O Br yen. t g l. Un A, Bl f. Wek.se

E ti'itln j* Ilc m J d

Fairway lownhomrt, 144.000
Norm Cow Inv Co to Fred
Delrm oi 1 Soni, Inc . Lott 13 t
It. North Cow. US too
Equity Rfully Inc to Ntncy
Yfl*. tgl , Un l]T C Dvtliny
Springs. HUSO
Overtired Inv Co lo Epoch
Crop . Inc .P a r I S 131IV of N
404 I f of SW1. of SW* SfC I I I TV
E ol RR. 1190.000
Meier Ctanelll, rlfl to Richard
M Ntttrcfh. MO. Loll 11. Blk A,
&amp; Loft I 3. Blk B. Bty TrtV Shorn.
134.000
Williard Phillips 10 Jim Hint!
Jr 1 svf Cheryl M . Lol 13. L ik t
Markham E t t t , 114.000
IQCDI W4ur Rmlatt. Inc Pent
A Prof Pltn lo Marctlla M
Thompson. Per F Beg II I ' W l
M3 )?' N ol SE cor Govt Lf 2. Src
)l IV )! H e . 1100
RCA lo Scoll A Evtns A wf
Marlene. LOl 24. Hidden Like. Ph
II, Un I. M i.100
Sun Rite Erecforl, Inc, to
Frrd in tn d D M turino A wf
Maude. Lot IIS, Sunrise Un ZB,
MJ.S00
Roberta L Frey, wid lo Craig L.
Factor t svf Jonnell L , Lot II, Blk
C. Summersrt No Sec t. Stt.OOO
Alonta T Swml Jr. lo Alonia T
Swmt Jr . Lot II 4 adi SO It
abandoned rd on E Blk )l.
Kathryn Park » d . letl N 10' ol W
III V 1 N M of W III V A I00‘ at
measured along N A S boundary
linos ot Lol II. 1100

«••»•*&gt;

Monday, Octotwr )», IM l-V ol. 74. No. SO
r
41
. 1
t.
y

FoblithtO Deity end londey, ticvft Saturday by T M I t .h r t

18-Year-Old Apopka Man Charged

’Accident' N ow Called Manslaughter
An 16-year-old Apopka man bas been charged with man­
slaughter in the April 11 shooting death of a south Seminole
County teen-ager, a shooting which originally had been ruled
accidental.
Frank Anthony Guercioni Jr., 813 Bill Dot Drive, was being
held at the Seminole County Jail this morning in lieu of $8,000
bond.
Police say Guercioni caused the death of Colleen Yvette
leaders, 15, through culpable negligence with a firearm.
Miss Leaders, of 1050 Broadway St., Forest City, was shot In
the chest with a .22 caliber rifle while she and several friends
were visiting at 122 Alma Drive in the Mobile Manor trailer
park west of lo g w o o d .
The day after the shooting, Seminole County Sheriff’s
Department spokesman John Spo!$ki said while Guercioni was
pointing the rifle in one room, Miss leaders entered from an
adjoining room into the path of the rifle as ft went off.
She was struck In the upper chest and was found dead out­
side the mobile home.
Seminole County Medical Examiner Dr. G.V. Garay said the
girl died as a result of massive bleeding caused by the bullet
puncturing a major artery.
Miss lead ers was a cheerleader while attending Teague
Middle School and was the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. l.H.
leaders.
ARMED BOBBERIES
A pistol-packing bandit robbed the Tenneco gas station, 1800
French Ave., Sanford, shortly after 10 p.m. Saturday and
escaped with an unspecified amount of cash.
On the previous evening, a man robbed the Cumberland
Farm s convenience store at Sanford Ave. and Airport
Boulevard.
According to the store manager, no weapon was seen but a
gun was mentioned in a note handed to clerk Donna Cowart,
791 Crestvlew Dr., Casselberry.
The robber escaped with an unspecified amount of cash.
SILVER HEIST
Jean II. Wiley, 117 Sanora Blvd., Sanford, reported Sunday
the theft of Iter sterling silver flatware valued at $2,000.

Action Reports
★

Fires

it Courts
★

Police

She said the forks, spoons and knives In a Damask Roce
pattern were taken sometime between June and 3:30 a.m.
Sunday.
HOT MICROWAVE
Virginia Wygand, 427 Center St., Sanford, reported to police
that someone stole a microwave oven from her home
sometime between 4 a.m. and 8:15 p.m. Sunday.
THEFT WAS A GAS
Responding to a call about two subjects siphoning gasoline
from a vehicle at 1661 Giadiolas, Maitland, Seminole County
Sheriffs deputies today arrested Richard Scott Loach, 18, and
Mike Sean McFeeley, 18, both of Orlando.
But It wasn't the theft of gas that got the pair in trouble.
Although a plastic garbage can containing about 12 gallons
of gas and a 5-foot garden hose were found in the back of the
suspects' vehicle, arresting officer Jim EngebreL. n said a
clear plastic baggie containing marijuana was spotted lying in
plain view on the front left floorboard of the car.
McFeely and loach were being held at the Seminole County
Jail this morning in lieu of $5,000 bond each. They are charged
with possession of marijuana and drug paraphernalia.
FLYING BULLET
While Jogging in front of 114 Pressview Ave early Thursday
evening, a Ijongwood man reported he heard a bullet fly by his
head and strike the door of the Family 1st Federal building.
Steve Demino, 51, of 801 North Street, told police he went to
the back of 114 Pressview where he found persons shooting at
tin canj with a .22 caliber rifle.
Police are investigating the Incident.

\

Heme Delivery Week. tl.Mr MeeTb, M U i b Mbbtbt, IWSSi
Veer. H I M &gt;y Mbit: Week I I I I , Meefh. IS II; b Meelet.
Mb H i Vebr, MI M_______________________________________

»•

HING STOLEN
A burglary of a 1979 Blue Chevrolet van parked at 140 Fernwood Blvd., Fern Park Station, sometime between midnight
Monday and 1:20 p.m. Thursday netted thieves a diamond ring
valued at $1,200.
The 14-karat gold diamond cluster ring with seven stones
belonged to Romeo C. Scannapleco, 1600 Sandpiper Trail,
Casselberry.
ARSON CHARGED
A 35-year-old Orlando man was being held at the Seminole
County Jail In lieu of $19,000 bond Friday charged with the
December 1980 burning of a house at 1839 Jerry St. in the
Goldsboro area of Sanford.
Police allege Jam es Michael Williams, atlas Big Jiin, set the
fire that destroyed the dwelling, which was unoccupied at the
time.
MOTORCYCLE THEFT
A 1982 maroon Honda motorcycle valued at $1,800 was stolen
from the Twelve Oaks Campground west of Sanford sometime
between 5:30 a.m. Oct. 8 and noon Thursday.
The cycle Is the property of Irwin Camenson, 30 Wacassa
Trail, Sorrento.

Sanlando Utilities
Gets DER Aw ards
The Sanlando Utilities Corp. has been
named "Best Operated Plant" by the U.S.
Department of Environmental Regulation
(DER) for both its water treatment and
wastewater treatment plant facilities.
"We believe that this is the first time a
utility operation has won these awards
simultaneously," said Bill Mustard, Sanlando
executive vice president. "Naturally, we're
very proud of this recognition."
Sanlando was Judged by the DER against
other facilities of Its size — those producing
and treating up to 10 million gallons of potable
water per day and those treating up to five

million gallons of wastewater per day. Criteria
included water quality, certification levels and
skills of plant personnel, and customer
relations functions of the corporation. Quality
of the wastewBter treated at the plant, for
Instance, exceeds standards required by the
State of Florida, Mustard said.
The Sanlando Utilities Corp. was started In
1970 to serve a south Seminole County sub­
division of 550 homes. Today, the utility aervea
20,000 people in Seminole and Orange counties
from three plant sites. It eventually will
provide water and wastewater treatment
services for up (o 50,000 people, Mustard said.

Winter Springs Mayor
In Running For FLC Post
For the first time In at least 25 years,
Seminole County will have a candidate for an
officer of the Florida league of Cities at Die
statewide conference to be held Thursday.
Friday and Saturday at the Sheraton Twin
Towers in Orlando.
Winter Springs Mayor Troy Piland, who
recently won a sixth consecutive term In office
by being unopposed, Is vying with Daytona
Beach Mayor l-arry Kelly for second vice
president of the league.
The election is scheduled for 3 p.m. Saturday
in Die main auditorium at the convenUon
center.
Piland lias been serving on the board of
directors of the league.
A total of 43 municipal officials from six of
the county’s seven cities are registered to

attend the convenDon. Only Oviedo is not
sending anyone to Die gaDiering. Recently
elected Mayor Bob Whittier said, "We have
too much to do here In Oviedo to attend Die
conference."
Sanford Mayor Ijte P. Moore will be a
member of Die nominating committee, which
selects candidates for the various offices of the
league. The nominating committee Is to meet
Friday. Those named by Die nominating
committee usually are elected. However,
nominations will be allowed from Die floor.
Piland said today he hasn't decided wheDier
to seek Die nomination from Die floor U he Is
not selected by Die committee.
Piland has served a total of 10 years in
elective office In Winter Springs — four as a
councilman and six as mayor.

s t '
HvftM «* V s By T « * Vtrtoravg*

lions iris

Charlotte Richter, Altamonte Springs community service clerk, drops a pair
of donated eyeglasses Into a box set up at city hall by the Maitland Lions
Club. The club Is collecting donated eyeglasses, regrinding the lenses and
distributing the optical aids to underprivileged people who can’t afford them.

2 Americans, Swede Win Nobel Prize
STOCKHOI-M, Sweden (UPI) Two American scientists and a Swede
won Ihe 1981 Nobel Physics Prize
today for their work in atomic
spectroscopy, the study of energy and
matter, Including the development of
the laser.
Professor Nlcotaas Bloemuergen,
6), of H arvard U niversity, and
Professor ArDiur 1* Schawlaw, 60, of
Stanford University, shared half Die
$180,000 award for their contributions

to Die development of laser spectroscopy.
Professor Kal Slegbahn, 63, of
Uppsala University of Sweden, won
the oDier half for his work in
developing high-rtsoluUon electron
spectroscopy.
Their work furDiers Die study of Die
properties of atoms to a higher
precision, enabling measurements to
be taken and testing chem ical
reactions of atoms, said a member of

Correction

in phsytcs.
Bloem bergen, 1, w as born In
U trech t, N etherlands, and was
educated at Die universities of Utrecht
and Leiden in Die Netherlands and at
Harvard.
Schawlow, 60, was barn in Mount
Vernon, N.Y., and educated at the
U niversity of Toronto and Ihe
University of Ghent, Belgium. He
became a professor at Stanford In1961.

A letter lo the editor, tilled
"Revised Criminal Code Set
For January Action," which
appeared on Die Opinion page
in the Sunday, Oct. 18, edition
of Die Evening Herald, was
written by U.S. Rep. Bill
McCollum,
R-Altamonte
S p r in g s .
M c C o llu m ’s
signature was inadvertently
dropped from Die letter.

j

AREA DEATH
ARTHURC. MOORE
Arthur C. Moore, 78, of 214
Sum m erlin Ave., Sanford,
died Sunday at his residence.
Born in Oviedo Nov. 20, 1902,
he moved to Sanford from
Diere in 1909. He was Die
retired owner of Die Hill
Hardware Co. He was a
member and elder emeritus
of Die First Presbyterian
Church, Sanford. He was a

Die Royal Academy of Science*,
which decides on the prize winners.
The chemistry prize — the last of
the 1981 Nobel awards — was to be
announced later today.
The physics prize brought to five the
number of Americans honored thus
far in Die 1981 aeries of Nobel awards
and to 45 Die tiumber of Americans
winning Die physics prize Once Die
awards were first given in 1901.
Slegbahn was Die fourth Swede to win

Mason.
Survivors Include his wife,
KaDileen; a daughter, Mrs.
Betty Woodruff, Sanford; a
sister, Mrs. Charles Staton,
Clermont, Ga.; a brother,
Milton, Lake Mary; and four
grandchildren.
Brlsson F u n eral Home,
Sanford, Is In ch arg e of
arrangements.

WEATHER
AREA READINGS (I a.m .): temperature: 65; overnight
low: 63; Sunday high: 89; barometric pressure: 30:15; relative
humidity: 58 percent; winds: north at 12 mph.
TUESDAY TIDES: DAYTONA BEACH: hlgtw, 2:31 a.m „
3:10 p.m.; lows, 8:24 a.m., 9:21 p.m.; PORT CANAVERAL:
highs, 2:23 a.m., 3:02 p.m.; lows, 8:15 a.m., 9:12 p.m.;
BAYPORT; highs, 6:17 a .m .,9:45 p.m.; lows, 12:22 a.m., 2:25
p.m.

GREAT
AUTUMN
SALE
OCTOBER 19NO VEM BER 30

at your gas company showroom!

d A Q / Off ALL APPLIANCES
1W IN STOCK

To

• Save on Hardwick Gas
Ranges In a variety of
cotors and styles
•Saxe on Cm Dryers. O s
Water Heaters. Gas
Space Heaters

•Vbur old working
model water heater Is
worth $$ toward the
purchase of a new gas.
energy conserving
waterneater during the
Great Autumn Sale.

AREA FORECAST: Clearing, windy and cooler today
through Tuesday with highs mostly In the mid 70s today and
low 70s Tuesday. Colder tonight with lows near 50 or low 50s.
Winds becoming northerly around 20 mph today through
tonight.

FREE SPINAL
EXAMINATION
1 SstoMtos. Mutant. Un d Oms
2 M N s. Tigs m mtrn

I N M j m A rm M S * N s
• r w w I u M m n m im
3 7 Im M M ams N a N s to n lip

,.? ■ * * » Thousands of area residents'have'spina
releted problem which ueuetly respond to chiropractic
cere.
' This Isour wey ofencouraging you tofindout If you have a
problem that could be helped by chiropractic cere. If It
also our wey of acquainting you with our staff and
feernttes.
Em nlnetion Indudm a minimum of 10standard teats far
evaluating the spine and a contour analysis photo as
tmi i we are accepting newpatients, no one naod feai any

Otl y TWl
^

' RAost Insurances Accept s?

SANFORD

PAIN

C O N TR O L

CLINIC

Her el*. I n c )M N. French Aye.. Sinferb. Fib. Till I
Secend Clbtt Patie ee P u t bl I enter*. Fltribe llffl

HOSPITALIZED AFTER FIGHT
A 19-year-old Sanford man was hospitalized Thursday after
an altercation at Joe's Tavern, Southwest Road, Goldsboro.
Charles Leonard Ware, 118 Anderson Ave., told police a man
at the tavern approached him and made a threat.
Then the man sprayed him in the face with mace and hit him
several times about the right side of the head, he said.
Following the beating, the assailant pulled out a pistol, Ware
said. He said he then ran towards the rear of the club while the
man shot al him twice.
Ware was taken to Seminole Memorial Hospital at 12:04 a.m.
where he was treated for a head trauma and fractured finger.
He was released at 2:10 a.m.
Police say a 24-year-old suspect is being sought in connection
with the attack.

your ffo« co.
SANFORD 830 W 6th St/322-5733
DELAND 206 L New Ybrit **7734-1951

/• 1' S » tgfitlt Avq Ainni h Wn

d

323-5763

/•

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�W O RLD
IN BRIEF
Polish Hard-liner Warns
Solidarity: 'No Retreat'
WARSAW, Poland (UPI) — Prime Minister Gen.
Wojdech Jaruielski replaced ousted Communist Party
chief Stanislaw Kania and used his unprecedented
power to warn Solidarity he would no longer "retreat"
before union demands.
Jaruielski, who added the party chiefs Job to his
command of the government and armed forces, was
given sweeping authority Sunday by the party's cen­
tral committee, including the right to declare a state of
emergency "to assure peace" in Poland.

Socialists Win In Greece
ATHENS, Greece (U PI) —Greek socialists, swept to
victory in national elections, said they were ready to
take office today to start on a program calling for with­
drawal from NATO and the banning of U.S. military
bases.
Andreas Papandreou, the U.S.-educated leader of
the Panhellenic Socialist Movement (PASOK), which
also advocated withdrawal from the European
Common Market, said after his election Sunday he was
ready to take over by early afternoon but it "depends
on when the president will gall me and give me the
mandate.*

Mideast TensJons M ount
CAIRO, Egypt (UPI) — A key Egyptian newspaper
warned today of a "decisive confrontation" with Libya
within days and authorities tightened internal security
by arresting 230 Moslem militants and dismissing 134
members of the army.
With tension rising on both sides, U bya's official
Jamahiriyah News Agency charged that Sudanese
helicopter-borne troops were preparing to Invade
Chad, which is occupied by Libyan troops.

Pope Uses Shield
VATICAN CITY ( UPI) - In his first appearance at
the window of his private apartments since his return
to the Vatican, Pope John Paul II stood behind what
appeared to be a bullet-proof glass lectern.
I-ooking up from St. Peter’s Square, the thick
transparent glass lectern shielded John Paul's entire
head and chest as he delivered his Sunday noon
blessing. Vatican sources said the pontiff has never
i&gt;efore used a lectern during his Sunday appearances.

Discord Over Wagner Works
TEL AVIV, Israel I U PI) — A Cabinet minister and a
parliament member added their voices today to the
crescendo of controversy surrounding the Israel
Philharmonic Orchestra's attempts to play works by
Richard Wagner, Adolf Hitler’s favorite composer.
Scores of scuffling, shouting concert-goers prevented
the orchestra from playing an encore of Wagner music
at the end of Sunday evening's concert. Conductor
Zubin Mehta's first attempt to play Wagner’s works
Thursday was similarly foiled.

HOSPITAL NOTES
Santa,* M ,m * rlil H*s#il*l
O tt.b„ If. IN I
ADMISSIONS
SANFORD
Debra Ann Young
William D Camay
John Brooks
Carlot V Paines
Lula Mar Jones
Carmella Severance
James C Mitchell
Karen J Churchill. Casselberry
DISCHAROES
SANFORD
Emma Ashety
Selene P Simpson
Andres J Sulek. Dellona
Jean F Anderson. Osteen

Semlael* Menterlal
Octeher II
ADMISSIONS:
SANFORD:
William K. Coopar
Gladys E Morris
Dorothy Ptrklnt
Alice B Promt. DtBary
John E Kent, Dtlton*
Jerry S Schwalm, Dalton*
William L Robinson. Wlntar
Springs
DISCHARGES:
Lori D Stokav Deltona
Odith Sides. Enterprise
Frank H Bailay. Winter Springs
Nrttie M Hill 1 baby girl,
Geneva

Legal Notice

Legal Notice
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF
THE E IG H TE E N TH JUDICIAL
C IR C U IT
IN
AND
FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY. FLORIDA
CASE NO. II U I C A H K
LEO THORNHILL, el u. ■
Pie.mills,
is
PATRICIA MAE NELSON.
Defendant
R EN O TICE OF SALE
NOTICE IS GIVEN that pur
suanttoalmal judgment dated the
71nd day ol June. IN I. and this
Court s Order on Motion to Eslend
dated October I, IN I. in Case No
•I at) CA 09 K ol the Circuit Court
in and lor Seminole County.
Florida.
In
which
LEO N
tH O R N H IL L
and TH E L M A ,
THORNHILL, his wile, are the
Plamlills and PATRICIA MAE
PELSON. is the Defendant. I will
aril lo the highest and best bidder
Iqr cash in Seminole County
(ourthouse in Sanlord. Seminole
Qtunty. Florida, at the Iront door
fl ihe West side ol the Courthouse
1 II 00 a m . on the ?nd day ol
lovember. IN I, the following
^escribed property set forth in the
frder ol final lodgment
T LOT J. BLOCK C. TOWN ANO
COUNTRY ES TA TES R EP LAT,
according to the Plat thereof as
(ecorded in Plat Book 11. Pages 1*
and JO. Public Records of Semmol*
County. Florida
J l e s s That part o« Lot 3 more
particularly described as follows
BEGINNING at the Northwest
Corner of said Lot 1. run South IT
degrees JV EAST IIM 4 feet,
thence South 44 degrees EAST
110 70 leet. thence South 40 degrees
)0 OS ' WEST tool leet. thenca
North 04 degrees WEST 01 SO leet.
inence North 04 degrees 14 30
TVEST 114 04 leet to th* BEGIN
NING
1 T O G E T H E R with the dish
posher, refrigerator. rang*,
graperies. 1 air conditioners,
Storage shed, carpeting, pump and
fenks for well, and bar stools in
kitchen situated on the ado ye
Premises
-.D A T E D THIS 14th day Ol Oc

1

KKtr. INI
BEAD

S ARTHUR H BECKW ITH. JR
£ CLERK OF THE CIRCUIT
S' COURT
^
BY Carri* E. Buetlner
' Deputy
Publish October IT. 10. IN I
D E N IS

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C ITY OF CASSELBERRY
FLORIDA
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARINO
TO CONSIDER ADOPTION OF
PROPOSED ORDINANCE
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN
NOTICE IS H E R EB Y GIVEN
by the City ol Casselberry,
Florida, that the Cily Council will
hold a public hearing lo consider
enactment ol Ordinance 444
submitted to th* City Council o&gt; the
City ot Casselberry, Florida,
pursuant to Chapter 4T T74. House
Bill No ITS* Laws ol Florida INT.
and entitled
A N O R D IN AN C EO F T H E C IT Y
OF CASSELBERRY. FLORIDA.
ESTABLISHING AN ADVANCEO
L IF E SUPPO R T PROGRAM
(PARAM EDIC) W ITHIN TH E Cl
TV'S FIR E D E P A R TM E N T AND
E S TA B L IS H IN G A SP E C IA L
FUND BY WAY OF A SPECIAL
ASSESSMENT ON AO VALOREM
TAXES TO FU N D TH E SAME.
This notice Is given pursuant to
lh* provisions ol Chapter 144,
Florida Statutes, and th* Charter
and Ordinances ot lh* City ot
Casselberry, Florid*, as amended
and supplemented
Said Ordinance will be con­
sidered lor passage, relectlon. or
passage with amendment* on
Monday. October 14. ITEI, at 1:30
P M or as toon thereafter at
possible Public Hearing will be
held in th* Casselberry CHy Hall.
At th* meeting Interested parties
may appear and be heard with
respect to th* proposed ordinance
at submitted pursuant to law. This
hearing may be continued from
lime to Km* until final action is
taken by th* City Council.
Copies ot th* proposed ordinance
and related documents are
available at the city hall with th*
Clark ol th* City and sam* may b*
inspected by th* public.
Dated this lath day ot October
A D . IN I.
MARY W. HAWTHORNE
City Clerk
ADVICE TO TH E PUBLIC: It*
person decides lo appeal a dec I*Ion
mad* with respect to any manor
considered at th* above hearing he
will neod a verbatim record ol all
proceedings.
Including
the1
testimony and evidence, which
record Is not provided by Hi* CHy
ol Costalberry (Chapter MIS*.
Laws ot Florid*. ITEQI
Publish October IT, IN I
DEN 44

Monday, Oct. IT, ITU

Evgnlng Han Id, Sanford, FI.

Legal Aid And Land Managem ent

Report Suggests Changes
In Childbirth Practices

Top County Commission Agenda
The Legal Aid Society's present contract fiscal 1982-83.
During the Tuesday commission meeting,
with the Seminole County Commission is
expected to be discussed Tuesday, with two the board also will discuss several landmajor changes recommended for the 1981-82 management requests.
A request for a dredge and fill permit to
contract.
clear ISO feet of shoreline for a private beach
S everal planning req u ests a lio are
scheduled to come before the board during the at Lake Golden, south of Sanford Airport, also
10 A.M. commission meeting at the county is expected to come before the board.
courthouse In Sanford.
David Freygang plans to ask the board for
The first proposed change in the contract the the permit for property on Marquette Avenue.
Legal Aid Society has with the county relates Approximately 167 cubic yards of muck will be
to the lump-sum payment of $8,228 to be paid to moved to higher land and spread over an area
the legal organization.
of three acres, according to Freygang.
The sum represents an amount that has been
The county Division of Environmental
collected above a predetermined cap set for Services has no objection to the request.
the society's approved budget.
Joseph Whitaker will be requesting a dredge
The second change the county Office of
M anagem ent and Budget (OMB) has and fill permit to post three "No Trespassing"
recommended is related to the cap set on the signs on his property located on the E.
society's budget. The approved amount for the Chapman Road extension south of Oviedo.
society's budget next year is $10,800. However,
The commission staff reports that six letters
the OMB is recommending the society receive have been received in opposition to the "No
all funds collected during this fiscal year that Trespassing" signs, and one letter in favor.
exceed the cap, and that the money be paid to
Environmental Services reports the signs do
the society during the first three months of not present any environmental problems-

NEW YORK (UPI) - Pregnsnt women
should walk or sit during labor to make
childbirth easier and safer, rather than lie
in bed and take drugs, a new medical report
concludes.
The report, circulated Sunday by the
American Foundation for Maternal and
Child Health, challenges the practice of
confining women to bed, giving them drugs
to facilitate childbirth and using fetal
monitors.
"The average pregnant woman in the
U.S. approaches childbirth completely
unaware that none of the drugs offered to
her by her doctor or nurse during labor and
birth has been adequately tested In regard
to her baby's safety," foundation President
Doris Haire said.
"Yet we know that many of the drugs
given to the mothers during labor and birth
continue to circulate in the blood and brain
of the newborn Infant for several days or
more."

Instead of using drugs, the report
suggested it would be better for women to
walk or sit during labor — and to sit up
during delivery — rather than being kept on
their backs.
The report by the non-profit research
foundation, issued in advance of its annual
meeting today, was based on a sampling of
opinion from authorities.
Ms. Haire said evidence from many
experts points to the fact that, generally,
activity would make birth better for both
mother and baby — and that fewer drugs
would be needed.
Medical evidence, she said, shows that
confining the mother to bed during labor
can prolong labor, increase discomfort and
intensify the mother's need for drugs — as
well as affect the fetal heart rate and
condition of the Infant.
To facilitate delivery, she said there are
"birthing chairs" and "birthing pans" for
women to sit on.

CALENDAR
TUESDAY, OCT. 20
Umgw 004$-Lake Mary Lioui, 7 p.m., Quality Inn, 1-4
and SR 434.
South Seminole Masonic Lodge, 7:30 p.m., Triplet
Drive, Casselberry.
O vereaten Anonymous, 7:30 p.m., Florida Power &amp;
Light.
Weight Watchers,
Casselberry.

7

p.m.,

Summit

Apts.,

Seminole AA, 8 p.m., open discussion, W1 Lane
Minnie Drive, Crossroads, Sanford.
WEDNESDAY, OCT. 21
United Way report Incheon, noon, Holiday Inn,
Interstate 4 and State Road 48. Hosted by Sanford
Optimist Gub.
Sanford-Breakfast Rotary Gub, 7 a m., Sanford
Airport restaurant.
Casselberry Rotary, 7:30 a.m., Woman’s Gub, 250
Overbrook Drive, Casselberry.
Oviedo Rotary, 7:30 a.m., the Town House
Restaurant.
Sanford Optimist, noon, Holiday Inn.
Recovery, lac., 12:30 p.m., Sears, Altamonte Mall.
Sanford Klwaals, noon, Sanford G vic Center.

8 p.m., DeBary Community

Starlight

NOTICE

Center. Shell Road.
8:20 p.m., 1201 W. First St.
THURSDAY, OCT. 22
SemJaole Oonaty League of Women Voters Orieotattoa G m na and Wine FeaUral, $-7 p jn ., 114 Uvo Oak
Lana, Altamonte Spring*. Open to all persons Intarm tad in learning about league activities.

T A X IM P A C T O F P R O P E R TY A P P R A IS A L
A D J U S T M E N T BOARD

Florida Anduboa Society Seminote Chapter, 2 p.m.,
Florida Power k Light, N. Myrtle Avenue, Sanford.
Larry Hayeo will speak on violent storms. Refresh­
menta.

MEMBERS OF THE BOARD

V O N T M M B L I
w ith your In su ran ce I
— CALL —
TO N Y

B U SSI

H o n o ra b la

—

Pill—Klr*fihfr°f t

Honorabla
B a rb a ra C h r i s t e n s e n
Board of County Commliilontrs — Oistrict No.

SU-ftttS
4

FU R N ISH E D BEDROOM
Tha purpose of tha board Is to anhanca fairness in property taxes by correcting errors whan they are
found to exist.

CAVALIER
MOTOR INN

•M*M Service
•LaewOry FadUhat
• II Cbaaaal Cable TV
•Live RatertalAMeot
T Night* la Levee*
• Family Rattaeraat

T H E F O L L O W IN G T A B L E S U M M A R IZ E S T H IS Y E A R 'S A C T IO N B Y T H E B O A R D

3200 S. O v M o Dr.

• Larger Reams a a*
■ NNiehcy Apts. Availaoi#
At Slightly Higher Rat*
•Ipaclal Disc***) O*
Monthly Rates

• Through Dec 31. INI

(Nwy. 17-92) Satford
(305) 321-0490

Type
of
Property

Residential

Column 1

Column 2

Column 3

Column 4

Column 5

Column 6

Number of
Exemption
Requests
Qranted by
the Board

Total
Number of
Exemption
Requests

Number of
Assessments
Reduced by
tha Board

Total Number
of Requests

Reduction
in Taxable
Value Due
to Board
Action

Loss In
Tax
Dollars-

30

1

Commercial

8

7 8 ,5 2 0

1,491,29

2

5

1 2 4 ,6 8 0

1,950.73

0

Agricul­
tural

th a s M t k b f h a b it?

ao a» ShSrfg* iwt m u . d t

5-Day Plan
i t o jk i m p i n g f

Savanfh-day Advantkt Church

MONDAY, OCT. 19-29
7:30 p*m.-9 p.m.

10

1

Business
Machinery
end
Equipment

•

1

Vacant Lots
and Acroaga
TO TA LS

tor
Assessment
Reductions

3

Industrial
and
Miscellane­
ous

ts

-

Tha Property Appraisal Adjustment Board meets each year to review complaints regarding property
tax assessment and exemptions.

W EEK LY

s o

Honorabla .All fill Kfiftth
School Board — Oistrict No.

I

Honorsbia
Nflnry Warren
School Board — Oiltrict No.

M OBILE HOM E INSUR ANCE
» 9

Honorable - M J E f i a t h e r _
Board of County Commissioner* — District N o ..

Board of County Commlsilonsri — District No.

17

7
______ 1_______

175.93

9,410

0

0

2,289.74

145,445

30_______ ____ U _______ ____ 41_______ 1 3 5 8 .0 5 6

5 . . M 7 . W ______

A L L T A X P A Y E R S S H O U L D BE A W A R E T H A T B O A R D A C T IO N S W H IC H R E D U C E
TA X A B LE VALUE
PLICABLE TQ ALL P R O P E R T Y T O BE
P R O P O R T IO N A L L Y I M I I *
Questions concerning tha actions takan by this Board mss
parson or dark at

tha chair-

3Q5-123-433Q E x t .291

CHAIRM AN

700 ILM AVI.
SANFORD

00

0

(Phone)

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CLER K

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�Evening Herald

Sanford City Manager W.E. "P ete" Knowles
ranks second In the state of Florida in the total
number of continuous years of service in a
management position In a single city.
He has been Sanford’s city manager for the
past 284 years. This Is a record because
historically city managers do not have a long
tenure with a single dty.
At the same time Knowles ranks first in the
to u t number of y e a n - 3 3 - of active service as
a city manager. Prior to coming to Sanford in
1983, Knowles was city manager in Berwick, Me.
and in Derry, N.H.

(U IH « l MOI
300 N. FRENCH AVE., SANFORD, F M . 32771
Area Code 30W22-2611 or 831-9993

Monday, October 19, 1901— 4A
Wayne D. Doyle, PDblliher
Thornej Giordano, Managing Editor
Robert Lovenbury, Advertising and Circulation Director
Home Delivery; Week, $1-00; Month, $4-8; 0 Months, $24.00;
Year, $45.00. By Mall; Week, $1.23; Month, $S.2S; 8 Months,
$30.00; Year. 107.00.

Sarasota City Manager Ken Thompson ranks
f in t In the sU te in the most y e a n of service to a
single city.
Sanford was the only city in Seminole County
with a city manager for some yean.
Casselberry tried the d ty manager system for a
few y e a n and had a total of three d ty managers
before it abandoned that type government,
opting instead for a full-time mayor.
Now, there are d ty managers in four other
Seminole dties. They are: David Chacey in
Long wood; Jeff Etchberger, Altamonte Springs;

Reagan And
Human Righfs
The Reagan administration has stated that it
supports human rights but that quiet diplomacy is
more effective for influencing foreign govern­
ments than the vociferous human rights policy of
the Carter era.
Now a recent meeting between human rights
advocates and State Department people reveals
that the government may be quietly downgrading
the Human Rights Bureau.
Established by Congress and President Carter
in 1977 the bureau’s statutory functions include
monitoring human rights in nations receiving U.S.
aid. Tfie department is considering a plan to
trahsfqr many of 4he bureau's functions to
another section, curtail the functions that remain
with the bureau, and change its name to the
Bureau of Individual and Personal Rights.
Since the nomination of Ernest Lefever was
withdrawn, after stiff Senate disapproval of his
anti-human rights stance, no candidate for the
post of assistant secretary of state for human
rights has been proposed.
Is quiet diplomacy going to be succeeded by
silence about repression and torture?
The complaints against the Carter human
rights policy are well known. The U.S.
reprimanded its Third World allies for rights
violations, but seemed to overlook violations by
our ideological enemies.
The fall of Nicaraguan dictator Somoza and of
the Shah of Iran and the turmoil in both countries
have been blamed by Reagan officials on Carter’s
Insistence on demanding human rights even in
nations undergoing rebellion.
Critics also fault the bureau for holding back aid
to Chile and Argentina, and for interfering in
Korea, when anti-government groups threatened
overthrow of the regime.
These charges reflect a real weakness in the
Carter human rights policy. But other analysts
contend that the revolutions in Iran and
Nicaragua were fed by decades-long violations of
human rights and were Inevitable.
Thousands of political prisoners are alive today
in Indonesia, Argentina and Korea because of the
Carter policy. And the visible human rights
defense raised America in the esteem of the
world.
Tragically, in a world habituated to rule by
force and violence, the human rights policy was
seen as weakness. The invasion of Afghanistan
turned America's priorities back to militarystrength.
U.N. Ambassador Jeane Kirkpatrick argues
that in blinking at torture committed by friendly
authoritarian regimes, we can focus on the
greater rights abuses of the totalitarian com­
munists.
In a recent interview, she said, “ I know of no
country which has ever successfully carried out
reforms while fighting a civil war."
President Lincoln would disagree. For it was
during the Civil War that he signed the Eman­
cipation Proclamation, extending the basic
human right, freedom, to the slaves.
Lincoln pursued both strength and freedom. So
did President Roosevelt, who set the Four
Freedoms as the goal of victory in World War II.
President Reagan, in meeting the Soviet threat,
must continue America's dual commitment to
strength and freedom.
Our present military buildup must be ac­
companied by a visible and effective human
rights policy.
The first step is to preserve the Human Rights
Bureau, and to nominate a new director worthy of
confirmation by the Senate.

BERRY'S W ORLD

Charles Lytle, a Lake Mary merchant, has
been appointed by Mayor Walter Sorenson and
approved by the d ty council for a teat on the
d ty ’s planning and zoning board. Appointed to
the d ty ’s board of adjustment is Charles Elliott,
a building designer.
The two men replace Bill Durrenberger, who
resigned from the boards to run for Ray Fox's
seat on the d ty council In the Dec. 8 d ty election.
Three council seats are up in the election. In
addition to Fox's seat, ones held by Gene
McDonald and Vic Olvera are also open. Olvera
filed qualifying papers this past week. McDonald
has said he will be seeking re-election while Fox
says he hasn’t made up his mind yet.
The deadline for candidates to qualify with
City Clerk Connie Major at d ty hall is noon, Od.
29.
Those city residents who are not registered to
vole may do so at either of Seminole Elections
Supervisor Camilla Bruce's offices in the
courthouse in Sanford or at the Interstate Mall in
Altamonte Springs or at d ty hall. The

registration books will close on Nov. 6.
The Lake Mary City Council has awarded a
contract to Municipal Equipment Co. for a “skid
mounted fire fighting unit" — a pump to be pul
on a fire truck — for $4,302. Some $3,000 was
budgeted for the item and Fire Chief Jim Orioles
estimated the pump would cost about $4,500.

I
i
»■
$

The U.S. Senate has adopted Sen. l-ewton
Chiles' proposal to withhold fordgn aid funds
from Haiti unless that government cooperates
with the United Stales to halt the flow of illegal
emigrants into Florida.
The proposal sponsored by Chiles, DLakeland, was adopted as an amendment to the
foreign aid authorization bill.
The bill allows military and economic
development assistance funds to be provided to
Haiti only if the president determines that the
country is cooperating in halting emigration
from that county; is not aiding or supporting
illegal emigration and that It will cooperate fully
in implementing U.S. development in Haiti to
provide job opportunities.

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D O N G RAFF

ROBERT WALTERS

What's
In A
Theory?

Transit
System
Crumbling
WASHINGTON (NEA)—"Don't cross the
bridge, til you come to it," Henry Wadsworth
Longfellow sagely advised more than a
century ag o -b u t If he were alive today,
Ixmgfellow might find the span in danger of
collapse when he arrived.
In fact, several recenfauthoritatlve studies
suggest that the nation's entire public tran­
sportation sy stem -lts highways, bridges,
railro a d s, pipelines, a ir term inals and
com m ercial
w aterw ays—is
rapidly
deteriorating.
"The United Slates is seriously underinvesting in (its) public infrastructure,"
warns the Council of State Planning Agencies
in a report with the gloomy title of “ America
in Ruins: Beyond the Public Works Pork
Barrel."
"Because of tight budgets and inflation, the
maintenance of a growing number of... public
facilities has been deferred," the report adds.
"Replacement and rehabilitation of ob­
solescent public works have been postponed.
New construction has bet ' canceled, delayed
or 'stretched out."’
The American Transportation Advisory
Council, a coalition of business organizations
and trade associations, says the country's
highway system is wearing out at an annual
rate 50 percent (aster than it Is being repaired
or replaced.
One of the most Important sources of
revenue tor highway construction and
maintenance, the federal gasoline tax, has
not been increased since 1955. The Highway
Trust Fund currently has an $11 billion cash
balance, but federal officials estimate that an
expenditure or 114 billion annually is
necessary for maintenance.
The number of passengers carried by
scheduled airlines is expected to double
during the coming decade, but airports in
many cities already are Incapable of ef­
ficiently handling current passenger traffic.
The capital outlays of the nation's railroads
have exceeded internally generated funds
every year since 1962, thus adversely af­
fecting the industry's ability to finance
necessary improvements, says the advisory
council.
A massive Infusion of $623 billion in public
and private funds will be required during the
1980s, the council estimates, to sustain the
efficient operation of the country's tran­
sportation system.
Serious deterioration of the highway net­
work, including the relatively new interstate
system, has been compounded by escalating
construction and maintenance coats and
increasingly tight budgets at all levels of
government—local, stale and federal—says
the General Accounting Office.
Nowhere Is the crisis more readily ap­
parent than in the dismal condition of the
country's 514,000 bridges, approximately 75
percent of which were built before 1935.
More than 3,700 of those spans have been
closed because of life-threatening structural
deficiencies, while almost 87,700 suffer from
“overall structural conditions.

S M A L L B U S IN ES S M A N

JEFFREY HART

Lance The Libyan Boil
Vatican intelligence indicates the man who
attempted to kill the pope had been processed
through the Libyan terrorist academy.
We know that Libya has acquired large
stocks of terrorist equipment from farmer
CIA agents who now are in the weapons sales
business.
The evidence now Indicates that Libya and
its dictator Muammar el-Qsddsfi — U not
actually behind the aaaaasination of Egypt's
President Anwar Sadat -certain ly knew of it
In advance.
The Egyptian plotter who masterminded
the aaaaasination has been identified by some
as Saadedin Shazli, a former Egyptian
general who was relieved by Sadat during the
Yom Kippur War, who is now in exile in
IJbya.
Qaddafi went on television from Tripoli to
crow over the murder of Sadat, and he
threatened future Egyptian leaders with
assassination if they follow the path of peace
with Israel.
Palestine liberation Organization fanatics
danced in the streets of Beirut, while the rest
of the civilized world mourned the death of
Anwar Sadat.
It has now been revealed by columnist Jack
Anderson that Qaddafi is plotting (he
assassination of President Reagan. This plot,
if true, would cap the whole thing off.
Qaddafl's targets have been the noblest of
international leaders, men Immediately and
widely recognized for their courage and good
will: Pope John Paul 11, President Reagan,
President Anwar Sadat.
Qaddafi appears to be demonically driven
to strike at obvious goodness.
President Sadat died because he had in­
curred the enmity of Arab fanatics fay daring
to move toward peace with Israel. It ia not too
much to say that he died for Deace in the

Middle East. Though he was not an Israeli, of
course, It Is also true to say that he died for
the existence of the Israeli state. He saw that
it has a place In the region, and that con­
tinuous hostility is in the Interest of no one,
neither in the Middle E ast nor the world.
President Sadat had the courage, almost
four years ago, to travel to Jerusalem, speak
before the Knesset, and begin the peace
process. His personal initiatives made the
Camp David meeting possible. Without his
individual courage and statesmanship, there
would have been no "peace process" in the
Middle East.
Sadat for several years had seemed the
only sane leader In a region whose leaders for
the most part seem candidates for the lunatic
asylum, and this applies to Menachem Begin,
who stakes out territorial claims to the West
Bank based upon the Old Testament.
But Egypt is the pre-eminent military
power In the Arab side. Without Egypt's
trm y , there can be no plausible plan for war
against Israel Sadat made that impossible,
and that la why he died,
He also had the courage to throw the Soviet
ambassador out of Egypt along with six other
diplomats, and he gave 700 Soviets advisors
one week to pack their bags and go home.
Sadat was a patriot, and he did not want
Egypt to be turned into a Soviet client state.
He turned Egypt toward the West — and so he
is dead.
Colonel Qaddafi is nothing but an in­
tern atio n al m u rd erer. In 1959, when
P resid en t Eisenhow er recognised th at
Patrice Lumumba had become a threat to the
stability of Central Africa, he gave the order:
Get rid of him. Lumumba w ent
It'a time for a similar order from President
Reagan, and no exploding cigars or trick wet
suits this time.

!
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Our subject today is the theory of
"authoritarian" and "totalitarian" regimes. {
You are undoubtedly aware by now of at ;
least the general outlines of the dif­
ferentiation between the two that is a prime
directive of Reagan administration foreign
policy.
And if you aren't, where have you been?
Certainly not following the news and opinion
pages closely.
To refresh, the essence of the dif­
ferentiation is that the authoritarian regime ;
has its faults from a democratic point of view,
but these are primarily limited to political
control of its population. Whereas the
totalitarian system exercises comprehensive
control over all aspects of public and usually
private life.
In praetjeal terms, this means that we; the
United States of America, a democracy
dedicated to the principle of representative
government and respect for human rights,
can find Interests and goals In common with
the
theoretically
salvageable
and
authoritarian regimes while the totalitarian
ones are beyond hope, natural and Inevitable
enemies.
OK so far. Now we come to the tough part —
applying the theory to specific governments.
The first one Is easy: In the Soviet Union the
state has the last and unchallengeable word
across the line — politically, economically,
culturally. And seeks to extend Its control
beyond Us own borders. Obviously
totalitarian. En garde!
For contrast, let's take El Salvador. The
military-civilian (mostly the former) junta is
harshly suppressive of the opposition, not
only the guerrillas challenging it with arm s
but what remains of the moderate political
groups and critical press. AU right, so it's au th o ritaria n , but considering the c ir­
cumstances, that can be excused and a strong
case made not only for common goals but
active U.S. support.
But they are not all that easy. What ab o u tt
South Africa, whose black population is as •
thoroughly and represslvely controlled as any ■.
in the world? What about Zaire, as corrupt
and inept a dictatorship as exists In the
world? What about Poland, a country with a
communist structure but with a population
that insists upon behaving as if it should
decide public m atters for Itself?
And what about the People’s Republic of
China, worshipping at the same philosophic
shrine as the Soviet Union and essentially In
accord as to how to run the political shop at ,
home? The only real difference is a slight .
(4,000-mile) border dispute. As a con- ,
sequence, the Soviet Union and People's
China are bitter enemies. And People's China
and the United States are friends, sort of.
But back to the authoritarian-totalitarian
business, what seems to really come down to ,
in the end Is a handy way of differentiating ,
between those repressive regimes that this ■,
administration is willing to do business with .
and those it ii not.

JACK ANDERSON

Egypt Officials Involved In Arm s Scandal
WASHINGTON’ - The ainister figure of
fugitive ex-CIA agent Edwin Wilson lurks
d istu rb in gly In the background of a
multlmiUlon-dollar scandal involving the
highest officials in Egypt today.
1 have uncovered evidence that establishes
direct links between the surreptitious award
of a lucrative arm s shipment contract and the
men who are now the deputy prim e m inister
and defense m inister of E gyp t Another of­
ficial deeply involved is the brother-in-law of
E gypt's new president, Hoard Mubarak, who
as rice president learned of the backroom
deal but did nothing to stop i t
The company that was secretly given the
exclusive contract to ship billions of dollars’
worth of U.S. arm s to Egypt was called
T en a n t It la ostensibly headed by an
Egyptian businessm an named Huasan Salem .

"lethargy, onnul and mslaito’ won't wish
rouon tor not doing your homowortl"

Dick Rozansky, Winter Springs and Phil Kulbes,
Lake Mary.

But In a telephone interview with tny
associates Indy Badhwar and D ale Van Atta,
Salem acknowledged that an Abu Dhabi
m erchant, All Shorafa, helped create Terasm . Shorafa happens to be a Paiectlnian,
and he continues to have a hidden interest in
the firm .
The tie to Wilson Is through s former CLA
official, Thomas C lines, who w as 6 p « ty

•l]»»* ....**—. — .

director of covert operations before his
retirem ent in October 1978. Salem turned to
Clines when Teraam’a secret contract ap­
peared to be in trouble; the Pentagon con­
sidered the company totally unqualified to
handle the arm s shipm ents.
Salem needed an American with good
Washington connections, and Clines filled the
bill. He w u an old CIA buddy of Wilson; the
two have been linked with com panies secretly
owned by the agency. At the tim e 8elcm cam e
along looking for an American partner,
Clines w u already running a company with
financial backing from his friend Wilson.
The solution to T ersam 'i difficultie s w u
twofold: The company w u reorganised into
the Egyptian American Transport Services
Co., with Clines u a 48 percent owner. Then
the firm 's com petitors for the juicy shipping
contract w ere to be bought off or farced out of
the running.
The experience of the last potential rival to
Egyptian American T rauport bordered on
the m elodram atic. It look place in Septem ber
1171 In • su ite a t the rttsjr Madison Hotel In
W ashington
T hai
who began bragging about his connections in
ths CIA and aleaw hirr. The riattor w u im ­

pressed by the pretence of armed guards and
the Egyptian m ilitary attache, Gen. Abu
Ghaxala, who ia now defense m inister.
After Clines and the Egyptians got him to
agree to a phony subcontract In return for his
alienee, the com petitor w u taken to a nearby
room where more armed guards ushered him
into the presence of the then-ministar of
defense, Gen. Kam al H uaan A ll, now deputy
prim e m inister.
All asked the buMnessman if he w u
u tisfle d with the under-the-table d ea l The
/com petitor assured him he w u , though
ultim ately the payoff w u never con­
sum m ated.
There is another m ysterious link between
the high Egyptian officials and W ilson, who
Jumped bail on charges of sm uggling ex­
plosives to Libya and Is now hiding out in
Tripoli under the protection of desert dictator
Muammar Qaddafi. Both A ll's and C h assis's
nam aew ert found in notes confiscated from a
form er Wilson m ercenary a r u e tad for the
attem pted s — ination last year of a
dW daw t Libyan student in Colorado.
The su b n et Is known to have talked with
Wilson M o n the Colorado obootlng, and
investigators b elieve ths note* w e n mada at
that tim e. The two Egyptian officials' nam es

v*» ;* ** “-wg*^ n tm*—

were m isspelled but unm istakable. In one
significant reference to A ll, the notes say,
"Defense M inister often finishes up his of- *
fld a l buaineu in a few days, and then takes :
tim e to d ean up persona] business at 1
&lt;Egyptian Am erican Transport &gt;."
This utoniohlng notation supports evidence
I have already reported that links All and
Ghaxala personally to the secret arm s
shipm ent deal.
It's not surprising that Wilson would know
these men. For years, hit Job In the CIA w u
to
In filtrate
in tern ation al shipping •'
associations and learn iQ he could about
arm s shipm ents. His contacts throughout the
Middle E ast w ere extensive, and he h u
maintained them since leaving the agency.
A final note on W ilson: The CIA denies my
report that the renegade spy m et In Rome last
July with an agency official. But m y sources
insist that the CIA desperately wants to know
what sensitive operations Wilson might
reveal If he ia brought back to (a c t tha
charges against him. A s one source said
enigm atically, the agency la m ost afraid b e ll
blow tha w histle on "CIA Involvement in
deaths in the Middle E ast which be is aware
of - and CIA acttvW as In E gyp t"

’’
,

*'
*

�I

SPORTS

Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Monday, Oct. If, i n i —JA

Guess Who's Com ing To D inner? Again
By SAM COOK
Herald Sporta Editor
Guess who’s coming to dinner John
Blair?
He's someone that's been there
before. In fact, he was there Just a week
ago. Seminole linebacker Antonio
Davis, who turned in an incredible IS
tackles, sis assists and caused two
fumbles, was picked by the Sanford
coaching staff as its Sanford Optimist
Club Player of the Week.
B lair, the O ptim ist's friendly
president, will be more than happy to
set the table for Antonio one more time
this Wednesday when Sanford's most
sports minded d u b gets together at the
M Holiday Inn.
The 5-foot*7,170-pound Davis led the
Fighting Seminoles' best defensive
effort of the year — Friday’s 7-0
blanking of DeLahd. More Importantly,
Sanford&gt; victory, coupled with Lake
Brantley's lots to Spruce Creek, 14-7,
gave SemlAole a Ml conference record
and a half game lead over Terry
Manfredi's Hawks in the Five Star.
Davis was coach Jerry Posey's prime
choice for a Headhunter award after
viewing the films Sunday. Senior
defensive tackle BUI Painter had
an o th er good outing. The 6-foot-3
strongman coUected nine tackles, five
assists and recovered two fumbles. The
savage-hitting and alert Tribe snatched
five of the six bobbles DeLand coughed
up.

I f i M

Jeff Litton threw for 31 yards, but 17
came at a most crucial time, just after
a fumble set up Sanford on the DeLand
19. Big tight end Frank Rowe rumbled
to the two yard line. Litton followed
center Jay Hauck and guards Doug
Sanders and Donald Croslyn into the
cone on the nest play.
While L itton's passing (2-9-1-56)
wasn’t overwhelming, he did continue
his fine punting. His last boot, against
an 11-man rush, rolled 56 yards and
trapped DeLand 92 yards from the
promised land.
The aforementioned linemen, Hauck,
Croslyn and Sanders, picked up Hatchetmen awards for their excellent
blocking. Croslyn, a two-year starter at
guard and a senior, graded out the
highest in the mid-SO's. Hauck and
Sanders, both juniors, were in the high
70’s.
Senior Sutton picked up what's
getting to be a weekly award for him.
The 10.1100-yard dash sprinter hauled
in a pass for 14 yards and ran for 14
yards on a nice draw play in addition to
his 100-yard night. It was his third such
game in a row at that total.

f t i

"Painter graded out about as high as
anybody has all year," Posey said
about the tall senior's B9 percent
showing. Another Headhunter was
defensive back Vince Edwards. He had
four tackles, three assists and the
game-clinching interception,
"Vince didn't have as many tackles
as he usually does, but when the guys
up front are doing their Job, that's the
way it works," pointed out Posey,
whose fast-improving Seminoles have
won four straight since an openingseason loas to Titusville Astronaut.
The defense was working without its
m asterm ind,
coordinator
Dave
Moaure, who was taken ill during school
and couldn't make the trip. Despite
Mosure's absence, the Tribe remem­
bered its lessons.
During the first and second quarters,
DeLand could muster just 20 offensive
plays with two of those being punts. The
Bulldogs were held to 77 yards rushing,
while Sanford rolled up 199. Fullback
Lenny Sutton led the way with 100 yards
on 17 carries.

Ju n io r special te am 's m em ber
Harold Gaines picked up the Savage
award for his punt coverage work.

DeLand added 56 yards through the
atr to give the 'Dogs a measly 133 for
the evening.
Running back Victor W illiams,
shaken up just before halftime and
taken to the DeLand hospital, was
released Friday night and attended
S aturday m orning's loosening up
practice.

"Harold did miss one tackle but he did
an excellent Job of keeping their punt
returns to almost no yardage,” said
Posey.
Posey re-em phasizes that the
Seminole tans can get a good deal on
season tickets for the four remaining

dates on the Tribe’s chase for the Five
Star crown. For $17 per person, you can
see the rest of the home games. Per
game tickets are also available at $2.25
per ducal. The Tribe plays a nonconference game against Lakeland
Kathleen Friday at home at 8 p.m.
Kathleen lias lost three straight.
FORTUNE TELLING - When Ted
Hendricks blocked BUI Capece'a field
goal attem pt with eight ticks left
Sunday, the Tampa Bay Buct weren’t
the only team that lost.
H endricks' record-breaking (22
blocks) cost this writer a perfect
weekend. Yes, thanks to my soul
searching at M adame K ath erin e's
Palmistry, I have been 18-4 the last two
weeks including 9-1 this past week. The
Madame tells me no appointments are
necessary, just drop by for advice.
Sporiswriter Joe DeSantis benefited
most by Oakland’s 18-16 victory. He had
his best week ever at 7-3. Joyce Tullls,
wife of ta k e Brantley coach Dave, was
6-4 along with Joan BiscegUa, Mike's
wife from ta k e Howell.
Seminole County Com missioner
Sandra Glenn also 6-4 despite losing in
her bid for the Leesburg mayoral
primaries when Oviedo crushed the
Yellow Jackets. Weil, Sandra, Oviedo
still might give you a look.
Bringing up the rear was that high
school kid BUly Stripp. He was too
excited about homecoming to con­
centrate on his picks. He finished at 5-5.
Did you kiss her good night, Billy?

1*1 r

6k-.

Herat* WMt* tar lam vinctn*

Seminole backfield coach Emory Blake talks strategy
with quarterback Jeff Litton

Brantley's Ninth Place At DeLand Disappointing

Lyman Hosts County Postal Run Tonight
One of the biggest cross country meets
ever held in the state Is over — and most
of the Seminole County crons country
coaches are glad of IL
Saturday, the D etand Invitational was
held at the DeLand Airport with over 30
schools running In each division. The
meet la considered a prelude to the state
meet, held Nov. 31 at the same rite.
"It was Just too big," admitted Lyman
coach David Huggins. " It was like
throwing a bunch of marble* o u t In some
races there were over W runners."
Huggins' boys team had the beat
country showing—11th with 303 prints.
Edgewater easily wan the 4A boys with 89
points, while Fort Worth's John I.
Leonard was second with 140. ta k e
HoweU placed 18th.
Greyhound sophomore Doug McBroom
was the only area runner In the top 50.

McBroom placed 29th with a time of
18:18. "Doug tried to go out with the big
boys," Huggins said. "He did all right,
but be faded the last half mile."

Cross Cowotr y
Rowland's shoelaces.
For the second time In a major meet,
Marshall's number four runner fell or
was pushed down snd cost the Patriots
prints In the standings.
"She's Just unlucky I guess," said
Marshall Sunday evening. The Lady
Patriota were seventh in the meet with
216 points, but Brantley had been ranked
aecond in the 4A poll.

Winter P ark's Brian Jaeger waa the
boys winner with a time of 19:01 over the
three-mile layout Greg Green of Ft.
Lauderdale Dillard was aecond (19:09)
and Edgewater's Greg Doss (15:09) was
third.

In the 3A boys competition, Rockledge
whipped Niceville, 71-116, (or the top
*&gt;ot. Trinity Prep freshman Tommy
"We were shooting for the top five,"
Matthews w u 53rd in 17:03. Trinity
finished 29th and Mike Qlbeon'* ta k e said Marshall. "The fall may have cost
us 30-40 points."
Mary group 32nd in the standings.
Orange Park, as expected, ran away
Turning to the girls 4A, ta k e Brantley with the meet with Just 36 points.
coach Jim Marshall Is about to conduct a
thorough Inspection of runner T rad Clearwater Countryside was second with

161.
John I. Leonard (176), Hollywood
McArthur (202), Edgewater (213) and
Coconut Creek (215) finished ahead of
ta k e Branlley.
Junior Ellen Stem was the top county
finisher wtlh a ninth place spot in 12:14
over the tw o-m lle course, Senior
teamm ate Tracy Bonham was 18th In
12:29 and Kathy Hayward (12:48) was
34th. Shari Klllam (13.-23) was 70th and
ta u ra Barnhill (13:58) waa 87lh.
Miami Killian's Sharon Chiong edged
Sandra Broasch by three steps to win the
meet in 11:21. The two had been tied at
10:56 on the 4A honor roll.
The slow tim e aroused some
speculation among the coaches that the
course may have been long. "I don't
think the course was accurate," said
Marshall flatly. "Stem ran super. I

thought her time would be better than
thaL"
Lake H owell'a Tom H am m ontree
concurred. “Those girls (Chiong and
Broaach) went out pretty good to have
those slow tim es."
Junior Kerry Ryter w u 27th for HoweU
with ■ time ot 12:39. The Silver Hawks
were 10th in the meet wtlh 309 points, just
ahead of Lyman who had 329 points.
Other Howell finishers were Cathy
Compton (13:00) 48th, Shelley Carlson
(13:15) 64th, freshman Lyn Lucas (13:32)
76th and Candy Franklin (14:04 ) 94th.
Lyman's Susie Bringardner w u top
dog far the Greyhounds with s 25th place
finish in 12:37. Senior Dawn Bender w u
39th in 12:54.
In Junior varsity action, ta k e Bran­
tley’s girls were aecond with 84 prints
and ta k e HoweU w u third wi'h 102.

Cocoa Beach won the JV competition
with 102 points.
Freshmen Kim Lubenow snd Joanne
Hayward led the Patriot effort with a
seventh and 13th place finish respec­
tively. tabenow ran ■ 14:01 and
Hayward, aiater of varsity runner Kathy,
ran 14:11.
Tonight, Lyman hosts the county
schools in a Postal Run. The boys run two
miles and the top five team places are
added together. The lowest accumulated
time determines the winner.
The girls ran a mile and the same
procedure is used. Times from around
Uie slate are then compared to determine
the beat effort.
The girls junior v an ity kicks off the
meet at 9:30 p.m. at the Greyhound track
in lxtngwood.

Bengals Earn Stripes, Clobbers Steelers, 34-7, For A F C Jungle Lead
yard pass from Danny White to Tony Hill Giants’ rushing attack and Joe Danelo
in Uie second quarter helped Dallas snap added a club-record six field goals to
a two-game losing streak and end the spark New Y a k , 4-3. The hapless
R am i' four-game winning streak. The Seshawks have lost five in a row and 15 of
victory eased Dallas, 5-2, to within a (heir last 16 dating back to last season.
Brawns 29, Saints 17
game of NFC East-leading Philadelphia
while Lot Angeles, 4-3, fell out of a firstpiece Ue with San Francisco in Uie NFC
West.
Vlkiaga II, Eagles 21
Tommy Kramer threw four TD p a ssu
OAKLAND, Calif. (U P I) - Ted
for the second straight week u the Hendricks can’t understand ail tHe fuss.
Vikings, 5-2, upset Uie previously unbeat­
True, he was a big f a c ta Sunday u the
en E agles to assu m e undisputed Oakland R a id a s snapped a three-game
possession of first place in the NFC losing streak, a stretch tn which the
Central Division. Kramer, who threw for defense played well but Uie offense foiled
444 yards lari week, fired TD throws of to s c a r a single print in 12 quarters.
11,50,1 end 5 yards, completing 24-of-46
All Hendricks, nicknamed the a ta k for
p a u e s (or 257 y ard s ag ain st a his gsngty frame, did waa recover a
Philadelphia d eten u that had yielded a fumble that stopped a Tampa Bay drive
league-low average of only 11 print* p a deep In the Oakland end, blocked a PAT
eeme.
attempt a f l a the Bucs’ second touch­
Jets « , BUI* 14
down and f a a capper, blocked a chipBruce H arper's 29-yard TD burst and shot field goal in the fins) seconds to save
Bobby Jones* 81-yard dash with a fumble an 18-16 victory f a Uie Raiders.
recovery tor a score highlighted a 21As far a t Hendricks waa concerned, it
point third period that led the resurgent
w u all In a day’s work, and he w u a
Jets to a revengeful triumph. Pat Leahy
little reluctant to take all Uie credit f a
had field goal* of $4,29,39, and 22 yards
the blocked field goal attempt by Bill
for the Jets, who raised their record to 3Capece that would have given Uie Bucs a
$-1 after an M start.
19-16 victory.
Chiefs 2$, B ru ce* 14
"On defense," u i d Hendricks, "we
Rookie Joe Delaney, who had a 79-ysrd
TD wiped out earlier because of a operate u four guys against three and
penalty, bolted 12 yards for a score with we try to create a mismatch. Matt
1:27 left in the game to ensure K an su Millen, John Matuaxak and Howard Long
Ctty’i victory. The loss mapped Denver’s put on the pressure that allowed me to
four-game winning streak and Kansas penetrate."
Capece got off what seemed like a
City, Denver and San Diego a n tied f a
first place In the AFC West with 5-2 cinch winning field goal from the 20 but a
second after the ball became air b a n e ,
toot,
Hendricks stretched out his Woot-7
4
9
m
U
,
Packers
I
Cincinnati rolled up 494 yards while
frame and Upped Uie ball, causing It to
Johnny
Davis
ran
on#
yard
f
a
a
touch­
Pittsburgh - p o rtin g the N FL 'i No. 1
fall short of the goal post by a yard a
offense entering the game - managed down and Ray Waredting ticked two
two.
only HO total yards, more than 300 below field goals to lift the «9ar&gt;, 5-2, to their
R a id a coach Tom Flores wasn’t afraid
their average. The Bengali had 25 first fourth stra ig h t victory and sole
to resort to a superlative in praising Hen­
poaaaaaionof
first
place
in
tha
NFC
W
est
d o w n to 10 (or the Steelsrs and bald the
dricks, a 13-year pro v e ta a n who is listed
Chargers O , Celts II
ball for 31 of 90 mlnutsa.
u the left linebacka but h u freedom to
Dan
Fouls
completed
H-of-41
p
aaau
Pittsburgh's Tarry Bradshaw, who
go w h e rtv a he likes.
f
a
M
yards
and
threw
f
a
three
TDs
u
faroka the riaitovt on a 17-yard TO p a u to
•Ted Hendricks is the greatest kick
the
rtgfcecatng
Chargers,
52,
sent
the
Jim Smith with f f seconds rem aU ng in
blocker in the N ational F ootball
reeling
Cotta,
14,
down
to
their
sixth
the gam s, w u lift wondering whether be
League," u i d * relieved F lo ea.
straight lass.
should h a w punned hi* acting
"T hat's what he gets paid to do,” said
Glam s II, Stahaw ks •
R a id a managing general partner A!
Rob Carpenter n u h ed tor 111 yards
C vw toyt 25, Ram s IT
Davis.
A 44-jrard n m b yT ooyD asattan d al&gt; - and a TD to meariwed a revitalised
By United Press International
When General Manager Paul Brown
approved the unique derign of tiger
stripes for Cincinnati's helmets and uni­
forms, he didn't know the Bengals would
take the idea UteraUy.
The Bengals, who haven’t growled over
.500 since 1977, gave Coach Forrest
Gregg a very thoughtful gift for his 48th
birthday Sunday — a 34-7 rout of the
Pittsburgh Sleelen that lifted them into
•ole poaaearion of first place in Uie AFC
Central Jungle.
"We've got nine more games, but this
w u a big, big game for us because we've
broken out on top," said Gregg, whose 5-2
club will play in New Orleans next week
before finishing the final half of Uie
regular season against opponents with a
cumulative record of 34-22. "It w u Uie
b u t birthday present they could have
given me and Ute best game we've played
this year."
The Bengals received another out­
standing effort from veteran quar­
terback Ken Anderson, who passed for
346 yards and two touchdown*. In beating
Uie Steelers,« , for the fourth time in the
lari five meetings, Cincinnati w u also
sparked by a pair of touchdowns from
250-pound fullback Pets Johnson, who
scored on a 5-yard pass recaption and a $•
yard run. Charles Alexander ran 3 ysrde
for another TD and Jim Breech added a
nair of field goals.
The Bengali scored big early In the
aecond hsH when rookie wide receiver
David Versa- grabbed a short p a u ,
slipped away from a couple of would-be
ted d ers and sprinted 73 yards to Uie end

-

-

-

f a 122 yards, including a 79-yard scaln g
dash.
Patriots I t, Oilers 10
Steve Grogan, returning to the starting
lineup f a the first time in more than a

month, tossed a pair of third-quarter TD
passes to spark New England, 2-5, to a
rout of Houston, 4-3. Patriots’ star c a nerback Mike Haynes suffered a
collapsed lung before the game but was
listed In good condition.

’Stork' Delivers Raider Victory With Blocked Kick 18-16

*

4 t

* • —v *

-r - -

Brian Sipe completed 25-oM2 passes
for 270 yards and Mike Pruitt rushed f a
two TDs to help Cleveland, 3-4, snap a
two-game losing streak and deal the
Saints, 1-8, their fifth straight setback.
New Orleans rookie George Rogers ran

^

-.1 O. - . x ’’ W i f i '

v5V

*

^

r| *• rw ** i

"That Hendricks is some kind of an
athlete," u i d Capece. "I guess that's
what they pay him ( a , to make Uie big
play."
John McKay, the Tam pa coach,
couldn't have been more upset even
though his tu rn , held to 21 yards tn total
offense In the first half, didn't start to
play until he went to a different set of
plays in the aecond half to make it close.
"We played poorly," u id McKay, who

iM N M M n

McKay. "This is supposed to be Uie big
time. I thought Uie snap was a little
high."

takes defeat probably harder than any
coach. "The Raiders controlled Uie ball
in Uie first half and we helped them."
As ( a Hendricks' fine defensive e ffa t
in blocking Capece’s field goal, McKay
looked at it from a different angle.
"It beats Uie hell out of me that this
team can't make a field goal," said

"It wasn’t Uie snap," said Capece. "It
waa Uie penetration."
The Raiders scored the first three
times they had the ball — on a 51-yard
field goal by Chris Bahr, a blocked punt
in Uie end zone by Todd Christensen that
went f a a u fe ty and a 12-yard touch­
down run by Derrick Jenaen.

It a M f lif i
NFL Standings
By United P re ss International
A m erican Conference
East
W
Miami
Buffalo
NY J e ts
New
England
Baltl
Central
Cincl
P ittsb u rg h
Houston
Cleveland
West
Denver
San Diego
Kan City
O akland
Seattle
N ation al

5

4
3
2
1

5
4
4
3

L T Pet.
1 1 .785
.571
.500
.288
.143
2
3
3
4

0
0
0
0

.714
.571
.971
.429

5
5

2 0
2 0
2 0

3
1

4 0

.714
.714
.714
.429

8 0

.143

5

C onference

R ati
W L T Pet.
I
1 0 .197
5 I 0 .714
4 3 0 .571
2 5 0 . 281

P h lla
D allaa
NY
G ian ts
St. Louis

• *

* V *

Wash

1 6 0

.143

2 0

.714

Central
Minn

5

Tam pa
Bay
D etroit
G reen
Bay
Chicago

4 3 0 .571
2 4 0 .333
2 5 0
.188
1 5 0 .167
West

San F ra n
Los Ang
A tlanta
New O rleans

5
4
4
1

2 0
3 0
3 0
8 0

.714
. 571
.571
.143

Sunday's Results
New Y a k JeU 33, Buffalo 14
New E ngland 31, Houston 10
M innesota 39, Philadelphia 23
C incinnati 34, P ittsb u rg h 7
Atlanta 4), St. Louis 10
San F ran ciaco 13, G reen Bay
3

Cleveland 20, New O rleans 17
San Diego 43, B altim ore 14
Kansas City 28, Denver 14
New York Giants 32, Seattle 0
O akland I I , T am pa Bay I I
M iami IS, W ashington 10 .
Dallas 19, Loo Angeles 17
M onday's G am e

I
* t • • * * *
• - - * t
♦•

»

-J * % -

% » -V '

&lt;AU Times EOT)
Chicago at D etroit, 9 p.m.
Suaday, October 25
(All Times EST|
B altim ore
at
Cleveland,
1
p.m.
D enva at Buffalo, 1 p.m.
T am pa Bay a t P hiladelphia, 1
p.m.
Green Bay at Detroit, 1 p.m.
Minnesota at St. lands, 1 p.m.
New England a t W ashington,
1 p.m.
New

York G ianta

at

A tlanta,

1 p.m.
C incinnati at
p.m.

New

O rleans,

2

K ansas City a t O akland, 4
p.m.
Loa Angeles a t San F ra n c is­
co, 4 p.m.
Miami a t Dallaa, 4 p.m.
San Diego at Chicago, 4 p.m.
S eattla a t New York Je U , 4
p.m.
M eaday,

O ctaber 28

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LA-Montreal Try Again Today
' MONTREAL (UP1) - It would seem
that with all the born-again athletes on
the Montreal Expos and I-os Angeles
Dodgers and all the Bible quotations
coming out of their lockerrooms, at least
one of them could have spoken to
somebody in authority about the stuff
that kept falling from the heavens.
The lillh and deciding game of the
National U ague Championship series
between the Dodgers and the Expos was
postponed by steady windswept rain
Sunday and rescheduled for today at 1:00
p.m. EDT.
Dodger rookie sensation Fernando
Valenzuela and Expo Ray B urris
remained the scheduled starters for
today in weather that is expected to be
appreciably drier but very cold and
windy with a chance of snow. Tem­
peratures arc expected to reach no

M

l

P l a y o f f

higher than 40 degrees with winds from
IS to 30 mph.
Neither team claimed much of an edge
from the ralnout, but Tommy U sorda
who roused the Dodgers by reading the
Bible to them before a 7-1 victory to tie
the series Saturday was not altogether
ebullient.
S atu rd ay m orning L asorda had
promised the Dodgers: "There will be
Game 5 on Sunday if it doesn't rain."
And lo, the skies opened 50 minutes
before game time Sunday and the deluge
did not stop until about 8:30 p.m.
At 7:26 p.m., after a wait of 3 hours and
21 minutes, with the articifial surface
turned to an overflowing sponge, NL
President Chub Feeney consulted the
weather office and sent some 40,000

booing fans home and ordered that there
will be a fifth game Monday.
Feeney was philosophical and com­
forting.
"Rain is what makes the flowers
grow," he reminded reporters later.
laso rd a was accepting.
"You get Just as tired from sitting
around all afternoon as you do from
playing," he said. "But, it is the same for
both teams. I don’t know how the cold
will affect us, we haven't played in it
yet."
If there is another postponement,
Baseball Commiaioner Bowie Kuhn may
be consulting a higher power.
Another flood Monday and the World
Series, scheduled for Tuesday in New
York, will be moved back one day for the
first time in the history.
"If we have to play Tuesday we will
and let Bowie worry about the con-

sequences," said Feeney.
The most memorable playoff that was
ever held only 24 hours before a World
Scries ocurred in 1951 when Bobby
Thomson belted the "shot heard round
the world" with a one-out three-run
homer in the bottom of the ninth to give
the Giants the National leag u e cham­
pionship over the Dodgers,
There was of course one other high
power to be reckoned with Sunday after­
noon.
The lute 4:05 p.m. start time was due to
the need to coordinate television
coverage of a full Sunday program of
professional football.
"We agreed to the late start at the
suggestion of the network." said Feeney.
"But we have no objection to that since it
gives us better ratings."

Jackson M ay M iss Tuesday Opener
NEW YORK (DPI) - There’s a
possibility Jhat Reggie Jackson may not
be in the lineup for the New York
Yankees l^ es^ay night in the first game
of the World Series.
Jackson, who always seems to make
the World Series his own personal
showcase, is still nursing an injured left
calf muscle suffered in the second game
of the American league championship
series against Oakland and, since the
designated hitter role will not be used in
the World Series this year, be must be fit
enough to play the outfield in order to
make the starting lineup.
The 35year-old slugger took batting
practice Sunday but did not put any
pressure on the leg.
"It feels all right but I can't do any
hard running on it," said Jackson, who
has earned the nickname "Mr. October"
because of his past World Series exploits.

T o n fc « e s
“ I've been taking whirlpool every day.
"If they were using the dh this year, I'd
be all right. But there's no dh this year.
I've got to be able to play right field, and
I won’t know if I can run until the Monday
workout, maybe even Tuesday night
before the gam e."
Jackson wants very badly to play in the
World Series, not only to add to his list of
impressive statistics but lo prove to
owner George Stelnbrenner that he is
invaluable to the Yankees. Jackson, who
can become a free agent after the World
Scries, Incurred Steinbrenner's wrath
again last Thursday night when lie was
involved In a fight with teammate Graig
Nettles at a Yankees' victory party.
Nettles and Jackson have made their
peace, but Stelnbrenner has said that

Reggie will have to mend his ways if he is
to return to the Yankees next year.
Jackson said the incident with Nettles
was closed as far as he was concerned
and he felt it might even help the
Yankees' cause In the World Series.
"It could have a positive effect." said
Jackson. “ It may cause us both to work a
little harder. I've learned one thing —
bad press invariably goes away. I don’t
want any more bad press for myself or
Graig. I think this will eventually wear
off, especially after the way we both
approached it.
"We were never very close, but 1 think
this year we got a little closer."
Manager Bob Lemon said left-hander
Ron Guidry would pitch the Scries opener
followed by left-hander Tommy John,
rookie left-hander Dave Righeltl and
right-hander Rick Iteuschel.
Although the Yankees still do not know

who their opponent will be — Montreal or
I/&gt;s Angeles — they aren't worried about
facing either team.
"Montreal probably would have a little
advantage over us in their park because
of their speed,” said Yankees' outfielder
Dave Winfield, who played against both
clubs when he was with San Diego. "But,
with the hitting we have and the pitching
we have, we can stop anybody and we
can score against anybody.
"We really don’t care who we play. The
only difficulty we have is deciding which
coat w e're going to lake out of the
cleaners, cotton or wool."
I-emon said he would stick with his
time-tested plan of going to his ptwerful
bullpen after six or seven innings in a
close game. Since the postseason com­
petition began, the Yankees' bullpen has
given up only one earned run in 29 2-3
innings.

Los Angeles Dodger catcher Steve Yeager gets ready
to block the plate in National League Playoff action.

Bulldogs Upset Cowboys, 18-13, Force Tie
The Bulldogs upset the Cowboys 18-13
Saturday to throw the two team s into a
lie for first place In the Junior Division of
the Sanford, Recreation Department's
Flug Football league.
Both teams are each 3-1 with two
games remaining.
In Saturday's other Junior Division
game, the Wildcats stunned the ram s 4413 for their first win of the season.
The Bucs pushed thetr Midget Division
record Vo 5-0 with a 14-6 win over the
Steelers.
Defense dominated most of the first
half between the Cowboys and the
Bulldogs, but with three minutes left in
Ihe half the two offensive units came
alive and put 19 points on the board
before the intermission.
The Cowboys scored first when Kevin
Campbell scored on a quarterbackkeeper that covered 15 yards. Cumpbell
also ran for the extra point, making the
score 7-0.
Reginald Bellamy took the kickoff for
the Bulldogs and ran it all the way for a
touchdown. The I’AT failed and it was 76.
In tiie closing seconds of the first half,
Bobby Cofield Intercepted a puss by
Campbell and ran it back 15 yards for a

touchdown and a 12-7 lead for the
Bulldogs.
Defense dominated the second half
until Cofield scored on a one-yard run
with 2:15 left In the game to put the
Bulldogs ahead 18-7.
Campbell ran the kickoff back for a
Cowboys touchdown, but It was too little,
loo tale.
The Wildcats drew first blood against
the Rams with a 40-yard run by D anis
U tiles, but the Rams roared right back
and tied the score on a 40-yard run by
Bernard Mitchell.
IJItles ran the kickoff back for a touch­
down and then ran for Ihe extra point to
give the Wildcats a 13-6 lead
The next time the Wildcats got the bait
IJItles put the ball on the five-yard line
with a 40-yard carry, but the Rams took
over on downs.
Seconds la te r T ravis Brown in­
tercepted a pass and ran it back for a
touchdown and a 19-6 Wildcats lead.
The Rams pulled to within six points in
the closing seconds of the first half when
Kalvin Moore tossed a 45yard touch­
down pass to Mitchell and Mitchell ran
for the extra point.
Early in the second half Littles scored
fur the Wildcats on ii 10-yard run and

ASM Snaps Knight

Brown ran for the extra point.
An interception and 20-yard return by
Littles set up the next Wildcats TD,
scored on u five-yard run by Littles.
The Wildcats pul six more points on the
board with a 10-yard pass from Littles to
Mitchell.
The final touchdown came on a pass
from U ttles to Ronnie Hayes and ihe
same two players teamed up for the
extra point.
All of the scoring In the Midget Division
game came in the first half. After the
Bucs defense shut down the Steelers on
their first possession, Brian Grayson pul
the Bucs on the scoreboard with a 45-yard
punt return.
A short time later Brett Hansen caught
a Steelers runner in the end zone for a
safety, increasing the lead to 8-0.
Bucs quarterback Calvin Donaldson
scorer) a touchdown on a 20-yard run for a
14-0 lead.
The Steelers scored their only points
late in the first half when Dave Roberts
ran 15 yards for a touchdown.
After William Davidson intercepted a
pass the Steelers drove to the six-yard
line late in the game but (he Bucs
defense stiffened and look over on
downs.

G O O D VYEAR
SERVICE ^STO RES

TOTAL
ALIGNMENT
HEADQUARTERS
f r o n t Whe ol . . . Re ar W h e a t . ..

Win Streak, 23-15
Before venturing to Huntsville, Ala. last week, Central
Florida roach Don Jonas felt the Knights would be doing all
right to get out with their scalps.
Jonas considered Alabama A L M the toughest game on the
UCF schedule. Wiien It came to getting on the field, Saturday,
however, it was A &amp; M which abnosl got scalped.
Freshman Andrew Fields returned a punt 68 yards for a
touchdown us time ran out in the half to provide lire margin of
difference as Alabama A It M held off the Knights, 23-15.
Tire loss snapped a three-game winning streak by UCF and
leveled its seuson mark at 3-3. The Knights are open this
Saturday before traveling to Carrultun, Ga. to play West
Georgia College Oct. 31.
"Sloppy tackling killed us on the return," moaned Jonas
about three or four missed opportunities. "We thought the guy
Was down, but his lateral killed us." Teammate Ernest French
shoveled lire ball lo Fields as he went down.
\ Instead of going Into the halftime ahead, 12-7, (he Knights
jsere on Die short end of a 14-12 score.
; "We still felt we were all right," Informed Jonas. "We
f anted the wind the fourth quarter, because we knew (Scott)
Ryerson could win it for us almost anywhere on our side of the
SO."
I Ryerson didn't fail for lack of effort. The talented kicker
boomed three field goals on the day — from 30,33 and 27 yards
but never got the opportunity to kick the game winner.
■ Defensive end Jerry Nemethy’a 39-yard interception return
f a s UCF’s only touchdown. Alabama, however, added a nineyard TD run by fullback Reggie Gipson lo put the game out of
teach.

AM run *igri

'njhltiuoi i'1, j\f cjii tor
an appotnlmer1

SPORTS

Pats W a«
tow onyrfj

We II change oil perloim
chassis lube and check
• Transmission fluid • Power
s te e rin g flu id • B ra ke flu id
• B a tte r, * a te f level • Battery
cables • A ir tille r • B elts and
h oses • D ilte ie n lia l le v e l •
Tire pressure and c o n d lro n

INBRIEF

Sf. Andrews Tops All Souls
St. Andrews Iromped All Souls, 50, Saturday in
soccer action in Orlando.
Hie Souls hooters get back into action Wednesday at
5:15 p.m. against Winter P ark's St. Mary M agdalene.

Evert Turns Back Jaeger
D EEH FIEU ) BEACH. Fla. (UP!) - Chris Evert
IJoyd, the world's top-ranked women's tennis player,
was facing defeat Sunday
Cheered on by a host of friends and funs from her
nearby hometown of Fort I-auderdale, IJoyd
regrouped after an error-filled first set and turned
back Andrea Jaeger 4-6,6-3,50 to win the $125,000 Deer
Creek Women's Tennis Open._____________________

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TRANSMISSION
MAINTENANCE

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lluid • Install new pan
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Auto-Insurance?

so equipped • Adiust
linkage and bands as
applicable

12-MONTH TUNE-UP
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CALL

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Mas! U S '--es - t'ytl n !idiuslite suspenston In

• Inspect all lour tires, col­
lect air pressure • Set boot
wheel caster camber toe
to proper alignment • In­
spect steennq and suspen­
sion systems

BRAKE
SERVICE
Y O U R CHOICE

; Raiders Split; VCC Tuesday
•
Gearing up for a Tuesday night meeting with arch; rival Valencia Commualty College, Seminole ComI munily College's volleyballen split Saturday's twinbill
; at Brevard.
*
In the first match, the Lady Raiders extended Indian
River, ranked filth nationally, to three games before
! succumbing. IKCC won the first game, 15-3, before SCC
I came back with a 1510 win. Indian River prevailed In
' the tiebreaker, 15-4.
&lt;
In the second game against Brevard, the Raiders
! triumphed 156, 7-15, 159. Kim Meyers was cited by
; coach lleana Gallagher as making the difference.
!|
The 841 Raiders host VCC Tuesday at 7 p.m. in the
I SCC gym.
&gt;1
______________
_____

Bwi s'at e
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inciartr-i m*r&gt;, irnpufii j ',1

323-2454

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U t a h * - WasieUO •Visa • kmc--car l laess

Notlonwld* Auto Service Limited Warranty
All
ovu.aa iw
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least 90 days or 3 000 mites whichever
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II warranty service is ever required go to
the Goodyear Service Store where the

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555 W First Street
M F 1: 1 01 : 10. S 1:10 5

322-2821

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OURSELVES
E vtn ln g Herald, Sanford, FI.

Monday, Oct. It, it l l - I B

In Around Winter Springs

TONIGHT'S TV

Woman's Club To Host Bazaar
The TuscawiUa Woman's Club will host a
Halloween Bazaar and Carnival on Sunday, Oct. 23,
from 1-4 p.m., at the TuscawiUa Park. There will be
cratta, food and games. A HaUoween parade will be
held, followed by a costume judging for the
children.
AU TuscawiUa residents and their guests are
invited to attend.

Gatrell

Election of officers was held recently for the
Sugar Tree Station Homeowners Association. Those
elected are: Marsha Bracht, president, Bob
Chilmonik, rice president, Diane Brown, treasurer,
and Sandra Ridakoff, secretary’.

Winter Springs
Correspondent
K7-OJ7*

The 5th grade pod will take a field trip on Oct. 22.
They wiU go to the Theatre in the Park, Winter
Park, to view the production of Frankenstein.
Mrs. Barbara Ijiudon, leader of Brownie Troop
823, says her troop has an opening for one more first
grader. Troop 823 meets on Monday afternoons
from 3-4:15, at the Seventh-Day Adventist Church,
on Moss Road. Anyone Interested can contact Mrs.
Loudon at 331-1062.

TuscawiUa Middlfc School .has a busy schedule
planned. TJiey will be going fo Theatre in the Park
to see •‘Frankenstein". One team at a time will
attend th? shfws. Team 4 attended on Oct. 13, and
Team 3 Vent on Oct. 15. Team 2 will go Oct. 19,
Team 8, Oct. 20 and Team 8 on Oct. 21.
On Oct. 21, the TuscawUla Middle School Chorus
will sing at Altamonte Mall at 11-11:30 a m.
There will be a HaUoween Dance on Oct. 30 for aU
three grades, from 7-9:30 p.m.
That's the night chosen for aU the witches and
Frankensteins to do the boogie. But they must be
careful not to step on the toes of the invisible ghosts!

I learned that Mela Porter, Brownie lead er of
Troop 907, has been a scout leader for 16 years and
doesn't have a daughter of her own. She is the
mother of a four-year-old son. Meta works at the
Seminole County lib rary . She is to be commended
on the unselfish giving of her time devoted to the
Girl Scouts.
There will be a parents meeting for parents in­
terested In their daughters joining the Girl Scouts,
on Oct. 19, at Winter Springs Elementary, at 7:30
p.m.
A film will be shown on Girl Scouting. Also, there
will be tables set up with displays from different age
levels. Brownies, Juniors and Cadets. One of the
local Jr. Troops will have the flag ceremony.

Red Bug Elementary' Kindergarden through third
grade will have a book exchange Wednesday.
Every Friday is T-shirt day at Red Bug If the
children don’t have a Red Bug T-shirt, they can
purchase one on Friday at the school or at PTA
meetings.

Mr. and Mrs. I-arry Skrzycki were recently
visited by Mrs. Skrzyckl's father, John Koywcun,
and her two sisters, Shirley and Dorothy Kojwcun,
from Buffalo, NY".
They visited for two weeks and went to all the
attractions, such as Disney World. Mrs. Skrzycki
also took them to Naples to visit their cousins,
Joseph and Freida Nowlkl.
Mrs. Skrzycki said her father told her lhat when

Sterling Park Elementary will be holding three
assemblies during the month of October. On Oct. 20,
there will be an Asolo Theatre Production of
Pinocchlo, The Eagle Lady, Doris Mager, will
speak on the American Eagle on Oct. 22, and on Oct.
27, a clown from Circus World will entertain the
children.

The Sugar Creek Homeowners Association held
its annual progressive wine and cheese party
Friday. The party began with the first stop at the
home of Debbie and Greg Noetzel, 613 S. Edgemon
Ave.
The group then progressed to the homes of
Barbara and Nick Sherburn, 1-aurel Court, Sheri
and Tom Barker, 328 Panama Circle, and Janet and
Jim l,al.acB, 622 Murphy Road. The last stop was an
"R and R" stop, with coffee and tea being served.
Marianne and Paul Cheeseman were chairmen of
this event.
A HaUoween costume party la being planned by
the association for member's children. Each age
category will have prizes given. Kelley and Walt
Myers are in charge of the party.
i/ils and Ang Anato of 330 Panama Circle, are this
month's winners of the Yard of the Month Award.
Oviedo High will be busy bees this week. Today
there was a volley ball game with Jones High. On
Oct. 20, club pictures will be taken for the year­
book, and another volley hall game, Oviedo vs Lake
Mary Junior varsity team, at 4:30 p.m. at Oviedo.
Also the varsity volley ball team will play Bishop
Moore at 6 p.m. at Oviedo.
On Oct. 21 the volley ball game is scheduled to
take place at Lyman High, at 3:30. The ninth grade
football team will play Bishop Moore at Bishop
Moore.
Oct. 22 there will be a volley ball game, Jr. var­
sity, with Oviedo playing against Ijeesburg High, at
6 p.m. at Oviedo. The yearbook will go on sale that
day, before school and during the two lunch periods.
Junior varsity football will play against New
Smyrna, at Oviedo, at 7:30 p.m. The V anity football
team will play Rocklcdge High at Rockledge, at 8
p.m.

Circus Coming
To Sanford

Horie Bros. Cirrus Is coming to Sanford on Friday, Oct. 30,
with interns tionaUy known circus superstars presented in a
widely varied program of almost two hours duration.
The circus will erect the world's largest round tent at The
American [region Fairgrounds and shows are scheduled for I
and 8 p.m. under the sponsorship of The Sanford-Semlnole
Jaycees.
To make this program possible, a large number of skilled
and accomplished performers and trained animals have been
recruited from throughout the circus world.
In one display, four lovely circus starlets perform aerial
acrobatics on the Spanish web In perfect harmony while the
sensational trapeze star, Miss Danuska from Czechoslovakia,
performs a heart-atopplng routine high above the center of the
ring.
Among other popular displays are Randoms Trained
Chimpanzees, The Incomparable Bruski Trio's World
renowned Unicycle act, The Mystical Hoveck It Company, The
Hosle Bros. Circus Elephants featuring "Hoxle" The worlds
only trained male African Elephant, and Miss Que Yen Cheng,
Pearl of the Orient who hangs by her hair. In all, the performance Includes over twenty displays and Is packed with
action from start to finish.
Special reduced-rate ticketa are available from members of
the Jaycees now through the day prior to Circus Day. Senior
citizens will be admitted on advance children’s tickets.
Advance tickets are 12.25 for children, 11 and under, (3.25 for
adults and family tickets (2 adults and 3 children) are
available for ( 12.
Tickets can be purchased at 1915 S. French Ave. or by calling
323-4540, according to Sanford Jaycee president George
Currie.
Proceeds from the Circus will help fund the Jaycees com­
munity projects Including downtown Sanford Christmas
decorations.

practice medicine without a
license — a marriage Urease,
that is.
DEAR ABBY: I have taken
singing lessons and am told
that I have a lovely voice. I
love to ling and am frequently
asked to sing at weddings.
The problem is that many
people I know only aUghtly
(and some strangers) ask me
to sing for free.
People don't realise that the
soloist must meet with the
church organist several times
to practice, and gasoline costa
money. Also, I have to look
nice, which means getting my
hair done and my dress drycleaned or even buying a new
one.
On occasion I've
been
requested to sing ce rtain

,*

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12:15
t O ABC NEWS NIOHTLINE

EVENING

10:30

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8:00

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12:45
&gt;1 a MOVIE
11950! Eleanor
Moorehead

6:05
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0:30

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Q 1 11THE MUPPET 8
|1 Q PM MAGAZINE A woman
mbs possessed by 72 different
personalities travel 10 Tupper
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mi Kissimmee Florida to participate
in their 30th btrlhday celebration
Chef Tell prepare* Hutted peppers
Vicki Lansky has under-a dollar
diet items
1 Q JOKER'S WHO
t (35) THE JEFFERSONS
{D M0) MACNEll / LEMRER
REPORT

2:30

AFTERNOON

3:00
(7'i O MOVIE (Veen Grass Of
Wyoming (Cl (19401 Peggy Cum­
mins Charles Coburn

1 19591

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Randolph

S t oft

7:35

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A NEWS
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RESTLESS
&gt; p&gt;
mRYAN S HOPE
It (3511
) MAUDE

4:50
13 ( 1 7 ) M IS S IO N IM P O S S IB L E

1:00

J TUESDAY

O A DAYS OF OUR LIVES
r a ALL MY CHILDREN
ill (tT1
3 5 1MOVIE

1:05
tl 117) MOVIE

500
( r o MARCUS WEI BY. MO
(TUE-FRR

1:30
1J O AS THE WORLD TURNS

5:10

2:00

I I (17) RAT PATROL (THU)

O

} &gt; P SUNRISE SEMESTER

8:00

0
4 LITTLE HOUSE ON THE
M AINE Tlx Ingaiit nonty adopt
ion daodat lo tun away liom
homa iJ
(J) a MTVATE BENJAMIN Judy
play* ptyctiologitl whan a labour
piivata choaa* up n a ahoobng
competition
(I) O
THAT'S INCREDIBLE
Faatutad a m»d air raacua. a It'a
lalNllanl. a coupla mat wa* hand*
•d a nuawo doaart
&lt;U&gt;J35ICMARUTB ANGELS
) 6 (10) GREAT PERFORMANCES
‘ La Clamanta Dt Tno ' Amaiican
amgat a Card NtbMil Caihanna
Malftlano and Taiiana Tioyanot
and Sana* land Cue Tippy aia taalurad m a production o&gt; Ida op»a
compoaad by Moiarl m ITSt. tha
yaai ol da daath

5:40
M ( 17) WORLD AT LARGE (TUE)

6:00

8

S T Y
BACKSTAGE AT THE
ORAMO OLE OPRY (THU)
B I D PORTER WAGONER (FUJI
“ I THE LA W AND YOU (MON)
j SPECTRUM (TUE)
i BLACK AWARENESS (WED)
I THIRTY MINUTES (THU)
(HEALTH FIELD(FRI)
I SUNRISE
35) JIM BARKER
f 17) CABLE NETWORK NEWS

o » &lt; lOUCPASATIFRI)

3:05
.11 ( 17) FUNTIME
II (35) 8COOSY DOO
CD 110) ELECTRIC COMPANY (R)

3:35

6:45

ill (17) THE FLINTSIONES

m (10) A M WEATHER

4:00

7:00
B I 1TODAY
O IWAKE UP
JS 'O
i 7»r5Q&lt;OOOO MORNING AMERICA
dll (351 TOM ANO JERRY
CD (10) VILLA ALEGRE |R)

7:05

O J LITTLE HOUSE ON THE
PRAIRIE
i O RICHARD BIMUONS
I p MERV ORIFFIN
II (35) WOOOY WOOOPCCKER
CD i &lt;0) SESAME STREET g

4:05

11(171 FUNTIME
7:30
1) 0 MORNING WITH CHARLES
KURALT
II (35) WOODY WOODPECKER
CD i 10) SESAME STREET g

8:00
UH35I CASPER

II (17) THE MUNSTERS

4:30
j O happy d ay b a g a in (MON.
WED-FM)
J o THE BOOT HUMAN THE
FACTS FOR BOYS (TUE)
11 (35|TOM AND JERRY

4:35

8:05

t l |17) LEAVE IT TO BEAVER

5:00

8:30

O J GIL LIQAN S ISLAND
t O HOGAN'S HEROES (MON.
MIFIL-TRIl

J
O
1HE BOOT HUMAN
BECOMING A MAN (TUE)
11 (351 THE INCREDIBLE HULK
CD 110) MISTER ROOERS (R)

11 ( 17|MY THREE SONS

9:00

a

0 (4 ili)Q N E W t
HI (35) BENNY MILL
C li io j POSTSCRIPTS

O (4l TEXAS
Itia a U K M N O LIGHT
(1 1Q GENERAL HOSPITAL
(11) (35) BUGS BUNNY ANO
FRIENDS
CD (10) FROM JUMPSTREET |R)
□ (MON)
) ( 101
a&gt;(
10) 1ItAM, I CAN. I WILL (TUE)
CD (10) PEOPLE OF THE FIRST
LIOHT(R)(WED)
CD ( TO) ONCE UPON A CLASSIC

3:30

8:30
O
TOOAY in FLORIDA
1110 BEWITCHED

6:35

11:00

3.00

0 (41NASHVILLE ON THE ROAD
IMOH)
141 MARTY nOBSINS (TUE)
(1) PORI GOES THE COUNTRY

10:00

a ta

ill (35) YESTERDAY'S NEWS­
REELS (TIME APPROXIMATE)
(MON. THU, FAR

5:50

&lt;U &lt;35| INDEPENDENT NETWORK

a.pax ad

2:45

HI ( 17) WORLD AT LARGE (THU)

III (35) GREAT SPACE COASTER
a&gt;( 10) MISTER ROOERS(R)

(U (35) LOVE. AMERICAN STYLE
B
(10) HUNDCRTWASSER S
RAMY DAY Tha ccaorlul world and
■wk ol Auainan pamtu pnntmakat

I P SEARCH FOR TOMORROW
II (351 DO IT YOURSELF I LAU­
REL AND HARDY (TIME APPROXIMATE)(TUC)

5:35
U (17) WORLD AT LARGE (WED
FR1)

I I ( ) 7) I DREAM OF JEANNIE

10:05
«
10:30

A ANOTHER WORLD

I o ONE LIFE TO LIVE
2:30

6:30

(II 117) SANFORD AND SON

9:05

% ip» -• ■#

12:30

Karen

MORNING

OX (17) A CHILD IS A DELICATE
THMO

DEAR FROM; When yen
are asked to slag at the
wedding of a friend, bring n
g ift (Instead of paying yon,
they should present you with n
gift for your services.)
When you a rt asked to sing
at the wedding of a stranger,
state your fee. If you're In­
v ited to the d iu u er aud
reception, bring a sm all gift
ns a token. Profensionals do
aot stag for their supper.

A CARO SHARKS
) 0— &gt; 0“ II NEWS
IRHOOA
II (3SIRHOC

Steele

7:30
O * ENTERTAINMENT TONIOHT
S o YOU ASKED FOR IT
T O FAMILY FEUO
11 (351 BARNEY MILLER
8 ) 110) DICK CAVETT fiuMl St*
•y Spar#*

0:00

The Sanford-Semlnole Art Association held Its regular
monthly meeting Oct. 12 at the Chamber of Commerce
building.
Following a business meeting and discussion about the
FaU For Art show held In downtown Sanford the previous
weekend, members and guests were served refresh­
ments. An Informative pastel portrait demonstration w u
conducted by Bruce Cucuel, a well-known artist
associated with Crealde Art Center in Winter Park.
Cynthia Daugherty, a new member of the association
who also paints portraits, was chosen as model for the
demonstration.
President Ed Senkurik reminded members that the
annual Members Show and Tea is only four months away
In February at the Sanford Civic Center.

12:00
O

3:20
1J 117) MOVIE

7:05

a (!&gt; MOVIE
Mot* Amoot an
Gilltiti 1 19FBI Ron Howard Paul
La Mai Altai than high achocri
giadualton a group ol young Cak
loinian* lonom dnupani path,
lotaaid adulthood
(|) o VALLEY OF THE OOLIB
1SS1 Calhanna Mica* Ltaa Mail
man and Vatone* Mamai alai &gt;n an
updalad vatt-on ol Jacguatma
Suaann a no,at about Idaa young
woman atrugghog lo maaa tl in Mol
tyraood |Pai1 1|
(TJ O NFL FOOTBALL Chicago
Rant al Oaltotl l ton* (J
111) (35) THE ROCKFORO HIES

songs for which 1must buy the
sheet music. Nobody seems to
take this into consideration.
Abby, when I'm invited to
sing at a wedding, I
sometimes receive an in­
vitation for dinner and
reception. Do I have to bring a
gift? Or can my services be
considered my "gift"?
Last week I sang at a
Catholic wedding and was
given (30, which I was
delighted to g e t (I never
know whether I am going to
get paid or not.)
Please print this with a few
rules for brides as well as
musicians.
FROM MISSOURI

11:30
O * PASSWORD PLUS
II (35) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
NEWS

1 r Q NEWS

l l (17) CAROL BURNETT AND
TRIENOS

0 30

Cucuel Leads
Portrait D em o
For Artists

11:05
I I (17l MOVIE

ill (17) MOVIE
High Flight
(195SI Ra» Milland Anthony Ne*

6'35

Mundai 1a aaaai

A WHEEL OF FORTUNE
O THE PRICE IS RIGHT
O LOVE BOAT (R)
(J5 IB U O BREWER
CD (10) EDUCATIONAL PRO­
GRAMMING

1:35

fll (17) GOMER PYLE

F r tartan i r au. h

O
)
T
II

ill O HARRY O Many tnei lo pre­
vent the muider of a retired admi
rai s *&gt;te |R)

(D O THE TWO OF US Nan
CHdma Brantwood lo dog-ait lot
Cubby a pooch

George Currie purchases circus tickets In advance.

11:00

C*gnl ill Wl
Parker Agnes

1:10

O ' S I N K NEWS
} o css n ew s
l» o ABC NEWS
11 (35) CARTER COUNTRY
CD ( 10) OCEANUS

JX (17|

O * BLOCKBUSTERS
I O ALICE (R)
II (35) DICK VANDYKE
CD 110) ELECTRIC COMPANY &lt;R|

T O M O R R O W G u e s t sin g er

fliHy Squif-r
0 Donnell

0 (I : &lt; i ' 0 7 ' 0 NEWS
IT (3S) 8ANFORD AND SON
ffl (101 OCEANUS

8:05

Htr«M Phot* by Tom Vincant

I O WELCOME BACK. KOTTER
II |J5) I LOVE LUCY
tD I' Ol EDUCATIONAL PRO­
GRAMMING

Amer* Art diplomat is threatened by
an assassin

MONDW,

IX (17) SNOOPY'S MUSICAL ON
C t Snoopy • faniaax* on lea Irom
Fiddtar On Tha Roof lo a esnma
1 Rocky ata Irarad with apac.at
guaat aid Pappy Ftaming

Man Looking For Treat
As Well As Treatment
DEAR ABBY: I’m a 60y e a r-o ld ,
a ttra c tiv e ,
m arriage-m inded
widow
who’s been dating a 65-yearold, well-to-do, fun-loving
widower. He recenlly moved
Into my building, and every
unattached woman In the
building Is after him.
He propositioned me once in
a cute way, aaytng, "What's
another slice off a loaf of
bread that’s already been
cut?" I made It plain that I
wasn’t Interested In any kind
of relationship lhat didn't
include marriage. He Insists
Lhat m arriage la not In his
plans.
Now he haa a new approach.
He tokl me that his urologist
told him that men who are not
sexually active are 100 times
more susceptible to cancer of
the prostate than men who
have sex regularly. I&gt; this
true, or do you think he's Just
trying to get me Into bed?
LAUDERDALE LIBRA
DEAR LIBRA: It's M l true.
He's Iwktag f«r a U ral s i well
U a tre a ts:e e l Tell him
yeu're tarry, but you can't

O
(DO
(DO
CD

they got off the plane in Buffalo, they wanted to
head right back to warm Florida.

Dee

The officers of the Oviedo High Vocational
Industrial Clubs of America (VICA) attended a
seminar on Oct. 10, at Daytona Community College.
The purpose of the seminar was to inform the of­
ficers of their duties and to give them some ideas on
helping their club.
Those attending were Jeff Stewart, Steve Cox,
Chris Gatrell, Jim Yarborough, Carl Wright, Mike
Townes, Dennis Bamcard and Jerry Bennett.

CaMt Ch

It HOUR MAGAZINE
I o DONAHUE
r p MOVIE
I IDi35)
(35) OOMER PYLE
CD (10) 8E8AME STREET g

5:05
11 M 'I THE BRADY BUNCH

5:30
O 14 LAVERNE 4 SHIRLEY 4
COMPANY
i q u ’i t h

9:05
11 | 17) MOVIE

I P NEWS
CD ('O lI POSTSCRIPTS
POSTSCF

0:30
ill 435IANDYOHIFFITH

5:35

10:00

&gt;ll|17| BEVERLY HILLBILLIES

Q j 4 i TIC TAC DOUGH

11:05
U (17) ALL IN THE FAMILY

11:30

GREAT

0 (4) THE BEST OF CARBON
( J I Q M 'A 'B ’ H
IU (35) STREETS OP SAN FRAN­
CISCO

AUTUMN

11:35

ax (17) MOVE
Sivaga W.kJat
naa* (iflSil V «o t Matui*. Guy
Madtaon

SALE

11:45
( D O NEWS

I]) o

12:00

OCTOBER 19NO VEM BER 30

QUINCY Tha Ida ol a Utm

at your gas company showroom!

10%

OFF ALL APPLIANCES
IN STO CK

•Srvu on Htinlwick G is
R.inj}«*s in a variety of
c o lo n anti Myles
•Sa w on G is D ryeiv G
W ater Heaters. G is
Space Heaters

ls

'StHii okl woiVing
mcxlel Atilei healer is
yw ith S i Uhvaicl the
jMjrcIvase ol a new gas.
eneigy conserving
watei heater during die
G e a r Autum n Sale

&amp;

* ^ C 5 o * i

rk

■ U a w t inunt (0MP4BT
i t u m o 1.11 iB ia w a a n u k

Katharine Hepburn hat been
nominal ad for 11 Acad*my Awards, mora than
any othar actor or actrati.

*• h *

V ^v

your gas co.
SANfORD 830 W 6th St7322-5733
DLLAND 206 l NewVbfk Ave /734-1951

\ 5 » *- K I '1 * t * • -ta m

1*

!

* •

■ ■

�. I

IB -E vw lflfl Herald, Sanford, FI.

Legal Notice"
IN V ITA TIO N TO BID
A O D IT IO N T O IT U D IN T
C EN TER F A C ILITY
SEMINOLE COM M UNITY
C O L L IO I
SANFORD, FLORIDA
Sealed bid* from Contractors
will be received by Owner, Board
of Trustees, lor Seminole Com
munlty College at 4: IS P.M. local
time. October JO, IN I. In the Board
Room ol Seminole Community
College The following Is Included:
ADDITION TO STUD EN T
C E N TE R F A C ILITY
Bid documents are open to
public Inspection In the offices of
F W. Dodge Plan Room and
Central Florida Builders Ex
change In Orlando; and may be
obtained or reviewed from Ihe
offices ol Gulmann Associates,
Architects, Planners, Inc., ICS N.
Oak Ave., P o Drawer SJI,
Sanford, Florida 31771, upon
request accompanied by 11)00
deposit per set.
Oepotit will be refunded In full
for two sets to contractors sub
milting bona lids bids and return
ol documents In good useable
condition within S days attar Ihe
opening ol bids. Refunds for sets In
eacess ol two will be lets SIS 00 to
cover cost ol reproduction, on the
same basis of return ol documents.
Contractors who obtain bid
documents and do not bid Ihe
protect, mutt return same at least
10 days before the bid date, or pay
SIS00 per set to defray cost of
reproduction and handling, as set
lorlti above.
Sub contractors and others may
obtain complete bid documents
upon deposit ol S lA o which will bd
refunded, less SlfOO to cover
reproduction cost, upon return of
documents In good condition
within Sdays attar opening of bids.
Partial sett will not be Issued due
to sire and scope ol protect.
Each bid must be accompanied
by a certified check or bid bond
issued by an acceptable surety
company for not less than J per
cent of the base bid. The successful
bidder will be required to furnish
performance bond and labor and
materials payment bond, each In
the full amount ol the contract
sum, issued by a bonding company
licensed In Florida and holding an
As IA Plusl rating. Evidence of
said ratine will be required.
The successful bidder will be
Inquired to submit a complete list
of subcontractors who will be
performing work on the protect,
prior to release ot any partial
payment
To be eligible lor consideration,
btds must comply with Ihe laws of
riorlda, all conditions ot the
spec 11leal Ions, and must be made
on a facsimile ol the term Included
with ihe contract documents. In
duplicate, enclosed In an opaque
sealed envelope bearing Ihe name
and address ol Ihe bidder and
marked:
ADDITION TO STUDEN T
C E N TE R F A C ILITY
and delivered not later than dale
and hour mentioned above.
Owner reserves the right to
relect any or all bids or certain
portions ol a bid as stipulated In
Ihe FORM OF PROPOSAL, and to
waive any Informalities and
technicalities In bidding, and to
award the lob in Ihe best Interest
ot the Owner. No bid shall be with
dr awn lor a per lod of JO days from
Ihe opening date.
President
Seminole Community College
Bo* m
Dr Earl S Weldon

Monday, Oct, it, m i

Legal Notice
IN V ITA TIO N TO BID
A T H L IT IC T O IL IT
FA C ILITIES
SEMINOLE COM M UNITY
C O LLEO E
SANFORD, FLORIDA
Sealed bids from Contractors
will be received by Owner, Board
ot Trustees, lor Seminole Com
munlty College M IMS P.M. local
time, October JO, ISEI, In the Board
Room ol Seminole Community
College. The following Is Included:
A T H L E T IC TO IL E T
FA C ILITIES
Bid documents are open lo
public Inspection In the offices ol
F.W. Dodge Plan Room and
Central Florida Builders Exchange In Orlando; and may be
obtained or reviewed from Ihe
offices ol Gulmann Associates,
Architects, Planners, Inc., I0S N.
Oak Ave., P.O. Drawer SJI,
Sanford, Florida JI77I, upon
request accompanied by S1S00
deposit per set.
Deposit will be refunded In full
lor two sets to contractors sub
milling bona fide bids and return
of documents In good useable
condition within S days attar the
opening of bids. Refunds for sets In
excess of two will be less BIS 00 to
cover cost ol reproduction, on the
same basis of returnof documents.
Contractors who obtain bid
documents and do not bid the
prolect. must return tame at least
10 days before the bid date, or pay
ttloo per set to defray cost ol
reproduction and handling, at set
forth above.
Sub contractors and others may
obtain complete bid documents
upon deposit of IIS CO which will be
refunded, lets IIS.CO to cover
reproduction cost, upon return ot
documents In good condition
within Sdays alter opening ol bids.
Partial sets will not be Issued due
lo site and scope of prolect.
Each bid must be accompanied
by a certified check or bid bond
Issued by an acceptable surety
company tor not less than S per
cent ol the base bid. The successful
bidder will be required to furnish
performance bond and labor and
materials payment bond, each In
the full amount of the contract
sum. Issued by a bonding company
licensed In Florida and holding an
At- IA Plus) rating. Evidence of
Mid rating will be required.
The successful bidder will be
required to submit a complete list
of subcontractors who will be
performing work on the prolect,
prior lo release of any partial
payment.
To be eligible tor consideration,
bids must comply with the laws ot
Florida,
all conditions ol the
spec It Ice IIons, and must be made
on a facsimile ol the form Included
with the contract documents. In
duplicate, enclosed in an opaque
Moled envelope bearing the name
and address of Ihe bidder and
marked:
A T H L E T IC TO IL E T
F A C ILITIES
and delivered not later than date
and hour mentioned above
Owner reserves Ihe right to
relect any or all bids or certain
portions ol a bid as stipulated In
the FORM OF PROPOSAL, end to
waive any Informalities and
technicalities In bidding, and to
award the lob In the best interest
of the Owner. No bid shall be withdrawn for a period ol JO days Irom
the opening date.
President
Seminole Community College
Or. Earl S. Weldon

Chairman
Board of Trustees
Seminole Community College
Beverly P. Lee
Chairman
Publish October II. It, JO. II, II,
Board ot Trustees
Seminole Community College 1J. A II. It ll
DENSO
Beverly P. Lee
Publish October II. II, JO. II, » ,
NO TICE OP PUBLIC
HEARING
» . IS. 1MI
The Seminole County Board ol
DEN Tf
Commissioners will hold a public
hearing to consider a request lor a
IN THR CIRCUIT COURT IN ANO permit to construct a boel house
FOR SR M INOLR
C O U N T Y , and dock on the following
FLORIOA
described property:
G ENERAL CIVIL DIVISION
Lot 47, Shadow Bay Unit One,
n u m r r r i m i i s c a ee p
Recorded In Plat Book 14. Pages N
A M ER IC AN P n tC A S T COR and IOO. of the Public Records ol
PORATION.
Seminole County, Florida.
Plaintiff,
The hearing will be held InRoom
vs
TOO, Seminole County Courthouse,
HAROLD LE ITM A N . d b a
San'ord. Florida, on NOVEMBER
T O W N S H I P
P L A Z A ig, IN I at 10:00 A M . or as soon
ASSOCIATES, LTD.
thereafter as possible. Written
t East Jtlh Street
comments may be Iliad with Ihe
New York, New York
Lerat Management Division and
Defendants those appearing will be heard.
NO TICE OF ACTION
Persons are advised that, If they
tO: HAROLD LE ITM A N . d b a decide to appeal any decision
TOWNSHIP
P L A Z A made at this meeting, they will
ASSOCIATES. LTD .
need a record ol the proceedings,
t Easl Jfth Street
and. lor such purpose, they may
New York, New York
need to ensure that a verbatim
YOU
ARE
H E R E B Y record ot the proceedings is made,
N O TIFIE D that a suit has been which record Includes the
tiled against you and you are testimony and svldence upon
required to serve a copy of your
which the appeal Is based
written defense. II any, to It on
Herb Hardin
ADDISON E W A L K E R , 1001
Land Management Manager
Pennsylvania Avenue. P O Boa
Seminole County, Florida
Its. St. Cloud. Florida 117**, At
Publish October It, Itll
lorney for Ihe Plaint lit, and tile Ihe
original with Ihe Clerk of the above ,0EJf.il
FICTITIO US NAME
styled Court on or before the IJth
day ol November, IN I; otherwise Notice is hereby given that I am
a lodgement may be entered engaged in business at 104
against you lor Ihe relief bay wood Ava. Long wood. Fla
Seminole County, Florida under
demanded In the Complaint
WITNESS my hand and the seal the lldlttous name ol REPO
of said Court on the Ith day of DEPOT, and that I Inland to
register M id name with Ihe Clerk
October. IN I
ol the Circuit Court, Seminole
(Seal)
ARTHUR H. BECKW ITH. JR. County, Florida In accordance
with tha provisions ot lh» FIc
Clerk ot the Circuit Court
lltious Name Statutes, To Wit:
BY: Eve Crablree
section S41 Ot Florida Statulas
Depty Clerk
Publish: October IJ, I*, IS. INJ
November J, IN I
Sifl W. A Holtman Jr
Publish Sepltmbar It October S.
OEN SI
II. It. IN I
DEM 117
---------------- —
---------------- g j y j j g
_

The City ol Long wood. Florida adopted tha balow listed budget tor
Federal Revenue Sharing tor Fiscal Year IN I I N I by Ordinance No.
SIS on September M. IN I.
sai.Tttgg
Anticipated Revmue:
l i .ooom
Surplus carried forward:
IAJ.7tl.t0

Total Revenue
EependHures:
nniMwi rt ■
rw„it!onal Equipment (Iwg police cars)
Drainage and Construction I Range
1 1 no Road)
Repairs and Maintenance I Road Grader I
Additional Equipment (Heart Lung
Hesusclietor)
Oti.ce Equipment (CaplerCIty Halil
Office Equipment and Furniture lor
expansion ot City Hall
Tefal Expanses:

117,000 B0

III .000 00
I 1.000 00
I 4.000*
I s * o oo

.

Legol Notice
NO TICE OF PUBLIC
HEARING
T H E BOARD OF C O U N TY
COMMISSIONERS
OF
SEMINOLE COUNTY will hold a
public hearing In Room 700 ol tha
Seminole County Courthousa,
Sanford. Florid# on NOVEMBER
10, IN I at 7.00 P .M . or as soon
thereafter as possible, to consider
a specific land uie amendment to
the Seminole Cnunty Com
prehenslve Plan and REZONING
of tha described property.
AN ORDINANCE AMENDING
O R D IN A N C E
77 IS
WHICH
AMENDS TH E D E TA IL E O LANO
USE
ELEM EN T
OF
TH E
S E M IN O LE
C O U N TY
COM
P R E H E N S IV E PLA N FROM
LOW DENSITY R ESIDENTIAL
TO PLANNEO UNIT DEVELO P
M EN T FOR TH E PURPOSE OF
R EZO N IN G FR O M A I AG
R IC U L T U R E TO P LA N N E D
U N fT D E V E L O P M E N T , TH E
FOLLOWING DESCRIBED PRO
P ER TY.
The SW &gt;. it Ihe SW &gt;•ot Sect Ion
IS. Renge 30 Easl, Seminole
County, Florida, leu the East &gt;.
thereof, end also the North ’ y ot
the NW &lt;&lt; ot the NW la ol Section
Jl, Township It South. Range JO
East, less the East &gt;4 thereof
Consisting ol 4J S acres MOL
(Further described as at the in
tersection ot Dike end Howell
Branch
Road
(Northeast
quadrant). (OIST. No II
A P P L IC A TIO N
HAS
B E EN
SUBM ITTED BY O R S COR
PORATION - PZIIT 7111 S4
Further, the PLANNING AND
ZONING
COMM ISSION
OF
SEMINOLE CO UN TY will hold e
public hearing in Room J00 ot Ihe
Seminole County Courthouse.
Sanford. Florida, on NOVEMBER
4, m t at 7 * p m , or as soon
thereafter as possible, to review,
heir comments and maka
recommendations lo the Board ot
County Commissioners on the
above cepiioned ordinance and
w a n in g

Additional
Information may be
title
obtained by contacting Ihe Lend
Management Meneger at JJ14U0,
Ext ISO
Persons uneble to eltend Ihe
hearing who wish to comment on
ihe proposed actions may submit
written statements to the Lend
Management Division prior to Ihe
scheduled public hairing Persons
appearing at the hearings may
submit written statements or be
heard orally
Personsereedvlsedlhel.it they

decide lo appeal any decision
made at these meetings, they will
need e record ol Ihe proceedings,
end. lor such purpose, they mey
need to ensure that a verbatim
record ol the proceedings Is made,
which record Indudrs Ihe
testimony end evidence upon
which the appeal is to be based
Board ot County
Commissioners
*
By Robert Sturm.
Chairman
Attest: Arthur H Beckwith Jr.
Publish September I I A October
It, 0, November I, It ll
DEM U t
NOTICB OF PUBLIC
HEARING
TH E S E M IN O LE C O U N TY
BOARO OF COMMISSIONERS
will hold * public hearing In Room
700 ol Ihe Seminole County
Courthouse. Sanford, Florida on
NOVEMBER 10. IMI AT 7:00
P.M . or as soon thereatler as
possible to consider Ihe following
P U B LIC
H E A R IN O
FOR
CHANGE
OF
ZONINO
REGULATIONS
II JU L L IA N H A L L E R —
R EZO N E
FRO M
A I
AG RICULTURE TO M IA VERY
LIGHT INDUSTRIAL - PZ 110 7
I II I t — That pen ot the East i*
ot the SW 1x ol the SW 11 ot Sec. It
JISJ1E, lying Wly ot railroad
rtghl of way Sublect lo eilstlng
road or roads, drainage end public
utility easement, II any Consisting
ol I* acres MOL
(Further
described as being on the North
sldeof SR 414, West ot Jamestown
el Prison Road) (D ISTR IC T No II
II
M AHM O UD
AD E L
SHOURIOEH
REZONE FROM
N I
SIN G LE
F A M IL Y
DW ELLING DISTRICT TO C 1
R ETAIL COMMERCIAL PZ
110 7 111 to Lot I. Lekeview. Block
t, Plal Book S. Page 14 A lot SO It
by ISO approximately (Further
described as on the south side ol
SR 4J4. W ol 17 tl. between Pearl
Street and Lake Howell Roedl
(DISTRICT No 41
II TAMARK DEVELOPM ENT
C O R PO R ATIO N — REZONE
FROM R 1AAA SINGLE FAM ILY
DW ELLING DISTRICT TO R IA A
SINGLE FAM ILY DW ELLING
DISTRICT - PZ (10 7111 tl the East 1 1 ot Ihe SE i, ol Ihe NW
% ol Sec IS IIS 10E, LESS H W
for Dike Road. Seminole County,
Floride Consisllng ol J0 07J acres
MOL tFurther described ei on the
south side ol Dike Road. Between
Dodd Road end Tuskewlll* Roam
(DISTRICT NO II
Furthrr. a public hearing will be
held by Ihe SEMINOLE COUNTY
P LA N N IN G
ANO
ZONING
COMMISSION ON OCTOBER 7.
Itll AT 7 00 P M . or et toon
thereafter et possible. In Room 100
of Ihe Seminole County Cour
•house. Sanlord, Floride. in order
lo review, hear comments end
make recommendations to the
Board ot County Commissioners ol
Seminole County on the above
application! tl
Those In attendance will be
heerd and written comments mey
be tiled
with
the
Lend
Management Manager Hearings
mey be continued trom lime tq
lime as lound necessary. Further
details eveilabie by celling It )
4110. Ext IM
Persons art advised that if they
decide lo appeal any decision
made et these meet mgs. they will
need e record ol the proceedings,
end for such purpose, they may
need to ensure that a verbatim
rtcord ol the proceedings It made,
which record includes tha
testimony and avidanc* upon
which the appeal is to be mad*
Board ol County Commissioner*
Seminole County, Florid*
BY: Robert Sturm.
Chairman
A lie n ; Arthur H. Beckwith. Jr.
Publish: Sept. J l Oct. If. Nov 2.
Iff I
OEM 111

141*0 00
N1H

S S S S S S S H S ? w v w JUS £
Long wood. Florida between the hours of 100 a m . and I N
Monday through Friday.
D L . TER R Y
City Clark,
Longwood. Florida
Publish: October It, IN I
OEN 01

fiX C

pm

A good itrainor for
lumpy paint it an
old nylon stocking.

-» ^

^ V"* r

legal Notice
ORDINANCE NO. SJI
AN O R D IN A N C EO F TH E C ITY
OF LO N G W O OD , F LO R ID A ,
A N N E X IN G
TO
AN D
IN
CLUDING W ITHIN TH E COR
PORATE AR EA OF THE C ITY
OF LONGWOOD. FLORIOA. AN
AREA OF LAND S ITU ATE AND
BEING IN SEMINOLE COUNTY,
AND M O R E P A R T IC U L A R L Y
DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS: Lot
A Trienglt Subdivision. Plot Book
A Page Jl, Seminole County
R E O E F IN IN G
TH E
COR
PORATE LIM ITS OF TH E C ITY
OF LONGWOOD, FLORIDA. TO
INCLUDE SAID LAND W ITHIN
THE M UNICIPAL LIM ITS OF
T H E C I T Y ; A U T H O R IZ IN G
AM ENDM EN T TO C ITY MAP TO
IN C LU D E SAID LA N D AN
NEXED f PROVIDING FOR TH E
RIGHTS ANO PRIVILEGES FOR
CITIZEN SHIP IN TH E C IT Y :
S E V E R A B IL IT Y
AN D
EF
FEC TIV E D A TE .
W HEREAS, there h it been tiled
with Ihe City Clerk of the City of
Longwood, Florida, a Petition
containing the names of properly
owner* in the arte ol Seminole
County, Florid*, described et
follows:
Lot A Triangle Subdivision. Plat
Book A Page I I , Seminole County
requesting annexation to the
corporate area ol the City of
Longwood,
Florid*,
and
requesting to be Included therein;
end,
WHEREAS. Mid Petition was
Ally certified lo Ihe Seminole
County Properly
Appraiser
pursuant loth* Charter ot the City
of Longwood, Florid*, Chapter i f
liae. Laws ol Florida, H it. and
Chapter 7$ !t7. Laws of Florid*,
1S7S, end the certification ot the
Seminole County Property Ap
preiser at lo the sufficiency ol
such Petition pursuant to the
terms ol Mid Charter received;
W H E R E A S , the City Com
mission of the City ol Longwood,
Florida, has deemed it In the best
Interest ol the City ol Florida, to
accept Mid Petition end lo annex
Mid area,
NOW. TH E R E F O R E . BE IT
O R O A IN E O BY TH E C IT Y
COMMISSION OF TH E C IT Y OF
LONGW OOD. F L O R ID A . AS
FOLLOWS:
SECTION I: That the following
described property, to wit:
Lot t. Triangle Subdivision. Plat
Book 4, Pag* Jl, Seminole Countv
be end the seme is hereby annexed
to and mad* e pert ot the City ol
Longwood, Florida, pursuant lo
Ihe terms ol the Charier ol the City
ot Longwood. Chepter 411141.
Lews of Florida, IfSf, Chapter 7S
Iff, Lews ol Florida, 1t7S and
Florid* Statuta S171.044.
SECTION I : That tha Corporal*
limits of the City ol Longwood,
Florida, be end the seme ere
hereby redefined so ei lo Include
Mid lend herein described and
annexed
SECTION 1: That the City Clerk
is hereby authorlted to amend,
alter end supplement the official
city map of tha City ol Longwood,
Florida, to Include the annexation
contained In Section I hereof.
SECTION 4: That upon this
ordinance becoming effective, the
resident and property owners In
the above described anneitd ere*
shell be entitled to all ol tha rights
and privileges and Immunities as
are, tram time to lima, determined
by the governing authority ol the
City of Longwood, Floride. end the
provision* ol Mid Charter ol the
City ot Longwood, Florida,
Chapter *f ttto, Lews ol Florida,
leaf, end Chapter It I t ; Laws of
Florida. IffS
SECTION 3: It any section or
Portion ol a section ol this o r
dinine* proves lo be Invalid,
unlawful or unconstitutional. It
shall not be held to invalidate or
Impair tha validity, lore# or tffacl
ol any other section or part ol this
ordinance.
SECTION S: All ordinances or
parts of ordinances In conlllct
herewith be end the Mm* are
hereby repelled
SECTION 7: This ordinance
shall lake effect pursuant to the
provisions of Florid* Statute
S ill.044.
PASSED AND AD O PTED THIS
------day o f ------- A D. 1*01
FIRST READINO: September
If, (H I
SECOND READ ING: -----JOHN F. HEPP,
MAYOR.
C ITY OF LONGWOOD
A T T E S T:
O L . TER R Y,
CITY CLERK
Publish October II. It, » , A
November J, ittl
P E N H _________________________
IN THB CIRCUIT COURT, IN
AND FOR SRMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIOA
CIVIL ACTION NO.
•m i l CA SV K
ROSCOE E O TT end
SARAH F O T T, hiswite.
Pleintltts
vs
w i l l i a m o M cC l e l l a n d end
j a n e m Mc C l e l l a n d , his wile
Defendants
NOTICE OF ACTION
TO w i l l i a m o M c Cl e l l a n d
East McDowell
Mesa. Arlion* IS107
j a n e m M c Cl e l l a n d
East McDowell
Mas*. Arlion* Slier
YOU
AR E
HEREBY
N O TIFIE D lhAt an action to
foreclose a mortgage on the
following property in Srminot*
County, F lor Ida,
East SOlert of Loll * end 7. Block
II. Tier t, TOWN OF SANFORD.
Plel Book I. Pages 3* through *4.
Public Records ol Seminole
County, Florida, sublect to
easement 14 tact wide lying 7 teet
etlher side ol centerline ol existing
sewer line across Mid property
servicing
duplex
dwelling
designated as IOOIA loots Elm
Avenue. Sanlord. Floride
has been tiled egamil you end you
ere required to serve e copy ol
your written defenses. It any, to it
on HARRY G RE ID, III ol SHIN
HO -SER . LOGAN AND MON
CH IEF. Attorneys lor Plaintiff.
Post OfUct Box U7f. Sanlord.
Florida 31771. and III* tha original
with tha Clark ol in* above Court
on or before November J, itat;
otherwiM. a Judgment may be
entered against you tor the rail*)
demanded m the Complaint
WITNESS my hand and the seal
el this Court on this JJ4h day of
September, tMI.
Arthur H Beckwith, Jr.
Clerk ol ihe circuit
Court
By Susan E labor
Deputy Clerk
(SEAL I
Publish September It. October V,
IJ. tf. Iflt
DEM Ilf

**

m

f ^

* i

CLRSSIFIED ADS
Orlando - Winter Pork

Seminole

831-9993

3 2 2 -2 6 1 1

CLASSIFIED DEPT.

IB— Help Wanted

3t— Apartments Furnished

W AN TED : mature lady toUvt in
1 days and 1 nights a weak,
prepare meals A cart for J
Invalid ladlat In Sanlord
retfdtnc*. Call JOS J1M1IS
weekdays.

1 LARGE bdr, w w carpet, no
children or pets. 1710 mo., 1700
sec if* fast.
E F F IC IE N C Y , with stove,
refrlg , nr. downtown, S17J mo
1st mo 4 *100 dep. Ref
desired. J1J1N7 ett j p m

RATES

Him#
........ W c» lift*
HOURS
IcomacuflvBtlmBt 50c a line
JcoiwteutlvstlmaB ........o t
I 00 A M - 1:10 P M
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 10cgitMcutlvs tlmai. u c a lies*
SATURDAY f Noon
SI.00 Minimum
) Lints Minimum

DEADLINES

CO O K

C U TE Efficiency SIN me
A LG I BDRMIZISmo
Utilities not included
I N44I7I

FA STFO O D O P ER ATIO N
Good salary, hospitalltalion. I
w eek pad vacation every a
months
Experience not
necessary Phone Manager
I eke Mery *4 — 377 13*1

J B*rm Lara* »JTS with Sac.
Dap. N* Children
HdrtM Hdll Realty Inc. Realtor
21J-I774

Noon The Doy Before Publication
AVON R E P R E S E N TA TIV ft
The P*rt T Ime Career
4*4JOft - Collect KSI70I

Sunday-Noon Friday

6— Child Care

4— P e rso n a is
WHY BE LO N E LY T Writ# "Get
A Male" Dating Service All
ages P O Box *071, Clear
water. FI JJStl.____________
LO N LEYT ( I t l l I f l 7J77 record
rd message (24 hrt) Bringing
People Together Deling I
LO N ELYT New singles meg.
Stamp address envelope tor
Ire* info. Box 110(11)
Boynton, FI* 114JS.

FOR theUltimet* in
Child Care A Child's
World 313 1411
EXP. M OTHER. TLC In my
home. Any doy or hour.
Reasonable Ret* J J J IIff.
DAY time baby sitting in my
home, no weekends, have ref
371 0*1*
SPUR OF TH E MOMENT
BABYSITTING
373 S3**

Legal Notice

9— Good Things to Eat

N OTICE OF PUBLIC
HEARINO
TH E BOARD OF C O U N TY
COMMISSIONERS
OF
SEMINOLE COUNTY will hold *
Public hearing in Room TOO ol the
Seminole County Courthouse,
Sanlord. Florida, on NOVEMBER
10. IfSl tl 1 oo P M , or as soon
Iherealler as possible, to consider
a specific land use amendment to
Ihe Seminole County Com
prehenslve Plan and REZONING
ol th» described property.
AN ORDINANCE AMENDING
O R D IN A N C E
77 IS
WHICH
a m en d s th e d e t a il e d la n d
use
elem en t
of
th e

S EM IN O LE
C O U N TY
COM
P R E H E N S IV E P LAN FROM
LOW O EN SITY RESID EN TIAL
TO COMMERCIAL FOR THE
PURPOSE OF REZONING FROM
A 1 A G R IC U L T U R E TO C I
R E T A IL C O M M E R C IA L . TH E
F O L L O W IN G
D E S C R IB E D
PROPERTY
Consisllng ol two parcels: tl)
The E '■) ol the NW '4 ol Ihe SW '4
and Ihe NE &lt; 4 ot Ihe SW ' 4 ol Sec.
14 3IS30E, LESS Ihe NE ' 40 ! the
SW ot Sec 14 IIS JOE, and LESS
the N JJ teet lor road 1) The W •j
otlheNW '40f theSW
less road
in Section 14 II JO Consisting ol It
acres MOL (Further described as
at the SE corner ol Red Bug Lake
Road and Dodd Road) (DISTRICT
No II
A P P L IC A TIO N HAS B E E N
S U B M IT T E D BY LO UIS P
KILGORE. JR - PZt 10 7 It) fl
Further. Ihe PLANNING AND
ZONING
COMM ISSION
OF
SEMINOLE COUNTY will hold a
public hearing in Room 100 ol the
Seminole County Courthouse.
Sanford. Florida, on OCTOBER 7,
Ifll *1 7 00 P M , or as soon
Iherealler as poislblt, to review,
hear comments and make
recommendations to the Board of
County Commissioners on the
above captioned ordinance end
retorting
Additional Informal Ion mey be
obtained by contacting the Land
Management Manager *1113 41)0,
Ext. 140
Persons uneble 10 attend the
hearing who wish lo comment on
the proposed actions may submit
written statements lo the Land
Management Olvislon prior lo Ihe
scheduled public hearing Persons
appearing et the hearings may
submit written statements or be
heerd orelly
Persons ere edvised that, it they
decide to appeal any decision
made *1 these meetings, they will
need a record of Ihe proceedings,
and. toe such purpose, they may
need to ensure that a'verbatim
record ol the proceedings is made,
which record includes Ihe
testimony and evidence upon
which Ihe appeal is lo be based
Board ol County
Commissioners
Seminole County, Florida
By Roberl Sturm,
Chairman
Attest Arthur H Beckwith Jr
Publish September 1*. 1 October
tl. A November 1, Iffl
OEM 117
FIC TITIO U S NAMB
Nolle* is hereby given thai 1 am
engaged in business el Rl 1. Box
St B Richmond Ave, Sanford.
Seminole County, Florida under
th* fictitious name of P AIN TED
PLEASUR ES. end that I intend lo
register said name with th* Clerk
ot the Circuit Court. Seminole
County, Floride in accordance
wdh in* provisions of th* Fic
lltious Name Statutes. To Wit:
Section I4S Of Florid* Statutes
ltS7
Sig Joan L Buchanan
Publish October S, II. If. IS. Ifll
DEN IS
FIC TITIO U S NAMB
Notice it hereby given that I am
engaged in business *1 1)0 W. Slat*
Road 434, Aitamonie Springs, Fla
Seminole Cognly, Florid* under
Ihe llclltioui name ot SUN
CASUAL F U R N ITU R E, And that I
inland to regular said name with
tha Clerk ot the Circuit Court,
Seminole County, Florid* in ac
cord* nee with th# provisions ot the
Fictitious Name Statutes. To Witt
Section *43 01. Florid* Statutes
ISS7
Sig Harry E Fletcher
Publish September a , October A
11. tf. IN I
DEM 111
FIC TITIO U S NAMB
Notice ts hereby given that I am
engaged in b u tln ttf at 440
Rldtewood
st.,
Augment*
Springs, Samlngl* County, Florid*
under in* fictitious name *f NO
PLACE LIK E HOME P E T CARE
SERVICE, and that I Inland to
register saw name with tha Clark
of tha Circuit Court, Semtnofa
County, Florida to accordance
with th* provision* of th* FIcIH Wu* Nam* Statute*, TpW II:
Section 443Of Florida Statutes
WSJ

Kg. Susan J. Paul
Publish October If,
November 1 1, IN I
DCNBJ

w I

14.

A

Bananas
Jibs 100
Large Peppers
Sfort 00
W. Lopes
ft
Green Onions
I for 7*
EXTRA Lg Tomatoes
tt lb
Pumpkins
■Tf up
Red Del Apples
4 lbs 1.00
Rom* Apples
lib* 100
Wlnesep Apples
3 lbs. 100
Muttu Apples
Jib*. I 00
Golden Del.
Jibs 100
Yellow Squish
Jibs. 100
Sm Zucdnl Squash
Jib* 100
Lg Zucclnl Squash
*ibt. 100
Fresh Apple Cider
ijoa l. I ff
Fresh Maple Syrup
Iff
SOlbs Potatoes
tfo
Greens
Bunch ff
S Its Potatoes
If
Jack O' Lantern Pumpkins
Are In
I ’y Heeds Cebbege lor
100
PlckJIng Cukes
bu. 100
V ib u I SO

Bring your Own Containers.
Cukes
10(or 1.00
Va. Jum Bo
Water melons
*a. J tt
Green Been*
_ bu.400
W

Tak* Food Stamp*
LEROY FARMS
SR 44
Watson's Old Farm
b

BLUE CRABS LIVB
OR D R B ttB D
7 DAYSt-4. *441131

11— Instruct taro

HAIR stylist exp needed lull
time,
some
following
preferred Lake Mery 113 SS73.
COOK — breakfast experience
necessary lull time.
SALAD PBKSON - experience
necessary pert llm*. Apply In
person Tu*t.-S*t. 1 p.m.-Ap.m.
Deltona Inn J0SS74 A4fl.

AAA EM PLO YM EN T

m-itit

If 17

RN OR LPN
4 17 and I I I Shill. Full lime
Apply In person Sanlord
Nursing Convalescent Center,
fSO MelWnvill* Ay*.
RIGHT now w* need 4 few good
sales people who have th*
ambition end dedication fa
succeed It that’s you. than
we’re prepared to after you
real rewards and the methods
to gel them For intarvlaw.
pitas* cell Century Jl, Hayes
Realty Service*. Inc ■ Sanfbrd

snoso
PERSON to dellvw P M paper
rout* J days Por weak JJJ 4S44
aft * p m. good pay.
LA YO U T. Fitter, Welder, Shear
A Brake operators 4 Indus
trial Patotae. First and Second
Shifts, Tap F a y. Good
•anatlts. Call Florida Iran
Works Inc. JJ74J00.

FLOOR WAXBR -

steady kb

tor retired or atthl retired
parson. To work IS boon par
U ln a e
E X P E R IE N C E D meat cutter
Faad Earn Inc., IJMi tl. P*rt
Av*. Sanlord

E X P ER IEN C E D short order
cook apply Food Barn Inc. IJttt
SI. A Park Av*.

jt d r m .J B with
double cer garage. In
Dellon* Cells?* I4JJ
N C W E n ERGV
e f f ic ie n t ho m e
1) Built in ertrgy severs, attic
sioreoe Deltona Are*
37)3)10

34—B u sin ess O pportunities

LOCH ARBOR I1 C H A , carpet,
garage porch, tenet, shade,
*430 4 deposit. Phone 111 JOf*.

TWO questions Will you be
tinenctelly independent in 3 lo
1 years? Are you paid wtiet
you are worth? It not cell 3)3

SANFORO. 1 bdr, 1 bth, kl appll.
siained Oak Moors, custom
curtains. FI Rm, carport, Ig
Imced yard, kennels, tj fruit
tree* S37J. Before f AM or an 4
PM 37J-4S7I

I MONEY I FOR CHRISTMAS
Terrflc way for women to earn
money lor Christmas or year
round. Call today lor In
terview, 177 707T

LEASE option to buy, nlc* J
bdrm, 111 bth, AC home 1375
17) *570

*********

TOUCH OF CLASS
Restaurant • Lounge

SANFORD 3 bdr. 1 bth, eppllc ,
including w d, no pets S37S
Dep req 37) 1)77. 37) 744*

4JOO sq It bldg comer lot. TOO
seot. all equipped going
operation Liquor Items*.
All SfS.000 SIS,000 Handles.

CLEAN 1 bdrm, 3ly bth, CHA,
trull trees, storage shed,
w*th*r dryer. 1345 JJIlIS f.
D ELTONA — Executive type
home: 2 bdr. Ily bth. teperat#
dining art*, w w carpet. Ire
Defiled closets, modern kit,
cen. HA, cloAed garage. No
pets. 1335

CALL BOB BESKE.
REALTOR ASSOC.
7731*44 *r *74)3*4
GLASS t P F E IF F E R , INC.
REALTOR
• * a a * * * « * * A A *

574-1040

P LU M B IN G O IY . Hardw ire
and Electrical retail and
repair Business W WO Rtal
Estate. Best Terms, *14)4100.
Wm Mellctowskl REALTOR
3717N3. Eve*. 777 1317

3 BDR. 1 bth 1150 month
1st A last 4 security.
I l l 44*1.
J BDRM. Ily Bath. Cmt HA.
Wall to wall carpet. 1350 mo. 4
sac. Dtp. 373 4154

HERALD PAPER ROUTE
FOR SALE
377 17)3

J BDRM, J bth. appl, lane*,
double garage, to) Serlt* St..
Sanlord, JJJ IIS).
W INTER Springs lam home J
far, 1 b. air c. carpet, drapes,
lam rm. fenced, no pets.
*45 1114.
1BDRM. I Beth
S1S0 4 17JO Dtp.
31)44)4

29— Rooms

4 bdrm, IW bth, w w carpal, cm.
H A appll, large fenced yard
w pool *400. H i 0114

SANFORO — Reas, wkty A
monthly rates Util Inc Kit.
500 Oak Adults 141 7N)
ROOMS tor Rmt
Privet* Entrance

33— Houses Furnishsd

nnssj

CIRCULATION D E P T.

Title C le rk ............................. m i
Computer Operator........ 111.400
Systems Analyst............. t JO,000
Bakery Helper
Open
Cashiers
open
Maintenance
ttt
Heavy Equip. Operator ...... NS
Just a little of so much.

1 BDRM house lor rm t S1S0 mo.
SIX dep No pets, children are
fin* Central Air, fenced yard,
close to town » 7 0430 or
I SO* 717 7J4*.

p le n ty- ol ^bratpeett
Advertise your product or
service in the Classified Ads

SINGLE or Couple to share 3-1
pool home. Sanford Near
Hospital and downtown. Call
evenings alt 4. JIJ JIM.

JU S T FOR YOU
STARTING YOUR
CAREER
A N D FO R YOU
W ITH ALL
T H A T EXPER IEN CE
A WIDE RANGE
OF OPPORTUNITIES
ARE ASCLOSE
AS T H A T PHONE.
S2S-S174
W E'RE LOOKING
FORWARD
T O P U T T IN O Y O U T O
WORK THIS W EEK

32— Houses Unfurnished

Oet

18— Help Wanted

E v e n in g H e ra ld

SANFORO specious 1 bdr, t
bath, air, drapes, kit appll,
S350 mo 4 dep. JJf 1541.

PART lima, woman lo clean
motel rmt 7 J hr* In A.M., 4
days per week 4 private home
t full day per week, Longwood
are* I J 4 1141 or 131-4fff.

21— Apts. A Houses
.To Share

CALL 323-M11

SANFORO specious 1 bdr.
I bin. air. drapes.
1)50 mo * dep ) ) f 154)

'Halloween Ghosts’ Can’t Scar*
Awey Classified Ad Results
Here

Tennis Instruction — U S P T.A.
Certified Group or Priyet*
lessons Children e specially.
Oevi Mtliciewskl
I1MN7.

•0VSAGM S
ACES 13-17
EARN EXTRA S I
AFTER SCHOOL

31 A — D u p le x e s

I bdr, liv. rm, kit, bath, car
ptttd. adults, no pets SI7S. 4
miles east Rt 44 lo Richmond
Av*. turn right 1st house or
cell 311 1507 alt S:30.

30-Apartmerits Unfurnished
LUXURY
A P A R TM EN TS
Fam ily A Adults section.
Poolside J Barms Master
Cove Apts 111 7?00 Open on
weekends
BAMBOO COVE J bedroom
epts Available Meneger on
premises, J1J 1)40

37— Business Property
For rm t or leas* — 10,3)0 iq. it
industrial or warehouse fis
W 1st st„ Santord. JiJtiqg

Ridgewood A rip l J Bdrjyr.
Apts trom SlfS J Bdrm also
avail Pool, tennis court JJ)
*4)0

37-B— Rental Offices

ENJOY country living? I Edrm
Apt*. Olympic 1 1 . Fail.
Shenandaah Village Opm f I.

SM ALL O F F IC E PAR
TIA LL Y FURNISHED. PLUS
C O P IER ! 11SO M ON TH 11
CALL ) ) ) f)41, OW NER
REALTOR

WE
HAVE
Apartments,
Duplexes end Houses lor Rmt
June Porno Really » l * 4 ) l

Office Specs
For Leas*
U0 771)

no ELM Av*., newly remodeled,
1Bdrm, 1Beth S11S 4 Deposit.
3 Bdrm, I s*1h tU J 4 Deposit.
Call JJf JS10 Days *r C l 5441
Evenings.

DOCTORS Office tor teas* In
choice area near Hospital.
Alia side St. Office spec*
available. Hereto Han Realty
Inc. Realtor JU-tn*.

CLEAN lergt luxurious 1 Bdrm.
Apt. 10 ft celling. Ctremtc
Beth. Bey windows, carpet,
kit. nulp. Util paid. | bfk
trom downtown Sanlord.
Adults no pats, jgg Oak Avt.
AIRPORT Bivd , Sanford Largo
I Bdrm. 2 Full Bath, Kitchen
equipped. I lf *77*4

SUB 1toting small area in
J*nlord, located near hospital.
For furter totor motion call
Slave .Bernes J110H0

mifi*

Mariners Village on Lake Ada t
bdrm from 3750. 1 bdrm tram
ffT'.U * * * *
I** SBNtB
M Airport Bivd.inSantorB Ail
M um . JJJ *470

,tn

MetionvlM*
Tract
Apts.
Spacious, madam I Bdriq. 1
Bath apt. Carpeted, fell
equipped,
CHAA.
Near
hospital A lake Adults, no
pats. S170. JM fliJ
I Bdrm Mtomtshad SM . wtIB
lac. Dap- N* cBJMraa
t Bdrm Dwfttx •ohtratoJtad SM
Sac. Dap.
Hereto Nall Btatty lac. Realtor
m-ITJ*

31— A f M r lr m n h F u r n is h *
SANFORO LOST C O T T M t
Porch, air, shad S M Bn. BUS m*.
CASSBLBBBBY BURN APTS.

1 bdrm, lilt, 17* dn. USB mo
t bdrm, 1 acres, will, US wt.
IA V -O N -R E N T A L S
W nm m A*
XMLVflMi
1 S T -ON RENTALS BBALTOB
Furnished apartments tor Sanlpr
Cititani. I l l Palmetto Av*., J.
Cowan. No phono coils.

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turn, me
O P IN M O U tll
UPM.
Howard Blsf. Lonoweod
11t M
1)1 Loch Low Dr. Hlddwt Likes
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UBI Faikner, Altamonte Sprint*
ISAffg.

3234143
A IA L T O B S

&gt; - . f - e * eve. -mew ■**- m •» \

1

�I

* * I *

*1— Houses

41— Houses

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

41—Houses

with M ajor Hoople

Twi655,Ttt£ SCARPED CLAIM

THAT POP 11 ^ETT i NiS *

Harold Hall

TRYSUT with 5C*1E PRC
TEAM CA.U.EP THE

iJf THE REAL THIN.S,
MRS. HJOFLE: BUT he
h a s JO MAKE "HE
T E A M FIR S T J

W IL P C A T T E R S : ifi THIS

A Pu b l i c it y $ n
THE C EN TUR Y II SYSTEM
HELPS more people buy and sell
more real estate than anyone
else in Amer.ca Cali looay
and let ,| nork ior
^wll
111 1050
Mayes Real Estate
Services. Inc
415 W 15th St
Sanlord
Each cilice s independentlyowned and operated

REALTY, INC.
R E A LTO R

323-5774

PO TH EY c u p w
A R C U N T?

H AN D YM AN
S P EC IAL Surrounded by much mort
eipensive homn, this 'J I is on
• huge lot in Pin* Crest +
priced lor quick sole At s it . soc
REDUCED 11).*«1 1 M rm , 1
MIh heme toned Restricted
Commercial with IIS leet on
highway I f prime eiposure
New lull I44.4NII

B E A U TIFU L 1 Bdrm, 1 Bath
Home Large Fim Rm.Cent
HA, Outstanding shady lot and
most prestigious location
Only 554,500 This you mull
see

CallBart
REAL ESTATE
REALTOR 111 feel

1 STORY A P T HOUSE Complete!, remodeled w new
w lrln i, plumbing, smoke
•lorms, 1 peddle lens + Urge
rooms Posiliee cash How +
excellent financing') You'd
better hurry At only S47.S09II

R O B B irs
M ALTY
REALTOR. MLS
1101 S French
Suile 4
Santord

325-5774
When you place a Class.tied Ad
in The Evening Heratd. star
close to your phone because
something wonderlul is about
lo happen

24 HOUR m 322-9283
★

★

★

★

★

★

★

A

QUICK Sale, cash, cheap
1 Bdrm, I Bath LW Rm, Din Rm
Fam Rm w Dining area
Screened Back Porch Almost
new drapes A carpet, 4 air
condition units Frulltrees and
shade trees Call all 4 a m tor
Appl 111 1011 Sale by owner
*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

Inc.
ASSOCIATE. INC . REALTORS'
IIOffices Throughout
Central Florida

LAKE MARY
121-6940
see W Like Mary Blvd
IN DR IF TWOOD VILLAGE
155.500 Mint Orange Grove In
town, IS Bearinq Trees. Plus 1
Bdrm home w Fireplace.
Central h a with I duple* lots
ready lo build on Pool and
patio. Igt. oaks Cor lol Super
VA mgt

ttt.400 Lge. Custom built brick
on I 1 I Ird acres. A truly
e*coptional home with many
trees on quiet St. Will sell,
lease, option, or rent.
Ml,SCO Woodmere Park 1 1'Y
Central Heal A Air. garage.
Icnced Sell of rent option.

419.500 New listing NIC* home
with big trees, Central Heat
and Air Good FHA mgt.
Creative financing. 1 Bdrm. t
Bath
UI.OQO Nice I IV, in Country
Club New paint, lenced yard,
carport.

Ut.SCO First lim* ottered I
Bdrm, Femlly room. Needs
lace lifting near Meiionvllie

449.900 New I story log on *«
Acra. This is a rare beauty

Eyes 311041)
10ft 15lh SI
C R E A T IV E
F in a n c in g !
Academy Manor, 1 Bdrm, l&lt;,
ba New carpet A paint,
carport Rear fenced Big lol
114,400 111 4011
1 BDRM, 1blh, carport, cen HA,
carpet, 10*10 garage, fenced
back yard, deep well t i l . 400
or make reasonable offer.
14500 dn assume mortgage, no
qualifying call 111 JSOO
114.500 SPACIOUS 1 bdr, |lt blh
FI rm New roof — newty
painted, near Plnecrast Sch.
— Large Large fenced back
yard.
A A McClanahan
Lie. Rail Eslata Broker
_____. 17) S441

ALL FLORIDA REALTY
OF SANFORD REALTOR
1 BORM. 1 bth. split plan. A t
condition. Pricad 451,400
owner financing.

OREAT IN VESTM EN T NIC* 1
Bdrm, l Beth each unit!
Lovely landscaped loll Supor
location. Both renltd 155.104

LK H a r n e y est stlmnt, 1 acra
Ik frnf. 1 tty w pool envious
5114.000
WOODMERE spit I P r many
e*lras owner may hold with I 1
down 515000
MBLE home sglw 11 A dblw
turn 11 A lol w dock SI Johns
River 111.500 A $15,500

M 1,400 Orlando. Let's llnd some
Orange Co I I I , / Bond money
to llnanca this n»c# home for
small family. Near Hwy H UCF

S»4.joo Gat a panoramic view of
the Beautiful SI. Johns from
the Front porch ot this older
home on Its Acres with owner
financing.

NEW I Bdrm, I Bath, tttculive
home. Eal In Kitchen, stone
fireplace, screened porch,
Intercom, many mora aatrasl
Great location in Exclusive
Cardinal Oaks 11111.000 Heidi.
W INTER Springs. J Bdrm. 1
Bath Pool. Cant. HA. Owntr
financing at reduetd price ol
ui.400 Call Baa

N GA A N C min lots
SANFO RDR EALTY
REALTOR
11)5114
A t t .H r l.il! 4454. H U M S

S TE M P E R A G E N C Y
BUILDING LOTS 4 lots in
Geneva Good location, dose to
Si. Johns River and Lake
Harney Owner will llnanca
14.000 Ea
NEED ROOM? This lovely I
Bdrm 1 Bath has it. Nicely
landscaped and sattlad neigh
borhood Ha* Cent HA with
wall to wall carpal. 144,500
EXCELLEN T
S TA R TER
HOME Thera's room to n
pend in this I Bdrm 1 Bath
Horn* Central location and
priced right. at only 115.500

B E A U TIF U L Now 1 Bdrm, 1
Both Homo in Rambtewood on
lovoly landscaped lot All th«
ostrasl Cent H A Wall to wall
carpot, split bdrm plan, largo
Fla. r m , dining room, and
more *44.909
JU S T
L IS T E D
Spacious
remodeled 1 Bdrm, 1 Bath
home on largo shaded loti
Firtpllco, Cent HA. Will to
w ill carpot, Florida rm,
porch, plus 1 rental units.
SI 14.400.

CEDAR Siding Home on a City
tats. Eaac Area. It ft. living
rm See it today at 154,400.
CAPE Cod a Bdrm Mint condi
tlon Reduetd lo SP.N4, Boa.
1 Bdrm, HT Bath, Cant HA, lor
small lamliy. Privacy fonca
144.400 Call BEe
LARGE Country Home » Hbh
acra. I.a* down
Owner
financing SafMO Call Boa
SANORA Batter than new.
Corner lot. 1 Bdrm, 1 Bath. I
car garaga. 141.400. Call Baa
A B E A U TY Custom built. 1
Bdrm. * Bath near shopping
One of a kind A Musi See
144.100 Call Baa
DOW NTOW N Spanish. Doll
Lovaly I story Cant. HA. In
ter tor Decorated Don't miss it
at sai.soo ceil Baa

SALES ASSOCIATES
NEEDED
S aownlMS WH.

373 *7*0 '

Sanford
JR** t-Hled
CHARMING 1 Bdrm. 1 both.
Fireplace, Country KNdidn,
Family Rm., Formal Din.
R m , Scr- Porch, tin t AH ♦
Attic Fan. detached 1 cat
garegewilh office or ideal apt.
Dbl Lot. 10 malura fruit trees
Much More Asking 444.400
PHYLLIS CAPPONI, REALTOR

CENTURY II,

norm

O E u G h J F U L DeBary
e ilri
large 1 bdr. 1 b*h home with
lots d closets, on
acre
wooded. Ilka front lot Dream
kit. retrig, island slova,
washer A dryer, cent vac
system, w w carpel. I4i.lt
screened porch. pat«. And
dosed garage. *4) 500
FOUR TOWNES
R E A L TY INC BROKER
4M 4110 anytime

W ANTED Responsible party to
take over payments on Spinet
Console Piano Can be seen
locally Write Mr. Foster. P O
Bo* 5*1. Astor, Fla J7007

46B- Investment
Property

COM PLETE Camper Outfit tor
Van or Pick up, Table, Bed.
Sink and Ice Bo* Call 37) ) t l l

SMITH Corona typewriter in
case,
Burrough
adding
machine Cal! 327 )9*0

19)4 AMC Hornet Hatchback
Auto PS AM radio 14 miles
per gallon Looks and drives
like a new car 51495 May
conl ' - f trade *31 11)9
** MUSTANG hardtop
* cyl. auto. air.
sharp 3131*11

USE O engines SI SOu
Usedlrans 150 up
Fuel' Salvage 37) 1*47

19)5 CADILLAC Coupe Devillr
Full Powrr AC. low mileage
AM FM Asking 11)50
31) 04)4

77— Junk Cars Removed
CASH FOR CARS
Running or not

FOR SALE lo close estate 14)14
door Oldsmobde *7 000 i" les
Cash required Call 9 a m 5
p m 373 DM

_

TOP Dollar P.vd lor Junk A
List'd cars trucks A heavy
equipment 377 5440

MUST SELL
AQHA Mare and
Gelding Both found with great
dispositions.
good
with
children Best otter over 1500
Call 377 4)94 or 31) *01*

BUY JUNk CARS A TRUCKS
f rom *10 lo*50 or mote
Call 377 1*74 377 44*0

DAY TON A AUTO AUCTION
3R.

Hwv 42. I mile west ot Speed
way, Daytona Beach, will hold
a public AU TO AUCTION
every Wednesday al I p m II s
the only One in Florida You set
the reserved price C*ll 404
255 4IH t*r lurther deljils

70—Motorcyctes
68— Wanted to Buy
Antiques Diamonds Oil
Paintings Oriental Rugs
Bridges Antiques
3717*01

19?* YAM AH A 400c i . low
m-feaqe
like new AMung
WJ0 12) Ml*

cans, copper
lead brass silver oold Week
days 4 4 10 Sal 9 1 kokoMo
Tool Co 911 w Is! SI 1211100

Setting is Move outside lime
Gel patio and lawn lurmture at
a good price Read the
Classified Ads

HONDA Paitport 1000
Low milMUf ISO0
Tall 373 0647 aft A

PAPER BACK Books Western.
Adventure, Romance. Comics
Hatty Furniture 177 4504
a l u m in u m

60—Office Supplies

JUM t

,^

C A LL A N Y TIM E

322-2420

1541
Park

61— Building Ataterials

TOfZfC RfAlTr

' Reg Real Estate Broker
1111*)*
Ev* m jet*

b u il d in g s a l l s t e e l

1 V i W FAM RM. assumeS75I
mo wi 114 000 down
111 11)0

Santord Rejuvenation Area
110)11 Sanlord Ave e«cellent
location lor retail business or
oil ices 761* sq led building

BATEMAN REALTY

111 Sanlord Ave adlolns above
properly 257S sq leel otters
many business possibilitiet.

NO
R E A SO N A BLE
oiler
refused 1 !&lt; i Bik Eat In Kit.
FP. Carpet, ready to move in
Lg Assume Mtg Consider
renting Asking 11*.900

)4

When you place a Clatsifted Ad
m The Evening Herald, %tay
clot# to vour phone because
something wonderful is about
to happen

★ B&amp;H Auto Sales *
*339 7989*

79— Trucks-Trailers

W A N T lo buy agood
used slide projector

*3 *40 43.4)2. 40 «*0 16.394
44 *40 59.*3*. *0 *135' 119 991
Call Bill Webb JJI 4445

flank fm*nclngiviitibl*
15 N Hwy 1) 91
Casselberry
FOR Sale Todco Door
*&gt;* Overhead Van door
11) 1440

WANT TO BUY A
H E A T E R 74*74

CALL 1770147
•

■acal'On lime is here gel what

-ou need lor a happy lime wdh
a Classified Ad

4t-B— Condominium
For Salt

LUCKY

I NVEST

To List Your Business...

The sooner you place your
classified ad the sooner you
gel results

42— Mobile Homn

We pay cash lor 1st 4 2nd
mortgages Ray Leqg, Ltr.
Mortgage Broker J39 ,’ 7*4

SO— Miscellaneous for Sale

NEW Nobility, 1 bdr, 1 blh. dbl
wide, shingle root, wood
siding Oct special 114 445
delivered A Set up
Open Sundays
Uncle RoysMobile
Home Sales Ol
Leesburg 404 ) 4) 0)14
SUM
B U D G ETS
ARE
BOLSTERED WITH VALUES
FROM
THE
WANT AD
COLUMNS
CHECK TMISOUT
B E A U TIFU L 144) Royal Oaks )t
wide 1 bdr 1 bth gardm tub
deluie carprl. cathedral
ceilings, buck lirrplace. wood
siding, shingle root, paddle
tan and many more eatras
Only 174 400 VA financing nO
money down
10 *« down
conventional See at Uncle
Roys Mobile Home Sales ol
lrrsburg U S Hw* 441 S 404
!i)0)74 Open weekdays 4
I 10, Sun I) 4
C H EC K O U T UNCLE ROYS
LARGE selection ot 14 wide*
prices start M44S VA tman
eng no money down, 10 ’,
conventional
Shop Uncle Roys Mobile Home
Sales. Lrrsburg. u S Hwy 441
S 404 )1)0114 Open ) days

-------

■

Air (VffMtitionino

,

.

FRO NT
1&lt;&gt;

O STEEN II ACRES WOODED
PAVED ROAD FRONTAGE
1)4.000
GENEVA 3*a ACRES WOODED
ZONED MOBILE $11,500

Appli*nee Repair
S E R V IC E , Instillation. Air
cond , rttrlg , washers,
dryers, celling Ians, minor
plumbing Reas No service
charge with repair ipS 5)4

LEVI JE A N S t JACKETS
ARMY NAVY SURPLUS
110 Sanlord Ave
1)15)91

Looking lor a iOb’ the Clast it ird
Ads will hrlp you Imd that ibb

51— Household Goods

Beauty Cere

LIVING Rm Furniture
7 Pieces.5150
1)179*7

IOWER SBEAU TYSA LO N
lO R M E R LY Harrietts Beauty
Nook 519 t IS! St . 1)15141

Boarding A Grooming
■

51-A— F u m ih ir t
WILSON MAlER FU R N ITU R E
111 115 E FIRST ST
111 U l l

52— Appliances

SEARS mlciowavt
eacetlenl condition
Phone 11) 14*0________
R E N T A Washer, Oryer.
Refrigerator, or TV
904 IIS *995
9FO O TC H EST
FR EEZER
PHONE 111 19*0
Ken more parts. Service, utuu
washers MOONEV APPLI
A N C E j J)J 0*97

S3— TV Radio Stereo

GENEVA 10 ACRES WOODED.
COCHRAN ROAD tl.SOO PER
ACRE MAY DIVIDE

Good Used TVS, 111 4 up
M ILLERS
M190rl*ndoFr
Ph IJIO IS)

COMMERCIAL 1ACRESON If
41 NEAR
LA KE M ARY
BOULEVARD SIS0.00D

COLOR TV 111 Stereo corwoie
with reverb 4)5, ■ track player
recorder m ta io .
ZENITH Color
Console TV. (ISO.
Call all 5P m 17)4114.

GUN auction Sunday Nov. I
Sanlord Auction
HISS FrenchAvt
Mora into 11) 11*4

TLC W ITH "R U T H ’'
Dog grooming, sm*ll Breeds 14
Free pick up. delivery.
l cmgwood area 111 i l l )
Animal Haven Boardmg and
Groom.ng Kennels Shady,
nsulaled, Screened tly proof
mside oulS'de runs Fans
Alto AC cages We cater lo
your pelt
Starling stud
registry Ph » ) » »
Snuw Hill Kennel oilers Cal 4
Dog Flea Baths 55 up 34
Hour. Full Service 345 SH7

Building Gonfnsctor
SHIELDS CONSTRUCTION
Additions,
rem odeling,
designs Guar stale License
Prompt asllmalts 4)1 1 1 1 )
October is F ire Prevention
Month Clean up and Sell Owl
with a Herald Classilled Ad

Ceramic Tilt
Cempltlr Ceramic Tile Serv
walls lloors. countertops, re
mudrl reper Fr esl 339 0)11

1ConcrpfP Work, tootprv floors &amp;
poof% L Jndsr itptmj 4 sod
m»rk f rr »p % t J77 /10J

DUN R ITE Lawn Service Mow,
edge, trim, vacuum, mulch,
vod H r « 377 73TI

1 MAN Q U A LITY OPERATION
'* tr% i‘*P
Dr f*** 4
4-fi Well HP (If*(|l )71 IJ

Clock Rtpslr
G W ALTN EV JEW ELER
104 S ParkAvt
__________ 111*509___________
Start Indian Summer In a
"TpaPea" of your own, dtack
Real Estate Bargains...

Remodeling Specialist
Wehandie the
Whole Ball ot Wa*
O . C* UIF1K w oniTa

ruhbilh

remove!

Call

322-7029
F mane mg Available

Legal Services

e ip p ftfru f M«nor rppi,r% fo
comptHp String 177 0714

ROOFS, leaks repaired. Replace
retlen eaves and shuttle work.
licensed, insured, bended
Mike 17) 44)1.

provide representation al the
Administrative Law Judge
Level lor claimants who have
been turned down lor recon
iteration
IS) 111 I
Richard A. Schw sell Ally
111 Magnolia Ave
Daytona Beach. FL 1101

Pamimg carpentry, all types ol
home repairs Call lor tree
estimate 1)1 1414

Hauling A
Yard Work
TRASH Removal, cleanups,
small tree removal,
wood cutting 1)10994

Roofing

SOCIAL SICURiTY

Handyman

MnlU-Lodc
NEW Concrete Buildings, all
tiles 170 4 up A ll *4 SR 44 I
4 fndutliral Park, 1)10041.

Garage sales are in season Tell
the pntple about il with a
Classified Ad m the Herald
3)1 1411 III 9/vi

H om e Im provem ent

Christian Rooting I) yrs e*p
149 5750 tree esl Rerouting.
spe&lt;i4 h|e m irpair work 4
new rootmg
SO U TH tU N WOOI I NO 13 \ t \
rap. rr roofing, lr*ik \pro.|l
Oi’prmlAtjlr &amp; hon**\»
prill* D ay or n iq h i 177 I WI

Sandblasting
SANDBLASTING
DAVIS W ELDING
1314191. SANFORD

111 «r07

F l o r id a h o m e
IMPROVEMENTS
Pa nlmg Rooting. Carpentry
Lie Bunded 4 Guatanired
Free Estimates 111 H4f

SIGHING IT M AKESW ASTC SELLING If M AKES CASH
PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD
NOW Call 17) 7» l l or *]l V993

Nursing Center
OUR RATES ARE LOWER
Lekrvirw Nursing Center
•19 E Second SI . Sanlord

Small Home Repair

cen tr a l

7 4 B Home Improremeni —
Carpentry work or any l,p*
Hoot repair*, gutter wort,
pamtir Imtenor or eataritrl,
plump,.ig. specialiie m mobile
home repairs 4 root coating,
and wood patio decks Free
estimate j ) ) *054

II you are having difficulty
finding * place to live, car to
drive, a iob. or some service
you have need HI. read all Our
warn ads every day

Painting
Heilman PaiMmg 4 Repairs
Quality work Free Esl, One
to Stmors 41* 4*90 Refer.
October's Flying. Leaves are
Falling Bui Classified keep
Buyers calling 17) 1411

Painting ft or
Pressure Cleaning

K.T. REM ODELING
Kit, belh 4 additions Quality
workmanship in all home
improvements
LIC EN SED 4 INSURED
CALL KEN TAYLO R
U t 195*

LAagp r a n iNtT a l l ip

Landscaping. Old Lawns 4 *
P'»L9d MS 1501
Hava soma camping equipment
irow no longer use? Sail it all
with a Classified Ad in The
Herald Cali ) ) ) ) * i | or 111
*nd a friendly ad visor
w.ll help you

» '

you are having difficulty
lining a place, lg live, car to
drive, a iob. or some service
you have need of. read all our
want ads every day

»

% t

Plumbing

Fredd-e Robinson Plumbing
Repair*,’ lauctis. w
C
Sprinkier* 17)1510. S134704
IF THIS IS TH E DAY to buy a
new car, sea today's Classified
ads tor bawl buys
Plumbmg repair all types
water neaiar* B pumps
1)114))

^ ♦ T f*- &gt; • 'V * l

Sodding
C 4 J LAWN CARE. No lob loo
small Re* and Comm Free
E ll 5)4 4050 or 749 4110

IN S TA L L
and
Repair.
Residential and Commercial.
Free Est S)a soil or lie * »o

Tractor Wbrfc
BUSHHOG MOWING
GRADING
1)1 S/B)

FONSECA
P L U M B IN G
Repairs, emergency service,
sewer drain cleaning 373 40)5

Landscaping

SM ALL home repairs, root
repair, free est All work
guaranteed 1)1 4*45

Sprinklers

No iob loo large or small
Quality a mutt Cali 1)7 00)1
References Ft Esl
II

MEiNTZCH Nl E
New i * repe r4 leak, showers our
SpecM il, 15yrs Etp 1*9IS*)

Remodeling

Lawn Maintenance

Electrical

SEW AND SAVE

RADIO control airplane, 51)5.
large wood bdrm set 5115,
waterbed mattress 515, green
velvet ch*ir 5)5, solid maple
end and collee tablet 515.
calculators and mttc items
D ) **50

Concrete Work

Chns Mill service AC’s, relrig,
t'eeters. water coolers, m.tc

SINGER Jig Jag and cab net
Pa, balance *«• or 10
payments SI 50 See a! Sanlord
Sewing Center, Sanford Plara

9 Commercial dryers. See at
Lake Mary coin laundry 5100
•acts t it SSI!

O S T E E N S ACR ES TA L L
PINES. SCRUB OAK ttl.500
TERMS

-e -

fiAfttb » itr r&gt;4nv roof imu block
tuncri'fc1 *indGrt% rfdd 4
r owm fr pi* t'vf 1nnutr ) 7 J 0««3

Brown River Rock, Oist Bo*.
Grease Traps, Ory Walls,
Car Slops, Cement, Sand.
MiradrConcerte Co.
309 Elm Ave
1715151
— --------

^i »

Additions ft
Remodeling

LIK E new air condi, tools,
lormica cabinets. A misc. 9)4
Lake Irene Rd 1)1 9)09

Sea obr beautiful new BROAD
MORE, front A rear BRs
GREGORY MOBILE HOMES
1*01 Orlando Dr
1 ) 1 1XKI
VA A FHA F mannna

LAKE MARY 4large
lots, nice Ireei
115.000 each 11)4111

Dial 322-2611 o t 831-9993

47-A—Mortgages Bought
&amp; Sold

D ELTO N A
condom inium s
located near Lake Monroe, 1
bdr, 1 bth, unit over looking
lwlmming pooh IS5,*D0 Call
collect 11)451 00*3

S E IG L E R R E A L T Y
BROKER
3745 HWY. 17-92
321.0640

14)1 FORD Torino 101 PS. air,
new liras, runs good Body
rusted S«O0 1)1*04*

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB

MENTS, P O Bo* 1500. San
lord. Fla DIM 317 4141

O S TE E N
W OODEO
ACHES. S11.S0O TERMS

Get on Your Broomstick Clean
Up! Sweep Up! and List vour
"D o n l
Wants”
In the
Classifieds

We buy equity In Houses,
apartments, vacant land and
Acreage

area

14)0 OLDS Cutlass,
convert Power. A C FM
I owner S1S00 111)00)

CONSULT OUR

CASH FOH EQUI TY
Wecanciose in 4* hrs
CallBart Real Estate 1)1

321-0759 Eve 322-7643

E k iv a
falls
W OODED R IV ER
ACRE 111.000

TO YO TA Corolla assume
payment 1 1 1 * per mo . balance
44000 Good running condition
1)00 down 171 751)

J7— Real Estate Wanted

Lie Real Estate Broket
7*40 Santord Ave

w

in am.

WANTED 100 TO 700 acres in
Orange or Seminole Counties,
toned lor mobile home sub
division Send all details in
eluding location, lo P O Ro&gt;
14*4. Ocala. Fla 37*)*

FOR 5ALE upright
piano, good condition,
asking 1300 37))147

72 OR AND Satan wagon
runs good asking Slid
321 *550

17) f i l l

43— Loft-Acreage

SANFORD — Elegant totally
restored 1 bdrm. I Wh. new
AC H, wiring, plumbing.
firaplAC*. Naw carpal, kit,
Original brass tlitura*. Solid
neighborhood, across from
park, sodded yard, large trees.
141.500. by owner MS 4441 or

43- B— Lots ft Acreage
----------Wanted_______

PIANOS A organs large A small
starting as low as 5 U 4 45 Bob
Ba'I Move Centre A Webern
Auto 301 W 1st Santoro

rj 1 BIRD Loaded. New lues
Blue with White Top. r ) l
Cutlass Supreme No money
down 1)5 mo 1)4 4100 4)4 4*05
Dealer
______

76—Auto P a rts

66 -Horses
FOR SALE 5 acres ot land (un
developed! appro* 1 mile*
west ol Geneva Call 17) 544)
all five call 171 0445

80-Autos

_

75— Recreational Vehicles

0414*4 ___

M AYFAIR VILLASI 1 A 1
Bdrm , 1 Both Condo Villas,
noil to Moyloir Country Club
Soloct your lot. floor plan A
interior decor! Quality construtted by Shoemaker tor
MT,300 A upl

M A L T O R 111 4441 Day Of Night
DELTO N A 1st section walk lo
shopping 1 Bdrm, I Bath, 1
car garaga. Eacttlant owner
financing lovely home reduced
la UI.J00 Call Baa.

65— PetsSupplies

FR EE kittens. 4 adorable t week
old kittens 3 males. 1 female
377 431)

FAM ILY ! D ELIG H T 1 Bdrm. 1
Both Homo with beautllul
enclosed pool ond patio aroal
Cent H 41 Spacious rooms,
loll ol eitrasl M1.4M.

Monday, Oct. 14, 1411-18

For Estate Commercial or
Resident,al Auctions A Ap
pra sais Call Dells Auction
17) 5470

Buy Football Tickets with
Money You make with a
Garage Sate

CF A PERSIANS Adult
Females White, Black
H50t)50 171 3515
a n i MBC Ma»en kennels w ard
ng A grooming. Needed
Pekingese A small silver
cwodle lor stud Male Owners
rail 377 5)57

W E L IS T AND J I L L
MORE HOMES THAN
ANYONE IN THE
SANFORD AREA

SUPER buy tor a professional
building ample parking,
located on well traveled street
444,400
IF you are looking toe something
to do on your own, then 41500
could pul you in business In
this consignment shop Call for
details
1544 S French 113 4111
Aller Hours! 1*9 9900. I l l 07)9

72— Auction

Sanford's Sales Leader

HAL COLBERT REALTY
323-7832

OlRT A TOPSOIL
YELLOW SAND
Can Clark A H,rl 37) )5M
f il l

Pitt Bull Terrier Pups I wks
old Wormed Tails Cropped
1100 173 11*0

REALTY - REALTORS

Looking lor a iobl The Classified
Ads w it help you End that lob
PRICE reduced 1 Bdrm, I Bath,
Low dawn payment
No
closing costs Located at S«0T
Summerlin Ave Call owner
414 1111

PCNT W 0RRV1\ r \ |
NEVER v e t 5EEN PoF
TJRS l\TC A FARHINS
SPACE THAT WASTCO
T lS H T FCR H I A V r j

,— -

STENSTR0M

WE HANDLE RENTALS
BEST BUY IN SANFORD! I
M rm w new peinl A carpet,
separate OR, eat m kit, lg
bdrmt + food assumption *l
•Alt S U .N tll

im t ?

n

Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

42— Lawn-Garden

*

Trat Service
JUNULF
Jim f r et Srr
Trimming, lopping 4 removal,
tfr* estimate faito rubbish
removal) 1)4 Ties
Somebody is looking for your
bargain Otter &lt;1 today m the
Cleinlied Ads_______________
HARPER'S TR E B I I B V I C I

Trimmmg, removing 4 Land
* aping

f t * * Est

• * * * ? *. Y . f

D IO TIJ

F -a a- %

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BLO N D IE

&lt;B—E vtnirvg H t n l i Sanferd, F l.

Mania y, Oct. it, 1M1

by Chic Young

Pl E A M L N O T G O U X ©

B E E T L E B A IL E Y

40 Canon usd
Antwar to Prmoul Punta
man (abbr)
m
41 Saparata from
I Oil
othara
4 Group of boat
45 You would
9 Sporti
(cont)
tn t h u titil
48 Japanaaa
12 liv e r (Sp|
currancy
13 Orients! guitar
14 Greek lattar 49 Arabian ship
53 Naw England
15 Industrious
caps
creature
54 C anonind
16 Prepares to
woman (It)
publish
17 Ovar (poatic) 56 Cm Of triumph
57 Hops of
I I Amarican
Indiana
9 Proposition
35 Electric
SI Braw
20 Inventor
10 Attsnboncurrant (abbr.|
59 Suitabla
Whitnay
gatting sound 42 Eipound
60 Landing boat
21 Jans A ultsn
11 Hardna of A 43 Clothing
61 Narvout
btta
Doll s Housa
fabric
62 Lifts* child
22 Drawing
19 Psychotic
44 Puts up
28 Army duty
21
In
lova
with
DOWN
(abbr|
23 Tro|an haro
45 Southern
27 That boy
1 Gorman titla 24 Lass than 100
"you"
21 Form of
sharss stock
2 Am not ( ll |
46
Singletons
hortting crana 3 Cany
[2 w d s |
47 Entity
32 Ingatting
25 Barrels
4 Com pa u
35 Regard highly
26 Batida (prafii) 50 Handle of a
point
knife
36 Pataad
29 By way of
5 M ora
51 Buckeye Stats
30 Irritates
closely
sip sn iivs
52 Electrical unit
37 Robta
31 Ordeal
6 Tipping
33 Scotch beret 54 Swift aircraft
31 South Pacific 7 Proportion
(abbr)
island group
I Houiawtfa a ti­ 34 Gadolinium
55 Chimpanzee
symbol
39 Otharwiaa
tla (abbr)

.

by Mort Walkar

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S lf?. I H A V E T O
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HOROSCOPE
By BERNICE BEDE 060L

For Tuotday, October 20, 1901

E E K &amp; M EEK

YOUR BIRTHDAY
October M, 1M1
You srUl be lucky this
com ing year In venture*
which you undertake with
friends. Something that you
may collectively do may start
out email, but It srtU have

by Howl# Schntidtr

SOME. PtOO£ HAVE 3 0
MUCH RA) Ik) "THEIR UVES...

^ THEV UVJEJR GETACHAUCE
TD DEVELOP A HEALTHY
Arrnupt tujard f&amp;jecnou

O

Ji

-

PRISCILLA'S POP

THE POOR 5 0 U L 3 J»U T
KJJOU HOCU \MJJSRAOLS

THEY ARE /

« it » K U pnismtui

by Ed SvIHvan

by StoHol ft Haimdahi

BUGS BUNNY

shall v*

a u . rr^|

LIBRA *(SepL 230cL 23)
You’re lucky today In area*
requiring the personal touch.
However, your success will be
due In part to friends who trill
be pulling for you behind the
scenes. Find out more of what
Ilea ahead for you In the year
following your birthday by
sending for your copy of
Astro-Graph. Mall f l for each
to A stro-G raph, Bos 469,
Radio City S tation, N.Y.
10019. Be sure to apacify birth
data.
SCORPIO (Oct. 14-Nov. 22)
The odds are In your favor In
competitive situations today.
A dm irably, you'll U ke
neither yourself nor your
victory too seriously. You're a
winner with class.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) You've heard that old
adage, "The harder you work,
the luckier you get." Well,
this is especially true for you
today. Give vent to your
ambitions.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 2W an.
19) Challenge makes you try
h ard e r today and also
stimulates your Inventiveness
and originality. When under
pressure, you'll come up with
some nifty ideas.
AQUARIUS (Jan. » F e b .
II) You’re a welcome adjunct
to team efforts today, par­
ticularly those which require
abilities to research, probe or

detect. Digging up facta Is
your specialty.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
You're very good a t situations
today requiring one who can
make creative changes. Ideas
you can offer will be a big
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
You have a knack today for
taking the ideas of others and
putting them to practical,
productive uses. What's more
Important, you give credit
where credit is due.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Som ething advantageous
could develop today from a
friendly business linch or
dinner. Wlne-and-dine thoas
who can help you further your
interests.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
Make arrangements today to
be Involved In planning some
fun-type of winter activity.
Planning for happy hours will
shorten the bleak, cold season
ahead.
CANCER (June 21J u ly 22)
Something opportune could
occur today which offers the
promise of future rewards.
The foundation you lay now
will determine IU payoff.
LEO (Ju ly 23-Aug. 22)
Today you are gifted as both
an Idea person and a
producer. Even though your
schemes may sound a bit
outlandish, you'll know how to
make them work.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-8epL 22)
Your hunches could have a lot
of m e rit today reg ard in g
ways which could maka or
save you money. Y m r logic
will tell you which anas are
applicable.

Quick Weight Loss
Often Doesn't Last
DEAR DR. LAMB - I read
this article which I am sen­
ding you about how Elisabeth
Taylor lost eight pounds in
one week and continued to
lose until she quickly regained
her former beauty for her
stage appearance in "The
Little Foxes." Is It possible to
do that?
Would it be all right for me
to follow that 600-caloriesday diet she was on? I don't
want to be on Broadway or In
the movies but I would like to
star in my husband's life
again. I need to lose about 20
DEAR READER - With
that attitude I'U bet you are
alread y sta rrin g in your
husband's life. Yes, you can
lose weight the same way but
I want to point out a few
things to you. E lisabeth
T aylor followed th a t 800calorie diet for only m e week.
I don't really like diets to be
that low In calories and
certainly a week is long
enough for that kind of calorie
restriction. If a person la
healthy, a week isn't going to
be a disaster but it is not the
thing you should do without
knowing that It can be a strain
on your health.
Notice also, as the story
pointed out, she lost eight
pounds the first week, but she
only lost five pounds in the
following month. That initial
weight loos, particularly on a
low-salt diet which she had, is
larg ely w ater loss. T hat
happens
with
alm ost
everyone who goes on a strict
diet
It doesn't last. But she
probably did lose a total of 13
pounds in a little over a
month, if the story is ac­
curate. That is about a third of
a pound a day which is a little
fast but still reasonable.
Also note that she walked an
hour a day to atari her
p rogram and evidently
continued her exercise diving
the following month. That Is •
an important part of helping
people lass w eight So don't
just go on a d ie t but walk and
exardas, too.
I would prefer you follow a
balanced diet that is not ao
strict as I am am ding you Tbs
Health Lattar number 4-7,

Weight Losing Diet.
Others who want this Issue
can send 7S cents with a long,
stam p ed ,
self-addressed
envelope for It to me, in care
of this newspaper, P.O. Box
1561, Radio City Station, New
York, NY 10019.
Since you don't have to lose
your 20 pounds quickly to go
on Broadway, do it gradually,
safely and learn how to follow
a program that will last for
you. Why be a queen for a day
when you can follow a sen­
sible program and be a queen
every day for the rest of your
life.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I'm 80
and concerned about my lips,
which seem to be dry all the
time, especially in the mor­
ning. During the day the skin
around my lips gets flaky
which I can peel off in bits. I
keep a container of water in
my bedroom to moisten the
air but that h a n 't helped. Is
this an allergy or a symptom?
My blood pressure is norma)
and I’m seemingly healthy.
DEAR READER - It Is
Im portant
to
m ain tain
adequate humidity in the
house but the most important
moisture comes from your
own body. Moisturlters work
because they prevent the
evaporation of body moisture.
The
m ost
effective
moisturizers are the salve
preparations that provide a
thick oily film over the sur­
face of the skin. The best
known example of these is
common Vaseline. It works
better than many expensive
skin lotions. Just spread It
over your lips and around
your mouth each night before
you go to bed. That should
help. Also you can add some
after you have washed your
face. You can wipe off the
excess during the day if you
wish, but wait until It has had
a ohance to penetrate the
surfaoa.

WIN A T BRIDGE
NORTH
ISIMI
♦ JI
9JII
♦ Qll
♦ akjti
HOT
EAST
♦ KQ1I
♦MT4S
▼QIII
ft
♦Jll
4 X1171 it
♦ QIMI
41
SOUTH
♦ A ll
♦ AKIIIt
♦A
♦ III
Vulnerable: Both
Dealer North
» - "W t
N w n wJO*l
laett
!♦
Pass «f
Pass 1 NT Pass I t
Pass I f
Pass I f
Pass Pass Pass
Opening toed ♦ *

By Oswald Jeeeby
a*d Ala* Bei n g
Oswald: "Erie Jaanarstaa
has y vdvmf a unique book
called 110 Only Chance.' It
la a collection of BS hands
where you bars bid too

much and have to find the
one distribution of cards
that will give you your
contract."
Alan: "Here is hand num­
ber one. You are in an opti­
mistic six hearts. You wta
the spade lead and play your
ace and king of trumps. East
shows out and things look
hopeless. Is there any combi­
nation of East-West cards
that will let you make your
contract?"
Oswald. "That combina­
tion la shown. West must
hold four clubs and you must
be able to pick them up in
order to get two spade
discards. If West holds just
three clubs be can ruff the
fourth club and cash a
Alan: "So you lead your
nine of clubs and rise with
dummy's ace. You have
guarded against a singleton
queen or 10 In the East hand
Now back to your hand with
the ace of diamonds to lead
the eight of clubs, if West
ducks you duck and continue
clubs. If West covers you
cover and ruff a diamood in
order to lead another club.
Either way you make your
lucky slam."
Oswald: “Not pure luck.
You gave the cards a
twwsr i m n m n n u a

assn »

ANNIE
H -N O K H W ROBY'S

0H.TH16

ArtO THATKEN GOC COLONS*.
ARf HI5 HUHSEft PANGS WHATEVER
BUST BE F tm o m f
LOOKS GOOD
CHAT DOES HE EAT?
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FLETCHER'S LAN PI NO

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TU M B L E W E E D S

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                  <elementText elementTextId="209834">
                    <text>74th Y ear, No. 3 0 - F r ld a y , S ep tem b er JS, 1981-Sanford, F lorida 32771

Evening H erald— (USPS 481-280)—P ric e 20 Cents

Evansdale Paving Project Run Down In Lake M ary
By DONNA KSTES
Herald Stall Writer
A proposal to pave Evansdale Hoad,
discussed by the I-ake Mary City Council
lor the [last two years, died Thursday
night.
Councilmen voted 3-2 to reject the
paving plan.
,
L'ouncibnan Gene McDonald said the
project is not in the best interests of Die
community as a whole, noting it would
consume 51 percent “of the bucks
budgeted" for public works in the new
year and an equitable way to assess
nearby property owners for the im­
provement has not been found. In ad­

dition, McDonald said problems with
acquiring the right of way for the 1,275foot stretch of road left condemnation as
the only recourse.
“Condemnation is not a good thing for
a city the size of Lake Mary," McDonald
said. He also noted that the city could
become involved in a lawsuit with per­
sons opposing the paving.

The council has discussed paving the
road numerous times over the past two
years. Initially the discussion revolved a
portion of Evansdale known as Jackson
Street from Country Club Hoad to
Clairmonl Avenue.

Agreeing with McDonald’s position
were Councilmen Hay Fox and Vic
O lvera. F avoring the paving were
Councilman Hichard Fcss and Kenneth
King.
Fess insisted the city should pave the
road, adding that the council has been

City Attorney Gary Massey discovered
however, that Jackson Street years ago
was dedicated to the more than 100
property owners in Die Evansdale sub­
division. He said releases from all those
ow ners would have to be obtained before
the paving could be done, noting that the

"dragging its feet (or the past two
years.”

owners could not be assessed for Die
improvement by Hie city unless the road
is owned by the city.
Gelling liie list of owners together in
itself would be a huge undertaking, he
said.
When some Evansdale residents urged
the city to condemn the right of way,
Massey pointed out that the city would
•wive to have tl*e road appraised and
deposit its value with the court before
condemnation proceedings were In-gun.
Massey told the city council Thursday
night that he has also discoverer! that
p riv ate p roperty owners also own
easements on part of Evansdale and the

county has an easement for part of the
road. He said it would not be a difficult
m atter to gain a release from the county,
but research would also have to be done
before all Die private owners on that
stretch of road could be identified and
contacted.
He said the costs of condemning the
roads "wouldn't be worth it."
Tlie council also agreed to return
$39,891 on deposit with the city for the
Iwist several years for the paving. The
money is to be returned to 23 property
owners. The money began accumulating
on Oct. 18, 1977 as lots were sold on
Evansdale Hoad. The inonev was to be

used to help pay paving costs if a paving
project were begun before Oct. 18, 1981.
Some Evansdale Road residents at the
meeting complained that the city had left
the paving project hanging for too long
before rejecting it.
Tom West doubted the city would be
sued, saying "You’re not absconding
with anyone's property. Who is going to
sue you for (wiving a road?"
L aurie M cNulty, pointing to the
councilmen said, "You are a young
council but you're going to grow old fast
if the road Isn’t paved." Site said the
unimproved road is dangerous.

f!3 Casselberry
m Firefighters
Say They'll Quit
By TEN!YARBOROUGH
Herald Staff Writer

H trtld Photo by Tom Vmcrnt

THAT SINKING
FEELING

T ills y a c h t lie d up a t th e .M onroe lla r h o u r
M a rin a in S a n f o rd lia s a fo r s a le s ig n in th e
w in d o w , b u t if y o u 'r e p la n n in g to g o a b o a r d

to look it o v e r y o u b e t t e r b r in g a lo n g a b u c k e t
a n d b e p r e p a r e d to h a il.

Architects Chosen For New Health Center
The name, the place and the ser­
vices the county’s new liealth center
will offer are still undecided but
Seminole County Com m issioners
Tuesday night chose Helman, Hurley,
Charvat, and Peacock, of Winter
Park, to perform the architectural
services for the new building.
"We are considering tentative sites
right now fee the health center," said
Russell Miller, m em ber of the
selection committee and the county's
director of Environmental Health,"
but the site selection will be decided
during later negotiations and the
architects will help us determine the
site," Russell added.
JnAnn Blackmon, County pur­

chasing d irector, said the new
building is expected to provide better
and more efficient services for the
people who use the facility, but
exactly what services the new center
will offer is still under consideration.
Monday the selection committee
will get together with the ar­
chitectural firm to start laying the
ground work for the contract, Black­
mon said.
John Percy, county director of
Public Service and Development, Don
Flippen, building official, Dr. Jorge
Deju, director of Health and Human
Services, and Russell Miller, were
members of the selection team that

made the final recommendation to the
commissioners.
Other firms considered (or the
contract were Greenleaf-Teleaca Inc.,
of Altamonte Springs — the same firm
the county has hired for architectural
services for the library renovation
project; Walton Association, Orlando,
and Rogers, I/nelock and Fritz,
Winter Park.
Tlie county is now accepting bids for
the "lim ite d " dem olition of the
Courthouse Annex (Old Jail), located
directly behind the courthouse.
"Tlie board gave us direction six
weeks ago to start looking for a
wrecking firm to demolish the second
floor of the Old Jail," said Blackmon.

When tlie bids arc finalized, Hie
wrecking firm that is selected will be
knocking out steel bars and removing
walls of concrete that still remain as
part of tlie former jail cells.
The county will be renovating the
second floor of tlie building into ad­
ditional office space, Blackmon said.
"It will be u difficult job for
whoever is selected as Die wrecking
firm ," said Blackmon, "becau se
whoever does it will have to work
some weekends and some nights to
complete the Job because there are
people working in the building now
and the firm will have to work around
them," she said.

Lake Mary OK's Budget;
Tax Rate Goes Up 13%
Ijike Mary's nearly $800,000 budget
for 1981-82 and tax rate of $4.35 per
$1,000 assessed valuation, an increase
of 50 cents per $1,000, lias been
adopted.

The general operating budget for
Die new fiscal year beginning Oct. 1
totals $580,000, up from Die current
year's $496,542 while Die water and
sewer utility budget totals $211,905, up
from the current year's $148,815.

The council opened bids on Die in­
surance from the Bob Kams Agency,
Risk Management Association, Burt,
Bogart and Brownell and Sentry
Insurance during its meeting Thur­
sday night. Tlie city’s insurance wiDi
the Karris Agency is to expire
Thursday. Staff members are to study
the bids today and make a recom­
mendation to the council this af­
ternoon.

Tlie tax rate of $4.35 per $1,000
assessed valuation, js up 13 percent
from the current year's $3.65.
The budget provides a 10 percent
across the board pay raise for all city
employees.
The council will reconvene at 4 p.m.
today to discuss four bids on Die city's
liability insurance for Die new fiscal
year and a "Fall Festival" scheduled
by NCR Corp. and Stromberg-Carlson

. City Manager Phil Kujbes was
d irected to contact Strom bergCarlson to get details on Die Fall
Festival which Die industry is spon­
soring with NCR next week. Although
the city council said several weeks
ago it would cooperate In Die venture,
no further contact was made until a
schedule of everts was advertised in a
flier distributed In Die city Thursday.
The flier says Die city will be
sponsoring an activity in a week-long
series of events, but no activity has
been planned since city officials were
not apprised of Die plan, Die council
said. - DONNA ESTES

Firefighter Bill Adkins also said he will
resign to Join Orungc County if his physical
agility tests scores meet Die county’s
requirements, according to fire personnel.
Adkins could not be reached for further
comment.

NEW PRINCIPAL NAMED
Mary (Iroome, past principal of Wilson Elem entary School,
now Seminole County’* Director of E lem entary Schools,
congratulates Wilson's newly nam ed principal (i. Terry Itabun.
Itubun's appointment m arks the first tim e Wilson will have a
full-time principal. In past years It has shared a principal with
other schools. Habun graduated from Seminole High School and
earned degrees from Stetson University and Hollins College.
Habun said he looks forw ard to expanding services at Wilson for
both students and the comm unity.

TODAY

"I wouldn't do anything to hold a man back
from improving himself," Fire Chief KenneDi
Gaines said.
Gaines said the absence of the three
firefighters planning to resign will have an
adverse effect on firefighting operations.
"The resignation of the Diree men will put us
down to minimal manning of the two-man per
shift operation," Gaines said. "If additional
men resign before we can hire replacement
personnel, we will have to recruit volunteers
or close one of Die fire stations."
Gaines said he does not know if oDier

'Cat f i b wry It fust going
to ttay a rlnky-dlnk
fir• dopartmont bocauto
tho council doesn't allow
or promoto Incentive.’
—

Flroflghtor

Dave Hollenbach
firefighters are contemplating resigning.
Councilman Frank Schutte said lie feels the
firefighters have been given a "very fair deal
and it upsets me that people have no
gratitude."
Schutte said the council has in recent years,
provided the public safety incentive pay,
upgraded firefighter salaries and established
new positions for promotional potential.
"1 think they're a spoiled lot," Schutte »»id
"We've probably been guilty of giving them
too much over Die past few years and it's
spoiled them. Some of them seem to be of Die
opinion they can start right at Die top with Die
highest pay and benefits."
Mayor Owen Sheppard said he feels Die talk
of resigning from the fire department and of
closing a fire station for lack of personnel Is
"panic talk."
"There’s nothing official because they
haven't officially resigned,” Sheppard said.
"EveryDilng we have done has been perfectly
above board and we acted In what we consider
best (or Die city. However, it Is certainly
anyone's prerogative to resign If that’s their
desire."

Serviceman Killed In Accident

Action R eports................. 2 A
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C o m ic s .............. ............ SA
Crossword
SA
D ra rA b b y .......... ..............9A
Deaths
Dr. Lamb
SA

Editorial..............
Florida
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Horoscope
Hospital
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Ourselves ..
S p o rts.............. .......... IA-7A
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Now caroon havo oponod for women and Granny may now bo a frothman.
Florence Glatior't 13-year struggle for a college diploma, It featured In
Doris Dietrich's The Graying of the Campus,' In the
Herald's OUKSSLVCS section Sunday.

&gt;

^ ^a

"VIo
ai

Funeral services were held today (or a
Howell E sta te s serv ice m an killed
Tuesday in a three-vehicle collision near
Fort Rucker, Ala., where lie was
stationed.
Vivvw

College coodt of tho '90s are not tho twoot young thlngt they utod to bo.

•-&lt;» t

"Council sees Die fire department as a
n ecessary lia b ility ," H ollenbach said.
"You've got to have a fire department, so they
have one but that's as far as it goes."
Hollenbach, who is also a respiratory
Dicraptst at I-uceme General Hospital Orlando
and a volunteer firefighter for Orange County,
said he plans to Join Die Orange County's Fire
Department as a paid member.
"Orange County offers someDiing to work
for like self-im provem ent and ad­
vancements," Hollenbach said. “Casselberry
is just going to stay a rinky-dink fire depart­
ment because the council doesn’t allow or
promote Incentive. Fire Chief Gaines came to
the department not too long ago and tried to
improve it but they've stifled him, too."
Hollenbach said if you don't do your Job well
in Orange County, “ they won't keep you." But,
he said, a firefighter could "really be bad in
Casselberry and no one cares."
"The taxpayers definitely are not getting Die
services tliey are paying for," Hobbs said.
"They should have a paramedic program
here, but council has In Die past and probably
will In the future stifle those plans, too.”
Hollenbach and Hobbs said the recent
cutback of tlie public safety Incentive pay,
reducing firefighter income by $300 annually
was an additional reason for Dieir plans to
resign.

for this coming week.

City council Thursday night
unanimously approved the two items.
Despite an overflow crowd of citizens
at the meeting, none spoke either for
or against tlie budget or Die tax in­
crease.

Three Casselberry firefighters said Thur­
sday they're "not going to take it anymore,"
and are planning to resign w idiin the next fewwee ks.
"Tlie Casselberry city council treats Die
firefighters us second-class citizens and tliey
can do that to some, but not to me,"
Firefighter Carey Hobbs said.
Hobbs said he will either take a firefighting
p(«ition wiDi Orange County or Die Orlando
Aviation Authority at the Orlando Inter­
national Airport, if Die positions are offered.
Hobbs said he has completed all requirements
for the positions except the physical agility
tests.
Firefighter Dave Hollenbach said lie is
leaving becuuse of tlie "overall poor attitude
of Die council tuward firefighters and the
frustration of the Job."

V

HVWi

a

p. SIS.

Civ

Semoran Funeral home for Robert L
Patterson, 19, of 2025 Falmouth Road, in
South Seminole County, with the Rev.
Herb Hester of Klllamey Baptist Church
officiating. Burial was in Highland
Memory Gardens.
According to Alabama state police,
P atte rso n died instantly when his
motorcycle collided wiDi two other

-M i X t * - . —* * —- .

vehicles less than a mile from the Armybase. Patterson was an Army private
first class.
Police said no arrests have been made
in connection with Die fetal accident,
pending a full investigation.
Drivers of Die oDier vehicles Involved
in the crash include Jeff B. Kessler, 29, of
Dothan, Ala., and Tracy B. Kirkland, 38,
of Daleville, Ala.
Up for a promotion at the time of his
death, Patterson had been stationed in
Korea for more than a year before being
assigned to Fort Rucker, his first
stateside base since basic training.

— -r*viK «

Before enlisting in March, I960, he at­
tended la k e Howell High School. He
earned his high school equivalency
diploma while In service. Born in Winter
Park, he had lived in Howell E states for
4 4 years wiUi his aunt and unde, Carol
and Arthur Willett.
He was a member of Die Klllamey
Baptist Church.
ODier survivors Include his grand­
mother, Mrs. Ellen Phillips, Maitland;
siater, Ellen Frances Thomas, Orange
City; ste p fa th e r, C lark Thom as,
Homestead.

«V r

*.

�f

lA —Evwl«tgM«fald, Sanford, FI.

Friday, Soft. 15, 1W1

A

NATION
IN BRIEF
Administration Scrambles
To Salvage AWACS Deal
WASHINGTON (U P I) — The adm inistration is
negotiating on Capitol Hill in an effort to avert
congressional defeat of President Reagan's proposed |I.S
billion a n u s sale to Saudi Arabia, sources say.
Congressional sources indicated one compromise being
discussed involves some form of Joint U.S.-Saudi manning
of sophisticated Airborne Warning and Control System
aircraft — AWACS — the centerpiece of the arm s package
and the hardware that has stirred the greatest controversy.
Defeat in the House has been considered a foregone
conclusion, making the Senate the administration’s last
hope for salvaging the sale.
The deal is vigorously opposed by Israel as a threat to its
national security.

O ’Connor Sworn In Today
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Sandra Day O’Connor, the first
woman nominated to the Supreme Court, may also be the
first of several appointments President Reagan will make
to the high court.
More than 300 dignitaries were invited to watch Mrs.
O'Connor lake her oath of office today from Chief Justice
Warren Burger Inside the huge, marble-columned cour­
troom of the nation's highest tribunal.
Mrs, O'Connor, 52, replaces Potter Stewart, 67, who
resigned from the bench in July and who planned to attend
the swearing-in. She stepped down this week as an Arizona
appeals court Judge.

WORLD
IN BRIEF
The Man Who Shot The Pope
Was Part O f A Conspiracy
ROME (UPI) — The Judges who sentenced Mehmet All
Ages to life in prison for shooting Pope John Paul II con­
cluded he was part of a conspiracy but said "a thick curtain
of silence" conceals the Identity or purpose of the
mastermind.
In their Sl-page opinion released Thursday, more than
two months after the Turkish terrorist was convicted of
wounding the pope, the Judges said the shooting was not the
work of "ideological delirium" but part of a "complex
mechanism."
"But with all honesty it is necessary to admit Dial the
„jevld*ncp,dpea pgt yet disclose who art.the promoters ol the
W oa4l»qt.jir,.determine what objectives w e n directly
linked to the eventual elimination of Karol Woytyla (the
pope)," the opinion said.”

i

TVA Hit With Stiff Fine
SODDY-DAISY, Tenn. (UPI) - Tennessee Valley
Authority officials say they will not contest a MO,000 fine the
Nuclear Regulatory Commission levied Thursday for
safety violations at the Sequoyah Nuclear Plant's Unit 2, a
reactor that hasn’t even begun operating.
The fine was assessed because three valves in a crucial
water safety system at the reactor were left open Aug. 26
and If they had been needed In an emergency, they would
have been virtually useless, NRC officials said.
The fine was the fourth in two years against the federal
utility. The last was a $50,000 penalty issued last spring
when fire prevention equipment at the Browns Ferry
Nuclear Plant was not installed as ordered in the wake of a
1975 fire that crippled the Athens, Ala., facility for a year.

A ir Crash Tied To Strike
Fl-AGSTAFF, Ariz. (UPI) — An airport manager says
the air controllers' strike was b contributing factor in the
collision of a commuter airliner and a private plane on a
foggy runway Thursday. P arts of boll) plane's wings were
ripped away but no injuries were reported.
I-arry I-arkln, manager of Pulliam Field, said the
collision between a Sky West Airlines metrollner with 14
passengers aboard and a twin-engine Mitsubishi turboprop
might have been prevented if the airfield had a lull staff of
air traffic controllers.
The airfield’s complement of five controllers was cut
back from five to three when the air controllers struck in
August. On Sept. 3, the tower was closed for 90 days.

Prankster Killer Gets 5
I jONGVIEW, Texas ( U PI) — A man who shot and killed a
prankster for tossing a biscuit at his pickup truck last
Halloween has been sentenced to five years in prison.
David Anthony Nelson, 22, of nearby Glimer, was sen­
tenced Thursday for his conviction in the Oct. 31, 1990,
shooting of Kevin Scott Yarbrough.
Testimony showed Yarbrough was among several youths
-riding around Longview in the back of a pickup, throwing
biscuits at passing vehicles as a prank.

Dollar Slips, Gold Up
tiONDON (UPI) — The American dollar slipped at the
opening of European foreign exchanges today following
President Reagan's budget statement. The price of gold
moved up as the dollar weakened.
All currencies, Including the pound showed plus signs
against the U.S. unit.
Gold opened up in Zurich at $452.50 an ounce from
Thursday's $446.50 and in London at $452.50 from the
overnight $448.00

Government Warns Union

Round 2 O f Budget Cuts
M ay Be An U phill B attle
WASHINGTON (UPI) — President Reagan wants an ad­
ditional $13 billion in 1982 budget cuts and the departments of
Energy and Education abolished. But many in Congress, both
Republicans and Democrats, predict he is in for a fight.
In a nationally broadcast address Thursday night, Reagan
pledged to stand firm in his determination to balance the
budget by 1984, and proposed a 12 percent spending cut for
most federal programs and a stiffening of tax codes.
Overall, the impact would be $16 billion in savings next year
— 113 billion in reductions in proposed spending and $3 billion
in additional revenues through increased tax and fee collec­
tions.
And for the first time, Reagan recommended cuts In the
defense spending increases he earlier proposed — but only
about 1 percent of the total budget, amounting to $2 billion in
1982 and $13 billion over the next three years.
At the same time, he backed down from an earlier idea of
postponing Social Security benefit Increases, but landed hard
on other programs in his drive to lead the nation out of its
"economic swamp."
"I know we are asking for sacrifices from virtually all ol
you, but there Is no alternative," Reagan told the nation.
The president said harsh measures are needed if the budget
is to be balanced by 1984, the target date he has set.
Although Congress gave Reagan the bulk of what he wanted
in approving record tax and budget cuts this summer, the

Said Senate Finance Committee Chairman Bob Dole, RKan.: "No one is enthusiastic about facing up to additional
budget cuts. We will be very slow to cut further into the
nutrition and social program areas.”
Dole and assistant Senate Republican leader Ted Stevens of
Alaska said Congress probably will cut deeper into defense
than the president proposed.
Sen. Edward Kennedy, DMass., criticized Reagan’s acrossthe-board approach to cutting domestic programs. "All
programs are to be slashed, regardless of their worth, and the
social safety net will soon be more holes than net," he said.
Reagan said his proposed 12 percent reduction in non-defense
budgets would furnish an estimated $8.4 billion in savings.
He made good on a campaign promise by proposing elimina­
tion of the Energy and Education departments, both of which
were created by President Jimmy Carter.
And In a major concession, Reagan stepped away from his
oft-stated target of a $42.5 billion deficit for 1982, raising the
figure to $43.1 billion.

Woman Walking Dog Killed;
Man Charged With Homicide
A Casselberry woman was killed Instantly Thursday evening
when she was hit by a car while walking her dog along I .aura
Street in Casselberry.

Action Reports
* Fires
it Courts

Janice E. Cook, 79,780 Sable Palm Drive, was walking her
dog eastbound along Laura Street when she was struck by an
eastbound vehicle and killed, according to tike Florida High­
way Patrol (FHP).
Fred B. Lyons, 23, of 648 Lake Irene Road, Casselberry, was
arrested by troopers and charged with vehicular homicide and
driving under the Influence of alcohol. Lyons was transported
(o the Seminote Counly Correctional Facility where he was
being held this morning without bond.
FHP said that upon approaching Mrs. Cook, Lyons allegedly
ran off the road and hit her when he steered his vehicle back
onto the pavement.
Jail officiats said Lyons is scheduled to make his first court
appearance today at 1:30 p.m.

WARSAW, Poland ( U PI) — The Polish government in­
creased pressure on Solidarity today on the eve of the in­
dependent labor union's national convention, sending ar­
med troops into the streets and warning that Poland was at
a "turning point."
"This is Indeed a turning point," Prime Minister Gen.
Wojriech Jaruzelski said in a nationally televised address
to parliament, warning that Poland’s fate depended on
Solidarity's willingness to renounce any bid (or power in the
second round of Its national congress starting Saturday.
"E ver ready to delend the socialist state, we are awaiting
a stance, a reply from Solidarity leaders. We are walling
for them to change this line, which was crowned by the first
round of their congress."

sentiment that confronts the president as he moves into this
newest assault on spending looms as a more formidable ob­
stacle to his plans.
Sen. Bill Bradley, D-NJ . . said, "The president has gone too
far in cutting the non-defense portions of the budget. . . and the
American people are going to say ‘enough is enough."’

BANK ROBBERY SUSPECT CHARGED
The FBI lias taken over the investigation of Tuesday’s
robbery of the First Federal Savings and fjoan of Mid-Florida,
3090 S. Orlando Drive, Sanford.

* Police
not have a legal representative. A contlict arose over Tranchine's ability to pay for an attorney rather than liave a courtappointed lawyer and a bond amount will be set at a later date,
an FBI spokesman said.
A "B R IE F" ENCOUNTER
It was a clean get-away.
Toy 1/* Frcehan reported to Seminole County sheriff's
deputies someone entered her home Thursday, opened her
father's locked bedroom door and stole $2,800 in cash from a
dresser.
The intruders also used Ihe opportunity to take a bath,
leaving a pair of their undershorts behind.

Lynn Andrew Tranchine, 23, was charged Wednesday with
bank robbery, a federal offense. Sanford police arrested
Tranchine at his home several hours after the 3 p.m. hold-up.

Freehan, 4601 Gilbert St., rural Sanford, suspected a
nephew, who had also been living in the home until June. While
the deputy was taking the report from Freehan, the nephew
called and admitted taking a bath — but no money.

Tranchine allegedly look $10,540 from a teller after In­
structing her in a note to pul the money in a bag.
Tranchine was transferred to FBI custody and remains In
the Orange County Jail. No bond was set during a hearing
before a lederal magistrate Wednesday since Tranchine did

The house was unattended Thursday from about 7:45 a.m. to
7:Stp.m ., Freehan reported. Iter father was In the hospital at
the time.
The “ brief" investigation concluded Ihe prepetrator entered
through the front door, possibly using a knife.

Armenian Gunmen Surrender
PARIS (UPI) — Three Armenians surrendered early
today and released 60 hostages held under threat of death
(or 15 itours inside the Turkish consulate in a bloody at­
tempt to force Turkey to fly Armenian prisoners to Paris.
The nationalist gunmen seized the building Thursday in a
blaze of gunfire that wounded six employees.

AREA DEATHS
BILLY R HUBI.EY
I Billy B. Hubley, 55, ol 109
Oak St., I,ongwood, died
Wednesday in Tyler, Texas,
lie was born in Ashley, Ohio.
A truck driver, he was a
m em ber of the Sanlando
United MethodLst Church and
a Navy Veteran.
I Survivors include his wife,
M rs. S. M arie Hubley,
1-ongwood; sons, Ronald,
Longwnod, Alan, Apopka;
brothers, Jack, Gallon, Ohio,
and James, Columbus, Ohio;
ste p fa th e r, E arl Payne,
Gallon.
; Semoran Funeral Home,
A ltam onte Springs Is in
charge of arrangements.
I

Holyoke,
M ass.,
Fred
C hestnut, M argate and
Charles Chestnut, Chicopee,
Mnxs.; 10 grandchildren and
eight
great-grandchildren.
Gramkow Funeral Home is
in charge of arrangements.
MRS.
MAKII.LIAN
W.
STEELE
Mrs. Marilllan W. Steele,
80, of 1704 W. Ninth SI.,
Sanford, died Wednesday at
A m ericana H ealth Care
Center, Winter Park. She was
born Nov. 4, 1894, in Missouri
and was a housewife and a
Protestant.
She Is survived by her
brother, Dr. Hugh Warden,
Cluirlottesville, Va.
Cox-Parkcr Funeral Home,
Winter Park, is in charge of
arrangements.

MRS. MARION E. BARRON
’ M rs. Marlon E lizabeth
(Lee) Barron, 68, of North
paint Beach, died in Palm Funeral Notice
Beach Wednesday. She was a
native of West Springfield,
BARRON. MRS.
M A R IO N
Mass., coming to ta k e Mary
S U IA S E T H (L E E ) - F u n .r.l
ir r v lc n lor Mrs Marion E.
32 years ago. Site moved to
Barron. M , ol North Palm
North Palm Beach seven
Brarh. who died W fdneidar in
years ago. Slw was a member
Palm Beach, will be al 10 a m ,
Saturday al Gramkow Funeral
jdf
the
l,akc*
Mary
Home chapel with Ihe Rev. Jim
Presbyterian Church and was
Huqhent officiating Burial in
M retired bookkeeper.
Oaktawn
M em o rial
Park.
Gramkow Funeral Home it In
;! Survivors include her two
charge o&lt; arrangement!
dau g h ters, Mrs.' Ja n e t C.
W HITE, MR. JARAMUS R. Muse, U k e Park, and Mrs.
Funeral te rv ic e t lor M r.
f r o t h y L. Price, DeBary;
Jaramut R While, 71, ol 1*10
kon, G eorge W. Lee, of
Lake A v e , Sanlord, who died
Woodbridge, Va.j one sister,
Saturday al Seminolf Memorial
notarial, will be at LS0 p m
rs. Ella Brill, Pompano; six
Saturday al M a rt H ill Sevtnth
others, George Chestnut,
day Advenlltt Church, too E.
Springfield, M ass., A rthur Second S I. Sanlord. with Elder
C.E M air oH Id ilin g. Burial in
Chestnut, U s Angeles, Calif.,
Retllawn Ccm ctiry, Sanlord.
Jack Chestnut, Palm Springs,
Wilton Eichalberger Mortuary
Calif., Herbert Chestnut ol
t% in charged arrangement!

C

Evening llem ld

cuw^snmi

Friday, Saptambar 25. 1M1—Vol. 74, No. M
j PdOlitlWd Oariy and Wnday. e ic te l Saturday By Tha
MeraM, lac., IM N .P robC k A vt .la s lo rd . Fla. m i l .
Clast P e titte Paid at laniard. Plortda S irtl
Mama Daiivaryt Week. l l . H i M o a n . M i n a M#*«kh i H d i
, Tear, setae, ay Mail.- wood D i l i Month, n t l i a M orrw .
‘M M I I year, u t oa_________________________________________

-

I

* * ; JB

Drug Abuse
Prevention
Seminar Set
A look at preventing drug
abuse from the law en ­
forcement, community and
church points of view will be
presented In a sem inar
sponsored by the Knights of
Columbus al 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday.
Among
the
program
speakers will be Tom Roll,
drug coordinator for Seminole
County Schools; C harles
Fritch, executive director of
"The Grove" school; officer
Glenn Ixml of l)ie Sanford
Police D epartm ent; Rev.
Philip C. Walsanen, pastor of
the First Assembly of God and
president of the Sanford
Ministerial Association; and
F r. M arvin Jones, coor­
dinator o f . community ser­
vices at Seminole Community
College.
Louis G irard, sem inar
d irecto r,
stressed
the
program
is
nondenom inational and added
that parents should not feel
upprchenslve about coming
since it does not mean their
children have problems — ihe
program will deal with
preventing a child from
becoming involved with
drug*.
A question and answ er
period will follow.
The seminar is free and
open to the public.

Three More
Boy Scouts

Needs a N e w
ro o f because o f le a k a g e .
We wffl be inconvenienced for tho noxt three wotkt and wo mod to movo the

PRESENT STOCK to kisuro that wo don't got any mom wator damage. Wo am
wflRng to SAVE TOU MONEY and at tho tame time make working room.
WE HAVE... 15 BEDROOM SUITES That Mutt Go!
WE NAVE... 20 LIVING ROOM SUITES That Mutt Go!
we havl.. 13 DINETTE &amp; DINING ROOM SUITES Tim wimt Col
Tfctst m i mmy men Hem mt ktei, vfl be m &lt;ds *t IUMBIDOUS SAVINGS
te the M k . Heny beceme the tevb$s me gnat, bet Hbt mppfy b Smtteil
OPtN 9 AM to 5$30 PM
Monday-Soturday

Honored
Members of Cub Scout Pack
540, C asselb erry , inad­
vertently left out of the list of
Arrow of Light aw ard
recip ien ts in W ednesday's
Evening Herald, were Tim
Scarborough, John Payne and
Robbie
Volence.
They
received their awards at a
ceremony Friday night a t the
Silver Lake Boy Scout camp,
Sanford, conducted by Boy
Scout Troop 521 of Pools.

**** ** • -or •**.*•*- A- . . i *

322-7953
1100 FRENCH AVENUE (17-92), Sanford, FI

run Dfuviav * sct-up

�FLORIDA
IN BRIEF
Gov. Takes To Airwaves:
"No More Refugees .. •i
TA1J.AHASSEF., Fla. (UPI) - Taking a page from
President Reagan, Gov. Bob Graham went on
statewide television Thursday night appealing to
Floridians to deluge Washington with mail saying,
“We want no more refugees in Florida.”
An hour before Reagan himself appeared on national
television seeking citizen support for his proposed
budget cuts, Graham appeared on a hookup of eight
stations in seven Florida cities urging his constituents
to communicate their displeasure with Washington's
“ indifference" to the refugee problem.
He cited in particular increased crime in the Miami
area directly attributable to criminals and mental
patients among the 200,000 Cubans and Haitians who
have arrived in Florida since January 1980.
The governor demanded that no more refugees be
admitted to the slate unless they are to be reunited
with families, that other refugees be settled elsewhere
in the country and that the federal government pick up
the state’s refugee-related costs.

G oldwater On Way Down
HOIJ.YWOOD, Fla. &lt;UPI&gt; - The Rev. Jerry
Falwell, founder of the Moral Majority, scoffed
Thursday night that recent criticism of him by Sen.
Barry Goldwater is the result of the Arizona
Republican's decline as a conservative leader.
Falwell said the problem with Goldwater is that
"he’s getting older” and “no longer is the leading
conservative In the United States."
"Whenhc (Goldwater! says that religion la s no part
of public policy, lie's contradicting statements made
by Thomas Jefferson," Falwell added. "He is reacting
adversely to someone else taking away where llie
mantle used to be.
"I think instead of kicking his constitutents in the
posterior, he should be writing his memoirs," Falwell
said.

Builders Cited By OSHA
TAMPA, Fla. (UPI) — Four firms involved in Die
construction of a five-story Cocoa Beach condominium
that collapsed in March killing 11 people, lave IS days
in which to contest citations and penalties recom­
mended by the Department of la b o r's Occupational
Safety and Health Administration.
OSHA said Thursday it has issued 17 citations in
connection with the state’s worst building disaster and
recommended a maximum $1,000 penalty on each
citation.
OSHA said the "alleged serious violations" involved
concrete mixing, reinforcement of concrete floor slabs
and columns and a number of hazards connected with
shoring the building.

Friday, Seat. M, 1W1- M

Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Contest Voting Extended Until Nov. 17

More $ Needed To Fund Holiday Parade
winning couple to have been
crowned th a t afternoon a t the
"Sundae in tlie Park" sponsored by

The Sanford Christmas Parade
King and Queen Contest has been
extended to Nov. 17 to allow the four
pairs of candidates more lime to
secure votes and consequently raise
additional funds needed to finance
the annual parade.

S anford's In terested S arah s to
Encourage Rejuvenation SISTER,
Inc.
The king and queen candidates are
still scheduled to meet the public
and solicit votes at (Ik event, which
will be held from 2-5 p.m. in Cen­
tennial Park, Park Avenue ami

The candidates have raised a total
of $705, but an additional $800 is
needed. The deadline for voting was
originally set for Oct. 4, with Die

Fourth Street, Sanford.
The Christmas Parade sponsored
by the Greater Sanford Chamber of
Commerce, will be licld Dec. 12 in
downtown Sanford. The winning
king ami queen will receive $50 each
and ride on a special float in Du*
parade.

Crowning of the w inners is
scheduled for 7:30 p.m., Nov, 17, at
the chamber building at First Street
and Sanford Avenue. The event.

which will featu re live en­
tertainment and refreshments, is
open to the public.
The winners will be selected after
voting cans have been collected
from around town. Anyone wishing
to vote can drop coins into the can
bearing the picture of the couple of
their choice. A penny counts as one
vote.
Couples vying for the royal titles
are Dusty Gregory, 15, of Enter­

Orlando Calls May One Day
Be Toll-Free, But Not Now
Toll-free telephone service between the
Lake
M ary-Sanford
are a
and
metropolitan Orlando is probably in Like
Mary's future, but now is not the lime, a
Southern Bell Telephone Co. represen­
tative told tlie I«ike Mary City Council
Thursday night.
L arry S trick ler, Southern Bell's
manager for tlie Sanford area, said tlie
percentage of persons in the north
Seminole County area making telephone
calls to Orlando, is not yet high enough,
according to sta te Public Service
Commission iPSCi guidelines.
Strickler said tlie telephone company's
February figures show an average of 5.49
calls per local telephone were made to
Orlando monthly and those calls were

made by 44 percent of the area’s
telephone subscribers.
He said the frequency of calls meets
the PSC requirement of an average of
three calls per telephone monthly. But
tlie number of subscribers making the
culls must reach 50 percent, according to
PSC guidelines and that has not tuippened yet.
"Until the second criteria is met, the
PSC would refuse tlie request for tlie
extended service," Strickler said.
Strickler said extending the service, if
it were approved by the PSC, is not free.
He said the monthly bills paid by in­
dividual subscribers in the Sanford-ljike
Mary area would be increased by $4-$5
He said less Hum five percent of the

WEATHER
AREA READINGS (I
temperature: 76; overnight
low: 70; high: 90; barometric pressure: 30.17; relative
humidity: 90 percent; winds: north at five mph.
SATURDAY TIDES: DAYTONA BEACH: high*, 7:39 a.m „
8:04 p.m.; lows, 1:14 a.m., 1:29 p.m.; PORT CANAVERAL:
highs, 7:31 a m. 7:56 p.m.; lows, 1:05 a.m., 1:10 p.m.;
BAYPORT: hlRhs, 1:25 a.m., 1:14 p.m.; lows, 7:34 a jn ., 7:57
p.m.

Sanford-Lake Mary su b scrib ers are
making 80 percent of the telephone caUs
to Orlando. "Tlie bottom line is that
Southern Bell is going to get its money
anyway," Strickler said, adding ttuit he
doesn't personally care whether the
service is extended.
Councilman Gene McDonald said that
Strickler's report was biased in favor of
the company.
Saying he was skeptical of Strickler's
figures, City Attorney Gary Massey said
he would like to sec Southern Bell records
of tlie number of toll calls uuide between
the Sanford-laike Mary area and Orlando
over the past six months. Strickler said
lie would m ake the inform ation
available.

BOATING FORECAST: St. Augustine to JnpRer Inlet, Oat
50 Miles — Winds northeast near IS knots through Saturday
with seas 4 to 6 feet. A few showers south portion.
AREA FORECAST: Generally fair through Saturday. Hlgha
in the upper 80s. l/&gt;ws near 70. Wind northeast 10 to IS mph
decreasing at night. Zones 12, 17 — Partly cloudy through
Saturday. Highs in the mid 80s Lows In the lower 70s. Wind
northeast around 15 mph decreasing inland at night.
EXTENDED FORECAST - Florida except northwest Partly cloudy with scattered mainly night and morning
showers near the lower east coast and keys. Lows mostly 60s
north to mid and upper 70s along the southeast coast and
around 80 In the keys. Highs from the mid 80s to around 10.

Altamonte Commission Race*i

HOSPITAL NOTES

Parker Quits, Colardo Wins
By TENI YARBOROUGH
Ili-rald Staff Writer
John Parker, a candidate for the Altamonte Springs District
3 Commission seat, said today he will officially withdraw from
the election this afternoon.
"Yesterday, my wife delivered a letter to City Manager
i Je ff»Etchberger stating my intentions to withdraw from the
race," Parker said. "However, it won't be an official with­
drawal until I sign the letter this afternoon." The deadline for
candidate qualifying was 5 p.m. Monday.
Parker, a labor negotiator for tlie Retail, Wholesale and
Department Store Union, was running against homemaker
Gieney Colardo for the post currently held by commissioner
Dolores Vickers. Upon P arker's official race withdrawal, Mrs.
Colardo will win the city commission seal by default.

"I didn't anticipate, when I got into the race, 1 would have so
many added business contracts to negotiate," Parker said.
"For the next eight months, at least, there'll Ik- quite a burden
on im- from my workload and I don’t feel it would be fair to tlie
people of the city for me to run and not be able to give the time
that is necessary to tlie position."

Scmlnol* Memorial H aip ltd
irp ltm b f r 14
ADMISSIONS
Sanford
Glorld* L Kenned*
Lei* M Jone»
Elii«beth Manor
Benney Payne Jr.
Anthony J Verenn*
Andrew X Perkin*
Richard L. Grover
BIRTHS

In other commission seat races, Dudley Bates also won his
District 1 commission sent by default. He ran unopposed for
the post currently Ik-Id by commissioner James Thompson.

wfth your Insurance I
-C A L L -

However, the mayoral race is gearing up between in­
cumbent Muyor Hugh Hurling and Ray Ambrose, a police
officer currently on leave of absence, for tlie $4,800 annual,
three-year position.
Tlx- election is set for Nov. 3.

K

NOTICE O F
TA X
INCREASE

W llllt and Tracy Scoff a baby
girl. Sanford
O IS C H A R O II
Sanford
C arrl* J. Rugrm ftln
Eliiabeth Sue Howard
Timothy T. Chrltftnton
Kitty Jackton. Deltona
Opal M Pool. Deltona
Anwar M. Id ell. Deltona
Maten A. Ideto. Deltona
Jame i a. Sermon*, Holly Hill

DO ITT • AJNIBLI
TONY m i l l
O M

PAID NOTICE

prise, and Debora Alderman, 1$, of
Sanford, sponsored by the Rotary
Club of Sanford; BiU Painter, 17, and
Dawn Weekley, 16, both of Sanford,
sponsored by the Kiwanis Club of
Sanford; Rufus Christian Jr., 17, and
Sonia Thomas, 18, both of Sanford,
sponsored by the Women's Com­
munity Gub of Sanford; Jamie
Jessup, 16, and Stephanie Beard,
both of Sanford, sponsored by the
Sanford Optimist Gub.

IN S U R A N C I

HAPPY
B IR D D A Y
GET OUR FAMOUS 3-PIECE
DINNER FOR ONIY $2°*

The City of Longwood, Florida
has tentatively adopted a measure to
increase its property tax levy by 35.9

At Famous Reci|&gt;e, we’re celebrating
our liith anniversary by offering
1981 chicken at low prices. For
only $ 2 . 0 9 . you get three pieces of
golden brown Famous Recipe fried
chicken. mashed potatoes and
gravy, creamy cole slaw

and fresh, hot biscuits. So bring
the family into Famous Recipe. And
get our delicious 8-piece dinner at
a price that’s sure
to have you flocking in for more,

C H IC K B N

percent.
All concerned citizens are invi­
ted to attend a public hearing on the
tax increase to be held on Monday,
September 28, 1981, at 7:30 p.m. at

THE m WE MAKE IT IS MANNG US FAMOUS.
Offer good this weekend onlp
OPEN 10:30 A.M. - 10 P.M. EXCEPT FRI. A SAT. CLOSINO 10:30 P.M.
1109 FRENCH AVE. (HWY. 17-911

SANFORD

&gt;

*

1

N. HWY. 17-91

CASSELBERRY

City Commission Chambers, Longwood
•

*

City Hall, 175 West Warren Avenue,
Longwood, Florida.
A FINAL DECISION on the pro­
posed tax increase will be made at
this hearing.

*'»►•
A
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VN
yw
c-•
!A«•
ag•«'*•
V
‘
tO M I

/

i r.'&amp; * -

PW*- v
R* » | •*

g ^ r t wr-^*'*** • •• •%»«*

�E v e n in g H e ra ld
if,*.

Congratulations are in order tor Eteanor
Anderson, the county’s director of the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB). Anderson, who
has worked for the county OMB for five years
and becam e OMB director last January, has
received career status with the county.
“Finally," Jokes Anderson.

iusps « i iio)
300 N FRENCH AVE.SANFORD. FI A 32771
Area Code 305-322-2611 or 631-9933

F rid a y , September 25, 1981—4A
Wayne D Doylt, Publisher
Thomas Giordano. Managing Editor
John To#n|es. Advertising Director
Home Deliver)1: Week, 11.00; Month, *4.25; 6 Months, *24 00;
Year, 145.00. By Mall: Week, *1.25; Month, *5.25; 6 Months,
*30.00; Year, 137.00.
By DARLENE JENNINGS

The West Owes
Poland A Chance
The Polish trade union m ovem ent. Solidarity,
held its first congress against a backdrop that
included m assive Soviet m ilitary maneuvers
along P oland’s eastern border and a stream of
scathing condemnations from Tass.
If the Poles were intimidated, it w asn’t ap­
parent a t the Solidarity congress in Gdansk, or on
the stre e ts of Warsaw. On the contrary, Solidarity
seem ed bolder than ever. Its congress approved
calls for free parliam entary elections, an end to
centralized economic planning and regular access
for union leaders to the state-controlled news
media.
In W arsaw and other Polish cities open to
W estern visitors, Poles went about their daily
business as though nothing unusual were hap­
pening a t all.
Thus the question: Do the Poles know
som ething their friends in the West do not? Ap­
parently they do. There m ay be a bit of bluff in
Solidarity leader I^ch W alesa's jaunty boast that
tanks couldn't make us work," but it is becoming
increasingly clear that Moscow sees an invasion
ns an absolute last resort to be avoided at almost
any cost.
Why? Because any overt attem pt to crush a
popular movement actively supported by the vast
m ajority of Poles could trigger savage resistance,
lingering guerrilla w arfare clnJ widespread
sabotage for years. And these would be only the
m ilitary costs — just the beginning.
,
The economic consequences would be, if
anything, still more dam aging to the Soviet
Union. Poland’s foreign debts total a staggering
127 billion. A Soviet invasion would elim inate any
chance that the Poles could enact the reforms
necessary to revive their nearly prostrate
economy. That, in turn, would m ean that the
Soviets themselves would have to assum e the
burden of supporting Poland, or w atch the Poles
starve.
The political consequences of arm ed in­
tervention would be no less devastating.
W hatever shreds of ideological credibility the
Soviets retain within their em pire and beyond
would be lost, perhaps forever. NATO would bo
solidified anew. And prospects for successful
Soviet-American negotiations on arm s control
would vanish.
Moscow knows all this and, so, would prefer to
fight S o lid a rity with p o litic a l subversion,
duplicity and the rest of the catalogue of black
a rts at which the Kremlin is so practiced.
But that gives Solidarity, and its sympathizers
within the Polish Communist P a rty and govern­
ment, a fighting chance to institutionalize at least
some of the reforms that have long since sur­
passed anything ever achieved elsewhere in
E astern Europe.
What the Poles need from their friends in the
West is an international version of what Lech
W alesa’s trade union m ovem ent has already
provided the Polish people — nam ely, solidarity.
T h is m ean s econom ic a s s is ta n c e , debt
rescheduling and new credits m ade conditional on
the acceptance of economic reform s of the kind
already advocated by Solidarity.
It m eans repeated, bold expressions of Western
solicitude for the Polish people, for Solidarity, and
for the possibility of a Poland that would enjoy
substantial internal freedoms even if Warsaw’s
foreign policy would still be largely dictated by
the Kremlin.
With this sort of help, it is just possible to
im agine a successful, non-violent revolution
within Poland that the Soviets would be compelled
by circum stances to accept.
The West owes Poland this chance. The Western
dem ocracies tried in vain to preserve Poland’s
independence in 1939. But six y ears later. Western
diplom ats acquiesced in the forcible assimilation
of Poland into the Soviet em pire. The time has
come for the West to repay an old debt to an in- dom ilable people.

, BERRY S WORLD

decide to marry someone very, very rich, end
take FULL advantage of It. ’’

Even though Anderson has worked for the
county for many years, it Is still part of county
employee policy to place an employee on a
probationary status for any new job they take
with the county. Anderson has been OMB
director for eight months,
" I ’m pleased that the county commissioners
are pleased with the work that I’m doing.
Approving the career status will give me an

eitra sense of confidence in doing my jo b ,"
Anderson said.
Along with the career status die county has
approved for her, the board has also granted a
seven-and-a-half percent merit increase for
Anderson. This is the highest merit increase the
county gives a county employee and it is based
upon performance.
"Eleanor will probably use two-and-a-half
percent of the m erit increase to buy a stock of
aspirins after all we went through to get the
county's budget together this year," quipped
commissioner Sandra Glenn after the board
agreed to the m erit increase.
Even though putting the 1981-62 county budget
together was "lough," Anderson said it was not

one of her biggest challenges while working for
OMB “ After a while you just get used to the
demands of the job. I don’t really think there’s
anything that t can't accomplish," she said
slightly embarrassed by the attention she was
receiving.
Anderson started working in Seminole County
government in the clerk's office and worked her
way into the OMB She started in the OMB as an
analyst.
” 1 thoroughly enjoy working with the board of
county commissioners and all the other
departments. I like Seminole County and never
want to stop working for county government,"
Anderson said.

DON GRAFF

SCIENCE WORLD

Poison
Bulletin
Issued

Really
High
Finance
The timing may be a bit discomfiting, but
no one can say it comes as a surprise.
In the midst of its hard-sell campaign to
convince the public, particularly that portion
of it that hangs out around Wall Street, that its
policies will regenerate the economy and
stabilize federal finances, Die administration
has had to ask Congress for an Increase in die
national debt limit.
Beginning Sept. 30 to more than *1 trillion, a
"dreaded financial milestone" in the words of
the Wall Street Journal that everyone has
seen coming for a long time.
It is a step that this administration, of all
recen t adm inistrations, would ce rtain ly
rather not lake, but there is no way out. Even
if the Reagan budget trims and tax cuts
deliver fully as promised, it will be 1964
before federal accounts show a surplus.
Meanwhile, fed by continuing deficits and
interest accrual, the debt goes on ac­
cumulating. The total was *980.5 billion as of
Sept. 3 with a legal limit of *965 billion.
Scarcely enough room left there to cover the
b u re a u c ra c y ’s office
supplies
and
miscellaneous requirements for die rest of
the month.
So the Reagan administration has the
dubious historical distinction of presiding
over the erection of a milestone. You have to
go a long way back to find a comparable one
— to the Wilson administration and 1917
when, under the pressure of World War I
expenditures, the debt first topped *1 billion.
Of course, those were much different
dollars, which suggests another way of
looking at die debt. Applying a little historical
perspective to that trUlion-dollar figure, it is
somewhat less formidable. In term s of
purchasing power now as compared to then, it
works out to less than *500 million in 1971
dollars. Or about *300 billion in 1961 dollars.
T hat's discounting for Inflation.
Now doesn't that make you feel better1
Are you in gee with the administration's
formating of public pulley for the out years?
If you understand that you could well be
working now, or at least be a good candidate
for a job, in Reagan's Washington TTie ad­
ministration is already putting its distinctive
stam p on die language as it is sometimes
incomprehensibly spoken in the highest of­
ficial circles.
As researched and defined recently in the
Wull Street Journal, "in gee" as used by
movers and shakers in today's Washington
means ihey are in agreement. "Out years"
means long term and "to format" stands in
for to plan or develop. No problem once you
have a phrase book, and Berlitz may be out
with one shortly.
Actually, the Reagan phrase-makers are
only following precedent. E v ery administration in recent memory has done the
same. Reasonably long memories may recall
"thrust,” which the Kennedy people applied
to everything from the subject m atter of a
cocktail party conversation to Rve develop­
ment — pardon, formating — of nuclear
strategy.
The Johnson years bequeathed us, among
other things, "nitty-gritty," but the really
productive adm inistration linguistically
speaking is Nixon's Remember "tilt," as in
policies favoring one side or the other in a
foreign spat1 Not to mention "inoperative,"
as in "we made a mistake in what was said
earlier but would prefer not to say it now."

Ity PATRICIA McCORMACK
UPI Health Editor
NEW YORK i UPI) - Doctors and
paramedics arc being alerted to watch out for
injuries from hydrofluoric acid — the active
agent in brick, stone and aluminum cleaners

iH4*rrt

MY WIFE....... PLEASE f"

ROBERT WALTERS

"Such cleaners are used in Industry,
research and commercial products and have
caused health care professionals to begin b&gt;
recognize its severe deleterious effects,” says
a Poison Information Bulletin for Die medics
and doctors.
Products used in etching, polishing and
frosting of glass also may contain
hydrofluoric acid, says the bulletin going nut
from the National Poison Center Network
headed by Dr Richard W. Moriarity in Pitts­
burgh.
"H ydrofluoric a d d U a Darticularly
hazardous chemical,” Dr ‘Moriarity said

How To Save Dollars
WASHINGTON &lt;NEA&gt; - If ['resident
Reagan Is willing to supplant his symbolic
gestures toward reducing wasteful military
spending with a serious budget-cutting
campaign, tie’ll discover hundreds of op­
portunities to save money.

million, also was rejected by the White House.
But in the final months of his presidency.
Carter succumbed to Pentagon harassment
and approved the scheme — at a price of
almost *40 million.

The cost of operating the Pentagon’s dining
Even the Republican chairman of the room represents a very trivial portion of the
Senate Budget Committee, Sen. Pete V. Defense Department’s budget — but it
Dotnenici of New Mexico, lias rejected as •typifies tlie military establishment's pen­
Inadequate the p resid en t's virtually chant for extravagant spending.
meaningless initial proposal to trim *13
The average price paid by diners is *2.87
billion from the Defense Department budget
per lunch — but the dining room is so heavily
during the next three fiscal years.
overstaffed and inefficiently operated that
Reagan’s own Office of Management and each meal must be subsidized with *12.06 in
Budget, the Congressional Budget Office, the public funds, according to Rep. I&gt;es As pin, DGeneral Accounting Office, scores of mem­ Wis.
bers of Congress and a host of other
authorities can identify for the president
In other words, the average lunch costs
areas where countless billions of dollars’ *14.93 but those who consume the food pay
worth of additional reductions can be made. less titan 20 percent while the taxpayers pick
up the tab for more than 80 percent.
From Die airport at Kcflavik, Iceland, to
the Pentagon’s executive dining room, the
In the fiscal year about to begin, the
Defense Department's far-flung operations
Defense Department is expected to purchase
are replete with examples of ill-conceived, more than *100 billion worth of goods and
Ineffective, o v erp riced and unjustified services from individuals and companies
programs
outside the government under a cumbersome,
One of th is c ity 's most outspoken outdated procurement p ro g ram that
proponents of a strong military establish­ discourages competition and encourages
ment, Benjamin F. Schcmmer, editor of the waste.
Armed Forces Journal, recounts the sorry
story of the Icelandic airport in a recent issue
of that magazine.
Shortly after Jim m y Carter was sworn in as
president, he rejected a Defense Department
request to build, at a cost of *6.5 million, a
new civilian air terminal at Kcflavik so
Icelandic Airlines' passengers would no
longer have to use the U.S. Navy’s small and
somewhat dingy term inal building.
If Iceland wanted a new terminal for its
airline, Carter reasoned, that country was
certainly free to construct such a facility. If
not, what was good enough for the U.S. Navy
ought to be guod enough for the airline's
passengers.
less than a year later, Defense Secretary
llrrold Brown renewed the request — but the
cost had almost doubled, to *11.5 million.
Again, Carter turned down the proposal.
A third request, carrying a price tag of *23

The department's various components have
com piled more than 30,000 pages of
procurement regulations that, according to
the Congressional Budget Office, "add 20
percent to 100 percent to the cost of goods for
little or no gain in effectiveness."
Major weapons system s continue to
produce massive cost overruns. The General
Accounting Office notes, for example, that the
Army’s M-l tank was estimated to cost
slightly more than *500,000 in 1972 but now is
priced at *2.8 million men and women who
retired after serving at least 20 years on
uctive duty will receive about *13 billion
worth of pensions this year.
Reagan could perform a major public
service by applying to the military’ budget the
same standards of ruthless economizing he
displayed when dealing with domestic social
programs —but he apparently is unwilling to
do so.

"ft Is corrosive. Even in solution it can
cause severe burns to the skin The severity of
these burns may not be apparent im­
mediately, and not even for as long ns 24
hours.
"Permanent scarring and disability can
result,"
Before using any powerful cleaning agent
that makes elbow grease almost a tiling of the
past - at home or at work — Moriarity
recommends reading the label. There’s a
good chance It may contain hydrofluoric ad d .
"We clean our aluminum siding, bricks,
masonry, and air conditioners, pre-soak
heavily soiled laundry, remove spots from
our own clothing and rust from metals — the
easy way," he said.
"While all the convenient self-serving saves
money, it could add up to a dangerous
situation If the cleaning product we use
contains hydrofluoric acid."
Products containing hydrofluoric arid often
have listed among ingredients — "H F" or
"HF Arid." Here arc some precautions from
Moriarity, recommended to all who use
products containing the arid:
—Be sure to wear rubber gloves
- Use the product only in a well-ventilated
area. "If you suspect even a mild exposure to
this chemical, call your Poison Center im­
mediately," Moriarity said. "The staff ts
knowledgeable about hydrofluoric arid ex­
posures and can give you direction about
what to do.
“If hospital treatment is necessary, he can
alert the emergency room to your case, no
time will be wasted."
Moriarity said that with hydrofluoric arid
exposure to the skin, "Initially the patient
may notice only a slight tingling or burning
sensation with a little redness of the skm.
"It doesn’t look or feel like the kind of burn
we would expect from an acid.
“ If the patient is seen at this stage by a
doctor u n fam iliar with the problem s
associated with hydrofluoric acid, it is
possible the physician may be unimpressed
with the injury.
"Damage, however, lias already occurred
The acid attacks cells deep in die skin and
bones of the exposed area. Without proper
and immediate attention, the problem will
become worse and the patient could lose his
nails and perhaps the ends of his fingers.
"The same type of damage can occur with
any tissue ex p u til to tl&gt;e arid."

JACK ANDERSON

Billy's Dealings The End O f Him ?
WASHINGTON - A complex federal in­
vestigation of two ex-CIA agents who supplied
arm s to Libya has focused on a famous
target: Billy Carter.
As I lave noted in the past, there U an
obvious need for a special prosecutor to in­
vestigate the tangled dealings of the two ex­
spies, Frank Terpil and Edwin Wilson. There
are several aspects of their connection to the
former president’s brother tla l bear looking
into. These Include;
— Terpil’s statements to associates that he
was pivotal in behind-the-scenes activity that
led Billy to accept a *220,000 "loan" from the
Libyans, presumably in return for any in­
fluence he might have had on the thenpresident.
— Similar statements by Wilson, including
one discussion of assassinating Billy for
reneging on a deal with the Libyans.
— The indisputable fact that Terpil knew
details of Billy's Ubyan deals long before
they were made public, and even before
federal Investigators were aw are of them.
— The close similarity of an oil-commission
deal for Terpil in 1976 tn the one offered to
Billy Carter in 1979.

Billy Carter first visited Libya with a bunch
of Georgia cronies in the fall of 1978. The
ostensible purpose of the trip was to promote
commercial ties with the Libyans. But in­
telligence so u rces said that Libyan
strongman M uammar Qaddafi had Billy
targeted right from the start as a White House
influence-peddler.
Qaddafi apparently believed that Brother
Billy could persuade liw president to release
eight C-130 transport planes, which had been
embargoed because of lib y a's support for
international terrorists Carter associates
said Billy discussed the plane embargo with
Libyan officials. Billy denied this, though he
admitted discussing it with American of­
ficials after his return.
Federal Investigators have pointed out that
one of ex-CIA man Terpil’s main projects,
besides supplying explosives and terrorist
training to the Libyans, was to arrange
delivery of the embargoed C-130s. A former
business partn er of Terpil and Wilson said
Terpil advised Qaddafi that Billy Carter
might be the vehicle for getting delivery of
the transport planes.
According to th is associate, Terpil

**

*

*

*

*

^

. * »-

,
# *#

« -*

telephoned Billy and invited him to the tenthanniversary celebration of Qaddafi's coup, in
September 1979. It was then, apparently, that
the deal was struck that would give Billy a
commission on additional Libyan crude
delivered to the Charter Oil Co.
Ironically, Terpil hud attem pted to arrange
a sim ilar oil-commission deal for himself two
years earlier. The Terpil associate described
tlic arrangement in handwritten notes, now in
my possession. I also have a Terpil telegram
In which he confirmed the arrangement,
which apparently fell through later.
The Terpil partner told my associate Dale
Van Atta that he understood the oil deal “ was
simply a bribe, a way for the Libyans to get
Billy In bed with them." Billy asked for a
*500,000 "loan” — actually an advance on his
expected commissions. The Libyans gave
him *220,000. Terpil later told another con­
fidante that the amount of money available
for bribing Billy was $1 million, to be supplied
directly by Libyan intelligence agents.
(According to one Justice Department
intelligence report, Ira n ia n strongm an.
Ayatollah Khomeini, bent on embarrassing
President Carter, sent a trusted mullah to

Ubya with *1 million in U.S. currency to
finance the buying of Billy.)
Terpil and Billy were spotted together on at
least two occasions during the 1979
celebration; Terpil told several persons he
had met with Billy during the visit.
On Jan. 16. 198J), Billy told a Justice
Department official he had indeed met Terpil
on the 1979 trip, and that Terpil later followed
up with a telephone call about a proposed
"machine-gun deal." Carter recanted this
statement two months later, but he did
acknowledge that he might have autographed
a picture of Terpil and himself "To my friend
Frank.”
The most bizarre twist in the Billy CarterTerpil-Wilson connection comes from a
knowledgeable source who detailed a meeting
between Wilson and a professional assassin.
According to this source, Wilson was angry
over Billy’s failure to perforin on some
unidentified deal, and suggested blowing
Billy away by planting explosives in an oil
painting. The painting was to be given to
Billy, then detonated by remote control.

�SPORTS
Evening Herald, Sanford. FI.

Friday, Sept, 25. i»ll—SA

Seminole Seeks To Break Edgewater Hex Tonight;
Underdog Greyhounds Go A fter Ranked Wildcats '
By SAM COOK
11era lit Sports Killtor
Veteran Edgewater football coach
Bob Dolce hasn't ever lost two seasonopening football names until this year
Winter Park's Lirry Gergiev anti his
state's second-ranked tA Wildcats have
lost just one name in the past too
seasons.
Add that first statement to the fact
that a Jerry Posey-coached team lias
yet to beat Edgewater in Posey's
career at Seminole — anil you have a
pretty tough assignment (acini; the
Tribe tonight at ft m the Tangerine
Bowl.
Add the second statement about
Winter Park In the theory that the
Wildcats have a cat eye out for tlie
number one spot in the rankings - and
youliave Bill Scott's Greyhounds facing
a similar hill to climb tonight at 8 at
Showalter Field
Hut it is a challenge that each
relishes. We’re going to go after
them," vowed Scott while setting up the
sprinkler system Wednesday night at
Lyman. It's easy to get up lor them
They 're the best hall s tub around I've

SeminoJes
seen since the Merritt Island team with
Jimmy Black ami Leon Bright."
And d you think this is just another
coach's buildup of" an opponent, you
better think twice The 'Cats are pretty
awesome Most observers thought they
would tie hard-pressed to replace savvy
Jamie Lugo, an excellent option man at
quarterback last year
Enter Mike Sweeney. A converted
defensive back, Sweeney has given the
Wildcat offense a different look —
airborne
I think he's better than Lugo,*' said
Scott. "Tills kid can really throw I
think he can do more Hungs than
Lugo.''
The thing he docs best is definitely
throw Wide receiver Darryl Smith and
tight end Cecil Holt are the prime
targets Holt, an all-around athlete,
also doubles as the punter Dennis
(lareau carries the Parkers' running
attack. He lias rushed for over 100
yards in both wins Defensive hack Eric
Ingram is rated as a potential all-state
selection

A man w ho knows just how tough the
Cats are is E dgeuater's Dolce The
Ltngwood resident suffered a .10-7
licking to the Wildcats just last week
While Dolce is thoroughly impressed
with Gergiev s squad, he is undecided
on whether it is better than last year
In some ways they are and some ways
they aren't,1' Dolce said "Sweeney is a
different kind of quarterback than
Lugo He's a much, much better
thrower. I*ut he doesn't run the option.”
Well, coach, what does Lyman have
to do to beat Winter Park''
"Tliey have to play error-free ball
and stand toe-to-!ue with them because
they will come at you." assessed Dolce.
"They have good backs, but they don’t
liave great speed 1-urry iGergley i will
tell you that
For Lyman to beat them, they have
to stop Sweeney from throwing and be
strong up the middle "
The Lyman-Winter Park matchup,
however, wasn't taking up much o|
Dolce's tiiile Thursday lie was worried
about Sanford and shaking an u-2
opening record which was staring him
in the face for the first time since taking

over the rd n s lor the Eagles
Tins is a very pivotal game tor us
We're in a must win situation," Dolce
said The Eagles dropped a 31-1.1
decision to Satellite Beach before the
Winter Park setback
Dolce feels his team is finally healthy
now with the addition of Moot-5, 2ti5pound Craig Cleveland and senior
secondary man Paul Conley Conley
joins senior Jerome Broner who lias
been Polce's most consistent performer
defensively
Offensively, the Eagles go with just
two seniors Marcus Slade is back after
being sidelined lor four weeks with a
knew* injury Slade runs a I fi lb-yard
dash and "should help our running
attack "
Dolce goes with two juniors at
quarterback Marvin Zander will start
tonight, hut he has been splitting time
with Itodney Ling. who will move to
Hanker
Along with Slade at running back,
Dolce uses 5-foot-ltl, 170-pound junior
Kenny Jones and senior Leroy Filinore
When asked about his team 's
strengths, Dolce chuckled and said.

Lym an
The way we're been play ing the past
two weeks 1 don't know if we have any
strengths."
One thing he does hav e is the hex over
I'osey The classy Tribe euach has
never beaten Dolce " T h a t’s one
gratifying thing," Dolce said Hut I'll
tell you when tliey w ine down here the
Tangerine Howll, it’s always ch»c."
Which was what exactly Posey
pointed out earlier in the day "The
games at the T-Bow l have alway s been
tlie closest tor some reason," concurred
Posey
Dolce thinks he knows the reason
"Whoever we play gets pumped up
coming in here," Dolce said almut the
bow Mike atmosphere. “It's a big
stadium, there's a lot of jieoplc
Every laxly gets motivated coming to
the Tangerine Bowl"
I’osey hopes to see some motivation
train Ins offense which was shut out for
eight quarters before punching across
nine points during the triple-tiebreaker
victory over Like Howell last week

The return of lulllw k lenny Sutton
should helj*. Sutton, nursing a s o r J
At hi lies tendon, watched the win over*
Howell from the sideline last week He
was going pretty good yesterday
i Wednesday I." Posey said about hiy.^
power back who rambled (or 89 yards
against Titusville Astronaut.
Another weapon uncovered lash**
Friday was the toe of Alan Cahill. ThO'i
senior defensive tackle boomed the
game-winning three pointer to drop,^
Howell
„ jj
I dunk he's good from 40 yards in.'1.*
said Posey "til course we still have t^.;
find out whether Cahill can do it con,-i)
sistcntly under pressure." Posey said ,
he wouldn't hesitate to call Cahills'
number on a fourth down and three or1' !
four
The offensive lineup remains pretty '^
much the same with Victor Williams,1,1
steady Johnnie Littles. Jell Litton a tide)
Sutton in the backficld
Defensively, Larry Eason wafC
Burger King Player of the Week (or his']
super all-around game at defensive enrVI
against the Silver Hawks
|
ill

Raiders G rasp County Talent For Net Success

,IA( K IK M \ R T K L
. . . O vied o H igh

Hrr«ld Photo* by Tom Vincent

KIM M K Y K R S
. . L a k e llr a iitle v H igh

llle a n a E s c a p e s C u b a n H a n d
Volley hall T o n ig h t
S e m in o le C o m m u n ity C o lle g e
a p .lll.
I lr e v a r il CC v s, V a le n c ia CC
I* p in .
S e m in o le CC vs, i t r e v a n l CC
By SAM TOOK
Herald Sports Editor
llleana looked over her shoulder as the
bearded rnun wearing a cap inched
closer and closer. Just as Fidel Castro
grasped her anke, she Jerked free, leaped
upon a horse and escaped Irom her
native Cuba with her life. (The horse
swam very well. I
Well, maybe it wasn't that dramatic
when this cute (our-year-old fled Cubit (or
Connecticut 21 years ago, but it was
probably live best thing that happened to
die then llleana Millares.

NANCY GIZINSKI
. . . Lake Howell High

The Evening Herald incorrectly
reported the SCC-Ilrevard vo lleyball
game would be played Saturday It will
be tonight. Sorry.

PATTY CORSO
. . . Seminole High

Now a Gallagher
she was married
last year
llleana is putting together
what she feeLs will be the best volleyball
team to date during her three years at
Seminole Community College.
Gallagher plays a triple role (or the
Haiders. She coaches volleyball, softball
and basketball. The attractive Univer­
sity of Central Florida graduate was a
standout volleyball and softball player at
Hialeah High School before two more
good years at Miami Dade South. She
also played both sports at UCF prior to
graduating in 1978
"This year I liave tl*eexperience and
height that we didn’t have last year,"
points out Gallagher. The Raiders were
17-5 a year ago and return five starters
They placed eighth in the stale.
Gallagher has built the team with
Seminole County players. "There is so
much talent around here, you don't need
to go anywhere else," she said through
her Cuban-Connecticut accent. "Plus, I
think its better to build with local
players."
Gallagher has picked two girls each

NAN GALL AG HE It
. . . Lyman High

\ 1 * • S » %* -

II 1.1 \N \ (. \I .L M .IIK H
I ( a id e r c o a c h

M l Ml B O N IT A
. . . S e m in o le H ig h

F R A N C IS R H O D E S

. . . l.aki* Brantley High •:

To M o ld S o lid S C C P r o g r a m
Irom Seminole, la k e Brantley and
Lyman High Schools. She plucked one
each from Oviedo High ami Lyman High
Two out-nf-county mijiorts come from
Edgewater High and St Cloud High to
complete the tO-niember team
One of the Srmirudes
sophomore
Patty Corso is a lop all-around player
lor SCC. "Patty is one of our best hit­
ters," stressed Gallagher. "She's a good
server and very aggressive around die
net ’

Another starter comes from Mike
Brantley. Sophomore Francis "Franny"
HhoUcs is the team's sparkplug. “She’s
the spirit," said Gallagher about her
captain "Franny was a little too hyper
last year, but she's come a long way and
has what it lakes to be a leader,"
The Lidy Haiders tallest player comes
from Orange County Debra Dyer, a 5foot-11*3 basketball standout at
Edgewater, is the key blocker lor SCC.
"We call her the "Hoof," laughed
Gallagher "She’s one of the strongest
blockers I’ve seen. Debra's a little lazy
sometimes, but we're trying to make her

SHARON VOBORNIK
.. . Lake Howell High

• ' f t -

an all-around player,"
Seminole’s fifth starter hails from
Lyman Sophomore Nan Gallagher is one
of die team's quarterbacks and setters.
List year Nan was lacking the con­
fidence," said the namesake coach. "But
this year she has the experience to run
the team for me ’*
The fifth starter is Just a rookie. Fresh­
man Sharon Vobornik
who helped
Like Howell h&gt; a district championship
last year
is serving as a setter
"Sharon's a little nervous about Iw-mg
a setter, but she'll Ik* all right," assured
Gallagher "She has a lot of talent and is
a very smooth player
"She also has the best serve on the
team and w ith the talent she has 1expect
here to lx- twice as skilled next year."
Gallagher's last starter is anodier
freshman
St Cloud's Kendra King
King came to Itaiderlarnl to supplement
the softball program. Inil decided to go
oul for volleyball too.
"And I'm glad she did," exclaimed
Gallagher. "Kendra's very strong on
See Page 6A

DKltftA DYER
. . . Edgew ater High

|,
0

�-

•-* '

■"- * ■ i I

H f i H la M tr i, F I

Friday, lay t, t t , m i

SPORTS
INBRIEF
Knlghtt In Soarch O f

—

Quarterback, Touchdown
l i * University of Central Florida's Fighting Knlghta
football aquad left Thuraday for Jackson, Miss. In
search of Its first victory sgalnst two losses and In
search of Its third quarterback In s i many games.
With Injuries having farced freshman starter Mike
Wood and senior returner Bob Burkhart to the sideline,
head coach Don Jonas will turn quarterbacking duties
over to Mike McCrary.
McCrary and the Knights will face a tough task in
stopping Millsaps in the Saturday d ash scheduled for a
2:30 p m . kickoff at Alumni Field In Jackson.
The Millsaps Majors are currently riding the
nation’s second longest Division III winning streak ( H
gam es) that includes a 3-0 start this season. The
Majors a r t coming off a 27-0 win over Suwanee and
sport a stiff defensive unit.
Millsaps currently sports the nation's second best
Division HI defense, including a number two ranking
against tile n u h and a number six position in scoring
Thoes statistics shouldn’t make things any easier for
UCF. In addition to looking for Its first win, the Knights
are still looking for their first touchdown of the 1981
The UCF-Millsaps contest will be broadcast over
WUCF-FM (89.9) beginning at 2: IS p.m.
The Knights and the Majors have met Just once
before. Millsaps emerged from last season's initial
meeting with a 7 4 decision.

Mfncay, Smart* Poes Win
Joe Mlncey and Brent Smartt each collected two hits
and two runs batted in as Florida Baseball School Blue
beat Florida Baseball School Red, 11 In Zinn Beck
League action Thuraday night at Sanford Memorial
Stadium.
Mlncey from Lake Brantley and Sm artt from Lyman
paved the way for pitchers Tom Novak, Jerry Wallens
and Buddy Underwood to hold the Red to seven hits.
Underwood picked up the victory. Seminole
righthander Greg HUl suffered the loss.

Flag Football
Openers Set
For Saturday
Sanford's Recreation Department launches its flsg football
program Saturday with two Junior games and one midget
game taking place at Chase Park.
The Bulldogs, coached by Lawrence Hawkins, battle the
Cowboys of Michael Vallot In the 9 a.m. opener. In the other
Junior game at 10 a.m., Coach William Taylor's Rams take out
the Wildcats of Coach Preston DeBose.
In the midget division, Coach Gary Taylor's Bucs play the
Steeters who are coached by Jam es Stevens. The midget game
gets underway at 11 a.m.
The Juniors will play a six-game schedule, while the midgets
play a five-game slate. The midgets will participate In the
Punt, Pass and Kick competition Oct. 31 at 11 a.m. The Juniors
take part in the annual event Nov. 7.

S A N F O R D aec aB A T IO N
D EPARTM ENT
FLAG FOOTBALL 1*01
SCHEDULE
JUNIOR DIVISION
I BULLDOGS
COACH
L *« r« n c 4
II l * I In l
1 COWBOYS— COACH Mlchatl
V lllol
3 RAMS
COACH W llllim
Taylor
4. W IL O C A T S - COACH P rnton

Dtbont
All g im t* will ba play'd l l
C lm i Park.
SCHEDULE
S tplim ter Hih
1:00 i in. — Bulldog! v !
Cowboy*
10 00 a m — Ram* vt Wildcat!
October 3rd
V 00 a.m. — Cowboy* v* Ram*
10:00 a.m , — Bulldog! »*
Wildcat*
OcteMr lDlti
♦ 00 a.m. — Bulldog! v* Ram*
10:00 a m . — Cowboy! v*
Wildcat!

Ocletxr I7lh
♦ :00 a.m . — Bulldog* v i
Cowboy*
10:00 a.m. — R am i v i Wildcat*
Octobar Mth
♦ 00 a m . — Cowboyi v* Ram*
»9 00 a m — R am i v i Wildcat!
October 31it
♦ 00 a.m. — Bulldog* v* Ram i
10:00 a.m . — Cowboy* Yt
Wildcat*
Punt, P a *i. and Kick com
petition will bo Nov. 7, at * :00a.m
M l DOE T DIVISION _ . .
I BUCS - COACH Gary Taylor
3 SANFORDSTEELERS
—
COACH
Jam a*
SU vant
All g a m tt playtd at Cha*a Park
at 11:00 a.m.
Gam ** tctiadulft tor:
S*pt*mb*r lath
October 3rd
October 10th
October I7lh
October J*lh
Punt, P a u , and Kick com
palIIIon - October 31lt at It :0O
am .

Astronaut Dips Silver Hawks;
rinity Prep Hosts Shorecrest
he would have got I t
"But they had a real good team. Our
defense did a good Job. Penalties at bad
times really hurt us," concluded Pope.
Lake Howell
0 0 0 7 )
Astronaut
7 0 7 7 21
ASTR — Parker 23 pass from Whiting
(Waldron kick)
ASTR — Whitney 18 pais from Whiting
(Waldron kick)
ASTR — Whitney 6 pass from Whiting
(Waldron kick)
LKHW - Grant 43 run (Grant kick)

I TttusvlUs Astronaut's Donnie Whiting
s VswM m b i pmeee m the War

iMsd ijfeg Hawaii, tl*7, baton
I fans at D rsa Ftold Thuraday night
i Titusville.

[ Ths loss was the third In a row for
i Mike BisosgUa's Hawks, who host
ska Brantley next Friday in a key Five
cladi. Lake Howell Is 0-1 In con-

play.
Whiting, a top college prospect, found
tight end Ken Parker for a 20-yard
— In the first quarter. Bruce Waldron
ihdded the first of three extra points [or
:jhe night far ■ 7-0 lead.
Whiting connected again in the third
. This time the rifle-armed senior
t Robert Whitney out of the backfleld
an 11-yard TD. An Interception by
tt Kuxma at the 00-yard line had aet
the seers. Waldron converted for a 14bulgs.

SCOTT GRANT
... 43-yard TD gallop

It was the "W” boys again in the fourth
iod as Whiting located Whitney from
yards out for the touchdown. Waldron
J the PAT and Astronaut's lead
.... to 214.
The Silver Hawks finally dented the
tutvtlle defense after a fine kickoff
turn by BUly Mosblech In the fourth
Quarterback Scott Frick hit
.ioa Payss for a seven-yard gain
fart tailback Scott Grant exploded 43

was the first touchdown given up by the
War Eagles' stingy defense too. Grant
was named Burger King Player of (he
Week for 106 yards rushing Iasi Friday.
Grant added the point after to draw the
Hawks within, 21-7. The Silver Hawks
used an onsidea kick to regain
ooaaesaion. A pass to Nat Edmonds at the
goal line went up for grabs, however, and
Astronaut sealed off the victory.
“He almost caught it,” assistant coach
arda on a pitch from Frick for the Paul Pope said about Edmonds' effort.
wks' first TD of the year. Ironically, it "If he would have been a little bit taller

Another team looking for Its first win is
Coach Ron Vlerling’s Trinity Prep
Saints. The Preppers go after victory
number one Saturday at 2 p.m. against
St. Petersburg-Shorecrest.
Shorecrest Is 0-2 on the season In­
cluding a one-point loss to la k e
Highland. Trinity is 0-1 after being blown
away by Frostproof, 334, last Friday.
"It will be nice to get back and play
regular people again,” aaid Vterllng, who
Is still reenvertna from the Frostproof
onslaught. "They were awesome. Our
rookies were dlscombobulated.
"But we did hold them down the second
half (seven points). And they didn't run
any second stringers In because they only
have so many players."
Vlerling's backfleld la up In the air for
tomorrow's game. Star running back
Gerald Sutton Is still bothered by an
ankle Injury and la questionable for
Saturday.

Sanford at
Edgewater

Tullis

DeSantis |
(6-14)

Scott

Sanford

Edgewater

Sanford

j Stripp
(8-12)

|

Edgewater

Glenn
(10-10)
Sanlord

Cook
(14-6)

Concensus

Edgewater

toss up

Lyman at
Lyman
Winter Park Winter Park
Winter Park
Winter Park
Lyman
Winter Park
Winter Park
Boone at
Lake Brantley Lake Brantley Lake Brantley Lake Brantley Lake Brantley Lake Brantley
Lake BranUej
ta k e Brantley
Shorecrest at
Trinity Prep
UCF at
MlUsam
Miami at
Texas

Trinity Prep

Trinity Prep

Trinity Prep

Shorecrest

Millsaps

Millsaps

UCF

UCF

Texas

Miami

Texas

Texas

Florida

Miss- St.

Florida

Florida

USC

Oklahoma

USC

USC

Bucs

Cardinals

Cardinals

Bucs

Dolphins

Dolphins

Dolphins

Florida at
Miss. Si.
Oklahoma
at USC

Cardinals
■t Bucs
Dolphins
at Colts

Dolphins

-—
—
'- f

Trinity Prep

Trinity Prep

Trinity Prep

UCF

Millsaps

toss up

Texas

Texas

Florida

Florida

USC

use

USC

Bucs

Cardinals

to n up

Texas

Florida

Dolphins

Dolphins;

Colt*

B lin d To M a r r y D a v e . . . O r M e t O n B lin d D a t e ?
I was half asleep when I talked to the
Lake Brantley football coach’s wife.
Lets see now, I think her name Is Joyce
Tullis and her husband's name Is Dave.
They’ll be married nine years In
November. Then she said, "I must have
been blind to m arry Dave," Or was
that, “ I met Dave on a blind date."
Now you coaches see how you get
misquoted. Yeah, I think it was the
second one. She met the former Dunnellon football standout on a blind date.
They were both at the University of
Florida. “Dave wss ■ member of the
D elta
Tau
D ella
fra te rn ity ,"
remembers Joyce. "I was in the Alpha
Chi Omega scrority and someone fixed
us up."
Well, Joyce, what happened to Dave's
football career after graduating from
the 2A powerhouse?
"Oh, he walked on at Florida," in­
formed Mrs. Tullis. "But he walked off
a little faster. When you’re only 5-foot-7,
you have to walk a little faster at
Florida."
Well, so much for that marriage.
Let me start on the next one. Lyman
Coach BUI and Norma Scott met at
Memphis State University wnere Bill
was an offensive lineman. The cir­
cumstances were somewhat similar to
the Tullis' since a friend Introduced
them and they went to a freshman
dance (or their first date.
In fact, It was a "May Day" dance. It
must have been love at first sight. The
Scotia were married later that year and
have been tor 11 years.
I won’t say anything cute here since
Burly BIU la a Utile bigger than me and
"Henley High" hasn't thrown too many
bouqwta my way linos my last poetic
work of "The Raving."

Stripp. What are you going to do with
these high school geography students?

Sam
Cook
Sports Editor

Onward and upward...
Sanford ( M ) at Edgewater (0-t)
This one Is Interesting. So, you think
women know more than men. The
ladies look Sanford. The men took
E dgew ater. N orm a Scott feels
Edgewater Is down after being blown
out, 30-7, by Winter Park. Sandra Glenn
feels Sanford is up after beating Lake
Howell. Joyce Tullis picks the Tribe by
an Alan Cahill foot. (3).
The men feet Edgewater is too strong
for Sanford and the home-field
(Tangerine Bowl) advantage makes
the difference/
Lyman (1-1) at Winter Park (24)
Scott and Glenn pick the Greyhounds.
Glenn feels Lyman playa better away
from home. They have to. This is the
third straight road game. The men and
Tullis are swayed by the Wildcats
number two ita te ranking.
Boom (6-2) at ta k e Brantley (1-1)
Com plete accord on this one.
Brantley hasn't given up a point miring
the regular eight quarters. Lyman best
Boone, 144, "This is a completely
objective opinion," laughs Joyce. "1
don’t know a soul at Lake Brantley.
Friday, the Joke wtU be Boone.
S h erecrat at Trinity Prep (6-1)
"I picked Trinity Prep because I've
heard of them ," said Scott about the
matchup. That was good enough logic.
for everyone except xportswriter Billy

UCF &lt;0-2) at Millsaps (34)
Another toss up. Scott Ukes the local
talent. Stripp thinks the Knights will
overcome their quarterback woes. The
“Saps" have won 14 In a row which w bs
good enough for Cook, DeSantis and
Tullis.
Miami 124) at Texas (24)
The DeSantis Theory here is, “If I
Can't Be Right, I'll Be Different."
Lonesome Joe goes with the
Hurricanes. All the gregarious people
pick Texas.
Florida (2-1) at Mississippi State (24)
Another DeSantis special. Joe feels
the ground game and MSU's stingy
defense will leave the GBtors without a
cigar. The rest of us like Charley Peli's
boys.
Oklahoma (24) at USC (24)
Gel the couch ready, Mrs. DeSantis,
Joey's coming home for some care.
Come on, Joe, this is getting old. The
cast says Southern Cal. The outcast
says Oklahoma. DeSantis feels Ihe
number one ranking has been a Jinx,
thus far. That's true, thus far.
Cardinals (1-2) at Bucs (1-2)
Another toss up. Tullis, Stripp and
Glenn love those Bucs. Cook, DeSantis
and Scott are Jim Hart fans. St. Louis
scored 40 points last week. Have the
Bucs scored 40 this year?
Dolphins (34) nt Colts (1-2)
Stripp has the best line here. "Don
Simla's going to teach his son (Dave,
Colts wldeout) how to win." Everyone
seems to agree, except me. I got the
"Joe DeSantis Syndrome." Get awny
from me everybody!

...SCC Net Success
Continued From Page IA
defense. She does a good Job of picking up
the other team ’s hitters."
King also possesses a fine floater serve
which Gallagher plans to call on in
certain situations.
The first Raider off the bench will be
Oviedo sophomore Jackie Martel. "She
can clean up back there," praised
Gallagher. "Jackie's quick and smart
and not afraid to go to the floor."
Another valuable addition la Lake
B rantley freshm an Kim Meyers.
Gallagher calls her an all-around player
who will come in when "one of the other
girl* la off."

Another Fighting Seminole — Mlml
Bonita -a e rv e a a reserve role for SCC.
"M lml Is inexperienced, but very
determined," laid Gallagher about her
tall freshman. "She will be a very good
player for us aa the season goes along.”
Sophomore Nancy Glzinaki Is the final
addition to this year's squad. GizinaU ex
ce ls In basketball for the Raiders. She
missed volleyball last year with a knee
Injury, but has a special spot in
Gallagher’s plans this year.
"N ancy is our secret weapon,
declared Gallagher. "She's lefthanded
and you don't see too many In volleyball.
"She should do very well messing up

the opposition's blocking," observed the
ex-Hialeah grad.
While GBllagher can point to many
strengths on the team she does res lire
the weaknesses. "We really don’t know
each other as well as we should on the
court. I like my girls to think as one
person.
"We got In the top ten in the state lait
year. We'd Uke to get in the top five this
year. I think we can do it," reasoned
Gallagher.
And who’s ti&gt; doubt the determination
of anyone that's had an ankle In Castro's
grasp?

Point Spread Establishes Gambling Odds
When I announced that my point
reads w e n better than Harrah'a for
of the 14 games played last week,
ral people wanted to know what I

A point spread in a game, such as
la the difference in actual or
aeons between the two
Profsaalonal gambling
nts publish point spreads as
method of establishing gambling

C liff
Nolton
Football
Prognosticator

This list la also published In many
newspapers across the country. Slyly
slip Cliff's Hangers from tha Herald out
of your pocket and compare Harrah's
and Cliff's point spreads. When Cliff
has picked a different team than
Harrah to win, promptly circle CUH’i
pick.
This la called an upset selection.
When Cliff's point spread Is greater
then Harrah’s far tha same team to
win, choose Cliffs to win. When Cliffs
point spread is smaller than Harrah’a
for the same team, dwoae that team to

WINNIMO TSAM
Miami
II
Fltt*bur|h
SO
Buflilo
33
Houston
11
Atlanta
M
SanDitfo
n
Oakland
n
Kama* City
»
D*Us*
as
Pftlledftphla
V
V Louis
MUvwtoia
is
Em Franc Ik s
IS
Lm Angola*
IS

LOtINO TSAM
Baltimore
NtwCnfisne
Cincinnati
Now York J«tt
Ctoaiond
pgnvsr
D*tr»tt
toatll*

I
0
1
I

If they aay that Team A will beat
B by 6 points, then the point
1 la I. If you bat on Toam A, you
betting that Team A will win by
re than • points. If you bet on Turn
, you are betting that Toam A will erin
' iaas than 6 points, or than Team B
11 erin by any aeon.
Hhon I Mated that my point ^nada
i botiar than Harrah'a, I meant that
Utaeoce In my predicted scons
cioesr to the actual dlfiaronce
&gt;Harrah'a.
How do you uaa (fans point ^nads?
Now had you doqe that last weekend
fall nppoaa you w n in a state wbon bet, uh, say a dollar on aU 14 gums,
l il legal to gambis (such aa Harrah'a you would have won on 13 gamoo, or
Sab in Rage, Nevada) and you wanted 111. You would have loot an 1 gum, or
bet on professional football games fl. Your profit would have been 111,
tha weak.
which you could have put in your
t a betUag afaeat (ran any pocket, and then wonted all the way
ila tb a p lm . It will list all of buck to Florida aa to how you could
■tonal gamoo achsdukd that show it on your income tax return.
, with lha winning laams d»wn on
Now, before you sneer and ask me
how much I won last week If I'm ao
i lift, tha point * n a d in tha i
smart, I will tell you —nothing! I must
U t a J o ^ J e a m ^ o n ^ je jig h L

confess that 1 have never laid a wager
with a professional gambler In my life.
I have never bet on a game, golf,
volleybaU, soccer, baseball, a horse
race, a dog race, a dog fight, a cock
fight, a boxing match, or a wrestling
match In my life with anyone.
I never bet on the performancs of
Individual animals or small groups of
people —except my own performance.
I will bet that I can run faster, or Jump
higher, or shoot strlighter because I
am confidant of my own ability, I have
also laid small wagan (nothing large)
with friendi on tha outcome of a football
gams - college and prefaadonaL It
adds w&gt;lce to the gum and sharpens
tha attention to snail details. It In­
creases the pleasure of tbs group TV
watchers.
I have no profeuional gambling
ewsritnca. Goneldar me for what I am
— a man who thoroughly enjoys lha
game of footbufl aa a ^editor. Nothing
mors.

WakhtnWon
Tampa
Orton say
NowOr loan*
Chicago

1*
IE
11
17
14
It
SI
11
•1
II
14
t
U
n

(p
feral * * * Of Tom Vimcmt

OPTIMISTIC
ItAM, SEMINOLE
Swford Optimist Club President BUI Colbert (right) congratulate U k e Mary’s
Jeff Hopkins (left) for Us excellent kicking which lifted U k e Mary pant U ke
Brantley, 14-13, II days ago. Hopklaa was selected aa the Optimist Player of Ihe
Week for the Rami. Seminole's Larry Eason (middle) wai the Tribe Player of
the Week for the Optimists. The senior defensive end bad an excellent aU-aro&lt;md
game as the Fighting Seminoles tipped U k e Howell. M . In three overtimes.

**
-f n ,n - * ■ i*. *

' /*

A, *

, 9 h » %O V h ♦ 4

’«

%'

^ N n ♦ • -YVl

,

�Evening Hsrikt, Sanford, FI._______ Friday,Sept. 25, t f ll—fA

Laid-Back Leonard
Pitches Kansas City
Into First Place, 9-2
By United P m i International
For a guy who Just pitched his team
into first place, Dennis Leonard didn’t
seem too thrilled with the accomplish­
ment.
"If we finish in first in the second
half," said tacmard after guiding the
Kansas City Royals to a 9-2 victory over
the Minnesota Twins, "all It means is
that we get (wo games at home (against
Oakland). It’s kind of funny: the first two
teams aren’t really fighting it out. It’s us
against Minnesota and Texas."
The Royals lead second-place Oakland
by a half-game, Minnesota by 3' j and
Texas by five in the AL West with nine
days left in the season.
Leonard, 11-11, scattered nine hits over
eight innings and struck out four. Re has
now won four of his last five starts.
Mariners t, Rangers 1
At Arlington, Texas, Tom Paciorek
singled In Dan Meyer from second base
with one out in the 11th to boast Seattle.
Meyer singled off starter Doc Medich, 96, stole second and scored when
Paciorek sent a shot down the left field

A L

Slowbrawl To Fastbrawl

Smith Battles Fans

B a n b a ll

line. Shane Rawley, who relieved in the
seventh, upped his record to 3-6. Dick
Drago relieved in the Ilth and earned his
fifth save.
Indians 5, Red Sox I
At Boston, Mike Hargrove, Toby
Harrah and Ron Massey ail collected
Ihreo hits and knocked In a run to deprive
Boston of a share of first place.
The loss dropped the Red Sox one game
behind the first-place Tigers.
The Indians trailed 2-1 entering the
seventh when Miguel Dilone drew n walk
off Mike Torrez, 8-3, who had not lost
since May 2nd. Dilone was sacrificed to
second by George Orta and Hargrove,
hitting .722 in Fenway Park this year,
singled in Dilone lo tie the score at 2-2.
Harrah chased Torrez with a double to
score one run and Hayes tallied when left
fielder Jim Rice hobbled the hit.
Reliever DanSpillner hurled the final 3
2-3 innings to up his record to 3-1.
Orioles S, Yankees 1

DENNIS LEONARD
. . . s c a t t e r s nin e hits
At New York, Jim Palmer pitched a
four-hitter and Rich Dauer hit a two-run
homer to spark the Orioles. Palmer, 7-6,
recording his second straight complete
game victory, set down the side in order
five times in posting his 246th career
triumph. Dauer’s fifth homer came off
reliever Andy McGaffigan in the fifth and
scored A1 Bumbry.
Ron Guidry, 11-4, who had a personal
six-game winning streak snapped, was
forced to leave the game after two in­
nings after being struck on the left foot by
a hard smash off the bat of Ken
Singleton. Xrays revealed a bad bruise.
White Sox 4, Angels 1
At Anaheim, Calif., Harold Baines
stroked a homer, double and single to
drive in two runs and Dennis ta m p
pitched a four-hitter to enable Chicago to
snap a four-game losing streak.

By United Press International
First we had Slowbrawl and now it’s
Fastbrawl.
The players and owners went at It for
nearly two months and now, in u
development that may not be entirely
unrelated, the players and the fans are
toe-to-toe.
Reggie Smith of the ta s Angeles
Dodgers and Pete Rose of the
Philadelphia Phillies became involved
with the paying customers Thursday
night, becoming Die second and third
players in two weeks to do so.
"It started in live sixth inning when I
was stretching in front of the dugout,"
Smith said after the Dodgers beat the
Giants 7-3. "A fan said, ‘You stink, you
have no class,’ so 1 said, ’Wliat does Dial
make you if you're talking to me?'
"The fan said, ‘If I come down Jhore I
could get hurt and be out of my 540,000 a
year Job. But il I hurl you, it will hurt the
Dodgers.’”
Smith said he noticed the fan beginning
lo wave a batting helmet and he warned
the fan not lo throw it. The fan threw the
helmet, grazing Smith on the hip.
"That’s when I went after him," said
Smith, who entered the stands and

Expos 7, Pirates I
At Montreal, Gary Carter drove
three runs and W arren C rom arl
stroked four hits, including a home rui
in the Expos' fifth straight victory. Bi
I mm?, 4-5. hit a home run, his first of tf *
season and second lifetime. Starter Ode 1
Jones, 4-4 and 0-4 lifetime again; 1
Montreal, took the loss. Bill M adlocl.
bidding for bis third NL batting crowi
wenl 0-for-3 lo fall to .337,

M l ■oMbafl
pummeled the fan before being torn
away by teammates, "I think I threw
three punches and somebody hit me. I
realized I would be ejected if I went in the
stands."
Smith also became the target of u
thrown beer bottle as he left the field, but
it missed by a wide margin.
Mike S d o sc ia 's three-run homer
capped a five-run third that snapped n
five-game losing streak for tlte Dodgers
and dropped the Giants 4 'i games behind
Houston in the West with 10 games to
play.

Astros 5, Braves 3
At Houston, Art Howe, who leads tf
team with a .309 average, knocked In tw
runs to carry the first-place Astros. Be &gt;
Knepper, 9d, needed relief help froi
Dave Smith, who picked up his eight i
save, ta r r y McWilliams, 1-1, took tl *
loss.

Rose was issued a summons for in­
dividual peace disturbance following an
altercation with two fans during a 14-6
romp in St. tau ls that severely damaged
tin* Cards’ second-half pennant hopes.

Cubs 10, Mcts 9
At Chicago, Bobby Bonds' Iwoot t
homer in the eighth — the fourth Cu &gt;
homer of the game — snapped a 9-9 til
Bonds’ sixtli homer of tlte season can *
off Jesse Orosco, D-l. Dick Tidrow, 3galned the victory while Rawley Eas
wick pitched the ninth for his first savi
Ellis Valentine had two homers and
double with five RBI in a losing cause.

A police spokesman said Rose was
issued the summons ufter Ire allegedly
pounded n bat on top of tin* Phillies'
dugout in tlte top of the ninth Inning to
frighten the two fans who had been
shouting obscenties at him and throwing
beer at Philadelphia players.

Reds' Berenyi Declines Tempting Offer, Dwells On Loss Alone
explaining she was a baseball fan, that
she had been following Berenyi's
progress and would like to meet him.
As tactfully as he knew how, he
declined the templing invitation.
"I'm just not in the mood to go out
after pitching a game like that," he
said.
Tliat was about a month ago and it
was the first call the Reds’ 27-year-old
bachelor had ever gotten from a girl he
didn't know since reporting lo Cin­
cinnati.
Berenyi, who is 8-5, struck out 10 in
that game with Montreal in which
Andre Dawson's fourth-inning single
kept him from a no-hitter last June 7,

NEW YORK lU Pl) - Bruce Berenyi,
Cincinnati’s rookie right-hander, heard
the phone ring in his hotel room and
picked it up.
A girl was on the other end, a girl he
didn't know.
She told him Iter name and com­
miserated with him over the tough onerun ball game he had lost to the Mels a
couple of hours ago.
" it wasn't really your fault," she
said. "You pitched a good game."
"Thanks," said the Reds’ big fastbailer, "but we still lost."
"I know you don’t know me, but I was
just wondering if maybe you'd like to go
out this evening," the girl went on,

but the big thing as Ityvas the Reds were
concerned was that he gave up only one
walk in that game. Only two weeks
before that, he walked seven batters in
3-2-3 innings against the Dodgers and
had so much trouble finding the plate
that he threw 15 consecutive balls In one
stretch.

UPl Sports Editor

"Any time he goes out there," Reds’
M anager Johnny M cNam ara says
about Bereny i, who led the American
Association in strikeouts the past two
years with Indianapolis, "he has a
chance to pitch a nohltter. He's that
kind of pitcher. He throws hard and lias
good movement on all his pitches.

Basically, he’s a fastball pitcher, but he
atso has a good curve and slider along
with an occasional change.
Berenyi could be the key man for lla*
Reds in the next few years or even in
the next weckand-a-half, when tltey’ll
be trying to catch the first-place Astros

Major-League Roundup
I f i M

l t o f i

By U nit** P r t it Intornatienal
National League
(Second H alil
■ a it
W L re t. OB
Montreal
14 I t
15* —
SI Louis
I I IO 114 l i t
Chicago
10 I I
4M 1
New York
10 25 4*1 4
■ Phil*
I t 21 452 4to
Pilllbrgti
II It
ItS I
W ait
Moulton
I I IS
til —
Clnclnnet
IS t l
StS Jto
San Fran
I ] It
54* 4to
« Lot Ang
I ) 10 S15 S
Atl«ma
II II
500 *to
San Diego
I I It
Its ISO

• Fir »l hall d i m ion winner
Thursday's Ret vita
Chicago 10. New York t
Philadelphia 14, St. Louli t
Montreal I, Pittsburgh I
M oulton S, Atlanta 1
Loi Angeles I, San Francisco

■ .w w . * w . ’ w v r v

1
Fridav'i Oamts
Philadelphia (Larson 10) at
Chicago IKravec IS ). 1 15 p m
New York IZachry I It ) at
Montreal (Gulllckion S I). 7 IS
pm
Cincinnati (Berenyi I SI at
Atlanta (Boggs I I I ) . 7:15 p m
Pittsburgh (Solomon 7 S) at
St Louis (Kaat * 5 ) , I IS p m,
LOS Angeles IHooton 101) si
Houston IRuhle 4 4), I;1S p m
San Francisco (Ripley 4 41 at
San Diego (Flreovid 001. 10 01
pm
Saturday’s Carnes
Philadelphia at Chicago
New York at Montrtaf
Pittsburgh at SI Louis
Los Angeles at Houston
Cincinnati al Atlanta, night
San Francisco at San Oiago.
night
American League
llecand H all)
■asf
w L Pci. OB
14 11 405 —
Detroit
1
IS II Sll
Boston
IS It 341 IVl
Milweukt
Belllmor
17 If 544 !V&gt;
■ New Yrk
11 11 111 4
Clevelnd
11 71 477 S’Y
If 71 i l l
Toronto
West
14 It 554 —
Kenss Cty
to
77 II 5)0
■ Oekind
11 1) .417 J’Y
Minnesot
tf 14 441 s
Seattle
I I 7) .4Jt s
Teuas
17 14 JtS 7
Chicago
Calilorni
IS 24 144 1
■ First ball divtston winner
Thursday’! Results
Cleveland S, Benton t
Baltimore I . New York I
Seattle 1. Teias I, I I Innings
Kansas City t , Minnesota 1
Chicago 4, California I
Friday's Oamts
(All Timas COT)
Cleveland
(Walts
7 tl
at
Boston (Hurst 1 0 ). 7 :K P m
Baltimore (McGregor 1141 at
New York (John tO I. I P m
Milwaukee ICaldwell I I I ) at
Detroit (Morris U S ), I p m
Ttaas (Hough 2 I) at Min
nesota (Havens S *t. 0:15 P m.
Seattle
I Bannuter
II)
at
Kansas City (Wright M l . M S
"Toronto (Leal M i l *1 Call
M rn lt (Zahn f I I ) , 10:10 p m
Chicago
(Dotson
III
at
Oakland (Norris
110),
to JO

pm
Saturday’s Oamas
Cleveland at Boston
Milwaukee el Detroit
Toronto ol California
Chicago at Oakland
Baltimore et New York, night
Scelite at Kansas City, nigtd
Teias at Minnesota, night

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M R s-M onlreal. Lee t l) , Cro
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and Puiols W —Knepper I f 4).
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and
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Sortmen. Shirley ( ) l, Lillell
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Bair ( f l and Porter, Brummer
t il , Sane her ( I) W - M
Davis
I I I ) L - Sorensen ( I I I . HRe­
st
gouiS.
Tenace
1
IS).
Philadelphia, Boone (4).
LOS Ang

San Fran

OISUOOOOI- I IS I
Oil 100 00 0- ) 10 I

Welch and Sciosda. Crlllln.
lu lls ( I I . Rowland (S). Lavelle
I I ) . Breimng ( I ) . Hergesheimer
If ) and May W -W elch (IS ). L
- C r lllln
III)
H R -L o s
An
gales, Sciosda t l)

101 100M0- t 11 I

NY
Chi

11)070 l t » - 10 10 4

Falcone. Leech (1). Marshall
( 4), Orosco ( t l and Stearns,
Crlllln. Smith IS). M a rti I I ,
Tidrow I I ) . Eastwick ( f l and
Davis
W -T Id ro w
(] I ) .
L—
Orosco (O il. HRs—Now York.
Valentine
2
(I);
Chicago.
Waller I I ) . Durham (10). Davis
(4), Bonds (4).
American Leaout
Balt
101 010 100- S t 0
NY.
001 000 0 0 0 - 1 4 4
Palmer
and
D r m p ii* /
McGailigan 111, Fraiiar
(7)
and Cerone W -P a lm e r ( I t ) .
L -G u id ry
(114)
H R -B a l
iimore, Dauer 14).
Cleve
010 000 M l - S 10 I
Potion
000 101 OOP - 1 t l
Brennan.
Splllner
(4)
and
H attay. Torrei. Burgmalar (7)
and Gfdman W -S pilln ar (1 4 |.
L -T o rra l
(111.
H H -B o tlo n .
Cedman (41.

(11 limiagt)

SetUI
100 000 000 0 1 - 1 4 0
Teuas
000 000 100 0 0 - I 4 I
Beallit.
A n d e rs e n
(71.
Rawley (7), Drago ( I t ) and
Bulling. Firova (4), N irro n 14).
Medich, Comar ( I I I and Sund
berg
W -R a w le y
(1 4 ).
L—
Medich ( t 4). MR S eillt*.
Meyer 111.
Mins
Kan cu y

000 010 0 1 0 - 1 10 0
040 014 0 0 * - 1 14 1

Haven. Vetelic ( I I , Cooper
(41. Hohbt ( t l and Wynegar,
Liudner (M i Leonard, Quisen
berry ( t l and Wathan. Quirk
(II
W -Leenard 111 ID . L—
Havens ( IS ) M R -K # n **s City,
Otis &lt;♦). Minnesota. Engle (4).
Chi
Cal,I

Oil 001 100- 4 10 0
010 000 0 0 0 - 1 41

Lamp
and
Hastier
III.
Mahler ( f ) end
(IS )
L -K is o n
Chicago. Baines

Fisk;
Kiton.
Jettarson
III,
OH. W -L e m p
(O il.
HR—
(II.

1• ,to* rr mf »

Batting
(based an 1.1 appaarances
each team's garnet played)
National Laapua
■ ah n pci.
Madlock, Pit
IS 2*1 I I ))!
Rose. Phi
f i i f f no H I
14 I I] l i t
Baler. LA
)tt
Grittey, Cm I 111 I t )
Cncpcn, Cln
f l )14 120 ID
f t 1)4 104 .211
Brooks, NY
Dawson. M il
f 4 J40 t i l lit
Howe. Hou
t4 ) U 10) Kt
Durham, Chi
l i l t ) ft M l
Schmidt. Phi
f 4 ) M 104 M l
American Ltagu t
Pclrek. Sea
ZiSk. Sea
Hndrsn. Oak
Hrgrve. Cle
Hemy. Bos
Cooper, Mil
Mmphry, N
Oliver, Te«
Carew. Cal

tS)7) IIS Ml
fS)!0 lit I I I
15 )2I 101 124
ft ) « III 124
•4
ii
tl
II
ta
II

290
))i
)«4
)10
40t
)44

fl
ioa
111
96

114

id

MI
Ml

105

Mt
115
110

Home Runs
National League — Schmidt
Phi
II.
Dawson,
M il 71.
Kingman, NY 71. Foster, Cln
20. Hendrick. Stl II
American League — Armas.
Oak 11;
Thomas.
M il 20,
Murray. Bat and Event. Bos
It; Crlch. Cal and Lutm tkl, Chi
II

AtOrtonde-Stmlnole
Thursday night results
First game
■1 Simon Zarraga I 40 S 20 2 40
ILecona Atone
5 20 4 20
I Negui Oyarl
110
Q (1 11 l l . l t l T 11-17) 7 f l.II
Second game
) Negui Vegas
U 00 17 10 I 40
I Lrconi Elorta
4 40 ) 70
] Rice Cilon!i
S40
O I M I l f . I l i P I S - l ) 111 Mr T IS17) 114 M l DD (1 11 14.41
Third game
IL e q u rV r g a i
I t 00 S 10 4 10
) Simon Z arreg i
170 ) 00
50144 Arn#
5 10
O i l I I I I 44; P i l l ) I l f . I l l Tbi
I I I I ) 474 I*
Fourth garni
I Ira E lo r ll
17 40 It 70 10 00
SZateJuenl
7.40 4 00
7 Gerey Oyerl
4 40
Q IS I I 77.41) P ( I SI 144.M ) T IIs ii m i l l
Filth game
ILecube Terre
1100 5 40 1 00
)Sa,d Vegas
4 10 100
JManoio Goicoechea
7 10
Q l i lt 11 M , P ( M l Il.tO r T (7.
141 I I I 14
Hath game
S P ill Oyarl
t 40 7 70 1 70
lO guita Atano
1010 140

Although tie grew up and went to
school in western Ohio, Berenyi was a
Mels’ fan as a kid.
"Because of Tom Seaver," he says.
"I thought he was a great pitcher and I
liked the way he acted. 1 was in the

I L e l l l Atcollle
4 10
0 (7 -1 ) 41.44; P IS -]) 111 I I I Tb i
ll- l - f ) 411.44
Seventh garni
7 Bilbao
U 40 4 40 4 00
4 A|uria
4 10 4 40
I ira
7 40
Q 17*41 41.74; P (1-4) 141 to; T ()■
4 4) 14)7 I I

Eighth game
5 Said Terra
U 40 7 10 5 00
IManolo Echeva
S 40 4 00
J lr a Y ia
4M
0 ( 1 ) 1 I f .44; P ( M l M i l ; T i l
1 11 417 to
Ninth game
1 Garay
Goicoechea
D i d 7 ao a 70
5 Negui Echtva
t 00 4 40
2 Alurla F a rih
5 40
O il I I I I It ; P i l l ) D IM ; T i l
M l IIS 41
10th game
IZ i r r e
IS 10 7 00 4 40
ILecube
4 40 7 40
IManolo
2 40
O ( M l 14 44; P 114) t f M ; Tbi
(1 I I I 7M.7I

15,000 MILE LIMITED WARRANTY
INCLUDES ROAD HAZARD8_________

D u ra -T U F F
Retreads
a Fro# Mount
• Free Rotation
• Free Flat Repair
• On our Ur*

llth game
4 Ricardo Echeva I I 40 10 *0
1 Bilbao E loria
1 40
I Ira Vegas
Q (1-41 l t . l l ; P i l l ) 114.44;

3 10
7 40
140
T (4

A78x13
B78x13
078x14
678x14
560x15

Plus Tax and
RecappaWo Trade In
Whitewalls $1.00 More
F.E T.of 35c lo 70c Each

1 II Itg.M

A u &gt; n &amp; s $
W HEN |

600x13
650x13
650x14
700x14
600x15

078x14
678x14
678x15
G7Bx15
C78x13

695x14
775x14
775x15
825x15
700x13

GBt

Dayton D ELU XE 78

Runs Balled In
National League — F ile r, Cln
I I ; Schmidt, Phi l i t Buckner,
Chi
and
Carter,
M il 45;
Concepcion, Cin 41.
American League — Armas,
Oak I f .
M urray.
Bal 44
Ogllvla, M il 41. Winfield. NY
44. Evans. Bos 12

Slit

1 8 .9 9

The ever age perton hat tomewhat lew than five quarts of
blood.

A70X13
plus 1.55
FET

NEW COM ER!
“Florida's own greeting
senrica" — dedicated fo
welcoming now rosWonU

American League — Mender
son. Oik SI. Crui, Sea 42;
LeFlore. Chi 7); Wilson, KC M .
Dilone. Cle I I

Sit#
145x12
165/70x13
185/70x13
155x14
165x14

Price
34.99
49.99
59.99
46.99
l

Plus Tax &amp; Old Tiro Off Car
F.E.T. ol 1.23 lo 3.45 Each

Lata W in s -m -llll

IS .N

1.04

140*
070*14 tl.H
anus tin
M7I*1» t i n

1.14
in
l.M
1.17

Biackwails

105-14

ZOSitS
ZZSj I5

Bflltil]

canal*
wn&gt;i4
ERTlil*
Htnau
caniir
(4171a14

J7IH5.

P205/75RI4
(715/75415
P7J5/I5RI5
FIIS/TSRIJ
P175'75RI4
P1I5/75R14
F105/75R14
FK6/75RM
R1J/7Mf4
PZ2V7SAM
PM/TSRfS

S4M
M .H

UN

U .M
40.M
11.f t
MM
MM
71 M
T IM

J l.ll

Itedonoftel Factory 2nda or

Laura M ia —Mf*IMS
C M riiw I tr

Amtrlcen Laagua — Stewart,
Bal
111;
Lamp.
Chi
171.
McCetty. Oak 140; Bums. Chi
154. John. NY 7 40
Itr lk tw to
National Laagua — Valen
w e la, LA 141; Carlton, Phi I l f ;
Soto, Cin 111; Ryan, Hou IM ;
Gullit kton. M tl 1H.
American League — Barker,
Cle ! » ;
Blyleven, Cle 107;
Guidry, NY and Leonard. KC
t l ; Burns. Chi *4.
Ssvws
National League — Sutter,
SIL 71. Allen, NY end Minion,
SF 17; Camp, A ll IS; Hume,
Cin and Lucas, SO I I .
American League — Fingers.
M il
II.
Gosaagt,
NY
10,
Quisenberry, KC 17. Corbett,
Min IS. Saucier. Del I I

Eiiita

S tM l EM ted R a d la lt
w llttowall “X*
Blickwill Xtx a z x
Jill— _Alat Fltol1_P»1«*

« -a -X
WMTW1

earned Bun Average
(bated an 1 Inning par each
ite m ’s games played)
National
League — Ryan,
hou IIS ; Knepper, K w l.S I,
Carlton. Phi 1.1); Reuse. LA
114. Blue. IF 7 41.

FIT
tu g t.H

MICHEUN “ X ” A “ X IX ”

Florid# Ownsd ^
Florida Manat sd
A call from you will bring a
prompt vigil from our raproaontatlvo. th# has brochurss, civic Information;
and to holp with your chop­
ping rwadg, card* ol In*
traduction tram local mar*
chants.

Pitching
Victories
National Laagua — Seaver,
Cin 111. Valemucta. LA U S ;
Carlton. Phi 12 4; Ruthven, Phi
II 4. Rogers. M il, It 7.
American
League
—
D.
Martinet. Bal 14 4; Vuckovich.
M il 114; Morris. Del U S ;
McCally. Oak 114; nlnt pilch
ert lied with I I wins

Priot

A7IH1
F7U14

o Na thump polyester
cord body
o Action tread design
o Modern, 7f! series
profile
Plus old tire off car

W e lc o m e

Staten Bases
National Laagua — Raines,
M il I I ; Moreno. Pit )7; Scotl.
M il JO, Dawson. M il and North,
SF I I

v

Rk h m a n

Reds’ farm sy stem when he was traded
to Cincinnati and it made me happy I
was in the same organization as him.
Ttie first time I ever met him was
during spring training in 1980 and he'd
say ’hi' to me, but he’s not the kind of
guy you were Just going to go over and
start a conversation with. I couldn't
bring myself lo talk with him."
Berenyi talks to Seaver a little more
now, or to be more exact, the Reds’
three-time Cy Young Award winner
talks more to him.
"It really gives you a boost the day
ufter you pitch a good game to have a
fellow like him come over and pay you a
compliment," Berenyi says.
V

J a l A la i

L e a d e n

o r t i

Milton

for a playoff berth in the National
taague West.
He is a nephew through marriage of
Ned Garver, who once won 20 games for
a last-place St. tau ls Browns’ club and
also pitched for the Detroit Tigers, but
seldom volunteers tluit information for
(ear perhaps someone might gel the
idea lie’s trying lo ride on G arver's coal
tails.

Brake Work

*34“

Raptaco From Disc
Pad* i Turn Rolotg
Most American C a n

Otter Social Sarvicw
oFriMEiiMfMr
ol

Whail M igrant

10“

Most American
Cara

7 BIO LO C A T IO N S
S H o u ia

24S01 OttANOO ML (17-91) UJtfOCD m

Q mcUm) S a n a &lt;9*c.
i
Homs Office
804*7344031

to* t l f « i*.#-* * * * * * ^

I

•

Hi «4 * •

« * ^ i« * M 4 ie P g. ("NT •«# ft tor S&lt;%

^ f9

u

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rse to OBANBI A V I. toMtol
• toN g. OHAwet A V I. OSIABto
SIM to.. COLONIAL DR. tff-M
If f toto
1 454* S. OEANOI SLIM . TR . 4114*1
Jt BLVD. 1)1-421*
_____________________ ,
to* l|MOB AN SLVD. M l-4744
OPEN MONDAY THRU tATURDAV IAJA. T IL 4 WM.

m
e»\w
A
.j-LtoV
.-ktlib
*-■*-».

M '

r.\ ■

tSftr

t IM 1 ---------------------------

.AhW.LV, to. .

�»A—Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

BLO N D IE

Friday, Sapt. 25, ttll

M tz o r m e R ^ o o M X J
BELIEVE IN
DREAMS?

by Chic Young
IT S RAISES I DON T ) K~fB E L IE V E IN i---- ' ,

ACROSS

Amwer to Piavtoui Purrle

41 life

42 Moving
Q L 3 L H J U |( J U U
I Enormoul
vehicle!
nnnnnB unn
5 Hard hesried 45 Houiewife i ti­
Hlnmh. (or
tle |ib b r|
□
on*
46 Seimen
9 Thouimdth
49 Choral work
□
u
u
n
n
n
o
n
n
u
u
u
12 Sights
52 Ivy
a n n
n a n
□□□
13 Eigtr
53 Carry
14 Year (Sp|
54 Weitarn weed
15 Pivot
55 Bird d a n
IS Avtruon
56 Printer's
18 Sup*rliliv*
maaiurt (p i)
luffu
57 Think
19 Tutor
56 Small lirird
20 Betide*
3B Dyting tub
17 Round o(
21 Scotch cup
DOWN
ap pliuu
23 Tun* period
36 Have (archaic)
19 Compatt
(abbr)
39 Incorracl
1 Flowtr holder
25 Witered t ill
point
(prafu)
2
la
not
wall
27 Wirrior
22 Curva
41 Engine aound
3
Grimiest
31 Wtlh (Fr)
23 Drudge
42 Rtt-Jik* rodent
4 M ao____
32 Lei sink
24 Badly
lung
43 Jeck-in-the33
2»dung
25 Mother
5 Valley*
putpit
34 Inteimednt*
26 Stove
6 Atien
44 Complaint
(prdii)
27
Boat
rida
35 H«*d covering 7 Actiett
45 Vtrmin
2B Copying
Farrow
36 Putporl
47 Once mort
29
Ralieve
endorument 8 Tima rone
48 Ralai
30 Ballow
jabbi ]
37 Formicery (2
50 Aged
9 Poital ttrvic* 32 African
w d i)
51 Smell deer
gianland
39 Mother (Let) 10 Hoteli
52 Front
35 W.na (Fr J
11 Emblem
40 Ampertand
1

2

3

4

5

12

13

15

16

6

7

8

9

29

30

47

46

17
20

21

■
22

"
24
■

25

11

14

18

by Art Sansom

THE BORN LOSER

10

"

26

26

%

■

31
■
35

34
n
37

■

■
36

j

■
39

31

"

■
40
■
42

43

44
■
52

"

by Bob Montana

ARCHIE
Z f k
MOWE COMPANIES AKt
RELUCTANT THESE DAYS
TO INVEST IN NEW STORIES

THEY WANT TO PLAY IT
SAFE ANO ONLY FILM STORES
THAT HAVE BEEN PROVEN
F Y V JIIIA P f

49

50

53

54

55

56

57

58

ONLY USE MATERIAL THAT
HAS ALREADY GOTTEN
AN 'A ' •
&gt;

51

u

HOROSCOPE
By BERNICE BEDE OSOL

For Saturday, September 26, 1981

EEK A MEEK

I MOTTflOUERUEO ABOUT
AUV 50CALLED TWREAT TD
THfc B J M t a J M B J T

by Howie Schneider

IF THIS PLAidfcT STARTS
HAVIUG f f m £ lA S ,T W

SYBt OUR SCIENTISTS

YOUR HIKTIIDAY
September 26, 1381
Something on which you
tuny have given up will tall
within your reach in the year
following your birlhttuy. Stay
utop things when the &lt;n&gt;portunlly p resen ts Itself,
you’ll wnnl to be prepared.
I.lllllA (Sept. 23-Ocl. 231
TtHTe could be strings nt*
lad led In a (avnr that
someone lias offered to do for
you. Before accepting, make
sure you don’t mind the price.
Rom ance, trav el, luck,
resources, (wssible pitfalls
and career for Hie coming
months are all discussed in
your A stro-Graph which
begins with your birthday.
Mail tl (or each to AstroGraph, Box 489, Radio City
Station, N.Y. 10019. Be sure to
specify birth date.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Tact uikI charm ure two tools
you use very advantageously
today, but you could un­
consciously
abuse
the
generosity of (xtrsons who are
drawn to you. Take care.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) You sliow your best
side today wlien you relax and
don’t try to impress anybody.
When you attempt to display
your heller ulribules, you
come off all wrong.
CAPRICORN (D ec. 22Jan. 191Don’t Id doubts creep
in after you’ve established
plans with others. Continue
with the program and Id time
render tin* verdict.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) Treat everyone you meet
today with the same friend­
ship and congeniality you do

those to whom you feel close.
II you don’t, u nice person
could be snubbed.
PISCES iFeb. 20-March 20)
You may in all good faith
promise to do .something (or
another, only to find out later
Hiut it won’t be possible. This
person will understand. You
won't lose face.
ARIES (March 21-Apri! 19)
Excellent gains can be made
by both parties if you and
another person can work in
unison and mutually aid each
other. Neither should feel his
stiare of the job is tougher.
TAURUS i April 20-May 20)
You have everything going for
you today, so don’t allow thal
little green imp of jealousy to
goof up your good time bybeing loo possessive of one
you love.
GEMINI (May 21-June 201
You and your mate may not
be in complete accord as to
what family chores should be
done today. If you can't agree,
draw lots.
CANCER I June 21-July 22)
When hold m easures ure
called for today, have the
courage of your convictions.
Every body is on your side and
will support you all the way.
t.EO (July 23-Aug. 22) You
might have much loo difficult
of a time today saying "no" to
persons who have their hand
out. Don't tie a Scrooge, but
also don’t be a pushover.
VIRGO l Aug. 23-Sept. 22) A
family member will have his
or her feelings hurl today If
you make plans in which
they’re excluded. Be con­
siderate of kin as well as of
pals.

ANNIE

*

*

AT-***-

^

DEAR DR. LAMB - I have
been having rectal bleeding
for about a year, R Is not a
great deal of blood, bul It
shows up for a day or two
every four to six weeks. It
even shows up on my clothes.
The doctor has given me tests
in the hospital and all he found
were some in tern al and can send 75 cents with a long,
self-addressed
external hemorrhoids. There stam ped,
is no pain nr itching, except a envelope for it to me, in care
great deal of gas when
of Ihls newspaper, P.O. Box
bleeding occurs. The doctor
gave me suppositories and 1551, Radio City Station, New
told me to use hot sitz baths. I York, NY 10019. Surgery is not
still have bleeding every alw ays n ecessary or In­
m onth or so, in sm all dicated. Some of the Interna!
ones can be treated by In­
amounts. Do you think I
jecting
a sclerosing agent
should have rectal surgery? I
around the offending veins.
am 65 years old.
And regular bleeding, even
DEAR READER - R is
of a small amount, can be a
important for anyone who has
cause for iron deficiency thal
bleeding
to
have
an
can result in an anemia. So it
exam ination. D on't ju st
is wise to keep a check on
assum e
that
it
is
thal.
hemorrhoids. There are a
number of serious medical
DEAR DR. LAMB - I am
conditions that can also cause 16 years old and have always
bleeding. I would doubt you used sanitary napkins when
have any of those in view of menstruating. I have tried
your examination.
several times to use tampons
but can’t. I am unable to in­
Your letter makes several
sert them even tialf way. The
Important points. First, you
lip is pressing up against
have no pain. Internal
something causing pain.
hemorrhoids are inside the
rectum and the pain fibers
Is it possible I have some
that cause pain and Itching kind of growth blocking the
arc outside, under the ex­ opening? Am I Just naive
ternal skin area. The internal about how to use one?
type tend to bleed without
DEAR READER - Go see
causing pain. The external
your
doctor. You might in­
type tend to cause pain and
itching without bleeding. Of deed have a m echanical
obstruction. R will require an
course, If you Bre really
unlucky you can have both.* examination to know for sure
and If you are simply doing
Then you mention gas and something wrong, you will
that your doctor gave you a learn how to do It right. There
suppository. Thai suggests are girls born without a
less than perfect bowel func­ normal opening. Others have
tion. Constipation and bowel a very rigid hymen that can
problem s that re su lt in prove difficult. It is rare, bul
straining make hemorrhoids in view of the large number of
worse. Thai includes hard people who write to me I can
stools — hence the sup­ expect to hear from some rare
positories.
cases.
There are several different
And you should consider If
approaches to treatin g you want to use tampons at all
hemorrhoids discussed in The or nol in view of the problems
Health U’tler number 13-12, of toxic shock. If you do use
Ilem orrholds: New T re a t­ them, be sure and change
ments lor an Old Affliction, every day at least once and
which I am sending you. don't leave one In overnight
Others who want this issue when you are sleeping.

W IN AT BRIDGE
NORTH
4 AJ7
4 Q J I7
4 7J
4K Q J1
WEST
4*

4NOJ4
• J 101 1

4 1 0 11SI

I IS I I

EAST
4 K15
4 K I1 J
4 A K Q I4
47

SOUTH
4 Q 1 IH I1
4 A4
4 • I
4 A 14
Vulnerable. North-South
D ealer West
West
Pau
14
Pats
I’l U

Nerth
14
Put
44

East
Obi
34
Pat*

Sm U
R*bdl
14
P au

Opening lead 4 J

By Oswald Jacoby
sad AlaaSoolai
East's Jump to three dia­
monds was mainly preemp­
tive and destined to make it
difficult for North-South to
find the right contract.

It didn't quite shut South
out and South bid his spade
suit. North raised to game
and West opened his Jack of
diamonds.
East looked over dummy
and didn't Like what be saw.
He could count on his king of
trumps for one trick, but
there was little chance that
his king of hearts would be
worth anything
There might be two dia­
monds tricks West could
have just a four-card dia­
mond suit.
Where was the fourth
trick going to come from?
Maybe East could get to ruff
a club.
East did all this thinking
in much leas time than it
took us to write about it.
Then he overtook his
partner's jack of diamonds
with the queen and led back
the seven of clubs.
South knew be was in
(rouble. He led his queen of
spades and rose with
dummy’s ace in order to get
in two rounds of trumps but
it did him no good.
East took his king and led
back a low diamond to
West’s 10 spot. Back came a
club and another good cootract had bitten the dust.
iNcwiPATta ofTtanuu u n i

by Leonard Star

t tort#Ifoifnm tag*Mil

■M

Spare The Scalpel
For Hemorrhoids

**

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�OURSELVES
Evining HeraM, Sanford, FI.

Friday, Sept. U , l f l l —f A

Gardening

Nitrogen Deficiency Common In Plants
One key to successful lanti&amp;Tfinini?
landscaping in
In
Florida is making sure your soil has
enough nitrogen.
Almost w ithout exception, plant
growth can be improved by applying
nitrogen to the soil.
But nitrogen deficiency continues to be
the most common nutritional problem
affecting woody ornamentals In Florida.
Nitrogen is probably the most important
element affecting the health of your
woody ornamentals, and it’s needed in
greater amounts than any other element,
as well.
Nitrogen allows plants to synthesize
amino adds, and these amino adds are

nilmoAn
mop
thnthenlnnt
Kutbut yellowing
(• Is worse
nnon
over
plant,
nitrogenio islnm*kAj4
leachednutoutin inikathenwuuaa
process.
the fruiting branches of the tree. If the
Abo, if you plant your ornamentals In a
plant is severely affected, the foliage will
place where vegetables have grown for
become quite sparse and a good amount
many years, the soil is probably defident
of dead wood will appear on the plant.
in nitrogen.
You can suspect nitrogen deficiency if
Nitrogen deficient plants show slow
Horticulturist
growth, if any, and they are more
you notice a uniform loss of green color
susceptible to cold injury.
from a plant’s leaves. This loss of color
may vary from pale yellow-green In the
Working some organic m atter into the
the building blocks of protein. But, beginning to an ivory color, if the
soil
will help it hold nitrogen better. I
because nitrogen is very low In Florida deficient condition persists.
must
point out, however, that organic
soils, nitrogen defidency is a common
If your plant has a nitrogen
m
atter
alone won't clear up a nitrogen
problem.
deficiency, the leaves will be thinner and
The main reason why we liave nitrogen smaller than normal and there will be deficiency. You can't udd enough organic
m atter to restore proper plant growth.
deficiency in Florida is the soil. Florida’s fewer of them.
Working It into the soil simply improves
sandy soil drains very rapidly, and
Nitrogen deficiency affects leaves all

If you choose to add a basic gardening
fertilizer, apply II four times a year, at
the rale of two to four pounds per hun­
dred square feet. For the high nitrogen

One to three weeks after applying the
fertilizer, you should expect n noticeable
improvement in the green color of the
foliage.

In And Around Winter Springs

Miss Koch,
James Jones
Repent Vows

VFW Post 5405 Presents
Police, Fireman Awards

Penelope Elizabeth Koch and Jam es Whigham Jones
were married on Aug. 29, In a double ring ceremony at the
Church of The Incarnation, Dallas, Texas. The Rev. Jack
Altman was the officiating clergyman.
The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Graham
Robinson Ellsworth Koch, 13720 Spruce wood Drive,
Dallas. The bridegroom's parents are Mr. and Mrs.
Donald Randall Junes, 1919 Sanford Ave., Sanford.
Given In marriage by her father, the bride chose for her
vows a formal silk organza gown, fashioned along the
princess silhouette. The reembroidered Alecoo lace
bodice, embellished with seed pearb, was designed with a
Queen Anne neckline and slim tapered sleeves. The
controlled skirt, bordered with an insert of wide Alencon
lace, cascaded into a graceful chapel length train.
A halo held her tiered fingertip veil of imported illusion
and she carried a cascade of white roses interspersed with
baby’s breath.

VFW Post 5405 held its annual Awards Day and presented
John Govoruhk, Winter Springs Police chief, with the
Policeman of the Year Award. Fireman of the Year Award
went to Chuck Holzman.
The I-adies Auxiliary. along with the Umgwuud and
Casselberry Posts, will hold a Bike-A-Thon to benefit Cystic
Fibrosis on Saturday, from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m., at Winter Springs
Elementary School.
The Bike-A-Thon is open to all ages. Anyone interesled in
participating will need to have sponsors. For information coll
Mary at 327-1949.
The Tuskawllla PTA announces it has achieved its goal of 100
percent membership. A magazine sale will start on Sept. 24,
according to a spokesman.
The Tuskawilla Homeowners Association will meet Oct. 2, at
8 p.m. In the New Fellowship Church, corner of Tuskawilla
Rd.. and la k e Drive.
All candidates who are running for Winter Springs City
Council, along with Mayor Troy Piland, have been Invited to
attend this meeting. There will be a question and answer
session for the candidates.

Becky Wells of Dallas attended the bride as matron of
honor. Bridesmaids were Kiley Pryor, Carol Williams,
Jill Rothe, Kim Jackson and Cathy Cox, all of Dallas, and
Cacye Cum beat, Jackson, Miss. They wore peach colored
gowns and each carried a bouquet of peach roses and tiger
lilies showered with baby's breath.
Donald R. Jones served his ion as best man. Ushers
were Ted Walker, Larry Bauman and Jeff Franzen, all of
Dallas. Groomsmen were Tom Jones of Dallas and Lt.
D.R. (Randy) Jones Jr., Pensacola, both brothers of the
bridegroom; Hunt Campbell, Nashville, Tenn., and
Travis Green, New York City; and Rob Koch, brother of
the bride, Harry Hawks and Kim Slavinoha, all of Dallas.
A reception at Norlhwood Country Club followed the
ceremony.
After a wedding trip to Hawaii, the newlyweds are
making their home In Dallas where the bridegroom is a

iknthe
enll'a
nmlcturn
hnMinn
nananitu
Thie
filter mtilrn
fertilizer
maketrftlir
yourfinnlfm
applications, but
soil's
moisture
holding
capacity.
This fart
only use one to two pounds of fertilizer for
cuts down on leaching.
a hundred square feet. For the single
To treat the nitrogen deficiency, you'll
nutrient fertilizer, the amount you use
have to add a fertilizer to the soil. There
will depend on the percentage of nitrogen
ore three ways you can add nitrogen. You
in the material.
may choose to add a basic gardening
fertilizer, such as an 8-8-8, or you may
As an example, a half a pound of
want a high nitrogen content Fertilizer, ammonium nitrate, that contains 33,5
such as a 16-4-8. Or, you may decide to percent usable nitrogen will supply
supply wily the nitrogen Itself, and use enough nitrogen for a ten by ten foot
something tike ammonium nitrate.
area.

Tiin Howlngton is recuperating from an emergency ap ­
pendectomy.
The Girl Scouts are still in dire need of leaders. A leader for
Junior Troop 478, girls In grades 4,5, and 6, has yet to be found.
There is a waiting list of 20 girls for this troop. A leader Is also
needed for a Cadet Troop, grades 7, 8, and 9.

MHS. JAM ES WHIGHAM JONES
real estate broker with Die Swearingen Co., and the bride
is investment analyst for Vantage Income Properties, a
real estate development firm.

These girls are our leaders of tomorrow. With so many
working mothers, maybe grandmothers or aunts would like to
volunteer. You need not be a mother or relative of a scout to be
a Scout leader. If Interested, call Carman ol 645-1020.

Dee
Gatrell
Winter Springs
Correspondent
127-4371

from the elements. All homeowner members ore welcome to
use it. Tlie bulletin board was built by Ken Ritter, a member of
the association.
Tlie winner of the Yard of the Month Award for September
was Gordon and Mildred Ellsworth, 724 S. Edgemund St,
At landgrnf, 413 Holly CL, a member of Sugar Creek
Homeowners Association, has been appointed as the new City
Recreation Director for Winter Springs. He says he will be
planning many activities (or the children of Winter Springs.
The South Seminote Lions G ub will plant a tree on the
grounds ol the Iwngwood City Hall on Oct. 8 to represent the
Symbol at Peace,
Mrs. Iwls Workman, president of the lioness’ would like to
invite any Winter Springs residents to Join the club. They meet
at the Quality Inn on U.S. Interstate 4 and State Route 434, the
third Tuesday of each month, at 7 p.m.
If anyone knows a person who needs a hearing aid, glasses or
a blind person needing help in getting a seeing-eye dog trained,
please contact Ixls at 830-4873.
TAKE

A

F e e l B e tte r
S leep B e tte r
In A u ( oncld ion#*d
Com loi 1

IU J U i O *

ORANCEJUICE
B R E A K

Fathers As Well A s Moms
Deserve Equal Job Rights
DEAR ABBY: My husband and I
recently lost a premature baby boy. He
was our first child and the first grand­
child on both sides. My husband and I
were both very grateful to our family and
friends (or their support during such a
• difficult time. However, all the [lowers,
gifts and condolence letters were ad­
dressed to me. My husband hardly left
my side during my stay at the hospital.
' That dear man stood on his feet for 12
hours beside me while I was In labor.
When the baby was bom we both held
• him and wept together, knowing he would
live only a few hours. It was our loss and
’ we both grieved.
Abby, why do people consider the Ion
of a child only the mother's loss? It’s the
father's loss, too. Please remind your
(. readers that men need Just as much
‘ support as women when their children
are 111 or dying.
I was given time off from work to
recuperate emotionally, but my husband
had to go back to work the day after our
baby died. Thank you (or letting me get
this off my chest.
v
E.W.
P DEAR E.W.: Thank yon for a valuable
i addition to this column. You also laadV v e rte a tly gave a beoet la the Equal
Rights Ameadmcat, which would make
dlsrrimlaattoa between the sexes Illegal
our Coastituliaa. la other words, U
a Job provided time off to recuperate

emotionally after the death of a child,
lathers as well as mothers would receive
It
DEAR ABBY: 1 am writing this in
hopes that some of the older generation
moms will read it and be more un­
derstanding of young mothers who work.
I have a beautiful 3-munlh-old baby.
She Is my second child. I plan to go back
to work next month. I've always worked
part time to help support our family. My
working outside the home Is not a m atter
of luxury, it's a necessity. You would
think people would realize how expensive
it Is to raise a family today, but I guess
they don't.
Abby, I am sick of hearing older moms,
including my own, say, "How can you
leave (hat beautiful baby all day?"
Now I Just reply, "This beautiful baby
Ukea to ea t!” Sign me.
I'D RATHER BE HOME
DEAR RATHER: That's food for
thought Well said.
DEAR ABBY: My mother and my best
friend are having a disagreement. My

friend says that a girl can't get pregnant
the first lime she has sex. My mother
says tliat is a lot of hogwash. Who is
right?
I'm sure many girls are wondering the
same thing. Sign me.
HASNOIDEA
DEAR HAS: Your mother Is right!
DEAR ABBY: i am an attractive
bachelor who would really like to get
married, but it seems the only women 1
find appealing are married! Being a
romantic, I get Involved with them
anyway, which leaves me very little time
to court single women, should I happen to
meet one I like.
I can't figure out why married women
hold such a fascination for me. They
were all single before they were married,
and many of them were available, but 1
had no Interest In them. Why, oh why,
Fair Oracle?
IJKES 'EM MARRIED
DEAR LIKES: E lem entary. Yon
really don’t want to get married, because
you aren't prepared to. make a com­
mitment. The married ones are "safe" —
and so are you. Grow up!
Do you have questions about sex, love,
drugs and the pain of growing up? Get
Abby'i new booklet: "What Every TeenAger Ought to Know." Send f t and a long,
stamped (33 cents), self-addressed en­
velope to: Abby, Teen Booklet 1MM
Hawthorne Blvd., Suite SIM, H aw thorn,
Calif. 902SO.

The Sallie Harrison Chapter ol the Daughters of the
American Revolution held Its first fall meeting a t the home of
Dr. Sara Ingang in Idyllwllde.

fil

Constitution
Week Observed
n
I By Daughters
v

•

rOd

fob

Congratulations are In order to Mr. and Mrs. Hank Pace on
the birth of their son, Sleven Henry Pace. Steven was born
Aug. 31, and weighed S lbs., 10 oz. When he was 2 weeks old he
had to go back to the hospital because of a virus, but is twine
now and doing fine.
Maternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Tarantino
of Freeport, MY.
Paternal grandparents are Mrs. Joan Pace of Winter Purk,
and John Pace of l,ake Worth, Florida.
Meta Porter, leader of Brownie Troop 907, says she has an
opening for three more first graders. The troop meets at Inke
Hodge on Tuesday evenings, from 7-8:30. The girls will have an
investiture ceremony on Oct. 6, for all Incoming members.
The troop is going to start practicing for a night of Halloween
caroting. For information call Mrs. Porter at 831-8527.

Maternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Gene Rogero,
Rosalia Drive, Sanford, and paternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Fred Ferlisi of Jacksonville.

F’ M J7J 0U 1

W

Or U n d o U» HI *11

14 It

O i l M | A | i n o IN (
Vh I?; t s t l

Unfwrd

too t ShiiIoi

*9 4 *°

AVi Sd'Hoid

WEEKLY
FURNISHED BEDROOM

• S U M Service
• Levndry Facilities
• I I Channel Ceble TV
•L iv e entertainment
1 N ith tl In Lewn«e
• Family R tttavranl
• Larger R h i h i an*
Ctlicwncv Apt* Available
At Sltfhtly Hither B ile
■ Specill Ditcevnt On
Menthly
let

CAVALIER
MOTOR INN
3200 S. Orlando Dr.
(Hwy. 17 02) Sanford
(305)321-0*90

It's Part o f
the Servicel

'!'//' - '

/ft

Cake Carousel
Open To Public
The Third Annual Cake Carousel, sponsored by the Cake
Aria Society to benefit the Meals on Wheels Program, will be
held Saturday at the Greater Sanford Chamber of Commerce
building, 400 E. F irst St.

Strickland spoke on "The Reflections of the American
Constitution" and the proposed amendments to the Con­
stitution, stating that the only Amendment to the Constitution
ever repealed was the Prohibition Amendment.

According to Joan Cameron, the proceeds from the carousel
will help bake and decorate birthday cakes for some 70 elderly
■hut-ins and provide them with food an other occasions.

Mrs. Wm. S. Brumley Sr., R e g en t, presided. Prior to the
regular meeting, a Memorial Service was held for member
Mrs. Fred J . Harris.
Twenty-one members and guests were served refreshments
by tlie hostess.

The awards ceremony far those competing in the decorating
contest will get underway at 1:30 p.m. Several live contests are
planned for the public, and there will be several drawings.
Among the prises are a mixer and a color television.
The public Is welcome to view the cakes and participate in
the activities.

* *•

rti-iifh r r Iron Cwnlr 4 l
An Conditioning Sy sli*m

C A l l M IL L E R S

BIRTH
Mr. and Mrs. John F. Ferlisi, (Theresa Marie Rogero) 12710
Varina Court, Jackaonville, announce the birth of their first
child, a ion, Anthony Joseph, who weighed In at 8 lbs., 8 ozs. on
S ept 1, at SL Vincent's Hospital, Jackaonville.

THE B IS T

TV SERVICE

The Sugar Creek Homeowners Association will have a new
community bulletin board which will be put up Oct. 1. It will be
located on the comer of Panama Road and Fruitwood Avenue,
by the new playground.
The bulletin board will have a plexiglass cover lo protect il

In celebrating National Constitution Week, Mrs. T. Burch
Cornelius Introduced the speaker, Commander Guy Strickland
and his wife.

*** I « V •
&amp;

Happy 27th birthday on Sept. 27 to Diane Culpepper.

- y ^

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♦

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If you're not getting It,
ta ll 322-2611

E v e n in g H e ra ld
CIRCULATIO N M P T .

1 -1 * z,

* a * .,

9 *,

AN '»

V,

V-

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ISA—Evtnlng Harold. Sanford, FI.

Friday, Sapt. M, IN I

CALENDAR
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER *7
Rrbot and liv e Oak AA, Rrbos Club, 220 liv e Oak
Center, Casselberry, 10:30 a.m. open discussion, and 0
p.m., open meeting.
Sanlord Big Book AA, Florida Power building,
Myrtle Avenue, Sanford, open diicutsion, 7 p.m.
Seminole AA, S p.m., Hallway House off Highway 1702 on U k e Minnie Road.
. - "Young-aV-Heart” dance, 8 p.m., DeBary Com­
munity Center, Shell Road, DeBary. Open to public.
Ballroom and round dancing, 8 p.m., Temple
Shalom, Providence and Elkcam boulevards, Deltona.
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 21
Seminole High School Open House, 7:30 p.m.,
opening session In the auditorium alter which parents
will follow student's daily schedule and meet teachers.
Refreshments served in the library.
’’ Free dating service (or mature adults, 1 p.m.,
Deltona Public lib ra ry , 1691 Providence Boulevard.
Sanlord AFAnon, 8 p.m., First United Methodist
Church, Park Avenue and Filth Street.
TUESDAY, SEPT, *9
Seminole County Council PTA Skate Party, 6:30-9
p.m., All American Skating Rink, State Road 436,
Altamonte Springs. (2 (or students, parents skate free.
Tickets at Bear U k e , Spring U k e and U k e Orients
schools.
Sanford-Breaklast Rotary Club, 7 a.m., Sanlord
Airport Restaurant.
Daybreakers Toastmasters, 7:15 a.m., Sanford
House Restaurant.
Winter Springs Sertoma, 7:30 a.m., Big Cypress.
Longwood Rotary Club, 7:30 a.m., Longwood Village
Inn.
Sanlord lions d u b , noon, Holiday Inn on U k e
Monroe.
Longwood Sertoma, noon, Quality Inn, 1-4 and State
Road 434.
At-Anoa, noon, Mental Health Center, Robin Road,
Altamonte Springs.
WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 38
United Way ol Seminole County Kickoff Breakfast, 8
a.m., U k e Monroe Holiday Inn, Sanlord.
Sanford AA Beginners, 8:30 p.m., 1201 W. First St.
Starlight P rom enadm , 8 p.m., DeBary Community
Center, Shell Road.
O vereaten Anonymous, 7:30 ^.as*., Altamonte Mall,
Sears
Bora to Win AA group, 8 p.m., Ravenna Park Baptist
Church, 2743 Country Club Road, Sanlord. dosed.
AlrohoUci Anonymous, 8 p.m., Altamonte Springs
Community Church, State Road 436 at Hermits Trail.
Closed.
Wednesday Step AA, 8 p.m., Penguin Building,
Mental Health Center, Crane's Roost, Altamonte
Springs. Closed.
THURSDAY, OCT. 1
Tropical W eaven Guild ol Orlando meeting, 10 a.m.
*'•***1. John's Lutheran Church, M0R I . Orlando Ava.,
Orlando. Program — “Weaving (or Christmas." Open
to those interested in weaving or spinning.
Senior Cftlseas trip to Cypress G ard en leaving
Sanford 8:30 a.m. from Sanford d v ic Center. Pick up
at Leedi in Casselberry, 9 a.m. lunch and boat ride
included. Call 322-9148 for reservations.

«

t
&gt;

FRIDAY, OCTOBER*
Beginning tewing sponsored by Daytona Beach
Community College, 9 a.m. to noon, Deltona Public
Library, 1691 Providence Boulevard.
DeBary Garden d u b Horticulture Group, 1 p.m.,
DeBary Community Center. Regular Garden d u b
meeting, 2 p.m.

* •-SUNDAY, OCT, 4
s^V.- Sunday in the Park sponsored by SISTERS, Inc., 2-5
• p.m., Sanford Centennial Park, Fourth and Park.
Entertainment, priiea and Ice cream social.
Concert In the Park by Altamonte Springs Com­
munity Jazz Ensemble, 5-7 p.m., Westmonte Park,
Spring Oaks Boulevard, Altamonte Springs. Open free
lo public, bring chairs and blankets.

Hava yuu &gt;*«n a
photo that apptarod
in tho Evtnlng Heraid you would Uka to
havaT Wall, thay'ra
available. Now you
can ordor an l i l l
orint of any photo
Which hat appoarod
in tho Evoninf Har‘aid within tha last 39
day* for M.h ptoi

■r t

i :■ f - z i ’

4

Legal Notice
FICTITIO US NAME
N oiit* It hereby given ihel l em
&lt;*ig#ged in business el P 0 Bo&lt;
SOT). Longwood. F I * . 11750.
Seminole County, Florid* under
tha Itctittous neme of ACCURATE
M A ILIN G SERVICE, end Ihel I
inlmd to register said neme with
ihe Clerk ol (he Circuit Court.
Seminole County, Florid* in *c
cordence with the provision* of the
Fictltiout Neme Statute*. To Wit
Section Its Of Florid* Statutes
I9S7
Sig C. POSEY
Publish September II , II . M . 1
October 1. t t l l
OEM IS
IN TNK CIRCUIT COURT OF
THE E IG H TE E N TH JUDICIAL
C IRCUIT SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIOA
Civil A cl I* II N *.i 11-1914 CA-99 K
SUN BANK MORTGAGE COM
PANY.
* Florid* corporelion.
Plainlllf,
v*
W ILL IA M H ENRY STENSON
* tingle person,
Defend* nM
NOTICE OF ACTION
TO W ILL IA M H ENR Y STEN
SON
Residence: I X Ter Iwood Street;
Fern Park, Florid* 11710
M illin g A d d re tt: H e lm tU d l
Support Del 1*7*40)77. APO. New
York 0*741
YOU ARE N O TIFIE D lh*t «n
•clion lo foreclose a mortgage on
Ih* lollowlng properly in Seminole
County. Florida,
Lot IS. LAKE OF THE WOODS
TOWNHOUSE. "SECTION O N E",
according to the plat theraot, at
recorded in Plat Book It. Pag* SO,
Public Records ol Seminole
County, Florida
has been tiled agalntl you
and you are required to serve a
copy o&lt; your written defenses, II
any, lo II on PAUL F. BRYAN,
Plaintlll't attorney, whose ad
dress is *00 Courlland Street, Suit*
*00. Orlando. Florida 17104, on or
hetore Ih * 14th day Ot October.
IN I. and III* the original with the
Clark ol this Court either before
service on Plaintiff's attorney or
Im m ediately th ereafter, other
wise a default will be entered
against you lor the relief
demanded in Ih * compalnl or
petition
WITNESS my hand and Ih* seal
of this Court on f i l l
(SEAL)
ARTHUR H BECKW ITH, JR
CLERK OF TH i : COURT
By: Catherine M Ebons
Deputy Clerk
Swann and Haddock. P A
100 Courlland Street
Suite MO
Orlando. Florida 17104
Publish September II , II . 25.
October 1. IN I
DEM 17
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY. FLORIDA
PROBATE DIVISION
Flla Number PR I I 4SOCP
Division
IN R E : ESTATE OF
JOHN ALAN SCHADE.
Deceased
NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION
Th* administration ol Ihe eslal*
ol
JOHN
ALAN
SCHAOE,
deceased. Flla Number PR I I 4SI
CP, is pending In in# Circuit Court
ter Seminole County, Florid*,
Probate Division, th* address of
which Is Seminole County Cour.
House, Sanford. Florida 11771.
Th* names and addresses ol th*
personal representative and Ih*
personal representatlve's attorney
are set lorlh below
All interested persons are
required to file with this court,
W ITH IN THREE MONTHS OF
THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF
THIS NOTICE
I I I all claims
against the estate and 111 any
object ion by an Interested person
to whom nolle* was mailed that
challenges Ih * validity of th* will,
Ih* qualifications ol Ih * personal
representative.
venue,
or
jurisdiction ol th* court
ALL
C LA IM S
AND
OB
JECTIONS NOT SO F IL E D W ILL
BE FOREVER BARRED
Publication ol this Nolle* has
begun on September IS. IN I
Personal Representative:
s Florence G Schade
7*1 Sorrento Circle
Wlnler Park. FI llT fl
Attorney
lor
Personal
Representative:
OAVID W CUNNINGHAM
P O Bo* ISM
Winter Park. FI 117N
Telephone 444 4110
Publish September IS 1 October 1.
IN I
DEM 1 1 4 ____________________
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF
THE E IG H TE E N TH JUDICIAL
C IR C U IT .
IN
AND
FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY. FLORIDA
C IV IL ACTION NO. I I 1I11CA I I
K
IN RE
F O R F E IT U R E
OF
THE
F O L L O W IN G
O E S C R IB E O
PROPERTY
A 1977 Plymouth. 1 door. VIN
Nu RP71G1R1I7141 Fla License
No NC J *01 Regitter lo Carol A
M e h altt. 101 G ram
Street.
Longwood. Florida
THE STATE OF FLORIDA TO
YOU AND EACH OF YOU are
hereby notified that Ihe above
described properly has been
sailed, under and by virtu* ol
Chapter 171. a t amended, and is
now in Ih * possession ol Ih * Board
of County Commissioners ol this
County, and you. and each ol you.
are hereby further notified lhal a
Petition, under said Chapter, has
bren tiled M Ih * Circuit Court ol
the Eighteenth Judicial Circuit. In
and lor Seminole County, Florid*,
seeking Ihe forfeiture ol Ih * said
property, and you are hereby
directed and required to III* your
claim, it any you have, and show
cause, on or before October I I .
IN I. It not personally carved with
process herein, and wilhln twenty
days Irom personal sarvic* It
personally served with process
herein, why Ih* said property
should not be forfeited pursuant to
said Chapter Should you tail to III*
claim as herein directed judgment
will be entered herein against you
■n due course Persons not per
sonally served with process may
obtain a copy of the petition lor
•orleilur* hied herein Irom Ih*
undersigned Clerk of Court
WITNESS my hand and the toal
of Ih * abova mentioned Court, at
Sanlord. Florida this 17nd day of
September, I N I
(COURT SEAL)
ARTHUR H. B E C K W ITH .JR ,
CLERK OF THE ABOVE
M E N TIO NE D COURT
By Catherine M . Evan*
Deputy Clerk
Publish September IS. October l
t. I N I
OEM IN

legal Notice

U n fu m k h K l

CLA SSIFIED ADS

NOTICE OF
S H ER IFF'S SALE
NOTICE IS H E REB Y G IVEN
that by virtu* ol lhal certain
W RIT OF E*ecutlon Issued out ol
and under th* Seal of Ih * Circuit
Court ol Volusia County, Florida,
uts-n a linal lodgement rendered
l H u n ............................. M c B f lf N
in Ih* aforesaid court on Ihe ISth
1 cbitBgcutlvgtlmgs. . M ealing
day ol April. A D IN I . in that
| 00 A M. - 5:30 P.M.
7 CBINBOlHvg tllM I ..........4tC
certain cate en titled, E llis
National Bank ol Volusia County
MONDAY thru FRID A Y UeBfNBCwHvBtlMBB .ffc a MfN
Plam lifl, vs Asphalt Prolectorv
SATURDAY 9 - Noon
II.M Minimum
Inc . etc,. Delendant, which
- J U n a s M in im u m
aforesaid W rit ot Eiecution was
delivered lo me a t Sherlll ol
Semmole County, Florida, and I
have levied upon the lollowlng
described properly owned by
Asphalt P ro ia d o r t, Inc., said
properly being located in Seminole
County. F lorida, m ore par
llcularly described as follows:
One 1971 Ford One Ton Truck,
yellow in color ID No F174NS01N0
On* Small Yellow Road Roller,
! Caul -if Thanks
with gasoline engine
VIDEO Electronics Rental and
being stored a l Dave Jones
Salts C*. Is apenlng I naw
Wrecker 501 Highway 17 91, Fern
We wish lo tip re s t our deepest
starts in Central Flarlda In th*
Park. Florida
gratitude to all our Iriendt and
n a il 1 years and 1s leaking lee
and Ihe undersigned as Sheriff ol
neighbors lor Ihe Mowers, food
men and wnman In sl*M it*
Semmole County, Florida, will *1
and cards ol sympathy tanl al
starts. Star* managers, rental
II 00 A M on the llth day ol Oc
th* lime ol the lots ol our w il*
managers, secretaries, snd
and beloved mother Aid in#
lober, A D IN I . oiler lor sal* and
salts ntrsani needed naw.
Hutchinson
The
Frank
sell to the highest bidder, lor cash,
Pitas* apply m P*f»«" &gt;&gt;•
subject lo any and all ealsllng
Hutchinson Family.
C am m arclal I I . S an ltrd .
lims. al the Front (West) Door of
Callage Orads Preferred
the Semmole County Courthouse In
NEED A SERVICEMAN? You'll;
4—Persona ls
Sanlord. F lorida, the above
llnd him I It lad In our Butlnaas
described personal properly.
Directory.
That M id sale Is being mad* is
Mllsly the terms of said Writ ol WHY BE LONELY? W rit* "Gat
A
Mate"
Dating
Sarvic*.
All
Eiecution
ages P.O. Bo* 1071, Clear­
John E Polk
water. FI. 11511.
Sherlll
Seminole County, Florida
Publish: September II . IS. Oc L O N E L Y : W rite “ Bringing
lober }, 9, with Ih * M l* on October
People
To g tlh er
Deling
Service!" All ages A Senior
I I. IN I
OEM (9
Cltltent P.O. Bo* I4SI. Winter
Haven. Fla 1NI0

Sem inole

Orlando - Winter Park

322-2611

831-9993

CLASSIFIED DEPT.

RATES

HOURS

DEADLINES
Noon The Day Before Publication
Sunday - Noon Friday

AAA EMPLOYMENT
1917 ftiNCN AVL
CALI 3234174

FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice is hereby given that w*
are engaged m business al P O
Bo* 410 A ltam onte Springs.
Honda 11701 Seminote County,
Florida under Ih * liclitious name
of FUNERAL m a n a g e m e n t
ASSOCIATES, and that we intend
to register M id name with Ih*
Clerk ol ihe C ircuit Court,
Seminole County, Florida in ac
cordancewiththe provisions of th*
Fictitious Name Statutes. To Wit:
Section 445 09 Florid* Statutes
1957
Sig Kenneth R Roney
Sig Dennis L Smith
Publish September II. 15. Oc
lober 1. 9. IN I
DEM 17

5-Lost A Found
*
LOST gray male poodle Ird are*
Oeltona^needs m edication,
rewRrd ( f V l * 4451 o f 7191745

A—Child Care
FOR the Ultimate In
Child Care a Child !
World 1114414
BABYSITTING Inmy
home, any age.
H I 0451
SPUR OF THE MOMENT
BABYSITTING
111914*

NOTICE OF BUDOET HEARING
The City ol Sanlord hat ten
talively adopted a budget I or I N I
•7 A public hearing to make a FI
NAL DECISION on th* budget
AND TAXES will be held on
September 71. I N I at 7 00 o'clock
P M in the City Hall in the City ol
Sanlord. Florida
City ol Sanford. Florid*
H N Tamm, Jr
City Clerk
Publish September IS. 1911
OEM IIS
NOTICBOF PUBLIC
HBARINO
NOT ICE 14 heraby given that Ih*
Board ol County Commissioner* ot
Seminole
County,
F lo rid *,
proposes to regulate the u m ot
land in Ih* uninrorporaled area
and will hold a public bearing lo
consider amendments to the
adopted Semmole County Com
prehensiv* Plan The Board will
consider adoption of Ih * following
ordinance
AN ORDINANCE AMENDING
ORDINANCE NO
77 15. THE
S E M IN O LE
COUNTY
COM
P R E H E N S IV E
PLAN;
PROVIDES FOR EXCEPTIONS
TO TABLE 10 OF THE SHORT
RANGE DEVELOPM ENT PLAN;
PROVIOES D E FIN ITIO N S OF
LANO
USE
C A tE G O R lE S
PROVIDES FOR INTENT AND
PURFOSE OF TRANSITIONAL
AREAS.
P R O V ID E S
FOR

A LLor P artol Ih*
Day School Pick up
available 1111145

9—Good Things to E a t
B*nonet
lib s 1.00
Cukes
7 lor I 00
Peppers
7 for I 00
W Lopes
each .79
Green Onions
1 for 79
Soled Tomatoes
4 IDS. 100
Fresh Pumpkins 79 to 1.49 ea
Red 0*1 Apples
41b*. 100
Jonathan Applet
1 lbs. 1.00
GoldOel Applts
lib s 1 00
Mutru Apples
lib s 100
Fresh Apple Cider
&gt;ygat. 1.99
All Purpose Potatoes 10 lbs 100
Greens
a bunch .99
/rflwood Corn it Ini Buy It by th*
bo* or by tha ear Fresh daily.

W«T«k« Food Stamps
LEROY FARMS
SR44
W atson's Old Farm
M—In stru ct ions
Tannl* Instruct Ion — U S P .T A .
Ctr ill lad Group or Private
lessons Children a specialty.
Dev* Mallciawskl. 77V1M7.

c h a n g e s i n t a b l e io o f t h e

SHORT R A NGE O E V E L O P
MENT PLAN AMENOS DEN
SITY RANGES IN OEVELOP
MENT
P L A N N IN G
AND
R E G U LA TIO N
OF
THE
DEVELO PM ENT
FRAME
WORK; PROVIOES FOR ADE
OUATE SITES FOR GROUP
HOME AND FOSTER CARE FA
D U T IE S . PROVIOES FOR LOW
IN TENSITY COMMERCIAL AS A
LAND USE CATEGORY. PRO
VIDES POLICIES FOR TRANSI
TIONAL A R EA S . PR O VIO ES
fOR THREE FIFTHS I I SI MA
JORITY VOTE OF GOVERNING
BODY TO ADOPT SPECIFIC A
AMENDMENTS. PROVIOES FOR
LANO USE MPA. CHANGES TO
THE MAP ANO WORKSHEETS.
PR O VIO ES FOR E X C LU SIO N
FROM S E M IN O L E C OUNTY
CODE. SEVER A BILITY AND AN
EFFEC TIVE DATE
Al 7 00 p m , or as toon
th ereafter a t possible al IIS
regular meeting on Ih * lllh day ol
October. A O . 1911. al tha
Semmole County Courthouse.
Room 100, Sanlord. F lo rid *
Persons are aovited that. II they
drcide lo appeal any decision
made al this hearing, they will
need a reenrd ol Ih* proceedings,
and. lor such purpose, they may
need to insure that a verbatim
record ol Ih* proceedings Is mad*,
which record
includes the
testimony and tv id tn c * upon
which Ih* appeal n lo b* based
Additional information may be
obtained by contacting Ih *
Planning Director al i l l 41)0. * * t
141. W rilltn comment! may be
liltrt with Ih * Planning O lllc* Th*
Public ts encouraged lo allend ihe
public Iirerlng lo Ipeek lor or
against th* ordinance
(SEAL)
ARTHUR H BECKWITH JR
Clerk to Ih * Boerd
Ol County Commissioners
ol Seminole County, Florida
By Arthur H Beckwith Jr.
Publish September IS. 4 October
1, 1911
D EM 71
FICTITIO US NAMB
Nolle* It hereby given th *i i * m
•ngegeo m business at 140 Nelson
A v tn u t Longwood. Flo 111SB
Semmole County, Flerido under
•he lic lllio u t name ol JACK
FLANAGAN SALES, ond thol I
inf and to register said name with
th* Clark of Ih * circuit Court,
Semmof# County, Florida in ac­
cordance witB th * provision* of tha
Fictitious Nam# Statutes. To Wit:
Section test* Florida statutes
1957.
tig . Jack L. Flanagan
FuBllsh: September a. I I , l | , is.

m\

Y#ur tutor* eur cewctns
*

*

*

*

*

*

*

NEED good horn#? I need *
good, mature part lima titter
tor my'husband. 1US47I 9-11.

FREE TUITIO N - Real E ita t*
school Alger and Pond Really
INC ERA 111 1941

BBAUTICIANSW ANTBD
with lollowlng.HI 99S0,
M l French Ay*.
POLICE OFFIC ER — Th* City
ot Orlando will b* scheduling
applicants for tha examination
lor POLICE O FFIC ER . Contact th* C IV IL SERVICE OF­
FICE. in parson. CITY HALL
ANNEX — 440 S. BOONE
A V E N U I. MONDAY. SEPT E M B IR I t thru MONDAY,
SEPTEM BER
19,
1*91
(WEEK DAYS 9:00 to l:B9l to
be scheduled lor th* entrance
eliminations Must be a U. S
Citlian, I I years of aga by
February H . 1991. high school
grad or slaf* equivalent, good
character, no felony convic­
tions
O R LANDO IS AN
EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EM
PLOVER.
RIGHT now w * need * tew good
salts people who hove th*
embltlen end dedication to
succeed II that's you. than
we re prepared to offer you
real reward* and tha n&gt;ethodt
to gat them. For Interview,
pitas* call Century 11, H ey**
Rtalty Servlets. Inc., Sanlord

RN OR LPN

4 1} and 111 Shift. Full lima
Apply In parson Sanlord
Nursing ConvalatJant Ctnlar,
950 Mallonvilla Av»

M M M IM IM M IIM IB

■

C O N V E N IE N C E ^ ^

STOtf CASHKRS
Good salary, hospllalltallon. I
weak paid vacation every a
months
E a p t r lt n c t
not
necessary
For Interview
phone th* manager at:
Alrpart Blvd 44
Casselberry 4*
Calary Ay*. 44
Laka Mary 44

m am
Ut-1711

m am

ttl-S M I

LPN II 7 1 rights per week
Applv L a kevitw Nursing
Cm tef, t i t Tnd St , Sanlord

TRACTOR TRAILER
DRIVERS
DIVISION ol major U S Corp la
seeking D O T . qualified
drivers lor Its over th* rood
p rlv e le carriage operation
based In Sanlord. Flo
Qualified applicants must hay*
two man laam eiparianc* are)
a minimum ol 1 years O.T.R.
experience Good reference*
and provan safely record
required
In la ro tta d
ap
plicantt pleas* call la m 14)
0191
Equal
Opportunity
t-mploywr
AVON B B F B B S B N T A T IV II
Th* Part T im * Career
444 1 0 7 9 - Collect 9*4*709

Alger A Pone

21— S itu a tio n s W a n t e d

REALTY, INC.

Two question*: Will you be
financially independent In 1 1#
S years? A r* you paid what
you are worm? II nol call H I

CALL

323-7843

W ILL do babytillirtg. washing 4
ironing in my home H I 7530
Thurt 4 F rl * 5 . H I 7114
enytimt.
BOOKKEEPER :.&lt; r .ia r y I I
yrs. t i p , attking job Sanlord
Deltona a r t* call Kathy S74
4171 or H I 79M
Spring i* her* and ll 'i a good
lima to chooa* a naw home
Irom Ih# page* ol our
classified edt
WAN TED to car a for
tk k ln m y h o m t.
H I 1194

REALTORS
a iA p rtm o n h Fumhhod
1 BOR lurn apt.
AdulltSMS
H I 119*
STOP AND THINK A M IN U T E .
II Classified Ads didn't work
. . . .there wouldn't be any
furnished apartments lor Senior
Ciliians. I l l Palmetto A v a . j .
Cowan. No phon* calls
Looking lor garden equipment?
Read today'* classified ads lor
good buys

W OMEN; llrtd ol X hr. wk
want lo ba own bos*, choose
your own hr*. M * k t e* cell cm
money. For information H I
10*1. 349 5555 alt S p m
TWO question*: Will you be
financially independent In 1 lo
S year*? Ar* you paid what
you a t* worth? II nol call H I

f = =

31 A—D uplexes
SANFORD new 1 bdrm .
Ib a m L a kaA vt
449 1114
SANFORD spacious 1 bdrm. I
Mh. air, drapes. SIM mo +
oep 11*1541.
DELTONA uniurn. 1 bdrm.
Ib th , appliance*.
91S0 449 4554

To Stare
YOUNG Christian Man to shart
my 1 Bdrm House with same
•Y rent It S9S 441 4144

S IX PER MONTH Modern. Air,
Carpet, Nice Area. Kids ok., no
pets First 4 Last Months
Rent. ISO Damage Deposit
Lawn Cere utilities r Pest
Control Pd Cell 111 1111 Days
ask lor Carl

32—Houses Unfurnished

PRIVATE ENTRANCE

ATTRACTIVE 1 bdr . )** blh.
CHA, washer d rye r, con
veniently located U7J
111*570

H I 1*51
LARGE Airy Furnished room*.
Maid sarvic*. 4H Palmetto
Ava H I 1441
SANFORD — R ta*. wkly. 4
monthly rata* u til Inc. Kll.
500 Oak. Adult* 941 79*1

1 BDRM. I Balh SX0 mo 1X0
Security Deposit. References
required No pels, call 111
1471.
DREAM W ORtO
B RANDNEW
1 bdr, 1 balh 9400 mo
H D R E A LTY . INC.
realto r

910 4100

o m r n r - «*arrM E M gj|^
F a m ily 4 Adults te c li
Peers Id* I Bdrm*. M w ts rs
Cove Apt*. I l l 7901 Qpee an

Somebody I* looking tor your
bargain Offer It today in the
destined Ads *

1 BR. In Oround Pool. Country
Club Manor. Sanford. Fenced,
S IX m o .1 I II, last and 9100
Deposit. 447-9400

SMNMOTtZINS
Two M * two birti
M oot I eoreo Ir

Ridgewood A rm f. 7 Bdrm
Apts. Irom 917S. 1 Bdrm etso
avail. Pool, tennis court. H l44M
• f T t i d t r y R v fB * I S S n T
Apts. Olym pic s i. Peal.
I k eeandtsk vuiap*. Open 9 4.

tra in ** apply
in parson lor great op­
portunity Casa M ia P U iitra
17)1004

STORING IT MAKES W A S T E SELLING IT MAKES CASH.
PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD
NOW Call I H M il or 911 99*1
DAY Shill Immediate opening
•or Fence Assemblers, Sew
operators. General Labor.
Apply batwaan hour* 1 1 p m.
American Wood Product* Mill
O lllc * 100 M a rv in A y *.,
Longwood

C r iiM a Jo,,
5744614
4 BDR . 1 blh cent H A Lake
Mary, Sanlord a r t * WOO mo -t
Deposit. I H 1094
• Ib d rm , 1 B. with
double car garage, m
Deltona Call U e t U l .

WOMAN D E P E N D A B L E 4
MATURE.
GENERAL
FACTORY W ORK. SOME
L IFTIN G FULL TIM E ? ***
H I 9141

M a rin e r* V lll#**o n Lake Ada. 1
bdrm Irom *150.1 bdrm from
U K Located 17 91 jutl South
of Airport Bird. In Sanford. All
Adult*. U ) *970

SANFOBDOPT. TO BUY I
1 bdr. caropn. kid* o k . 91S0
Collage, turn no dtp. SHS
SANFOBD FURN APT.
lb d r.w 1l.9 M d n .tlW

Clatalf lad edsserve Ih * buying 4
selling community every day.
. RtH
mm mam stxn.-------- -SANOALWOOD V illa* Airport
Blvd.. Sanlord. 1 Bdrm, 1 Ba.
The Realty Store, Realtors
1471 191*

k

Sanford — I- bdrm + dan,
c tro m lc
both,
fu rn llu ro
available, adults, til? mo. t9411H1.

WOULD Ih* Young Lady who
answered Ih * ad tor a weed
working jcb. p la ts * call
Staworth Wood Products at
H I 0144

Q e H ohci

tS25Mo*fWy

BAMBOO COVE 1 bedroom
apis. Available. Manager on
premia**, H U 140

. m m *.

management

1

PONY Rida Attendant E .p
with
Pony
or
Horsts
preferred. Pari lima Min.
Wag* Call Sharon H I 9471.

HAIRSTYLIST wanted
with following. Immsd.
Call Delores711 7510
Classified Ads ara th* smallest
big news items you w ill llnd
anywhere

M allon villa
T ra c t
Apis
Spacious, modem 1 Bdrm. I
Bath apt. C t'p t te d . k ll
equipped,
C H 4A
Near
twspftal 4 lake Adults, no
P itt. 9770 TH 9H1__________

FLOOR WAXER - semi rafirtu
person 4Soul is hrs a week
apply Mr. Powell at Zayres.
Sanlord mornings

SECURITY Guards H Hr* per
Week Midnight. Lake Mary
A rt* Prater retired or semi
retired Call 111 9150 E *t. 140.

niioso

If—ttHfVfrnfrd-

CONCESSION 4 gill Shop. r ip .
p ari lim a.
Weekends 4
lalidaysam usl Apply Central
Florida Zoo

SANFORD UNFURN APT.
Ir m i , appllc .kids, IH 5
LONOWOOOHANOYMAN
SPECIAL
Srm house, kids, pel*. SHS

SAV ON-RENTALS
Seminal*
11* I X *
9AV ON RENTALS REALTOR

Itotoll Manogwmwnt Carwwr
O u « to E x p a n s io n , R o m ' s , th # i t r o n g g t t r e g io n a l

BOYS A 0MIS
A0B 13-17
UM KXTUH

m o s t r t t a l l d f In th o S o u th e a s t, h a t lm m » d ia t R
o p e n in g * f o r :
I o n lo r A s s is ts R t-M o rc fc a itd ia R M a n a g e r s
R s q u lr t m o n f s In c lu d e :

CAU 322-3*11
CIRCULATION O eP T.

•
•
•
•

Evening H n ald
COOK

J la S years e* par lance in hard lints and salt Unas
Ability lo become a star* manager In I la 1 years
Willingness la rtie c a lt in Ih * future
Leadership ability. Aggressiveness, intelligence, Honesty.
Integrity
T r s lM R t

and Assistant Managers

Successful candidate* will have the following qualification*:
a-Rataii a* per lance preferred
• Leadership ability. Aggressiveness. Intelligence. Honesty.

integrity

• ‘Sincere desire to become a successful star* manager
• Willing to relocate
R a s a 's O M a r s i

W A R E H O U S EM A N
factory
experience a must. Heavy
nttm * required. Full benefits,
apply in person. United
Solvents I M l Airport Blvd.
S IT T IR In my Hem *,
light houetkeeptna
m M si.

a
•
•
a
•
•
•
•

Eicetieni starting salary
Structured training program
Health and in * insurance
Paid Vacation
Paid Halfdays
Hck Pay
Merchandise discounts
Christ mat bonus
Profit Sharing retirement plan
• E icttN n t advinctm ant potential
• Promotion* be sad an mar It
All taterestad ippilcanti tkavld saOniH a resume h i

WANTED: matureledy I* liv e In
1 day* and 1 n iffd l p weak,
prepare meals, and car* far 2
invalid ladips in la n ia rd
residence. C all M S - U I - m i

O f M If

« puBrMFe#

4 «*• •« S* m wm

' *?*

V-V

�1

I » * •

7 BOOM. I Bath Lor Eat m
Kitchen D n-ng Rm . Fla Rm.
Storage R Util Rm A .r-A vail
Oct 1st IWS mn StOO Orp
M l S6JS
JB D R .lbthlJSO month
IV A last « security
M l 4461
3 BDRM t ' j B. Sunken living
r m . padair fans. 7 mo old
t4M A ttff 6 p m JJJ 0461
get

those

luxury

it e m s

f o r a f r a c t io n o f t h e ir

COST FROM TODAY S WANT
ADS!

W—Mobile Homes
J BORM House Trailrr Partly
furnished with Air, fenced
pat.o 377 SAS9

SANFORD
&gt;.000 tq It It Induttrlal or
Commercial Building on 17 11
1.000 it In oHic* space Call
MISJIO or IJ6 614J
■

__37-B—flentilOfficts

PRE CONST tale OeBary 1 Ige
water Iron! lots Buy now 4
choose lay out 4 Colors
Johnny Walker
Real Estate INC Broker
M l 14)1
OWNER W ILL FINANCE
Superior M a y fa ir Location.
Highest
qu ality,
roomy,
gracious living lor those who
appreciate the lines! This J
BR. 1 'j B. eiecutive home is
priced right at UI.S00 Call
now tor appt

Cal IBart

SANFORO
&gt;000 tq It It. Induttrlal or
Commercial Building on 17 11
1.000 it in oilier tpacr Call
31)5510 or IJ4 4162
O ilier Spacr
For Leatr
•JO »1J

37C-For Lh m
VEGETABLE Farm lor Leate
With option to buy m Samtula
Area Irrigation pump In or
out J Tractort and equipment
Owner help plant and grow on
co m m ittio n t A lbert Ford
V olu tia County «04 421 1401
Alt 6 p m
EVERY OAY IS BARGAIN
DAY IN THE W ANt ADS M l
7*11 or 111 W J

38—Wanted to Rent
COUPLE, no children, need J
Bdrm house w garage by Nov
Itl Good location in Santord

jas ns!

41—Houses

i

REAL ESTATE
REALTOR, M l &gt;atf
J BOR I bth. assume F HA mtg
l? 500 dn ill.SOO total, etc
cond move right In M l 1174

Q r jjv
T

r f

J Y

f S

l

THE CENTURY I t SYSTEM
HELPS more people buy and tell
more real etlale than anyone
else in America Cell today
and let It work tor you Call
M l 10)0
Hayes Real Estate
Services. Inc
61) W 15th St
Santord
Each ollice is independently
owned and operated

OWNER WILL FINANCE J
Bdrm.
I
Bath P artly
■emodeled Has Fireplace and
carpeting 50 It on Hwy 44 W
Only 131.TOO
acreage

I t Acre
1'4 Acres
5 Acres

11,000
111.500
t t t . 500

N IC E
STA R TE R
H OM E
Located in good neighborhood
Has large attic tor additional
bdrm Only 11S.500

\ l

1:

l

V

LA K E M ARY
m -w o
Sat W Lake Mary Blvd.
J.N O R IM W O O D VILLAGE
1
ATTRACTIVE Jbdrm . I ' , bath
tor tm all family Large yard
with privacy fence Clean and
pretty Sat.tOO
OSTEEN Brand New Log Home
on 1 Jrdt acre CH A, 14 It.
Iron! pch Move right in and
mioy country living at lit.fOO
CUSTOM built brick on 1',
acres Great room, fireplace,
island kitchen. J bdrm t. 1
baths Reduced to 541.500

131-M41

m

U

L A K E V liw 1 bdr. 1 bth. fp, l«
yard, veg garden, icr patfe.
• ■Iras Ill.S tS
LIKE TO E N T E h T A IN I bdr. 1
bth. 1 stary. peal, rat rm . Ip. Ig
lot enly 141.fee
CHARMING 1 bdr. 1 Mb. CNA.
work that, ter palM. wether,
dryer, goad area. M l.ttS .
Alter hrt 111 1154 end 1114151

331-0041

REACTOR
A fte rn rt. M IA M I end M i l l 54,

H a r o ld H a ll

ALMOST new J bdr. J bth,
double garage, fully equip kit,
energy efficient t l 500 dn.
assume I J ' i S 147.000 prin
Cipalt only J1J SOt7

R O B B I I ’f
R IA L T Y
REALTOR, MLS
M il S. French
Suite 4
laniard

24 HOURffl 322-9283
BATEMAhPREALTY
Lie Real E tlata Broker
1640 Sanlord Aye

331-075*

322 760

REALTY, MC.
. REALTOR

333-5774

WE HAVE RENTALS
PRICED REDUCED 11. I N Now priced be lew appraisal,
tbit 1 bdrm heme w beemed
ceilings A lovely, shaded let It
laniard's best buy at anly
lit .tw it

C R E A T IV E
F in a n c in g !
Academy Manor, 1 Bdrm. I ' 7
Ba New carpet A paint,
carport Rear lenced Big lot
t i t . TOO 111 1011

COUNTRY ATMOSPHERE in
lawn Plnecretl area. I Bdrm
Large Livtag Rm. Only
M l.tW

JUKI
tOKtC M A U I

EA ST
A S S U M P TIO N
LAW
payments 1 Rdrm Near naw
Hospital.
ZO N E D
COM­
M E R C IA L. tvpar petontial.
Only M l.tW .

I n R t i l l t l i t i Brsbar &lt;
Ml MU
Eyt M U R 4
n e w l is t in g s
h i o o EN l a k e
Clean

at a
whittle 1 Bdrm. 1 Bath Split
Plan hat many r it r a t . in
eluding Paddle Fans, home
warranty, clubhouse pool and
good schools Excellent low
interest assumable mortgage
SS1.SOO

SUNLANO Lovely 1 Bdrm. t'y
Bath, dream home can be
yours lor LOW DOWN Cent
HA Huge oak trees, fireplace
and family rm all included
Great huv at 141000

ALL FLORIDA REALTY
OF SANFORD REALTOR
Eicetlent Business opportunity
in good location Couple**
stock included m this peked
reduced to UNO
IM IS . French M l l i l t
Attar H eart: W *e*aa m -a n e

-F L O R ID A -

ARRIVE AUVE
m j
, SUNSHINE STATE

#.

* *■ 9 '•

____

*

OWNER FINANCING a v 'll an
m u lovely 1 bdrm Prick heme
w D ra p e s .
Range,
Regrtgeralor 4 Fern Rm ea
deep I pI I I tU.WP.
OVER IW I sq tl in tbit 4 1 with
new Cea Heal, big badeearns.
Pern Rm. H i t ! ter perch +
heavily treed tat tar only
S4I.IW II
CUSTOM E XE C U TIV E HOME
w aver IIW sg tt. 1 bdrm tdfit
plan. Fireplace. Fam Rm. eat
in kitcbaa, Kvge ter parch +
landscaping galara at IH .IM t I

4 tsOMM. in Ground Pool.
Country Club Manor. Sanlord.
Fenced. MS0 mo. 1st, last and
1100 Deposit AilpSSOO
Kids outgrew the swing sal or
small bicyclaT Salt theta MW
items with a want ad. To plact
your ad. call your frlemJlr
Classified gal ai Tha HaraM.
M l M i l . or n t t t n

HAL C O U ttT t u r n
lac.
333-7332
Eves M l M i l
J01 E.ZSthSt.

*b le

SHOVI VATE A COUPLE OF
P hone c a l l s b u t i t
j u s t SOT CANCELLEr
FOR UJW RATINGS.'

B E A T O U T BY
R ERU N S J F THE

Ho w a r d S

x _ _ _

THE O F M E IN M A P O T flu ff
e tc e lle n t condition, selling
price 1199 Reta.l% at 1)30 Call
671 374) aft 4 p m
PIANOS K organs large A small
starting at low as 1U9 93 Rot)
B.ill Vustr Center A Arsfrrn
Auto

62—Lawn G arden

ell!
F IL L D lR t 1 TOP SOIL
YELLOW SANO
Call Clark A H.rt )7) IS* 0

'i* * T

■fli

'- V ,

Don I Despiir Or Pull Your Hair
- U tt A Want Ad M l 1111 or

•it m i

/

FOR SALE
The undersigned Special M etier
will sell to the highest and best
biter. lor cash the property
described as follows All oilers
to be received no later than
October K . IW I Sale subject
to Circuit Court approval The
North 157 feet ol Lot I t ol
FLORIDA LAND AND CO
LONIZATION
COMPANY'S
CELERY PLANTATION, ac
cording to the Plat thereof, a t
recorded in Plat Book t. Page
111. ol the Public Records ol
Seminole County. Florida, lest
the West 100 leet 0* said North
157 leet of said Lot I t Further
described at three 111 houses
located on the Southwest
corner ol Rlverview Avenue at
Narcissus Street
W Garnett White,
Special Matter
Cate No H1S11 CA IJ L
Suite A
Flagship Bank Building
Sanford. Florida 11771

/

^ -r tp

low
tHATiS REALLY
UNBELIEVABLE

C • be«A ■■ N t^glM lN IO i

H

RUMMAGE Sale Fleet Reserve
Assoc W Hwy 46 Santord
Saturday. Sept 76.1 a m til ?
Ram or shine Public invited
Something lor everyone
Hamburgers. Hot Dogs Sott
Onnks available Games tor
children

M B -In v M tn w rt
Property___
IN V ES TO R S
PLEASEf
1
Triplet units lust arrived
Purchase separately or both
lor 140.000 with owner holding
Call on this one I June Poriig
Realty Realtors. M l W7I

GARAGE sateF n 4 Sat
only t 6 711 Cherokee
Circle I Suniand Estates)

REALTY - REALTORS

47A-Mortgages
Bought A Sold

CFA PERSIANS Adult
Females While. Black
5150 S7S0 M l 1515
German Shepherd Male ) Y ri
Super with children e*c
Wa»ch fioq 1700 )77 5737

67—Livestock-Poultry
WILCO SALE)
NUTRENA F E E 05
Hwy 46 W. — M l 6171
CASH 4 CARRY PRICE1
IS 60
Hog Finisher Pellets
IS SO
Layer C
16 15
Rabbit Pellets
14 15
Bret Kwlk
14 *• Vitality Horse
16 10
Frllets
10 ••'/'la lily Sweet
1) 75
Feed
SANTA Gertrud.* Hull
tor vale 1130 Call
after Sp m i)05&gt; 377 0)6«

We pay cash lor 1st 4 Ind
mortgages Nay Legg. L k
Mortgage Broker JJ17711

SO—Miscellaneous for Sale
COTS. TENTS. TAHPS
ARMY NAVY SURPLUS
310 Sanford A vf
)?) J7tl

AUCTION SALE i f
FRI. NIGHT, 7 P M .

Bahama Bed, touchei. living
room ch ain , color TV ‘%. large
metal kitchen cabinet, triple
itrciier. more new bar itooll
All kind* of M ilt Glauware.
P'Cturrv lamp*, etc plui a lot
ol new item*
CASH DOOR PHIZES

Dell's Auction

Have some camping equipment
you no longer uie? Sell it all
with a Clam fied Ad m The
Herald Call 377 7611 or 1)1
9V9) and a friendly ad vlior
will help you

76—Auto Parts
Used Car Parts all makes and
models M l 1617 We buy Used
Cars and Trucks

77-r-ju n k O n Rem tm n

Top Dollar Paid for Junk 1 Used
lars. trucks t» heavy equip
men! 377 5990
• ’J V JUNK CARS 4 tllUC K S
FrorrjSIOIolSOormor*
Call M l I k l a . r i ZMO
WEED A SERVICEMAN? Yaw H
tmd him listed in our Business
Service Oirectory.

750 1171 HONDA, runs great,
new
tires ,
chain,
rear
sprocket. K Q seat S115 M l
04)5 alt 5 p m

11*0
SUZUKI sso
J ll MIS

I1SSCHEV V pickup, sound body,
rngine needs work, wide tires,
chrome reverse. J spd on
tloor. new exhaust 1650 Days
M l ) 151. eves )M 10)1

AYTONA AUTO AUCTION*
Hwy 11. I mile west ot Speed
way. Daytona Beach will hold
a public AUTO AUCTION
every Wednesda r at I p m It s
the only one in Florida You set
the reserved price Call 104
1SSI11I lor further details
1174 MAZDA R X 4
Station Wagon 1700
J l l 0111
7] T BIRO Loaded New Tires.
Blue with White r-yp or &gt;4
Cutlass Supreme No money
downtlSm o 1)1 1100 114 460)
Oealer
1*77 PIN TO 4 yp rt ns good
new tiri-s $650
J7J 1677 arte. 6 p m
nave a room ta rent? Let a&gt;
classified ad find a tenant for
yOot

★ BAH Auto S a le s ★
★ 339-7989^
197; ThundffD'fd
1976 B un* i4iS«*t&gt;rr
Cultom
1976 Bu ck M3 Coup*
1977 W rc u ry CcuQAr
SW7
1969 VutM ng Convertible
1977 Bwek Limited
Coupe
1977 Monte Carlo
Sunroof
I960 Chevette
7 000 miles
1*61 F ireb-rd Coupe
1976 VW Helhti.t
197) Vo&lt;ki Sfa Wacjon
1979 F trrb rcl 9 ormulA

1)477
1)490
1)293
14277
1399 $
14277
154»7

*4993
11)60
12177
12060
16393
Bank tinarktng available
S5N Hwy 17 11
Casselberry
117a BUlCx Skylark Clean t
Owner. Auto AC. PS New disc
brakes, tilt whet
AM FM
Stereo radio Custom interior
Vinyl lop new steel belled
rad'als New exhaie.t syxtr.n
60 Mo Battery Rust prool.
$7715 J05 717 J560 or M ) 4110
1170 VW BUG New slicker, runs
well Needs some body repair
MIS 111 1714
till
CHEVY
Im pala
1
Passenger Wg Clean Cond V6
Auto. Cold Air, Elec windows,
seals and door locks, new
sticker, new tires, lies
• I t IM4
75CMEVY Van Ispeed
air. custom plus extras
Makeotler 11)1111
IF THIS IS 1 HE DAY to buy a
new car. see today's Classified
ads lor best buys
1174 OLDS Della t l. 7 Door V t
Automatic. Air. power win
dows. steering and brakes
Runs excellent, needs pamt
1515 1)1 11)4
1JBUICK Century 4dr.
PS. PB. AC. till,
clean 5750 11) 4)40

CONSULT OUR

BUSINESSSERVICELISTING
AND LETAN EXPERT DO THE JOB

A E DOING ring let woman 3 7
I 3rd karat 1330or
belt offer $74 $971

Sea our beautiful new BROAD
MORE, Irani 4 reer BR't
GREGORY MOBILE HOMES
MOlOrlendoOr
M l 5100
VA 4 FHA Finenrinq

To List Your Business...
Dial 322-2611 or 831-9993

51—Household Goods
I SETS Custom Made Oraprry 61
in long Cost S1100 Sell for
1100 Double Bed new. 1100.
Color TV Antenna 150
M l 5751

14x40. I BDRM. 1 Beth 10x10
Screen porch enclosed with
R olledtn shutters
ISxlO
U tility
Rm
W ell
end
Sprinkling system , many
extras 111 Hacienda Village
M l IW I

Air Conditioning

51-A—Fumiturv

CHECK THISOUT
BEAUTIFUL IW ! Royal Oaks I I
wide 1 bdr, 1 bth, garden tub,
deluxe ce rp et, cathedral
ceilings, brick lirepfece. wood
tiding, shingle roof, peddle
fan and many more extras
Only M4.100 VA financing nb
money down. 10 S down
convenlionol See et Uncle
Roys Mobile Home Sales of
Leesburg. U S Hwy 441 S 104
7110114 Open weekdays I
I X , Sun 111

It
WILSON M AIER FU R N ITUR E
J ll JI5E FIRST ST
M l 5471
CHECK With Santord Auction
before you buy or sell Ills S
French MJ 7J40 Mon Sat

S LIM
BUDGETS
ARE
BOLSTERED W ITH VALUES
FROM
THE
WANT
AO
COl WMNS

52-Appliance*
Ken more parts, service, useu
washers MOONEY APPLI
ANCES M l 0417

Boarding A Grooming

GE Gas Dryer
I year old 1150
Call M l 1M7

SANFORD Prime t i l l Acres w
options tor toning M l,500 w
Terms W. M e lkto w tkl M l
11U. Eves M l 1147

Animal Haven Boarding and
Grooming Kennels Shady,
insulated, screened, fly prool
inside, outside runs Fans
Also AC cages We cater to
your pets
Starting stud
registry Ph M l SIS)

19S1

LAKE M ARY 4 large
lots, nlco trees
MSOOOeech M l 4111

Toshibie microwave oven, sale
price 1141
t i l l canister
vacuum cleaner 151 50 See at
Santord
Sewing
Cenler.
Santord P laia across from
Burger King

AREA.
FRONT

Make your Budget go further,
shop the Classilied Ads every
day

I'T

Good Used TV's. IIS 4 up
M ILLER S
16t l Orlando F r.
Ph. M l 01)1

Building Contractor

OSTEEN t l ACRES WOODED
PAVED r o a d f r o n t a g e .

YARD Sale Fri 4 Sat M . Sun
I • Hanging lireplace electric,
g a t neater w Ian . lo o ll.
clothing, misc Nothing over
11S E 66 to S Baardall. 1st
hows# on Ilia left

G ENEVA 10 ACRES WOODED.
COCHRAN ROAD tl.SOO PER
a c r e m a y o iv id e .
C O M M E R C IA L ! ACRES ON I I
t l NEAR
LA K E M A R Y
•O U LE VA R O . 11)0.000

4 FA M IL Y garage 4 yard salt,
mg variety, Fri noon thru Sun
1)14 Magnolia Aye

SEIGLER REALTY
BROKER
374S HWY. 17-92
321-0440

YA R D Sale Saturday and
Sunday M
M l Serita S«
(Behind the Burger Chef I
Couch, loves eat, M ile

1

1

W

Concrete Work, footers, floors 4
pools Landscaping 4 sod
work F rewest 1 ) 1 ) 10)
I MAN QUALITY OPERATION
1 yrs e»p Patios, Driveways
He Wayne Ileal 1)7 IJ 71

Electrical
Quality electrical work ) ) yrs
experience Minor repairs to
complete wiring M101I4

When you place a Classilied Ad
in The Evening Herald, slay
close to your phone because
something wonderful is about
to hapoen

Handyman
Painting, carpentry, all typas ol
home repairs Call for Ir a t
estimate M l ISIS

Hauling A
Yard Work
It s like pennies from heaven
when you sell "Don't Needs”
with 4 want ad

• I I I Corse, S late C ertified
B u ild in g
C o n tra c to r.
Residential or Commercial,
New or Remodeled M l 0614

54—Garage Sale*
GENEVA JVy ACRES WOODED
ZONEO M OBILE. Ill.SOO

Concrete Work

Snow Hill Kennel otters Cal 4
Dog Flea Baths IS up 14
Hour. Full Service J45 57I7

53—TV Radio-Stereo

O S TE E N S ACRES TALL
PINES. SCRUB OAK tlt.SOO
TERMS

GW ALTNEY JEWELER
104 S Park Ave
M l 4501

TOWER S BEAUTY SALON
FORM ERLY Harriett's Beauty
Nook 511 E 1st St . M l 574)

BE A U T IF U L M ” round table,
hand made 1)7 S
1M 151). 104 Brentwood Or

43—Lot* Acreage

you are having difficulty
finding a place to live, car to
drive, a iob. or some service
you have need ol. read all our
wgnl ads every day

Beauty Can*

NEEO A SER V IC E M A N ’ You It
find him listed in our Business
Directory

Shop Uncle Roys Mobile Home
Sales. Leesburg. U S Hwy 441
S 104 117 0114 Open 1 d a rt

Clock Repair

Chris will service AC'S, ralrig.
Irte itrs . water coolers, misc
Call M l t i l l

GREEN s o la ! High back
chair to match
Callatl 5 p m 111 4511

CHECKOUT UNCLE ROVS
LARGE selection ot 14 widet
prices sterl U t i l VA linen
cmg no money down 10*
convenlionol

O S TE E N
W OODED
ACRES 111.500 TERMS

CHE V Y window van
loaded, e* cel lent tondt
J7) 1129 or )77 1690

7*—Trucks-Trailers

We a rt open lor furniture sale*
on the tioor daily 10 5 p m A
lot ot reasonably priced lur
mture

50-A—Jewelry

42—M obile Homes

W E K IV A
FA LLS
W OODED R IV E R
ACRE I2S.000

7S-A—Vans

)))0 W . H w y.41

17 Cu FI Freezer 1 yrt old
Amana SJOO Elecfncptwmc I
Track Stereo, cabinet type
MOO 1111117
I

322*2420

M l IMS

78—Motorcycles
★

M l IN I

CALL ANYTIME

• SANFORO AUCTION*
1115 5 French

72—Auction

FIREWOOD

IW I
P art

househo lds

5)5 CASH VISASSS
515AMERICAN EXPRESS t t t

3)9 m i

A.ummum. cans, copper, lead,
brass, silver, oold Weekdays
I a 10. Sat 1 1 KoKoMo Tool
Co 1U W 1st St M l HOP

CARPORT sale, lots ol plants.
Smger Sewing Machine, in
cabinet, clothes, odds 4 ends
Sat 16. 1 till

3 PIECE RI'droom Set
1100 Pool Tabic 140
37) 17)0

66—W anted to Buy

A N TIQ U E S , collectibles, all
kinds ot goodies L what not
Sat 1 till 114 W ISlh S'

APT S A LE. Ceuch. Chairs.
Tables. Etageres. Aquarium.
Decorator Phones. Queen S ilt
Betf. Almost New. Much More,
Prices
Reduced!
No
Reasonable O lfor Refused
Sanlord Crt. Apt., Apt 64.
Santord Ave. 4 Airport Blvd

a n t iq u e s r e p r o d u c t io n
s e v e r a l n ic e

C AIN FOR CAR*
Running or not

Antiques Diamonds Oil
Pamtmgs Oriental Rugs
Bridges Antiques
MJ HOI

CARPORT Sale Saturday l a m
to 4 p m
104 W Coleman
Circle Misc Household items
and
Appli
toys,
c h ild ren s clothing, large
Paragon Kiln

MONDAY. SEPT 7 I . I P M
ANTIQUES a n d m o o e r n

For E state. C om m ercial or
'Residential Auctions 4 Ap
praisats Call Oell's Auction
M l 5610

TAG SALE
SATURDAY IS 00
407 HOLLY AVE

M O V IN G sale sola, wieighl
bench, misc items M l 0441,
MJ 1070 I7IS Oak Ave Sat

A U C T IO N

DON T SIONC |T SELL IT with
a low cost Classified Ac

YARD SALE
1106 Locust Ave
Saturday.Sept 16 l a m

CASH FOR EQUITY
Wecandose InaShrt
CallBa ri Real Estate M ly jta
Sanford'* S a lts Leader 1We buy equity in Houses,
apartments, vacant land and
WE LIST AND SELL
Acreage
LUCKY INVEST
MORE HOMES THAN
ME NTS. P O Box 1500. San
ANYONE IN T M t
lord. Kf» M i l l 1M dial
S A N F O R O A R IA
f
M l eaiy to place a Classified Ad
OREAT IN V ES TM E N T Nice 1
We'll even help you word
Bdrm. l Bern each unitl
•7 Call M l 1411
Lovely landscaped left Super
location. Both rented M5.144

72—Auction

exposure — takp that
For Sale” sign down &amp; run a
classified ad Call M l 1611 or
lit m i

M U LTI FA M ILY garage sale,
toys, clothes, furniture, plants.
4 etc F ri 4 Sat 6 4 corner ol
Upsala A Garden Crt M l 4771

47-Real Estate Wanted

ASSOCIATES N IE D E D I New
or exporfencod. Coll Herb
Stenttrom or Loo Albright
today 4 dltcavor success!

Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.______Friday, Sapt. IS. 1M 1—HA

ANIMAL Haven Kennel* boari
•ng A groom.nq, Needeo
Pekingese A sm all silver
poodle lor stud Male Owners
'.ill 177 WW

r

MOVING Sale Sat and Sun
Lamps. Dishes. Misc . Fur
mture Under 150 704 Vmewood
Or Loch Arbor

WANTED too to 100 acres in
Orange or Seminole Counties,
toned lor mobile home tub
division Send all details in
eluding location, to P O Bo*
•IM Ocala. Fla 1147I

STENSTR0M

65— Pets Supplies

54—Garage Sales

43B-Lots A Acmag*
Wkrited

J U IT
L IS T E D
Specious
remodeled J Bdrm. l Bam
Kama an larga shaded let!
Fireplace. Cent HA. w ell I t
well c a rp e l, F lo rid a rm .
porch, plus 1 rental units.
IM M Sa.

I S | \ I |

a b s o l u t e l y u n k l ie v

FOUR TOWNES
REALTY INC. BROKER
I I I 1110 enyllme

59-Musical Instruments

T

w o r r n

I t GOT

FA M ILY'S D ELIO H T 1 Bdrm. 1
Beth Home with beautiful
OPEN HOUSE It 4
enclosed pool end polio areal
DREAMWOLO
Cent H. Al Specious reams,
lets el o itr e ti sai.ioo
Osceola t El Portal 1 br. 1 ba. j
cent air heat, t i t In kit,
B
E
A U TIFU L New 1 Bdrm. 1
14T.S00 Owner will carry mtg
Bath Heme In Ramblewtad an
with 110.000 down at 11 N in
lavely landscaped lei. All the
lerest lor 11 mo or FMA. V a
•x tre tl Cent H A. Wall ta wall
M ichael R. Capko
carpet, split bdrm plan, large
L k . Real Estate Broker
Pla. rm ., dining ream, end
l i t Ilia . M l i l l s
mere. S IM M .

* ASSOCIATES, INC . REALTORS*
1) Offices Throughout
Central Florida

TMET STORY ?

to

A B O U T . MRS h &lt;x &gt;f i e ; T h e

If TMklN3

S H O W .' Vi H A T 6

M A L T O R H1-4TTI P ly d fN IflW

l{ l

n o t h in g

W ARPERS

AB0UT MAKING A BUS
appearance ON SCME
national TELEVISION

D E LIG H T FU L OeBary - extra
large 1 bdr, 1 bth home with
tots ol closets, on &gt;s acre
wooded, lik e Iron! lot. Dream
k it, re frig , island stove,
washer 4 dryer, cent vec
system, w w carpet. 14x10
screened porch, patio, and
closed garage. 147.500

STEM PER AGENCY

\ |S ||

r

T W IG &amp; 5 .T H E

SKI TH A T

SANFORD Attractive 1! yr old
home on 160 It ol Lake Onoro.
1 Bdrm. 1 Bath. 1 porches,
property can be split 1SS.OOO
Low interest Open to otters
By Owner 1 I t l tlt&gt;

37—Business Property
For rent or lease - 10.320 tq It
induttrlal or warehouse 111
W l i t S t, Sanford MJtlOO

41—Houses

41—Houses

Home Improvement

Landscaping
L A R O IT R C I IN IT AL L « R
Landscaping, Old Lawns * a
placed 16) 5501.

Landc tearing
Acreage 4 lot clearing
Fill dirt top soil
lor salt M l 141)

Plumbing
Freddie Robinson Plum bing
Repairs,' faucets. W
C
Sprinklers 111 SSI0. MJ47704
Aodcrmiing your Home? Sell no
longer needed but useful itei
with a Classified Ad

I

FONSECA PLU M B IN G
C«S(
struct ion. Repairs. Emerpafci
cy Lie . Bonded. Ins 1114074

Lawn Maintenance
D U N N R IT E Lawn Service
Mow. edge', trim , vacuum,
mulch, sod Reas )M ISIS

-----------------------------Plumbing repair
alltypes *•
water healers 4 pumps
\»
M l Sail
£

Remodeling
Metonry
T T usin^ ^ ^ 1 TooP
It you aren't
table, take a cue. and sell it
with a Herald classified ad
Call 111 ) 4ii

Mini-U-Lock
NEW Concrete Buildings, all
silts 110 4 up A ll 4 4 SR 4S I
4 industrial Park. 1M 004)

Hurting Center
OUR RATES ARE LOWER
Lake view Nursing Center
f t * E Second SI.. Santord
M l 4707

feinting
Hallman Painting 4 Repairs
Ouslity work Free Est, Disc,
to Seniors S14 44*0 Rater.

Remodeling Sptcialli
We handle tha
Whole Ballot Wax

B. E. Link Const.
322-703*
Financing Available

Roofing
ROOFS, leaks repaired. Re
rattan aayas and shingle i
licensed, insared,
Mika IM SITS.
Christian Reotln| 17 yrs
141 S750. tree ast RtreolK
spectallM in repair wore
naw rooting
SOUTHERN ROOFING I I yy,
exp . r * rooting, teak specuH
•U
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LEISURE
Complete Week's TV Listings

Sanlord, Florida — Frid a y, September IS, I9BI

Canoeing
Hy IIIANK M. JF.FFEItSO N
H erald F eatu re W riter
As you ili|&gt; your paddle into the Wckivu Itiver a wading
bird is startled and sprint’s into the air with a screech. Ills
&lt;ry erhoes dow n a watery enrridor shaded hy a eanopy ol
ancient trees. A lter he is none you are alone on the river
attain, the only sound the w ater dripping oil your paddle
as you lift it to Itettin another stroke.
It is not hard to imattine a T unueuan Indian stalkintt a
deer as a littht breeze stirs the lohatte
You a re in another existence, w here hills and a|tpoiiitinents and the inodern world cannot intrude, lor a
little while
You are hitchinil a ride on the liack o| a spring-fed river
in a canoe
From deep within lim estone caverns Wekiwa Springs
huhbles up to form the m ain stiurce of the Wekiva Itiver,
which com bines with Hock Sprint; Hun to How 15 m iles to
the St. Jo h n 's Itiver in northw est Seminole County
Itaccoons, o tters, and an occasional sleepy alligator can
lie glim psed as the canoe glides hy wet muck forests into
o p en ex|KitLsesol w ater dotted with the purfde blossoms of
w ater hyacinths.
I’crhafis tills is why |tcnplc com e to Wekiwa Springs
State I’ark amt wait for half an hour by the canoe con­
cession. scanning the river to see il a canoe is coming in so
they can rent it.
Canoeing is a sta te ol mind.
"I go canoeing just to net aw ay, and to ex ercise," said
Tom U 'itzke of Sanford. He said lie d rives bis family from
Sanford to the WckiVa Itiver twice a month.
"If y ou run, you exercise from the w aist down. Canoeing
gives you the chance to develop your upper body," be
said.
Ills wife added canoeing is som ething the entire fam ily
can sliare.
'Hie canoe concession is open only during w eekends at
Wekiwa Springs S tale P ark located w est of Interstate 4 on
S late Hoad 434. A d riv e r's license and a refundable
deposit of $10.00 will secure a canoe for y ou, com plete with
paddles and life jackets or buoyant seat cushions. The
m inim um rental is two hours, at $2.00 per hour. A canoe
can be rented for the entire day for $10 00.
K ing's l-anding off Hock Sprains Hun and K atie's
la n d in g off S tate Hoad 4G also rent canoes. Both places
also offer canoe ow ners the opportunity to launch their
own canoe into the river from a sandy stretch by the
riv e r's Iwink.
Even thouuh the first day of fall has passed and short
cold fronts a re beginning to cross C entral F lorida,
William Benson, Wekiwa Sprint’s park ran g e r captain,
said people rent canoes all through the fall until tlie fiark
closes at the onset of w inter.
"You liave to rem em b er the tem p eratu re of the w ater is
about 72 d egrees y ea r round," he explained. "T h a t's
relatively cold in the su m m er, when the w eather is hitting
tin- upper 90’s here, but it's w arm when the a ir tem ­
p era tu re drops to the GO's."
Benson said he does not know how m any |ieople have
been visiting the canoe concession in the |&gt;ark. It is
privately run, so the sta te m aintains no figures.
However, attendence at Die |iark is expected to peak at
an all tim e high luist y ear 200,000 persons visited the
(Kirk. Benson said from attendence figures for tlie y ear so
far, this y ea r will easily su rp ass the 200,000 m ark.
See CANOKINd, P age 2

T h e re 's nothing b e tte r thun u re la x in g day-of
can o ein g dow n YYekivu Itiv e r in no rth w est
Sem inole C ounty. Tom l.e itrk e , 102 W.

tir e e n lr e e , and his d a u g h te r, puddle dow n the
r iv e r tw ice a m onth with o th e r m e m b e rs of
th e ir fam ily .

jr

�1 —Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Friday, Sept. IS, 1WI

Young
Poets
T1IE DREAM
My d ream was sad
As people cry.
The drearn w as soft
As a quiet night.
It touched m e softly
As a kitten's' fur.
It was not rough
U ke a k itten’s first tooth.
It said, "B e calm "
U ke nightfall,
U k e being on a cloud
In the sum m ertim e.
But when it was over
It just turned into a
Big spot of paint.
Susan Ewcl
English E states

Canoeing lends Itself to peacefulness — be It floating down the river or docking the craft on the
shores.

• • •

Canoeing Florida's W aters
(C ontinual F rom P ag e 1)

T here a re m ore cartoea on the riv er now, claim people
who u i d they have been paddling down the Wekiva far
years.
Benson offered the following tips for anyone w anting to
glide down the w aters of the Wekiva for the first tim e:
—Be sure to ca rry a life Jacket or buoyant seat cushion
for every person aboard the canoe. If you ren t a canoe
from a sta te p ark , a cushion or jacket will be provided for
you.
—Don't stand up in the canoe, for.any reason. The canoe

can Up over v ery easily U suddenly unbalanced.
—Keep a look-out for other canoes.
—Do not bring alcoholic beverages Inside a sta te park.
—Any boat m otor touching the w ater Is prohibited on
sta te p ark w aterw ays. An airb o at m otor, which is
suspended above the w aterline, is perm itted.
If you fallow the rules of common sense, th ere is no
reason why you cannot em b ark on your first canoe trip
dow nriver, seeing scenery th a t h as changed v ery little
since the T im ucuan Indians fished the W ekiva’s banks
long ago.

Charlie Brown G ets A Little Happiness
E veryone h as felt like a
n o th in g a t s o m e tim e or
another — and th a t's w hat
m akes Charlie Brown so
universal.
T he
m ost
fa m o u s
ch a racter in ' C harles M.
S c h u ltz 's sy n d ic a te d c a rtoon, " P e a n u ts," m ay have
felt "like a nothing" m ore
tim es than m ost people, but
unUI now he h as had pretty
good reason.
As m a n a g e r of th e
P ean u ts' baseball team , he
ta k e s th e b r u n t of its
m o n u m e n ta l lo ss e s. As
kicker in the school football
gam e, he usually falls on his
face in front of crowds. It
took him y e a rs of sw eatypalm ed m om enta to get up
courage enough even to say
hello to a Utile red-headed
classm ate. His very own
dag, Snoopy, upstages him
on a sem i-regular basis. And
h is " s h r in k ,” th e self*

CHARLES SCHULTZ
p ro c la im e d
p s y c h ia tr is t
Lucy V an P elt, charges him
plenty to call him "failu re
fa c e " and "w ishy w ashy."
With a record Uke th at, it is
no wonder th a t Charlie ^&gt;ins
with Joy when he actually
wins a school spelling bee in

"A Boy N am e d C h a rlie
B ro w n ," un
a n im a te d
m o tio n p ic tu r e
to be
reb ro ad cast a s a special
W ednesday on CBS.
Finally, he h as a m om ent
when he is not afflicted with
what he describes a s “ deepdown, black, bottom-of-thew o rld ,
w h a t ’a - th e - u s e
lo n e lin e s s ," a d re a d e d
m alady th a t haa been known
to him him while he is eating
a peanut b u tte r aandwich
a lo n e
in
th e
achool
p la y g ro u n d o r w hen hla
m a ilb o x
is e m p ty
on
V alentine’s D ay.
A cc o rd in g to C h a rlie 's
c r a a to r ,
S ch u ltz ,
th e
vulnerable little half pint
with the oversized h ea rt is
his own w orst enem y.
" I th in k ," sa y s Schultz,
" t h a t C h a rlie B row n la
supposed to rep resen t th at
stran g e quality which un­
fortunately m ost of u s have

— a desire to be liked by
everyone.
" I f he could only settle
back and realize th at th is Is
never going to happen, that
everyone c a n 't Uke him a t aU
tim es, perliaps his Ufe would
be ea sie r."
Of course, in addition to his
s tru g g le s , C h a rlie h a a a
g rea t m any things to smUe
a b o u t an d , a c c o rd in g to
Schultz, "h e am iles all the
tim e" — w hen h e 's not
frowning.
M any things m ak e the
s m a ll c a rto o n c h a r a c te r
happy, ranging from "two
kinds of lea c re a m ," "five
d iffe re n t c r a y o n s " a n d
"finding his sk a te k e y " to
"being aw ay every now and
th e n " a n d , b e a t of a ll,
"com ing hom e ag a in ."
Now, in "A Boy N am ed
Charlie Bcrw n,” happiness
Is a w arm feeling you get
when you win a spelling bee.

TH E MOON
The moon is big
As an elephant
The moon glows
As his farth er moon
T hat glowed until he died.
The moon says, " I come
out a t night;
I m ake a little Ught
In the d ark
Ju st Uke my fath er did
before
He died.”
Scott K orm ao
Saba! point E lem entary
HAPPINESS
These be
Two happy things:
Me and my mom cooking;
My d a d , m y b r o th e r,
playing gam es
With me.
G reg Hoyden
E astbrook E lem entary
d y nam e is Serina
I can pick up 15 drills In my
left hand
and speU sig n atu re In ten
seconds
I can fly in the sky
am pretty
You a re ugly
1 am rich er than you
‘ am stronger than you
I can get home (aste r than
anyone in the world
I can pick up the earth
the whole planet and the

sun
You ca n ’t
so 1 am b etter than you
Serinn Tibbetts
C asselberry E lem entary

On a subm arine
You look in the periscope
An eagle w atching you with
triangle eyes.
On a plane
lo o k out the window
An eagle looking at you
with triangle eyes.
On a train
1,00k out the window
And eagle w atches you
with trian g le eyes.
On a m ountain
Circling around you
W atching you with eagle
eyes
The eagle with triangle
eyes.
l a r r y W alters
Woodlands E lem entary
DREAMING
Y ou’re In a c h a ir at
poolside
The sun a larg e orange ball
going down below the
ridges
The thin clouds up against
the orange-painted sky
Y ou're drinking a whipped
cream plna colada
Now you’re on a bean bag
chair
bean bag rocking chair
w lth a d o u b le -b a rre le d
m achine gun a t your side
S o m eone y e lls " W e 'r e
havin' oppossum tonight,
p a"
Ju st a s you s ta rt to eat
You vanish
Hanging onto a cliff
F or your m iserab le Ufe
you sUp
just a s you’re about to hit
you w ake up
In bed
safe as safe can be
L arry M orrissette
Tuskaw llla Middle School
MY COUSIN
W henever he plays football
he throw s the ball un­
derhanded
His bike is so rickety—
the fram e Is halt crooked
and the tires a re usually
low
He laughs over his own
jokes
som etim es so h ard he cries
D avid Federinko
Tuskaw llla Middle School

Carradlne Plays Second Fiddle
David C arradlne la used to
playing title roles since his
f ir s t
te le v isio n
s e rie s ,
"S h an e." His success a s the
s ta r of "K ung F u " m ade him
som ething of a cult figure
and he also played title roles
in th e m ln K a e r le i 'jM r.
H o rn ,"
th e
sp e c ia l
“G auguin the S avage” and
in the feature film "The
Long R id ers."

C arradlne plays a sup­
porting role in "H igh Noon,
P a rt II - The R eturn of Will
K an e," to be rebroadcast
T uesday on CBS. Lee M ajors
s ta rs in the film.
U d id n 't bother him to play
a supporting ch a racter.
" I t's a little Uke playing
rig h t field," he said. "Now
and then they h it one to me
and I try to catch it."

�Evtnlng Hire Id, Sanford, FI.

A u s t r a lia n P ro d u ctio n To A ir O n PBS

Friday, S. pt,7S, 1**1—J

Town Like A lice’ Expected To Be Blockbuster
NEW YORK ( UPI i — It’s nut enough that the United
States has surrendered space In the Russians and industry
to the Japanese — now com es the Public Broadcasting
System with a very serious com petitor in the business of
m aking quality television mini-series.
PBS unveiled the A ustralian production "A Town Like
Alice" last week and left the disquieting thought that if
this keeps up, all that m ay be left to A m erican ingenuity is
the hot dog concession at Coney Island.
A ustralian producer Henry Crawford was modest ubout
it.
He w arned rep orters at an "A lice" (tress conference
that the m ini-series w as the top of the heap, and (hat any
wide infusion of his nation's film la re soon m ay result In

Dr. Bill Cosby
Earned His Title
By DICK KLEINER
DEAR DICK: After w atrhing both the “ P icture P ag es"
segm ent o f " C aptain K angaroo" and " F a t Albert and the
Cosby K ids," we saw the nam e Dr. William If. Cosby,
psyehologiral consultant, appear in the credits. Is that the
one and only Bill Cosby? WIIJ.1AM MICHAEL AND
MARY ALICE KELLY, Winona ljik c , lad.
The sam e. Bill, the com edian, w as aw arded his doc­
torate in education in 1976 from Die University of
M assachusetts, so he is William H. Cosby, B.A., M.A.,
Ph.D ., and can use Uie title “ D r." before his nam e
whenever he desires.

"your getting all the stuff w e’d just us soon you didn’t
see."
And he added, "hut then w e've been getting all that
from you for y e a rs."
"A Town I Jke Alice" m akes its A m erican debut on PBS
with the first of six powerful p a rts Oct. 4 at 9 p.m ., EIIT.
Crawford and Co, treated television re|x*rters to a
tantalizing condensation of the film, and if the whole is
any true sum of the p a rts, ABC, CBS and NBC sltould be
sick.
"A Town 1Jke Alice" might have registered Nielsen
ratings in the range of “ R oots" an d “Shogun." but the Big
3 can 't afford to m ess with the Nielsens. "A lice," after all,
is foreign produced.

So a re Toyota and Dalsun.
The sweeping d ram a s ta rs Helen Morse and Bryan
Brow n, w ho recently m ade his ow n A m erican debut in the
Aussie feature film m asterpiece "B reak er M orant."
He is no less |x&gt;werful as Joe H arm an, an Australian
soldier captured by the Jap an ese in World W ar H and
crucified against a b arn door for stealing the Japanese
prison cam p co m m andant's personal chickens to feed
starving captive British women nnd children.
Miss Morse is a new Ingrid Bergm an. Brown is a young
Michael Caine. The film — at least a s seen in m iniature
is exquisite.

Every Wednesday

BUDGET
{OPTICAL

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INCLUDES CHOICE OF ANY 2

* G la s s e s D u p lic a te d *
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• Cole Slew • Baked Beens
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322-9442

3 2 3 -8 0 8 0
DEAR DICK: Would you kindly find out the ap ­
proxim ate num ber of tongs w ritten ( but not published) by
Steve Alien? MBS. BEN I . BOYNTON, P anam a City
Beach, Fla.
Steve tells me that he is a compulsive song w riter and
often averages eight to 10 a week. So his grand total, a s of
now, is som ew here around 4,000, he says. Hum n few bars
of num ber 2,366, Steve.
DEAR DICK: A Chinese dinner rides on this bet. What
Is Ja m es A m est' real nam e? It P ete r G raves his blood
brother? Whlrh one changed his nam e? NOREEN
BRYCE, Reese, Mich.
Have the moo goo gai pan, it's delicious. Actually, if you
want to get technical about, both Jim and P eter {who are
brothers) changed their nam e, nltliough Jim just changed
Ihe spelling. The fam ily nam e was A um ess and Jim
dropped the U.
DEAR DICK: While watching an episode of “ Hill S treet
Blues,” my friend said (hat actor Michael W arren Is bald.
Is that true? SYDNEY H., Tucson, Art*.
No. W arren still has his hair.
DEAR DICK: I am confused about the show Danny
Thom as does, “ I'm a Big Girl Now." I saw an article In
which It said the w om an's nam e was Judy. But then I read
som ew here her nam e is Diana. Which Is it, Judy or
Diana? K .U C A L M HAN, Kalamazoo, Mich.
Her nam e is D iana Canova, and she plays a ch aracter
nam ed D iana, too. The confusion is that she is the
d aughter of the fam ous old-tim e movie com edian, Ju d y
Canova.
A lew weeks ago, someone asked m e if there w as a
“ G rease I I" movie coming. At th a t tim e there w asn't, but
now P aram ount has announced plans to m ake one. And
incidentally, 'tls the season for sequels — besides "G rease
I I," future film sequela will Include “ S tar T rek II,"
“ A irplane I I," "S uperm an III," "Ja w s III" and even
"P sycho II."

Aon. Thru Frl.
9a.zn.-S p.m.

2100 S. French A vt.
Hwy. 17-92-Sanford

Saturday
9 A.M.-1 P.M.

Al Constantine-Owner

Sensational

Personality Portrait Package

95 &lt; /$ 12.95
deposit / total package price

24 Professional Color Portraits
2 -8x10s 3~5x7s 15-Wallets and 4 -Color Portrait Charms
No addtlional charge for groups Posos our selection Backgrounds
may occasionally change Additional portraits available lor purchase
with no obligation You must be satisfied with portraits or your
deposit cheerfully refunded.

THESE DAYS O N LY...
SEPTEMBER:

THaURS-

« '•

“ T-

*un.

mon.

DAILY 10 AM • I PM SUNDAY 12 Noon • 5 PM

3101 ORLANDO AVE.
Sanford
"Quality at a K mart price Nice."

�Friday, Sepf. IS, Ifil

4 — Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

TELEVISION

G O GUIDE

September 25 thru October 1
i

Cable Ch.

“ Brom ellafest,” Brom eliad Society of Central
F lo rid a's annual show, Sept. 26-27, W inter P ark Mall.
Admission free. Hours 10 a.m . to 9 p in., F rid ay and
Saturday and 12:30-5 p.rn., Sunday.

Cable Ch.

(D O
(S O
(D O

1ABC) Orlando
IC B S I Orlando
(N B C ) Daytona Beach
Orlando

Independent
Orlando

CED(35)
IS) (17)
(1 0 )0

Independent
A tlanta. Oa.

Galacilcon ’l l , science fiction-science fact con­
vention, will be held Sept. 25-27 continually from 3 p.m.
F riday to 6 p.m . Sunday a t the D esert Inn In Daytona
Beach. Speakers, films, displays, m asquerade contest
and auction.

Orlando Public
B roadcailing System

In addition to the channel! titled , cetaievtiten tu b tc rlb e n may lu n * In lo Independent channel 44,
St. F tfe rtb u rg , by tuning to channel 1 1 tuning to channel t l , which carries sport* and tha Christian
Broadcasting Network (C B N ).

Specials

O f The Week

EVENING

SATURDAY

WEDNESDAY

7:00

AFTERNOON

2:30
I D (1 0 ) TEACHING AMERICA TO
8M Q "The Ffed Waring Muuc
W wkthog 1 Eighty-year-old Fred
War mg it teen at m l mating M l
aeereta with high achool students
trom all ecroaa the country
EVENING

CD O STONED A teen-age boy
who hat dilficully making friends
seek t solace In marijuana tJ
0 (1 0 ) SUNSHINE MUSIC HALL
SPECIAL Gamble Rogers '

8:00
0 (3) SOS HOPE SPECIAL

An allstar cast |omt Bob Hope tor a satir­
ic took at some ol television's most

ppp y tff H f lf l.

0:00

0

10:00
0
Cl) SHAUN CASSIDY Shaun
C at tidy la |o*ned by Loot Anderton
and Jaca Alberlaon In him tin t tele­
vision mutlcal apecial.
0
(1 0 ) NEW CINEMA FROM
M O A "27 Down" (1973) A young
man'* lather lor tea him lo abandon
M l hopea ot studying art and lake a
full-time |ob a t conductor on the
local Bombay Ham Mne

9 ) TONIGHT SHOW 19TH
ANNIVERSARY SPECIAL Johnny
Carson and his sidekicks Ed
McMahon and Doc Sever insen
mark the 19th anniversary ol I he
Tonight Show with highkghlt trom
previous shows.

TUESDAY
EVEMNG
PROJECT PEACOCK “The
Big Slutted Dog" A five-loot fan
Snoopy dog loucnea the lives of
those who find II after It becomes
separated from Its owner. (R|

AFTERNOON

12:00
(1 0 )
W O R LD S FE C IA L
"Agam•! The Wind A Cuban
Odyssey" The )ourney of lour
Cuban refugees lo the Untied
States la iraced from theft depar­
ture to their present situation. (R|

EVENING

8.00

( } ) a A SOT NAMED CHARLIE
BROWN Animated Charlie Brown
wins a spelling bee al school which
leads Mm lo the national spelling
championships (R)

0:00
0D O THE MAMONB OF AMERI­
CA 19th-century Irish rebel Rory
O Mamon leaves the Englishwoman
he lovee and Ms lemma-stricken
homeland baMnd and amlgrataa to
America (Pert 1)

10:00
0
®
THE SOPHISTICATED
GENTS The genie reminisce el a
dinner party, unaware that outside
a detective is lying In waft tor a
missing member who la suspected
of murder. |Part I t

8.-00

0 (|)

SUNDAY

10:30
0

(1 0 ) DAUGHTERS OF TIME
Three conlem porary nursemldwfves ere profiled as they work
with patients, families and medical
starts ol hospitals and carves

8:00
0 (1 0 ) THE GOLDEN AGE OF
TELEVISION Bang The Drum
Slowly ' Paul Newman. Albert Salmi
and George Peppard star in a tele­
dr sma about a young baseball play­
er who helps Me terminally ill friend
and leammete through one last

0:00
CM O THE MANIONS OF AMERI­
CA Prosperous M Philadelphia,
Rory marries Rachel, he If Joined by
Ms sister Deirdre. who, conytocnh
of the death of Ol'vid. merries
another man (P v t I )
KfcOO
0 J f ) THE SOPHISTICATED
DENTS On the hnaf night ot the
reunion, the misting gent arrives,
setting oft a confrontation between
Mm. the reel of the dub and the
detective who suspects Mm ol mur­
der. (Part 3)

FRIDAY
EVENING

900

M 0

0

■ 0 (4 )
THE SOPHtSTICATEO
GENTS Nme members of an athlefic-sociaf dub reunite attar IS years
lo pay tribute to their lormer coach
and mentor. (Part 1)

THURSDAY

® O THE MAMONB OF AME1
CA Despite his laamg business a
Ms WIN'S pregnancy. Rory Journa
back to Ireland to keep a promt
ha made when he Nft. (Pwt 3)

Sports On The
0

SATURDAY

(ID &lt; 17) C O U J O E SCOREBOARD

MORNINQ

( 7 ) 0 NCAA FOOTBALL
0 (1 0 ) SOCCER MADE IN GER­
MANY ■Champions Cup Final"
Liverpool vs Real Madrid

8:30
( | ) I-COUNTRY FISHING
AFTERNOON

12:00
( 2 ) 0 NCAA FOOTBALL

6:00

6:56
(IS (1 7 ) COLLEGE SCOREBOARD
EVENING

1:00
0 &lt; j I WRESTLING

1:30
HZ) (1 7 ) THIS WEEK IN BASEBALL

2:00
O
(1 ) BASEBALL: AN INSIDE
LOOK
flX (1 7 ) BASEBALL Cincinnati
Reds al Atlanta Braves
2 :1 6
0 G
O BASEBALL l o t Angeles
Dodgers at Houston Astros

0:00

QZ)( 17) WRESTLING
7:00

0

4.-00

(1 0 ) VIC BRADEN'S TENNM
FOR THE FUTURE

4:30

CD 0 SPORTS SATURDAY 10round auper wefferwafghl bout
between Roberto Duran and Luigi
MlncMao (Inw bom Laa Vagaa).

RW&amp;Sii-.
4:56

12:00
0 14 1BOBBY BOWDEN
( 1 ) 0 JOHN MCKAY
(7J O COLLEGE FOOTBAU 'SI
Weekly highkghls ot key NCAA
contests ere presented
1 2 :3 0
( i ) O NFL TODAY
( 7 ) 0 SOCCER B O W L 'll

1:00

a

(I)
NFL FOOTBAU Atlanta
Falcons at Cleveland Browns

OX (1 7 ) WRESTLINa (CONT'D)

ax (17)

0:00

FOOTBALL SATURDAY
Hosl Bob Neal Paul Hornung.
ANs Hewkme, Norm Van Brocklm.
DeM Segura are laatursd

SUNDAY

3'30
(7J O WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS
0 (1 0 ) HOT SHOTS Kevin Brophy narrates a look al the Malory,
techniques, equipment and personaktiee of skateboarding

strategy, conditioning and the win­
ning power ol laughter ( n ip
AFTERNOON

6:65
OX (1 7 ) COLLEGE SCOREBOARD

1:30

B G &amp; n t l -si

0

2:00

11.-00

(S
FLORIDA FOOTBALL
JdGHUOHTB
0 (ID ) VIC BRADENS TENNIB
FOR THE FUTURE "Psychology"
VIC Braden shows you how to
reduce unnecessary stress during a
match and how to pul more fun
bach Into your game (R) p
1 1 :3 0
0 (1 0 ) VIC BRADEN'S TENNM
POR THE FUTURE "Wrap-Up" VH
and n iNwe key points on strokes.

om

0 ) 0 NFL FOOTBAU Los Ange­
les Rem* el Chicago Bears p

1:40

(Q) (1 7 ) BASEBAU Los Angelee
Dodger* at Atlanta Breves

TUESDAY
EVEMNG

6.-00
OX (1 7 ) BASEBAU Lo* Angeles
Dodgers el Atlanta Brave*

1:15
OX (1 7 ) BASEBALL lo * Angeles
Dodgers el Atlanta Brave*

WEDNESDAY
EVEMNG

3.-00

OX (1 7 ) BASEBAU Sen Francisco
Omni* el Atlanta Braves

4M
d ) 0 NFL FOOTBAU New York
Grants el Dekea Cowboy*

8:30

c c o a x&lt; i7M

MONDAY

7:30

1:40

IB (1 7 ) BASEBAU San Francisco
Giant* at Atlanta Brave*

THURSDAY
6.-00

0 ( 1 7 ) BASEBAU Ban Frandeco
Giant* al Atlanta Braves

7:30
M (1 7 ) B A M M A U Lee
Dodger* at Atlanta Breve*

Southern Bock Rand Molly H atchett will present
concert at S tetson's Edm unds Center in Del-and, Sept.
26, nt S p.m. Tickets available al Edm unds Center or
Altamonte Mall. Sponsored by Student Union Board.
O range Blossom Chorus will perform a capelin fourp art harm ony at 2:30 p.m ., Sept. 27 in the I-och Hnven
Art Center auditorium . Open to the public, a $1
donation will be accented.
Sundae la the P ark sponsored by SISTEItS, Inc., 2-5
p.m ., Oct. 4, Sanford Centennial P ark , F ourth and
P ark. Old-fashioned ice cream social, entertainm ent,
prizes.

Fall for A rt sponsored by Sanford Business
Association, Sanford-Semlnole Art Association and
City of Sanford, Oct. 10,10 a.m . to 5 p.m . and Oct. 11
noon to 5 p.m ., on F irst S treet and Magnolia Avenue in
dowtown Sanford, E ntertainm ent, a rts and crafts and
concessions.
“ Private Landscapes", an exhibition of silkscreens
and lithographs by R ichard Steinm etx an d Ken Kerslake, through Oct. 15, at the U niversity of C entral
Florida Art G allery on the 3rd floor of the H um anities
Building. Call 275-2678 for information.
Central Florida Zoological Park, open dally 9 a.m. to
5 p.m. UJ5. Highway 17-03 between 1-4 and Sanford.
Picnic facilities.
---------------------- --------- 1------------------------------------------ T V ----------------------------------------------------------

O ) NFL FOOTBAU Miami DotpMns al Baltimore Colie
OX (1 7 ) BASEBALL Cincinnati
Rede al Atlanta Braves
CDOBABEUU

0

Orlando O ktoberfest to benefit C entral Florida
Multiple Sclerosis Society, 5:30 p.m. to 2 a.m ., Sept. 2526, Downtown Orlando, including Church Street
Station, B avarian beer tent on Central Avenue,
Valentynea, the O range Q uarter, 100 W. Washington,
Mack M elners F rench M arket, D aisey’s Basem ent anti
leaser World.

2:06

0 ( 1 7 ) B A M B A U Ban Frandeco
Giant* al Allanla Braves

�September 25

FRIDAY

bom lakeovo* by an uoscruputout
tn'VMtOf t j

EVENING

6:00
0 ( 3 1 ( 0 0 ( 1 ) 0 NEWS
ANDY GRIFFITH
ill) ( 3 5 ( 3 1 ( 1 * ) AND!
03 (1 0 ) THE ART OF BE1NQ
HUMAN

6:30
O d l NSC NEWS
( ) ) O CBS NEWS
( 7 ) 0 ABC NEWS
(U) (3 5 ) CARTER COUNTRY
0
(1 0 ) THE ART OF BEING
HUMAN
(JI (1 7 ) OOMEA PYLE

7:00
0 ( 2 1 THE MUPPET8
(1) O P.M. MAGAZINE A 14-yearotd t attempt at the "Aateroidi
playing record. choreographer Juna
Tsytor'l work with I ha Miami Dol­
phins cheerleader!; Joyce Kuthawik
look! at computar corf aapondenca
Slava Cinay ha* aoma u*a* lor old
newapaper*
( D O JOKER'S WILD
(ft) (3 5 ) BARNEY MILLER
0 (1 0 ) MACNEIL 7 LEHRER
REPORT
( I I (1 7 ) CAROL BURNETT ANO
FRIENDS

7:30
0 9 ) e n t e r t a in m e n t TONIGHT
0 ) 0 y o u ASKED FOflrT
( 7 3 0 FAMILY FEUD
il 1) (3 5 ) RHOOA
flD (1 0 ) DICK CAVETT QlwsI
JohnGkHaud (Part a ol 4)(R|
01 (1 7 ) BASEBALL Cincinnati
Rad* at Atlanta Brave*

0:00
O
4 1 NBC MAGAZINE WITH
DAVID BRINKLEY
THE INCREDIBLE HULK

&lt;y □

The Hulk b a th e * ih e cre atu re w ho
h o ld * the te c re l to the a n tid o te that
Banner needs to find re lie f Iro m h i*
co nd itio n (Part 2) (R)

(73 O BENSON Benton * attempt
at a romantic interlude in hi* new
aparimenl tail! when Pete come*
knocking on Ihe door l R)
QD (3 5 ) MOVIE
The Lila And
Time* Of Gnuty Adam*" (0 (1 9 7 4 )
Dan Haggerty. Don Shank* A man
unjustly eccuted ol a crime heei
Into the wildernea*
CO ( 10) WA8HINOTON WEEK IN
REVIEW

CD

a

6:30

CD

O CD MOVIE "Better Late Than
Never (1979) Harold Gould. Harry
Morgan A leitty lemor citiren
throw* a retirement horn* into tur­
moil when he relute* to obey any
rule* that limit hi* tieedom (A|
(») O THE DUKES OF HAZZARO
II I Duke against Duke when Bo
and Luke compete m the J D Hogg
First Annual H u ta rd Derby (R)
(73 O
MOVIE Golden Gale"
(Premiere) Perry King, Jean Sim­

W ORLD

SPECIAL

10:00

(S) O DALLAS Sue Elten meets
Dully egain, Lucy move* out on
Mitch, end Rebecca and CliH meet
atlas! (R)
dP (3 5 ) INDEPENDENT NETWORK

GD (1 0 ) THE GROWING YEARS
,11117) MISSION IMPOSSIBLE

MORNING

5.30
I J I O BUMMER SEMESTER

5:50
3 1 (1 7 ) WORLD AT LARGE
( i l O MIGHTY MOUSE / HECKLE
t JECKLE
(7 ) O OR SNUGGLES
I I (T 7 ) r r s YOUR BUSINESS

6:30

10:30
t)D (3 5 ) CAR CARE CENTRAL

11:00
!) 0 ( 7 3 0 new s
) BENNY HILL
POSTSCRIPTS
) ALL IN THE FAMILY

11:25

o

(51
HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL
ROUNDUP

11:30
O
(3) TONIGHT Host Johnny
Carson Guests Angie Dickinson.
Bill Coaby
(7) O ABC NEWS NIGH TUNE
(1)1 (3 5 ) STREETS OF BAN FRAN­
CISCO
1 1 (1 7 ) MOVIE
Shalako ' (1968)
Sean Connery. Brigitte Bardot A
loner saves a group ol aristocrat!
from Indian attack alter defeating
Ihe Apache chief* son In a tight

11:40
(110

SATURDAY NIGHT

12.*00
GD O MOVIE "That Lady" (C)
(195$) Olivia da HavtUand OtlttT'i

ROarf.

12:30

O (41 2-COUNTRY FISHING
(D O O R A K P A C K
( 7 ) 0 RAINBOW PATCH
H (7 7 ) INFlNrTY FACTORY

7:00

7:30

o

THUN-

8:00

(J) O KWICKY KOALA
(710 SUPER FUN HOUR
(10 (3 5 ) PRAISE
Q3 (1 0 FALL PREVIEW
1 1 (1 7 ) THE PARTRIDGE FAMILY
1 s) O TROLLKINS
8 ) (1 0 ) THE GOOD NEIGHBORS
3 1 (1 7 ) MOVIE "Drums Ot Tahiti"
(1954) Denm* 0 Keel*. Patricia
Medina An American ^J.enturer
and * wiowgirl amuggle gun* to
rebel Tahltiani in aupport ol their
etforl to win independence Irom
french control

9:00

(i) Q BUGS BUNNY / ROAD
RUNNER

( 7 1 0 NEWS

(J1 (1 7 ) BASEBALL Cincinnati
Red* at Atlanta Brava*

0 (4) KID SUPER POWER HOUR
11) (3 5 ) LIFE BEGINS AT CAL­
VARY
0 (1 0 ) COOKIN' CAJUN

2:25

10:00

BTARSKY AND HUTCH

1:55

9:30

2:00

(73 o
MOVIE "Green Dolphin
Street" (BfW) (1»47| Lena Turner.
Donna Reed

4:20
U ) ( 1 7) RAT PATROL

4:50
0 1 (1 7 ) MISSION IMPOSSIBLE

(73 O RICHIE RICH / 8COOBY
DOO
0 (1 0 ) MAGIC METHOD OF OIL
PAINTING
1 1 (1 7 ) MOVIE
"Lit Abner
(1959) Peter Palmer. Julie Newmar
ll'a a dark day in Dogpatch lor Lit
Abner when he learn* the Army I*
moving in to teat bomb* end Deity
Mee t getting him closer lo Ihe
altar

10:30
0 ( 4 1 SPACE STARS
(J) O UTTLE RASCALS
(It: (3 5 ) SPACE: 1SSS
( 1 0 ) THIS OLD
C arpenter

2:15
Q
(2) BASEBALL lo t Angeles
Dodgers at Houston A tlio *

2:30
I} ) O
MOVIE
Zeppelin (C)
(1971) Michael York, Elke Sommer
During World War I. a British spy
learns that Ihe Germans are plan­
ning to use a giant dirigible lo steal
Ihe Magna Carta and thereby erode
British morale
0 (1 0 ) TEACHING AMERICA TO
SING "The Fred Waring Music
Workshop" Eighty-year-old Fred
Waring is teen at work sharing hit
secrets with high school students
Irom all across the country

N orm

HOUSE

A b ram

shows

111) (3 5 ) MOVIE "Stowaway To
The Moon" (C) (1974) Lloyd Bridg­
es. Michael Link Unknown lo
Ground Control, a young boy h id "
on a ipeceahm
(5) (1 0 ) PRESENTE

3:30
(73 o WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS
tS-round WBC Light Heavyweight
Championship bout between
defender Matthew SaerhA4uhammad and Jerry Martin (Irval. The
Fifth Avenue Mile, featuring many ol
the world's top meets racing down
New York 's lamed avenue (live)
0 &lt; 10) HOT SHOTS Kevin Biophy narrate* a look at tha history,
techniques. equipment and person­
alities ol skateboarding, featuring a
locus on pro riders Tony Atva and
David Hackatt (R|

4:00
0
(1 0 ) VIC BRADENS TENNIS
FOR THE FUTURE Psychology
Vic Braden show* you how to
reduce unnecessary H i eat during a
match and haw to put more tun
back Hilo your game (R)(J

4:30

(J3 O SPORTS SATURDAY 10
round super welterweight bout
between Roberto Duran and Luigi
MiflcMIO (live Irom l i t Vegail
0
(1 0 ) VIC BRADEN'S TENNIS
FOR THE FUTURE Wrap lip Vic
Braden answers viewers question!
and reviews key points on ltiobes
strategy, conditioning and the win­
ning power ot laughter (H)CJ
3 1 (1 7 ) RAT PATROL

how lo pout a concrete wall and
landscape architect Tom Wtrth
discusses Ihe lay ol Ihe land |R|tJ

4 :5 5
3 1 (1 7 1 COLLEGE SCOREBOARD

11:00

Q (4 i EMERGENCY
(73 O NCAA FOOTBALL
llti (3 5 ) GRIZZLY A0AMS
0 (1 0 ) SOCCER MADE IN GER­
MANY "Champions Cup Final"
Liverpool vt Real Madrid
3 1 (1 7 ) UNTOUCHABLES Eliot
N et* works In uncover the evidence
necessary to trap a leading bank
robber

IS IO B LA C K S TA R
( 7 ) 0 LASSIE
0
(1 0 ) AMERICAN GOVERN­
MENT
1 1 :3 0
O (4) SP10CR-MAN
I TARZAN / LONE RANOER
ITHUNOARR
MOVIE " Ih e Men Who
Reclaimed Hit Head (B/W| (1914)
Claude Rams, Joan Bennett A bril­
liant author sett* himseil lo an
am bit tout publisher resulting in
tragedy
0 (1 0 ) AMERICAN GOVERN­
MENT
AFTERNOON

12:00
DAFFY 7 SPEEDY BHOW
NCAA FOOTBALL

».«• INK C H IlD tfN

O
(41 BASEBALL: AN INSIDE
LOOK
0 (1 0 ) LIVINO ENVIRONMENT
3 1 (1 7 ) BASEBALL Cincinnati
Reds at Atlanta Braves

3:00

(73 Q FONZ / LAVERNE S SHIR­
LEY HOUR
(1J (3 5 ) HERAU) O f TRUTH
8) (1 0 ) FLORIOA HOME GROWN

(il o

1:30
1510 80110 GOLD
0 ( 1 0 ) FAMILY PORTRAIT
I I (1 7 ) THIS WEEK IN BASEBALL

a.sn
0 (2 ) sm urfs'

0 3 3 TOMORROW

12:40

/

O l4 &gt; WRESTLING
J O FAT ALBERT
lit (3 5 ) MOVIE
Dive To Danger
|C| (1977) Documentary Narrated
by Richer d Ba saber 1 A look at the
work ol men and women who daily
put their lives in leopard) by work­
ing m the ocean i depths
0 (1 0 ) FAMILY PORTRAIT

2:00

Q (4) NEW ZOO REVUE
l i l Q N MINUTES
(7 ' O ANIMALS ANIMALS ANI­
MALS "The Mouse"
3 0 ( 3 5 ) JIM BANKER
1 1 ( 1 7 ) VEGETABLE SOUP
0 (4) THE FLINTSTONES
IS I O POPEYE
(7 )
GOLDIE QOLO
DARH
( I I (1 7 ) ROMPER ROOM

7 :0 0
£ ) 1 IN SEARCH OF ,.
iJ O HEEHAW
11 (3 5 ) WILD. WILD WEST
0 (1 0 ) UNDERSEA WORLD OF
JACQUES COUSTEAU
I l ( 17) WRESTLING ICONT'D)

1:00

5:00
( 7 ) 0 MARCUS WELBY. M O

6.00
0
( 1 0 ) SOUNDSTAOE Shel
Sihrerttem and Dr Hook perform in
concert (R|CJ
0 1 ( 1 7 ) NEWS

September 26

SATURDAY

Aga&lt;nsl Thn Wind A Cuban
OdytMty
The fournoy of lour
Cuban refugees lo th* Unit(Hj
SI alt*a i* 1raced from tfwr do par*
lure lo their pro swot situation (R)

IT S A UV1NQ Jan I net to
run a email buameti and wail on
table* at tha tame tuna (R)
8 ) (1 0 ) WALL STREET WEEK
"Panny Stock*: The Denver Fol­
lies" Quest Allan R Aden, presi­
dent ol First Financial Securities.
Inc

9:00

(1 0 )

Friday, Sept. 25, 1981—5

Evening Herald. Sanford, FI.

mon* A publishing family it thrown
into a power struggle when the son
1n«*&amp; to tsvfi a pnffHl npwipajiaH

12:30
i l TOR TEN
TDM ANO JERRY

5:00

5:55
a i (1 7 ) COLLEGE 8COREBOARO
EVENING

6:00
) ( ! ) O NEWS
35) BIONIC WOMAN
(1 0 ) ALL CREATURES QREAT
ANO SMALLS
3 2 ( 1 7 ) WRESTLING

S3
3 2 (1 7 )

5:30
WE
WE

6:56

7:30
O (4) FLORIDA'S WATCHINO

0:00
0 ( 4 BARBARA MAN0RELL ANO
THE MANORELL SISTERS Guests
K&lt;winyRog«r». Andra« Crouch (R)
(») O WALT 04SNEY The Love
Bug
A human like Volkswagen
named Hmbw adopts a former pro­
fessional race driver, and together
they become a racing sensation
(Part 1)
17) O LOVE BOAT A husband and
wife try to find jewels (hat they
stashed aboard on a prior cruise a
cheerleader attempts to escape the
affections of her boyfriend, and a
man rents a family to impress hit
boss |RKJ
iU (3 5) MOVIE
Ihe Marriage Ot
A Young Stockbroker |C| (1971)
R ichard
B en jam in.
Joanna

Shimkus A young businessman
bored with his lot in file decides that
becoming n "Peeping Tom" might
add some spice lo his daily enstence
CD

(1 0 )

EVENING

AT

POPS

"foots Ihhplefoani” fo o ls Thiele*
mans jams John W Miami and the
Boston Pops tor an evening ot guttar strumming, harmonica blowing
and virtuoso ja /i whistling (H)
i l l (1 7 ) NASHVILLE ALIVE Host
Ralph Emery
Co-host
Jimmy
Dean

9:00
0 (43 I4ARIF
Andy Gibb
(1 ) O MOVIE ' Matilda" (1978)
Elliott Gould. Robert Mitcbum A
last-talking booking again guidat
tha caioai of a prlaelighling kan­
garoo toward a heavyweight bout
0
(1 0 ) MYSTERY "Sergeant
Cnbb
Abracadaver" Sergeant
Cnbb and Constable Thackeray gut
into tha act whan malevolent and
dangaiou* piactical (oka* a/a ruin­
ing tha caiaar* ol Victor ran muaic
hall ai till I (R ]t;
0 2 (1 7 ) FOOTBALL SATURDAY
Host Bob Naal Paul Hornung.
Alai Hawkatt, Norm Van Brocklin.
Dab* Sagura ara featured

10:00
0
( j ) SHAUN CASSIDY Shaun
Cassidy t! touted by loot Anderson
and Jack Albertson in his lin t tele­
vision musical special
(7 )0 LAWRENCE WELK
3 1) (3 5 ) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
MEWS
0
(1 0 ) NEW CINEMA FROM
INOtA "27 Down" (1973) A young
man * lather force* hurt lo abandon
his hopes ot studying art and taka a
lull time fob as conductor on the
local Bombay tram Ime
3 1 (1 7 ) NEWS

10:30
111(35) THE BAXTERS

O

11:00

(4) ( f i 0 ( 7 3 0 n e w s
(Ml ( 3 ^ BENNY HILL
3 1 (1 7 ) MOVIE " f alhom" ( 1967)
Tony franciosa. Raquei Welch A
criminal hues a tamale paractHihst
to recover a prtcalass pmen ot
tewelry under the pretert that she is
looking lor a bomb-triggering
device

11:30
0

(2) SATURDAY NIOHT LIVE
Host Chevy Chase Guests Junior
Walker and Ihe All Stars (R)
1 } I O SOLID OOLO
(73 a MOVIE "The Dark At The
Top Ot The Slavs" |C| (I960) Robart Praslon. Dorothy McGuwa
Based on the ptay by Wiaiam Inge
Members ol an Oklahoma family m
the 1920* struggle with the prob­
lems ol everyday lite
a i) (3 5 ) M O V *
"Thank Your
Lucky Start" (B/W) (19431 Eddw
Cantor. Dinah Shore An imperso­
nator hopes lo raise money Irom a
latent show by posing as a pro­
ducts

12:30
(13 o
MOV*
"Tha Oul Moat
Ltkafy To
" |C) |t973) Stockard
Charming. Edward Asoar

1:00
0 3 ) GANCE FEVER

�4—Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

September 27

SU N DAY

ttralagy. conditioning and tha
rung power ol laughter (R) g

MORMNO

5:10

AFTERNOON

I I (1 7 ) WORLD AT LARGE

5‘30

12:00

0 1 ( 1 7 ) AGRICULTURE U 8 A.

(i) O

o (4) BOBBY BOWDEN
( } ) 0 JOHN MCKAY
(7) Q COLLEGE FOOTBALL 'SI
Weekly lughtghll ol fcay NCAA
conlatlt ara pratanlad
®
(1 0 )
W ORLD SPEC IA L
"Agamil Tha Wind A Cuban
Odyttey ' Tha (Ournay ol lou,
Cuban rafugaat lo tha Umlad
Slate* it hacad Irom thaw deparmre lo Ihaw pretent tiluation |R)

8.00
the law ano you

T O AGRICULTURE U S A
0 1 (1 7 ) BETWEEN THE LINES

8:30
( D O SPECTRUM
(7) O VIEWPOINT ON NUTRITION

7:00
O (4) OPPORTUNITY UNE
(} i O ROBERT SCHULLER
I / | Q PICTURE O f HEALTH
(11) (3 5 ) CHANGEO UVEA
1 1 117) JAMES ROBISON

12:30
O (4) F A U PREVIEW
&lt; J ) 0 NFL TODAY
( 7 ) 0 SOCCER BOWL ‘SI

7:30

1:00

0
(4 ) MONTAGE: THE BLACK
PRESS
(7) O
DIRECTIONS IS aaton
Prtmrartl Tha m at* mltrnmrml ol
Japannta Amancana during Wo,Id
'Va, II and I ha current tflo rtt lo
re d ,**! that wrong ala trammed
III 135) E J DANIELS
0 1 (1 7 ) IT IS WRITTEN

O ( D MEET THE PRESS
(1) O NFL FOOTBALL Atlanta
r alcont at Clava!and Btownt
ID (3 5 ) MOVIE "Ooclor Dofctlle"
IC )(1967) Rai Htrrtton. Samantha
Fggar A doclm who love* anrmelt
iaa,nf to communrcate with Iham m
500 different animal languagat
B (1 0 ) WASHINGTON WEEK IN
REVIEW (R)

8:00
a « I VOICE OE VICTORY
ID O R E X H U M S A R O
(7) Q SHOW MY PEOPLE
00 (35)JO N N V O U E S T
B ( 10) SESAME STREET (R )g
0 1 (1 7 ) THREE STOOGES ANO
FRIENDS

1:30
0 ( 4 ) N FL'SI
[10) W A U STREET WEEK
8 ) (1
"Panny S loctt Tha Danya, FolLat Guatl Allan R Adan pr etidanl ol F a il Financial Sacuntiaa.
Inc |RI
11 (1 7 ) RAT PATROL

8*3o
0 1 4 ; SUNDAY MASS
15
I Q OAV OF DISCOVERY
, 7 J O ORAL ROBERTS
(ID 7351 J O B * A « 0 THF P O M T .
CATS

2:00
C ) (4) NFL FOOTBALL Miami Dotprunt al Baltimoca Colli
£ ( ! 0 ) M OVE
South Pacific
(C) (1956! Miiii G fyW . Rottano
llfarri An American woman teat m
lova with a Franchman whUa t i t
lionad t l a Navy rxxta on Hawaa
during World Wa, II
1 1 (1 7 ) EA8EBALL Cmcmnali
Radi al Atlanta Bravat

0:00

0 14 1J J .S CLUBHOUSE
( I l O SUNOAY MORMNO
(7J O K B S ARE PEOPLE TOO
Ouettt act rata DaraaMa Bntebort.
aclo, DougUt Shaatian. gadget
a ,p a ,I Stan Kann
(ID (3 5 ) BUGS BUNNY / ROAD
rij NMER
S (1 0 ) MISTER ROOERS(R)
0 1 (1 7 ) LOST IN SPACE

0:15
f i (4 ) REAL ESTATE ACTION LINE

0:30
O
( I ) MOVIE
" A lttk t Seat"
IB/W) (1954) Robert Ryan. Dana
Hairy Givan a tacond chanca lo go
tlratgbl. an at-con rtlurnt lo coma
by |ommg a gang wfwch it plolling a
, ax) on hit now employer
(1II (3 5 ) THE JETBONS
0
(1 0 ) NOVA Dhndnott F.ya
Polnlt Of View" Tha ad m it ol tiva
people tlrugghng to tavo lhaa
vitton Ihtoogh drugt. torgery,
countering and detarmmation a,a
aaplmod with them and lhaa docIo n (RKJ

Friday, Sapt. IS, 1U 1

( 7 ) 0 BASEBALL

4:00

(1) O NFL FOOTBALL Naw York
Gianlt at Dataa Cowboyt
(ID (3 5 ) BIG VALLEY

4:30
1 1 (1 7 ) UNTOUCHABLES Whan
Ekot Naat cult od I ha aourca ol
tupply. ha Imcaa I ha m obtlatt lo
adopt olhar maaturat lo oblam
whita tlavat

5:00
0 (4 ) a a MRUON DOLLAR MAN
I I ) 3 5 ) GRIZZLY ADAMS
0 j 10) FM N Q UNE "Mow To Wm
A rg u m a n lt" O u a tlt
W illiam
Ruther. Howard Maker

5*30
(7)0 Q1(17) WRESTLING
EVENING

( 7 ) 0 KIOSWORLO

(ID (3 5 ) MOVIE " lo ti In A lt t k t '

10:30
( 1 ) 0 BLACK AWARENESS
&lt; 7 ) 0 FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
1 1 (1 7 ) MOVIE "Thai Hamillon
Woman" (1041) Laurence Okvter,
VivMMiliugh I la tragic, tcandakxjt
k&gt;»« aflat, between Im d Hmalio
Nelton and lady Emma Manullon It
pmliayad

11:00
©
(4 ) FLORIDA FOOTBALL
HtOHUGHTS
( I ) Q THIRTY MINUTES
® (1 0 ) VIC BRADENS TENNIS
FOR THE FUTURE PtyCfxUogy
Vic B,adan thoart you how Ip
raduca unnecettary ttra tt during a
match and how lo pul mota tun
back Into you, gama (R )g

11:30

0 ) 0 1 FACE THE NATION
I DON JONAS
MOVIE
"Blondia't
Sacral" (B/W) ( I94S) Panny Smglelon. Arlhu, Lata Counlatlatl monay and an altamplad luggage robla S Ik a
—*
- a - » ---------*■
b------a
an H
at I ha Bumalaadt
vacation
■ (1 0 ) VIC BRAOE0TE TENM8
TOR THE FUTURE "Wrap-Up" Vic
Bradan anawart kieweti quaaliona
and revtewe Lay poaitt on tlrotaa.

(ft

(3 5 )
(3

FlFlfKilSF BATMkS

8:00
H 7 )O N E W S
I) (3 5 ) BKNMC WOMAN
( S (1 0 ) MAGIC METHOD OF OIL
PAMTMO

8:30
Q l4) NBC NEWS
I n o ABC NEWS
W (TO) FLORKM HOME OROWN
I I (1 7 ) MCE PEOPLE

O (4)

7:00

CHIPS Jon and Pooch tat
up a go-cart tract lo piavanl k;dt
Irom bacommg deknquentt (R)
(1) O SO MINUTES Tha fournakttic practical ol mvettigalive reportmg and piocaduraa ara aiam nad m
a one-hour dabaia
(7) O STONED A teen-age boy
who hat drfhciJty mating hlandt
ta a tt tolaca m marijuana U
(1D(35) W KDKMOOOM
B (1 0 ) BUNBIMNE MUSIC HAU.
BPECUL Gambka Roger t
1 1 (1 7 ) MOIRE "40 Poundt Of
Tioubta*' 11963) Tony Curtlt.
Sutanna Plathalla A cabaral
owna, and tut Club aknger Imd lhaa
handt tut whan I hay agraa lo lata
m a Iroublatoma bul lovabla tyta

ARCHIE BUNKER'S PLACE
Archia facet tha pottibttly ol lotmg cutlody ol Slaphtnla to ha,
grandmother |Part2)|R )
( ID O MOVIE
Tnvawon Ol Tha
Body Snalchert" (1978) Donald
Sutherland, Brooke Adamt Podt
from oule, tpaca taka tha lorm ol
humant and tap tha mmdt ol Ihota
I hay impertonate
I I (3 5 ) OAV OF DISCOVERY
B i 10) NOVA Computer*. Sprat
And Private Livet" Tha benehtt
and potential haiardt b,ought
about by advance! m computer
technology ara mvetl-giled Q

8*30
(1) O ONE OAV AT A TIME Ann
worriet that hat mother* raditcovarad bad habtlt vrrt land har m |aH

IR)

(ID (3 5 ) JERRY FALWELL

0.-00
O
(3) TONIGHT SHOW 19TH
ANNIVERSARY SPECIAL Johnny
Carton and hit tidakickt Ed
McMahon and Doc Severmten
mark tha 19th anntvertary ol I ha
Torught Show with hrghkghtt Irom
premout thowt
(S) O ALICE Tha girl! concocl a
tchama lo wm back tha dmer by
promrtrng lo gal Robert Goulet lo
perform m lha catmo (Part 2|(R)
B (1 0 ) MASTERPIECE THEATRE
FE S TIV A L
OF
FA V O R ITES
Suntat Song Tha Song” Chnt
and Ewan pari with Culler n ett th e,
ha boattt ol hit inhdelitie!. Rob
ralurnt lo tut mrN |Par!6)(R )
1 1 ( 17) ATLANTIC O TY AUVE

9:30

(S&gt; O
THE JE FFE R S O N S
Florence accaplt tha naw |ob al
lha hotel bul doetn't kka t&gt; that
comat with II (Parl2)|R )
(1D(3 5 ) JM M V SWAOGART

10:00

u o

"The Bin Stuffed Do«,”
Charles M. Schulz's story of
u 5-loot-tall stuffed Snoopy
do); und the people's lives it
touches, will be the second
NBC
P ro je c t
P eac o ck
p re s e n ta tio n for th e fall
season Tuesday. The show,
which launched the P roject
Peacock series last season,
sta rs Noah B erry, Mildred
D unnock, R o b ert G in ty ,
G ordon
Jum p,
D enise
Nicholas and Abe Vigoda,
with Ilossie H arris as Petey
and Sydney Penny a s Lily.
In the story, younu Petey
Pearson looks forw ard to
visitinK his K randfather who
lives on a farm . But Petey is
very utlached lo his 5-loottall Snoopy doj&gt; and Insists on
takint* it alonn. Problem s
arise a t the airport and
Petey sends the do# to the
baKKaKc section of the plane.
It doesn't reach its intended
d e s tin a tio n , h o w ev er —
there a re m any adventures
in store for the Snoopy doji.

IwIkKER
8 D ( 10) THE GOOO NEIGHBORS

MOAMMO

11:00
H ) ( 4 ) 0 ( D O NEW *
8 (1
0 ) SNEAK PRBVWWB "Mora
Ouety Ptaaturet" Roger Ebarl and
Gana Srtkal review toma movie*
Ihey'ra ambarrataad to admit they
Miw) IR)
1 1 (1 7 ) CARMBEAN NtOHTS
Ouaalt Volandrla Mon fa. Marian
P i bon. J a ck! Steal Band

11:30
• (4) THIS WEEK M ENTERTAIN­
MENT
(1) O SATURDAY NIGHT
(7) o CIRCLE OF ETARS
1 d (3 5 ) r r s y o u r b u s in e s s
1 1 ( 1 7 ) OPEN UP

12:30
O (4) MOVIE "My Favorite Spy
(B/W) (1951) Bob Hopa. Hedy
Lamarr
(1) O MOVE * Goodmghl. My
love * |C| (1972) Richard Boona.
Michael Ounn
( 7 ) 0 MOV*
Biantlocm ' (B/W)
( 1965) Jett Hunt«f, Anne Franett
i l l (1 7 ) MOVIE "Action In Tha
**orlh Atlantic' (1943) Humphrey
Bogart. Raymond Maasay

2:20
( D O NEWS

2:50

(7 ) O MOVIE "The Honker* (Cl
11972) Jamat Coburn. Lori Nat I Fe­
lon

3:10

1 1 (1 7 ) MOVIE "Man Of Tha
W all * 11959) Gary Cooper. Juke
London

(D O

5.-00

(TUE-FRO

5*05
a l (1 7 ) RAT PATROL (WED)

6:20

0:00
0

S

(4) HOUR MAOAZME
O DONAHUE
S O X (1 7 ) M OVE
(3 5) OOMER PYLE
(1 0 ) SESAME STREET g

1:30

(i)

O AS THE WORLD TURNS
2:00

0

(41 ANOTHER WORLD
QDO ONE UFE TO UVE

2:30
( D O SEARCH FOR TOMORROW

3K)0

1 1 (1 7) RAT PATROL (MON)

5*30

(I) Q SU94MER SEMESTER

9:30
0D(35)A N OYOR IFFITH

1 1 (1 7 ) RAT PATROL (TUB. THU)

6:35
1 1 (1 7) WORLO AT LARGE (WEO)

5:45

10.-00

O (4) TIC TAC DOUGH
O WELCOME BACK, KOTTER
ap (35) I LOVE LUCY
« **A T K &gt; N A L PRO-

1 1 (1 7 ) WORLD AT LAROE (FRO

6:50
1 1 (1 7 ) WORLD AT LAROE (MON)

6:00
B &lt;2} TODAY IN FLORIDA
H THE LAW ANO YOU (MON)
I SPECTRUM (TUB)
I BLACK AWARENESS (WEO)
i THIRTY MINUTES (THU)
HEALTH FIELD (FRY)
"UNRISE
JIM BARKER
CABLE NETWORK NEWS

10:30
0 ( 7 ) BLOCKBUSTERS
J O ALICE (R)
ID (3 5 ) OCK VAN DYKE
(1 0 ) ELECTRIC COMPANY (R)

11:00
WHEEL OF FORTUNE
THE PRICE (BRIGHT
„ ^ LOVE BOAT (R)
ID (3 5 ) BUO BREWER
0
(1 0 ) EDUCATIONAL PRO1 1 ( 1 7 ) MOVIE

5:30
(4 ) O BEWITCHED

8:45
0 ( 1 0 ) A M . WEATHER

7.-00
) TODAY
I WAKE UP
I GOOO MORMNG AMENCA
. 5) TOM ANO JERRY
(1 0 ) VELA ALEGRE (R)
(17) FUNTIME

7:30
0 ) 0 MORMNG WITH CHARLES
KURALT
OD (3 5 ) WOODY WOOOPCCXER
0 ( 10) BSBASIB STREET g

MO
T h t svtrsgs guKsr ttring h ti
■ plsying lifs of 40 houri.

I D (3 5 ) GREAT SPACE COASTER
B 10 M M T*R ROGERS (R)
1 1 ( 1 7 ) MY THREE SONS

MARCUS WELBY, M.D.

4:35

(7 ) O M OVE "Only A Scream
Away" (C) (1974) Hayfay M4M.
David War back

J o h n n y C a rs o n s u rro u n d s h im s e lf w ith
n e w s p a p e rs t h a t c a r r y th e d a t e of his first
T o n ig h t" sh o w b r o a d c a s t on
T he Tonight
S h o w S t a r r i n g J o h n n y C a r s o n 19th A n n i v e r s a r y , ’
t o a i r S u n d a y o n N 'H C.

Daytime Schedule

10:30
( I ) o r r s A U V M u A Numhar
party al L o ttt bout# It interrupted

7:30

CP BOB HOPE SPECIAL An a t­

Tale Shown

( I ) O TRAPPER JOHN. M .0. (R)
B (TO) TO THE MANOR BORN
1 1 ( 1 7 ) NEWS

(U
)(35)rrs YOUR bubieii
0

Stuffed Dog

(J O

3.-00

10:00
|II,W ) | 19521 Bud Abboll. lo u Cot
lallo A paa ol Ivaman viul A lttk t
In tlrarghlen out a danca-hall gut
(1 1 (1 7 ) HAZEL

i l t , catl |om» Bob Hopa to, a tabrK loot al toma ol teteviuont m oil

11:30
0 ( 4 ] I PASSWORD PLUS
OB (3 5 )I tLOVE. AMERICAN STYLE

0

ANO

(1 0 ) FROM JUMPETREET (R)

0 (1 0 ) FEEUNQ FREE (TUB)
B (1 0 ) PEOPLE OP THE FIRST
LIGHT (R) (WED)
0 (1 0 ) ONCE UPON A CLASSIC
(THU)
B ( 10 ) QUE PABAT (FTU)
17) FUNTTME

3"30
135) SCOOBY OOO
10 ELECTRIC COMPANY (R)
17) THE FUNTBTONFS

4.-00
o
(4) l it t l e h o u s e o n t h e
PRAIRIE
(J) O RICHARD SIMMONS
I ME RV GRIFFIN
35) WOOOY WOOOPECKER
(1 0 SESAME STREET g
(1 7 ) THE MUNSTERS

4*90
AFTERNOON

.HAPPY DAYS AGAIN
5 TOM ANO JERRY
17) LEAVE 7T TO BEAVER

12.-00
0 ( 7 ) CARO SHARKS
( 4 ) 0 ( D © NEWS
QJ) (3 5 ) RMOOA

12:30
0 (7 )N E W B
(T) O THE YOUNG ANO THE

8.-00
(7) OILUGAN-E WLANO
0 HOGANS HEROES
(3 5 ) THE INCREDMLS HULK
0 MMTER ROGERS (R)
(1 7 ) THE BRADY BUNCH

8:30

R YAJfB H O Ft

1J»
DAYS OF OUR UVCa
. ALL MY CHILDREN

• 30

0 ( 7 ) TEXAS
l O a U O N G LIGHT
( 7 ) 0 GENERAL HOSPITAL
D (3 5) BUGS BUNNY

W -.5 ) 0 ( 1 7 ) 1

S mpaw ’
M *A *8 *H

1

4

�September 28

MONDAY
EVENING

6:00
o q n c D 0 ( 1 ) 0 new s
lit: (3 5 ) SANFORD AND SON
0 ( 1 0 OCEANUS
{JD (1 7 ) ANDY GRIFFITH

6:30
O &lt;4) NBC NEWS
(4) O CBS NEWS
( D O ABC NEWS
0 |J (3 5 ) CARTER COUNTRY
Q ) ( 1 0 ) OCEANUS
(IX 117) OOMER PYLE

6:30
(J) O
THE TW O OF US
Brentwood s senile soccer referee
lortows Nan home on the day ot an
important interview (FI)

7:00

9:00

7:30

d f | ) MOVIE
The Secret Love
Of Marilyn Monroe r f 1980) Cunstance Forslund Lloyd Bridges The
story of one of America s foremost
se* symbols and the man behind
her rise to stardom is dramatized
|R)
( i ) O M* A * 8 * H The 1951 N e *
Year's celebration marks the begin­
ning of another 1? months of war at
the 4077th (R|
( D O NFL FOOTBALL Los Ange
i*$ Rams at Chicago Bears r j
(\ ]) (3 5 ) THE ROCKFORD FILES

O Cf) THE MUPPET8
® O P U . MAGAZINE A donur•hkped poiyurelhirre loam houwv a
look at Soap Opera Digeii maga
ime Linda H arm goe* white-water
ratting in Alaika. Chet Tall makes
oarlic m i
( 7 ) 0 JOKER'S WILD
(111 (3 5 ) THE JEFFERSONS
0
(1 0 ) MACNEIL / LEHRER
REPORT
I t (1 7 ) CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS

O (4) ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
I } I O YOU ASKED FOR IT
( 7 ) Q FAMILY FEUD
(ID (3 5 ) BARNEY MILLER
0 (1 0 ) DICK CAVETT Quest But
Moyers (R)
a s (1 7 ) BASEBALL LOS Angeles
Dodgers i t Atlanta Braves

8 00
a

3 ) THE HOYT AXTON SHOW
A widower ed country-western
singer returns alter years ol cross­
country touring to lace the responsibakes ol being a lather q
( I ) O WKRP IN CINCINNATI The
stall grows pltery alter an oIt ice
break-m (R|
(S
O
THAT'S INCREDIBLE
Featured: a three-year-old wire
a ten-year-old girl who

TU ESD A Y
.

*mg* oper*. « fiv*-year-old body
buitd#f
r t j (3 5 ) CHARLIE’S AHQEL8
CD (1 0 ) QREAT PERFORMANCES
VWiHwb Slirfc" Timothy Nolan iwcf
Jan Curtis are featured Ift the Hous­
ton Grand Ope*a t production of
Carlisle Floyds musical drama
ha&amp;ed on Robert Penn Warren s
novel "All The King s Men "

6:00

) O D O NEWS

35) SAHFORO ANC SON
n
m
0 ' (1 0 )
U N D E R S T A N D IN G
HUMAN BEHAVIOR
o i (1 7 ) BASEBALL Los Angeles
Dodgers at Atlanta Braves

6:30
| ( I ) NBC NEWS
I Q C B S NEWS
) B ABC NEWS
) (3 5 ) CARTER COUNTRY
(1 0 )
U N D E R S T A N D IN G
XVXJR
BEHAV

7.-00
■ m T H E M U ffC T B
( D O R - M . MAGAZINE A profile ol
San Diego Zoo spokeswoman Joan
Embery: Pat Travars. a rock n' roll
gullarist In production with ms Istasl album "Radio Active", Chat Tall
makea a tomato salad. Vicki Lansky
discovers "under a dollar
pet
Hams.
m ® JOKER'S WILD
(ft) (3 5 ) THE JEFFERSONS
0
(1 0 ) MACNEIL / LEHRER
REPORT

7:30
) (J) ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
I Q YOU ASKED FOR IT
) 0 FAMILY FlU O
3 (3 5 ) BARNEY MRAER
(1 0 ) DICK CAVETT Guest
chairman ol the FCC Charles Farris
(R|

8:00
•
(3 ) PROJECT PEACOCK "The
Big Stuffed Dog" A five-loot tail
Snoopy dog I ouches the lives ol
those who find It after It becomes
separated from Its owner. (R)
(I) 0
MOW
"High Noon Pan
Two: The Return Ot W « Kane"
( 1M0| Lee Uefors David Carrs
dine. WM and Amy Kane make thaw
hrst hart to HadleyvMa tinea the
famed gunhght and find It In the
grip of a bounty-hunting marshal
(R|
m
0 HAPPY DAYS Fonite mvttee
the Cunrunghamt to dmnar at ChacN ’t mother's humble apartment.
jy jiU l
| f f f ) l W J 8 , T W W * ea o t
■Coamtc Ocean" Or. Cart Sagan

o

9:30

(} )
HOUSE CALLS A patrent
from the psychiatric ward holds
Ann and Mr Peckler hostage with a
stolen gun (R)

( D O NEWS

11:45

12:00
(5) O QUINCY A pregnant Invi.
ager tans to hei death Irom a cliff
and her boyfriend 1s accused ol
murder

12:15
CD Q ABC NEWS NIGHTLINE

12:30
D ( f &gt; TOMORROW Guests Oavtd
Steinberg Pat Paulsen

12:45

D
O MOVIE "The Citadel
IB/WJ t I93BI Robmt Donat Rosal
md Huswii

1:10

(J) O HARRY O Harry becomes
the protector ot a musician who has
been marked tor death (R|

10:00

1:40
(IX (1 7 ) BASEBALL Los Angeles
Dodgers at Atlanta Braves

g j) (3 5 ) LOVE. AMERttAH STYLE
0
(1 0 ) UVE FROM THE MET
"Tuning Up La Travtata" The
Metropolitan Opera Company and
the ms (Or artists are seen preparing
lor their production ot Verdi's "La
Travtata "

September 29
takes viewers on a spectacular
flight through apses in a simulated,
scientifically accurate tourney half­
way from the edge ot the known
universe to Earth |RJ{J

8:30
m
O
LAVERNE S SHIRLEY
Lsverne and Shirley s former drill
instructor goat AW0L and pitches
a tent m the girls' apartment (H) g
OX (1 7 ) LAST OF THE WILD

9:00
B
(C
THE SOPHISTICATED
OEHTS Nme mambart ol an si mal­
ic-social club leurile altar i b years
to pay tribula to than former coach
and mentor (Pari 1)
(7) O THREE'S COMPANY A case
ol mitlakan identity lands Jack a
lobes a chal (R ig
(11) (3 5 ) THE ROCKFORD FILES
0 (1 0 ) OOYSSCY "The Ancient
Manners'' Underwater archaaologislt reconstruct the davalopmant
01 shipbuilding and I ha lives of
ancient seafarers from three ships
that sank m the Mediterranean
thousands ol years ago g
OX (1 7 ) MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE

2:45
D O

NEWS

3:15

D
O M O W "The Forgotten
Man" (C| (1971) Dennis Weaver.
Anne Francis

4.-00
OX (1 7 ) LOVE, AMERICAN STYLE

02) (17) I

4:30

ID O H 'A 'I'H
7 Q ABC NEWS NtOHTUNE
ID (35) STREETS OP SAN FRANOX (1 7 ) M O W "The Night Walk#r" (IM S ) Robert Taylor. Barbara
Stanwyck A widow endangers her
die whan she investigates a recur,
ring dream

12:30
0 ( 2 ) TOMORROW Guests Eddie
Rabbitl. Patti Davia.

12:35
(1) 0
MCCLOUD McCloud bias
lo protect a union official and at tha
same lime track down a hooker
who paints her clients blue (R)
D O

MOW

W illie Stark Comes To PBS
H u b ert P en n W a rre n ’s
P u l i t z e r P r iz e - w in n in g
novel, "All Die K ing's M en,"
is the basis (or Carlisle
F loyd's new m usical d ram a,
"Willie S ta rk ," which a irs on
" G ro a t
P e r fo r m a n c e s ’’
Monday, on PBS, i I jk iiI
tim e s m a y v a r y : check
listin g s.)
T heatrical producer and
d ir e c to r H aro ld P rin c e ,
whose m ost recent Broad­
way w orks are " E v ita " and
"Sweeney Todd," slaved this
production (or (he Houston
(•rant! Opera in association
TIM OTHY N'OI.KN
with the John K. Kennedy
C enter for the P erform ing
. . . s t a r s a s Willie* S t a r k
Arts.
Baritone Tim othy Nolen
featu res Ja n Curtis, Alan
s ta rs a s Willie S tark, the
K ays and Ju lia Conwell.
Southern populist governor
N arration of (he twn-andm o st o ften c o m p a re d to on e-h itlf-h o u r te le c a s t is
Huey ljtn « . The east also p ro v id ed
by
v e te ra n
new scaster I j w ell Thomas,
who died ea rlier this month.
W hen
you
fin a n c e
n
"W illie S tn rk " is the story
c a r, g e n e ra lly I hi- ktnallcr
of
a sm all-tim e politician
th e a m o u n t o f m o n e y b o r ­
who rises from n humble
r o w e d , th e lo w e r th e a n ­
n u a l p e rc e n ta g e ra te ( A I 'I t );
b a c k g ro u n d
lo b eco m e
th e
a h o r te r th e d u r a tio n
governor of the sta te in the
o f th e lo a n , th e l e u it* to ta l
d e e p S o u th . He is th e
c o a t. T o fin d th e lo w eat
grassroots cham pion of the
A I*R a v a ila b le , a h o p a ro u n d
working class, but behind his
am ong
a e v rra l
le n d in g
"country boy" im age, Willie
in n lit u t io n i.
S ta rk is u lso a sh rew d
politician, willing lo stretch
the law w henever he feels

IACR-T0-SCH00L
W h e n k h n p p in g f o r a lo a n ,
avk n I h ru t c o s t* o r fe e * n t h r r
I h u ll in te re s t ch a rg e *. Ila u a lty y o u w ill I h * r e q u ire d to
m a k e a c a *h d o w n p a y ­
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D O M O W "Victory At Sea
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11) (3 5 ) INOEPENOCNT NETWORK

contricted bv its Itoundtirics.
As the telecast begins,
Gov. Willie S tark is resorting
to any m eans necessary —
including blackm ail — to
av o id im p e a c h m e n t. He
finally trium phs but in his
|iath to victory lie has ruined
many lives: His longtime
tr u s te d
a d v is e r ,
S ad ie
B u rk e , is to ssed a s id e
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and tils energetic, idealistic
a id e , J a c k B u rd en , se es
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Burden's fa th e r’s suicide.
T h en th e yo u n g B u rd en
learns that Willie S tark has
robbed him of his fiancee,
loo.
At the end ol the program ,
Willie exuberantly leaves Ur*
atatebousc where he has
Itcen cleared of any charges
of wrongdoing — and he docs
not n o tic e J a c k B u rd en .
Burden fires fatal shots into
"th e h eart of the people,"
Willie Stark.
"W illie S la rk " is produced
for "G reat P erfo rm an ces"
by Sidney P alm e r and P eter
W ein b erg . Jo h n tlcM u tn
conducts the Houston G rand
O p era O r c h e s tr a ; B ria n
fjtrg e d irects Ihe telecast.
J a e V enza is e x e c u tiv e
producer of "G reat P er­
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1:10

DONEW S

(S) O UNIT 4 An anli-tarronst
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ernment official from revolution-

'All The King's Men' Adaptation

12:00

(13 O ALICE Akca discovers that
her lata husband tall a suable
insurance pokey, but who is the
benefioa/y7 (R)
D O FANTASY ISLANO A World
War I bull lights the Red Baron, and
an aging woman lam poranly
regains her youth (R)

9:30

(2 ) O HART TO HART The Haris
investigate the mysterious death ol
a close friend at a health spa |R )g

Friday, Sept. 25, 1111—7

11:30

B '4 I TONIGHT Guest host Jo.in
Rivals Guests Richard Simmons
Mark Russell
( S i Q M 'A 'S ’ H
ll! (3 5) STREETS OF SAN FRAN­
CISCO
OX (1 7 ) MOVIE
Jeanne fagels
(1957) Kim Novak je ll Chandler
The careei ol the famous actress
uses and then tails because ol a
struggle with alcohol

(4 ) a
LOU ORANT Billie tails in
love with her news source, a proles-sionstbaseballplayei (fl)
(ID (3 5 ) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
NEWS
Q2)( 17) NEWS

10:30

Evening Herald, Senlord, FI.

11:00

OSHDONEW S
(It (351 BENNY HILL
0 (10) POSTSCRIPTS
I t (17) ALL IN THE FAMILY

Befora painting window*,
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Mickey Rooney:
It Was Just Practice

M IKK DOUGLAS
NEW YORK — Jack
U-mnion is tapering off. Ik*
switched from cig arettes to
cigars and now lie's pipe
sm oking... ttlcky Schroder's
secret am bition is to do n
w estern and to play baseball

for the Y ankees... Phyllis
McGuire of the McGuire
S isters is npnrtnient-hunling
in the Bin Apple... Mike
D ouglas' favorite food is
ch ic k e n p n rm ig ia n a . He
even cooks it himself.
l ) u \ id Frost: " I t ’s better
to have loved and lost than to
do homework for three kids"
... P ete r Ustinov: " I t's so
sinoggy in I,.A. that live first
tim e I visited th e re I Just felt
the s i g h t s ''... Ann-M orgret:
"T he Bible tells us to love
our neighbors and also to
love our enem ies. Probably
because they’re the sam e
people!"
Hollywood knows how to
live: C harlene Tilton put a
down paym ent on a palazzo
for a million and a half and
B arbara M andrell bought
h e rse lf a SG0.000 Bolls

Boyce... ljirc tta l.ynn is
looking to w rite a movie
script ami to s ta r in it.
This is from the cighttim e s - m a rr ie d
M ickey
llooncy: “ I didn’t m arry a
lot. I just practiced a lot" ...

6:00
O lT lU O ir O N E W S
IC (3 5 ) SANFORD AND SON
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I t (1 7 ) ANOY GRIFFITH

6:30
O l4 iN B C NEWS
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1 7 ) 0 ABC NEWS
ill (3 5 ) CARTER COUNTRY
CD (1 0 ) i r S EVERYBODY'S BUSI­
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7:00
o (4 THE MUPPET8
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MAOA2INE Eileen
Ford •- c tM lw ol cover-girl super­
start, a larm in Tainan where m l*
ara raised IOf eating, Cathie Mann
m e e l*
H o llyw oo d's
h o lie s t
songwriting learn. Dr Marina Granich on why living together firsl
doesn't guarantee a happy mar­
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(7 ) Q OTHER'S WILD
(11 (3 5 ) T HE JEFFERSONS
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111 (1 7 ) CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS

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(1) a
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CD
MONK ANO MMDV Mr
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DIFi-'RENT STROKE8
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othy Hutton
The relationship
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CA 19th-century Irish rebel Rory
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homeland behind end emigieles lo
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0:30

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(3 5 ) BENNY HILL
( 10 POSTSCRIPTS
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11:30

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(73 O t h e OREATEST AMERICAN
HERO Dill MaawHi learnt that a
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U I (3 5 ) CHARLIE'S ANGELS
ID ( 10) LIVE FROM THE MET La
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la Traviata James Levine con­
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i ) l O U ‘ A‘ S 'H
171P ABC NEWS NIOHTLINE
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Travis changas tha format of tha
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I f ) O LOVE BOAT A man maats
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tycoon IRI

12.30
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12:35

(») O MOVIE
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O ( i t THE FACTS OF LIFE Blair
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1:10

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ol murder (Part ?)
(II) (35) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
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1:40
d t (1 7 ) BASEBALL San Francisco
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3:10
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(It (17) NEWS

10:30
(11) (3 5 ) LOVE. AMERICAN STYLE
ff ) (1 0 ) DAUGHTERS OF TIME
Three contem porary nursemidwives ara proliled as they work
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11:00

(DP MOVIE

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"The Eyes Have II
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at ( 17) LOVE. AMERICAN STYLE
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102 S. FRENCH AVE. (17-92)
SANFORD, 32771

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WEDNESDAY

Friday, Sept. JS, l t l t

CD (1 0 ) POSTSCRIPTS
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11:30
Slowly Paul Newman. Albert Salmi
end George Pepperd alar m a tele­
drama about a young baseball play­
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end teammate through one last

0:30
(Z) P
BEST OF THE WEST A
reived guntighlor lake* a (Ob a t a
cook m the Square Deal Saloon
O t (1 7 ) LAST OF THC WILD

0.00
(1) o
NURSE A young doctor
shows romantic attentions lo Mary
a t she undergoes a m idlile crisis

&lt;RI

(D

O THE MANIONS OF AMERI­
CA Prosperous In Philadelphia.
Rory marries Rachel, he It (omed by
hit sister Dev die. who. convinced
of the death of David, marries
another man (Pari 2)
OB (3 5 ) THE ROCKFORD FILES
• &lt; 10) SNEAK P R E W W S Roger
Ebert and Gene Slakel review
Momm a Dearest. "Only Whan I
laugh" and "Continental Divide ”
O t 0 7 ) MMSIOM: IMPOSSIBLE

9:30
S

(1 0 )

ALFRED HITCHCOCK

10:00

•
(31 THE SOPHISTICATED
O B IT S On the IvW rogni ol I ha
reunion, the rnraamg gen I arrives,
setting oft a confrontation between
him. tha real of tha club and tha
detective who suspects turn of mur­
der (Part 3)
(D O
KNOTS LAMOMQ Whan
they cooperate with an FBI Inveatlgalion of the underworld. Sid and
Oar^r tear lor thaw three |R)

O lilT O N IO H T Guesl host David
Steinberg Guests Beverly D An
gelo Peter Cook
( 3) n M *A *B *H
(7) P ABC NEWS NIQHTUNE
0 M 3 5 ) STREETS OF SAN FRAN111 (1 7 ) MOVIE - The Story On
Page One" (1950) Rile Hayworth.
Anthony Franciosa A detente
attorney battle* I he prosecutor in
h»t attempt to acquit a woman and
her lover of murdering her hu I band

12:00
( l) Q O U M C Y Oumcy crusade* lo
have a legal drug, which caused the
death ol a young gvl, outlawed
( D O VEGAS An e i-M ita America
becomes the victim ol an Salomon
P*ol (R)

12:30
•

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1:10
(D C 0 T H C B A M T A pax of wouldbe |ewel thieve* are duped mio
(leekng a taka necklace
( D O M O W "First To Fignr (C)
( 1987| Chad Ever* 11 , Marilyn Dsvm

2:08
OX (1 7 ) BASEBALL San Francisco
Glams at AlW ita Braves

2:50

CDI
(D O MOW

3:20

"Sam Whiskey" (Cl
(1989) Burt Reynolds. Cknl Walker
a x d 7 )i

-

4:45

HU

10) DA VS ALLEH AT LARGE

10:30
op (3 5 ) LOVE. AMERICAN STYLE
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11.-00

SKIRAfflA.1

That popular and dtlicioui
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wai first grown in Europe.

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                    <text>74th Y ear, No. 29—Thursday. Septem ber 24,1981— Sanford, F lorid a 32771

Evening H erald— (USP5 481 2801— P rice 20 Cents

M ore Hospitals?
Seminole Commissioners, HSA Argue Over Expanding Health Care
It) DAKI.ENE JENNINGS
Herald Stall Writer
Seminole County commissioners have
asked an advisory agency to reconsider
its method used to determine the number
of hospital beds the county w ill need in
the next five years.
John Beaton, director o| the East
Central Florida Health Systems Agency
told the board Tuesday the county will
need only 56 beds by 1986. Beaton said the
county’s needs are estimated by looking
at the past use of hospitals. "We look at
the patterns of care in the county and if

no major changes have occurred in the
last five-to-ten years, we determine a
ratio based on this information," Beaton
said.
Commissioners objected to Beaton's
line of reasoning, saying it promotes
patients traveling out of the county for
care because county fa c ilitie s are
relatively limited.
The need for obstetrics care in the
county, argued commissioners, is one
example why patients leave Seminole for
care in other counties. Between 75 and 90
percent of all county residents' Infants

are not delivered in the county's
hospitals.
Commissioner Bill Kirchhoff added,
"You're going to have more people
coming to and staying in Seminole
County for care if we have the facilities
here," Kirchhoff said.
Bob Sturm, commission chairman, told
the USA representatives that he didn't
feel the 56 extra beds the agency plans to
recommend to the state adequately
anticipates the county's growth
" I think the method you are using
understates the actual need (or Seminole

area where thev can't rcl\ on their
cohorts h-r referral service." Beaton
added
Beaton asked the commissioners to
consider building only a few large
hospitals instead o| many sm aller
hospitals
USA assured :h&lt; &gt;ommissioncrs that
the agency's interests were the same as
'tie county's hi expanding hospital
facilities "(Jive us a year to look at this,
and if we find a need, we’ll go out and find
a hospital tor you to build." Beaton said

Parents Fume O ver
'Values’ Counseling

Florida:
Near Top
As Rip-Off
Community
By TF.NI YAKBOKOLGH
Herald Staff W riter
"Florida almost leads the nation in
being the rip-o(l state of the Union," the
state's chief consumer advocate said In
Sanford today.
Tlie comment was made by Jane
Hobinson, director of the state Division of
Consumer Services, during o breakfast
meeting at the Greater Sanford Chamber
of Commerce.
"To some, consumer complaints sound
like small potatoes, but we're Involved in
complaints that touch on organised
crime, scams of all types, the laundering
of illegal money by various businesses
and groups and many others," Hobinson
said.
Stic added that Florida is a prime
target for flim -flam artists and scams
because of Its transient, and heavyelderly population.
"We’re all for free enterprise and we
fight like hell to keep it that way in (his
country," Mrs. Hobinson said. "But you
wouldn't believe some of the cases we
handle from the very frivolous to the
very serious."
One such serious m in e ot wnicn
Florida residents are prime targets is tlie
“ work at home and supplement your
income scams," Mrs. Hobinson said.
"These work-at-home scams are
popular to Florida residents because
many of the elderly and others are
looking for ways to supplement a
retirement check, social security or
whatever," she said.
To combat the trend, Mrs. Hobinson
said the stale Division of Consumer
Services successfully lobbied state
legislature into passing the Business
OpiHirtunities Act which is designed to
protect the consumer from companies
See HII'-OFF. I’age 5A

County," Sturm said The county is • D llltS i The D llltS will make the final
being treated like a step-child," lie ad­ decision.
ded.
Beaton agreed Seminole County really
needs to attract specialty care to
Hospital Affiliates International lias promote its hospital growth, Imt tinasked the USA to recommend to the state county can't do ,l,a e "h the I'ommunity
a 150-bed hospital for l/ingwixxl, and hospital idea, he continued
Florida Hospital-Altamonte has asked
" I don't think you need a community
that 56 lieds be added In its facility
Hospital now You need OB -obstetrics i,
pediatrics and specially care." Beaton
The HSA is expected to make its final
said 'The real problem is to attract
recommendation in November to the
specialists, and you can t do that with a
Office of Community Medical Facilities,
a division o| the state Department of 150-bed hospital," Beaton said
•'Dm-tors don't like to practice in an
Health and H e h abilltative Services

l-'ln ritlu , JotHi S. O rla n d o D r iv e
S a n fo rd , s its a lo n e in a s m a l
c o u rtro o m a t th e S e m in o le C o u nt
J a il as he m a d e h is fir s t a p p t-u ru n c i
in c o u rt W e d n e sd a y. T r a iic h in e ,
- la iio r a d a A x e ., S a n fo rd , xxas ja ile d
a fte r h e a rin g u n d e r SM.000 Im m l. H r
a lle g e d ly got a w a y w ith &gt;10,5111 in
th e r o b b e ry , h u t w a s id e n tifie d
w ith in la m in u te s o f th e
I ’ u llc e s a y they h a v e re c o v e re d a ll
hut Slat) o f th e s to le n cash.

By DONN A ESTES
Herald Stall Writer
Guidance counseling services in the i t
elementary schools in the Seminole
County public school system is here to
stay, despite some parent criticism
Tlie program is mandated by the state
Department ot Education, Assistant
S&lt; hod Superintendent Dan Dugg told an
overflow crowd at a School Hoard
hearing Wednesday night And Dagg
relayed School Superintendent Hob
llugtie.H endorsement "I the program.
Hughes was unable lo attend the meeting
because of illness
1jess than a dozen parents complained
about the guidance counseling program
as such Their complaints were that
neither the state nor tlie school ad­
ministration has set guidelines lor what
w ill or will not be taught in the program
or what methods or textbooks will l»used by the counselors.
Specifically criticized was Uie use o|
one textbook — Tow-tml E ffective
Development (TADt — which parents
said favors discussions and "value
clarification" on the "bom b" and the
"p ill” in the elementary school program
Over the past several months, parents
luive protested that "humanism" was
also being taught in large and small
group ( lasses Mr and Mrs Bill Hussey
of XVekiva Springs said they turd initiated
the protests of the program on advice of a
member id the school administration
Ivan Bowers, director id student ser­
vices
Mrs Hussey said she found that her
daughter lunl been in counseling for two
years at Wekivu Springs Elementary
School without her knowledge
She said sla- asked the principal to
allow her daughter to to- removed from
the program and be refused She said she
then took her request lo Bowers, who also
refusxxl her request
Mrs Hussey said Bowers advised her
to get enough parents to complain and

maybe the program would In- thrown out
Bussey said she appealed to School
Board member Pat Telson and the child
was removed from the class
By the time Mrs. Bussey and her
hustiand got enough people toge'.lier. Hie
protest had gotten "out of hand." she
said But. she added. " I send my i laid to
school to U-arn reading and math, not
"value clarification " Bussey continued
hy saying it is humanly inqiossible for a
teacher to clarify values without his own
values creeping into the clarification
process.
Bowers said today he initially refused
lo permit the removal ol the child Irom
tlie guidance classes, fearing the child's
absence would lie conspicuous and sixwould become isolated He denied Ihot lahad advised Mrs Bussey to initiate a
protest group, say ing he told Mrs Bussey
d something was going wrong with the
program c o u n t)-wide, it would he
examined.
He said the parents are correct that no
standards are sot (or counselors. The
program has to be molded and lormed
according to the student laxly Since we
do not have standardized children, there
is no such thing as a standanzed
program." Bovvers said
"There are no standards at any level of
counseling and I Iio| m- then- never will
I n-." Bowers said
Guidance counseling is provided at all
2.1 elementary w hools. Bowers said, with
full-time counselors on duty at all hut
lout of the schools The student body is
not sufficient in size to warrant a fu ll­
time counselor at those four schools.
This is the thud year guidance coun­
seling has been a county wide service in
the elementary schools, he said, adding
Seminole is one ol tlie first of the 67
counties in Florida to luive a county wide
service Tlie state mandates the program
and provides Seminole County almut
S54MI.OOO annually for it

Shirley Cornell of the Pro-Family
Forum of Orange and Seminole counties,
told the Imard Sid Simon, author ol I AD
stresses that elementary students do a
self-audit of their souls and spirits
She insisted this concept violates tlxfirst amendment to the Constitution
separation of church and state She said
that "hum anism " has been defined as a
religion hy the C S Supreme Court,
insisting that humanism is being taught
in Hie program
School Ih iird attorney Nul Julian,
asked for an opinion, said he doesn't
Ix-lieve the program violates the precept
o! separation of church and state
Ms C orn'll warned the Imard Hint
tiling a lawsuit against the School Hoard
on the guidance program has tu rn
deferred pending an opinion from the
state Department ol Education
Betty. Braun, guidance counselor at
Sahal Point Elementary and immediate
past president ol tlie Seminole County
Elementary Guidance Counselors, said
students are counseled on underlying
Irulh, principles and beliels.
School Board member Nancy Warren
said with all the questions on the
guidance program she isn't sure it
shouldn’t he looked at carefully
Somewhere you have to start with a
value that needs clarifying," she said
Mrs Telson urged that the book, TAD. be
placed on the next school board agenda
lor evaluation on whether it slmuld I hused in the system
Chairman Bill Kndl said the up
propriute place for discussion ol the
guidance program is at the local school
level la-fore each individual school ad­
visory com m ittee K n d l refused a
suggestion Irom Hie audience that Hmboard request each school advisory
committee and the county wide school
advisory committee take up the issue lie
said each com m ittee may discuss
whatever n pleases without interference
from the Si Imol Board

Palsy Victim's Speech Aided By Laser Computer
By DIANE M. JEFFERSON
Herald Feature Writer
A Dike Mary student who has difficulty
making anyone but his parents and
teachers understand him is learning to
communicate with others using a laser
beam and microcomputer.
Mark Ding was born with cerebral
palsy, an affliction in which he has no
control of his muscles. His lips and
tongue do not want to form the words he
tries to say and his fingers cannot hold
onto a pen (or very long. Spasms strike
his body without warning. Unable to
walk, unable to point to what he wants,
and speaking in half-articulated words
that vary in pilch, Mark has been cut off
from normal communication with the
outside world for 20 years.

TO DAY________
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• -• • • -•»

But a special federal grant obtained
through tlie Seminole County School
Board is helping him reach out to others
without liaving to rely on someone to
translate for him.
. L ist June, Mark received a device
called Express I Tlie unit was funded
through a federal grant, costing ap­
proximately $2,500. Tlie unit belongs to
tlie Seminole County School Board but
was bought to help Mark find u way to
break down Hie barrier of his isolation
imposed by the cerebral palsy and
become capable of communicating with
other people in the outside world.
An instru ctio na l aide, M yra
Swaggerty, is helping him use HitExpress I and teaching him to spell
"survival words" that he must know
once he leaves school.
Express I is a microcomputer that can
be prograiiuued with phrases or sen­
tences. It can also be connected to a
television set or printer for use as a data
entry terminal. Tlie Prentke Homich
Company designed Express 1 for in­
dividuals who cuuld not speak or move
their limbs.
Mark lias only begun to learn Hie
capabilities ot the unit. To communicate,
he wears a headband wiHt a pointer at­
tached near his eye level. As Mark moves
his head, the pointer sends out a laser
beam, which scans the console in front of
him. Tlie console is divided into boxes
containing letters or phrases. When the
beam rests on Hie letter or phrase Mark
lias selected, the console is activated and
Hie IcUer either appears on a small
screen on Hie console or can be printed
onto tape, which can be lord off and read.
Using Express I is hard work for Mark.
His spastic condition causes Hie pointer

to sometimes scan the console wildly ,
causing a whole row of boxes to light up
Without Express I, however,
Swaggerty sziid Mark would lx- com­
municating Hie same way he has been in
Hie past; trying to speak Site* said lie us
only beginning to tap the resources ol
Express I and luis a lot of work attend of
him before he w ill be able to use it last
and efficiently.
But Mark is 20 and when he celebrates
his next birthday lie w ill no longer be able
to p articipa te in the exceptional
education program since funding is
available only from infancy through 21.
And when he leaves the program.
Express 1 and his electric w heelchair will
go back to tin- owners. Seminole County.
Swaggerty said if Mark could gel
another Express I to use after lie leaves
the school program, site would be
training him a little differently than she
is now. As far as Swaggerty knows,
Express I w ill be returned to the countyami Mark w ill be left In the same position
as before, relying on speech to try to
coiiununicate his needs
Seminole County Health and
Heliabilitative Services iHHS) social
worker Robbie Holland said she sees "no
problem" with Mark getting an Express
I, or a sim ilar device to lielp him com­
municate. Holland said she expects a
wheelchair w ill also be piovided for
Mark. His case is in committee right now
she said.
Before Holland took over as Mark's
counselor, a former employee no longer
with Semuiole County misplaced Mark's
file. M urk's case had to be reactivated.
So when Mark leaves 1-ake Mary High
for home, Express I stavs behind at the

M e rsld C holo B» 0 &lt; *n t J t l l t n o n

.Mark l.o tig

le a rn s to
s tu d e n t p ro g ra m .

speak v ia

an E x p re s s I c o m p u te r th ro u g h th e S e m in o le C o u n lv e x c e p tio n a l

school.
M a rk's parents praise Seminole
County School Board officials, though,
and say Uiey can see Mark's progress
since lie luis beer- using Express I.
"He wrote Hie first letters he's ever
been able lo write ui his life ," recited
Carol D«ig. "H e wrote three or four

letters—one to his ststri in Michigan and
one tu his uncle. He got a letter back from
&lt;&gt;ur granddaughter You should liave
seen him. He was so proud He just used
dial machine (Express l i and put the
words on tape and then 1 cut out Hu- ta|ie.s
and pasted (Item on a si wet ol paper. It
was his own words."

Carol Dmg said tier son lias come a
long way, relating an interview with a
iwdiatrician in Michigan when Mark was
very young.
"They told me lie would have to bt |wt
in an institution and be a vegetable lor
See CKHKHKAI. VICTIM, Page 5A

» l*» * «•

-• «

I

�U r.Ivjglw t HtnM, laniard. Ft.___ T h m ^ S e g U M f t i

V*

BimD/NG

W ORLD

O N THE M O V E
The fo rm rr IJl* Pantry Con­
venience Store nl 2313 W.
First St.. Sanford . hove), is
bring m o\rd lo makr way for
the new overpass to tie built
over the n rarb y ra ilroa d
tracks. The building, purehasetl from the state hy Tom
A. Youngblood llnusemnvers.
of Sanford, will be relocated
at 413 W. First St.. Sanford, !
and will he available lor
lease. The only other building
on Ihe right-of-way is Kiddy's
Auto repair, which w ill be
torn down by rnnlraetor Wev
ley Rush. According to a stale
Department of Trnnsporlalion ( DOTl spokesman the
contrail for the overpass construrtlnn will he ready to let in
60 Hays.

IN BRIEF
C rackdow n A im e d Against
Polish G overnm ent Critics
WARSAW, Poland i UPI) - Poland's Prime Minister
told parliament today he has ordered special army
units lo back police In a crackdown against
"hooliganism, anti-slate and anti-Soviet excesses."
Gen. Wojdech Jaruzelskl also warned that the future
of the nation depended on whether Solidarity
"repudiates its intention to lake over power" and in­
dicated Moscow has threatened to withdraw economic
aid If the union does not take heed.
"An end must be put to anarchy, hooliganism, antistate and anti-Soviet excesses as well as to jeering at
legal norms," Jarutelski told parliament in the
nationally televised address.
He said he had ordered selected army units to aid
police in stamping out attacks against the Soviet Union
and appealed to the nation to support the law-and-order
campaign.

Herald Ohote by Tom Vincanl

Iranian Killings Continue
By Usited Press Iatersatiosal
Iran's school year opened with the execution of 22
dissidents accused of creating political unrest in
classrooms and reports that non-Moslem teachers are
being dismissed in an apparent purification campaign.
A Tehran radio announcement of the executions,
soon after schools across Iran began a new academic
year Wednesday, was the first time "political ac­
tivities In schools" was cited as an offense punishable
by death.
The radio did not say when the 22 Mojahideen Khalo
members were killed. But the executions in six dif­
ferent cities, which raised the total since late June to
1,138, appealed Intended lo frighten dissidents seeking
support on the campuaes.
Opposition sources reported authorities also were
firing non-Moslem teachers in the state controlled
schools in an apparent attempt lo make the nation's
education system completely Islamic.

Nuclear Arms Talks Will Begin In Geneva Nov. 30
The announcement came in a joint statement released by
both governments following lour hours of talks Wednesday
between Secretary of State Alexander Haig and Soviet Foreign
Minister Andrei Gromyko.
The announcement said the American negoliating team
would be headed by Paul Nltzc. He is a former deputy
secretary of defense, a member of Ihe SALT I negoliating
learn and a strong and vocal critic of the SALT If treaty that
was negotiated but not ratified.
The Soviet team w ill be headed hy Ambassador U.A. Kvitstnsky, according to the announcement.
Tlie joint statement concluded, "Both sides believe in the
importance of these negotiations for enhancing stability and

Arms To Cuba Increase

A supplemental grant of 36,600 is being
sought from Hie State Department of
Education (DOE) by the Seminole County
School Board (or the Dividemls-school
vnlunteers-program.
Dan Dagg, assistant school superintendent
tor instruction, under w I vjsc department the
school volunteer program operates, said today
the grant, which is almost assured, will come
from a DOE appropriation for community
services.
Tlie grant, to be used for travel, purchasing
services, supplies and materials and equip­
ment, w ill supplement the program 's
allocations In the School Board’s 1981-82
budget of $54,226.

NATIONAL REPORT: Heavy rains washed low-lying areas
along rivers and streams in the Northeast and a flashflood
watch was posted for the region today. More than 4 inches of
rain soaked southwestern Maine. Sub-freezing temperatures
chilled the Great Lakes Wednesday and a cold front pushed
I hunder showers Into the Plains states. Showers also doused the
upper Mississippi Valley and the Southern Plateau. Frost
warnings were posted early today over West Virginia, where
temperatures lingered in the 40s. A record-low 25-degree
reading was reported at Sault Sle. Marie, Mich. That eclipsed
the city's old mark established in 1896 and tied the all-time
reading for September. Some Hooding was reported Wed­
nesday along the Ausable River in Essex County of northeast
New York. A small stream flood watch was posted today for
Vermont and the Adirondacka of eastern New York.

During Hie past school year, some 1,600
volunteers, ranging from middle school
students to parents and grandparents, gave
81,000 hours of service lo Ihe county’s 42 public
schools.
Tlie program was founded by Dede Sclmffner of Altamonte Springs six years ago.
Initially Mrs. Schaffncr gave tier services
gratis while leading volunteers al three ol the
county's sellouts, according lo Dagg. During
the period she completed her college
education, receiving a bachelor's degree in

AREA READINGS ( t a.m .|: temperature; 76; overnight
low;67; Wednesday's high; 90; barometric pressure: 30.17;
relative humidity; 84 percent: winds: north at 6 mph.

TALLAHASSEE (U PI) - Tlie alleged
leader of a marijuana smuggling ring said to
be the largest ever prosecuted by Hie federal
government is being held on 320 million bond.
Bonds were set ut the same figure (or five
other men among a dozen indicted for
allegedly operating a 3300 million smuggling
operation employing a fleet ol shrimp boats
from Key West.

AREA FORECAST: Generally fair through Friday. Highs
in the upper 80a. Lows in the upper 60s. Wind northeast 10 to IS
mph today decreasing to less than 10 mph tonight.
Zones 12,17, — Partly cloudy through Friday. Highs In the
mid 80s. I jOw s in the upper 60s. Wind northeast around IS mph.

Florida Department of Law Enforcemenl
Commissioner James York said the ring used
the shrimp boats to move marijuana from
Colombia to offload sites in north Florida and
Georgia at the rate of 25 tons per shipment.

HOSPITAL NOTES

O tlC H A tO d l
Jan lord
Jim M BUhop

•ti

, ig

Evrtiing Herald

im»r»

Thursday, September 24, if t t —Vol. 74, No. 2*
RwMtaAad Dally at* Sunday, aitaot SatvrBay By Tea
Itaaoie. Ia*., MSN. BrontR Ay#., Santord, Bl*. M n i.

It toad ciau PaWatt Bats si ItstarB. Btsrtes u n i
____ OdHtaryi Week, 11*1 M#*W, M U i 4 M art*. IM M i
vaar. M M t By «UNi waa* 11.11; M«*m. n i l ; 4 MaeiB*.

I 4 4 *

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An unusual project for Hie school volunteers
occurred recently. The volunteers laid sod at
Altamonte Elementary'- The Dividends' office
in a portable building is located at tlie school.
The major qualification for persons wishing
to volunteer for tlie program is Hiat they “ liave
a willingness to help," according to a
spokesman in tlie organization. Persons
wishing to apply may do so at any of Hie
sctwxiLs or al Hie Dividends olfice.

*

moved under federal racketeering statutes lo
seize a Key West marina, a farm, a fish camp
and 17 other parcels of property allegedly used
by Hie ring.
Higby issued a restraining order prohibiting
tlie transfer or sale of any of Hie 310 million in
property |iending a hearing.
York said evidence collected established
that tlie group imported or attempt to Import
500,000 pounds of marijuana but added that the
actual figure is probablv much higher.
He said Hie ring had grossed about 3300
million since 1977.
The charges included racketeering, con­
spiracy and operating "a continuing criminal
enterprise."

• 4

t

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csw

3 P

16. 55 %
18. 265 %

Per Year Compounded Doily

Effective Annual Yield

CHECK THESE IMPORTANT
ADVANTAGES!

Tlie federal indictments were unsealed
Wednesday in Pensacola and UJ». District
Judge Lynn Higby took the unusual action of
The two lawyers indicted were Manuel
setting bonds even before Hie suspects were
James of Key West and Clifford Wentworth of
arrested.
Fort Lauderdale.
The accused ringleader, Manuel Villanueva
Also named waa Antonio Bascaro of Miami,
of Miami, was arrested at hia home and taken
who already was in federal custody on charges
before U.S. Magistrate Peter Palermo, who
relating to the ring.
continued the 320 million bond pending a
Others were Jose Acosta of M iami, Gustavo
hearing Monday.
Tlie indictments and arrests followed a 3l&gt;- Fernandez ol Key West, Rene Benitez of
year joint tederal-atate investigation dubbed Colombia, Carlton Reeves of Milton, James
Sellers of Pensacola; Patrick Waldrop of
"Operation Sunburn."
Birmingham, Ala., Russel Hobson of Satellite
York said those indicted Included a Beach and John Araneo ol Fort Ijiuderdale.
Colombian supplier, financial backers, two
Sellers surrendered at the Bay County Jail
lawyers, wholesale distributors and major in Panama City and was turned over to UJ&gt;.
buyers.
marshals.
"The indictment of these 12 people
“ This particular group Is through doing
penetrates the backbone of the largest business," York declared.
marijuana organization lo be prosecuted by
The property targeted (or attachment by the
the U.S. Justice Department to date," he told a feds includes the 23.5-acre Safe Harbor Marina
newt conference.
al Key West, a 690-arre farm allegedly used as
"This was no fly-by-night operation," said a marijuana storage site near Cottondale,
FDLE agent Scott Daniels in Miami, who Fla., and the rVicilla River Fish Camp in
Taylor County, said lo be the prim ary offload
headed the state investigation.
U i . Attorney Nicholas Geeker in Pensacola site.

R o M r t E . D u n lap
G rata 6 Hudvon
Pamala G. Dunn
Baby G ir l D unn
Ruth C. Smith
M ary H W hitah urji
Nattio R M illa r
Hanry T. Slav**. Cotoa Batch
Irm a I. Hops. Oallona
Cynthia B. Koatlvol, Dollona
Elaonor S R u tta ll, Oallona
V irginia S. C ollin*, LaL* Monro*
Jtt»&gt;* l Hugh**, Long wood
W illiam M. P rlta , Orlando
Mat lid * M. Hicks, Orango City
John H Stoar, C rane* City
jo Anno H ulchlnjgn, O il tan
H o iltr A R tddick. Oviodo

Loot's M Chanolor
I Halt a rad lo r. OoLand
M a rl* M H*n»«n, D tilona

In the current year she w ill receive a salary
of 320,703. Mrs. Schaffner's title Is consultantcoordinator of the program. Also paid in the
program arc two clerical workers.
*
_
a
. ..
* -A
Funds are budgeted for salaries, main­
tenance, materials, rental fees, travel, for
professional or technical assistance when it ia
needed and to purchase lunches for volunteers
who work in a school more than five hours a
day.
Tlie volunteers in the elementary schools
work on a one-to-one basis with math and
reading students and in art programs. At
times they help out w ith clerical work in school
offices and in Hie clinics.

Busted Off Florida Coast

BOATING FORECAST: SI. Augustine to Jupiter Inlet, Out
» Miles; Wind northeast 13 knots today and tonight becoming
easterly Friday. Seas 3 to 3 feet. Widely schattered showers
mainly over the Gulf Stream.

L y a t O Lavandaf
J rn n i* O Marchanl
E iu a M in J o t Howard
tim o th y T C hrljta n ja n

education. After receiving her degree and
after (he service expanded county-wide, she
was placed on the county school payroll.

$300 Million Drug Ring

FRIDAY'S TIDES: DAYTONA BEACH: highs, 6:50 a.m „
7.19p.m.; lows, 12:29 a.m., 12:42 p.m.; PORT CANAVERAL:
highs, 8:42 a .m „ 7:11 p.m,; lows, 12:20 a m , 12:33 p.m.;
BAYPORT: highs, 12:56a.m., 12:28p.m.; lows,6:43a.m., 7:20
p.m.

U n lo rd ;
C lu rry 0 * "w »
M ar s a r d C J a rtto n
M a rv in O Brown

Their talk Wednesday was described as "frank anil
businesslike," diplomatic terms for a conversation which was
no) particularly cordial or harmonious.
The meeting followed weeks of harsh rhetoric from both
sides, most recently an extraordinarily strong speech by
Gromyko on Tuesday before the United Nations General
Assembly.
The two men are scheduled to meet again in New York on
Monday.

Dividends Grant Sought

WEATHER

tt
A D M IS S IO N S

terrain against a pre-recorded computerized map in their
guidance systems.
The result is a weapon of extreme accuracy.
The agreement on beginning the TNF negotiations ap­
parently was the only solid achievement of the Haig-Gromyko
talks, the first high level diplomatic contact between the
iwn sides since the Reagan administration came to office
about eight months ago

By S chool B o a rd

WASHINGTON (UPI) — Cuba lias received more
m ilitary equipment from the Soviet Union during the
first nine months of 1W1 than In any single year since
the Cuban missile crisis of 1962, official sources say.
Deliveries of war material since 1975 have been
designed to "upgrade and expand Cuba's armed for­
ces" to a point beyond the legitimate defensive needs
of the Caribbean island nation, the sources said
Wednesday.
The sources, who have access to classified in­
formation, Insisted their Identities and affiliations
remain anonymous.
The purpose of the buildup, which has caused alarm
In Washington, is not clear cut and is thought by the
sources to be either for stockpiling for use by Cuban
forces or f i r shipment to revolutionaries elsewhere in
l-atln America or both.

iM M k MMssrWi Nsiatui

international security and pledged to spare no effort to reach
an appropriate agreement."
The United Slates, according to officials, had proposed an
earlier date for the talks, preferring to begin them In midNovember. The Nov. 30 date Is apparently a compromise and
means the talks will begin almost exactly two years after the
Brussels NATO Council voted to go ahead with the mediumrange missile force while al the same lime approaching the
Soviets on negotiations to control them.
The Soviets, according to Holg, now have about 270 of the socalled Theater Nuclear Force weapons, SS-20 missiles,
already deployed In Eastern Europe.
According lo liie NATO plan, the Western alliance will place
572 of ihe TNF weapons in westirn Europe by 1984.
The Western arsenal w ill consist of 464 jet-powered cruise
missiles and 108 Pershing 11 missiles.
Both types of Western missiles arc under development ami
would include the ability to “ read maps," that is to check the

UNITED NATIONS (U PI) — The United States and the
Soviet Union announced today they have agreed lo start talks
in Geneva Nov. 30 on the control of medium-range missiles
stationed In Europe.

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Evening Herald,Sanford, FI.

Will Donate Medical Services

NATION

Doctor Admits Burning Brother's Home

IN BRIEF
R eagan W ill U nveil His
Budget Package Tonight
WASHINGTON i UPI) — President Reagan’s revised
economic recover)’ plan includes a $2 billion cut in
defense spending plus, sources say, abolition of the
Energy Department and a likely reduction In most
federal benefit programs.
But Reagan, who is to unveil his latest budget-cutting
moves in a nationally broadcast speech tonight, ap­
parently is backing off plans for a three-month delay in
a 1982 cost-of-tlving increase in Social Security
benefits.
Earlier this week. Republican congressional leaders
warned Reagan to shelve the Social Security proposal
or sec it defeated on Capitol H ill, where it has evoked
loud and bipartisian opposition.
Sources said, however, Reagan is likely to propose
delaying cost-of-living increases in other federal
benefit programs, such as black lung and m ilitary
retirement pay.

i

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i

Rogers, an Air Force captain specializing in gynecology,
may donate his time at Florida’s taw ell women's prison,
though a decision wasn't made during the hearing Tuesday.
Also as part of the plea, Rogers agreed to pay 6450 a month in
restitution not to exceed 660.000.
The explosion blew out the windows of the home, spreading
glass over b 100-foot area, according to reports. Investigators
found Rogers wallet at the scene.
Originally, Rogers contended he was not in the area at the
lime. An A ir Force officer in Minot, S.D. asked Rogers about
numerous cuts on his face after returning from a 3-day trip to
Orlando. Rogers said he suffered the cuts when he slipped on
some ice.

i

Racist K iller G ets Life
S A L T U K E CITY I UP1&gt; - Just hours after he tried
to escape from the courthouse, an all-white Jury
Wednesday sentenced avowed racust Joseph Paul
Franklin to life in prison for the Aug. 20, 1980 sniper
killings of two black youths Jogging with their white
girlfriends.
The Jurors' other option was to sentence Franklin to
execution by firing squad but they could not reach the
unanimous consensus required by stale la * for the
death penalty.
The verdict was returned less than three hours after
the former Ku Klux Klansman attempted to escape
from a holding cell. He was captured within seven
minutes as dozens of pistol-wielding police surrounded
the courthouse and conducted a floor-to-floor search of
the five-story building.
Franklin, 31, Mobile, Ala., was discovered hiding in

A U.S. Air Force doctor has pleaded guilty to setting his
brother's Longwood home on fire Jan. I and agreed to donate
30 days of medical work annually for 15 years as part of a plea
agreement entered In Circuit Court in Sanford.
Dr. Charles Wilburn Rogers. 40. of Lackland A.F.B. in San
Antonio, Texas, could have faced 30 years in state prison If
convicted of the first-degree arson charge.
According to police records, Rogers was charged in March
with pouring gasoline on the floor of his brother’s home,
located al 105 Fox Valley Ct,, and Igniting it causing an ex­
plosion and fire, which did an estimated 6260,000 damage.
Homeowner, William N. Rogers was on vacation at the time
of the fire. Records show the two men had argued a few days
earlier over how they should split 628,000 which had been sent
to them from their father, Norval Rogers of Waynesvilie, N.C.

C a rte r: H oneym oon Is O v e r
WASHINGTON (U P I| — Former President Jimmy
Carter says “ prejudice” against poor Americans led to
his successor's budget cuts, and he warns President
Reagan's victory string may be nearing an end.
In a newsletter to former Cabinet and senior staff
members, Carter, just back from Asia, also said many
nations are questioning the wisdom of Reagan's
"confrontational attitude" and reluctance to work for
arms control.
"Although the budget and tax votes in Congress have
been hailed as great political victories, the time for
reassessment is approaching," Carter wrote. ” ... all of
us must be thinking of ways to m inim ile the damage to
our country."
"There is always a latent tinge of prejudice among
some powerful political leaders against less fortunate
fellow citizens who may be partially dependent on the
government for student loans, medical care, school
lunches, welfare, food stamps, a job, legal protection
nr decent housing," lie said.

i

another holding area after sheriff’s deputies sounded
an alarm (hat he was missing during a break in the
sentencing hearing.

Action Reports
★

Fires
*

it Police

NEAT THIEF
Normally, a crook w ill pry and smash open a vending
machine in order to gain access to the change box. But a
Bortliw ick told police lie had noverseeri the man before and
burglary earlier this week at Sanford's B 4 G ta u m ln . 2010 S
said he would press charges for simple battery when tin* man
French Ave., demonstrates that not all bad guys are slobs.
is apprehended Bortliwick gave police the license number ol
According to a police report, someone broke into a soft drink
ilie suspected vehicle.
machine at the laundry sometime between 4 p.m. Monday and
2 p.m. Wednesday. But the thief apparently had a key or knew
DEFENSE MOTION ACCENTED
how to pick the lock, police said, because there were no visible
A motion to dismiss a concealed weapon charge against
signs of forced entry.
After stealing about 65 in change, the (Took politely closed Calvin E. Se-Cheverell was accepted Monday in Circuit Court
in Sanford by Judge Volie Williams.
the machine and relocked it, the report said.
Se-Cheverell still faces drug charges stemming from the
JEWELRY HEIST
Three gold and diamond rings with a total value nl $3.1100 sale of 5.000 quaaludes to undercover agents July 29, 1981. A
were stolen Irom a 36-year-old Sanford woman's home pre-sentence investigation re;&gt;orl was ordered in the case.
Se-Cheverell. 33, 243 Thomas Dr., Casselberry, allegedly
sometime this month, but the victim told police she Isn't sure
sold the drugs for $7,000.
exactly when the theft occurred.
A pistol w as found during the arrest lint police were unable
Marjorie Sposato, of 2549 Marshall Ave., said the rings must
to determine il Se-Cheverell or a passenger in his ear was the j
have been stolen from a Jewelry box in her bedroom sometime
owner.
between Sept. 1 ami 22.
I

WASHINGTON (UPI) - The high cost of
housing helped push the government's key
measure of inflation up 0.8 percent In August,
for an annual rate of 10.6 percent, the Labor
Department reported today.
It marked the second straight month that
double digit Inflation has disturbed the trend of
moderate price increases that began in
March. July’s Consumer Price Index was up
15.2 per cent annually.
Housing costs replaced energy as the price
villain In August, contributing 54 percent ol the
monthly increase, department analysts said.
In contrast, fuel price increases accounted for
only L I percent of the monthly escalation, and
gasoline, natural gas and fuel all got cheaper.
Of the energy products, only electricity
became costlier.
The August increase of 0.8 percent In the CPI
raised new questions about the progress the
nation Is making in lowering the Inflation rate,
and provided a sobering backdrop to the
president's economic address scheduled for
. delivery this evening.
The August rate, if projected for an entire
year, would equal a 10.6 percent rate of In­
crease after compounding and seasonal ad­
justment.
Government officials said the actual annual
rata of Inflation Ira n January through August
is running at 9.6 percent, slightly below the
administration’s forecast of 9.9 percent for the
year. But officials caution Inflation w ill have

—— '** -• *

■
i

to be below double digit figures for most of the
next four months for the Reagan ad­
ministration projection to stand up.
The complete Consumer Price Index for
August was 276.5, which meant goods and
services that cost 1100 in 1967 had gone up in
price to 6276.50.
While housing costs were the major con­
tributor to overall August price Increases, the
hikes were spread broadly throughout con­
sumer goods and services.
Food prices were up 0.7 percent lor the
month, slightly less than July's 0.8 percent
increase. Clothing costs for August were up 0.8
percent, with the introduction of winter und
fall styles blamed for llic increase. Tran­
sportation expenses went up 0.6 percent.
Medical care turned in another remarkubly
strong increase for the month of a full 1.3
percent, the same as in July, and the eighth
consecutive month of large increases.
Entertainment expenses were up 0.7 percent
for the month and all other goods and services
were up 0.5 percent.
T l* tabor Department also reported that
the real spendable earnings of Americans,
after inflation and taxes, increased by 0.4
percent in August for the once typical family
of four, with one wage earner, after eeaeonal
adjustm ent. But over the past year,
Americans have lost 2.7 percent in spending
power.

ROSARIO BEACH, Mexico (UPI) - A man
whoxe common-law wife spirited their 5-yearold daughter from a Fort Lauderdale, Fla.,
foster home alter trying without avail to
reclaim her through the U.S. courts denies the
girl was kidnapped.
" I t ’s not a kidnapping," Victor Martinez
said Wednesday. "We waited for the law to

OUTSTANDING YOUTH AWARD
K ililic K o i 'K u ii I I I o f S a n fo n l a c c e p ts Slim s a v in g s
lio n il fro m S a n fo rd R o ta ry (T u b P re s id e n t J a c k
llo r n e r w h ite h is m o th e r, H e tty J o h n e o n , h o ld * h U
O u ts ta n d in g Y o u th A w a rd c e r tific a te p re s e n te d
h v th e e lu li in o b s e rv a n c e o f In te rn a tio n a l Y o u th
W eek.

i
i

PUBLIC NOTICE

decide, and wlien the law didn't do any tiling,
we did."
M artin e z' conunon-law w ife, Angela
Madas, had been in Florida for a custody
hearing involving tier natural daughter,
Cynthia Elizabeth (Cindy) Johns, when she
spirited the child to Mexico Sunday.

A R EA DEATHS
MRS. 1.F.NORE PRICE
Mrs. tanore E. Price, 61,
206 Arcadia Road, Deltona.
died Wednesday at Seminole
Memorial Hospital. Bom in
Flanahcn, III., she came to
Sanford in 1968 from Elgin,
111. Stic was a member of the
Deltona Lutheran Church and
Chapter 1404 of the tayal
Order of Moose, Sanford.
S urvivors include her
husband, Howard P rice,
Deltona; twu sons, Merle
Price, Deltona, and ta ffy ,
Orlando; daughter, M rs.
Beverly
Carey
of
Pascagoula, M iss.; two
brothers, Clifford Schaefer of
Odell. III., and Ernest
Schaefer, O rlando; sister,
Mrs. Mar)'Boys, Pontiac, III.;
ami nine grandchildren.
Urisson Funeral Home,
Sanford, is in charge of
arrangements.
MRS. BETTY STRIPLING
Mrs. Betty May Stripling,
52, Route 1, Box 1M. Sanford,
died Wednesday in Florida
Hospital. Orlando. Born In
Oneida, N.Y., on June 5 ,1929,
she moved to Sanford from
Baltimore, Md., in 1966. She
was housewife and a Baptist.
S urvivors
include
a
husband, Ruel; sons, Steven
E., Fort Pierce, Ronald C..
Winter Park; daughters, Mrs.
C rystal M. M acNam ara,
Orlando, M rs. M artha J.
Wade, Highland, C a lif.;
brothers, Raymond L Purdy,
Sanford, Thomas L Purdy,
Euslis; mother, Mrs. Martha
Purdy, Sanford;
three
grandchildren.
Cox-Parker Funeral Home,
Winter Park, is in charge of
arrangements.
ROBERT PATTERSON
Mr. Robert L Patterson, 19,
of 2025 F a lm o rth Road,

Todd D Borlhwick, 18. 183 Parsons Drive, l-ongwnml. told
police be drove into Hie parking lot at Westmore Recreation
Tenter. 500 Spring Oaks lllvd . Altamonte Springs, and a man
in a 1981 Toyota came up to him while he was getting out ol the
ear and said. "1 saw you speeding down the road." Bortliwick
said the man then tut Inin in the mouth with Ins fist, got back in
die car with a woman and child and left.

C ourts

Mom 'Reclaims'Child

MEMPHIS, Tenn. (U P I) Dr. George C. Nichopoulos,
who is accused of overprescribing thousands of pills to
the late Elvis Presley, goes on trial Wednesday.
Hie tria l may shed some light on the superstars'
death four years ago.
A question of whether Presley died of drug-related
causes has not been put to rest despite Shelby County
Medical Examiner Jerry Francisco's ruling that
Presley succumbed to heart disease.
Attorneys expect the tria l to last up to eight weeks.

A M D IT IIF I L
According to Altamonte Springs police, an unknown man In:
n Ijungwood man Sunday, around 3 p in ., in tin1 mouth in an
"unprovoked" attack and (led.

Inflation Rate Creeps Up

Elvis' D octor On Trial
:

Thundsy Sep* 24, t i l l —JA

Due to prior obligations, it is
IMPERATIVE th at COUNTRY FURNITURE
hold an INVENTORY LIQUIDATION SALEI

Maitland, died Tuesday at Ft.
Rucker, Ala. Bom in Winter
Park, on June 26,1962, he was
an Army Private First Class,
stationed at Fort Rucker, and
a Baptist.
Survivors include a grandmother, Mrs. Ellen Phillips,
M aitland; sister, Ellen
Frances Thomas, Orange
C ity ; stepfather, C lark
Thomas, Homestead,
Semoran Funeral Home,
Altam onte Springs, is in
charge of arrangements.
GERTRUDA COLEMAN
Gertruda Coleman, 68, of
A ltalnonte Springs, died
Monday in Richmond, Va. She
was a retired dress shop
salesperson.
Survivors include son,
Thomas G. Laym an and
daughter, Valerie J. Layman,
bolh of Richmond, Va.;
father, Gertrude .Franclacus
J- Vaessens and brother,
Rudie S.J. Vaesaens.
B a ld w in F a i r c h i l d ,
Altamonte Springs Chapel, isi
In charge of arrangements.
MRS. HAZEL COOK
Mrs. Hazel Cook, 13, Belle
Avenue, Casselberry, died
Tuesday in Casselberry. Born
in Cincinnati, Ohio, on Oct. 16,
1S93, she
moved
to
Casselberry many years ago.
She was a housewife and a
m ember
of
Longwood
Kingdom Hall, and Jehovah's
Witnesses,
S urvivors include: sons,
Charles, William, John, all
fro m Chicago; daughters,
M rs. M ild re d M a tt, M rs.
V irg in ia C arr, both of
C asselberry; 10 grandch ildre n ;
16
greatgrandchildren; one greatgreat-grandchild. Semoran
Funeral Home. Altam onte
Springs, is In charge of

arrangements.
THOMAS RATLIFF SR.
Thomas R atliff Sr., 89, of
2724 Orlando Drive, Saniord,
died Tuesday night at
Seminole Memorial Hospital.
Born in Pikeville, Ky., Sept. 4,
1892, he came to Sanford in
1920 from Huntington, W.Va.
He was the founder of Ratliff
L Sons New and Used Auto
Parts and Wrecker Service of
Sanford. He was also in real
estate and a member of the
First Presbyterian Church of
Sanford, Saniord liodge 62 F &amp;
AM, the Bahia Shrine of
Orlando.

4*.*- * * ♦ P *

Gramkow Funeral Hume is
in charge of arrangements.
Survivors include his wife,
Mrs. Jadwiga Ratliff, San­
ford; a son, Thomas, Jr.,
Sanford; three daughters,
Mrs. Juanita M ille r, of
Sanford; Mrs. M ildred
Brewster and Mrs. Evelyn
Politz, both of Tallahassee; 16
grandchildren; 23 great­
grandchildren.

Funeral Notice
RATLIFF, MR. THOMAS. SR.
— Funeral U r v K n tor Mr
Thomat Ratllfl S r . I t. of 7714

O rla n d o D r iv e , Saniord. who
d a d Tuevday m g h l a l Sem inole
M e m o ria l H o s p ita l, w ill be *1 a
p m , F r id a y a t G r a m k o w
F u n e ra l H o m e ch apel w ith th e
R ev
D a n ie l L
C o n t la o l
lic ia lin g B u ria l in E v e rg re e n
C e m e te ry
F rie n d s m a y pay
ra s p e d i t p m today and all
day F r id a y a l th e lu n e ra t hom e
G ra m k o w in c h a rg e

STARTING THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24
OPEN SUNDAY 12 NOON TIL 6 PM

We know that in order to raise
the necessary capital from this
sale WE MUST OFFER BARGAINS

PRICE. MRS LEHORE E —
F u n e r a l s e rv ic e s lo r M r s
L en ore E P ric e , a l. ol T tt A r
ca d ia R o ad . D e lto n a , w ho died
W ednesday
at
S e m in o le
M e m o ria l H o s p ita l, w ill be a l 3
pm
S a tu rd a y at th e Brisson
f u n e r a l H o m e w ith P a s to r
H e r b e r t G o t r r s s o f f ic ia t in g
B u ria l in O a k la w n C e m e te ry
Brisson F u n e ra l H o m e P A is in
ch a rg e ot a rra n g e m e n ts

AT LESS THAN COST - BUT WE
MUST REGARDLESS OF LOSS1

HUNDREDS OF BARGAINS
FAR TOO NUMEROUS TO ADVSRTIStl
BRING YOUR VAN, TRUCK or TRAILER
or ARRANGE DELIVERY BY US.

Park and Dotson Surgical Group, P.A.

WRMl

CHARLES L. PARK, M.D.

YOU CAN SAVE HUNDREDS OF D 0UAR S
BARGAINS TOO NUMEROUS TO LIST

H. GARRETT DOTSON, M.D.
announce the opening of their

HOT DOGS AND
REFRESHMENTS
SUNDAY

second office for the practice
of General and Vascular Surgery

Financing — VISA, Master Charge or Layaway

at the Longwood Medical Arts

All Salat F in a l-A ll la la Hams Sublet To Prior Salt And Sold A l It

P H lt nE I » F S

Country Furniture

Building, 1385 Highway 434,
Suite 102, Longwood.

BY APPOINTMENT ONLY

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Ph. 331-8979
322-8979

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DISTRIBUTORS INC
IlM I ST Hk i l E S i N l l M H t i 1, &lt;i|ii[M
•»pr» Mt«n &amp; • '■ ’ t wrs Anl Tr, * *
Sd1 I(j S Sup , t
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300 N. FRENCH AVE., SANFORD, FLA. 32771
Area Code 305-322-2611 or *31-9993
T h ursd a y, Septem ber 24, 1911—4A
Wayne 0. Doyle. Publisher
Thomas Giordano. Managing Editor
John Totn|as, Advertising Director
Home Delivery: Week, tl.OO; Month, *4.25; 6 Month*, 124.00:
Year, $45.00. By M ail: Week, I I .29; Month, 15.25; S Month*.
130.00: Year. 107.00.

Biological
W arfare

ByTENIYARBOROUGH

Secretary of State Alexander Haig made a
telling point the other day when he noted that the
Soviets, supposedly so eager to reach new arms
lim itation agreements with the United States, are
almost certainly violating two treaties they
signed years ago banning the production,
possession or use of lethal biological weapons.
ITie treaties in question are the 1925 Geneva
Protocol and the 1972 Biological Weapons Con­
vention.
The suspected violations referred to by
Secretary Haig include Soviet use of lethal
mycotoxins in Afghanistan and the supply of these
outlawed substances to Communist m ilitary
forces in Vietnam and Laos.
Afghan refugees reaching Pakistan have been
reporting bombing attacks by Soviet aircraft
dropping deadly chemical and biological agents
since early 1980.
While the circumstantial evidence supporting
these charges is compelling, proof is lacking
because the Soviets perm it no international ob­
servers to monitor their brutal suppression of the
Afghan resistance.
Hanoi has found it more difficult to conceal the
evidence of its use of prohibited biological w ar­
fare agents that can only have been supplied by
the Soviet Union.
Plant samples carried out of Cambodia —
where 200,000 Vietnamese troops are fighting Kh­
m er guerrillas — have been found to contain
saturation doses or trichothecene mycotozins, a
deadly biological substance that produces the
physical sym ptom s reported by countless
refugees who survived Vietnamese bombing
attacks in both Laos and Cambodia.
I-notian and Cambodian refugees refer to the
liquified substance as yellow ra in ," and their
unU of Us use and effects coincide with
rts from Afghan refugees as well; ‘

C

Trichothecene mycotoxins are produced In
funguses that do not grow naturally in Southeast
Asia but are plentiful in the Soviet Union.
And there is good reason to believe that the
Soviets are extracting large quantities of
trichothecene m ycotoxins fro m a r tific ia lly
cultivated funguses.
Predictably, the Soviets and their Vietnamese
allies deny using any lethal chemical and
biological substances. Countless thousands of
refugees who have seen their countrymen gassed
and sprayed brand those denials as lies.
And now, the plant samples carried out of
Cambodia in recent months provide tangible
evidence of Soviet-Vietnamcse duplicity and w ar
crimes.
i

The Stale Department is pressing for a United
Nations investigation of its charges. If the Soviets
and Vietnamese are innocent, they should have no
objection to permitting U .N . teams access to
reported bombing sites in Afghanistan, Laos and
Cambodia.
But. to date, sim ilar requests from in­
ternational observers have been sum m arily
rejected by Moscow and Hanoi.
One obvious lesson that ought to be learned
from ail this is that no arms control agreement
with Moscow is worth the paper it's printed on
unless Soviet compliance can be conclusively
monitored.

BERRY'S WORLD

Supposedly, a dog is a man's best friend. Well,
il that's the case, there are a couple of dogs at the
Casselberry Animal Control Shelter that could
use a frie n d -m a n or woman.
Monday, Casselberry F ire fig h te r H a rry
Klinger told me about a young Irish Setter that
lire personnel found after it was hit by a car. He
said the animal was taken to the animal shelter,
but was unable to be treated for the broken leg it
received from the accident because there were
no funds available in the budget to cover
veterinarian costs.
After talking to Animal Control Officer Vicky
Shook, it was discovered Injured animals found
in the Casselberry area and brought to the
shelter are treated for minor medical needs by a
local veterinarian
“ Dr. Alex Suero has been so gracious," Ms.
Shook said. "He voluntarily offers his medical
assistance at no charge to us or a very minimal
charge to treat minor problems an animal might
have."
• However, Ms. Shook said, the Irish Setter’s
problems are far from minor. She said the cost
for treating a broken leg and an apparent
respiratory problem could run as high as 1200 to
*300.

ROBERT W A G M A N

Lean
Days For
Democrats
WASHINGTON (NEA) - When California
tund-ruisc* Diaries Manat l became chair­
man of the Dei,, -ra tio National Committee
earlier this year, he Bnin.u«ccd that he would
initially devote most of lus attention lo a
critical party problem — lack of funds.
In 1900, the Republicans raised far more
money than did the Democrats. Manalt said
that he had to remedy this disparity if his
parly was (0 come back in the 1982 and 1984
elections. The first results of his efforts are in,
and il appears that his party’s finances may
be in even worse stupe titan before.
No less than t i l l million was taken in
during live 1980 cnm|ulgn by ihe GUP’s
principal fund-raising committees — the
Republican National Committee and (he
Republican Congressional and Senatorial
committees. The corresponding Democratic
committees look In only 118.9 million.
But the problem is not merely one of
dollars. The Republicans - belying their "fat
cat" Image — received most of their money in
small contributions solicited by direct mail.
The Democrats, however, received most of
their money In large donutions from wealthy
individuals.
Manalt said that this pattern would have lo
change. He proposed that the Democrats take
a leal from the Republican book by relying
more on direct n u ll and by targeting atiluent
younger voters who,could support the party In
annual amounts of less than *500. Tltese
tactics do not appear lo be working.
During Ihe first half of 1981, Ihe tlirec
Republican committees raised *43.3 million
— a staggering amount for a non-election
year — according to reports filed with the
Federal Election Commission. Meanwhile,
the three Dem ocratic comm ittees ac­
cumulated a paltry *3.5 million. In other
words, the Republicans raised more than 10
limes as much us the Democrats in the first
six months of this year.
S|vcrilically, Ihe Republican Congressional
Committee reported firs t-lu ll Income of *10
million, the Republican Senatorial Com­
mittee reported $7.4 million and the
Republican National Committee reported u
whopping *19.8 million. In contrast, the
Dem ocratic Congressional Campaign
Committee reported $700,000, the Democratic
Senatorial Camjuign Committee reported $1
million and Ihe Democratic National Com­
mittee reported $1.8 million.
The Democrats’ financial problems are
even more bleak than tltese figures suggest.
The party hail to spend $3.2 million over the
same period (or fund-raising and repayment
of debts. The Republicans, who began the
year without a debt, spent $23.5 m illion; much
of that money went toward fund-raising, but
substantial amounts were used (nr $&gt;olitlcal
organizing aimed at Ihe 1982 elections and for
generating support for President Reagan’s
economic pregram.
Tlie financial reports also show ltu t the
Democrats luive so far failed to build that
bread base of financial backers. Most of Ihe
party's income for the first half of 1981 came
in large sums from wealthy donors and
corporate political action committees

JA C K

"I'd hate for the Setter to be put to sleep,"
Suero, of the Animal Clinic of Casselberry, 1025
Seminola Rlvd,, Casselberry, said. "It's ob­
viously a pedigree animal, only one or two-years
old and I w ish we could help him ."
However, Ms. Shook said, there is "no way"
the shelter can afford to pay *200 to $300 to treat
&lt;&gt;nc animal.
S&lt;i, what happens to the Irish Setter with the
broken leg and otliers like him? When the owner
can't be located and if he is located, won't pay for
treatment, what happens?
" I f the injury is too severe for us treat and the
owner is not known or unwilling to claim the
animal we have no alternative but to put the
animal to sleep," Ms. Shook said.
The Irish Setter’s number could be coming up
at tin- end of this week, Suero and Ms. Shook
said. No one has claimed the animal, — or of­
fered aid.
The shelter is also currently housing a dog with
a broken pelvis lhat, according to Ms. Shook, the
veterianarian said w ill heal "in a matter of
tim e."
"The animal is cute as it can be and w ill make
a great pet, but people just don’t want the animal
even tftough it w ill heal in time,” site said.

r,I

There may be an alternative to euthanasia,
however.
Anyone interested in making donations for the
treatment of this Irish Setter or other injured
animats like him can do so. Bui, make the
donation io a veterinarian, not the shelter.
According to Ms. Shook and Casselberry
Mayor Owen Sheppard, donations to the shelter
are put into the city's general fund for
distribution through the shelter. However, if
citizens want to donate specifically to provide an
animal with medical attention, they should do so
dirough the veterinarian.
Suero said if there is someone who wants to
lielp finance live dog's treatment, he would be
more than happy to offer his services at a
reduced rate.
Ms. Shook also said pot owners should nuke
sure their animals are vaccinated and licensed
each year.
"Florida law is very specific about licensing
animals," Ms. Shook said. " I f more people would
license their animals and make the animal wear
identifying license numbers and information, we
could get in touch with them if their animal Is
picked up or Injured.”

JEFFREY HART

r \

HAVE A D IG IT A L WATCH T H A T T E L L S
T H E T IM E A N D T E M P E R A T U R E AND
M O N ITO R S M Y V IT A L S IG N S , A RAD IO /
A L A R M /M U L T I-F U N C T IO N CALCULATOR,
AND A V ID E O S T A T IO N W IT H 3 8
CHANNELS A n d 108 s e p a r a t e
G A M E S . EjU T I Q U E S T IO N IF T H E R E
IS N ’ T M O R E T o L I F E . . .
-

Asia,
Then
And Now

- V --------------------------------------------------- ---------------------------------- i

.MY PERSONAL COMPUTER IS WORKING ON THAT-j

ROBERT WALTERS

Deregulate Politicians?
even rent) the soul of a politician (or a mere
$1,000.
1 Moreover, those lim its were established in

WASHINGTON i NEA I - Although
elimination or modification of unjustifiable
federal regulation* lias become a popular
cause In recent years, one group of Ivarniaed
citizens remulns entangled in unwarranted
government restrictions.
Tlie hapless victims are the politicians who
must run for federal office, especially tlapresidency, under a set of laws and
regulations that range from absurd and
outlandish to inappropriate and irrelevant.
A series nl sensible reforms has been
proposed, however, by the Citizens' Research
Foundation, a highly regarded, non-partisan
b is Angeles-based organization Huit lias
specialized In campaign-finance issues for
more than two decades.
The recom m endallons come from a
meeting that CRF convened late lust year of
approxim ately 30 finance officers who
worked lor virtually all ol the presidential
contenders in Hie 1976 and 1980 campaigns.

1974 and have nol been Increased during the

ensuing seven years to adjust for inflation.
All campaigns for federal office last year
cost more than $500 million, divided about
equally between the presidential race and
contests tor House and Senate scats — but
p olitica l cam paigning isn't necessarily
becoming exorbitantly expensive.
CRF Director Herbert E. Alexander notes,
for example, that this country's annual ex­
penditures for chewing gum — now ajvproaching $1.5 billion — fur exceed the
amount of money invested in campaigns,
undoubtedly the most essential component of
the democratic process.
Tltose participating in the CRF conference
suggested maintaining Ihe overall spending
limits for presidential candidates during the
prim ary election season but proposed im­
portant modifications in the method of
establishing Dial ceiling.

Those participating Included the finance
chairmen, finance directors or treasurers ol
ruiu|aligns organized on Ixdialf of winners
and losers; liberals and conservatives;
Republicans, Democrats and independents.
One proposal would increase (to on un­
specified figure) the current lim its on tlie
amount an individual can give to u single
presidential or congressional candidate per
election ($1,000) and lo all contenders for
federal office during any year ($25,000).

Tlie sending limitations are indexed lo
account (or inflation, but the current method
relies U|xm the Consumer Price Index, which
is wholly inappropriate for measuring the
specialized costs of political campaigning.
Tlie rests of air fares and aircraft charters,
for example, are major components of any
presidential campa ign budget — but not of the
typical household budget measured by the
CPI. Other items in that category include
television advertising and direct mail costs.
Tlie price of all (hose items lias increased
lar more rapidly in recent years than lias the
CPI, but the present system is incapable of
reflecting those inflationary pressures. A new
index can - and stwuld — be developed.

Those numbers undoubtedly appear to be
quite generous lo most |&gt;eople — who donate
little or nothing to support the politicians of
their choice — but they're actually very
modest in the context of contemporary
campaigns.
[it an era when races for House seals
frequently cost $500,000 or more and cam­
paigns for Senate seats In many states
require expenditures of at least several
million dollars, nobody Is about to buv (or

In addition, those assembled by the CRF
proposed abandonment of the current system
under which candidate spending celling! are
fixed b&gt;r each of the stale primaries.

Three experts on East Asia have produced
a new book on our experience there from the
day* of ihe clipper ships through the present.
ft's called "Sentimental Imperialists: The
American Experience in East Asia" (Harper
and Row) — not u happy title — and for the
general reader this book w ill fill in vast areas
in his knowledge of this fascinating and
tremendously Important sector of the globe.
It focuses on China, Japan and the
Philippines with side glances at Vietnam,
Korea, Thailand and others,
Professor James Thomson of Harvard
handled the section oi China, and, hearing
lhat he would be in New York, I decided to
have lunch with him.
Thomson is an affable, physically powerful
looking man who wus born in Oiina and has
been fascinated by it ever since.
t found that he cares passionately about an
issue that seems to me of great importance lo
American culture and American education,
and which, indeed, I have been discussing at
some length with John Rasslas, Dartmouth's
great teacher of foreign languages — I mean
the widespread American ignorance of other
cultures and languages.
As Thomson writes in his book, there exists
"on both sides of the Pacific . . . virtually
invincible ignorance. That Asians and
, American* knew so little about each other in
the gemote past is hardly surprising. That
knowledge of each other's histories, cultures
and languages remains so pathetically thin
today is alarming in the extreme. In this
regard Americans bear the greatest burden
of guilt, through perpetuating a system of
primary und secondary education which
largely Ignores Asia except as an oc­
casional adjunct to some quick ‘world
history’ survey. As for the teaching of Asian
languages in Die United States, that offering
is rarer still . . . Of course, Asian states
reciprocate through their own parochialisms,
although linguistically they often try harder."
For a world power with global interests and
involvem ent thl* is an amazing c ir­
cumstance. (Rassias points out, similarly,
that n student can graduate from the best
American colleges today and be unable to
speak a single foreign-language, Asian or
European.) Both Thomson and Rasslas ad­
vocate an all-out effort, beginning in the
elementary grades, to correct the situation.
"When you think of all the junk that takes
up room in Uie curriculum ," Thomson said,
"you realize how pathetic it is that so much
vital material is left out altogether."
He believes that Peking and Taiwan have
worked out a modus vlvendi. "You could call
it Die Hong-Kong solution. Tocay Diere Is a:
tremendous amount of trade between Taiwan*
and the Mainland. But it Is important not Itf
offend Chinese pride. Reagan should let well
enough alone. It's a practical arrangement
there and we should not inflame Dieir feelings!
wiDi careless rhetoric."
t
On Vietnam: "They've been fighting each
other for centuries. Fighting in I nos, in
Cambodia. Now that we and Die French have
left, they have simply taken up where they'
left o ff."
'■»

ANDERSON

A B SC A M Judge Barred Evidence

"Just w*it ill you're « permit, tomedeyl You
won't know whet you're talking about, either."

WASHINGTON - One of the Jurors who
convicted Sen. Harrison Williams, D-N.J., at
his ABSCAM tria l last spring has stated he
would have voted for acquittal il he had seen a
Justice Department document Indicating that
federal prosecutors knew they had no case
agsinst the senator alter a 13-monDi effort to
trap him. I first reported the existence of the
document last month.
The juror, Salvatore Oltovino, told in­
vestigators hired by Williams' attorney,
Robert J, Flynn Jr., he was confident some
Olivermembers of the Jury would have agreed
with hint. The result would hsve been - at Ihe
very least - a hung Jury and a new trial, al
which Williams would have offered the
document as evidence of government
misconduct
But U.S. D istrict Judge George Pratt
suppressed the exculpatory evidence, and
Williams was convicted. Now he faces ex­
pulsion from the Senate, a move recom­
mended by the Ethics Committee, which went

along obediently wiDi the prosecution's
wishes and refused lo give Williams Die full,
lair hearing he requested.
In addition to Ottovino, the private in­
vestigators also Interview ed Ihe Jury
foreman, Ralph Monaco. He (old Diem Dial if
Judge Pratt had allowed the Jury to consider
possible entrapment of Williams by Die FBI's
undercover agents, Diere would have been a
hung Jury. Rut Pratt refused to let Die Jurors
discuss charges of government misconduct
raised by Ihe senator's counsel at his trial.
The private probe was conducted by
In te rna tio na l Investigations Inc. of
Springfield, Vo., whose president, Richard
Rast, has made something of a career of
exposing FBI and Judicial misbehavior.
Monaco told Ihe detectives lhat the Jurors
were troubled by the entrapment Issue.
But Pratt, who is known as "the m arine"
for his unbending, pro-government rulings
Irom the bench, told the Jury: "You are not to
be concerned whether the prosecution, or the

1

f p jpw

*», r

* y §* f t *

m

•

FBI agents, or Mr. (Met) Wfinberg (Die
convicted con man used by the FBI lo snare
targeted politicians (or ABSCAM) acted
legally or properly or improperly ... Those
are questions which must be derided by me at
an appropriate lime ...”
Ttiere is other evidence Dial raises
questions about Pratt's fiUvess to preside al
W illiams' trial. My associate Indy Badhwar
lias teamed Dial Die judge liad access lo raw
FBI files &lt;xi Die senator and studied them
even before Williams was indicted. Pratt has
acknowledged "the nights I spent in Brooklyn
going Dirough them with my law clerks."
WlwDier Pratt was bothered by the Internal
Justice Department document indicating
there was no case against Williams is not
dear. Yet he wiDiheld Die document from
Williams and his attorney.
During the trial, Judge Pratt belittled the
use of character witnesses in crim inal trials.
Yel he delayed the proceedings al one point to
appear himself as a character witness at the

*

w

-

*

** * * * * * -

♦

• ••

trial of Nassau County, N.Y., Republican
Party county chairman Joseph Margiotta
who was accused of m ail fraud and extortion
The Judge descended io personal attacks o&lt;
governm enl prosecutors who had bed
disturbed by the FBI's excesses during Da
ABSCAM Investigation. The prestigious Net
Jersey l a v Journal called P ratt’s at
hominem attacks on the attorneys at
example of “ non-judicial animus."
Pratt, who reportedly has his eye on i
vacancy in the federal appeals court, resorted
to near-hysterical hyperbole when describing
the ABSCAM operation. "The cynicism and
hippoaracy la ic )" of corrupt public offidaUf
lie wrote, “ probably pow a greater dinger tc
this country than all the drug trafficked
combined."
rFootnote: Congress was the main target ol
the Executive Branch terrorism known a*
ABSCAM. Yet not a single member ol
Congress so fa r has had the courage to stand
up and call [or an Investigation.

r

*

f

*

�FLORIDA
IN BRIEF

A lle g e d Spy G a ve Russians
nKey To The Dam n D o o r "
JACKSONVILLE, Kla. (U PI) - The code information which Joseph George Helmlch Jr. is accused
of selling to the Russians for $131,000 gave them “ the
key to the damn door," according to his former
commander.
Helmlch, 44, a former code custodian tor the bat­
talion, is on tria l (or espionage, charged with
delivering to Soviet agents in 1963-04 top secret in­
formation about the Kl^-7 Cryptosystem, a typewritersire machine used to decode and encode U.S. military'
and diplomatic messages around the world.
"Would it lip off our enemy? It's the key to
j everything." testified one of the prosecution's first
j witnesses, retired LI. Gen. Thomas Rienzi, who
t commanded I lie U.S. Arm y's 50th Signal Battalion in
1963-64. “ They’d have the key to the damn door."

Students D e fy Sex Law
TAMPA, Fla. (U P II — The Student Government
Association at the University of South Florida Is
challenging the controversial Trask Bush Amendment
by advocating sex between unmarried people, and
university administrators are assessing what course of
action to lake.
The amendment, which went into effect July 1, cuts
off state funds to universities which allow
organisations to “ recommend or advocate" sex bet­
ween people who are not married.
It was upheld last week by the I^eon County Circuit
Court and state Education Commissioner Ralph
Turlington has not decided whether to appeal the
circuit court ruling.
Tuesday night, the USF Student Senate sponsored a
lecture on the merits of premarital sex and then passed
a resolution advocating premarital sex.
Student Body President Ken Richter said the actions
were intended to test the constitutionality of the
amendment and indicated (he student organization
may go into court as part of its challenge.

K iller Sentenced To Die
TAVARES, Fla. (UPI) - Convicted killer Paul
Beasley Johnson has been sentenced to die in the
electric chair tor the January slayings of thjeo men —
including a Polk County Sheriff’s deputy.
The death sentence was recommended by the 12member jury Wednesday dial convicted the 32-yearold carpenter from Eagle I-ake after a seven-day trial.
Johnson's victims were Deputy T.A. Burnham,
Darrell Ray Beasley of lakeland and William Evans of
Winter Haven.
All three men were shot to death in separate in­
cidents during a bloody overnight rampage last Jan. 8
and Jan. 9. The jury also found Johnson guilty of armed
robbery, arson, kidnapping and attempted murder.

|

Koxly Linked To Shooting
WEST PAI.M BEACH, Fla. (U PI) - Prosecutors In
the citizenship tria l of a Fort Lauderdale motel keeper
are spending much of their effort this week trying to
implicate him In the shooting death of a 4-year-old girl.
In an Interview taped in Warsaw earlier this year
and played in the courtroom Wednesday, Jadwlga
Spilarewicz testified she was hiding a 4-year-old
Jewish g irl named Singer when Ukranian police
barged into a house and look them to police
headquarters in Lysiec, Poland.
Mrs. Spilarewicz could not identify the defendant,
Bohdan Koziy, as one of the arresting policemen, but
another witness said he saw Koziy shoot the youngster
In a courtyard outside the police station.
Koziy, 58, is a Fort laiuderdale motel operator
charged with lying to U.S. Immigration officials about
his role In the occupation of Poland during World War
II. If convicted, he could be stripped of his U.S.
citizenship and eventually deported.

j

| Space Shuttle G ro u n d e d ?
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (U PI) - Space agency
officials prepared for the worst today — a rollback of
the space shuttle Columbia off the launch pad and back
to the hangar lo repair damage from spilled rocket
propellant.
Hugh Harris, chief spokesman at Kennedy Space
Center, said it would be Friday before shuttle officials
decide whether it w ill be necessary’ 1° move the
Columbia back indoors and dismantle it.

!

|

Brantley 'Roast'
Set For Oct. 3
$

Proceeds from the Oct. 3 “ Roast of State Rep. Bobby
Brantley", R-Lnngwood, w ill go Into a war chest for his 1982
election campaign.
But whether that campaign w ill be for re-election to his
House Seat 34 or to a yet-to-be-created Senate seat, hasn't been
decided.
Fred Strcclman, a Brantley spokesman, said today there is
currently no Senate seal, adding that Brantley has filed his
intent to seek re-election for a third term in the Florida House.
An array ol dignitaries is scheduled to participate in the
Brantley roast to be held on Saturday, Oct. 3 at Lard
Chumley’s Pub, State Road 436, Altamonte Springs. Dinner is
\p be served at 8 p.m., cocktails at 7 p.m.
i Seminole County Commissioner Bob Sturm w ill be master of
ceremonies. Others participating in the roast w ill be: U.S.
Hep. B ill McCollum, R-Altamonte Springs; County ComHiisslooer Sandra Glenn, R-Altamonte; Sheriff John Polk, DSsnford; School Superintendent Bob Hughes, norvpartisan,
Longwood; Republican Slate Committeeman Fred Streetman;
Former State Sen. Mack N. Cleveland, I^Sanford; and Carl
Selph, president Florida Federation of Young Republican
(Hubs.
i, A special auction w ill be conducted by Art Grindle.
. Reservations may be obtained by calling Jim Stelllng at 830($71 or Streetman at 423-9401. Tickets cost £ 0 for a single
person end 185 per couple.
„ Brantley was first elected In 1978, winning all three counties
in the district which includes parts of Seminole, U k e and
Marion counties. He was re-elected by a substantial margin in

Lake M ary Council Expected
To Approve 1981-82 Budget
Final approval of Lake Mary's nearly
$800,000 budget for fiscal 1981-82 Is ex­
pected to be given by the city council
after a public hearing, at its 7:30 p.m.
Meeting today at city hall, 158 N. Country
Club Road.
The budget calls for a property tax
increase of 50 cents per $1,000 assessed
valuation. The new tax rate Is $4.35 per
$1,000, up 13 percent from the current
year's $3.85.
The general operating budget totals
$580,543, up from the current year’s
$496,542, while the water and sewer
u tility budget totals $211,905, up from the
current year’s $148,815.

The tentative budget was approved by
(he city council two weeks ago on a 4-1
vote, with councilman Ray Fox casting
the only negative vote. Fox said he
believed the tentative budget could have
been cut more to allow a lower tax rate.

A petition is scheduled lo be presented
by Bill Gilmore, a property owner on
Evansdale Road, requesting that the
In other business, the council will
council, rather than paving of the street,
consider rezoning the U2 acres south of
permit Ihe residents lo maintain the
Main Road to State Road 427 from street themselves.
agriculture toRlAAA, a zoning requiring
The city council, acting on another
a minimum of three houses to the acre.
The tract Is adjacent to Cardinal Oaks. petition from Evansdale Road property
The rezoning is being requested by- owners, have been discussing paving the
developer Larry Dale. His development street for the past year with the majority
plans call for 89 lots.
of the costs assessed to adjacent property
The council w ill also consider a request owners.

Cerebral Victim

• M

w ill be given if they hand a clerk a $5 bill.
Tliis
is because most children get to go to
Ihe rest of his life. Some vegetable!" she
the stores for their mothers when they
exclaimed.
arc young; they learn how to make
Mark has told his parents he would like change from their experiences. These
to work helping other handicapped students have been sheltered, they've
people. But Fred Gordon, Mark's teacher never had to go shopping alone. Some of
and the person in charge and who helped them have never even been shopping. So
write the program for the "varying they don't understand money."
exceptionalities class," said he sees little
Many students who have problems like
chance of that ever happening.
these end up in a sheltered workshop
Gordon said students who ahave where they work with other handicapped
serious physical handicaps often are individuals. They will never be able lo
sheltered and do not have the opportunity compete for a job, he said.
to come into contact with "litera ry type
Gordon sees Mark leaving Lake Mary
experiences" to help their reading
High School and working in one of these
abilities to develop.
workshops.
"Most students in special education
Carol lang Is against Mark working In
have been sheltered all their lives and
are not taught to read. They come into such an environment.
high school and they can't read. They are
"They wanted him to go lo a workship
already behind In everything else — in Sanford (the Seminole County Work
math, science, el cetera — because all O pportunities P rogram ). W ith his
their academics depend on reading," he electric wheelchair, they figured he
could put a trailer on the back of It (the
explained.
“ I have three students who have no wheelchair) and pull parts around a
idea wliat money is," said Gordon. "They shop. But this wouldn't stimulate Mark's
have no idea what kind ol change they m ind," said fang.
(Continued From Page 1A)

• 88

(Continued From Pago 1A)
promising the moon but delivering little or nothing,
"The Business Opportunities Act requires such businesses lo
register with us and if the business promises such things as
money-back guarantees, or a certain income for a certain
effort, they have to post a $25,000 bond with us,” Mrs. Robinson
said. "Not very many bonds have been posted and I really
don't think the Florida public has missed these types of
businesses. I know, 1 don't."
Mrs. Robinson said although the state Division of Consumer
Services "can't educate the people to avoid all of the pitfalls
out there, we do try to tall you of as many aa wo can."
"We're dealing with a public that Is not as wise as they
should be," Mrs. Robinson said. "They're not stupid. It's Just
all the Information they need to know before becoming In­
volved with a business for whatever reason is not always
available.”
For example, Mrs. Robinson said that deregulation of the
trucking industry has created many problems for the con­
sumer.
She cited a case In which a person hired a moving company
and were "horrified when their personal belongings were
delivered in pieces and the b ill for services was quite high.
"W ith the trucking deregulation In this state, any two people
in a olck-un truck can qualify as a moving company," Mrs.
Robinson said. "They don't need a chauffeur'a license, nor
insurance.
" I could tell you horror stories about such companies. But ■
because of the consumer’s greed and hope for a bargain, it
motivates us lo lose our wisdom and go for Ihe cheaper way
(hat is often more expensive in the long run," she said.
By far the biggest consumer problem In Florida is mall
orders. Mrs. Robinson said, warning, "Don’t buy anything
through mail-order."
According to Mrs. Robinson, thousands of Floridians were
"ripped off by the “ Doodle-Ijxmi' scam that adverllaed on
television how to make yam animals and quills wtlh a plastic
loom for $11.95."
"We received thousands of calls from people who ordered
ihe loom and hadn't received It, and thousands more from

li
if t y f **

people who didn’t order it Bnd received il anyway," she said.
"We also received calls from television stations advertising
the loom who said they were never paid for over $600,000 ol
advertising."
Mrs. Robinson said with help from a Ft. Ijiutlerdale
newspaper reporter, investigators learned that the man
heading the company had pulled a similar scam in
Massachusetts under a different name.
"B ut before we could issue a cease and desist order on the
man, he skipped (own to Rhode Island," Mrs. Robinson said.
"He's now selling neck chains via talevia Um ada and we can'l
go after him because of the expense of litigation In crossing
state lines. We have, however, warned Rhode Island
authorities of the man’s past activities.”

Thursday, Sept. 24. I»»t-S»

Fire/Rescue

Seminole Ups
Taxes In N.
Orange County
The Seminole County Commission upproved a contract
extending emergency fire and rescue service to live Orange
County areas north of Maitland between Interstate 4 and
U S. Highway 17-92. Tlw contract agreement was accepted
by the hoard during Monday's work session.
Residents in the Maitland area w ill pay Ihe same $3.69 for
$1,000 assessed property value that other Orange Countyresidents already pay for emergency fire and rescue ser­
vice.
Seminole Counly residents pay $2.21 (or every $1,000 of
ussessed property value for the same sen-ice.
Residents that live in Ihe Druid Hills, Druid Isle, Oakland
Shores and Palm Cove Subdivisions had been receiving fire
and rescue service from Seminole County since 1976 at a
lower tax rale, but Orange County recently re-assessed the
area and raised the lax rale there, said Gary Kaiser, public
safety director.
Over Hie past lew years, Ihe |x&gt;rtion of Orange County
being serviced by Seminole County fire and rescue units
had nearly doubled in size, Kaiser said, noting tluit llte area
now includes all the unincorporated area between I-l and
U.S. 17-92.
The $1.48 per $1,000 lax hike is expected lo generate
$37,000 in revenue, $18,000 more Hum Hie $19,000 received
from Orange countians last year.
The additional money w ill go into Hr* Seminole fire
department budget to be used to improve fire protection fn
the Maitland area, according to Seminole Counly ad­
ministrator Roger Neiswender.

NEW
MANAGER'S
EMERGENCY REDUCTION OF
CURRENT INVENTORY

SAVINGS OF
30°/ . • 40% Z 50%
ON ALL HOME
FURNISHINGS
U n ite d
IJu rn ltu ro
Slates nhfaA

SSO N . H W Y . 17-92

LONGWOOD
( J u il Norm o i l » 414)

331-7218

MOJs-ersi.sa

&gt;• •say.s-s •
SUN. IM

Glues,caulks and sealants
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Quelmg Sauce 3 k .

‘ Several months ago, he said he was considering running for
tjie Senate if a |eat I* created for Seminole County. Brantley is
qyrrently serving on the State House of Representative's
reapportionment committee.

' .

The Ixmgs are atrald Murk would
slowly lose the gains he lias made with
the program and using Express I in such
a job.
"M a ry W hittinger (coordinator ol
Exceptional Education In Seminole
County) ts so wonderful," said famg.
"She said Mark didn't have to do tlu it;
that he could continue with his education.
1 can't say enough good things about the
Seminole County School Board — they
have been so helpful; so understanding.”
But soon Mark w ill leave the school
program. Then he w ill pass Into the
hands of the Seminole County Health and
Rehabilitative Services (HRS).
" I am going to recommend Mark bo
put into the Seminole County Work
Opportunities Program," said Holland.
He will not have an aide to help him
with Express I If HRS should purctune
one for him. Aides are nut assigned to
individual homes because of the expense,
said Holland. To get an aide, Mark would
liave to go Into an institution, he said.
"M ark's future is a little bit bleak, I
realize," said Holland. “ Once the child ts
older, there Is so much less you can do."

Rip-Offs Common In State

ueo.

TV--'W.

from Andrea Smith to rezone the 44-acre
Countryside Unit II, from agriculture to
R1AAA with the restriction that lots
contain at least one-half acre.

Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

•&gt; '*“*■ ' * * ' * ' * ' • * * #■ m

Home Office
904-734-8031

g lu * tl, d o it a il at this p articip a tin g dealer.

Gregory Lumber True Value Hardware
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SPORTS
Briefly

'Cloud O f Sod' Pats
Host Boone Friday
/

Lake City O utlasts Raiders;
SCC A t Hom e Saturday
The only thing Seminole Community College volleyball
coach Itleana C.allagher wasn’t satisfied with at take City
Wednesday night was the final outcome.
take City Junior College's perennially powerful netters
outlasted the ta d y Raiders, 7-15, 154, 154, 13-15, 7-15 in
Division II volleyball action.
“ We just ran out of gas that fourth game," lamented
Gallagher about her team's season opener. "But for our
first effort, our offense was fantastic. All the girls played
well. It was one helluva game."
Saturday, the Raiders host Brevard Community College
at 6 p.m. Valencia Community College plays Brevard in tlie
5 p.m. preliminary*.

O viedo Drops H a w k N etters
Oviedo roughed up Five Star Conference leader lake
Howell in a dual volleyball match, 15-5, 15-9 In the Lions'
Den Wednesday afternoon.
“ We played awful," Hawks' Coach Jo I Aid ano said
Thursday morning. "We never really got anything going
and they played really w ell."
Saturday, take Howell takes part In tlie Ml. Dora
Tournament before returning home Tuesday for an im­
portant Five Star tri-match with Dctand and Seminole.
Game time Is 6 p.m.

St, A ndrew s Trips A ll Souls
St. Andrews dropped All Souls, 6-1, Wednesday night in
soccer action at tlie Orlando-based school.
Ricardo Chauarratu tallied tlie Raiders goal. Saturday,
Coach Ted Sic urpo tow ski's Sanford bunch lakes on SI.
Margaret Mary in Winter Park at 11:45 a.in.

By JOEDcSANTLS
Herald Sports Writer
With two weeks of the young prep
football season expired, no other
Seminole County team lias borrowed
from an old football cliche more
than Dave Tullis’ take Brantley
Patriots.
"Tlie best offense is a good
defense."
While take Brantley’s "three
yards and a cloud of sod," offense
lias had difficulty lighting up the
scoreboard in its first two outings,
Hie Big Blue defensive unit has been
performing in near perfect fashion
and is a main contributor to tlie
Patriot's 1-1 slate (leading into
Friday night's game against the
Boone Braves.
Consider a few of these statistics,
take Brantley's defense lias not
allowed a single point in eight
straight quarters of regulation play.
Tlie Big Blue field Colonial to less
than 100 yards total offense in the
first game r&gt;f the season, including
minus yards rushing in the second
lialf and a total o| three first downs
tlie entire game. While that's im ­
pressive, tlie truism that slats don't
always dictate who wins prevailed.
Colonial managed a 0-0 win in double
overtime.
L is t week tlie Patriots chalked up
another regulation shutout, blanking
Apopka 3-0 and in the process
shutting down one of the Five Star
Conference’s premier running backs
in the Blue Darter’s Arnell Likes.

Despite that proven ability to keep
the opposition off the scoreboard.
Patriot boss Tullis isn't all that
convinced his squad should be
favored Friday night when the
P atriots mcel Boone in Lake
B rantley's th ird straight home
game.
"They've scored a lot of points in
their first two games and they have
a really good throwing quarterback
and a couple of good wide
receivers," [mints out Tullis of the
Brave offense.
"They’ve scored 28 points in two
games and we’ve scored three."
The three Tullis refers to came
from Kevin Becsaw's toe in the final
thirty seconds of the A[mpka game
that lifted ta ke Brantley to a 3-0
win, and more importantly a district
victory that has take Brantley in a
current three-way lie for first place
w ith Je rry Posey's Fighting
Seminoles and M ainland's sur­
prising Buccaneers.
“ We're moving lla- ball," says
Tullis. “ We think A|mpka had a
really tough defense. We'll slay with
our offense, we’ll score some
points."
Tullis will have Al Hollison at the
quarterback helm again this week
after an early game experiment
with Fred Baber getting the starting
nod against Apopka.
“ Our passing game may be
hampered a little this week, though,
admits Tullis. Both of our wide

receivers are out with injuries."
Tullis is hoping for more real
estate nut of running backs Besaw
and Rob Brown to offset the passing
game.
While an improved offense is in
the works on the Patriot drawing
board, mention of the defense brings
heaps of praise from the secondyear head coach.
"Yep. we’ve talked about the
shutouts, tluit's something to be
proud of," boasts the Gator alumni.
"The whole defensive unit has
played back-to-back disciplined
games. People have been taking
care of their assignments. It would
liave been easy for our guys to chase
a back like Amell Ukes all over tlie
field, but we didn't. Our players
have been executing and that’s been
tlie key to our defensive success."
take Brantley’s head hunting
linebacking duo of Kyle Davis and
Otis Cliatt have been particular
standouts. In two games Davis leads
the team with 26 solo tackles while
Cliatt is second with 15. For his
efforts against Apopka, C lia tt
shared defensive player of tlie game
laurels with John Desmond.
H t r i l d Photo by T o m V in c tn l
Davis' play has drawn praise from
the entire Patriot coaching staff, Patriot running back Kevin Besaw hopes to rev up
and another interested coach who
happened to be on ghe sidelines his ’buzz saw running style' Friday against Boone
scouting during L ike Brantley's
Tullis Patriots are hoping to stick a
Sam Weir, “ lie's built solidly, luis
lirst gume against Colonial.
lew more goose eggs on the visitors
“ That Davis is the kind of player great lateral pursuit and he really
section of Hit scoreboard when
we're looking for and would like to sticks."
With the defense leading the way,
Boone comes calling Friday night.
have,” praised UCF associate coach

JV Football
Silver Hawks Blank Tribe, 21 -0
By GEOFFREY GIOHDANO
Herald Sports Writer
Tlie still undefeated L ike Howell
Silver Hawks recorded their second
victory ol tlie season with a 21-0 shutout
of the Fighting Seminoles In last night's
Junior vanity

loolbaU

contest, at

Seminole High School.
Tlie Tribe could not get moving, as it
turned the ball over after Its first two
drives.
take Howell had the first crack at an
offensive drive, and made the most of
It. They drove 62 yards in nine plays,
with Tim Reedy taking In u 15-yard TD
pass from quarterback Darin Slack.
Tills came right after n 10-ynrd TD
pass, also to Reedy, was nullified by a 5yurd illegal motion penalty against the
Sliver Hawks. Robert Kerr kicked tlie
extra point for a quick 7-0 lead.
Seminole's first drive ended when
L ike Howell lineman Tim m Weber
recovered a Mike Futretl fumble at the
Seminole nine-yard line. Quarterback
Fulrell ended up with no completions
out of seven attempts, and added an
interception to that bleak performance*
on the next Tribe drive.
L ike Howell used Its four downs, then
Seminole took over at lltclr 10. Tliey
were Immediately hit with a 5-yard
[K'liulty. After two more unsuccessful
[days, Futrell threw u pass directly Into
tta o|H*n anus of Mike Palowitz, who
returned tlie ball to the Seminole 29.
which gave them an opportunity to up
their score.
But. they didn't get the ta ll any where
near the goal, as they were assessed 10

yards for a holding Infraction. Slack
punted (or the Hawks, and coffincornered it at tlie Seminole six.
Running back Tim Liwrence carried
tlie bull four times for 24 yards, but Ha*
Fighting Seminole® could only resell
ihelr M . Alter a detay ol game penalty

tawrencc, attempting to punt, ran Into
teammate William Wynn, und was
nailed for a 13-yard loss to his 21 by un
alert Silver Hawk named Rick Poghe.
Hits time take How ell capitalized, witli
Slack making a one-yard plunge into
the end zone early in the second
quarter. Kerr hit his second PAT to
boost the Silver Hawk lead to 14-0. Each
team made one last attempt to score
before halftime, but no one actually
threatened.
By this time, the gume pattern was
set. Seminole hud a tenacious defense,
but Luke Howell kept squeezing
through it to score, la ke Unwell lield an
advantage in first downs, 4 to 2, and in
passing, with Slack making 3 out of 6
tries for 41 yards, and a touchdown puss
to receiver Reedy, while Fulrell could
not manage a completion out of four
throws.
Seminole did lead, however, in the
rushing department, one of their strong
[Mints. Liwrence picked up 28 yards,
while Ids partner Teddy Jones gained
31, to make up most of their 62 yunls in
13 carries during the first ta ll. L ike
Howell managed 39 yards from 19
carries, witli Slack scoring on his oneyard keeper.
Tlie beginning of the third |icriod
signalled the end of Hk* Seminoles, ns

Kerr look Wynn's kickoff 85 yards lor
the third and final score of the evening.
He kicked las third |H&gt;int after, and the
game was set at 21-0
tawrencc apparently pul Die Tribe
on Die scoreboard, w itli u 68-yard TD
run on its lirs t second tin If play, tad this
was nullified by a clipping penalty,
which killed tlie TD, lla* drive, and
Seminole’s hopes, as this was the last
major threat for the remainder of the
game.
This loss brings the Seminoles down
to an 0-2 standing, Imt Like Howell is
going strong with a 2-0 record early in
the season.
Seminole w ill be lacing another tough
team next Thursday, as they take on
the surprisingly strong L ik e Mary
Rams in possibly the first home game
of the season for the new school.
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Ptata hy T«'m Vmctnt

S e m in o le 's R icky W h itta c k e r (no. 62) g o e s up
‘ to bat a p a s s a w a y from La k e H o w e ll's Jo e y

W IL L L A V K I.L K

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.IO IIN HILANTLKY
. . . .M r.duk'k"

SCOTT K l'T Z
. . . f i r m * b lin k e r

Rams Veer Past Spruce Creek, 7-6
By SAM COOK
Herald.Sports Kdltor
If one would have happened by
Lyman High School Wednesday night
during the last three minutes of the
L ike Mury-Spruce Creek junior varsity
football game, lie might liave been
startled to find out who was ahead.
With three minutes to play, tlie Rams
were filling the air with footballs while
perched on tlie Creek's 36 vard line.
After Kyle Frakes fired successive
blanks on third und fourth down, Jeff
Hopkins boomed u punt into the end
/.one. Taking over ut the 20, Spruce
Creek run a series of sweeps before
firin g a desperation bomb which
Frakes valiantly grabbed with 1:00 to
play.
Despite tlie - opposite approaches,
L ik e Mary was winning and did win the('
gume, its second in succession, 7-6 over
Spruce Creek.
As (or tlie aerial onslaught. Ram
Coach Roger Beatliard had this ex­
planation. "Three minutes is still a lot
of tim e," said Bcalhard. "We wanted to
gel close to get a touchdown or field
goal and [nit ii out of reach."
As for the Hawks' propensity to keep
it on tlie ground with just two minutes to
play, Beatliard Just shuok his head.
"I'm glad they did," said the former
Seminole defensive coach. "That kid
(Stan Hamilton) was a good passer. He
had us scared the first period."
As well he should. Hamilton, a
deceptive 10th grader with a strong

lake M ary
arm, moved the Hawks easily the first
quarter Twice, Spruce Creek utilized
fourth down plays to move drep into
Ram territory, but could not come up
with the TD
Spruce Creek finally dented the end
/one with 5 S3 remaining m the first
half. Roger Brockrngton, who carried
14 times for 71 yards in the half, put
together six carries fui 44 yards on the
drive. Brockington finished with 150
yards.
Hamilton capped tlie effort with a
fourth down spiral to Kent Rushing,
who caught it at Hie goal line und fell
into the end /one. A run (or the extra
point was smothered by the Rums.
take Mary made quick work of the
Hawks' lead. Sophomore signal caller
Frakes opened up the Rums attack with
an eight-yard [Hiss to Brian Joseph at
tlie 43. Joseph had given take Mary
excellent field position on the preceding
kickoff return.
Alter Reginald Anderson secured the
lirst down, Frakes rolled for three and
Will taVelle, who was standing in lewinjured starter Greg Sliatlo, rumbled
fur fiair more.
Two plays later, John “ Mr. Quick"
Brantley scooted for 10 yards to the
Creek 35. A personal foul moved the
ball to the 25.

The drive appeared to stall when
Brantley lost three. taVelle got it tack,
but Frakes threw incomplete. Another
penalty, however, gave tlie Rums life al
eight.
j
LiVelle then took a hundofl over left
tackle, bounced oil one Hawk and
dragged another tlie final three yards
into the end zone.
Tito eight-yard power slash tied the
game witli just 39 ticks left in the half.
Hopkins boomed the extra point and for
the second straight week provided the
margin of victory.
Frakes pul on a dazzling show run­
ning tlie veer during the fourth quarter
to wde away the time. Up front Scott '
Kutz und Ned Kolbjornsen threw the
blocks to spring Frakes.
“ We’ve been taving trouble running
the veer," Beatliard said after the
game. "But we're learning it more each
week and Kyle did a good job tonight.
“ We made some adjustments on
defense which helped. The whole
defense played better. We started
making tlie hit al the line of scrimmage
instead of |xist it," concluded Beathard.
take Mary hosts Seminole at the new
Rum facility next Thursday. The
lighting, though. Ls still unsettled. A
decision on the game site w ill be made
this week.
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Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Reggie, Denny Incite 'Basebrawl'

SPORTS

Dusted Jackson Cleans Indians

THIS WEEK
THL'KSDAY
Varsity football...

l-ike Howell at Titusville,
Astronaut, 8 p.m.

Junior V a nity lootball...

Osceola at ta ke Brantley,
7:30 p.m.
Apopka at Lyman, 7:30
p.m.

Kill DAY

V anity ionlhall...

Sanford vs. Edgewater at
the Tangerine Bow l, 8 p.m.
I.yrnan at Winter Park at
Sbnwalter Field, 8 p.m.
Bonne at take Brantley, 0
p.m.
SATURDAY

V anity football...

Shorecrest at Trinity Prep,
2 p.m.

College football...

Central
Florida
Millsaps, 1:30 p.m.

Cross Country...

I-ake Brantley Invitational
at Seminole Community
College, 9:30 a.ill.
I-ike How ell and take
Brantley at the M l. Dora
Tournament, 8:30 a.m.

Volleyball...

ut

By United Pres* International
John Denny made the nearfat at
mistake of knocking Reggie Jackson
down with a high-and-tight fastball
in the second inning of New York's 61 victory over Cleveland Wednesday
night.
Reggie struck out to end the inning
and if teammate Bobby Brown
hadn’t lifted Jackson off his feet and
carted him off, a slugfest was sure to
have ensued.
Jackson liud two innings to calm
down, then stepped up to the batter's
box in the fourth and drilled a
tremendous two-run homer off
Denny into the bleachers in rightcenter. As Jackson circled third and
headed for home, he waved his
helmet to the crowd and Denny
headed for the plate to meet him.
Jackson said, " I didn't see him i as
he was running the bases). I
wrestled him down with my shoulder
and threw an armlock on him. It
would be stupid to fight. He looked
like he dared me.”
Jackson, who called the brawl “ a

TAMPA, Fla. (UP1) — Veteran held goal kicker Garo
Yepremian, released by the Tampa Bay Bucs Wednesday
when B ill Capcece was signed, bitterly criticized the Bucs
management ami said he was made the fall g u y .
"1 have been blamed (or losing all live games, I guess,
because 1 am the one being fired,” Yepremian said. " I have
nothing to be ashamed of. 1 am proud of my performance.
"1 don't think by eliminating the kicker you eliminate live
problems with live Bucs,” tie said. " It is like having a car with
a bad transmission and you get a new lire ."
Coach John McKay bad said Monday be probably would
replace Yepremian and punter Tom Blanchard, and Wed­
nesday he did both.

lot of fun," finally was carried away
by Brown and Oscar Gamble and
deposited near the Yankee dugout.
He then discarded his shirt, went
a fte r Denny again and was
restrained by Bobby M urcer.
Jackson and Denny both were
ejected.
While Jackson may have been
enjoying himself, Yankee owner
George Steinbrenncr was busy
dictating a press release threatening
legal action ugainst any pitcher who
dares throw at one his players in the
future.
Elsewhere in live AL. Baltimore
blanked Detroit, 14), Boston crashed
Milwaukee, 11-5, Minnesota downed
Kansas City. 6-2, Seattle edged
Texas, 2-1, Oakland defeated
Toronto, 6-0, and California got by
Chicago, 7-3.
In the National taague, it was
Chicago2, New York 1; Philadelphia
9, St. 1 j &gt;u i s 4 ; Montreal 3. Pittsburgh

It K C iC IK JACKSON
. . . blnst starts braw l

D K N M S MAHTINKZ

2; Atlanta 3, Houston 1; Cincinnati 5,
San Diego I; and San Francisco 8.
tas Angeles 4.

victory and snap a four-game
winning streak for Detroit. Mar­
tinez, 14-4, became the m ajor
league's winningest pitcher by
outdueling Dan Retry, 9-8

M i t e r L f i f u t S tan d in g *
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. . . w i n s 11t h K i l l i n ’

Orioles 1, Tigers 0
At Baltimore. Jim Dwyer led olf
the ninth inning with his third home
run to give Dennis Martinez his 14lh

By United Pres* International
Get out your long Johns ami dust
off your ear muffs There's liable to
be baseball in October in Canada
after all.
The Montr. al Expos, trailing by
3‘ r games Iasi week, moved into
first place in the National U-aguc
East Wednesday night by boating
the Pittsburgh Pirates, 3*2, on pincliliilte r Jerry White’s one-out home
run in the insl of the ninth inning.
Sent up by Manager Jim Fanning
to bat for winning pitcher Grant
Jackson, White, a switch hitter
b a itin g
left-handed
against
righthander H ick Rhoden, 8-4,
drilled a pilch over (tie right field
fence to give the Extvos their fourth

G E R R Y WHITE
.. gam e-winning hom er

ML Baseball
straight victory.
“ It's the biggest win we’ve had,"
said Fanning, who replaced Dick
Williams as Ex|vos’ manager earlier
this month. ••We’re on the way
now."
Jackson agreed with Fanning,
"The spirit is just great here,” he
said. “ We just have to be
aggressive."
Elsewhere in the NL, Philadelphia
trimmed St. tauis, 9-3, Chicago
edged New Y o rk, 2-1, A tlanta
downed Houston, 3-1, Cincinnati beat
Stin Diego, 5-1, and San Francisco
defeated I j i s Angeles, 8-1.

AAajor*League Roundup
10 l i p m
F r id a y '* G a m e *
P h ila d e lp h ia a l C hicago
N e w Y o rk a l M o n tre a l, night
P d ttb g h a t St L o u it, night
C incl a t A tla n ta , n ig h t
Lon A ng a t H ouston, n ig h t
San F r a n a l San D ieg o , n ig h t
A m e ric a n L e a g u e
East
w L P e l.
OB
D e tro it
74 11 40*
Boston
7 * 17 *9 )
'T
M il* a u k e
7* 19 *41
vv»
B alt
17 19 *17
1
« N rw Y rk
77 30 .374 1(Y
Toronto
19 21 471 S’ z
C le v rln d
30 73 44S 4
W a tt
■ O ak in d
17 I I 5S0
K an C ity
21 19 549 —
M in n
I t 73 444 I 'J
T r ia s
I I 73 4 SO 4
S r a ftir
I I 14 419 s
Chicago
14 24 111 7
C ah f
IS 2S 175 7
■ F ir s t h a ll d ivisio n w in n tr
W ed n es d ay's R esults
O a k la n d 4. T o ronto 0
Boston I I , M ilw a u k e e S
B a ltim o re I, D e tro it 0
N ew Y o rk 4. C le v e la n d 1
S eattle 3. t e a s I
M in n e s o ta a. K ansas C ity 3
C a lifo rn ia 7. C h icag o 1
T o d a y ’s P ro b a b le P itc h e rs
(A ll T im e s E O T )

Bed Sox It, Brewers 5
At Boston, Gary Allcnson's grand

In Am erican League games,
Oakland blanked Toronto, 6-0,
Boston whipped Milwaukee, 11-5,
Baltimore edged Detroit, 1-0, New
Y ork defeated Cleveland, 6-1,
Seattle nipped Texas, 2-1, Minnesota
downed Kansas C ity, G-2. and
California beat Chicago, 7-3
Phillies 9, Cardinals 3
At St. Units, Mo., Gary Matthews
and Mike Schmidt each drove in
three runs to help the Phillies hand
the Cardinals Ihvir fifth loss in their
last six games.
Cubs 2. Mels I
At Chicago, Mike Krukow ami
Dick Tidrow combined on a tourhitter amt Ivan Dejesus' leadofl
triple sparked a two-run, fourth
inning to spark the Cubs' victory.

,.

•

M m p h ry . N Y
ZZ 310 94 110
A lm on . C hi
V) 330 01 100
H o m e R uns
N a tio n a l L e a g u e
S ch m id t.
Phi
37,
D aw so n .
M II
11:
K in g m a n , N Y I t : F o s te r, Cm
30 H e n d ric k . SI1 17
A m e ric a n L e a g u e — A rm a s .
O ak 11;
T h o m as .
M il
30.
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I f G ric h . C a l and L u n n s k l. Chi
it
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N a tio n a l L e a g u e
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Phi
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B u ck n er. Chi 4 *. C oncepcion.
C m a ) C a r te r . M II *3
A m e ric a n L e a g u e — A rm a s ,
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O ak 69.
M u rra y .
fla l and
By U n ite d P ress In te rn a tio n a l
O
q
liv ie , M il a t
W in * (eld . N Y
Batting
44
E
v
a
n
s
,
Bos
43
(b ased on I t
app earan ce s a
Stolen Bases
each te a m ’s g a m e s p la y e d !
N a tio n a l L e a g u e
R aines.
N a tio n a l League
M tl 71 M o re n o . P it 17, Scott.
M ad io ck . P .l
74 2SI 94 341 M M ? f, D aw so n. M t l and N o rth ,
94 19) 111 314 SF 76
R o te . P h il
A m e ric a n L t a g u r
M ender
B ak er. L A
9J 341 117 111
C r t il, Sea 43.
G ritte y . Cm
91 341 111 31) son. O ak Si
Concpcn. Cm
94 314 110 111 L e F lo re C hi 33 W ilson. KC 30
90 1)1 10) 311 0&gt;lone, C le 76
H ro o kt. N Y
P itc h in g
O aw to n . M H
9 ) 3SI 111 310
V ic to rie s
D u rh a m . Chi
77 191 90 W l
N a tio n a l Lea g u e
S eaver.
H ow e H ou
9 ) 379 101 307
M a y Sr
90 300 93 307 Cm 13 7 V a lr n fo e la . L A 13 5
C a rlto n , Phi i7 4 W u th v rn , Phi
A m e ric a n Lea g u e
l i 6 W ogers. M il. t l 7
g ab h pet
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League
D
L a n s lo rd . Bos
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14
114
10a
117
Zisk. Sea
M il
11 4
M o rr is .
D et
IIS
P a o o re k , Sea
94 14V l i t 174 M c C a tlv .
O ak
II4
eight
H endrsn. Oak
V9 WO 177 374 p .lc h e rs tie d w ith I I w ins
*0 337 lOV 171
R rm y . Bos
E a r n e d R u n A v e ra g e
15 7TJ 04 131
H a rg ro v e . Cle
Ib a s e d on I inning p e r each
tr H4171 m
Cooper. M il
te a m ’s g am es p la y e d !
O liv e r. T e i
os wa 171 in
N a tio n a l
League
—
R yan.
Hou I IS . K n rp p e r. H ou I 04
C a rlto n .
P h i 3 11
Reuss, L A
7 14 B lu e. SF 1 4S
A m e ric a n L t a g u t — S te w a rt.
B al
117.
Lam p.
C hi
111.
M c C a tly , O ak 7 40, B u rn s, C hi
7 54 John. N Y 3 40
S trikeo u ts
N a tio n a l
L ta g u t —
V a ie n
fu e l* L A 141 C a rlto n , P h i IS *.
Solo. C m IJ4. R y a n . H ou 130.
G ullic kson. M t l 103
A m e ric a n L e a g u e B e rk e r.
C le 171.
B iy le v m . C le
107.
B urns. C hi 04, G u id ry . N Y 01
L e o n a rd KC 01
Saves

C liff
Nelson

Kansas C ity
(L e o n a rd
10 I I I .
I II pm
C hicago
(L a m p
4 SI
at
C a lifo rn ia
(K ix o n 0 01,
to 10
p m
F r id a y 's G am es
C le v e la n d a t Boston, n ig h t
M ilw a u k e e a t D e tro it, night
B a ltim o re ot N e w Y o rk , n ig h t
T e ia s o l M in n e s o ta , night
S ea ttle A l K an C ity , night
Toronto at C a lifo rn ia , night
C hicago s i O a k la n d , night

Leaders

*'*

r ' f**f ai &amp; ' f r ■ f t A.’

SECOND SEASON

) • ja

I

(H arold Photo by B ocmIo WiabaWt Bobbins)

S e m in o le C o m m u n ity C o lle g e rig h th a n d e r S te v e B lrc h m e ie r f ir e * a p itc h in
T u e b d a y 'K
ch m e te r's

seco n d s e a s o n ” a t S a n fo rd

M e m o r ia l S ta d iu m . D e s p ite B ir ­

s to u t e f fo r t, s e v e ra l R a id e r th ro w in g

e r ro rs

handed

R o llin s

C o llrg e a : u v ic to r y In o p e n in g n ig h t a r tio n o f th e Z ln n B e c k F a ll le a g u e .
T o n ig h t th e F lo rid a B a s e b a ll S c h o o l’s B lu e a n d R e d te a m s c o llid e a l fi:4 5 .

• *

**

’

*

Braves 3, Astros I
At Houston, Hick Mahler tossed a
three-hitter and drove in live first
run o| his major-league career with
a double to lead the Braves to their
win. Mahler, 6-6, notched the lirsl
complete game ol Ins career,
Beds 5. Padres I
At San Diego. George Foster and
Junior Kennedy each drove in a pair
ol runs and Frank Pasture amt Joe
Price combined on a six-hiller in
sparking the Reds.
Giants 8, Dodgers I
Al San Francisco, Enos Cabell's
twiMiut. bases-loaded single capped
a four-run sixth inning that carried
the Giants to their triumph and
revived their division playofi hopes.

A uto and Truck R epair

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WINNING TEAM
Miami
Buffalo
Houston
Atlanta
Sail Diego
Oakland
Kansas City
Dallas
Philadelphia
St. tauis

18
30
23
21
28
27
23
24
43
27
18

Minnesota
San Francisco
ta s Angeles

1!)
23
25

Pittsburgh

I jOSING t e a m
BaltimoreNew England
Cincinnati
New York Jets
Cleveland
Denver
Detroit
Seattle
New York Giants
Washington
Tamiui
Green Bay
New Orleans
Chicago

N a tio n a l L e a g u e
S u tter,
SIL 11. A lle n . N Y and M m to n .
s r 17 c a m p A lt TS H u m e ,
C m and L u cas. SD H
A m e ric a n L e a g u e
V m g e rt.
M tl
34
G ossage.
NY
30
Q u ite n b e rry , KC 17. C o rb ett.
M in 1$. S au cie r. D et I ]

A t O rla n d o -la m m o lt
W ed n esd ay n ig h t r t l u l l l
F ln tg a m t
4 0 lc a A ia n o
11 40 4 40 1 40
I Sim on O la
S 10 1.40
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14 10 4 40 1 10
IL r c o n a F a r a h
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7 41 1 4 * 44 ; O D I N K
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I P . l a Ju a n
10 00 4 00 4 10
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4 R .C J E lo rz a
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GAME 4
WEEK OF27 SEPTEMBER 19*1

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Sonfur d

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Sanford P aint and Body

in I Alai

T

slam highlighted an eight-run
seventh inning that enabled Boston
in pull within one-half game of the
first-place Tigers in the East.
Twins 6. Royals 2
At Kansas City, Dave Engle
homered and knocked in the gitahead run in the fifth inning with a
sacrifice fly to knock the Roy als out
of first place in the West
Mariners 2. Rangers I
At Arlington, Texas, Glenn Abbot!
allowed three hits in 8 1-3 innings
and Paul Serna, brought up from the
Mexican league, atoned for an error
with a home run to lead Seattle.
A's 6. Blue Jays 0
At Toronto. K eith D ru m rtg hl
drove in three runs amt Wayne
Gross blasted a solo homer to
support the five-hit pitching of Rick
l-ingford and move Oakland into
tlrst place in the West.
Angels 7. While Sox 3
At Anaheim , C a lif., B rian
Downing rip|H‘d a three-run homer
in (he third inning and rookie Mike
W ill fires! a seven-hitler to drop the
Sox.

AL Baseball

White's Home Run Sends Shivers Through National League

G aro W alks Buc Plank

S t a n d in g s

Thursday, Sept. 74, H U — 7A

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Thurvday, Stpt. 71, 1H I

THOMAS JEFFERSON
He Thought Science M ost C e rta in ly
M eans To A chie ve "The Freedom A n d Happiness O f M a n '
March. His long-forgotten role in
helping to eradicate smallpox in the
former Colonies was one of several
surprises uncovered by Smithsonian
historian S ilvio Bedini while
tracking down inform ation on
Jefferson’s scientific pursuits for an
exhibition at the National Museum
of American History.
Tlie little-known scientific side of
Jefferson’s distinguished career has
been studied by Bedini for many
years. In the course of h&lt;s research,
the historian examined virtually all
of the* statesman’s 35,000 letters and
papers and located many ol Jef­
ferson’s scientific instruments ami
collections, all of which had been
sold at auction and dispersed alter
his death on July 4, 1826.
The detective work turned up,
among oilier things, a dusty “ lleport
on the Methods for Obtaining Fresh
Water From Salt," prepared by
Jefferson at the request of the House
of Hepresentatlves in 1791. It may
well be the U.S. government’s first
scientific publication.
"Jefferson was never a scientist,"
Bedini acknowledges, "but he was
surely one of the most accomplished
men of science. Many people know
that our third president was an
architect and an inventor. But this
man was into everything. He was an
a g ro n o m is t, a r c h a e o lo g is t,
a s tro n o m e r, b o ta n is t,
meteorologist, naturalist, paleon­
tologist, surveyor—to name a few of
his endeavors

“ Above a ll, his greatest
achievement was as a promoter of
science In the United States. He used
his public offices at every’ op­
portunity to urge the application of
science as the most certain means of
achieving ’the freedom and hap­
piness of man.’"

Jefferson was never a
scientist, but he was
surely one o f the m ost
accomplished
m en o f science .'
This was a daring role for a
statesman in an age in which there
were no real American scientists by
our modern definition and at a time
when popular demand for science
was lucking. “ Science was an
avocation for most of (hose who
loved it," historian John C. Greene
writes of the period, "and even those
who taught...in the colleges were
hard pressed with other duties."
Jefferson's "other duties" oc­
cupied more than 50 years of his
life—ns author of the Declaration of
Independence, governor of Virginia,
minister to France, secretary of
state, vice president and president
for two terms. But he always found
time for his not-so-secret love.

"Science is my passion, politics
my duty," Jefferson wrote to a
friend in 1971 while serving as
secretary of state.
It was a passion instilled in Jef­
ferson as a child. His father, Peter, a
land developer and surveyor, en­
couraged
Tom 's
consuming
curiosity about the world around
him. As a young man, he developed
a peculiar penchant for recording in
pocket memo books tlie smallest
details of daily life and nature.
Nothing was too trivial: Jefferson
once recorded bow many shovels of
dirt were needed to fill a grave.
While growing up on the Virginia
frontier, tlie young Jefferson also
developed a lifelong affection for the
Indians and their culture. His
curiosity about their origins and
customs led him around 1780 to
excavate an ancient Indian burial
mound near his home.
Uke archaeologists today, tlie
then-governor of Virginia was not
merely interested in collecting
artifacts; he wanted to resolve
speculations alwut the purpose and
structure nj Indian burial places.
Working slowly, he meticulously
recorded his observations and
examined every bit of evidence he
unearthed. "W ith no precedent to
guide him ," Bedini says, "he an­
ticipated the techniques of modernday archaeology by almost a cen­
tury."
Closely related to his interest In
Indians were Jefferson's con­

jectures about the origins of
universe and the E arth
prehistoric forms of life. In
ferson's day, fossil bones were

the
and
Jef­
just

U \

lt&gt; M A OKI.EIN K JACOBS
Smithsonian New * Service
•Hif year was 1801. One of the
w orld's most dreaded plagues,
sm allpox, having crossed the
Atlantic with the early colonists,
was again taking its tragic toll in the
new American nation The disease
struck ruthlessly, nearly killing off
entire Irihes of American Indians
ami erupting in devastating out­
breaks in the cities and towns.
A Harvard college physician, Dr
Benjamin Waterhouse, had a plan to
stop the scourge by using the vac­
cination techniques discovered in
England only live years earlier. But
everywhere he turned, even when he
appealed to President John Adams,
his proposal met with indifference.
Finally in December, Waterhouse
turned to another political figure, a
man renowned for his role in
establishing the fledgling country.
Within 24 hours, the physician
received an enthusiastic response.
Waterhouse proposed a nationwide
vaccination program , and the
statesman personally distributed
lh&gt;' vaccine to physicians in
Philadelphia, Virginia, Washington
and elsewhere. Ijte r , the political
leader provided Iwwis and Clark
with vaccine to distribute among the
Indians they were bound to en­
counter on their overland exIK'ditlnn.
That man was none oilier than
Thomas Jefferson, who had suc­
ceeded Adams as president in

beginning to be discovered in
Kentucky, New York, Virginia and
elsewhere, and the lanky Virginian
avidly collected whatever he could
gel hold of. Soon his home was
crammed with an odd assortment of
mastodon Jawbones, sharks’ teeth,
musk ox bones and the remains of an
extinct ground sloth, which he
named the "Megalonyx.”
Always more man just a collector,
Jefferson firm ly believed in the
practical value of science. A farmer
at heart, he considered agriculture
“ a science of the very first order."
In 1788, Jefferson applied
mathematical principles to solve a
design problem of wooden plows.
"In the late ISIh century, the shape
of a plow was detenu in ed by the skill
of the person who made it," Bedini
explains, “ and there was no way to
reproduce a successful design."
While serving as minister of
France, Jefferson designed a new
mouldboard plow, which, he noted
proudly, could be readily
reproduced for the first time with
nothing more than a saw and adze
"by the coarsest workman by a
process so exact that Its shape shall
never be varied by a singlehair's
breadth." It was widely accaimed
though never widely used.

Minis e x i i m p l i ' S nf Thomas J e llris im 's scientific
pursuits are on view for (lie first tim e since his
death in IfCil, in an exhibit al the Smithsonian
Institution. Historian Silvio Hcdini, &lt;above),
exhibit curator, holds a theodolite used h) J e f­
ferson to survey Montii-ello.

D O N 'T C A M B L K
w ith your insurancel
-C A LL-

f

TONY RU SSI
IN S U R A N C K

It
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E ttic ia n c y A p tt A v a ila b ly
A t t lia ld ly H tq h fr Maty
■ tp a c ia l D itc o u n l O n

CAVALIER
MOTOR IN N
3200 S. Orlando Dr.
(Hwy. 17-92) Sanford
(305)321-0690

Monthly Ratal

He Was
Thomas Jefferson was an
extraordinarily learned man and
the range of his knowledge and
inquiry is scarcely believable in
the modern age of specialization.
Among
his
many
ac­
complishments;
INAGIUCULTUBK
"Agriculture is the first in utility
and ought to Ik: the first m
respect," Jelferson wrote to a
(rwind in Hurt He devised ingenious
V rtulinhi
WnpYcxlng tlie etT lrte w y IT Wx ptnfflnUnns In ­
cluding a machine fur .shelling
corn, nrmpple press, a m ill lor
making cider and a device for
raising water to a roof-top
reservoir. He was among tlie first
to undertake contour plowing to
prevent soil erosion, ami his design
of a new wooden plow based mi
m athem atical p riciples was
awarded a gold medal for in­
vention by the French agricultural
society.
IN BOTANY
Jefferson delighted in bringing
new plants into ttiis country from
Ins1 travels abroad When the
Italians tried to prevent tlie new
Ameriean nation from cultivating
i li e by prohibiting tin* exportation
ol it, Jelferson arranged for
samples to be smuggled out ot tlie
ouintry I-ite r, lie introduced rice
and olives into South Carolina.
Though neither crop look bold, lie
was juulicularly proud ot this
initiative lie introduced tlie caper
into i ultivation in Ibis country and
' ■

A Man O f Many Accomplishments
was the first person to describe the
liecan, calling it Hie "paccan or
Illinois nut.”
p a rtic u la rly prouu of this
initiative. He introduced tlie caper
into cultivation in this country and
was the first person to describe the
fiecan, calling It the "paccan or
Illinois nut.”
IN METEOROLOGY
From the lime be was a boy,
Jefferson faithfully recorded daily
note* ot rain, temperature and
wtrxl. With the !#tp ot friends
throughout the country, lie
established a kind of "weather
service," the forerunner nf the U.S.

Weather Bureau established in
1842
IN THE PUBLIC SERVICE
"Science is important to tlie
preservation of our republican

Congress his plan for establishing
a system of uniform weights and
measures as well as a system of
coinage, a (dan which eventually
led to the National Bureau of
Standards and the U.S. Mint. In
1802, he established the U.S.

government and it is also essential
to its protection against foreign
power," Jefferson wrote in 1821.
One of his major achievements
was as a promoter of science in the
newfound nation. He was Involved
In or rupanaibla (or the exWblUhment nf the first scientific agencies
of the government and tlie in­
spiration for many that came later.
On July 4, 1790, he presented to

®

IR S A p p ro v e d ®

M ilitary Academy, bringing to
reality a vision cherished by
George Washington. In 1806, he
recommended Use establishment ol

TAX FREE
SAVINGS

a Coast Survey to chart the
tuition’s coasts, shoals and islands,
an idea brought to realization in
1807.

with Seminole
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return and $ 1 ,0 0 0 for individual returns.

\iim n g .IcKcrsoii'x inventions are the
p o rtab lelap d esk (above, left) on whii'li be
wrote (lie Deelaration nf Independence,
and a model nf his wheel eipher (above,
right I.

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S-.*WC***4

i'ti ||.m l l B A R G A IN
V l l i l

I.

W ell help you get the m ost
for your money!

r s c - r u r t J / 'M U T U
OF
THE MONTH

Ol I I I ! M O M II

C om e in today. O u r savings counselors w ill explain all
o f tlte details so you can take advantage o f tills great tax
free savings opp o rtu n ity. We can show you exactly what It
m eans for you.
Federal R egulations Require S ubstantial Interest
Penalties For Early W ithdrawal o f Term Accounts. All $avers
C ertificates Subject To Fitial Regulations.

QUAMTTTtiS IMMrtEO

IV.

Tlie thill engraving
(le ft) raptures Jef­
ferson’s iiderest in
polities and science:
Jelferson bolds the
D eclaration of Indep­
endence in a ro o m fil*
led with scientific in­
struments.

Ek F I R S T
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S E M IN O L E

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OURSELVES

Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Thursday, Sept. 14,1M1—IB

School To Begin

Briefly

Saturday Program
Sanford C ham ber O u tle t

Thede Paul School ol Central Florida, Inc., 3045 Aloma Ave.,
Winter Park, a non-profit, non-discriminatory, non-sectarian
school (or children with specific learning disabilities w ill be
offering a unique "Saturday Program" beginning at the end of
this month.
Designed for children and adults ages 6 to 80. with a learning
disorder called dyslexia, the program involves one-toone
tutoring in 13 Saturday morning sessions from 9 a.m. to noon,
at the cost of flO a Saturday.
In addition an $85.00 pre-admission test is required, which is
tux deductible. Dyslexia is j learning disorder characterized
by inability to read, write, spell and organize ordinary ac­
tivities effectively. In addition the individual may experience
difficulty in communicating, in following directions and in
completing tasks.
For information contact the de Paul School office 671-1612
between 8:15 a.m. and 2:15 p.m. weekdays. Registration closes
Sept. 28.

For Discount Bus Tickets
Effective immediately, the Greater Sanford Chamber of
Commerce, located at the corner of First Street and San­
ford Avenue in Downtown Sanford, w ill assist the Tran­
sportation Authority in their Discount Ticket Program.
The Chamber of Commerce w ill act as a ticket outlet to
sell the Transportation Authority's Ten-Ride Tickets, a
convenience to passengers who w ill not need to earn
correct change to ride the bus.
The Ten-Ride Tickets sell for 15.75 effective Oct. 1.
For information call the Transportation Authority's toll
free information number. 628-2897.

O p e ra Auditions Called
Auditions for the Orlando Opera Company will be field on
Oct. 1, from 4 to 6:30 p.m., according to General Manager
Dwight Bowes.
The auditions, to be held at the Fred Stone Theatre on the
Rollins Campus, w ill be for positions in the productions of
Faust and Die Fledcrmaus, and for the Opera’s Performing
Studio.
Those interested in auditioning are asked to call the
Orlando Opera office. 423-9527 for information.

Htrald Photo Or Tom Vinctnl

C ITATIO N

A A U W Education Program

OF MERIT

The Seminole County Brandi of American Association of
University Women i AAUW i will meet on Oct. 1, with a
social at 7 p.m. followed by the meeting at 7:30 p.m., in the
Burdine’s Community Room in the Altamonte Mall.
All current and prospective members are invited.
Requirement for membership is a college degree. A special
program on education w ill be presented. The general public
is invited.

Beta Sigma Phi

SCC Dance Auditions Called
Tlie Seminole Community College Dance Company
I ballet. Jazz and modern dance l w ill hold open auditions on
campus in Room &gt;1*119. Oct. 3, at 9 a.m. Minimum age is 18
for men and women who are aski'd to wear leotards and
bring dance shoes.

Zeta X i Chapter Names Valentine Girl
Norma Dwpp was selected
Valenline G irl for Zeta XI
chapter of Beta Sigma Phi at
the meeting held in the home
of Deborah Part low. Norma
has been active in Beta Sigma
Phi for four years and was
chapter president last year
Plans were announced lor u
September rush social to bo
held Saturday In the home of
Donna Thomason.
Bonnie Jones, president,
announcer! lire Flea Market
table and aluminum cans,
ruised $26.75.
A report (nan city council
announced that the Valentine
Bull ITmrity in February this
year w ill be "R onald
McDonald
House"
in
Gainesville.
Members were reminded to
get their orders ready for the
fund-ruising plastics |iarty to
be held Sept. 29 at the home of
Nina Crouse.
Virginia Powell and Bonnie
Jones led in a program
discussion
of
the
requirements for a successful
m arriage. Key factors
discussed were financial
security, com m unication,
trust, loyalty and sexual
compatibility.
Following (lie closing ritual,
the hostess served refresh­
ments to members present

Qa%memL
Look slim and be
com fortable w ith a
sklnny-walst
foundation
garm ent from
Smoothie.

W illiam A. Jacobs, assistant vice president anil manager of Chelsea T itle
and G uaranty Company, Suntord, receives a Citation of .Merit certificate
from Dona Speir, center. Sanford Jayceeltcs IMione Center coordinator for
M uscular Dystrophy, and Karen Itracken assistant coordinator. The Phone
Center was operated from C T tiC . The Jayceetles and Jaycees raised nearly
S.l.tMMi for M l) and presented certificates to firm s and individuals helping
with (he benefit.

T
■t

Choose a panty girdle
In eith er brief or
long leg style,
or for that all
over slim look, try
a body b rief.
Also In b rief or long leg.

G irdles from $17.00
All-In ones from *15.00

111-M O E . F IR S T IT .

SA N FO R D

X I Theta
Epsilon

P H . M l-1 5 1 4

cheon" of Xi Theta Epsilon
chapter of Beta Sigma Phi at
her Sleepy Hollow home.
Members were treated to a
pool party ami covered dish
luncheon.
Chupter president Gtnny
Hagan distributed yearbooks
for the coming year. A special
thanks was extended to the
yearbook committee and to
Linda Dunn for the specially
designed covers. Members
had a relaxing afternoon
catching up on summer's
activities.
Vickie Hall was hostess for
the first meeting in Sep­
tember with all members in
attendance. Ginny Hagen
presided. She announced the
plans for the Daytona Area
meeting "Autumn Witchery"
on Oct. 24, ami the All-Chapter
Luncheon on Nov. 7th.
Officer Edna Abies from Hie
Altamonte Police Department
presented an interesting
program on "What to Do
Before The Burglar Comes".
Linda Morris was hostess
for the Sept. 16 meeting. All
but two members were in
attendance.

sorority.
At its first meeting held
Sept. 3, members voted to
help raise funds and supplies
tor Bela House us its service
project lor the year.
Members attending the
luncheon were: Sandi Cilrone,
Dianna Foster, Carol I jiw ,
Nancy N ew kirk, Georgiu
The b usin ess m eeting w a s Palmer, K a y P ru lU , P a u la
adjourned early as Diane Thomas, Stephanie Turner,
G azil, Ways and Means und Becky Winn. Diane Gerry’
chairman, had planned a was a guest.
p rofita b le program fo r
members ami guests.

Ginn) Hagan announced
Becky
Molenaar
w ill
represent the chapter as
Valentine Girl.
Members attending the
chapters first social at Walt
Disney World Hoop-Dee-Do
Revue decided they had such
a good time, they would like to
go again.

Upsllon
Omlcron
Upsilon Omlcron chapter ol
Beta Sigma Phi held its
Beginning Day Luncheon at
Die Village Restaurant in
lake Buena Vista.
The
newly
elected
president, Paula Thomas,
announced (lie chapter had
received a Three Star Rating
from International Beta
Sigma Phi for the work and
projects it completed as a
first year member of the

ifC lfi&amp; s

Al Kurtz served as hostess
for "B eginning Day Lun­

v 'T c ih lo n T a ln ic * kox C reative P e o p le !
MOM. FBI.

* $ * &amp;

II : 44 to 1:44

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SAT.
11:44 to 4 :44

SUN.

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B LO N D IE

2B— Evening Herald, S a n fo fd .fi.

Thursday, Sept. &gt;1, t f t t

by Chic Young

ACROSS

TWE BLNOWXD TESTAND:
TASTE M»SNEW Dt5H

I

by M ort W alker

B A IL E Y

w o m d er

if

S A R 6 E W AS
A N Y T H IN G
TO E A T INI
MlS ffO O M ?

sg t:

ORVUU

SNORKI

7
WUP5I I FORGOT
1 HOW PO G S PROTECT
THEIR OWW T U R F

Qfow

t

THE

by Art Sansom

BO RN LO SER

r

Answer to Previous Puult

enew
I Automotive so-45 Rollewey
ci«tv (ib b r) 46 Sweet poteto
4 Mtlk-orgin
47 Useful
9 Unhippy
50 Stone with
12 Son-m-law ol
crystals
Mohammed 54 Cyst
13 Actress Rimer 55 Gyrete
14 B i r item
59 Eiprett
15 Source ol
60 Soldier's
light
eddrete
16 Show
Show
(tbbr)
dnepprovel
Helot
17 The briny
Fib
Swemp
deep
Irish poet
18 Whitebeit
CIA
20 Show to e
eeet
forerunner
22 Dry.fi wme
24 Yeer (Sp)
DOW N
25 Church pert
28 Dot of lend
Impudence
Potseiium
32 Southern
compound
itete jebbr)
33 Traveler's
One (Ger)
Cost type
choice
35 Cenel eyetem
Oemtnd
payment
in northern
Michigen
tip ire
36 Slouch
Compete
point
37 College
Shows enew
degrM (tb br)
38 Long period
Cloth belt
ol time
Toths
39 Empower
sheltered tide

THECHEf WMWTBVOUTO-axE

BEETLE

42 Conitruct

2

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D U U L l'l n o n o l u u H
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IH v I t I h I□ □
n o o o n n

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□

□non
tinnltonnrilnnun
11 Eipeneivf
19 Lending host
21 Eerthseur
(Let)
23 Rode bike
24 Heving little
moisture
25 Potiche
26 Brillience
27 Modern
epiclike
ntrrttnre
29 Bewildered
30 Obscure
corner
31 Finished
34 Gtngster
Ctpone
40 Berrel (tbbr)

4 1 Freedom of
action
43 Predatory
birds
44 M td im t
(ibbr)
47 Air dafente
group (ibbr |
48 Rscord (or TV
49 Image

St Chnttiims
52 Raitsd
platform
53 Looks it
56 Tings
57 Author Lsvm
56 Rodsnt

9

3

12

14

ts

17

to tt

16

T v e e u n D R S A s e iK m
AW DI'MItt
M F tfO K T .

25

26

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27

32

35

36

36

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46

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62

63

64

65

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53

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1

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HOROSCOPE
By BERNICE BEDE OSOL

For Friday, Soptom bor 2 5 , 1981

b y E d S u lliv a n

P R IS C IL L A 'S P O P

^

rfCHOO/

OOULPN'T

by Stolfel

BUGS B U N N Y

S

THlSVE HAPPENEP
AT THE BEGINNING
OF THE SEASON ?

A

Heimdahl

WANT TD BUV,
A SP IR l*
HOCS E ?r

m LiZirn
FR A N K A N D ER N EST

YOUR BIRTHDAY
PISCES (Feb. 20-Msrch20)
Septembers, 1911
For two reasons this may not
In the year following your be an unproductive day for
birth d ay your fin an cia l you: 1) You won't be able to
prospects look especially make up your mind what you
good. However, be wary about want to do. 2) You might not
entering Into agreements with follow through.
persons about whom you know
ARIES ( March 21-April 19)
little. Get references if you’re It isn't likely friends can fill
in doubt.
your needs today, either for
I.IBRA (Sept. 23-Oct, 23) em otional or plsaaurable
Today could fin d 'you a bit outlets. In fact, they might
down in the dumps because even add to your frustrations.
you may think you've been
TAURUS (A pril 20-May 20)
taken advantage of by a Avoid arguments at home
friend. It isn't likely you’ll today. You run the risk of
bring the Issue out in the open. saying things y o u 'll la te r
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) regret. Harsh words could
II you're not as self- in flic t wounds that leave
disciplined as you should be lasting scars.
today, there is a good chance
GEM INI (May 21-June 20)
)o u'll whip out that stinging
This could be one of your
restless days. If depression
lail all Scorpios possess (/
anyone rubs you the wrong
sets in you could, un­
way.
characteristically, become
moody and difficult for others
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23to contend with.
Dec. 21) You’re noted for
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
being blunt from time to time,
If you're not careful today,
and today might prove to be a
you could go on a spending
classic example. You may not
spree. This could be
mince words, even lo be
especially possible If you are
polite.
trying to lick some wounds by
re w a rd in g y o u rs e lf
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22Jan.
materially.
19) You might enter into a
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) It's
game of trying to match wita
not like you to react
today. Just take care on
em otionally, but today
whom you pick. If you aelect
patience Is not your long suit.
Hie wrong persons, you could
If someone attacks your pride
(time out on the short end.
you won’t let logic keep you
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
from retaliating.
19) Confusion might occur
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
today because you may have
You could wake up on the
a difficult time determining
wrong side of the bed today,
and everything or everybody
when you ahould be
might irritate you. Get hold of
cooperative with associates
youraelf or you'll be labeled
and when you should be In­
as a crab.
dependent.

Raw M e a t Good Case
For Food Poisoning
DEAR DR. LAMB - 1 work
in o well-known fast food
chain. We sell beef and beef
sandwiches. I am very
worried about how the beef is
cooked. Or I should say how It
is not cooked. We get the beef
frozen. We have Instructions
about putting it in the oven for
thawing and then leaving it
unthawed until our cooked
supply gets low. It is then put
in the oven but If we run out of
beef we go ahead and use it
even if it has not been in the
oven as long as it should be to
be completely cooked.
I suppose th r franchise
knows what it is doing but that
beef Is not cooked In the
center and sometimes it Is
really raw. It Is thin sliced so
the customers are not so
aware of it in their sand­
wiches. Isn't that raw meat
dangerous for them? What do
you think I should do?
DEAR READER - There
is a health reason for cooking
food. Cooking destroys harm­
ful bacteria and w ill even
destroy some toxins already
farmed In food ( but not all). It
is not just a matter of taste. It
is dangerous to eat uncooked
meats, Including p ou ltry.
F ortunately, In most In­
stances the most people get Is
a good case of food poisoning
from the bacteria-laden
undercooked food, but that Is
bad enough.
The situation you describe
cries out for a meat ther­
mometer. The only way to k ill
unwanted bacteria is to
subject them lo a heat of
about 175 F (80C) (or at least
30 minutes. Poultry should be
cooked to 190 F (87.8 C). That
means all the meat and not
Just the outside. That is why
the thermometer should be
inserted Into the center of the
meat being cooked. It
doesn't mat ter what .(lie
cooking procedure is as far as
health is concerned so long as
these tem peratures are
reached and maintained. You
m ight suggest that your
supervisor get a meat ther­
mometer.

There is more lo preventing
food poisoning than this. Y«u
w ill want to read other details
in The Health le tte r number
6-2, Food Poisoning o|
Infectious Origin, which I am
sending you. 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
Bacterial contamination is
still our greatest food hazard,
not chem icals. And the
temperature for food in the
refrigerator is as important
as the cooking temperature
DEAR DR. 1-AMB - I was
wondering If there is any
relationship between the
common cold, I mean the
frequency with which some
people get colds and keep
them, and the incidence of
cancer. Are people who are
highly susceptible to one virus
that causes a cold more
susceptible to all virus in­
fections and hence cancer1
DEAR HEADER - Good
question. And I don't think
there is any good evidence on
this point. But you must
realize that we do not know
that cancers are caused by
viruses. Even if some are
there Is evidence that other
cancers are not. As a case in
point, most skin cancers are
caused by radiation from sun,
not viruses.
But the body's ability lo
reject or destroy abnormal
ceils or organisms is related
to our immune system which
does influence our resistance
to colds. One approach to
cancer
treatm ent
or
prevention is to improve the
body's a b ility lo destroy
abnormal cells (cancer cellsi
regardless of their cause
through improving the body's
immune response.

Catary should be avoided b y th o M on low-Mlt diets. Sub­
stitute raw carrots, cauliflower, green pepper and ndnhti.

W IN AT BRIDGE
bid. He could pass, raise to
two hearts or bid one spade
or one notmm
He final!IIJM"decided on one
NORTH
I It I I
spade as the least undesir
♦ QJ7«
able ichoice. North jumped
REK Q 10 7 4
to three and now South
♦ KQ
passed and wished that he
♦KQ
passed originally.
nadpai
WEST
EAST
A ctually, Tour spades
♦ KJZ
♦ 14
would not'have been a bad
fll
V A I2
c ont ra ct . With decent
♦ A I7 IZ
♦ 154 1
breaks it would simply
♦ a tos
♦ J 71Z
depend on a spade finesse
SOUTH
With the spade finesse
♦ A to il
wrong there was no play for
V J44
four and good defense beat
♦ J to
three.
♦ lilt
West opened the nine of
Vulnerable: East-West
hearts, the 10 was plaved
Dealer North
from dummy and East had
to make a decision Was that
West Nerth Eait Seetk
nine singleton or doublelon1
IV
Pits 10
He decided It was a double
Pm
JO
P iu Pin
Pin
ton. Give South four hearts
and he surely would have
raised hearts Instead of bid
Opening lead O l
ding a spade. So East played
his eignt of hhearts as a
strength signal.
Now South led dummy's
By Oswald Jacoby
queen o f spades and
aad AlnBsatag
finessed. West took his king,
three of hearts and
South looked at hia unat­ ted his
in
the ru ff to defeat
tractive hand and debated
between fo u r calla in SL‘
iNcwwara orm nusc *»&gt; i
to North's heart

A N N IE

by Bob Thavet

b y L e o n a rd S ta rr

T O UiRE V

IvOLyfi INPfto A
i»AND-pwEvk£R, PuT n ®T AT A
|6 ' j Pf/TCENT* MORTGAGE RATE-

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it

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�TONIGHT'S TV
K IT 'N ' C A RLYLE ~

find* • aW n g act o rn tw c* In S B 's
Malar Abby (R)

by Lany Wright

(2 )0 &gt;0/10

® ^ 5 ) am

w in 1
0 (1 0 ) DAVE ALLDt AT LAMM

6:00

10:30

g |35j LOVE. AMBUCANITYLE

I t |55) ixTiT) andt a w m x
® ( io )EARTH.
r — SEA
‘ AMOMY

I UR
11:00

6 :3 0

,® ® 0 ® 0 ® 07)

i NOCMEYYE
9 O CUNCWI

O

IT) (35) BENNYWLL
0(10) ROETBCRteTE
11:30

( 2 ) Q ABC NEW S
(3 5 1 CARTER CO UHTRY

10 EARTH. SEA AMOMY
i7 )o o u e n m i

0

12.-00
® Q iT A R B K Y ANO HUTCH
CD 0 C H A R U r i ANGELO Tha
A n g M mova Into *n (p v tm a n !
houaa lo m vaatigalt lha death ot
two t* n * n t* (R)
0 ( 1 7 ) M O V * "W arlock" (IS S t)
fbehard W idm ar*. Henry Fond*

12:30

1:10
®

0

MOV*

"The Long Good

tya" (C| (tersy E«K&gt;tt Goutd. Nmi
Van PMtendl

ERNOR ORAMAM
J J (1 7 ) a l l b it h e f a
6 ‘3 0

(D 0 m r OP THE WB8T Tha

2:30
(D (17) BA8EBALL Atlami

on tha hoaprtat (R)
(23 0 T A B Tha cab brat are left to
pound the parem ant in a hunt lor
new |oba whan lha SunaM nt Cab
Com pany geaa out ot buatnaaa (R|

Brave* al Houtton A itro *

___

0
(1 7 )
B A S E B A L L A tla n ta
A ra ra t at Houeten Aatroa

W )0 '
( I ) A LOVE L E T T W T O JACK
George Bume, Bob Mope
I Johnny C a n o n boat atn b w ia to
the ta la co m ed ia n , laatu rtn g
am Banrty'a T V aartaa
(R|
A re p o rttr p c k a lha
®
Fpoawbte tana la d o a N ature

3-08

rooNEwe

Ehnra and Ooc try lo keep

DEAR ABBY: Cm in lave. And it's the mast
exciting thins* that has ever happened to me.
I'm 22 and "G " is 24. He's also the boyfriend of
one of my girlfriends, which complicates
matters. They've been very light for several
years, but he told me he has no plans to marry
her, although they're living together tern*
porarily.
There has always been a very strong at­
traction between "G" and me, but I never
dreamed anything like this could happen.
Well, the other night, the very first time wt
were alone together, we lost all control and
made love. I don't regret it, but I'm all con­
fused. I know il happened Incredibly fast, but
Abby, I ’ve never been in love like this before.
"(1" says he thinks he loves me, too, but it's
lo o soon to make a commitment
To make matters worse, "G" and his
"girlfriend" are going on a 10-day vacation
together. ( Il was planned a long time ago.) He
promised to call me every chance he gets
wmie ne's away, and said we will « n &gt;
something out when he gets back. He says he
doesn't want to lose me, but he's a very caring
lierson and doesn't want to hurt her.
I suppose there is nothing I can do except
wait and see what happens, but in the
meantime, 1 would appreciate an objective
opinion and any useful advice.
MESSED UP IN W.VA.
DEAR MESSED UP: My objective opWoo
is that you should cool It. If and when “ G" is
tree from his present commitment, yon caa
pick up where you left off.
DEAR ABBY: A new family moved inlo our
neighborhood. Their children are about the
ages of our children, so the youngsters quickly
struck up a friendship. Soon we mothers were
visiting each other's homes for coffee. So far
so good!
Then after one of her visits, I noticed that
two towels and matching washcloths were
missing from my bathroom. They were not
misplaced — (hey are gone! Of course 1 didn't
see her lake them, bul I strongly suspect she
did. My questions:
1) Should my children continue to play with
Iwr children? Why or why not?
2 ) How can I get my towels and washcloths
back in a face-saving manner for aD con*

3:38

i ( 1 0 ) BNEAK P R E V *W E "Mora
G u tty Ptaaauraa" Roger Ebert and
Oene l a * at ravtaw aoma mo w e t
they're am ber tat t e d to admit they
kked |R)

® O MOV* "Tha Ne.t Victim"
(C ) 11075| C a rro l

McKarme

B a k tr.

TP

rrr?7i

6:30

__________________

( 3 5 ) W O O DY W OODPECKER
1 0 B E S A IIC S T R E E T (R )g
( 1 7 ) THE MUNOTERO

FREE

5 :3 0

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3 5 ) TO M AMO JCTRY
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ENJOY YOUR FAVORITE

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6:46

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0 ( 1 0 ) A M . W EATHER

321-0668

3200 S. O R L A N D O i

7:00

A bby

SANFORD

0 ® TODAY
® 0 M O R N W O W ITH CNARLEB
KURALT

5) TOMANOJERRY
tOVKLA ALEGRE (R)

cemed? 1 do not want to confront her.
Please don’t mention my name or town. Sign
me.

17 ) FU N TB IE

7:30

0 (35) W OODY W OODPECKER
0 &lt; to )(iSESAM E STREET (RJ g
•0 0

"M "
DEAR "M ” : 1 see aa reawa why your
children sbaalda'I ceuttaae U pay with her
children. 11*1 unfair ta punish iaaoceai
chttdrca for toe alleged "staa" el a p a re *.
There is as way you caa get your towels and
washcloths back without u eenfrentoUoa. My
advice la to l«ne» I t Bul wafeb her carefully
to toe future.
DEAR ABBY: I am a 60-y ear-old woman
who has been friends with a very nice gen­
tleman my age Cor the past throe yean. I am
quite sure he has a good income because he
often goes on expensive cruises, drives a fine
car and has a beautiful home.
He often s itu me out for dinner, and the bill
la never le u than S30, but he never leaves
more than a 11 Up! H its is embarrassing to me
as I am well-known In this restaurant In my
small hometown.

I CART A M KANGAROO
(3 5 ) CASPER
( 1 7 ) 1 DREAM O F J E A N N *

8:30

IMmsrb"

0 ( 3 5 ) GROAT SPACE CO ASTER

M0

0 ( £ hour MAOAzam
®
0
0
0

BOONAHUI
B O ( 1 7) M O V *
(T 5 T o O M E R R Y U
( 1 0 ) BEBAME STREET (R ) g

0 30

.

0 ( 3 5 ) AMOY GRWF1TH

1 5 ) I LOVE LUCY
( 1 0 ) EDUCATIONAL

PRO-

10:30
) BLOCKSUSTERB
*(R )

ia l x

. 5) OCK VANDYKE
(10) ELBCTRC COMPANY(R)

i LOVE BOAT(A)

1 5 ) BUO BREW E R

DEAR EMBARRASSED: Use the direct
approach. TeU him that a ! i percewt Up to
cualdertd fair these days, aad a 0 percent Up
would be ceasidcrtd generous.
De you hate to write letters because you
dea’t kaew what to u y? Thank-you notes,
sympathy letters, ceugratulatieaa how to
decline aad accept tnvttaJtouiudhow to write
aa latere*Ung letter are torladed la Abby’*
booklet, “ Hew to Write Letters for AU
Otratteaa." Sead 11 and a leaf, stomped (U
cu ts), self-addressed envelope to: Abby,
U tte r Booklet, 12EE6 Hawthorne Btvd., Suite
H 0 , Hawthorne, Calif. M M .

(10) BUCATIONAL PRO1 1 :3 0
J PASSW O RD PLUS
3 5 ) LOVE, A M B 0C A M 0 T Y U

m

Crooms — Lyman — Lake Mary
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U

12:30

* 3 1 3THE

YO U N G ANO THE

Raanaaa
RYAM'S HOPE
5) PA0BLYAFFAIR
ia o
)days or oun lives
I ALL MY CMLOROt

?

® 0

AS THEWORLDTURNS
200

0 ®
® 0

ANO THER W ORLD
ONE UPB TO LIVE

®

SEARCH FO R TO M O R R O W

300

or looking to soli...whether

) TEXAS

you hove m erchandise to tra in

M

I LIGHT
_______L H O SPITAL

or o service to e ffe r—thera's

out RABAT

one piece w here yau're sura

b Orfedo headed for another tfafo playoff berth?

MO

ear'g 0*10 toatonf

WM Semhtofo

h r fbe Fh§ Star tMof

AS

Can Sam Mfefr war

fm hm on compactiont
( for Centra/ Florida’s

KnfohfsP W/tt Labe1

'repeat as conference

cbempfoni P Can

p once again rule the imoU

idieet dbbfon?

0 (3 5 )B O O O B Y O O O

Innbg of Tho Bost'7

Can Lyman hour

WM die Croomi Par

2:30

0

THE CHALLENGE
WIR lab# Mery

1:30

Thu Iv u n in f Harold Ct a il died I

Sanford Seminole — Oviedo

0 1 17) M O V *

3 )0 (1 7 ) MOV*

to get the result* you w is t.

THE
TEAMS
lake Brantley — UCF

11.-00

LOPPORTUNE
) THE PRXE • RKIHT

EMBARRASSED

W hether you're look in f to buy

1181

1040

( T X T AC DOUGH

How can I let him know that his Up is not
enough? Thank you.

y o w l fin d il in t h e O a s s M e d l

,Brantley raise Its rod, white

and bfoe bannerP

Jump right In and chuck aut
tha ClatsMtod Ads tad ayl

M

ALLBEATS

Call ObmHM Adwrrtih|

■ ID L U i

322-2611

99* |

T tM l a s t n i t

LJNUI K IN I
NAI[\H( )VL
I 11\

The

II

300 N. Franch Avenee
a

THE ANSWERS
Even in g H erald
YOUR

)C I 1 I

( l \ l \

Evening Herald

SPOUTS

PAPER

For Immediate delivery Call: 322-2611

Sanford, Ha.

\

* '

(; ,e

* Seminole County's Oafy Oatfp Newspaper*

•eeeeeea

*4*1 'vi {(.; rtil

^ , ' 1 »'

* 1

'

I &gt; &gt;

. ‘.ifrTT
*V
d
V
*

In Harmony
With
Nature

For Better
Hoe mi

( 1 7 ) THE BRADY BUNCH

I JO H N D A V D B O N

KhOO
®
0
K N O T ! LAMOtNG Sid
rtfe c tt J R ' * o h tr to patent and
m a n a t tu t new car engine, but J R

JUMP RIGHT

%
$

11

1.-00

®ONEW «

Acute' Angle Used Not
'Right' In Love Triangle

: l

4 :0 0
LITTLE HO U SE O N THE

0 ® TO M O RRO W Q u a *' C h a r*
Ttaga, author John trying

8:30

I
:

) QUXIAM'S *LAMO
J HOGAN’S KEROCS
3 5 ) WONDERWOMAN
10 MMTER ROGERS(R)

TONKJMT H o*t

® O M *A ‘a*H
(7) Q ABCNEWB MQMTUNE
1C (35) aTRErra of ban fram-

7 :3 0
0® C N TEK TA M M C K TTO M aH T
f|'l O Y O U A M E O FOR (T
I Q FA1MLY FEUD
) f ( 3 5 ) RMOOA
®
( 1 0 ) D ICK C A VETT Quaat
JohnGiatgud (Part 3 ot 4| |R|
1 1 ( 1 7 ) SAMFORO AMO BON

8:00

5 :0 0

THE FU N TETO NEB

Cotton Q u ad Robert Klam

7 :0 0
a ® TH E M UPPETS
_____
■
M O • pMi. M A G A ZIN E Jack Klug.
m an i campaign lor m o r* govarnm ant-fundad madical raaaarcn, a
punk lathion .how m Mmnaapoaa.
Dr W n c o on lha lalaal m pramalura baby ta ra . Suaan W ataarttam
la a i b o a to baggla at a baa mark at
0 D Q J O K E R S W ILD
( I t ( 3 5 ) BARNEY U iLLER
S
( 1 0 ) M A C N G L / LEHRER
REPORT
3 1 ( 1 7 ) CA R O L B U RNETT AMO
FW EN 08

S ® N A TIO N AL G EOGKAPM IC
SPECIAL "Amaticana O n Evaraat"
On M ay I. 1M 1 . Jan W ltlM a r
bacam a tha tin t man to plant tha
S ta rt and Slnpaa on M l Evaraat
(i) O
M A O N U M . P.L M agnum
fo n t a marathon aaxm-run-brka
r aca m or oar to haip a chant (R)
GD O MORK AMO MINDY Mindy
g o a t to w o rt tor a TV caR-m m ow .
tearing Work to copa with lha
houterrork (R)
1 1 (3 5 ) M O V *
Return To Para­
d i n ' 1C | (19SJ) Gary Cooper.
Roberta Haynea Altar apandlrtg
tim e on a South S ea t island, a man
taitt m tore with one ot tha tatand
QKtt
8 ) ( 1 0 ) O N THE U N E W ITH G O V ­

®

8 j j $ | “ q n ? c c o !^ (» n

PERSONAL
CARE

NUTRITIONAL [
PRODUCTS

/

^ l

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*

%’

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*

* »r&lt; O •

* O h* 6^ h\*

�t % '

i

Q - » v m I bp H grgrt, jgfrtprQ, F t

T t e ir a r t g J g g J M II)

CALENDAR

Nerw aa da V e rt Howard Chapter UDC, I:M p.m .,
home of D r. Sara Irrgang, 131 Aktean D rive, Sanford.
Program by the hosteaa on “Confederate Treaaurea."

THURSDAY, SEPTEM BER M

the public.
W right Watchers, 7 p.m ., Good Shepherd Lutheran
Church, 81 7 Highway 17-**; 7 p.m ., Q uality Inn, M
and State Hoad 434.
G reater S riala ilr TaaM aiM resa C M , 7:3* p ja „
Altamonte Springs Eaatmonte Center.
S«ahwte Rcbekak U d f t a , • p.m ., Odd PeUews
H all, 1074 Magnolia A v t., Sanford.
O vereaten Aaeayaw a^
7:30 p.m ., Community
United Methodist Church, Highway 17-02, Casaelberry.
Sasfard AA, • p m , 181 W . F irst St., Sanford.
F R ID A Y , SEPTEM BER IS
Ohteherfest to benefit M ultiple Sclerosis Society, S
p.m. to 2 a m ,, Church Street Station and Orlando
Central Business D istrict. German bands, barrel
rolling log sawing and Chug-a-lhon contesta, Beer
tent, food and entertainm ent.

G iant Raw w age S alt, Fleet Reaarve, W ait P in t
Street, Sanford, beginning at ■ a jn . Refrwhm eata
available.
Cake Shew - decorated cake contest to benefit
M eals-on-W hecte sponsored by Cam eron’s Cake
Carousel, 1-4 p.m ., G reater Sanford Chamber of
Commerce. Open to the public. Call 3334102 to register
(or contest.
Irish Am ericas C M sf Central Flarida, • p,m „ All
Soul's Social H all, Sanford. Ooverad dish supper. Ham
l AA W s a c a 'i Creep, 2 p.m ., 1391 W. F irst
S t., Sanford.
C w d h n y AA, closed. I p.m ., Ascension Lutheran
SU N DAY,!
One-day Baas T e i a n w t to aid Muscular
Dystrophy Am odation, Southport P ark, Kissimmee.
304 entry fee tax-deductible donation. F or information
cad Ron Henderson in Orlando at 80-3110.
Orange Bleessm Cheree Barker Skip concert, 2 :8
p.m ., Loch Haven A rt Center auditorium Orlando.

'60 Minutes' Crew Offers
30-Minute Daily Version
NEW YORK (U P I) - Fans of CBS’s " 8
Minutes” — and the Nielsen ratings Indicate
they are legion — now can have their favorite
video fare six days a week, though (or five of
those days It w ill be called "U p to the M inute.”
The crew for the new JBminute sertes which
prem iere* Monday at 4 p.m ., E D T , la the same
aa the one that rune the popular Sunday
evening magstlne — M orley Safer, H arry
Reaaoner, M ike W allace and newconwr, Ed
Bradley. Even the logo is almost the asm* - a
pocket watch w ith no ticking.
Instead of Andy Rooney, "U p to the Minute”
employs Bob Keeriian - “Captain Kangaroo”
in another Incarnation — for the postscript,
thus making good a promise CBS advanced
when Kecshan yielded half an hour of his
morning kiddie show to “Morning With
Charles K u ralt."
Only the producer has changed. For the
Monday through Friday aerias, It la Gracs
Dirithaus instead of Don H ew itt
Certainly the content Is every bit aa
provocative, and since the program w ill
dedicate an entire week to one subject, It
delves much deeper than Its Sunday ceurin
ever could.
The topic with which "Up to the M inute"
makes Its Monday debut Is "The Effects of
Feminism on M en," and H arry R eam ntr
kicks it off w ith some aurpriaea for both
genders.
In five segments, ha explore* a w orld In

b etw een

Church, Camribcrry.

- even aggressive - In their bid for equality
and what he tu rn up among macho men in
barrooms, at cocktail parties and In in­
terviews often is rtWBr terror.
" Il goes against the grain," soys one
unidentified man of the rrxxtem woman's
pndllaction for Initiating contact. " It goes
against years of tradition and upbringing."
“ What do they really want anyw ay!" walls
another. “ What la it they Ye looking for?"
A third answers.
" I think what they want is somebody who is
an upper-level executive for Xerox who
happen to be a well-published poet and la
deciding on a secret career aa a Ph D a n
therapist and Is attending the M a rte n and
Johnson's clinic largely because he wants hia
lady to be totally happy," he grouses.
By episode fire , with frightened men, men
abandoned to raise the kids, men who work for
women and men now confused as to how to
relate even to their daughten a ll explored In
depth, Reasoner'a around-the-cbffee table
diacuarton crumbles into a blaring free-for-all.
Everyone talks at once, tempera Bara,
names a n caOed.
W ryly, Reaaoner interrupts the brawl with «
summation.
"Can you imagine five women agreeing as
cioeety aa we h ave!" ha taka.
Experts doubtless w ill carp at th s rty is , but
"U p to the M inute" te likely to wind up owning
the 44:31 p.m. daily tim e riot the way
•M lM lf

L tfd

N o tk #

FICTITIOUS NAMR
Natk* e hartby *lym ttoi I am
mpapad In buskwM at r tt I .
Falm att*
Av*..
Lonywaod.
Florida. DM*, laminae Caunty,
Florida under tha HctHNu* name
at CHAN N IL * TRUCK A IO U IP.
r e p a ir , and that I intend te
raflktov MM torn* with the Curb
at m* Circuit Cwrt. tornkuu
County, Fur id* m accordance
with tto pravNiwe at tha Pk.
tit leu* Nam* ItaiutM , Ta-Wit:
laciun US M FNr Id# Statute*
tfS7.
IN . OENNIS K. CHANNEL
PubiNh tammnbar te. IT, 14. A
Delator I, IN I
DEM X

NOTICE WNOBR PICT IT t« U»
NAAtS STATUTE
Natke e hereby pNm that the
wndartipnad, RUFiumtt la the
•'FklltNu* Name SlatvtK'' Mine
lacten M a t. p end* Staivta*.
will rapetar with the CNrb m lh*
Circuit Caurt In and ter SamkuN
Caunty, FNrtd*. upm roc*k»l of
pram m pubtkmen rn the notice,
tha llctltMut name. ta-wH:
AMERICAN F UNDINO LIMITED
d b aT H B M O N tr SAVERS
undtr which tha undartlenad N
aneepad In butlnoN In IM City m
Un(#r i
Tha partia* InlarMlad In IM
uanamaa butku N are
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
FUNDINO, INC..
General Partnar
OENSTAR PACIFIC
FINANCIAL CORP..
Limited Partnar
Data# at Montvala, Haw Jartay,
me Slh day m Aapurn. IN I.
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
FUNDINO, INC.
m 0 moral Parmer
by: drtmam f . Decay.
PvMNh I amamtor S4, A Octatof
I. ■, IA IN I
D E M tlt

REALTY TRANSFERS
Thama* N. D iv li Wm, a.
Dooley Jr A J*a D letters Jr. la
Thoma* N. D#vl» 4 William R.
Dooley Jr., Lai I. Bih 1, Giendraa*
Laa Add Lw. SIN.
coco) chdrm m . a m i, ao&lt;- it
Rosemary W Scan, Let a, a * a.
idyttwiid* at Loch Araar lac. A
SIN.
CQCD1 Sartor a A. Aurkun ta
Ronald o Burkean. — Sa*. 1IAST
■ A »is « • s at NW car. at S lu el
NWU at NWU Sac. IS S S ate.
IIM .
Winnie M. Halt A HA W.H. te
OayttolM. Warran, IS M i 1 41'at
Lot It A N S' at Lat M Oaldanrad
Manor. MSN.
COCO) Lama* A Nattlatan Ca. ta
L A N Consultant*, Inc.. Lat ft A
N'v at « . Finahurtt, SIM.
COCO) Lomat A Nattlatan Ca. la
L A N Consultant*. lne„ Lat 71
Oanava Tarr., Amandad fla t. A W
J* at' at Lt M A I II.W at Lt St
Oanava Tarr. Amandad Old! SIN.
Urban Ca*. Inc. ta Wllliem
Oral*, ifl.. Lot in ilk B. Wkitor
Oraan, Pud. Sdt.tOO.
Marcalla I. Oratom OAA Haart
Home* la Rabart M. Gerrtque* A
wt Paw* W.. Lat 3, Sib R
Swaatwaiar Club, Un. On*.
UJSJOO
Herbert D Padrlck ill A art
hi jam * M to Rabart C. Money A
wt Patricia L . Lot A Aik J, Tha
Woodland*, Sac. Poor. Iff.N *.
IQCOI William T. Im llh A wt
Odaita L. la William T. Smith A wt
Odatta L . Trustee*, — Lot It*.
Myrtle Laka Hill*. A Lat I4J SMS.
Rrtocca Ann Smith (Farm.
Lanedaial **i. ta Jaal B. Smith,
tgl - Let I. Oakwaad l it * . IN *
Howard J. Hamquto A wt
Mailrn to Rabart L. AwhrleSr Awt
Marram Auhrl*. Lat A Alb V, Tha
Woodland*. Sac. A in,NS.
Jahnnia C Walhar A wt Linda t*
Jahnnla C Walhar A wt Linde I..
Lot I. *ik C. Sttrllnf Fk Un. 1 IMS.
IQCOI Sanpiargi inv. Ca. N
JtMpn A. Ungurg I, E Id' at Lat }*
A all at &lt;r bn C, watt Attamokg
Haight*, Sac. One, SMS.
Lima S. Reynold* to Lilli# a.
Rtynoidt, SyracuM NV A Ida a.
Williams, W K 'at S 4 7 '* N 114*01
Lot IS Amt at S4?' at N 114* at 11
Fraat* Adn No l AS. 1111 at SR
437. SW*.
VKwdl A rt* Prod . Inc. te
Richard K. Spancar. *pt., Lat A.
bib M. A E J)‘ of 14, Mb K.
Tawntll# at North Chulwat*.
SAMS.
visual Art* Prod Inc. to Larry
D Piddle A wt Maureen B . Lot I I
A E » ' 44 7 btb I I TawweRt *1
North Chuivata, a* ai , SI44N.
Huey L. William*, tgl. t* Earl F.
Tunwr A wt Bra M . Lat* I I n A
IA Slh I, Fairvlaw, IANS.
•run W Davit A wf Shlrtay J. M
Karen J. RtvkMhy, H I . Let II,
•Ik I, Better wb S D Un. A StMW
let Date BaUdar* Inc. ta Charlaa
O Baumann A W Judith M , Let &gt;1
Tuttewiile, Un. t. *111J N
(OCOI Cart j. Lit taw (MARR.I
TO le w . ■ Donnie A wt iwby L«
S T Y tfN S c h .a fE N C. at NWia
Sac. IS 1* 39 ItJ rt.
Conetr. te j**eph H.
A wt Swan A. Let 11
Twscewtild, Un *A S tllJN .
A J Thame* Jr. Wc. I* Samara
J. A stattd C. Mlchnlb. Un. &amp;

Aria*. »*i — Un. iste Aahwaad
Cana* IU J M
Fam Pk inv. ta Savarly P
Sullivan (M arr.) A Carolyn R
burton (M arr.) A Sdw. V. Fryor
(M arr.I jt. Ian. - Un. IMA. AM
wood Cahda. U 4 N
Sun Rita Rractar*. Inc. ta
af
sLwtolM
v n t fnn rttn rtw w n m i Ab^to
neraA&gt; M
Sam. Ca . tnc., Tr. F, lunrita, un.
Two A. SIM.
lu a rn K. Mdtandra A wt Joan
ta Baewica OaraMNR. Un. nac At.
A Wahlva villa*

Fam Park inv. k Kathleen H.

HertU 0 . Uhrlp A wt M e t 0 . k

A. Araabt. *•&lt; . Let A Alb A,
ctlwmbu* Harwr SIVAIrt.
(QCDI Eweana Ladln It
m i meant o. Loam. Lt i t an a.
Serine Lake HUN *111.
Welter P, Scholar A wt Wanda ta
h/ten H. CrutA M&lt; A Lawranca
D. Crwta A Jama* Shunter, Lat It,
Bib I , SamMow HtWht*. StArtA
waller p. Scheter A wt Wanda ta
taken CruM. L.D. Crura A Jama*
Ihwtfler. Lat IA AN S. lamlnaN
Heights. H IM .
HeroM Taatua. •*!.. Larry R.
Teague A wt M ar, i ta Char in a.
Kranktl A wf YvamN, Lat 1*4
Haathartan Villaea. un. ana,
SUM .
Rater o. Radar*thnaidar A wt
OatreN 0. t# Barry I . Watteh A
wt Rayanna B , Lat 44A wahlva
Hunt Club. Fat Hunt, Sac. A
R IM .
Li«a J. william* A wt Jinpmn*
la Jehn M. Oliva A wt AamiM
Oliver. A Oarathy 0. W it*. Lot IN
Mt*., Un. two, S71JX
ly. Ltd. to Indian Eidr.,
Inc.. Lat* 1*41. Shad*whir, Un.
One, S IM M .
Edward Ella* A wt Marearat A
Ratarva Far mart ta France P.
Kraft A wt Martha H.. Un. a, SI. A
wahlva Fairway Tat.nhamaa.
Harriet S. Laatatar. WM. ta
Rabart C. Laataiir A Frank O.
LaataNr. Let A Mb t A Lat* IA L
AN t, Lab* a w t* Fare, tranter
UN H i. SNA
C m H arry Oartent Inc. N
FroncN M. WUaan. to rt at Lat N
btb D. O R. MHchalN t a r t y at
Mom * I . Law Oram. SAM.
A.M. Katlan, Trwtiaa te
Nichatw OekRteW* A wt ju pm
a m i. Lat 43. wettingMn. S U M
LaartNW Apf*., Inc. N Bab 0.
Tharmm. un. A *!«7. c marwiaa
VIII. Cande I, ISAM .
I OCOI Tray a Havre * wt
Cyrntde te CyNMa Havre. Let 17
Nylark M the weeiA IIM .
Rabart p. Mill k an. tgl. N Myra
Ratchhanar. Let IA BN A, Orvk
Ebktty Realty tnc. H Ramey D.
Burtto (M arr.I. Un. S*A Oaattny
gprkifi s u m .
Eeully Realty Inc. N Ramty 0.
Ruttaa (M art.), Un. IN A. Daatlny
ItrN to . W M .
E«ultr Raatty IRC. N Ramay
Buitee un. IMA oeetlny IprkNA
SIXIN.
Sam* a* eb*v«, Ur . M IA ,
Oartbiv Stride*. W .N A
ttuR v Ramty inc. N Jabn B.
OarttarM * wt Mary. Un. INS.
Daatlny Sprint*. W M .
Etuity B ttby Ins. M AN re A.
*rt- A u r n m lm L.

» V \,3

,f.T .

FICTITIOUS NAME
lm
WPlICw In. WteWPP Pfml A
TA
ra
wI1
l rn
art mpepei m autvwa* m m n
French Ate. Santera lamlnaN
County, Florida under the ticllliau * name at WHEELER
d e a l e r u iid cars , ana mm
wo inland m rapNier m m name
wtm (to CNrb at tto Circuit Court,
lamlnaN Caunty. PNrld* In aclevity Raatty Inc. la Edward J. cordanca whh the tr patslene m tto
FktHNu* Nam* tlatwtat, TbWRi
Share A wt tla M * T. A Fettle la I .
O'Bren I M arr.I. Un. T li, Datllnr SactNn m r n PNrld* siatmee
Spring*, UA4M
IM7.
SN Mar tarot M. Htak*
Foul tedavbky A wt Marparat N
Lowe M. Marin
Arthur b. Car Nan A wt Vlrgink
L.
, Lat ■ «Hb Q. Tht Warn land*
Pe#a J. Marin
Sac. T V **. trn.MS.
PuWNh: September A W. 17; M
(OCOI Angatkr Wtrratl Canatr., W l
inc. N tha Ham* OHka Inc.. Lat D IM IS
k . A#f N ValNy Un. A SNA
(OCOI Ray Swam A wt MariH
FICTITIOUS KAM I
A. I* M arfit A. Sweat h &lt;. - 1 4T
Nafkt Nhavaby t*«en mm t am
mtaead in bu*Wate at t i ll Or UN
ef Let 3 A N 4’ ot Ltf 4. Rib 4. Pal
Air. SIN.
St .. Lantwaad. PI. X7N SamveN
Caunty, Feriaa under the IN
(OCOI Ray Swam A Marylt A. N
titlaut
name
at
T.C .A I
Ray Swam, H i- - IWW at NWLb
UNLIMITED, md mm I Intend M
(N M I 44*' A W *N ‘ I me In lac. 17raeetar MM name with the dark
tTB val. c*. A Lat IIA NL* m Lot
at the Circuit ceurt, SamMaN
N.SenN PhA W n-4'm Lete.bN
Caunty. FNrldd -M eccartonca
II. Tr. A SantarA SIN.
wim me araveent m tto F k
Johnny R. Hutto A wt ChrMke
I it Mu* Nam* Hmutat. ToWIt i
ta Jerry 0. Piece A wf Cheryl L..
SectNn W N Flarida Itmutat
Let 11, tih 0, North Orland# Tarr.,
mi
Sac. * Un. Uf.JM.
Sit. Ot h Whttctor
IQCOI Errol L. Oraana I*
PwWeh: Stotamtor 17, 74. oc
CtorNtta Owlnt* A hb. Ttomav
tator I, A IN I
Lett M l A l i l t in 0. Sanland*
OEM 77
la rk i* Tr. V , Srd Ram. SWA
Them** Owlnte A wt Chartmta
p ^ n m w iiu u M
t# Farr am I. Oraana (Marr.) Lots
ttmka e hereby firm mm I am
M l A u n . SM Q, Samanda
anpatad
In butmau al n il South
Smito* Tr. n Sra ram.. S U M
Orlande Dr., tanterd PNrMa WT1
Lamars C. Manvee A wt Vivian
SamkuN Caunty, FNrMa vmdar
la Leonard C. Manra# A wt Vivian
im tktHNut name at CAR LI'A
M. A dabby 0 . Aannatl Sr A wt
and mm l Ntand N i ayWar t*N
Storm l ., ivy acre* P I IT K
name with tha CNrb of my CirtdR
NWU m NEu at Sac.» I I n ate.
Caurt, Mm kuNCaurdy, FNrldd W
SIN
accardanc* wim tha pvaveen* at
Thom** A. Mature. **!■ to
tto FkiNNua Nam* stmma*. Tm
Mkham L. Sraabt a wt Dagra Ja,
Wit: Stctlm W .H Flarida
Lm A Sib A. Hiikrem Sac. One.
liehRM IN7.
lip. 0 . Brant Carll
W. Sraland, tr A wt
PuWNh: SapMwiW *• **, 17, IA
D ta Ruth R. M*lkb
Wl
DEM 14
(Mary.I Lm MS. Faram Sraab, ah
Sac., M M .
lic T iT iW iir a i- *
,
Chare* Rrawtm A wt BntM H
em k* e sartor eium mm i *m
Raymond A O'Rrlon A wt lr«M I*
w natto in burineM m IM IkR
Lm * A w u m 7. se *. samamt.
Ay* santard, Ple. NTH * * * • " • *
S7IM.
Caunty, PlevlSb unSer tto fk
Richard A. tic to ll A wl
S
I tom e at U M IN O L E
DoerN* J. A Sana M. Akhmi,
SECURITY SYSTEMS and M id i
H i N Jan w. label (Marr.) A
w m d M rapeur srtR Rdmt wtm
Tam laem (Marr.) Lm IL Bib A
me CNrb e« me CkcaR Cawt,
Carnatm Un. One. IW M
lemteeN Caunty, PMrtde m accwemtuwRhRM traaNNnert m
Frank AccardMa ta Sty Oar.
PktMNui kerne SiatuMb, TaWR:
mena A wt Rya. I M I A S. SW &amp;
Sactlen M M * FNrida Statake
M rapt, m Tr. I t Stmanat

Oral K. Nmatoum A wt W«ndi L*
‘ i MI A Marvin C. Man*at (Marr.)
Lt M t, Lt A Rib E, Oakland Store*
S O. *41.100
Eeully Haalty Inc. la Chart#* O.
Hutton, «•&gt;. A William S. Radeon,
Un. INC DtttMy SerMeA

immm, s u m .

Jama* C. Casaw ttm A Thame*
S M in e r I A wt Tmye A. N
Raymane T. Klne A wt Viderie A*
Let A brt 4. Tier A «.B. Tretfarai
Map el tamevA s u m .
Krmt, Inc. N Jahn A. Raato A wl
Linen l , Lm n

IN IS ;

C l, t9
Timothy Dunn, Truck* L e tt« W A S Harm Cava. I W M .
Cava HN. M A.K. CMOS
me. Let 4L Nan

Paulina N. Padmara la
lerkarii NarndRdM A wt LM Ru
Nk M tv , at Wk N Milk « tun*
at Sac TAII IA S4A M .
(QCDI MdrvM Tyner, (PL N
M arvk
Typer, ypLLM 1LBN
a
--------

.X ^ ^ /

rT p '

z f r.

8 - H s lp W anted

NOTICE
OP
A
PUBLIC
M a r in o to c o n sio r r t h e
ADOPTION
OF
AN
OROtNANCR RV TMR CITY OF
IANFORO, FLORIDA
emke it luraby ysran mm a
PuMk Maarlnp will to to k at the
Commitnan Ream in the City Hall
ki tha City m SanNrd, PNrMa. at
7.-M o'etaeb P.m on Octabar I t
W l.lt can*Mar fh# adamkn at an
ordinance by IM City of Santard,
Fkrkd, as WNw*:
OROINANCR NO. 1171
ANORDINANCROP THE CITY
OF SANFORD, FLORIDA, TO
ANNER W ITHIN THE COR
PORATB AREA OF THE CITY
OF SANFORD, FLORIDA, UPON
ADOPTION OF SAID ON
OINANCB, A PORTION OF THAT
CERTAIN PROPERTY LYINO

SATURDAY, SEPT. N
Ohtehw feat to benefit M ultiple Scteroris Society, I
p.m. to 3 a.m ., Church Street Station and Orlando
Central Business District.

J O M M y L e a fs * * | Woqmr V sM rt, 7 :8
P m ., Eastm ort* O ric Center, AtUm enU S p rin t.
SUM Senator John V o ft and T U p n n a U th s Robert
Hattaw ay w ill diacnaa rsapporttonmant Mm . Opan to

,m § « , *

If l

copy shall to availed!# at the
OHka at tto City Clerk lor all
PMirlna te exam In* the
Ail p eril** In In ttrttt and
cltuent Mali have an apportunity
t* to heard M utd haariny.
By order m tha City CommHalm
m m* city m samara, fwtw *.
H. N. Tamm, jr .
City Ckrh
tamamtor 17, X , Oc

). t Wl

OEMX

NOTICE U N M R FICTITIOUS
NAME STATUTE
TOWHOM IT MAY CONCERN;
n o tic e ktoraby pivm mm tto
under H ynea, pursuant ta lha
"F ic titk u t Nam# Sim ula",
Chamar S44JS, F krk# Statuta*.
will rapktor wtm tto Ckrb m tha
ciravii Caurt, in m k Mr Samkek
Caunty, F krk a, upm racatpt m
mmi m pubticmim m m k Nmku.
me tictitlau* name, t* wH; CADO
SYSTEMS
OF
CENTRAL
FLORIDA under which mt* party
k mpapad k busltou at Ml
Wheapin# Lapp. AHampnla
Spykps, F k rk a X X I.
Turn lha party kkrpMad k m m
butkwM antarprka k a* telkwa:
CwUrai Dm* System*, i k ., Mt
Whaaplnp Lapp,
m A Remake
' k August. X ll.
INTRAL DATA SVITIM S.
INC.
■y i
l

ta,

it ,

la.

DCM I I

Air

Orlondo-Winter Park

P O N Y R id e A tle n d e iil
--&gt;P
w ith
Pony
or
H o r ie t
p re fe rre d . P a r t tim e M in
W ane C a ll Sharon 3)31471

322-26JI___________ 831-9993
CLASSIFIED DEPT.
u n i IO C
nUUKO
I M A.M . - i:M F,M .

21—Situations Wanted

RATES
1 tlm a .......................... fS callna
jcPRapcuttvatimaa. M cs lin a
7 cpRsacwtlvatlmaa ........... 43*

MONQAY*Mtrw FRIDAY « cgnaatuHvatlmaa.I7ca line
SATURDAY f • Neon
tl.M Minimum
1 ■*"'
3 Lina* Minimum

DEADLINES
Noon The Day Before Publication
Sunday-Noon Friday

W IL L do b a h y lllllito w e th .n q 4
•roninq ,n m y hom e 3?) 7530
Thun
4 F r i e s , 373 7136
a n y tim e
B O O K K E E P E R S e c re ta ry 13
y r t e x p , l e e lin g job Santord
D elto n a a re a c a ll K a lh y 574
127] o r 113 7931
T w o questions
W ill you be
fin a n c ia lly independent in 3 to
S ye ars ? A re you p a id w h at
you a re w o r th ’ it not c a ll 373

la k e

a

N, 17, M,

NPTICR WOOER FICTITIOUS
NAM U N
Notice N hereby phte* mm the
_
k
______ ___ thefkHNeu*
yt R OR INViSTMRNTS, M 40
Maitland Avenue. Altamonte
IprkNA F k rk * X X I. kpenp Ip
raptoar me u k neme wttb me
CNrb at me Ckcv* Caurt at
tern beta Caunty, Fkrldd.
RONALD NL CAMILLONE
RAYMOND KHRONDBR
OAVLN 0 OLLtN
FlklRR i p R iM R A )
A IA W l
D IM H I

Seminole

DRIVE AND PINE WAY AND
BETWEEN
MELLONVILLE
4— Persons K
AVENUE
EXTENDED
SOUTHERLY
AND
OHIO
AVENUE
EXTENDED
SOUTHERLY; SAID PROPERTY LONELY: W rilt "Bringing
People Together Dating
•B IN O
SITUATED
IN
iervteat" Alt age* A Senlor
SEMINOLE COUNTY, FLORIDA.
cm ten* PO. Box tUt.W Intar
IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE
■Haven. Fla. JXX .
VOLUNTARY ANNEXATION
PROVISIONS OF SECTION
m eat. FLORIDA STATUTES;
9 -Lost A Found
P R O V I D I N G
FOR
SEvERARILITY. CONFLICTS.
AND EFFECTIVE DATE.
L O S T g r a y m a t# poodle Jrd a re a
WHEREAS, thara ha* tom tiled
D e lto n a , n a a d l m e d ic a t io n ,
wim lh* City Clark of tto City M
re w a rd *04 7«* 4S1I o r 7« t 1741
Santard, Florida, a petition can
tainlny thy torn# at tto properly
4—C h ild C ara
owner in me are# d ttcrietd
htrtkiaftar rayutollny annexe! Ian
FOR m* Ultimata In
la tto carpark* era# at lh* city at
Child CaraaChtw*
Santard. Florida, and raqvetfIn*
world, m 4434.
I* to Included ihereini and
WHEREAS, tto Properly Ap
SABYSITTINO kimy
pralter at Sam Inala Caunty,
horn*, any ag*.
Florida, having ca rtlliM that
Jit-Oak.
mar* I* an* preparty owner in lha
ere# la to am end, and mm u k
proparty owner to* tlynad lh*
SPUR OF THE MOMENT
petition tar annexation; and
BABYSITTING
WHEREAS, it to t tom detor
733 7344
mkwd mm m# praparty deter ibad
heretnaHer I* radtorubtf compact
and cantieuau* te (to cerporate
4 Good Things to E a t
era* at the City of tantai
Florid#, and It to* further towr
i ib*. i n
determined mat tha annaxmkn of
7tor 1.00
u k maparty win nm ratutt in the Cuba*
7for I 00
creation at an enclave; and
W. Lap**
oach .11
WHEREAS, tto City at Unlord. Green Oman*
lfo r 7t
Florida, k in a pa*him to pryvko
Salad Tomato**
4 lb*. 1.00
municipal **rv k *t la tha praparty Frash Pumpkin* .Tf to 1.4t m .
deterWed herein, and m# City
Rad Oat Apple*
41be. 100
Commkllon of the City of Sanford. Jonathan Applet
3 IM. 1.0*
Florid*, dotm* It in m# to*t in
Gold
Dot
Applet
3 lb*. 1.00
loretr m lh* City ta accept u k
Mirim
Applet
3 lb*. 1.00
petition and la an n ti «ald
Frath Apple Cider
Vigal. l.fS
NOW. THEREFORE. RE IT All Purpose PoUtoet 10Ib*. IM
a bunch .tf
ENACTED BY THS PEOPLE OF Greene
THE CITY OF SANFORD, 2Hi wood Corn I* Ini Buy It by tto
box or by IM tar. Froth dally.
FLORIDA:
SECTION I: That lh* foilewlny
W
a T a h tF o o d S ta m p *
deteribed property tltuMad In
LER O Y FARM S
Sarnmal* Caunty, Florida, be and
m* lame it hartby annexed t* and
S R 44
|
mode a part o« lh* City at Santard,
W
a
h
a
n
's
O
td
F
a rm
Florida, pursuant k tto voluntary
•m et at ion pravklen* at Section
171.144, PI*rM4 Statute*:
_____U — In s tru c t tans
The Norm UK tern at tto NE &lt;«
ot tto NE 4 , Sactlm II, Tawnthtp
Tennl* Inatrurtkn — U.S.F.T.A
X South, Rany* it last.
Cart itlad. Oroup pr Ft tump
Tto above detcrlbad prepwty It
Chlkrm a epartalty.
further detcrlbad at a part!m of
M flkM w H i- 33S1X7.
that certain praparty lylny tot
warn Silver Lab* Orly* and Pkw
g
n
e
a
Way and totw am M tlkn vlii#
Avenue axtmpyd lauttorty and
OhI# Avenue extended Sauttorly;
RIOHT new eeu nato 4 law aaad
M k p r a p ir ty to tn p tR u P M d M
Mmmat* Caunty, Piwtd*.
a m b itio n a n d d a d k a fie n te
SECTION I; That upm ml*
tu c c a a d . it m * T » vm*- ,h * n
Ordkanc# becemlny etteeilv* tto
w a 'r# p r e p a re d to o ffe r you
praparty owner and any ratkant
re a l r a w a r d i a n d th a m ethods
m tto praparty Pttcrktd herein
te p m th e m . F o r In te rv ie w ,
shall to entitled M all tto rtpht*
p i t * * * c a ll C e n tu ry 71. H a y * *
and prlylkpat and Imnwnltlat at
R ta tt y S * r v lc * * , In c ., Santard
art tram time la time pranitd ta
3333040.
resident* pad preparty owner* ot
tto City at Santard, Ftarid*, and a*
ere further provided In Chapter POLICE OFFICfcR - Th# City
tit. Florida StattdM, and than
at Orlande will to tcMPulirp
further to aublact k tto reopen
applicant* far (to examination
twmiiet at ratkanc* *r awnenMp
l*r POLICE OFFICER. Canm may tram tlm * t* lime to
tart IM CIVIL SERVICE OF­
dttarminad by lha pavarnlhy
FICE, In partan, CITY HALL
auttortty m tto City at Santard,
ANNEX - *40 S. BOONE
FMrka, and tto pruvkkno m Mid
AVENUE, MONDAY. SEPChapter ill, F k rk * Simula*.
TIMBER 11 thru MONDAY.
SECTION 1; If any Mellon tr
SEPTEMBER
Tl,
1*11
part Ian at a Mctkn at mt* Or.
(WEEK DAYS * 00 to S:00&gt; ta
dkwnc* pray** k to invalid,
be tdtadukd ter tha entrance
unlawful * r uwtmai nut knot, n
examination!. Must w * U S
•M il nm to M k k invaI Wat* tr
Citlim , I I y#*r» of aga by
impair tto valklty, tu n * or artart
Fabruatv n . W l. high school
at any tertian or part of m k or.
grad or tiafo auuivakni. good
charactor, n* loteny convic­
SRCTI0N4; Thatill OrdlnancM
tion*. ORLANDO IS AN
or part* m Ora maneM In cantI let
EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EM
herewith b* and the u m t are
PLOYER.
toraby repaalad
SECTION I: That thN orPEAUTICIANS WANTED
amanca than become ttkrtivu
wllMellowing H I ttM .
immediately upm It* pHupa and
X3 French Avt.

1, MSI
OCM-rt

s il v e r

CLASSIFIED ADS

am ks N torapy pfwgn m m t sm

F S U if k toUnam m g Tib Sf.
Cdaaaiberry, Florida 117*7

om TJ&amp;m ckTmt^dJrT

F eb-•Mbs
Tp WRi

STORINO IT MAKES WASTESELUNO IT MAKES CASH.
PLACE A CLASSIFIED AO
NOW. Call 331-MilI or H I t**3.
MANAGEMENT train** oppiy
in pariah ter gram op.
partuni1» CauM ia F iiiitrp .
333

I f t

N o tk t

T lT N iiik c u it c o u rt :
IN AND FDR SEMINOLE
COUNTY,FLONIOA
CIVIL ACTION NO.
S1-XS7-CA-44-E
IN R l i Tto Marriage *t
LAVERNE LIVINOSTON AKEY.
Husband Pet 11loner,
LUCY DELORES AKEY,
WU#^Respondent
NOTICR OF ACTION
THE STATE OF FLORIDA TO:
LUCY DELORES AKEY
Ml Hiaen r Avenue
Hampton. Virginia
nee* a it)
Y O U *T A R E
HEREBY
NO TIFIED that LA VIR N E
LIVINOSTON
A K IV
ha*
IIM a Pathtan in tto Circuit Caurt
of lamkww Caunty, Florida, far
DkMhrikw of Marriage, and you
m t ramrod to ta rr* a copy at
yarn written at tanao*. it any, an
FRANK c WHIOHAM, m STEN
STROM. MCINTOSH, JULIAN.
COLRRNT A WHIOHAM, F.A.,
A fkfM yt &lt;m FN it knar, M om
torn*** k Past OHka Rm I M
Santara. F krka, 11771. and tit*
ma arlpkui wtm tha Ckrb m tto
’ M ira i hrtad Caurt an er befar*
Octabar 11 W l, etherarka •
utilmala lodgement
to entered against yau tar tha
N aamandil k tto Fatttlan.
WITNESS my hand and m tkkt
tart m sak Caurt an tto tm day m
’, A D W l.
Arthur h . Bacbwtm, Jr.
O ar* m im CkcuN
C urt Samkuta County,
Ryl Cynthia Frartar
Deputy Ckrb
(SEAL)
FsRRtf): SM im bar IT. *L Oc-

.* t t x * 9 f .t,?,r &lt;€a,.* r .r **wW r . : . r r r

24-Business
OpportunH tes
IA—H llp W fc n fid
W OMAN D EPEN D A B LE 4
M A TU R E.
G EN ERAL
FA C TO R Y W O R K. SOME
L IF T I N G F U L L T IM E
1)3 1)41

P L U M B IN G D IY
H a rd w a re
a n d E l e c t r i c a l r e t a il a n d
re p a ir Business W W O R eal
E s ta te Best T e rm s . 1143,000
W rr M a lic jo w s li R E A L T O R
373 771) E v e s 172 3 3 »

C m t lld t d A d * a r t th e i m a lle it
big n e w * H e m * y o u w ill lln d
an y w h e re

W OMEN
llr e d ol 40 hr w k
w an t lo be ow n boss, choose
your ow n hrs M a k e excellent
m oney F o r in fo rm a tio n 372
1077 347 SSSS a lt S P m ____

N E E D a S E R V IC E M A N ? Y o u 'll
lln d h im listed In o u r B u tln e t*
O lfa c to ry - __________ ________
H A IR S T V L I S T w in im
w ith fo llow ing Im m o d
C a ll D t l o r t t 333 71 M
D A Y S h llt I m m t d ia lt O pening
to r F en co A t t e m b le r t . Sew
o p e ra to r*, C tn e ra l L ib o r .
A p p ly b e tw re n h o u r* U p m
A m e ric a n Wood P ro d u c t* M ill
O tlt c e 70C M a r v in
A v e ,,
Longwood.

AVON RRFRBSRNTATIVBS
The F a r t T im e C a re e r
*44 J07» — C ollact M S I 7 M

TW O questions W ill you be
fin a n c ia lly independent in 2 to
5 ye ars ? A re you p aid w hat
you a r e w o rth ? II not c a ll 12)
4104

M —A p ts. A Houses
To S h e ri

S H A R E a pool h o m e close to
hospftal I* shopping, fe m a le
p re fe rre d 372 1121. t f p m

tt-R o o m s

RN OR LPN
4 1 3 an d 11 1 S h ift. F u ll tim e
A p p ly In p a rs o n S a n fo rd
N u rsin g C c n v a lo tjo n t C en ter,
*5 0 M e llo n v lllt A v e .

T R A C T O R T R A IL E R
D R IV E R S
O lV IS IO N of m i| o r U S. C o rp . I t
M e b ln g
D.O.T. q u a lif ie d
d r iv e r * fo r It * o v e r th e ro ad
p r i v e t * c a r r ia g e o p e r a tio n
b a te d In S en lord, F la .
Q u a lifie d a p p lic a n t* m u tt h a v e
tw o m a n te e m e x p e rie n c e end
* m in im u m ot 3 y e a n O T R
e x p e rie n c e Good r e le r e n c r t
a n d p r o v e n l a t e l y re c o r d
r e q u ir e d
In te r a c te d
ep
p tic a n lt p le a t* c a ll 1413) 143
t ill
Equal
O p p o r tu n it y
b m p lo y e r.

CONVENIENCE
STORE CASNIOS
Good ta la r y , h o tp ila llia tlo n , I
w e a k p a id v a c a tio n e v e ry 4
m o n th *.
E x p e r ie n c e
not
n e c e s s a ry . F o r In t e r v ie w
friton* th * m a n a g e r a t:
A ir p a r t R tvd. *4
Ca n e t b e rry 14
C e le ry A v t . M
L a w * M a r y te

1334111

337-1711
m aul
331-4349

P R IV A T E E N T R A N C E
322 1111_____________
L A R G E A iry F u rn is h e d room s
M a id s e rv ic e a n P a lm e tto
A ve 32)1141
S A N F O R D — Reas w k ty 4
m o n th ly ra te s U til inc K it
500 O a k A d u llt 741 23*3

30-A p eiT m tn ts
U nfurnished
W

im

r jrm x R T M e f7 *k

F a m i ly A A d u l t i i t c t k t T
Poolside 1 B a rm s M e t i e r )
C o v * A pts 133 2700 O pen on
xveebenox
S o m ro o d y is looking to r your
b a rg a in O tter it to day in th e
C la s s ifie d Ads
B A M B O O C O V E 2 bedroom
apts A v a ila b le M a n a g e r on
p rem is es. 33 ) 1)40
R id g e w o o d A r m f 3 B d rm
A pts fro m 1325 3 B d rm also
a v a il Pool, tennis co u rt 32)

*420 __________;________
R»kV country living? 7 M rm
Apts. Olympic it . Faal.
Maaandaab village. Open 7-1.
. R M R 4 ______ ___________

B A B Y S IT T E R needed In m y
h o m e Wad. th ru Sun*. 7 a .m . 1
p m . fo r a 4 y r old In q u lra a ll.
1 p m B am boo Cove A p t N o
75 T h u r* 4 F r i.
»

M a r in e r's v illa g e on L a k e A d a . 1
b d rm fr o m 1210. 2. b d rm fro m
*270 L o c a te d 17 72 fust South
ot A irp o r t B lv d . in San ford. A ll
A d u lt*. 33 ) |4 7 0

L P N 11 7 7 n ig h tt p e r week
A p p ly L a k t v i t w
N u r s in g
C e n te r, f it 2nd SI . S en lo rd

C l * t t l ll # d # d t b * r v e th e bu y in g A
se lling c o m m u n ity e v e ry d ay .
P tF F A u ,» I h em oI I w l
S A N D A L W O O D V illa s A lrp o rl
B lvd . S an to rd . 7 B d rm , 3 Ba
Th* R e a lty S to re, R e a lto rs
I *71 1711

VI0 1 0 Eledremct Rental and
falei Ca. It opening 3 new
ite r*i in Central Flarida in tto
next t years and Is leaking tar
men and warnan ta stall it*
stares. St*r* managers, rental
managers, secretaries, and
sales penent needed new.
Pleas* apply in person 311
Commercial SI. Santard.
Catlap* Prod* Preferred.
N E E D good hom e? 1 need a
good, m a tu re p a rt lim e t i l le r
to r m y husband 373 1 4 7 1 * 1 3

' i

Santord * - I- b d rm 4 d w i,
c e r a m ic
b a th ,
t u r n llu r r
a v a ila b le , a d u tli. 1321 m o I
*41 7 7 *3 ___________ _____________
M tllo n v lllt
T ra c t
A p t*.
Spacious, m o d ern 7 B d rm , 1
B a th a p t . C a r p e t e d , k it
e q u ip p e d ,
CHAA.
N ear
hospital A la k e . A dults, no
_ .p e ts . S370. 133 Ti l l .

S E C U R IT Y G uards 33 M r* per
W eek M id n ig h t L a k e M a r y
A re a . P re fe r re tire d o r sem i
re tire d C ell 13 ) 1350 E x t 340
Y O U N O ag g res siv e m a n w ith
ta m e tip . In w ood w o rk in g —
w ith a n t y a as to how wood
products should look w han
sanded A fte r I ] noon 337 0114

BOYS A OKU
ACES 11-17
EARN EXTRA $$
A m i SCHOOL
. CAll
CIRCULATION DEFT.

E vening H e ra ld
AAA E M P LO Y M E N T
322-SI 7A
LO W F E E
H IG H R E S U L T S
1717 French_________ 313-3171
•p q p p p p p p b p p p p p b b p p

Algor A Pond
REALTY, INC.
E X E C U T IV E h o m e 4 b d r. 1 bih
w ith loads o l e x tr a room s,
in cluding te rn rm A s e p a ra te
den W a lle d In p riv a te pool,
la rg e lanced lo t. L a k e M a r y

teoo
W A T E R F R O N T L O T , in Long
wqod a r t * . A buy a t 17.700
C a ll now I

CALL

323-7843
R EA LTO R S
Jl-A p o rtm o n fs Fum ishod
------------ ■

COOK
FAST FOODOFEEATION
salary, hospItallMlIon. 1
week paid vacation every 4
month*. Experience nm
necessary. Phone Manager
Labe Mary M - 33341*1.
WAREHOUSEMAN lactory
experience a mutt. Heavy
lilting required Full benefit*,
apply in person, United
Solvents 1107 Airport Bird.
------- Y------------------------- -----SITTER in my Ham*.
l)Wtthou**b**pine. *
_________333 3447.
WANTED: mature lady te live in
7 day* and 2 nights a week,
prepare «N ls, and car* tar 1
invalid ladle* in laniard
residence. Call MS i l l 4»s
CONCESSION A gift shop. txp.
part time Weekends A
M tkavttm utl.A pgty Central
Fkrkd lea.
FLOOR WAXER - semi retired
parson about IS hr* a weak
ill bt lay ret.

-

-

. —H

L a k e M a r y C lean F u rn
R t l l a b l e d M a n o n ly
c h ild re n , p a t* 377 1 7 X

A pt.
Nn

I S D R tu rn a p t,
A dults t i t )
322 7274
c u m ith e d a p a rtm e n t* tor S enior
C ltu e n t. 311 P a lm e tto A v * ., J.
C ow an No phone c a ll*.

31A —D uplexes
OELTONA unlurn 3 bdrm .
3 b th , a p p lia n c e *.
4ISO IM 4554
3)20 P E R M O N T H M o d e rn . A ir .
C a rp e l, N i l * A r e * K id s o k . n o
pets F irs t A L ast M o n th *
R ent ISO D a m a g e D eposit
L a w n C a r * U tilitie s t Pest
C ontrol Pd C a ll 32)3111 O ay s
ask lo r C a rl
_______________

n —Houses U nfurnished
A T T R A C T IV E J b d r . I ' , b in ,
C H A . w a s h e r d r y e r , con
v e n le n tly lac tie d S32S
1 2 )*5 2 0
1 B D R M . I B a th *300 m o S100
S ec u rity D eposit R rftr a n c e s
re q u ire d N o pets c a ll 31)

un

J jH ii
’ A*

•Y . ^:V
F , . X ;&lt;
* 'v .

i

�/

\ « % I

32-Housts Unfumishtg
dream

w orld
b ra nd new

) tx J ' 7 b ath *430 m o
H 0 R E A L T Y .IN C
REALTOR
4 )0 *1 0 0
3 B R . In G ro u n d Pool C ountry
C lub M a n o r, S a n lo rd Fen ced.
U S 0 m o 1st, last an d *100
Deposit 647 U 0 0
7 B D R M . 1 B ath L g e E a t in
K itch e n . D n in g R m . F la R m ,
Storage R U til R m A ,r A v a il
Oct 1st *1 7 } m n *100 D ep
377 *433

41-Houses

HAl COUNT R U lTt
In c .

M u m
5 r * » J » 0 6 i7
707 E 73th SI
A L M O S T new 1 b d r, 7 bth.
double g a r age l u ll y equ ip k it.
m e rg e r t lir e n t
*9 300 dn.
assum e 1 3 ' . * . *47.000 p rin
c p a ls only 371 30*7

574-6616

3 b d rm , 7 B w ith
double c a r g a ra g e , in
D elto n a C a ll S74 1437
SANFO RDO PT TO B U Y t
J b d r c a ro p rt. k ,d s o k *730
C ottage, tu rn no dep *773
SAN FO R D FU R N APT.
t b d r . u t l 360 dn. 1110

S A V O N -R E N T A L S
S e m in a l*
1 1 *7 1 *0
SAV ON R E N T A L * R E A L T O R
T B D R M . 111 B. Sunken liv in g
r m , pad dle ta n * 7 m o old
*150 A lte r ( p m 37} 04*1
7679 T re n c h A v e 3bdr . I b th .
la rg e room s, lim it 7 ch ild re n
no p e ll 37*3 m o ♦ 1700 dep
111 679} a ll 3 P M
G E T T H O S E L U X U R Y IT E M S
i o r 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
A D S '____________________________

14 —Mobile Homes

D E L 1 u n a s 7.00 u D ow n F ie n b le
teem s I y r old 7 b d rm .
W asher d ry e r, m ic ro w a v e sell
cleaning ovens 34? 300
303 169 6497

E x c e lle n t Business opp o rtu n ity
in good lo catio n C om plete
stock in cluded in th is priced
reduced to *1800
3 * 4 4 * . F re n c h m i n i
A lta r N a u rs : &gt;49 9949. 3)14779

P R E C O N S T sale D e B a ry 3 lge
w ater Iro n l lots Buy now A
choose la y out A colors
jo h n n y W a lk e r
R e a l E s ta te IN C B ro ker
333 4437

B E A T T H E H E A T — Spacious 3
b d rm , 3 B. w Ig g a m e room .
C H A , a t t r a c t iv e f i r e p la c e .
W W C . screened p e tio ♦ lovely
pool on a lots *77.300

CallBart
R EA L ESTATE
■R E A L T O R . 17 ) 7a9f
3 B D R . I bth assum e F H A m tg
37.300 d n 1)7 300 to ta l, e ic
cond m o ve rig h t in 337 7174

37— Business P ro p erty
F o r re n t o r le a s * - 10.370 sq It
in d u s tria l o r w arehouse t i l
W 1st St . S an lo rd 373 I TOO
SANFORD
7.000 sq ft It in d u s tria l o r
C o m m e rc ia l B u ild in g on 17 *3
1.000 i t . m o ffic e space C all
373 SSIO o r U 4 4I4 7

37-B— R e n ta l O ffices
‘

SANF&amp;RD
7000 sq I t It in d u s tria l or
C o m m e rc ia l B uilding on 17 97
1,000 It in o ffic e space C all
377 SSIO or 134 414!

T H E C E N T U R Y 31 S Y S T E M
H E L P S m o re peo ple buy and sell
m o re re a l e s ta te th an anyone
else m A m e ric a C a ll today
and let il w o rk to r you C all
173 3030
H ay es R e a l E s ta te
S ervices . Inc
613 W 33th St
San lord
E ach o ilie r is independently
ow ned and o p e ra te d

STEM PER AGENCY
O W N E R W IL L F IN A N C E 3
B d rm .
I
B a th
P a r tly
re m o d eled H a t F ire p la c e and
c a rp e tin g 30 tl on H w y 44 W
O nly *34.900
acreage

I . A cre
V . A cres
3 A cres

*9.000
113.300
*19.300

N IC E
STARTER
HOME
Lo c ate d m good neighborhood
H as la rg e a ttic fo r a d d itio n a l
b d rm O n ly 373.300

O tt ic * Space
For Leas*
130 7773

RB A L T OR 77_7_499l__D_aj o rN ig h t

J7C-F«r Lm

m

V E G E T A B L E F a r m lo r L ea se
W ith optio n to buy in S am su le
A re a Irr ig a tio n pu m p m or
out 7 T ra c to rs an d eo u ip m en t
O w ner h e lp p lan t and g ro w on
c o m m is s io n s A lb e r t F o r d
V o lu s ia C o u n ly 904 471 1403
A lt 6 p m
Ev e r y
day
is
b a r g a in
D A Y IN T H E W A N T A D S 377
7611 o r 131 9993

38—Wanted to Rent
C O U P L E , no ch ild re n need 3
B drm house w g a ra g e by Nov
1st Good lo catio n In Sanlord
36SI7S7

K JM l
l{l \ l I s I \ I I

p 2 1-0041

313.044 D ow n On th n c e iy 7
B d rm . I Ba C H A Goad N e ig h ­
borhood O nly S « l.3 *t
11} 004 D ow n w ill put you In th n
) B drm 7 Be F a m ily R M C H A
Lech A rb o r 339.990
330.000 D ow n and w alk t * G eil
C o u rt* tra m th is 3 B d rm 3 Ba
F a m R m F P L C H A . *09.3*0

121-0041

41—Houses

M LS,

A lta r hrs 31149*3

REALTOR
tad 1 1 )7 1 *4

Harold Hall

L O O K IN G
lo r
a s s u m a b le
m o rtg a g e w ith no q u a lify in g
and a low . low dow n p a y m e n t?
This is a d o ll house in a good
neighborhood C all lo r d e ta ils
N E W L Y L IS T E D
*79.300
W e p ro m is e you It fa ll m love
w ith th is bea u t d u lly re sto red 3
u j r , 7 b in co u n try hom e
S itu a te d
on
an
a c re
surro u n d ed by c itru s , th is
hom e h a s It a lll L e t us h ea r
fro m you
» * N F O R O A ttra c tiv e 77 yr old
hom e on 760 tt o l L a k e O ru ro .
3 B d rm . I B a in . 7 porches,
p ro p e rty can be s p lit *43.000
Low in te res t O pen to offers
By O w n e r I 793 9797._________
7 BORM
in G ro u n d P o o l ‘
C ountry C lu b M a n o r. S an ford
Fen ced . *330 m o 1st. last and
*100 Deposit 447P4400
SSOCO D O W N d u p le t. 7 1. I t .
double lot to n e d m o re units.
U t k e . re m o d e le d W ill tra d e
eq u ity. *41 300 to ta l 139 0349
W A N I A O S ARfc B L A C K A
W H IT E A N D R E A D A L L
OVER.
! h * sooner you p ie c e your
c le ts ifie d * d . th e sooner youg et re su lts
K ids o u tg ro w th e sw in g set or
s m e ll b ic y c le ? S ell th ese m i*
item s w ith # w e n t « d To p ie c e
your a d . c a ll ypu r frie n d ly
C le ts ifie d g e l 41 The H e r a id .
37) &gt;411. o r U l 998)

ASSOCIATES. INC . R E A LTO R S'

REALTY, INC.
R EA LTO R

I2J-S 774

LAKE M A R Y
)2 M f« 0

'

C H E C K T M IS O U T
B E A U T IF U L 'Yfl; RoyAl O aks 29
a da- 1 b d r. 2 bth. o a r d m tub
d r i u « r c a r p e t . c a th e d r a l
&lt;tilin g s b ric k fire p la c e wood
»-(t ng S htn q lr roof c a rtd 'r
tan and m a n # m o re e«tra%
O nly 526 900 V A f.n a n ftn g nO
n -o n ry (tow n
10 % dow n
conyt^iftonai See sit U n d e
Roy% M o b -le H o m e Sales of
l rrM X J'Q U S H w y 441 S 904
797 0)24 Open w eekdays I
7 X) Sun 12 6

D E L T O N A L ik e N e w O o ll
House A t Cond N e a r W in n
O m r and B anks
T erm s
*47 300
G O R G E O U S N ew 3 ) H o m e
L ak e M a r y . C ain
C eilin g .
F re n c h doors, la rg e closets
ow ner fin a n cin g O nly 160.300
C O U N T R Y P ro p e rly in Tow n!
Good in co m e D u p le , an d 7 I
H o m e on 3 A cres C onvenient,
owner F in a n c in g 173 000

C O U N T R Y A T M O S P H E R E in
lew n P m e c re s l e r e * . ) B d rm
I d r g e L iv i n g R m . O n ly
177.SM
EASY
A S S U M P T IO N
Low
p ay m e n ts I i d r m N e a r new
H e s p itd t
ZONED
COMM E R C IA L . S uper petew tiel
O nly *77.394
O W N E R F IN A N C IN G I t ' H *n
th n la s tly I b d rm t r i c k nam e
w O 1a p * s .
R ange,
R e g n g e ra te r 6 F e rn R m *n
deep le t 11 I U N I
O V E R 1341 SR ft in th it 4 7 w ith
new C an H e e l, big bedroom s.
F a m B in . H a l l s i r p erch *
h e a v ily fre e d Id l te r enty
S44.94411
C U S T O M 4 XE C U T IV E H O M E
w e v e r I I I * SR It. ) b d rm split
p lan . F ire p la c e . F e rn R m . ea t
in k itc h e n , h u g * te r p e rc k *
la n d tc e p m g p a le r * a t t lt .S P t l I

T l. " ■ &gt; ■
W e pay cash to r 1st 1 2nd
m o rtg ag e s R a y Leg g, L ie
M o rtg a g e B ro ker 3)9 7769

&gt;0—Miscellaneous for Sale
C O TS T E N T S . T A R P S
A R M Y N A VY SURPLUS
310 S an ford A y f
)22 5791
S P l F c r Bt’d ro o m Set
5100 P o o l Tab le 540
)71 I n o

CHECK OUT U N C L t ROYS
L A R G E \e le c tio n ot 14 wtdes
p rices s ta rt 51995 v a tinan
cm g no m oney dow n 10*#
convention al

F O R SA LE
The und ersig n ed Special M a s te r
w ill sell lo th e highest and br-sl
o ile r, to r cash th e p ro p e rty
d escribed as follow s A ll o ile rs
to be re c e iv e d no la te r than
O ctober 70 1991 Sale s u b t-c l
to C irc u l C ourt a p p ro v a l The
N o rth 137 le e l o l Lot 71 ol
F L O R ID A L A N D A N D CO
L O N IZ A T IO N
COMPANY S
C E L E R Y P L A N T A T IO N a
cording lo th e P ia l th ere o f, as
re co rd ed in P la t Book I. P ao e
179. ol th e P ublic R ecords ot
S em inole County F lo rid a less
the W est 100 le e l ot sa id N orth
137 le e l ot sa&gt;d Lot 71 F u r th e r
d escribed as Ih r r e 111 houses
lo c a te d on th e S o u th w e s t
corner g l R iv e rv ie w A ve n u e at
N arcissus S lree l
W G a r n e ll W h ile .
Special M a s te r
Case N o 40 73)1 CA t ) L
Suite A
F la g s h ip Bank B uilding
S an lorp. F lo rid a 32171

w il c o s a l E *
N U TR E N A FEEDS
H w y 46 W — 372 6 U 4
C A S H 4 C A R R Y P R IC E *
Mog F .m s h e ' P e lle t*
Laver C
R a b b it P e lle t*
B r e lK w ik
14• • V it a l it y M c r*e
3-t Met*
ID • • &lt; la lity Sweet
Fee&lt;t

)7 ) 9999
1/ Cu f t » r r e fe r 7 y r * old
A m a n a 5 )00 E le c tric phonic 9
T ra c k Stereo l a b o e t type
5100 )27 J19?

Shop U n d e Roys M o b ile H o m e
Sales Lee sb u rg U S H w y 441
S 904 797 0)24 Open 7 days

•Vt D O IN G rm g set w o m a n 5 ?
I 3rd k a ra t 5 )5 0 o r
best o ffe r 574 5 9 fl

3 A C R E S o l L a n d F o r Sale
L o c a te d a p p r o« im a te ly
2
m iles n e s t of G eneva Un
developed C ontact ) 2 ) 594) or
)21 0495

W IL S O N M A lE R * U R N lT U R E
311 315 E 8 IR S T ST
377 567?
C H E C k .Vdh S an ford A uction
U d o re you buy or sell 1715 s
fr e n c h
J73 7Jjq W on Sat

3 ACRES

t a il p in e s s o m e
pasture
HOAD IR O N !
a g e r iv e r a c c e s s g e n

N r i O A S E R V IC E M A N ’ You II
fin d h im lilte d in our Business
D ire c to ry
BE A ll T I f U l 69 ' ro und fable,
h an d m a d e 5775
377 1597. 104 B rentw ood p r

7' &gt; A C R E S , T A L I P IN E S
G E N E V A . I I ) 300 LO W IN
TE R E S 7
ASSUM ABLE

52—Appliances

W I L I t T AN D SBLL
M O RE H O M E * THAN
A N Y O N E IN T H E
tA N F O B O A R E A
C O U N T R Y A T M O tP H E R E I 1
B R . I B a th h am e te r the
H a n d y m a n a t h e a r ll E n |* y Ig.
shaded le t w h o r t t t w elco m e!
116.340!

700 O N 17*97 N E A R N E W
W IN N D I X IE C E N T E R C O M
IN G AT l A K E M A R Y B L V D
ZO NED
C O M M E R C IA L .
S I7 I0 0

C A L L A N Y T IM E
7*41
P e rt

322-2420

42—M o b ile Homes

74.60 7 IlD R M . 7 B ath 10.30
Screen porch enclosed w ith
R o lla d e n s h u tte r s
1 3 .3 0
U t i l it y
Rm
W e ll
and
S p r in k lin g s y s te m , m a n y
e . l r e s 111 H a c ie n d a V illa g e
377 746)

AGENTS

w o oded

l ik e

\

Used C ar P a rts a ll m ak e s and
m odels 377 7697 W e buy Us«J
C ars and T ru cks

77-Ju n k Cat? Removed
CA SH F O R CA R S
R u n n .n g or not
1)9 9969
Top D o lla r P a d tor Junk A Used
cars tru c k s A heavy equ&gt;p
m erit )?7 5990
BU Y JUNK C A H S 4 TRUCKS
• fo ri, 310 lo 330 or m o re
C e lt V J 1* 74. r . * .&lt;460
M F H * A « E R V « C E M A N &gt; i n (i
Im d h im title d in o u r B u tin e tt
V f y i c r D 'rn e ln ry

A N IM A l H a*e«t k m n e ls txiarc
•ng A g r o o m in g . N e e d fO
P e k m g r s e A s m a ll s tiv e r
poodle lor stud M a le O w ners
'a it 177 5757

78—Motorcycles
1990
S U / U K I 550
372 3795

*

5J4”
53*90 •
S i.N s ^ '
*
5477;*
J in s
’•
$4777* •'
^
15477
549VS
5U 99
57l77t**
57099 ,•
5659S

B ank tm a n c in f a v a ila b le
55 N H w y 17 9J
C a s s e lb e rry *
1976 B U lC h S k y la rk C lean 1
O w ner Auto AC PS N ew disc •*
Ir a k i's lilt w heel A M 8 M y
Stereo ra d o C ustom in te rio r
V *nyl top new steel b elted
ra d 'A is N ew f ih a u s t s ,» t * .n
M o B attery R ust proot
57975 305 71? 3560 or 37)6110
1970 V W B U G N ew s tic k e r, runs
w ell N eeds som e txxly re p a ir ,
5995 9)1 1774
19 7J C H E V Y
I m p a la
9 *,
Passenger Wg C lean Cond V I
Auto Cold A ir. Elec w indow s
seats and door locks, new •*
sticker new fire s . 599S
*•
9)1 1774
7 5 C H I V Y V a n 1 speed
air * ustom plus e a tra s
M a k e o ile r 173 7799
M f O R D f n il on 6 c y l. ra d io A
T C P n e rd s p a in t A *n tr f 5750
17 ) 609 1
1974 O L U 5 D e lta 99 7 Door v «
A u to m a tic . A ir. power w .n *
dows steer .ng and b ra k e s
Runs e ic r IU n t needs p a.n t .
1595 9)1 1774
7 3 B U IC K C e n tu ry 4 d r.
PS P B AC t ilt,
c Ir a n 5750 17) 4)40

CONSULT OUR

•

' ’ ‘t l'

*"
1?

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB

a

a v a il a b l e

To List Your Business...

7' j A C R E S W O O O E O
F R O N T A G E IN
*17.300

ROAD
OSTEEN

Diol 322-2611 or 831-9993

3 A C R E S W O O D E D JA C K S O N
BAY
AREA.
OSTEEN
314 soo s e l l e r
f in a n
C IN G
S E lO liR R E A LTY B RO KER
171 4641

4 3 ft-L o t! 4 A creage
W anted
W A N T E D 100 lo 700 a c re s m
O ra n g e or S em inole Counties,
zoned fo r m o b ile hom e sub
d ivision S m d a ll d e ta ils m
eluding lo catio n , lo P O U o i
1164. O c a la . F la 37471

A ir C onditioning

Clock R tp a ir
g \n

C h rlt w ill l e r v lc * 4 C '» , re lr ig .
I r e e i r r t . w e te r c o o le r*, m u c
C e ll 31) 4777
It

47-R eal Estate Wanted
C A S H I O R E Q U IT Y
W e c * n d o 6 * ln 4 k h r i
C a llB a rt R e a l E s ta te 373 jy y j
W e b u y e q u ity m M ouses,
ap a rtm e n ts , v a c a n t lan d and
A creag e
L U C K Y IN V E S T
M E N T S P O Boa 2300 San
lo rd . * ' s 37771 777 4741
It'S easy to p la c e a C lassified Ad
W e 'll even h elp you w ord
IT C ell 377 7411

A CLOSER LOOK .....

C oncrete W o rk , fo o le rs, floors 4
pools L a n d s c a p in g 1 sod
w ork F r e w e s t 177 710)
I M A N D U A L IT Y O P E R A T IO N
i yrs e«p P a lio *. D riv e w a y *
etc W ayne B eal 377 1)21

TO W ER S B E A U T Y SALON
F O R M E R L Y H a r n e tt's B eauty
Nook S I* E 1st St . 377 *747

E k c tric a l

SUM
BUDGETS
ARE
B O lS T T R E D W IT H V A L U E S
I ROM
tt.E
W ANT
AC
( O t IlM N S

Q u ality e le c tric a l w o rk 77 yrs
e x p e r ie n c e M in o r re p a irs to
co m p le te w irin g 771 0716

W tien you p la c e a C lassified Ad
in The E v e n in g H e ra ld , slay
d o s e lo your phone because
som ething w o n d e rfu l is about
to lia p o en

B oarding 6 G room ing

A n im a l H a v e n B o ard in g and
G ro o m in g K e n n e ls S h a d y ,
insulated screened. Hy p r o d
in tid e , outside runs
Fen s
Also AC ceges W * c e te r lo
yo u r p e ls
S t a r t in g s tu d
re g is try Ph 377 3737

H andym an
P a in tin g , c a rp e n try . *11 ty p es o l
hom e r e p e ir t C e ll for fre e
e s tim a te 317 1*7}

it s lik e pen nies Iro m heaven
wtien yuu se ll " D o n ! N ee d s"
w ith a w ant ad

B u ild ing C o n tractor

B ill C o rs o . S l i t * C e r t if ie d
B u ild in g
C o n tra c to r.
R e s id e n tia l o r C o m m e rc ia l,
N e w o r R em o d e le d 371 04*4

H o m t Im p ro v tm e n l
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
P a in tin g . R uotm g. C a rp e n try
l i e B o n d e d 4 G u a ra n te e d
F re e E s tim a te s 377 744*

C ara m k T ilt

b illy h w ells a nd associates

C e M R le l* C e ra m ic T i l* Sen t,
w elts , floors, co u ntertop s, re
m o d el, re p a ir F r . e s l l ) f O &gt; l l

w

H au lin g 6
Y a rd W ork

Snow H ill K en n e l o tte rs C e l 4
Dog F le e B eth s *3 u p U
H o u r. F u ll S e rv ic e 3 4 S *7 I1

MAY WE ASSIST YOU?

L 4 R 0 E TR E E IN IT A L IC E
Lan d scap in g . O ld L a w n s E *
p fa e td M S 5501

F r e d d ie R o b in s o n P lu m b in g
R e p a ir * . ' fa u c e t s . W
C
S p rin k le rs 37) 1310. 3)34)706 .
______________
%

La ndc tearin g

M a k i- your Budget go fu rth e r,
chop th e C lassified A d * ev ery
day

. . . often reveals hidden qualities that are
not obvious at a casual glance. Our service,
as well as our company, deserve a
discerning look.
W eoffer appraisals, private sales, or public
auctions In the follow ing sp ecialties:
Business Liqu id ations, Estates, F a rm
E quipm ent, Livestock, and Surplus
Property.

P lum bing

Concrete W ork

Beauty C are
Don I D rs p a -r O r P u ll Y o u r H a ir
U se A W ant A d 377 7411 or
431 9993

* ltn e y jew eler
704 S P a rk A ve
17 7 630?

Landscaping

■

you a f t * " h a v in g d iffic u lty
fin d in g a place lo liv e , c a r to
d riv e , a 10b o r com e te r y ic e
you h av e need o t. re a d a ll our
w an t a d * e v e ry day

48—Commercial Property

A P P R A IS E R S A U C T IO N E E R S

%w

76—Auto Parts

339 7989 *y

P A R K O N T O P OF A H IL L IN
G E N E V A *4 0 .0 0 0 . T E R M S

JU S T F O R Y O U ! 1 B R . 7 B ath
hom e in O re a m w e ld w Ig
P R ’s, F e e l A P a lio . BBQ .
G r e e n h e u te . F R A M u c h
M o re l 161.9401
E X T R A * G ALO R E! 3 BR. I
B ath hom e an Ig c e m t r tat in
d es ira b le a r e a l CH A C . W W C .
E q K it w B B. F R . Ig u r n
porch! *44.9991
M A Y F A IR
V IL L A S ) 1 A 3
B d rm . 1 B e th Condo V illa s ,
n * i t to M a y le lr C o u n try Club
S a te d you r lo t. Il* e r p lan A
in te rio r decor I O v a lity con
' ttru c te d by S h o tm ik a r tar
*47.1*4 A up!
A S S O C IA T E * N E E D E O I New
or t . p o n t n c t d
C o ll H e rb
S te n ttre m o r L o * A lb n o h t
to day A discover tv c c e ts l

acres

C H E V Y w ndow van
loaded ex c e lle n t cond*
1?) 1179 or 372 6690

*y

1977 1 t.u n d i*rb rd
1976 Bu'Ck i a S a tw r
Custom
1976 Bu ck 72 5Coupe
197 7 M e rc u ry C ougar
SR 7
I9S9 M u stang C i'n y .-rt p ir
1977 Bu ck L tm .fe d
Coupe
1977 M o n te C a rlo
Sunroof
1990 C h evette
7 0 .V m .lr s
1969 t treD&gt;rd Coupe
t9 7 6 V W R .5 b t» t
1971 V olks 5 ta W agon
19791 .re b -rd » r r m u ia

BUSINESS SERVICE USTIN6

4 H O M E S IT E * IN O R A N G E
G R O V E AT U M A T IL L A *7300
eac h , crazy term s
*•

75-A— Vans

8 i l i D IR T K TO P S O il
Y l 1 lO W S A N D
C -Ell ( lark M t r l 121 7590

1 9 7 ; P i N t O l * P ru n so cs V
ness tire s 5650
f ?1 M 77 a fte r 6 s1 m
n a v e a room to r e n t’ L e t a
clas sified a d fin d a te n a n t tor
VfHl*

★ B&amp;H Auto Sales *y

F o r E i t a l e . C o m m e r c ia l o r
'R e tid e n tla ! A u c tio n * 1 Ap
p ,A lta i* C a ll D e ll’i A uction
123 3420

P IA N O S K organs la rg e A d m a il
vt.yrt.ng ,*s low as %lav gy H c4&gt;
l*.ytl V u s u C4-n»t«r K W estern
Au*t&gt;

7) T B IR D L o a d ed New T .rr s
Blue w '»h W h ite Top or 74
C utlass S u p rem e No m oney
dow n 575 m o 3)9 9100 1)4 4605
D ea ler

to Buy

72—Auction

59-M usical Instru m en ts

- m*

*4 10

A lu m in u m , c a n t, co p p er, lead,
b r e t t . l il v e r , gold W e e k d a y *
• 4 30. Sal * I K o K o M o Tool
Co 914 W I t t St 33) 1100

M U L T i f a m i l y g a ra g e \ * l e
toys, clothes fu rn d u r e plants.
A etc lr &gt; 5 Sat | 4 co rn er of
Upsaia A G a rd e n C rt 37) 4779

tKJN 1 y l u h L . 7 , S E L L 11 w ith
a low cost C lassified Ac

S C L E A R E D D U P L E x L O T S IN
S A N IO R L - *1 3 .3 0 0 E A C H .
Z O N E O FO R O U A D S OR OF
, f IC E S

REALTY a- REALTORS
Sanford'a Sales Leader,

A T T R A C T IV E ! 4 B R . I B ath
h e m * in R avennd P a rk e n a Ig
co rn er le tt C H AC. E q K it
chen. fenced . F R I Just s o ld A
p a in te d ! *36.100!

K en m o re p a rts , s e rv le t, usuu
w ashers M O O N E Y A P P L I
A N C E S 37) 0697

3 A C R E S C L E A R E D L A N D IN
P A O IA *33 000

STENSTRO M

R U M M A G E Sale f le e t R es erv e
Assoc. W H w y 46 Sanford
Saturday Sep* 26 l a m til ’
R a m or shine Public invited
S o m e th in g to r e v e ry o n e
H a m b u rg e rs Hot Dogs Soft
D rm k s a%a ta b le G a m e s tor
ch ild re n

65—Pots Supplies

m ortgage

*3 *0
I®
* 4"
*6 ??

A n tiq u r* D ia m o n d * O il
P a in tin g * O rie n ta l R u g *
B rid g e t A n tiq u e *
37 ) 7401

6 2 ~ L iw t &gt; Garden

E v A 373 000
JO a c h e s w o o d e d R O L L IN G
M IL L S IN G E N E V A A R E A
*3300 P E R A C R E , S E L L E R
F IN A N C IN G M A Y D IV ID E

f

68—Wanted

l A * I and A r s t 70th l a r g e
V a rie ty V .sc P ius tools n a d t
and link fe n ce F rid a y only 9
a m

51-A—F u rn itu re

l A » l V A R Y 4 l.ir go
lots. nice trees
iis
i * U7 i*»&gt;

M O V IN G Sale Sat and Sun
L a m p s D s h r s Mi%c
fu r
n tu fe U nder 550 204 V m rw c o d
IV Loch A rb or

YARD sa i E
' e.'w 1 jc u s f A ve
S aturday Sep* 76 9 a m

50-A— Jew elry

41—Lots- Acreage

I974 M A /D A R k 1
stat-o n W ag o n 5700
17) 0777

S A N T A G e rtru d * Bull
lo r *a h - *» *0 C all
lite r 3 1- n
103 I ’ J O lt f

G A R A G f Kale I n &amp; Sat
only I 6 *71 C h ero kee
C e d e I Sunland E s tates I

F IR E W O O D

1 9 3 3 C t!f V Y p Ik v p W y n n tw o . ^
eng m e needs w ork w d e t i r e s
%
Chrom e r e v * e 1 spd on&lt;»
floor t*evy eeti.H ist 5650 D ay s
) ) • J95? eves 372 20)9

^ 1Y A Y T O N A A U T O A U C T IO N
H w y 92 I m ile w est of Speed
w ay D a y to n a B each w l lh o id
a pubhc A U T O A U C T IO N
e v ery W ednesday a t § p m i t s
*h r only one n f tor .da You set
♦he re s e rv e d p ric e C all W i
755 93M for fu rth e r d e ta ls

67—Livestock Poultry

YARD
s .y ir S a tu rd a y
an d
Sunday 9 )
61) S e rita St
f B ehind the H urocr C het*
Couch loves ea t S5.sc

47 A -M ortgages
Bought A Sold

42—Mobile Homes

349 W L a k * M a r y Blvd
IN DR IF T W O O D V IL L A G E

WE h a v e r e n t a l *
P R IC E D R E D U C E D (1.991 N ew p ric e d b etew a p p ra is a l,
th is ) b d rm h e m * w b ea m e d
c tih n g s A te v p ly , shaded le t Is
S e n fe rd ’s best buy *1 enty
373.99*11

G e rm a n Shepherd M a le ) Y rs
S u p e r k i t h c h ild r e n e«c
gva'ch ***&lt;1 $200 372 STS7

i » A V iL V u a ra q e &amp; y a rd va'e
b*Q va r r ly 8 r i noon th ru Sun
1M 4 V a q n c lta A ve

17 O ltlc e s Throughout
C e n tra l F lo r id *

“*

Z * * f* lrR S lA N S A d u lt
fe m a le s W h ite Black
11V* 1 * « : 37) 1515

Y A R D sate F n &amp; Sat 9 6 Sun
1 6 H anq ng fire p la c e e le c tric .
ga% h e a te r a fa n
tooi%
d o tti ng miAc N o thing over
37} E i t to S B ra rd a M 1st
»&gt;o u m * on th e lett

See o u r b e a u tifu l n ew .B R O A D
M O R E , Iro n ! A r e e r B R t .
G R E G O R Y M O B IL E H O M E S
3403 O rla n d o D r
37) 3300
V A A F H A F in a n c in g

■ eg . R e a l ■ • ! • • * B raA er
37! 1471
iv *» 7 H 9 M

8 R E F D a lm a tia n M a te I ' : Y rs
old A ll shots Needs lo v n q
hom e )77 201)

54—Garage Sales

L ie R e a l E s ta te B ro ker
7440 S an ford A v e

C R E A T IV E
F in a n c in g '
A ca d em y M a n o r. 3 B d rm . S' *
Ba
N ew c a rp e t A p am t.
c a rp o rt R e a r fenced Bio lot
3J9 900 331 *0 )1

Tcn h.b’A m t c r o * 4 v f Ov&lt;*n sale
p r ic e $ 2 4 t
I t l l (A n s ftrr
va cu u m c lean e r 559 50 See j *
S a n fo rd
S e w in g
C e n te r .
Sanford P l j / a across fro m
^ u r g r r K in g

Good Used T V S. *23 h up
M IL L E R S
7 6 l9 0 r la n d o F r
Ph J72 0337

B A TE M A N -R E A LTY
322-7843

79—Trucks-Trailers
45—Pets-Supplies

w

SJ—TV Radio-Stereo

;

c o n t e s t

24 HOUR QJ 322-9283

7 B O R M House T r a ile r P a rtly
fu rn ish e d w ith a ir, fenced
p a lio 377 S6S9
I B d rm I Person L ig h ts and
W a te r lu rm s h e d SISO m o
369 S9S9

• O U R TOW NES
R E A L T Y IN C B R O K E R
44* 63)0 a n y tim e

Thursday, Stpf. II, Itll—SB^

S2—Appliances

R ijK T .T iM !

B U T U N T IL W E
ACTUALLY ^TA R T
P R O D U C T IO N O N
M Y P IE T D E S S E R T ,
t H A V E A M IN O R
C A S H FLO W
P R O B L E M .’

REALTOR. M L *
7711 * F ren ch
*u it« 4
la n ia r d

SA N FO R O U N FU R N APT.
3 rm s . ap p lic . k i d s . *773
LO NG W O O D H A N O Y M A N
S P E C IA L
} r m house, kids. p els. *763

TO A &amp;15
MAdrR.JftoOHVS
BELT BUCKLE TJKE INVENTOR
Ti€ PELT \s*EN HE
L IK E
PA5SEP JUT
YOU
AFTER THE
CHU6 -A-LUJ

Y O U 'R E

MALTY

321 0759

4 B D R . 3 bth cent H A L a k e
M a r y . San lord a re a *400 m o *
__________
Deposit 337 1094

W ERE T X h iN j u p " \ 7 \ h l n p r e p
* s a i E - i T i j n r j 11 £' H S U L C B E
N O T H IN '
FIX THE r ^ L TABLE

R O B B IE 'S

A L L F L O R ID A R E A L T Y
O F SA N FO R D R E A LTO R

SINI0R CITIZENS
Two bed, two both
Now homo in DtKono
$325 Monthly
Cod Undo Jo#

41—Houses
O E L IG H T F U L D e B a ry - e i t r a ’
la rg e 3 b d r. 7 bth h o m e w ith
lots o l closets, on
a c re
wooded, lake fro n t lot D re a m
k i t , r e l r i g . is la n d s to v e ,
w asher 4 d ry e r, cent vac
sy ste m , w w ca rp et. I4«70
screened porch, p a lio . and
closed g a ra g e . *47.300

Evening Herald, Sanlord. FI.

with Major Hoopla

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

j 4 ■ H o m e Im p ro v e m e n t C a rp e n try w o r t at a n y ty p e
Root re p a irs , g u tte r «m rk.
p a m tm g (in te rio r or e i t e r lor I,
p lu m b in g , s p e c ia lll* In m o b ile
h o m e r e p a ir * 6 root co a lin g ,
and w ood p a lio d e c k * F r e e
e s tim a te 37 ) 4034

M E IN T Z E R T IL E
N e w or re p a ir, le a k y sho w ers ou r
s p e c ia lly .* * * * * E . p U * B M &gt;

A c re a g e 4 lot cle a rin g
F ill d irt to p s o il
tor sa le 372 3431

M w li r n ./.n g your H o m e ? Sell no
lo n g rr fu nded but useful ite m *
w ith a C lassified Ad
F O N S E C A P L U M B IN G
Con
S lru c tlo n . R ep a irs. E m e rg e r,
cy L ie . Bonded. Ins 37) 6073

Lawn Maintenance

D U N N R I T E L a w n S e r v ic e
M o * , t'dg**. tn m . va cu u m ,
m ulch sod R e a * 177 73W

P lu m b m g re p a ir
a ltty p e *
w a te r h e a le rs 4 pum ps
37) 4471

R em odaling
M asonry
il you a r e n 't using your pool
ta b le , la k e a cue. an d sell it
w ith a H e ra ld c la s s ifie d ad
C all 377 7411

M n i-U -L o cfc
N E W C o n crete B u ild in g s , e ll
sues *70 4 up A t I 4 4 SR 44 I
4 In d u s trie I P e r k . 37) 0041 ’

N u rsin g C o n ttr
OUR R A T E *A R E LO W ER
L e k e v ie w N u rs in g C e n te r
t l * E Second S t . Sanford
377 4 707

P a in tin g
Heilm an P ainting 6 R epair*
Quality work F r t * E sl, Disc
to Seniors 1*4 44*0 Refer

V a c a tio n lim e ,* h e r * g et w hat
you need lo r * h ap py lim a w ith
a C la s t d ie d Ad

P a in tin g B a r
P ro a a u rt C teaning
N o tob too U r g e or s m e ll
Q u a lity a m u tt C a ll » ! 0 0 7 l
R e le f .n c e t F r . E st

R a m o d a lin g S p e c ia lis t
W * h an d le the
W h o le B all ot W a«

B.

E . L in k C o n st.
322-7029

F in a n c in g A v a ila b le

Roofing
R O O F * , le e k s re p e ire d . R e f l e c t ' ,
re tte a t t y t t end t M n g lt w tr k . *
lic e n s e d . In s u r e d , b e a d e d * .*
M ik e 77) 4377.
C h ris tia n Rooting 17 y rs t i p . , , .
34* *730. Ire e esl R e to o lin g . ,
t p e o a l i l t m re p a ir w o rk k j , new ro ofing
S O U T H E R N R O O F IN G 1} f t * SJ
r i p . re ro o tin g , leak special
ill
D e p e n d a b le 4 h o n e s t &lt;.*■
p ric e D a y o r n ig h t ) } } I M ) •

S andblasting

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SANDBLAtTINO
DAVIt WBLDINO
H M t t f . SAN FORD

T ra a S a rv ic a
H A E P I E 'S T B i t ( ( a v i d
T rim m in g , re m o v in g 4 L trx )
$ *« » " « F rt# i n
m o m

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Scotty's Unbeatable Bargains!
6' EXTENSION
CORD
Has polarized 3-outlet
connector with SafetyKap and 2-prong plug.
C 2220-006-6’ Brown
or White.

ELECTRICAL
Straight
(msvuwpaA
FLUORESCENT TUBE

a

Each
R eg P rice le a c h ) ..............99C

Rapid start, 40 watts. 4 8 ’
long.

18 gallon
Each

With White bent glass shade. No.
SL-123.
_____

@ 7//MI/LV

©

C

7 / /W

s u

R eg P rice
(piece) . . . 4 1 C

Gilmour

Fo u r w a t e r i n g
patterns. Covers up
to 2 ,0 0 0 sq. ft.
Model 68OOS-B.

Q 9 9
Each

PANELING
PANEUNG
Real wood backing.
3.0 mm x 4' x 8'.
Appalachian Hickory
or Mandolin Maple.

499

Each

ccntkx

Your Choice:

They w o n t b e lie v e yo u d id
y o u rs e lf'

Insulated CEIUNG PANELS

Sheathing PLYWOOD
CDX Sheets

No. 348 Holds 20' of cord .. 9 9 C

Each

J_LL

Fiberglass handle with rubber grip
1 6 oz. Curved or ripping.

Cord not included)

EZ

B
WOOD*

CLAW HAM M ERS

CORD CONTROL

to 2" thick doors.

Treated
PINE

r e

Each

Door VIEWER

it

r e s

Each

L a st C atalog P rice Itu b e ) .............. 97C

*'

P

Each |

/ iV ^ 6 5

Tube

Fits 1

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S 3
Each

9.5 amp motor, 8 " ( iT ) 0 M Rockwell
blade. No. 31-205. w
^

Fluted glass with Black
rust-resistant holder. 8 ”
high. No. SL-715-7.

Catalog special
Save «•%

^

x2x8’

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Motorized 8MTABLE SAW

Outdoor COACH LANTERN

Bonds in seconds.

■

30 gallon

Oscillating
SPRINKLER

Each

MISCELLANEOUS
SUPER GLUE

t

Sturdy, warp-resist­
ant cans. TUCKER

CEILING LIGHT FIXTURE
I— r

HARDWARE
Plastic TRASH CANS

No. 148 —
Holds 150' of cord 1 . 9 0

Agency Approved
Sheet
3 /8 " x 4 ’ x 8 ’ ..................... 6 . 1 5
1 /2 ” x 4' x 8' (3 ply).........6 . ? ?
1 /2 " x 4' x 8' (4 ply)......... J . 3 9

TV ANTENNAS

5 /8 " x 4 ‘ x 8 ’ . . . .............. 10.15

UHF, VHF, and FM/stereo.
Metro — 19 elements. 32-1200.

Flexible Fiberglas® panels insulated
to save energy and absorb sound.

Portable LANTERN

l x 12 No. 3 PINE SHELVING

Use one 6 volt battery. (Not
included.)

8 ’ through 16' lengths.

Fire resistant and w ashable. In
White. 2' x 4 ’ panel.

Un. Ft
Each

.

-

-

-

-

Each
Terra —
5 / 8 ” thick (R -2.6 )*.
Pebble 3 /4 " thick (R -3 )*...
Sculptured —
1" thick (R -4)*........
Stonebrooke III —
3 " thick(R-12)* . . . .

B e ig e , G o ld or
W hite. 12" x 12"
tiles.

2x4x6'

R eg P rice
( e a c h ) ------

FLOORING
DURAVINYL* FLOOR TILE
E
te r s
style
c xx e ie
ty le in

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M*
0 TV;
w tn -x y k ' .
r.i. u: .
irl« ,

BUILDING PRODUCTS
CONCRETE MIX

■

Premixed sand, gravel
and cement.

No-Wax Vinyl
SHEET FLOORING!

TURBINE VENTILATOR

Durable, Topthane
surface on a vinyl
foam cushion. In
6 ’-6" wide roll. g g ( j

Internally braced,
g a lv a n ize d steel
finish. LT-12.

2 x 4 x 9 2 V .” Precut

2 x 4 x 96”

4 5 9

Each Tile

* The h ig h e r th e R value. th e g re a te r th e
in s u la t in g p o w e r . A s k y o u r S c o tty 's
s a le sm a n fo r th e f a d s h e e t o n R values

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SPRUCE STUDS

'*

^AMTICO

Exterior PLYWOOD
HANOI— PANELS

- S ’. ’

I

Good-one-side.

Plastic Asbestos
ROOF CEMENT
Liquid Asbestos
ROOF COATING

H H G D

Piece

Piece

1 /4 " x 2* x 4 *................. 3 . 3 9
1 /2 " x 2' x 4 ' __ 4 . 7 5
. 3 / 4 ” x 2' x 4'(

Your C hoice:

a n Ft.

GYPSUM WALLBOARD
KITCHEN FAUCET
Washerless, single lever.
Triple plated Chrome
fin is h . M odel 8 2 0 0
(without spray).

IG o M B o n d

3/8"x4'x8.
1 /2 ” x 4' x 8 '.
1 /2 ” x 4 ' x 12'

RlProduth ^

Piece
j

^

ZZZsltB

Coventry
Interior PAINT
Washable latex paint.
Covers in one coat.
White and colors.
M O B ll.t
MINIS

Self-Sealing
M
ROOF SHINGLES ^
White and colors.

3-Tab FIBER G LA SS
20 Year Warranty
S q u a re ...

P R IC E S O O O D F R IO A Y T H R U T H U R S D A Y ,
O C TO B E R 1

Shop

Scotty's
andSave!

— ir a iE i P M —
SANFORD
700French Ava.
Fh: 3294700
ALTAM O NTE SPR IN G S
1029 E. Altamonte Or.
(Wwy.436)
Fh: 3394311
lo o e y 's n o rM o p an i t 7 J O u n .

8 .1 8

3 4 .4 5

Bundle

r w

m

T N i --------------------------

o r a n g e cmr

2323 S. Volusia Ava.
H w y 17 an d 92
Fh: 775-7268
ALTAM O NTE SPRING S
875W .H w y .43S
Fh: 852-7254

G allon

R eg P ric e (g a llo n ). . 9 9 9

Price* quoted m this ad are
based on customers picking-up
merchandise at our store De­
livery is available for a small
charge.
Management roserves Ihe right
lo limit quantities on special
sale merchandise

�</text>
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                  <text>Sanford Herald, 1981</text>
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                <text>The Sanford Herald, September 24, 1981</text>
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                <text>Sanford (Fla.)</text>
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                <text>&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt; issue published on September 24, 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>Text</text>
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          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
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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;, September 24, 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>Sanford, Florida</text>
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                <text>&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;</text>
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