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                    <text>75»h Year. No 80-Monday November??, 1982-Sanford. Florida 32771

Evening Herald— (USPS 481 2801— Price 20 Cents

G lenn M ay Be Next Com m ission Chairman
B) MIIHKAI. BEIIA
Herald Staff Writer
Robert Stumi will step down Tuesday
as chairman of the Seminole County
Board of Commissioners and his suc­
cessor will likely be Sandra Glenn
Sturm, who has been chairman for the
past two years, said he will not seek the
post this year. " It’s tim e for me to step
down," he said.
And although Mrs. Glenn hasn't ac­
tively campaigned to become chairman,
at least one commissioner believes she
should assume the leadership post.
"It's Sandra’s turn to take it," Barbara
Christensen said. " It's her fifth year on
the board. She should be the first-ever

woman to serve as chairman "
M rs. Glenn downplayed the im ­
portance of the chairman's role.
"As they say at the conventions, if
elected I would sen e," she said
The chairman is responsible for setting
the tone of the commission’s work. The
c h airm an controls the debate in
meetings and work sessions, determines
what issues the board will discuss and
sets meeting and work session dates, she
said.
But she doesn't feel there is a
sig n ifican t difference betw een the
chairm an and the other commissioners
"It has not made a difference. You both
have one vote." she said. "It doesn't

make you a stronger commissioner,"
Mrs. Glenn said.
Sturm said Mrs. Glenn would make a
fine commission chairman but stopped
short of endorsing her "I’m sure she
would do a good job."

'It's time for me to step
down.' — Robert Sturm
Robert G. "B ud" Feather said he is
interested in being chairman. But he is
not actively campaigning for support.
"I would consider it an honor to be
elected chairm an," Feather said. He has

been vice chairman of the board this
year.
Commissioners are expected to ap­
prove another leadership change as well
Interviews were held this weekend with
four candidates to succeed County
Administrator Roger Neiswender who
will conclude his sendee with Seminole
County on Tuesday
Neiswender still has several weeks to
go before he is eligible for the state’s
retirement plan but because of his ac­
cumulated leave time, Tuesday will be
his final day.
Commissioners will choose between
A ssistant
Sem inole
County
Administrator Jim Easton; Iawrence

Arrington, assistant I,con County adrmnistrator; David Collier, consultant
with Helton A Associates; and T. Duncan
Rose, assistant Alachua County ad­
ministrator.
Fred Cremeans is expected to be
named acting Manpower Manager by
commissioners. Leonard Carswell, who
was named acting facilities, parks and
recreation manager last week, recom­
mended Cremeans be appointed acting
Manpower Manager
Carswell was taken from the position of
a d m in is te rin g
C o m p re h e n s iv e
Employment Training Act programs to
supervise the parks division pending a
reorganization.

Sanford,

Mental Health
To Charge

Longwood
"1 W|

........... 2 1

All $2 Fee

Eye Tax

A $2 minimum charge for clients of the Seminole County
Mental Health Center has been approved by the agency’s
directors.
The charge will take effect next week, beginning Dec. 1, for
all new clients and on Jan. 1 for the agency's existing clients.
The fee is expected to generate an additional $13,000 for the
center.
Dr. George IJndenfeld, executive director of the center, said
the charge is mainly therapeutic He said patients who pay at
least a token amount for their treatment are more likely to
keep their appointments, place importance on their sessions
and improve.

Doctor quits
with patients
In waiting room
J

TODAY
Action Reports................. 2A
Around The Clock .
4A
Bridge
................... 4H
Classified Ads
. 6-7B
Comics ............................. 4R
Crossword.....................
4B
D earA bby...................... 1R
Deaths .............................2A
Dr. Lamb ..........................4B

M easure
The Sanford and l .ongwood city com­
missions arc slated to be the first of Seminole
County's seven cities to consider adopting
resolutions at meetings tonight endorsing the
recommendations of a cities-county double
taxation committee.
The committee last week after some 2lv
months of weekly meetings concluded that
double taxation does exist in county govern­
ment in the areas of the Sheriff's Department
road patrols and investigations.
The Sanford Commission at a 7 p in. meeting
and the longwood Commission at 7:30 p m
will talk about askuig the county to fuid a way
to correct the situation whereby the cities arc
receiving "no real or substantial benefit"
from these two county law enforcement
functions

The center charges clients
on a pay-what-vou-can basis
The mental health center
cannot discriminate against
clients who are unable to pay,
its charter says.

About 60 percent of the center's 1,067 patients now |&gt;ay
nothing, IJndenfeld said. Those people can pay with goods or
services if they are unable to pay the $2 minimum fee, IJndenfeld said.
Meanwhile, another person associated with the agency has
resigned because of differences with Iindenfeld.
Dr. H. E. Ballentlne resigned last week because his hours of
consultations with clients had been reduced. Ballentine had his
hours cut from 12 to eight so another physician could also
consult for the center.
A further cut to four hours was planned, Ballentine said, a
move he claimed would “ create chaos and confusion" for
clients.
IJndenfeld criticized Ballentine's actions. The executive
director of the agency said Ballentine left the facility with
patients still in the waiting room.
Ballentine said he was not under contract when he left the
center.
The center’s community support program manager, John
Rope, resigned from the agency in October, citing
management difficulties.
In September, Outpatient Services Director David Flcischmann resigned. — MICIIEAL BEIIA

4A
Editorial
......... .......
3A
Florida .............. ........
Horoscope
4B
Hospital
.......
2A
2A
Nation
People
111
5-6A
Sportx
411
Television
World
3A

s w im \ (ii,K \\

Herald I*ho tot by Tom Vincent

NICE
CATCH
(live a kid a bamboo
pole, worms and a
fish in' hole and what
do you get? Fun, more
fun. and a couple "big
ones." Youngsters had
a good time Saturday
at Lake Carolla in
Sanford. It was the
annual fishing derby
sponsored
by the
Sanford Jaycecs. And
the kids, assisted by
moms, dads and a few
grandparents, enjoyed
themselves — almost
as much as the adults
did. The look on Selby
Jo h n so n 's face is
typical of the joy the
youngsters bad when
some of the "big ones"
didn't gel away. The 7year-old Sanford boy,
minus a front tooth, is
all sm iles us he
proudly holds up his
catch.

And both cities, in the view of their mayors,
will adopt the resolutions, giving the county
tune to solve the problem rather than go to
court.
“ I think it’s a start in the right direction,"
said Sanford Mayor Ut* P. Moore I'm not in
favor of litigating the problem if we can get
some equitable adjustment. I don't see any
reason why we shouldn't adopt the
resolution."
I&gt;ongwood Mayor June Iom iann said. "I
think it’s the right approach to take." She
added she is sure the resolution will be su;&gt;ported at the Icongwood meeting tonight.
Meanwhile, city officials in the county's
other five cities are also supportive of
cooperation rather than a court battle to put to
rest the long-standing dispute between the
county and city governments in Seminole
County.
Casselberry Mayor Owen Sheppard said the
resolution will be considered at a Casselberry
Council meeting on Monday, Nov. 29. He noted
that the city still has the option of going to
court against the county if the county refuses
to cooperate. Sheppard said he wasn't totally
satisfied with some of the committee's con­
clusions, but overall is supportive of
cooperation. "It looks good at this point," he
said.
Winter Springs Mayor John Torcaso said
City Manager Dick Kozansky will bring the
issue before the City Commission there at
Tuesday night’s meeting. "1 think we ought to
give the county a chance to get everything
working. I see no reason in trying to rush
things I think everything will work out fine
eventually."
Oviedo Council President Ralph Neely said
he supports the committee's findings and
believes the Oviedo City Council will adopt the
resolution at its Dec. 6 meeting.
See SANFORD, Page ZA

Lake Mary Officials Concerned

W ater System 'Disaster ...To Happen’
SCC CHAMPS
Seminole Community College's David Gallagher
(middle) was the man of the hour Saturday night
as the Haiders knocked off Miami Dade North on
Gallagher's shot at the buzzer to win the SCC
Haider Tournament. Kudy Kuiper (left) and l.uis
Phelps give Gallagher a post-game ride for his
exploits. See Sports, page 3,\ for the rundown of
SCC’s 81-82 victory.

« •• •&lt;

By DONNA ESTES
Herald Staff Writer
I -ake Mary’s water distribution system "is a disaster
waiting to happen,” according to City Councilman Pat South­
ward.
City Manager Phil Kulbes has the statistics to prove it, and
Fire Chief Jim Orioles agrees a m ajor problem could happen
at any time.
Mrs. Southward brought the issue to light two wteks ago
when she asked Kulbes to prepare a report on the condition of
the water system.
In his report, Kulbes said the city has 8.4 miles of water
lines, with 79 percent of the galvanized lines two inches or
smaller.
He said the two-inch and smaller lines, Installed in the
original system, purchased by the city soon after its in­
corporation in 1973, have a life expectancy of about 30 years.

Only four years are left before they will reach the 30-year
mark, Kulbes said.
Kulbes estimated that it would cost $250,000 to replace the
aging pipes.
Mrs. Southward's m ajor concern with the pipes two inches
and smaller is that under heavy pressure, especially during a
fire fighting situation, the lines could cave in or burst.
Orioles, changing his hat to public works superintendent,
agreed the possibility is a very real one. He added that now
after pressure is put on the lines, the water velocity within the
pipes breaks loose rust, which winds up cording out of the taps
of customers’ homes.
\
•
Kulbes reported that when $400,000 in water system im­
provements were made several years ago, larger lines were
installed in some places. In some areas where the larger lines
were installed, however, homes were left on the old. small
lines.

\

In overall water system Improvements, money would also be
needed to correct this problem. Further complicating the
issue, he said, is the fact that the system does not have a
complete valve network, meaning if a problem crops up with a
burst line in an old part of the system, the entire system must
be shut down during repair.
Additional lines must also be extended to give sendees to
new areas.
Kulbes said the city also cannot depend forever on the city of
Sanford as its source of water. Lake Mary, he said, should be
considering creating its own water supply. When this is done,
a one million gallon water storage tower will have to be In­
stalled at a cost of about $270,000.
All of the improvements could be made in phases and need
not be completed at one time, he said.
No action has been taken on Kulbes’ report.

�JA — Even in g Herald, Sanford, F I.

Monday, Nov. 21.19 82

Despite Reagan's Promises,

IN BRIEF

Deficit M ay Hit $ 170 Billion

More Defense Spending

IV

+ 1 0 .8 %

NATION
Congress May Resist
WASHINGTON (UPI) — With larger deficits in the
offing and Democrats claiming an election mandate to
slow deicnse spending, President Reagan can expect
m ore difficulty in getting Congress to approve his
m ilitary buildup.
Although Reagan so far has gotten what he wants for
defense, the debate over his policies has intensified.
Even some of his most loyal supporters in Congress
now seem reluctant to continue defense spending at its
present rate.
The recent elections, in which Democrats picked up
26 House seats, are seen by some administration critics
as proof that the public wants defense spending slowed.
"The American people are growing increasingly
m ore intolerant of our unrestrained defense spending
binge," Rep. Pat Schroeder, D-Colo., said.

UAW, Chrysler Talking
DETROIT (UPI) — Chrysler Corp. and the United
Auto Workers resume contract talks in the United
States and Canada with the company hoping to stop a
costly Canadian strike and the union seeking pay
raises for workers in both countries.
Negotiations open today first in Detroit and later in
Toronto. Bargainers say they will seek settlements at
the sam e time but a contract offer would be put before
Canadian workers first in an effort to end their 2-weckold walkout.
Wage increases for the 10,000 Canadian workers and
45,000 American workers is the toughest issue on the
agenda. But the union said it will negotiate first on non­
economic issues such as absenteeism, seniority and
supervisory levels.

Early Tax Cut Debated
WASHINGTON (UPI) — A key Republican senator
and President Reagan’s top economic adviser both are
wary of proposals to accelerate the scheduled tax cut
by six months and suggest that attention should be
focused on reducing the ballooning federal deficit.
M artin Feldsteln, chairm an of the President's
Council of Economic Advisers, said Sunday on NBC's
"Meet the Press" that speeding up the July 1983 tax cut
to January, as Reagan has considered proposing, has
"pluses and minuses," but when pressed said, "1 tend
to think the pluses are outweighed by the minuses."
But in a separate interview, Senate Finance Com­
mittee Chairman Bob Dole, R-Kan., said moving up the
10 percent income tax cut, would create even a larger
budget deficit.

NATIONAL REPORT:
Frigid temperatures and light
snows chased a lingering Indian summer out of the northern
, plains early today. Thunder-showers pounded Northern
j California and fog settled over the Gulf Coast and mid-Atlantic
‘ states. Thunder and lightning ushered in Seattle's first snow
of the season in an area that normally receives only two or
three snowfalls each winter. About 50 miles east of Seattle, ski
areas opened early Sunday at Snoqualnle Pass, where
unusually early storms have dumped 60 inches of snow. In
eastern Washington, 3 inches of snow fell in a few hours at
Spokane. Subzero air edged across the Canadian border into
the extrem e north central United States, dropping the mercury
In Havre, Mont, to 9-below zero as of midnight. Readings in the
single digits were recorded across the rest of the northeast
quarter of Montana and western North Dakota. Snow ac­
companied the cold temperatures from Montana to Minnesota.
AREA READINGS (9 a.m .); temperature: 70; overnight
low: 64; Sunday high: 82; barom etric pressure: 30.06; relative
humidity: 90 percent; winds: north at 7 m.p.h.; rain: none;
sunrise 6:52 a.m., sunset 5:29 p.m.
TUESDAY TIDES: DAYTONA BEACH; highs, 12:51 a.m.,
1:11 pim.; lows, 6:36 a.m„ 7:34 p.m.; PORT CANAVERAL;
highs, 12:43 a.m., 1:10 p.m.; lows, 6:27 a.m., 7:25 p.m.;
BAYPORT: highs,5:18a.m., 6:00p.m.; lows, 12:12a.m., 12:55
p.m.
BOATING FORECAST: ST. AUGUSTINE TO JUPITER
INLET, OUT 51 MILES: Small craft should exercise caution.
Wind northeast 15 occasionally 20 knots decreasing gradually
today becoming northeast to east 10 to 15 knots by tonight and
variable mostly northerly 10 knots Tuesday. Seas 4 to 6 feet
today and 3 to 4 feet tonight. Chance of rain with areas of fog
mostly north part. Otherwise Isolated showers.
AREA FORECAST: Partly cloudy and mild today. High
near 80 or low 80s. Wind east to northeast 10 occasionally 15
mph. Tonight and Tuesday partly cloudy and continued mild.
Lows near 60 or low 60s. Highs around 80. Variable light wind
tonight.
EXTENDED FORECAST North portion variable cloudiness
with a chance of showers Wednesday through Friday.
Otherwise partly cloudy and mild, Lows in low 60s north to
upper 60s south, except low to mid 70s along the southeast
coast. Highs in the 70s extreme north and low to mid 80s
elsewhere.

HOSPITAL NOTES
Central PlartSa S tflM il
SaturSay
ADMISSIONS
Ernest S Arana, Sanford
Marguerite H. Barrere. Osteen
Frances
M.
Schrolucke,
Sorrento
DISCHABOtS
Sanford:
Reginald D. Conquest
Ruuelt L. Corley
Dorine J. Macalter
Allred F. Murphy
Annie R. Williams
Beverly S. Wight
Nancy A. Cerow. OeBary
ADMISSIONS
Sanford:

Lenora Ashford

E v e n in g H e ra ld

WASHINGTON (UPI) — President Reagan, who had
trumpeted a goal of balancing the federal budget by 1984, in­
stead will preside that year over a record deficit of about 1170
billion, internal administration estimates show.
Administration officials said Sunday the broad budget plan
now being worked out by Reagan and his top advisers would
produce a deficit in the range of 9185 billion to 1195 billion
without spending cuts or tax increases.
Although general parameters have been established for the
budget Reagan will submit to Congress early next year, one
official said budget director David Stockman is proceeding on
the basis of "basic Judgments" by the president.
During the campaign, Reagan promised to balance the
budget — a goal that steadily moved farther out of his grasp.
Officials said Stockman is working on 120 billion to 930 billion
in domestic spending reductions, which still would produce a
deficit substantially larger than the latest projections by cither
the administration or Congress.
Alice Rivlin, director of the Congressional Budget Office,
said Stockman's latest figures suggest "I seem to have lost my
position as resident pessimist" to Reagan’s own budget
director.

Ms. Rivlin said the latest CBO projection of a 3152 billion
deficit in 1984 “ is clearly out of date," but declined to speculate
on what the next estimate will show in January.
The deficit for fiscal 1982, which ended Sept. 30, was a record
9112 billion and Martin Feldstein, chairman of the president’s
Council of Economic Advisers, said earlier this month the 1983
deficit, which the CBO projects at 3155 billion, “ is now
essentially beyond our control."
Feldstein, on NBC’s “ Meet the Press," said Sunday that
deficits in the years immediately ahead will be 3150 billion to
3200 billion without "significant action" to cut domestic spen­
ding.
Budget analysts In Congress and the administration have
said the recession and declining inflation would lead to higher
deficits, presenting Reagan with an Increasingly difficult set of
budget decisions.
The president, despite pressure even from within his own
party, has refused to scale back the sharp growth he proposed
in defense spending or back away from scheduled lax cuts that
will further erode the revenue side of the budget equation.
In a speech in New Orleans last week, Reagan branded as
"propaganda* suggestions that huge deficits are the result of
excessive defense spending and his "massive" tax cut.

Sanford Eyes Double Tax Measure
Continued From Page 1A
"As long as we get tax equity, that’s
the important thing," Neely said. "I was
not surprised at the committee’s fin­
dings. There is an inequality in the way
the county money is spent."
Mayor Walter Sorenson said the U k e
Mary council will take up the resolution
at a Dec. 2 meeting. "I'll recommend
they adopt th e resolution. It's
City Manager Jeff Etchberger said the
Altamonte Springs Commission will look
at the Issue at a Nov. 30 meeting. And he
will recom m end adoption of the
resolution.
He said the resolution is consislenl with
the direction Altamonte Springs has been
taking for some two years. Etchberger
added that Altamonte sent a represen­
tative to the county commission budget
meeting two years ago, urging the county
create a municipal service taxing unit in
the unincorporated areas of the county to
pay for at least a part of the Sheriff's
Department road patrols. The city of

Sanford did Ihe same thing.
The resolution notes the cities will
work cooperatively with the County
Commission to resolve the differences in
law enforcement and will withhold
earlier resolutions putting the county on
notice that the cities jointly were going to
sue the county on double taxation.
Included in the resolution is the "un­
derstanding that the Seminole County

Commission will respond to the findings
of the committee by Jan. 15, 1983," by
outlining their approach to the resolution
in the tim e schedule set by the com­
mittee.
The committee asked the county by
May 1,1983, tell the cities how it plans to
solve budgetarily the dispute and cities in
tum will respond to the county plan by
June 1. - DONNA ESTES

Rectal Cancer Losing
Its Stigma
^
^
NEW YORK (UPI) - A new consumer
survey by Ihe American Cancer Society
has produced evidence the stigma of
colon and rectum cancers is disap­
pearing.
This is based on how freely people
interviewed talked about the two
malignancies once called "the cancer
that nobody talks about."
Dr. Robert V. P. Hutter, national
president of the Am erican Cancer
Society and a pathologist from St.
Barnabas Medical Center in Iivingston,
N.J., said the fact that people talk about

the once unmentionable cancers today is
a step toward better and earlier detection
— when the cancers are most subject to
successful treatment.

Twenty-five years ago, he noted,
people didn't talk about cancer, per se,
out in the open. But in an evolutionary
process, all of that has changed — except
for colon-rectal cancer, the last types to
lose their stigma.
Hutter was pleased that the survey also
found people more talkative about the
cancers.

+ 3.1%
$617 8

S728 4

»552

SOURCE Oltice ot Managemen! and Budget

Tin* 1!)H2 fiscal year, which closed Sept. 30 and was
the Reagan administration's first full year, was a
record-setter in all respects. Total revenues were
up3.1 percent over lilHl, but some $33 billion short
of the original budget estimate. Actual ex­
penditures. up 10.8 percent, were $71 billion more
than budgeted. The result was a deficit almost
double IDHI’s and more than twice as large as
budgeted.

FBI A gent Expects
To Be Indicted
WASHINGTON (UPI) — A veteran FBI agenl, whose
clandestine missions helped build cases against a mob
kingpin and a union leader, said he expects to be indicted
today on charges involving diamond theft and tax evasion.
FBI agent Edward Tickel said in a telephone interview
Sunday night he expects to be indicted by federal grand
Juries in Washington and nearby Alexandria, Va., for in­
terstate transportation of stolen diamonds, tax evasion,
attempted burglary, obstruction of justice and soliciting
perjury.
But Tickel said he is innocent and plans to surrender and
fight all charges.

2 From Lake M a ry, 2 F ro m Sanford

4 Nabbed In Cocaine, Marijuana Bust

WEATHER

Tlmolhy L Hall
Pamela S Slinimann
Lletner E L,ey
Charles R. Hoover. Orange City
Edmund E. Marlin. Orange City
BIRTHS
Don and Hope Beverly, a baby
girl. Sanford
DISCHARG E!

Sanlord:
Bryan W. Allman
Theima L. Murray
Calhy E Scipio
Baby Girl Scipio
Esther M Ward
Robin J. Allan, Allamonia
Springs
baby girl Allen, Alfamonft
Springs

««*« «•»*•&gt;

Monday, November 22, 1912—Voi. 75. No. 10
M I t o M Dally m t M a r , eacesM laterSay By The Santar*
Morale, loc.. HSU. Franch Ave.. Sanford. Fie. u n l.
Clast Wattage Paid at laniard. PMrlda m i l
Meow Deilveryt Week. ll.M i Meat*. le.lSt « MaaMa. W M t
Vaar, M A S . By Malls WaeO ll.tS i Maolfe. SS.1t.- a Months,
SSM I j T oot, SI7.lt

I

By Fiscal 1984

ByTENI YARBOROUGH
Herald Staff Writer
A Sanford man was being held in the Seminole County Jail
today while three other people were released on bond after
being arrested by undercover agents who purchased about
35,000 worth of cocaine and marijuana at a Sanford home
Sunday.
Kevin Wayne Cummings, 27, of 500 Palmetto Ave., Sanford,
was being held under 35,000 bond following his arrest on three
counts of sale and delivery of cocaine, conspiracy to deliver
cocaine, possession of less than 20 gram s of marijuana and
drug paraphernalia, sheriff's deputies said.
Agents also arrested Pamela l«e Collins, 27, of 500 Palmetto
Ave., Sanford; Douglas Gray Vickers 11,22, of 162 S. Fifth St.,
lake Mary; and Roderick Boyd Hall, 23, of 349 Evansdale
Road, la k e Mary.
Ms. Collins was charged with two counts of sale and delivery
of cocaine, conspiracy to deliver cocaine and possession of
drug paraphernalia, agents said. Vickers was charged with
delivery of cocaine, marijuana and possession of cocaine
paraphernalia. Hall was charged with possession of marijuana
and drug paraphernalia and delivery of cocaine, agents said.
Agents served a search warrant at the Palmetto Avenue
home early Sunday morning after undercover narcotics of­
ficers said they purchased cocaine and m arijuana there on
three separate occasions.
At the time the raid was made, two undercover agents were
inside the home finalizing a drug deal which they said netted
about 32,000 worth of cocaine and about 13,000 worth of
marijuana.

Action Reports
*

Fires

* Courts
■k Police
MAN ROBBED OF 9950
A 66-year-old Sanford man was robbed of 3950 after two knife
and club-wielding men attacked him along Airport Boulevard
and 20lh Street at 5 a.m. Sunday.
David King, of 2715 Hughey St., told deputies he was walking
along the street toward a grocery store where he planned to
make a telephone call when two men drove up beside him.
King said the men stopped their vehicle and ordered him to
hand over his money to them, deputies said.
King said whew he told the men he didn't have any money,
one produced a knife and the other hit him with a club,
knocking him to the ground. King told deputies the men then
took his cash and fled.
DUI ARRESTS
The following people were arrested in Seminole County on a
charge of driving under the Influence (DUI) of alcoholic
beverages:
— Ray Keough Anderson, 21, of Orlando, arrested today.
Anderson was arrested by Altamonte Springs police along
Longwood Ave. and North Street.
— Joel Martin Heath, 24, of Union Park, arrested 3 a.m.
Sunday. Heath was arrested by deputies along State Road 46

near Old Monroe Road, Sanford.
— Michael Lee Pace, 24, of 10 liitus lak e Drive,
Casselberry, arrested 10 p.m. Saturday, charged with DUI and
driving without headlights. Pace was arrested by the Florida
Highway Patrol along State Road 434 at U.S. Highway 17-92,
longwood.
— Patrick John Gregg, 43, of Orlando, arrested 11:30 p.m.
Friday. Gregg was arrested by the Florida Highway Patrol
along Fern Park Boulevard.
— Allen Ray Severance. 30, of Orlando, arrested 6:52 p.m.
Sunday, charged with DUI, reckless driving and no driver's
license. Severance was arrested by deputies along State Road
436 near Lake Howell lane.
SANFORD FIRE CALLS
The Sanford Fire Department responded to the following
calls:
Friday
— 3:36 a.m., 104 Castle Brewer Court, rescue.
— 4:59 a.m., 115 Bethune Circle, rescue.
— 6:01 a.m., 911 Cypress Ave., rescue.
— 7:25 a.m., 2656 Grandview Ave., rescue.
— 7:36 a.m., 704B Geneva Gardens, rescue.
— 7:45 a.m ., Seminole County Jail, resuce.
— 2:16 p.m., 2525 Ridgewood Ave., rescue.
— 6:17 p.m., 1613 Southwest Road, rescue.
Saturday
— 2:58 a.m., 10184 Maple Ave., rescue.
— 12:13 p.m., 1500 French Ave., rescue.
— 11:56 p.m., Seventh St. and Cypress Ave., false alarm.
Sunday
— 4:49 p.m., 1100 Orange Ave., rescue.
— 11:15 p.m., 13th St. and Pomegranite Ave., rescue.

AREA DEATHS
MRS. IOLA M. NOLTEE
Mrs. Iota M. Noltee, 66, of
192 Mobile Ave. in Longwood
died Thursday at Florida
Hospital-Altamonte. Born
Oct. 8, 1916, In Perry, N.Y.,
she moved to Longwood from
Rochester, N.Y., In 1979. She
was a homemaker and a
Baptist.
Survivors include her
husband, Donald A.; two sons,
Bruce J. and David A., both of
Rochester;
her
father,
George Miller, of Rochester;
a sister, Leona Cummings, of
Rochester; and two grand­
children.
Semoran Funeral Home,
Altamonte Springs, Is In
charge of arrangements.
JULIAN C. KIDW1LER
Julian C. Kldwller, 85, of
Florida living Retirement
Center In Forest City died
Friday at Florida HospitalApopka. Bom in Martinsburg,
W. Va., he waa a retired
elementary school principal
and a member of the Florida
living Seven-day Adventist
Church. He was a member of
the
National
Retired
Teachers Association.
He is survived by his wife,
Thelma F., of Forest City.

Semoran Funeral Home,
Altamonte Springs, is in
charge of arrangements.
COL CLARENCE W.
GRIFFITH
Col Clarence Wendell
Griffith, 57. of 208 Riverbend
Coup in Longwood died
Thursday at his home. Bom
June 29, 1925, in Huntington,
Ind., he moved to Longwood
from Omaha, Neb., in 1175. He
was retired from the U S. Air
Force and was of the United
Brethren faith.
Survivors include his wife,
Alice; h is mother, Mrs.
Kathryn Griffith, of Wtlshlre,
N.Y., two daughters, M ia
Kimberely and M ia Tamara
Griffith, both of Longwood;
two brothers, Dr. Russell E.,
of Oxford, Ohio, and Harold
D., of Glendora, Calif.
Baldwin-Fairchild Funeral
Home, Altamonte Springs, Is
in charge of arrangements.
MRS. DOROTHY H. MAGEE
Mrs. Dorothy Howard
Magee, 72, of 588 BrtoUde
Circle in MalUaad died
Friday at Orlando Regional
Medical Center. Bora Nov. 6,
1910, in Camden, N.J., ihe
moved to Maitland from
Atlanta, in IMS. She was a

homemaker and a Protestant.
She was a member of the
Central Florida Gem and
Mineral Society.
Survivors
include
a
daughter, Mrs. Bonnie M.
Harwell, of Maitland; a son,
Kerry B., of Lake Jackson,
Texas; two brothers, John R.
Howard, of Titusville, and
Frank Howard, of Orlando; a
slater,
Mrs.
Beatrice
Edwards, of Atlanta; and five
grandchildren.
Baldwln-Fairchild Funeral
Home, Altamonte Springs, is
in. charge of arrangements.
MBS CARLA JUNE
MeFADDEN
Miss Carla June McFadden,
44, of M01 Lakevlew Drive in
Fern Park died Thursday at
Florida Hospital-Altamonte.
Bom Oct. 3,1938, In Cairo, IU.,
she moved to Fem Park from
Charleston, Mo., in 1964. She
was a cashier and a member
of the Fem Park Church of
Nazarene.
She Is survived by a
brother, James W. McFadden
Jr., of Anaheim, Calif.
Baldwln-Fairchild Funeral
Home, Altamonte Springs, is
in charge of arrangements.

CHARLES B. HARRIS
Charles Bristol Harris, 77,
of Hobson Street In Altamonte
Springs, died Nov. 10 at
Florida Hospital-Altamonte.
Born June 27, 1905, in
Wilkesboro, N.C.,he moved to
Altamonte Springs from
Eustis In 1965. He was a
retired Army major and a
Methodist.
Survivors Include his wife,
Abbie; three sisters, Mrs. Ilia
label, of Raleigh, N.C., Mrs.
Madeline Herman, of Lenoir,
N.C., and Miss Ruby Harris,
of Wilkesboro; and a brother,
Spencer, of Wilkesboro.
Baldwln-Fairchild Funeral
Home, Altamonte Springs, is
In charge of arrangements.
MRS. GERTRUDE C.
WATSON
Mrs. Gertrude C. Watson,
69, of GO Statler Drive In
DeBary, died Saturday at
West Volusia Memorial
Hospital. Bom March 3,1913,
in Chicago, she moved to
DeBary from Pennsylvania in
1171 She was a homemaker.
Survivors include her
brother, Arthur F. Collins Jr.,
DeLand.
Allen-Summerhill Funeral
Home, Orange City, is in
charge of arrangements.

A
Changing
Profession
A century ago, "undertaken" did little more
than provide a "coffin" and a horiedrawn
carriage. Today's funeral director completes
specialized education so that he can coordi­
nate numerous details and relieve the family
of every possible burden.

C .R A M K O W
F U N E R A L HOM E
la n v isr Aiurom boulevard
SANFORD. H O H ID A
I H I P H O N r 377.12IJ
Wit IIA M | liMAMKOW

�Monday, Nov.

Evening H erald, Sanford, FI.

22 , 1982-JA

FLORIDA
IN BRIEF
Jurors To Decide Today
If Henderson Should Die
TAVARES i UPI l—Confessed killer Robert Dale
Henderson has been found guilty of three counts of
first-degree murder for killing three hitchhikers in
Hernando County, part of a five-state crime spree he
described to police.
Henderson, a 37-year-old laborer turned drifter
turned outlaw, showed little emotion late Saturday
when the jury returned the guilty verdict after two
hours of deliberation. He just rocked gently back and
forth in his chair.
During the second stage of the trial today, Jurors
were to decide if Henderson should die in the electric
chair or be sentenced to life in prison on each of the
three first-degree murder counts. The final decision
will be made by Fifth Circuit Judge L.R. Huffstetler.

Nude Is Not Lewd'
KISSIMMEE (U PI)—A group of “ free beach"
supporters, claiming "nude is not lewd," sav they will
fight a state indecent exposure law both in the court­
room and on Florida's beaches.
The group says it plans to openly oppose the indecent
exposure law that has been used to arrest nude
beachgoers through civil disobedience, by sunbathing
nude and fighting the expected arrests as a test case.
Free beach proponents say some Florida sheriffs are
perverting the intent of state indecent exposure laws
by including simple nudism under a heading of lewd
and lascivious conduct.

Bush's Fate To Be Decided
FORT MYERS (U PI)—Jurors considering the fate
of John E arl Bush, who convicted Bush for his part in
the kidnap-murder of teenage Evinrude heiress
Frances Julia Slater, now have to decide if he deserves
to die.
Circuit Judge C. Pfeiffer Trowbridge ordered the 12
jurors who found Bush guilty Friday to return to the
l&gt;ee County Courthouse today to recommend whether
Bush should be sentenced to die in the electric chair or
spend the rest of his life in prison.

WORLD
IN BRIEF
More Changes Expected
In Russian Leadership
MOSCOW (UPI) — Soviet leader Yuri Andropov set
the scene for expected high-level changes in the
Politburo with the Central Committee expected to
meet today to discuss key appointments within the
Communist Party hierarchy.
The Central Committee was expected to debate the
problems of the Soviet economy, staggering under the
burden of four consecutive poor harvests, plus inef­
ficiency and waste in both agriculture and industry.
Andropov, who is linked with the economic reforms
in Hungary' where he served as ambassador from 1954
to 1957, appeared Sunday to be marshaling the
ideological justification he needed for sweeping
reforms.

Soviet Weapons Studied
United Press International
Pentagon experts today began studying the military
lessons of Israel's war in Lebanon, including a look at
Soviet-made hardware captured in the conflict and the
technology that shattered Syria's air defense system.
In Lebanon, U.S. envoy Philip Habib met Sunday and
today with the leaders of Lebanon's Moslem groups in
an effort to ease mounting factional fighting.

Guard Hl/acks Plane
BERLIN (U PI) — A militia man assigned to guard a
Polish airliner against hijackers forced it to fly to West
Berlin today, firing shots of Joy Into the air on his
arrival at a U.S. Air Force base, a U.S. Army
spokesman said.
The guard, who was assigned to the Polish national
airliner at the last moment, used the opportunity to flee
to the West, the spokesman said.
The man hijacked the LOT AN-24 carrying 31
passengers and a crew of four while on a flight from
Warsaw to Gdansk, the spokesman said.

EARLY ARRIVAL
Santa Claus arrived in Winter Springs Saturday
for the town's Christmas parade. The Navy's
Color (luard and Drill Team also participated in
the holiday procession along with several floats
and marching hands.

Herald Photei by Dee Oatrell

Reagan Opts For M X 'Dense Pack' Plan
WASHINGTON (UPI) — President Reagan, intent on
countering a Soviet military buildup, tonight will outline a plan
to deploy the MX missile hi a "dense pack" formation, ad­
ministration officials said.
Reagan, in what aides described as "a major address on
defense and arms control," will deliver a televised speech
from the Oval Office at 8 p.m. EST, several hours after an­
nouncing his choice of a basing mode for the MX.
Administration officials said Sunday the president, in accord
with the recommendations of Defense Secretary Casper
Weinberger, had chosen a plan that would place 100 MX
missiles in closely spaced launch canisters in the West.
The concept, known as "dense pack," assumes the bulk of
the MX force would survive a Soviet attack because the first
explosions of incoming warheads would destroy or deflect
others that followed.
Weinberger has estimated the "dense pack" option could
cost $25 billion.
The missiles would be located in a field 14 miles long near a
m ilitary base in Wyoming, Nevada or New Mexico. Critics

As proposed by the
administration, annual
military
spending
would almost double in
the five-year period
19X1-85. Figure for 19X1
is actu a l budgeted
spending
authority.
Following years are
estimates.

One of the men, Wayne A.
Moore, 18, New Caney, was
arrested at a friend's house on
the north side of Springfield
early Sunday, officials said.
He w u scheduled to appear in
federal court today.
Moore was being held at the
Sangamon County Jail in lieu
of a |1 million cash bond. The
other two men remained at
large and are considered
armed and "extremely
dangerous," FBI special
agent Joseph E. Ondrula said.
Moore, his 20-year-old bro­
ther, Matthew M., New
Caney, and Don B. Anderson,
41, Pearland, were charged
with obstructing the business
of abortion clinics owned by
Dr. Hector ZevaUos.

Zevallos and his wife,
Rosalie Jean, were kidnapped
from their posh Edwardsville,
111., home Aug. 12 and
released unharmed eight days
later. Zevallos, S3, operates
the Hope Clinic for Women in
Granite City and owns the
building that houses another
clinic In Shreveport, I*.
Ondrula said Madison
County authorities plan to file
state charges against the
three men for kidnapping.
A group calling itself the
"Army of God" took credit for
the abduction in a ransom
letter and tape-recording left
at a St. Louis park. The
c o m m u n ic a tio n lis te d
"E pistlas" discussing the
group's views on abortion and
the U.S. OopMttatloo .
"From the indication that
we have, the Army of God —
as the press has reported it in
• the past — is most likely
comprised of these three
individuals. The motive, u
w u stated in the Epistles, Is

Christmas Trees
Need Rewiring

contend the plan offers no greater protection than other
deployment options.
The question of how and where to base the MX — the newest

Sanford To Take Over Youth Baseball Program
Sanford's youth baseball program
which traditionally has some 600 young
people, 7 to 15 years old, involved during
the spring-summer season isn't going to
falter because of lack of volunteers.
Sanford Recreation D irector Jim
Jernigan is expected to report to the
Sanford City Commission at its 7 p in.
meeting today that the city's recreation
department will take over the full
operation of the program.
The departm ent to tally ran the
program until four years ago, Jernigan
said, when a volunteer Youth Baseball

for state competition.
For more than 20 years the city has
provided facilities, lighting and money
for umpires to fund the 350-100 games
held during the season. Jernigan said,
noting that even though the city is taking
over the program again, it will still be
necessary to have volunteer assistants to
aid regular recreatio n departm ent
employees and part-tune city assistants
next season.
Jernigan said the Youth Baseball
Association did a good job, but the job got
to be a "grind for some parents and
volunteers." - DONNA ESTES

Association (YBA) began handling the
program with assistance and cooperation
from the city.
But, Jernigan said, the association has
turned the program back lo the city
because of a lack of volunteers.
Jernigan said the YBA had been
responsible for fund-raising and finding
sponsors for the various teams.
The city youth baseball season
generally begins the second week in April
and extends through league playoffs in
mid-July and then the post-season
tournaments when local teams qualify

The Downtown Sanford Business Association is soliciting
organizations and civic groups to pay the $150 costs of
rewiring each of the seven Christmas trees used during the
holiday season to decorate the downtown area.
Any club or organization wishing to take on a project may
call DBA secretary Martha Yancey at 323-0794.
Mrs. Yancey said that beginning Dec. 16, downtown
stores will remain open daily until 7:30 p.m.
In the meantime, the Holiday Inn la k e Monroe Marina,
in cooperation with DBA. is sponsoring its first annual boat
decorating contest, Mrs. Yancey said.
Judging will be the evening of Dec. 14 and the first prize
winner will be announced the following day.
First prize is a $200 gift certificate to the Holiday Inn,
la k e Monroe Marina. Those wishing additional information
may call 323-1910.
New DBA officers are: Fred Salgado, President
Keeling, vice president: Ron Dycus, treasurer, and
directors, Don Knight, Boyd Coleman, Bill Painter, Bob
lav en b erry and Bill Maclauchlin.
Full memberships in the organization are $100.
Among the benefits of membership in DBA is a window
decal and identification card for each member.
The motto of the organization is: "We believe in San­
ford."

Biologists Help Anim als Fight M an s Onslaught
GAINESVIUJ? (UPI) - About 15 biologists
at Florida's Wildlife Research laboratory are
helping endangered animals battle extinction
as civilization gobbles up the state's wilder­
ness areas.
"We work with everything from birds to
alligators to panthers,” chief biologist Tommy
Hines said. "We deal in management
problems — problems caused mainly by a lack
of knowledge about a species or group of
anim als.”
The laboratory, a division of the Qame and
Fresh Water Fish Commission, develops
projects to protect the rare animals roaming
the state. It also assists in safeguarding more
common species of wildlife.
" I ’d say we’ve got more endangered species
here in Florida than anywhere else in the
mainland United States," Hines said. "There
might be more in Hawaii or somewhere else.
But if we don't have the most, we're close."
Researchers blame the decline of animals
such as panthers, crocodiles, wood storks and
whooping cranes chiefly on land development.
"T hat's the root cause if most of our
problems," Hines said. " It's by far worse in
south Florida than in other parts of the state,
because there are more people living there
and that's where the population is growing

fastest.
"If you have more people, you're going to
have more problems," he said. “ The trouble
comes from not only the outright loss of land to
development, but the severe modification of
the land that's left.
"If something isn’t done to turn back the tide
of development in this state, we’re going to
have a very difficult time maintaining certain
wildlife populations," he said. "W e’re going to
see our wildlife and wild land values severely
compromised."
Florida panthers probably are more scarce
than any creature in the state, Hines said.
"W e’re down to about 20-plus anim als," he
said. “ You don't have to use much imagination
to realize that those 20 panthers’ chances for
survival are threatened by Increasing land
development."
Hines said changes in the land could rapidly
force the big cats into extinction.
“ Wild communities are elastic and have
withstood m an’s onslaught surprisingly well,
but that comes to an end after a while," he
said. "And there's continuing development
around the panther range.”

off," he said.
In another project, state biologists are
trying to determ ine whether Florida’s sandhill
cranes can serve as surrogate parents for
endangered whooping cranes.
"We're checking to see whether the san­
dhills will hatch whooping crane eggs and
raise the young," Hines said. "If it works,
there's a possibility we might be able to
establish a resident whooping crane popu­
lation."
The agency also is concerned with solving

Jr

the abortion issue," Ondrula
said at a news conference.
However, he said there was
no evidence to link the three
with another letter from the
"Army of God" claiming the
group had burned two Florida
abortion clinics. That letter
w u delivered to a television
station in Tampa last May.
U.S. Attorney Frederick
Hess said money also w u a
motive but declined to reveal
the amount the trio had
sought.
Ondrula said a tip from a
concerned citizen last month
led the FBI to the men, who lie
described as "transients"
from Texas.
Moore w u arrested just 20
miles sway from the concrete
and steel bunkers in which the
Zevalloses were held during
the abduction. The bunkers, in
a desolate fleld near Dliopolls,
had been used to store am­
munition during World War
II.
The elder Moore was

extortion while the other
prohibits tra v e l betw een
states for an Illegal act.

"*55

If convicted of both crimes,
the men could face a
maximum penalty of 30 years
In Jail snd a $15,000 fine.

SANFORD CIVIC CENTER
SEMINOLE BOULEVARD

FR EE

SANFORD, FLORIDA

SM lN Al t A A M I N A f »O N

(&gt;«, ,*•

«■
MM.Ii

I
I I m I k I « h«

K E Y N O T E SPEAKER
U.S. C O N G R ESS M A N JOHN C O N Y E R S

1 OlUIMU •&gt; LMI H
4 HlMtMII MHWWI
■HMMO .

PLEASE MAKE YOUR RESERVATIONS
IN ADVANCE BY CALLING

Pm
*•••
0»4r*+***' •**«r
»«•**• • Xs«»of

I

s ra
g
•ttUfcl

(305) 323-4360 831-2023

SANFORD PAIN
CONTROL CLINIC
M l H v As » N I f I
. 9

I*

]

7:30 P.M.

i

s &amp; 'f i s ? ’ » » » .1

THE SEMINOLE EMPLOYMENT ECONOMIC

DECEMBER 3, 1982

‘H I T ’* * N im umwl
tcanitmrim i i m I m k

BL* C r R i C

YOU ARE INVITED TO ATTEND

Annual rFmtuls
UBaiwueT

The wildlife lab has equipped five panthers
with radio collars “so we can keep track of
them and possibly keep them from being killed

believed to be in Texas.
Anderson, who was last seen
in Springfield a few days ago,
also is wanted in Texas on two
felony charges, the FBI said.
Moore w u decribed u 6
feet tall, weighing 175 pounds,
with brown hair and hazel
eyes. Anderson was said to be
about 5 feet 9 inches tall,
weighing 225 pounds, with
brown hair and blue eyes.
The men were charged
under the federal Hobbs and
Travel acts. One act bans
individuals from obstructing
In te rsta te com m erce by

conflicts between humans and wild animals.
"We had a problem with bears and
beekeepers a while back," Hines said. "We
have black bears in areas where honey is
raised. All the beekeepers’ work was being
ruined when the bears would sneak in and raid
the hives.
“ We looked at the problem and investigated
several possible solutions," Hines said. "What
it boiled down lo was electric fences. Put an
electric fence around your beehives and the
bear stays out."

DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION

'Army O f God' Members Charged With Extortion
SPRINGFIELD, Dl. (UPI)
— Three Texans who waged a
battle against abortion as the
"Army of God" have been
charged with federal ex­
tortion in the abduction of an
abortion clinic founder and
his wife, the FBI says.

addition to the U.S. nuclear arsenal — has clouded the fate of
the program for more than a year. Reagan rejected a C arter
administration plan to shuttle the missiles among multiple
underground shelters in the West.

The Total Military Budget 1981-S5

ill I • $*» .
' i b l N t H A
N A N t ( &gt;W l&gt;

323 5 7 6 3

.(
fc

TAX DEDUCTIBLE CONTRIBUTION
$20 PER PERSON

K

P O Bo« 2074. Bldg. t. Sjniord Airport.Sanford. Flo 37771

J
J*
i .

�Evening Herald

Winners of October's School Bus Safety Week
coloring contest were announced last week bySeminole County School officials.
More than 3,000 entries were submitted bySeminole County students. About 200 entries
were expected, Karen Coleman, administrative
trainee, said.

IUSPS «S1 7(0 ■

300 N. FRENCH AVE., SANFORD, FI A 32771
Area Code 305-322-2611 or 831-9993
M onday, N ovem ber 22, 1982—4A
Wayne D Doyle, Publisher
Thomas Giordano, Managing Edito r
Robert Lovenbury, Advertising and Circulation Director

Home Delivery: Week, $1.00; Month, $4.25; 6 Months, $24.00;
Year, $45.00. By Mail: Week, $1.25; Month. $5 25; 6 Months,
$30.00;
Year, $57,00.
a

#

By M IC H E A l.B F .H A

Both Sides Playing
Nicaragua Hardball
The Soviet bloc is playing political ami military
hardball in its effort to transform revolutionary
Nicaragua into a second Cuba. It should come as
no surprise, therefore, that the Reagan ad­
ministration has reverted to a little hardball of its
own to prevent the establishment of another
Soviet base in the Western Hemisphere.
Specifically, the administration is providing
limited amounts of arms and funds to anti­
communist Nicaraguan exiles operating from
bases along the Nicaraguan-Honduren border.
'Hie administration is also embarked upon an
ambitious program of military assistance to
Honduras, a poor, underpopulated country whose
democratically elected civilian government feels
very threatened by the flow of Soviet bloc arms
into neighboring Nicaragua.
Some administration critics are viewing all this
with alarm and worrying aloud that Mr. Reagan
is heading directly for a second Hay of Pigs-style
debacle. They also charge that U.S.-sponsored
covert actions along the Nicaraguan border
combined with the buildup of Honduran forces
could drag the latter into open conflict with
Nicaragua’s Cuban-trained army.
[•’or the most part, these fears strike us as
overwrought. Nicaragua's shaky Samlinista
regime is not likely to provoke a war with Hon­
duras so long as the Hondurans enjoy strong and
unequivocal support from Washington. Con­
versely. a wavering U.S. commitment to Hon­
duras could well prompt the Nicaraguans to incite
and supply an insurgency in Honduras as they are
already doing in nearby El Salvador.
Which brings us to the administration s covert
action program in support of Nicaraguan exiles.
’Hie original intent of this relatively modest effort
was to equip a force of anti-communist guerrillas
capable of stopping the flow of arms from
Nicaragua across the rugged terrain of south­
western Honduras to Marxist insurgents in El
Salvador.
In recent months, the Nicaraguan exiles have
also been staging raids into Nicaragua itself. If
these raids help to keep the Sadinistas off balance
and encourage opposition groups inside
Nicaragua to oppose their country’s drift into the
Soviet orbit, then legitimate U.S. interests will be
well served.
The one danger the administration must guard
against is an exclusive reliance on and iden­
tification with theSomocistas, the remnants of the
late Nicaraguan dictator Anastasio Somoza's
armed forces. There is good reason to believe that
these former members of Somoza's national
guard are still feared and hated by many
Nicaraguans, who nevertheless have come to
detest the Sandinistas as well.
Regrettably, many and perhaps most of the
recruits for anti-Sandinista guerrilla activities
are coming from the ranks of the Somocistas in
Honduras. The Reagan administration must
broaden the political base of the Nicaraguan
exiles if a covert operations strategy is to be truly
effective.
But with that caveat, we see nothing improper
or ill-advised in countering Nicaragua’s aid for
Marxist-led guerrillas in El Salvador and
Guatemala. The alternative, after all, is to do
nothing effective against a Sandinista regime
clearly bent on subverting its neighbors and
remaking all of Central America into a string of
Soviet-Cuban satellites.

BERRY $ WORLD

m

i

*7 had to get out ot the house. My daughters
are driving me nuts with ‘ValspeakT

Winners In the Kindergarten-Grade 2 contest
were: first place, lis a t^Salle, second grade,
Lake Mary; second place, Kevin Barreto, kin­
dergarten, Sterling Park; third place, Adrienne
Nephew, second grade, Altamonte Springs.
Winners in the Grade 3-Grade 5 contest were:
first place, Glenn Green, fifth grade. lak e
Mary ; second place, Sean Gifford, fourth grade,
la k e Orienta; third place, Tina Henderson, fifth

grade. Geneva.
Seminole County also sent two teams of bus
drivers to the Suncoast Safety Road-e-o in
Sarasota. The teams placed fourth and sixth in
the 10-team competition.
Competing for the district were Debbie
Riggall, Gary ladford, Kathryn Rittlinger,
Flora Fam bro, Dorothy P alm er. Darlene
Haffner, June Boyles, Susan Hicks, Kim Akins.
Sylvia Hiltell, Clara Ripley, Betty J. Smith,
Cynthia Pratt, Carol Ross. Deborah Burkhardt,
Philip Hallemeyer, Jackie Ensrud, Julie Blount,
Patricia Bowen, Beverly Hughes, Dixie Flannagln.

School Superintendent Robert Hughes was
placed in an unusual situation at this week's reorganizational meeting when he was made ac­
ting chairman As a result, he kept forgetting to
ask the board members for a vote on things, like
who the new chairman would be.
Hughes was also called upon to serve as
keynote speaker at a Tuesday afternoon
reception for retired educators. A former
teacher and principal, Hughes told the gathering
that it was hard to get their attention because
•‘as typical teachers" they all wanted to talk and
didn't want to listen to anybody.
At that gathering were teachers with a com­
bined total of 1,918 years of experience.

ANTHONY HARRIGAN

ROBERT W AG M AN

Elections
And
Economics

Bradley's

For months to come, Americans will be
pondering the meaning of the mid-term
elections.
While a definitive reading of the elections
may be premature, there is considerable
evidence to support the view that they
amounted to a draw. The electorate definitely
didn’t repudiate President Reagan and his
policies. On the other hand, he did not receive
an unqualified endorsement.
The voting public isn't prepared to return
the federal government to the liberals who
created the mess in the first place. They are
unhappy, however, with the steep downturn in
the economy.
This suggests that the Reagan ad­
ministration, while holding to its general
course, needs to seek fresh approaches to
economic difficulties.
While seeking new approaches, the ad­
ministration must stand firm against liberal
panaceas. The first to be advanced is a
mammoth federal jobs program. Such a
program would do nothing to strengthen the
economy. Instead, it would be an updated,
more expensive version of the old New Deal
WPA program.
A program of make-work jobs isn't what
Americans need. Their future lies with a
revival of general business prospects. This, in
turn, depends on less government, not more.
The administration also has a duty to hold
firm on national defense. The armed forces
ore suffering from years of neglect.
The liberals will insist that defense spen­
ding should be cut m order to finance newsocial programs. Assuring the survival of the
American people is the No. 1 social program
for the nation.
At the same time, Congress and the
Executive must endeavor to reduce personnel
costs in the anned services, which account
for 57 percent ot the detenu budget. They
should scrap antiquated m ilitary bases that
are sacred cows for Individual congressmen.
And they should curb spending on militarypensions. Military retirees should not have a
belter break than other citizens.
Both Congress and the Executive will be
hard put to find the political will and stamina
to put a cap on cost of living increases for
Social Security recipients. That step Is
necessary, proper and just, however.
One new element that the Reagan ad­
m in istratio n should insist upon is
strengthening of trade laws in order to
achieve fair trade. l.arge numbers of
Americans are out of work because of unfair
foreign competition. More Americans will be
jobless unless action IS taken. The ad­
ministration must make sure that the liberals
don't steal this vital issue from them.

PLEASE WRITE
letters to the editor are welcomed for
publication. All letters must be ilgned,
with a mailing address and, U possible, a
(telephone number so the Identity of the
writer may be verified. The Evening
Herald will respect the wishes of wrtteri
who do not want their names in print The’
Evening Herald also reserve* the tight to
edit letters to eliminate libel or to conform
to space requirements.

Race Issue
In Defeat?

'Here's to another new beginning!'

JEFFREY HART

Yale Glee Club Silenced
The administration of Yale University has
suddenly discovered a new university policy,
viz., that the university, its spokesmen and its
organizations do not take sides on political
issues.
Luckily for Yale’s president, A. Batletl
Giamatti. tills policy was not in effect a few
months ago when he sent a presidential
message to the freshman class denouncing
the Moral Majority, or when he came out
against school prayer, or when he endorsed
federal aid to higher education.
Indeed, such a policy might well have
resulted In the Impeachment ot Mr.
Giam atli's predecessor Kingman Brewster,
who liked to denounce Spiro Agnew and
declare that Black Panthers could not get a
fair trial in New Haven.
The new policy emerged when it appeared
that the Yale Glee Hub was in dire peril of
being associated with the Polish aspiration
for freedom and democracy.
H ere's what happened. D ecem ber 13
happens to be the anniversary' of the
declaration of martial law in Poland, and the
consequent dissolution of Solidarity, the
Polish labor union which has become the
focus of free aspirations. The United States
Information Agency taking note of the ap­
proaching anniversary, decided to com­
memorate it and planned a program for the
occasion.
As part of the program, the USIA decided to
ask a singing group to render "lx-t Poland Be
Poland," the official anthem of Solidarity. An
official asked the Yale Glee G ub to par­
ticipate. It Is an outstanding choral group,
and frequently goes on International tours.
The director of the glee club said yes. Yale’s
President Giamatti said ... No!
Pressed for its reasons, the universityissued the following s ta te m e n t:' "The
university turned down the State Department
request to have the Glee G ub especially
record for the USIA the Solidarity Anthem
because the university does not take sides or

lend its name to one political cause or another
no matter how compelling that cause m ay be
or how sympathetic members of the central
a (Immigration may be U it. To do otherwise
is to create a precedent whereby the
university is compelled to pick and choose
among various political causes."
How awkward that would be, wouldn’t it?
Just imagine Yale might be asked to disapproveof the Gulag or the gas chambers or the
demographic theories of Pol Pot. One would
imagine it to be precisely the role of an in­
stitution claiming to represent moral and
'Intellectual probity to come out for, at the
very least, freedom.
As it happens, I sometimes stay at the Yale
Gub in New York City when I am in that city.
On one com er of that building there is a
plaque stating that Nathan Hale, a Yale
graduate, was executed by the British arm y
at a location nearby. His last words, "I regret
that 1 have but one life to give for my coun­
try," would no doubt be embarrassing to Mr.
Giamatti. The existence of that plaque on the
wall of the Yale Gub seems to me to imply
that Yale is willing to take sides, at least in
retrospect, a s regards the A m erican
Revolution. So do the Civil War, World War I
and World War II honor rolls inside the club.
Will Mr. Giamatti now have them
removed?
The instincts of the USIA are sound. But we
can do more, and here Is an idea for Mr.
Reagan. Why has it not occurred to any
American administration to encourage the
formation of go. emments-ln-exile for the
satellite nations, on the model of exile
governments In Ixmdon during World War II?
The current Polish quisling dictatorship has
no legitim acy whatsoever. No sa te llite
government would last for 24 hours without
the backing of Soviet force.
Such exile governments could do many
things. They could broadcast with special
clout to their countries. They could draw up
alternative econom ic proposals for th e
stagnant satellite economies.

WASHINGTON (NEA) - In the race to
succeed California Gov. Jerry Brown, Los
Angeles Mayor Tom Bradley lost by a razorthin margin to George Deukmejian, the
state's attorney general. Although Bradley is
black, most news accounts have dismissed
racism as the reason for his defeat.
The preferred reading of the returns i3 that
Bradley was done in by the unusually heavyconservative voter turnout generated by
Proposition 15, an initiative to limit private
ownership of handguns. The gun-control
initiative was California's "hot" issue this
year, and those on both sides spent about $6
million to air their views. The initiative was
overwhelmingly defeated by a margin of
more than 2 to 1 — due primarily to a veryheavy voter turnout In traditionally con­
servative areas, such as Orange County and
the central valley.
This heavy anti-gun-control vote u n ­
doubtedly gave the conservative Deukmejian
many more votes than otherwise might have
been expected — but there is striking
evidence that race was a pivotal factor in the
voting, and that Bradley's defeat was not due
solely to Proposition 15.
Bradley was 12 points ahead in the polls
three weeks before the election, yet he was
defeated by seven-tenths of a percent on Nov.
2, losing by some 52,000 votes out of 7.5 million
cast. C alifornia's Democrats have a
registration advantage of almost 1 million;
for Bradley to have lost, it is estimated that
more than 500,000 Democrats and in­
dependents had to cross over and vote for
Deukmejian. Had fewer than 30,000 of these
voters not done so, Bradley would have won.
To attribute Bradley's defeat to the heavyconservative turnout, one must ignore the
defection of these Democrats and in­
dependents. And to say that racism was not a
factor is to Ignore the results of several polls
that were conducted as voters left the voting
booths.
These polls indicate that most of the 500,000
Democrats and independents who crossed
over were not so much voting for Deukmejian
as they were voting against Bradley. Their
reasons varied considerably — but on the
issue of race, some of the polling results are
striking.
The most startling result was obtained by
the respected California Poll. One of the
questions it asked those leaving the polls was
whether they had voted against Bradley
because he is black — and 3 percent said they
had. Pollsters arc accustomed to getting
"socially acceptable" (that Is, not truthful)
answers to this type of question. Therefore,
for 3 percent to admit to a stranger with a
clipboard that race was any factor at all — let
alone a major or deciding factor — is
amazing: It Indicates that the number of
those voting against Bradley because of his
race probably was far greater than this 3
percent.
In another exit poll, commissioned by the
U s Angeles Times, voters were asked if they
believed that government was doing too much
for blacks and other minorities. Of registered
Democrats and Independents who said they
voted for Deukmejian, 8 percent answered
affirmatively. It must be reasonably assumed
that race played some role In the voting
decision ot this 8 percent.

JACK ANDERSON

Andropov s Rise M eans Detente's End
WASHINGTON - Despite the Kremlin’s
not-so-subtle disinformation campaign to
paint Yuri Andropov as a moderate, or even a
liberal, the new boss ol the Soviet Union is a
hardliner whose elevation means rough times
ahead for the long-cufferlng Russian people
and the rest of the world.
Actually, anyone who thinks a man who ran
the KGB for 15 yean could be a liberal must
also believe In the Tooth Fairy. The KGB is a
combination of the CIA, the FBI and the
Bureau of Prisons — but without any legal
restraints whatsoever. The head jailer Is now
in charge of the entire country.
For years, our intelligence agencies
mistakenly thought that no one with a KGB
background could hope to rise to the top of the
Kremlin heap. At most, they believed,
Andropov would have veto power over any
would-be succeaior to Leonid Brahnev.
As I reported three y e a n ago, the CIA
evaluated Andropov’s position this way:
"‘Any serious contender for the job of general
secretary m u* ensure that he has the tadt
approval of the security organ If not Its active
support."
Within the la* year, however, Western
intelligence began to rethink tta assessment
of Andropov’s chances. In tact, as early as
la * May, I reported my intelligence sources’
hunch that Andropov would be Use one to grab

the brass ring on the Kremlin merry-goround.
The CIA may have been slow to consider the
possibility that Andropov would be
Brezhnev's successor, but it was never under
any illusions about the nature of the beast, In
November 1979, sources told my associate
Bob Sherman that Andropov Is "an astute,
ruthless party bureaucrat whose cold and
calculating attitude" fit him well for his job
as KGB boss. Any notion that he has softened
since then is dangerously wishful thinking.
What this means for Sovlet-American
relations is that detente is dead. As long as
Andropov is In charge at the Kremlin, the
United States can expect a tough Soviet policy
on all fronta. The man who supervised the
crlulling of Ute Hungarian uprising as Soviet
ambassador In 1956 can hardly be expected to
take a lenient position on Poland or other
restive satellites.
The big que*ion now Is how long Andropov
will remain In charge. I've seen secret CIA
reporta oa his health; he Is far from robust.
At 61, Andropov Is a relative stripling by the
rtandards of the Soviet gerontocracy. But be
has serious health problems. In 1966, he
suffered a heart attack, and in the mid-1970s
he required surgery so major that he spent 10
weeks in the hospital, according to the CIA

»*vld**"*V* *vr

Power, as Henry Kissinger fondly believed,
may be the ultimate aphrodisiac; it may also
be the ultimate tonic. Brezhnev was In frail
health for y ea n , yet he never relinquished his
grip on the Soviet power apparatus. Andropov
can be expected to be every bit as tenacious
now that he has reached the pinnacle.
In the Byzantine atmosphere of the
Kremlin, no one can relax In the top job. The
other old men Andropov beat oik will not give
up easily.
But Andropov still has the ace In the hole
that put him where he Is: the loyalty of the
KGB. The
men who run the Gulag
Archipelago now have one of their own In
control for the first time In Soviet history, and
they're not likely to abdicate their newly
enhanced power and prestige.
DRESS RIGHT!! Starting Dec. 1. the 110
Inspectors in the Interior Department's Office
of Surface Mining will be required to wear
uniforms, and some of them aren't at all
pleased by. the guasy-up effort.
One inspector sourly suggested that If the
field troops have to wear uniforms, then the
director of the office should also be required
to. And another filed this complaint with his
bosses:
"The OSM inspectors would be similar to
Park Rangers chasing the elusive Yogi Bear.
We would be likened to tookeepers with whips

taming the anim als In the cages.
"The next step after uniforms Is the Issuing
of guns to complete the Police Power concept.
Instead of Issuing a Notice of Violation, a
warning shot would be fired. Authorization to
fire fatal shots would probably be reserved by
Interior Secretary (James) Watt."
One Inspector even complained that he was
allergic to the $250 polyester uniform. It did
him no good; he was Issued a cotton one.
HEADLINES AND FOOTNOTES: When
the Arthritis Foundation took over a two-story
building In Atlanta for its new national
headquarters, It had to Install an elevator to
accommodate arthritic* who can’t negotiate
the Aalre. What's odd about the lack of an
elevator Is that the building's previous owner
was the Otis Elevator Co. The elevator In­
stalled was an OUs.
— "Blue Monday" Is evidently a wellfounded expression. According to the
National Center for Health Statistics, more
people commit suicide on Monday than on any
other day of the week. Saturday has the
lowest score in suicides - but the highest In
motor-vehicle deaths, 13 percent more than
on Tuesday, the lowest day. Saturday is also
the day when m o* murders occur; Us
average 1*74 percent higher than Wednesday,
the lowest In that respect.

i
«

�SPORTS
__________________________________

Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Monday, Nov. 71, 1881— SA

Gallagher's Shot Lifts
SCC Past Dade North

Rotary Plans
W ork Perfectly
This bowl picking can be a sticky
business, even on the high school
level.
George G rant, chairman of the
Rotary Bowl football com m ittee,
matched up ta k e Howell and Oviedo a
couple weeks ago for Saturday’s game
at Lyman High School.
He extended the invitations last
Friday. Oviedo, on a hot streak,
snapped up the chance to play, ta k e
Howell, disillusioned by a tough loss to
Apopka, took a little longer, but after
a team vote, accepted.
The paring, of course, is a natural,
take Howell and Oviedo shared the
same school while the Silver Hawks'
complex w as being constructed. They
haven't played in a couple years,
though, because former Oviedo coach
Joe Montgomery discontinued the
rivalry.
It will be the first time in a long time
that two Seminole County teams make
up the bowl. It took some foresight,
however, on the part of Grant. He
reasoned that Lyman, probably the
county’s best team , would win the
district and earn a spot in the stale
playoffs.
TTie Greyhounds didn't disappoint
him when they nipped take Brantley,
6-4, Friday. It was the first district
and Five S tar Conference cham ­
pionship for Lyman. The winner of
District 4A-10, nevertheless, has not
been determined.
Tonight at 8 in Satellite Beach,
Merritt Island, Vcro Beach and the
host team will use the tiebreaker
system to determine who plays the
'Hounds. All three team s finished tied
for first during the regular season.
Anyway, everything worked out as
Grant had expected. If take Howell
somehow had made the playoffs,
Lyman w as to be the backup team.
“We think it should be one of the
best Rotary Bowl matchups ever,"
said Grant. "We’re expecting a big
crowd."
Kickoff is 8 p.m. Saturday.
While Lym an, Oviedo and ta k e
Howell are concerned with bowls and
playoffs, th ere are a few other teams
in the county which didn’t mind the
season drawing to a close.
Seminole finished its worst season
ever. The Tribe lost ail 10 games,
take M ary, stepping into its first
varsity schedule, lost 9 of 10. The
Rams whipped Wymore Tech, 27-0, in
the fourth game of the year, ta k e
Brantley, starting mostly sophomores
and juniors, won two games. The
Patriots cam e on al the end of the
season. T hose two wins, coin­
cidentally, were over Seminole (18-14)
and ta k e M ary (54-6). -SAM COOK

By SAM COOK
Herald Sports Editor
When Seminole Community College's
R aid ers needed a lak e-ch arg e guy
Saturday night at SCC, sophomore David
G allagher stepped b ackw ard, then
forward.
The pencil-thin guard from Edgewater
drew an offensive foul with 23 seconds
left to play al one end of Ihe court ami
then tossed in an off-balance shot from 19
feet out al the buzzer to give the Raiders
a dramatic 84-82 victory over Miami
Dade North.
"It wasn’t even a jum p shot," said
first-year SCC coach Bill Payne. “David
just stepped between two guys and threw
it up. Somehow it went in."
The shot set off a wild post-game
celebration as the jubilant Raiders
paraded Gallagher around on their
shoulders before settling down to accept
the first-place trophy. On Friday, SCC
trimmed Edison while Miami took care
of Palm Beach in the first night of the
SCC Haider Tournament.
The double-night success gives Payne
a 2-0 start in his first year as a junior
college coach. Miami, runnerup at the
national championships last year, is 1-1.
In Saturday's consolation game. Palm
Beach ripped Edison, 84-61.
Palm Beach, 8-1, will be SCC's nexl
opponent. The Raiders take on Palm
Beach Tuesday night in ta k e Worth al
7:30.
Although Gallagher grabbed the Iftro’s
role at the end of the game, Payne
pointed to the play of freshman Delvin
Everett as making the difference.
“ Delvin played like he was possessed,"
said Payne. “He was tough on the of­
fensive boards too."
The 6-5 Apopka graduate hit 8 of 12 field
goals and 8 of 11 free throws for 24 points.
He also nabbed 13 rebounds, eight
coming from his own backboard.

J . C . Basketball

’It wasn't even a jump shot.
David (Gallagher) just

FC.M-FGA FTM-FTA-TP
6
24
24
8-11
24
6-12
6-8
16
812
6-10
16
4-7
B
3-4
2-10
0-0
2
1-3
CM)
4
2-5
4-5
8
2-3
0-0
0
0-1
26-S7
31-42
84
Dade North (821
8-10
23
Williams
7-14
4-6
10
Walker
3-14
0-0
Rodriguez
10
0-2
2-4
10
Innocent
4-13
Fernandez
6-7
8
1-2
Fairley
34
7
2-6
0-0
C. Davis
4
2-2
B. Davis
2-2
18
7-11
2-2
G arke
2
M
27-35
82
26-64
Three point goals - Whitney, B. Davis
2, Williams.
Halftime: Seminole 44, Miami DadeNorth 41; Fouls: Miami Dade North 31,
Sem inole 27; Fouled out: F a irly ,
Rodriguez, Kulper, Phelps.

SCC (84)
Phelps
Everett
Kuiper
Sutton
Whitney
Koldenhof
Merthie
Gallagher
Wright

“Delvin’s been a very pleasant sur­
prise," continued Payne. Everett wasn’t
originally slated for a starter's role, but
when Kevin Jerry Smith didn’t take
enough hours at one school last year, he
moved into the picture.
The Raiders outrebounded Miami, 4324, which took the sling out of 29 tur­
novers. Dade North turned the ball over
17 times. Rudy Kuiper, Seminole's 6-10
center, collected seven rebounds and
tossed In 16 points. Sanford’s Bernard

stepped between two guys
and threw it up. Somehow
it went in.’— Bill Payne
Merthie came off the bench to grab seven
boards.
It was Merthie's dunk on a follow up
shot at the first half buzzer which gave
the Raiders a 44-41 halftime advantage.
The final 20 m inutes were touch-andgo. Each team took the lead at different
intervals, although the spread was no
more than six points.
The Raiders trailed, though, by three
points with 30 seconds left until Sanford's
Keith Whilney threw in a three-point goal
for an 8242 deadlock.
"II musl have been from 30 feel and it
banked in," said Payne.
Gallagher took over from lhal point,
drawing the charge with 23 seconds to go.
The Raiders ran down the final seconds
until the 811 guard stepped between two
defenders and pumped in the 19-footer.
Everett and team m ate Kuiper joined
Miami's B rad D avis and Malcolm
Williams and P alm Beach's Mike
Guthrie on the All-Tournament team
RAIDER RAP — Point guard Jimmy
Payton will miss at least 10 days with
ligament damage in his knee, Payne said
Monday.
Payton, who played at Spruce Creek
last year, was injured in a collision un­
derneath (he backboards during Friday’s
victory over Edison Junior College.
The freshman guard was replaced by
Luis Phelps who Joins Everett, Kuiper,
Whitney and Ricky Sutton in Ihe starting
lineup.

Htrsld Photo by Bonn!* Witboldt

Drlvin Everett, SCC's 6-5 forward, converts one of his eight of­
fensive rebounds for a bucket over Miami Dade North’s Wesley
Davis. Haider guard Kicky Sutton (right) waits for the rebound. SCC
whipped Miami, 8I-K2, tin a last-second shot by David Gallagher to
win the SCC Haider Tournament.
__________

Kush Calls Colts A Disgrace
NEW YORK (U PI) — Are you starting
to get the feeling the professional football
season is dragging a little?
I am.
Particularly after seeing Sunday's
atrocity at Shea Stadium where Ihe New
York Jets would've been far more
merciful had they pulled the plug on the
comataose Baltimore Colts before tor­
turing and butchering them the way they
did in a 37-0 blood bath.
If it wasn’t the worst football game I've
ever seen, then it had to come close, and
when I offered that thought to Frank
Kush, the Colts' coach, without really
trying to demean his young, inex­
perienced ball club, he didn't argue with
me at all, he merely confirmed my
opinion.
"It was a lol worse than it looked," he
said.
Coming off the strike, Kush was openly
disgusted at how the Jets had rubbed the
Colts’ noses in the dirt. By the intcrmlsssion, the Jets had built them­
selves a 27-point lead without hardly
exerting themselves and I heard one fan
ask another if he knew where to go to get
refunds.

H trtM Phot** by Bannla Witbuldl

Jason Varitek, Hock Lake Green running back, straight arm s an
opponent on his way to a big gain Saturday against the Tuskawilla
Hams. Hock Lake lost to Tuskawilla, 6-2, in Junior Feewee action.
See Wednesday’s Evening Herald for a complete rundown of SYSA
action from Saturday.

"They could've scored another 20
points if they had wanted to run it up,"
Kush said about the Jets, who looked
surprisingly sharp in gaining a total of
476 yards. "They scored practically
whenever they wanted. Our defense
couldn't stop 'em . The only thing that did
was the goal posts."

Milton
Richman
UPI Sports Kdilor

the Colts dating back to before all the
players went out on strike eight weeks
ago.
In his first season as Baltimore coach,
Kush is going about it properly in
remolding Ihe Colls. Unquestionably,
they'll be one of Ihe better team s in the
NFL some day. Sunday wasn't lhal day.
Not the way they played following four
days of practice after the strike was
settled last Tuesday night.
"I thought it was a disgrace to foot­
ball,” Kush said of his team 's per­
formance. "Especially our defense. We
were pathetic. They scored practically
whenever they wanted. Our tackling was
inept to say the least. We alt stunk out the
joint."
Kush wasn’t talking behind the Colts'
backs, either. Only a few minutes before,
he had talked to them behind closed
doors and told them the same thing he
was telling all the media outside the
dressing room now.

The Jets made a few m istakes but they
hardly showed in contrast with the Colts’
It was second victory in three games general ineptitude. Jets’ back Freeman
for the Jets and the third straight loss for McNeil ran up and down the field almost

Brantley Girls Finish 4th In State
Hie take Brantley girls turned in an
impressive team effort Saturday and ran
to a fourth place finish in the 4A State
Cross Country Championships at the
Detand Airport.
The Lady Patriots finished with 159
points, edging the fifth and sixth place
teams (John I. Leonard and Brandon) by
just one point. The powerful Orange Park
girls ran away with the state title with 71
points. S p u c e Creek’s Carmen Gardner
claimed the Individual title with a time of
U:11.6 in the two mile event.
Lake Brantley was led by senior
standout Ellen Stem, who, in her last
meet for the Patriots, turned in her best
performance of the year with a time of
11:11 and a 20th place finish. Stem's
previous best time was 11:11.
Behind S tern , Kathryn Hayward
docked in at 11:30 in 29th place, Joanne
Hayward w as 33rd at 12:42, Barbara
Holmes beat her best time with a 13:03
and 47th place (her previous beat was
13:04), Laura Barnhill was SSth st 13:24,
Kim Pacetelli was 06th at 12:84, shaving
a second off her previous best, and
Melissa Meghdadi was 96th with t time of
14:22.

CLASS AAA A

Cross Country
“They (Branliey girls) ran ss i total
team," Lake Brantley coach Jim Mar­
shall said. "It wss a good effort, they ran
really well."
In the boys meet, ta k e Howell’s Kenny
Cheeseman finished second with a time
of 14:43.0,11 seconds behind the Mate's
best, Winter Park’s Brian Jaeger.
Tampa Leto edged Largo, 103-106 for the
state team title. Lyman’s boys finished
ninth with 226 points.
In the A-2A meet, Trinity Prep's girls
finished 10th while the Saints' boys team
did not finish in the top 10. Hie Lady
Saints should be strong again next year
as its two top m in ers, Adrienne
Politowicx (ninth grade) and Katie Sima
(eighth grade) will return.
Jacksonville Episcopal cruised to the
state crown with 61 points while Daytona
Beach Father tapes was a dose second
with M points. Trinity Prep wound up
with 2B points. - CHRIS TOTE*

•ovs
T u m i : I. Tamp* L*fo 103, I Largo 10*. ]
Miami Killian 129; 4, Edgawatcr 1*0; 3. John I.
Leonard 172; *. Hialeah Miami Lake* 210; 7,
Miami Jjckson 215; I Choclawhatchea 211; 9
Lyman 22*. 10 Winter Park 2)0
Individual*: 1 Brian Jaeger, Winter Park
14 32 1; 2 Ken Cheewman, Maitland Lake
Howell 14 4) *; 3 Manuel Gontalei. Miami
Jackson 14 4*1; 4 Greg Green, Fort
Lauderdale Dillard IS 00, 3 John Henry,
Miami Killian 13:04 2; * Sieve Mandell,
Coconut Creek IS 0* 2; 7. Oavid Barbaih,
Lauderdale Lake* Boyd Andarion 9 3 : 1 3 I.
Lawrence Bentley, Fort Walton Beach
Chocatawhatchee, IS 19 5; 9. Keilh Batten,
Clearwater 15:21.7; ID thru Palmer, Largo
15 25 7
OIRLS
Team*: I. Orange Park 71; 2. SI Petersburg
Northeast 178. 3 Tampa Leto 1*4; 4. Lake
Brantley 139; 3. Lake Worm Leonard 1*0; *.
Brandon 1*0; 7, Winter Park U l; 8 Coconut
Creak 114; 9 Clearwater 224, 10 Colonial 229.
Individuals: I, Carmen Gardner. Spruce
Creek 11:11.4; 2. Dorothy Rhodes. SI. Peter
sburg Northeast 11:27.3; ]. Darcy Scarlett,
Jacksonville Wollson 11:122; 4. M ery
Dougherty, SI. Petersburg Northeast 1133 $,
3. Juanita Sagura. Tampa Leto 11:110; a.
Michelle Lambert, Pensacola Pine Forest
11.*3 0; 7. Charlene Flanagan, Miami Springs
11:413; I. Donna Kufftl. Dunedin 11:31.3; 9.
Sandra Braasch, Orange Perk 11:38.0; 10 Lori
Lltltll, Tampa Leto, II 004; (II. Louise Sch
weitter. West Orange II 02 01

CLASS A AA
BOYS
Ttarns: 1. Miami Ransom Everglade*IS; 2.
Miami Btltn 92; 1. PahoLee 111, 4 Jackson
viHe Bolle* 1*4; S. Gainesville P.K Yonga 172;
* Orlando Lake Highland Prep 211; 7. Boca
Raton St Andrews 217; I. Boca Raton
Christian 231; 9 Pace 234; 10 Tampa Prep 280.
Individuals: I. Bill Convey, Miemi Ransom
Everglades 14.321; 2 Sam Gadlrey,
Jerksonvillt Bolle* 13 711; 1. Keith Wallace,
Palmetto 13:1*8; 4 Edward Myers, Boca
Raton SI. Andrew* 13:17.1; 3 Mike Hamilton,
Newberry 13 4$*; 4. Juan Alvarty, Miami
Belen 13:4*1; 7. Joseph Zauntr, Gainesville P.
K. Yonge li e* ] ; 8. John Wisker, Jacksonville
Bolle* 55 30 5; 9 Eric Alvarey, Miami Belen
14 3* 7: 10 Eugene Dunham, Gainesville P.K.
Yonge i* oo
•
OIRLS
Teams: I. Jacksonville Episcopal I I ; 1.
Diylona Beach Father Lopej 19; 1.
Jacksonville Boiiet 117; a Fort Pierce John
Carroll 141; S. Clearwater Central Catholic
147; a Miami Ransom Everglades 170; 7,
Pensacola Catholic 171; I. Miami Westminister
Christian 171; 9. Fort Lauderdale West
minister Academy 281; 10. Trinity Prep 2IS.
individuals: 1 Donna Combs. Jacksonville
Episcopal 11:20.1; 1. Tamara Reardan,
Jacksonville Episcopal 11:101; l. Carolina
Hooper. Miami Westminister Christian
13:01 3; 4 Frances Vivleno. Pensacola
Catholic 12 07 0. 3. Eltiebelh Baum,
Jacksonville Bolle* 11:14 0; a. Lynn Feld
pausch. Miami Ransom Everglades 11:130. 7.
Oeborah Pastoor, Miami Westminister
Christian l l : U .S ;

Ellen Stern (left)

at will, scoring their first touchdown less
than a minute and a half after the game
started wills a 34-yard romp and their last
one in the third quarter on a 32-yard pass
from Richard Todd, who ulso tossed
another payoff pilch of 23 yards to ta m
Jones in the second quarter.
While all this was going on, Pat Leahy,
the Jets’ place kicker, was chipping In
with three field goals of 43. 37 and 19
yards, and fullback Mike Auguslynlak
was capping another 87-yard scoring
drive with a one-yard touchdown run.
Things got so bad for the Colts that al
one point free safety Nesby Glasgow
couldn't help but plead with one of the
officials, “ how about giving us a break?"
It didn't help. The official, referee Fred
Wyanl, Just looked at him.
There were some light moments, too.
McNeil netted 123 yards in 22 carries ‘
but on some of the occasions when he was
stopped, his Colt tackier would greet him
with a cheerful “hello." And when the
Jets were penalized 15 yards for unneces- .
sary roughness because tackle Marty
Lyons hit Pagel on the side of his helmet .
trying to get at him, Pagel looked over at
Jets' end Mark Gastlneau and said to
him, "bad call."
A somewhat disappointing crowd of
46,970 was on hand to see the Jets and
Colts resum e the season after the strike.
The no-shows num bered 13,402,
Generally, they were to be envied. They
didn't m iss much unless they enjoyed •
watching mistakes.

�*A— Evening Htr&lt;ld, Santord, FI.

Monday, Nov. » , 1 983

Cowboys Survive

Fans Stay A w ay

Tampa Bay Rally

A s NFL Returns

IRVING, Texas i UPI) — Since he had
played his share of football, he felt he
knew th e real thing when he saw it.
So Roger Staubach, sitting in a
broadcasting booth at Texas Stadium
Sunday, did not hesitate to share his
opinion with those who had tuned in.
"They started off with some intensity,"
said the former Dallas Cowboys quar­
terback. "But the play is not of NFL
caliber."
The problem with T am pa Bay,
however, was that it needed to play a
little better than it did Sunday, even
though the Buccaneers performed at a
more efficient level than did the Dallas
Cowboys.
Playing before more empty seats than
they have seen at home in seven years,
the Cowboys somehow survived against
Tampa Bay Sunday, 14-9, thus resuming
the strike-interrupted season on a win­
ning, if unimpressive, note
Dallas is now 2-1 in the nine-game
season and Tampa Bay has yet tn pick up
a victory.
The Bucs outgalned Dallas, 382 yards
to 185, suffered only one turnover and
controlled the ball for almost 36 minutes
to Just over 24 minutes for the Cowboys.
But even though Tampa Bay quar­

United Press International
National Football le a g u e players
came back to the playing fields Sunday.
The same was not true for NFL fans.

terback Doug Williams completed 23-of42 passes for 258 yards, he could not push
it into the end zone.
The Bucs had to settle for field goals of
26, 27 and 26 yards by Bill Capece, who
also missed a 24-yard attempt in the
fourth quarter that would have moved his
team within another three-pointer of
victory.
Dallas, m eanw hile, had just two
reasonable opportunities to score and did
so both times — on a 9-yard pass from
Danny White to Drew Pearson late in the
first half and on a 3-yard run by player
representative Robert Newhouse with
3:57 remaining in the third period.
Newhouse’s touchdown turned out to be
the game winner, although the Bucs
threatened tim e after time to pull the
game out.
Tampa Bay took over for the last time
at its own 43 with 1:15 to play and
Williams threw 10 straight passes. One of
them was caught by flanker Kevin House
Just out of the end zone and the last one
was grabbed by tight end Jimmie Giles
at the 10-yard line. But Giles fumbled as
he was falling to the turf and Dallas
safety Michael Downs scooped up the
ball at the 1-yard line to preserve the
victory.

After settling a strike that wiped out
eight weeks of play, players returned to
action Sunday to continue the ab­
breviated NFL season and were greeted
by less-than-enthusiastic audiences It
appeared that many fans were soured by
the players' walkout and decided to show
their displeasure by not appearing at
games.
The most notable cases were in New
Orleans, Cleveland and Buffalo but even
football-crazed Dallas was caught up in
strike apathy. There were 31,989 empty
seats in the 71,330-seat Superdome in
New Orleans, where only 39,341 fans
showed up. C leveland's Municipal
Stadium, which holds 80,322, had 29,041
empty seats and Rich Stadium in Buf­
falo, which holds 80,020, had 24,814 emp­
ties.

Gators, FSU Gain Bowls
United Press International
Florida won its way into the Blue
Bonnet! Bowl, Florida State lost its way
into the Gator Bowl and Miami spent
Sunday sitting and waiting.

College Football

Hurricane
Coach
Howard
Schnellenberger said Sunday, " I'm
disappointed that the (bowli committees
did not extend an invitation to us, but
sometimes th a t's the way the ball
bounces Now we go into earnest
preparation for the Cincinnati's game
this Saturday."
At New Orleans, the Gators were never
able to put the Green Wave away as
expected, but the victory and bowl in­
vitation ended the day on a satisfying
note.
Florida A&amp;M and Bethune-Cookman
Miami and its two freshmen quar­ finished their seasons in their annual
terbacks, Mark Vanderwende and Vinnie game Saturday and FAMU prevailed, 29Testaverde, took it to North Carolina 14. Florida A&amp;M wound up at 6-5 and
Slate, 41-3, but the hoped-for bowl in­ Bethune-Cookman closed with a 5-5
vitation dJdn't come Saturday.
mark.

Florida (7-3) Jumped on Tulanc 30-17 at
the Superdome Saturday night and then
accepted the Blue Bonnett invitation to
face Arkansas. That door was open for
the Gators by the Air Force, which upset
Notre Dame, 30-17, to knock the Irish out
of the bowl picture.
Floridu State l8-2i had its eye on the
Orange Bowl but ISU look the bid away
from the Scminoles with a 55-21 rout. The
consolation prize turned out to be the
Gator Bowl bid to face West Virginia.

SPORTS
IN BRIEF

Acre Impressive At State,
Howell Girls Finish 8th
Karen Acre recorded two third-place finishes to lead
the Lady Silver Hawks of ta k e Howell to eighth place
at the 4A State Swimming Championships Saturday in
Gainesville.
ta k e Howell finished the meet with 58 points, Winter
P ark's girls won with 140 points.
Acre posted a 1:54.29 for third place in the 200 free
and she finished third in the 500 free with a time of
5:03.5.
Winter Park also claimed the boys championship
with 240 points. Lyman’s boys finished 13th with 27
points.
In the class A 2A and 3A state meet at the Sharidan
Aquatic Club in tangwood, the Trinity Prep boys
finished seventh with 54 points. Jacksonville Bolles
won the meet with 147 points.
Oviedo's Andy Gill finished second in the 100
backstroke with a time of 52.70 while Trinity’s Roger
Brill was third in the diving competition with 397.10
points.

Sonlcs' Streak Ended By Nets
United Press International
The 1948-49 Washington Capitols, whose roster in­
cluded the likes of Clarence Hermsen and Sidney
Hertzberg, can rest easy.
The Seattle SuperSonics have lost a game.
Looking to set the record for most victories at the
start of the season, the SuperSonics ran into an
unexpected roadblock Sunday night. The New Jersey
Nets, behind 23 points by Buck Williams, rolled to a 11191 victory to stop the Sonics' winning streak at 12.
The Capitols, of the infant days of the NBA, won their
first 15 games. The 1957-58 Boston Celtics started the
year 14-0.
How bad was Seattle, usually untouchable at home?
"We didn't play well, we didn’t shoot the ball well, we
didn’t play loose," said Seattle coach Lenny Wilkins.
"It's hard to figure why everyone goes cold."
In other games, Milwaukee defeated Indiana 100-98,
Portland blitied Cleveland 129-79 and Los Angeles beat
Denver 143-129.

Stastny Brothers Too Much
UiMed Press lalenatfoaa]
Wayne Gretsky, who ought to know about scoring,
has a theory about the success of the skating StaAny
brothers.
"They all play the exact same style. You can change
their sweaters around and not know the difference.
Every one of them knows what the other will do
because that’s what they would do in the same
situation," Gretsky said Sunday night
Gretsky had ample opportunity to analyse the
Stastnya’ motion during the Quebec Nordtquee' 1-7
shootout victory over his Oilers at Edmonton, Alberta.
Peter and Marian StaAny scored two goals each and
along with brother Anton combined for 11 points and
five goals.

I

GREAT
SCOTT

Chuck Scott, Vanderbilt University wide receiver,
was one of (lie key reasons the Commodores have
turned it around this year with a 7-:i record and a
herth in the Hall of Fam e Howl against the Air
. Force Academy at Birmingham, Ala. Scott, a
sophomore starter, played for the Lake Howell
Silver Hawks' district championship team two
years ago.

V irg in ia Tops Poll
NF.W YORK fUPh - The University
of Virginia begins its tour this season
offering a last look at one of college
basketball's show-stopping acts.
With the Ralph Sampson stage spec­
tacular entering its fourth year, the
Cavaliers enter the 1982-83 season as the
No. 1 team in the country.
" It's nice and, again, it's flattering
being No. 1 in the preseason," says

Virginia coach Terry Holland. "But it
means you haven't earned it at all."
Virginia received 23 first-place votes
and 572 points over the weekend from the
UPI Board of Coarhes.
Defending NCAA champion North
Carolina, with eight first-place votes and
502 points, was second followed by No. 3
Georgetown i seven first-place votes and
479 points), No. 4 Kentucky (one firstplace vote and 397 points) and No. 5
Iouisville (376 points).

Porter Tires Out,

A string of 44 consecutive sellouts at
Texas Stadium was broken on the NFL's
reopening Sunday following the strike
and there were 15,523 empty seats on an
almost balmy afternoon.
Play was expected to be sloppy on the
first day back since most clubs had only
two or three days to prepare themselves
after settlement of the strike on Tuesday.
But the play generally was better than
expected, considering the long layoff,
with notable examples such as Joe
Montana of San F rancisco, Joe
Theismann of W ashington, Terry
Bradshaw of P ittsb u rg h , William
Andrews of Atlanta and Freeman McNeil
of the New York Jets.
Montana threw for a career-high 408
yards and had three second-half touch­
down passes to lead the NFL champion
SanVrancisco 49ers to their first victory
of the season, 31-20 over the Cardinals.
Montana hit Russ Francis with a 6yard TD pass midway through the third
period to wipe out a 13-10 St. tauis lead,
then added a 33-yarder to Dwight Clark
and a 17-yarder to E arl Cooper in the last
period to break open the game. He hit 26of-39 passes.
Theismann threw two first-half TI)
passes to lead unbeaten Washington to a
27-17 victory over the winless New York
Giants. He was 16-of-24 for 185 yards for a
67 per cent completion m ark through
three games.

NEW SMYRNA BEACH - After speedway
officials found that the tires on apparent first
place finisher taRoy Porter's car were illegal,
David Rogers was declared the winner of the
50 lap "Cracker 200 Tune-Up late model race
on Saturday night at New Smyrna Speedway.
Rogers, along with Butch lindley. Junior
Hanley, Gary Balough, Jim Tuning, Jim Cope,
Rick Wilson and Duane Pierson will be among
the favorites to win this Sunday afternoon's
Fifth Annual "Florida Cracker 200" ta te
Model Championship here on the high-banked
half-mile of pavement.
Following Rogers were Don Biedemian,
Duane Pierson, Chris Dellarco and Danny
Bowman.
Just like he did the previous week, Joe
Coupas drove the Terry Taylor Ford thunder
car to victory ahead of fastest qualifier Bruce
tawrence, with Chuck Burkhalter, Barry
Ownby and quickly improving young pilot
Mike Filch rounding out the lop five. Heat
winners were Coupas and newcomer Tony
Altiere from the Tampa Bay area.
Steve Ixkey won the street Jock finale, with
Orie Smith, the 1982 track champion, taking
the runner-up spot ahead of Rick Clouser,
Johnny Grainger and second heat winner
Doug Howard.
Top five four-cylinder finishers were W. G.
Watts, Gene Van Alstine, Stan Eads, Eddie
Tovat and Ralph Zelich. Dale Clouser was the
spectator races winner.

Auto R acing
Vet

LA TE M O D ELS
Qualifier LeRoy Porter. Orlando, I) vg«

"Cracker TOO ' Tune Up ISO lapsl — I David
Wogcrv Orlando 7 Don Biederman, Oakville. O nt,
Canada J Duane Pierson. Villa Park. Ill . t Chris
Dellarco Sanlord 5 Danny Bowman. Vero Beach,
6 Jack Hackney. Korona 7 Floyd Miner. Ormond
Beach 8 Mike Riley. Daytona Beach. 9 "Bear
m an" Townsend. New Port Richey; 10 Marc
Biackner. New Smyrna Beach
THUN D ER CARS
Fastest Qualifier Bruce Lawrence. OeLand. 1»»0
set
Firstheat (1 laps! — I Joe Coupas. Molly Hill
Second heat II laps* — 1 Tony Altiere. Largo
Feature (JO laps)
I Joe Coupas. Molly Mill; J
Bruce Lawrence, Deland J Chuck Burkhalter.
Orlando 4 Barry Ownby. Daytona Beach. S Mike
Fitch. New Smyrna Beach
S TR E E TS TO C K S
Firstheat II lapsl
I Steve Lokey.Orlando
Second heat 16 lapsl
I Doug Young. Lake Helen
Feature (IS lapsl
I Steve Lokey, Orlando J
One Smith. Orlando, ) Rick Clauser, Melbourne 4
Johnny Grainger. New Smyrna Beach. S Doug
Howard. Lake Helen
F O U R C Y L IN D E R S
First heat ( I laps)
1 Gene Van Alstine,
Hockledge
Second heat (A lapsl
I Paul Brasstield. DeLand
Fcalurr 110 laps)
1 W G Watts. Daytona
Beach J Gene Van Alstine. Rockledge; J Stan
Eads. Titusville. 4 Eddie Tovat, Apopka. S Ralph
Zelich, Orlando
SPECTATOR R ACES
Top Eliminator (One on One) - I Dale Clouser.
Melbourne
Feature IS lapsl
I Clouser

Richmond Wins Western 500;
Waltrip Takes Winston Cup
RIVERSIDE, Calif. (UPI) - Tim Richmond
won the season-ending Winston Western 500 on
the NASCAR circuit Sunday while Darrel
Waltrip finished third to defend his Winston
Cup championship at Riverside International
Raceway.
Waltrip entered the final stop on the 30-race
circuit Just 22 points ahead of Bobby Allison,
who could have won the championship with a
strong showing and a poor showing by Waltrip.
But Allison was hampered by car trouble
throughout the 119-lap race and was forced to
drop out Ax laps short of the checkered flag.
Richmond of Doolie, N.C., averaged 99.823
mph in his Buick to finish 7.85 second ahead of
Ricky Rudd of Chesapeake, Va. The former
sprint car driver and 1900 Indianapolis 500
Rookie of the Year earned 824,730 for his
victory.
Allison. «4, of Hueytown, Ala., had his beA
chance to win the NASCAR title he has sought
for almost two decades.

As a result ol a record breaking qualifying
time of 114.995 mph, Waltrip, 35, of Franklin,
Tenn,, started in the pole position. Allison, who
finished second among the 42 qualifiers, also
shared a position on the front row of the
starting grid.
Waltrip led the first four laps but Allison
grabbed the lead for five laps before Rich­
mond took over. After the field pitted, Allijon
regained the lead but soon loA it back to Rich­
mond who led at the halfway mark.
On lap 65, Allison blew a tire and took a
shortcut into the pits. After his crew changed
the shredded tire, Allison Immediately
rejoined the field but was flagged back into the
pits a second time and forced to take a 30
second time penalty as the rest of the field
raced by.
After the second Aop, Allison was one Up
down in 14th pUce. Within 10 laps he blew
another lire, resulting in another costly pit
stop.

Bradshaw threw TD passes of 17 yards
to Greg Hawthorne, 17 yards to Bennie
Cunningham and 27 yards to Jim Smith
to power unbeaten httsb u rg h to a 24-10
victory over Houston. Overall, Bradshaw
hit 16-of-40 passes for 228 yards.
McNeil ran 34 yards for one TD and
caught a 32-yard scoring pass from
Richard Todd for another as the Jets
scored on all five of their possessions in
routing Baltimore 27-0.
McNeil, who rushed for 123 yards on 22
carries to become the first Jet ever to
have three straight 100-yard rushing
games, also scored in the third period
when he look a pass from Todd and raced
32 yards for a TD
Andrews had 119 yards rushing including a 19-yard TD burst — and
caught seven passes for 88 yards to lead
Atlanta to a 34-17 victory over the Ins
Angeles Rams.
In other games, it was Cincinnati 18
Philadelphia 14; Chicago 20 Detroit 17;
New Orleans 27 Kansas City 17; Miami 9
Buffalo 7; Green Bay 26 Minnesota 7;
Cleveland 10 New England 7; Dallas 14
Tampa Bay 9; and Seattle 17 Denver 10.
San Diego is at the Ins Angeles Raiders
tonight.
Theism ann played like he never
missed eight weeks of work.
"I'd have to say this is the best groove
I've been in during my NFL career," he
said after hitting 16-of-24 passes for 185
yards. "It's always nice to be 3-0 when
you play a nine game schedule. In a
regular 16-game season, a 3-0 start
doesn’t mean so much."
Bradshaw, however, said the rust was
evident at times.
"At times, I really felt comfortable,
and at other times, I felt a little bit
confused." he explained. "The Oilers are
always tough for us, so anytime we can
win here, we have to be tickled."
Montana was happy with his per­
formance and the 49ers' first victory.
" I t’s a good way to come back," said
Montana, who hit 26-of-39 passes. "My
timing wasn't there early and I made a
lot of mistakes. I thought we played well
but I wasn't surprised. We looked like we
were in good shape in practice."

Scorecard
Baseball

Rogers Wins 200

Pro Football

Zinn Beck F ill League
A T SANFORO
Florida Blue 1. Seminole Navy 0
Seminole Navy 7. Florida Blue 6
F IN A L STANDINGS
W L
Rollins
IT 9
Seminole Navy
16 V
Seminole
IS 10
Florida Blue
IJ 1}
Florida Red
1 72

Softball
Friday
Red Bug Park Saltball
Nautilus Red Bug ?, Emerson
Electric a
T G A Y II. I T * Devil* A
Alp* J ], Ryland Home* )

Football

4 7 )64 3
Atlanta
Cincinnati II. Philadelphia 14 Cle-rind
I 10 091 *
Chicago 70. Detroit 17
New Orleans 27. Kansas City
Midwest Division
GB
17
W
Pel
67S
Atlanta 34, Los Angeles Rams Kan City
S
17
6IS
•
San Anton
4SS 7
Miami f. Buttalo 7
s
Oallas
417 7’i
Green Bay 26. Minnesota 7
5
Denver
300 )'»
Cleveland 10. New England 7
3
Utah
Pittsburgh 24 Houston 10
t 10 091 6
Houston
Dallas 14. Tampa Bay 9
Pacific Division
Washington 27, New
York
12 I 973
Seattle
Giants 17
769 7
10
San Francisco 3t. St Louis 20 Phoenis
7SO 2' i
9
Los Ang
Seattle 17, Denver 10
S)l 3
7
Portland
Monday's Game
33) Vi
4
Golden St
(A ll Times E S T)
167 9' i
2
San D&gt;ego at Lot Angeles San Diego
Raiders. I p m
Saturday's Results
Thursday's Oamet
New York Giants at Detroit. Boston 97, New York I )
San Antonio 134. Golden State
12 noon
112
Cleveland at Dallas. 3 p m
Chicago lit. Detroit 121
Kansas City 127, Dallas 120
Sunday, Nov. 21
Phoenii 91. Atlanta 80
Baltimore at Buttalo. I p m
Washington 9S. San Diego 17
Chicago al Minnesota. I p m
St Louis at Atlanta. I p m
Sunday's Results
Green Bay at New York Jett.
Milwaukee 109. Indiana 91
1pm
New Jersey 111. Seattle 91
Houston at New England. I
Portland 129, Cleveland 79
pm
Cos Angeles 143. Denver 129
Los
Angeles
Raiders
al
Today's Games
Cincinnati. I p m
(No Games Scheduled)
Philadelphia al Washington. 1

National Football League
By United P rttt International
American Conlerenc*
W
Pet.
Pittsburgh
1
1 000
Miami
)
I 000
LA Raider*
I 000
J
N Y Jet*
647
J
Cincinnati
667 pm
I
New Orleans at San Francis
Cleveland
667
J
Buffalo
667 co. 4 p m
J
San Diego
1
SOO Denver at San Diego, 4 p m
Kansas City
I
333
Kansas City at Los Angeles
Seattle
I
333 Rams. 4 p m
New England
1
333
Pittsburgh at Seattle. 4 p m
Denver
I
333
Monday, Nov. I t
Houston
I
.333
Miami al Tampa Bay, 9 p m
Baltimore
0
000
National Conlerenc*

w

Pci.

Green Bay
)
1 000
Washington
]
1 000
Dallas
667
J
667
Detroit
7
New Orleans
667
2
Atlanta
667
7
San FrancIsc
I
333
Philadelphia
l
333
Minnesota
t
333
St Louis
I
333
' I
Chicago
333
Tampa Bay
0
000
NY Giants
0
000
L A Rams
0
000
(To p
eight
teams
tacit
conlerenc* make playelis.l
Sunday'* Resells
New York Jets 37, Baltimore

NBA

D#»-

o*

c ’H D 'tlH ih
I I'equom Headache*
&gt; low Back or M.p
Pain
&gt; Oniineit o. loss oi
4 Nwmbnest &gt;nHands
eeil atutieci

NBA Standings
By United Press International
Eastern Conlerenc*
Atlantic Division
W L Pd.
OS
pnna
to 1 909
Boston
to 7 133
New Jersy
6 7 462 S
Wash
4 1 333 *' &gt;
New York
] 9 2SO 2'j
Central Division
Detroit
1 s 4IS
Mitwauke
1 s 413
Chicago
4 6 SOO
Indiana
S 2 417

FREE
S P IN A L E X A M I N A I ION

**

HUiMS'l &gt; Nervousness
• c a r t , * stock Po.no.
Ml V1*011 W'Pnoss
IlNIUS
7 him one RiouRe
Pom
U9
» IK r«MW 1 -% '&lt;f
•♦•alt •
4*ft**-*- •

SANFORO PAIN
CONTROL CLINIC
OH

1M OM AS T AN [If I l

( hit upi a, lii Ph, mi isti
2017 f H t NC M A V t
SAM OH l)
1*»

323 5 7 6 3

ORDERED SOLD BY TRUSTEE
12 W aterfront Lots-Laka B athal Kstata*

5 0 % DISCOUNT

30% OOWN—BALANCI S YEARS
S t a r t in g A t *8,950 - P ull Prlca
Hlfh I Dry le ts , Swim. Rtk, Seilinf, Weter Skiint. Etc.
licit* % Mil Eat Of stm h M Os Estwjms R ut

W.A. Hoffman Trustaa,
P.O. Box 9064* Longwood, Florida
Phona

305-862-6172

If

�PEOPLE
Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Monday, Nov. 72, 1987—lB

In And Around Winter Springs
TONIGHTS TV

Kiefers Win

A w a rd

The Tuscawilla Pioneer Garden Club’s Yard of the Month
Award for November was presented to Joseph and I xiis Kiefer,
1107 Cheetah Trail. The Kiefers did their own landscaping and
cleared off everything except for the palm trees
This was the last judging until next Api il.

EVENING

Dee
Gatrell

6:00

6:30

There is some good and bad news from Sterling Park
Elementary. The good news is that principal Marion T.
Giannini has been accepted for the position of Director of
Elementary Education for Seminole County which she’ll begin
on Dec. 20. The bad news is that the students and staff will miss
Mrs. G., as she is affectionately known.
Birthday wishes goto Jeff Puryear who will be 18 on Nov. 24,
and Daryl Fetterhoff, who turned 19 on Nov. 17.
Daryl has been so excited at turning 19 that he has been
planning his birthday party for months. He lives "out in the
country" so he invited everyone to spend the night if they
wanted to.
Mr. and Mrs. Fetterhoff had wall to wall kids everywhere
i Daryl invited approximately 25).
A “ Happy Birthday" wish also goes to my father-in-law,
Dick Gatrell, who turned 60 on Nov. 24, and who, along with his
wife is visiting with us from Cape Coral for the Thanksgiving
holidays.

South Seminole Middle School had a fantastic turnout for
open house during Education Week
The chorus and band participated in the Winter Springs
Parade, with the chorus riding on a float.
The eighth graders took their big field trip of the year by
going to St. Augustine on Nov. 18.
Red Bug Elementary could use more volunteers to work with
the children on the computers from 11-12:30 daily. They also
could use a substitute for the program. Also needed are people
Interested In being Dividend Scientists. Mrs. Betlie Palmer,
Consultant-Coordinator for Science Programs in Seminole
County Schools will be going to Bed Bug to explain the
program. The volunteers will be trained to do simple ex­
periments in the classroums.

12:30

17 (17) CAROL BURNETT ANO
FRIENDS

Mrs. Marianne Pauley’s gifted class from Tuskawilla
Middle School look a field trip to the Radio Shack today.

All the units in the Mcrigold Unit will participate in the
"Helping Hands Day for the Salvation Army." The girls will be
given shopping bags to distribute to family and friends and will
collect used reusable items to put in them. On Dec. 4 the girls
will deliver the items to a Salvation Army designation point.
Each girl participating will receive a badge.

t O ABC NEWS NIGHTLINE

6:05

What a fun day at Winter Springs Elementary School last
Friday. The children and teachers dressed like their favorite
book character to celebrate children’s book week.
The next PTO meeting will be Dec. 14 at 7 p.m. in the com­
mons.

Brownie Troop 907 had a display at Coral Gables Bank in
honor of Juliet lam e's birthday. Juliet was the founder of the
Girl Scouts.
Gn Tuesday night at 7:30 the Brownies will be putting on a
skit for family, friends, or anyone interested in attending, at
the Winter Springs Elem entary School. The skit is entitled
"Gus the Ghost and Thanksgiving." Brownie leader, Meta
Porter, found this poem in a craft book and has adapted it into
play form for the children to present,

Anyone interested may call Evelyn Adair, Dividends
Chairman, at 699-1087. You don't have to be a parent to
volunteer.

All the participants are donned in the attire of the day, and
they all speak the King’s English.

O (11 NBC NEWS
5 0 CBS NEWS
’ O ABC NEWS n
fDtIOIOCEANUS

6:35

l i ) O COLUMBO Cdumbo con
fronts a cbarmmg poet wbo •*

7:00
Q QT‘ THE MUPPETS
1 O P M MAGAZINE An interview with the belt-telling author ol
booht on Into end health, a took at
hornet that were purchased
through the Sean catalogue horn
1908 lolh# 1930*
71 O JOKER'S WILD
J1 (35) THE JEFFERSONS
ffl 110) MACNEIL / LEHRER
REPORT
12 (17)QOMERPVLE

4 •' ,

1:30
0

J NBCNEWSOVERNIGHT

1:35
J ) O MOVIE
Toung Mr Lin­
coln 119391 H enry Fonda, Alice
Brady

7:35
12 (17) AMERICAN PROFESSIONALS Featured Cliff Hood shares
soithj interestirug flight storms from
fijs thirty years as a commercial
pilot for Eastern Air lines

MORNING

6:00
O
NEWS (MON)
,i! O CBS EARLY MORNING
NEWS
i l ) O SUNRISE
11 (35) JIM BAKKER
12 (17) NEWS

0 ( 3 EARLY TODAY
IS I O CBS EARLY MORNING
NEWS
17 1O ABC NEWS THIS MORNING
6:45
U ‘ 0 NEWS
CD HO) A M WEATHER

Q
4 LITTLE HOUSE: A NEW
BEGINNING
t l O SQUARE PE08
(D O
THAT'S INCREDIBLEi
Featured the rescue of a father
and h»s son from a submerged car
two-man learns lifl and race pick­
up trucks. Japanese surgeons blast
away bladder stones with dynamite,
a man fries hoi dogs with electricity
conducted through h&lt;c own body
(35f THE ROCKFORD FILES
(D (10) NATURE Forest In The
Clouds The dark underworld of the
tropical rain lorasl in th« Costa
Rican mountains is viewed

7:00
O 4 TODAY
5 O MORNING NEWS
f O GOOD MORNING AMERICA
11 (35) WOODY WOODPECKER
CD ( 10) TO LIFEI

7:05
12 (17) FUNTIME

7:30
il (35) TOM ANO JERRY
CD (10) SESAME STREET |R) g

notebooks."

I kept repeating th e se
sentences in a perfect Ger­
man accent as though I really
knew what I was talking
about, and 1 was left alone
im m ediately. This worked
with telephone so licito rs,
people trying to sell me
siding, roofing, m agazine
subscriptions, etc.
The only difficult part was
keeping my face straight
while delivering this spiel in
G erm an. (I heard som e
unusual comments from
people as they hung up or
walked away.)
Any high school student who
is currently learning a foreign
language could teach you a
sentence or two for this
purpose. So many people
speak Spanish today, 1 think it
might be wise to pick some
other
language.
Auf
Wledersehen!
SHERRY IN
WATSEKA, ILL.

'*

Dear
Abby

George has told me that he
has known a lot of women but
he has never wanted to marry
again — until he met me. The
feeling is mutual, but we have
been getting a lot of
resistance from our families.

DEAR SHERRY: Bltte
ipreche keln D eustsch in
Milwaukee (o r p a rts of
Pennsylvania) or your little
kiwst will be kaput!
(Translation: Please don’t
His sister tells me (behind
speak German in Milwaukee
his
back) that George is too
— or parts of Pennsylvania —
set
in
his ways to m arry now.
or your little trirk will be
And my children warn me
finished! |
that although George is in
DEAR ABBY: Over a year good health now, if he should
ago I met a retired gentleman get sick 1 will spend the rest of
(I’ll call him George). He is my life being a nurse for an
75. I am 71 and have been a "old m an."
widow for three years. George
I think I've made up my
was married a very short mind to marry him, Abby. All

1 need is a nod from you.
YOUNG AT HEART
DEAR
YOUNG:
I'm
nodding. (Now, please don't
say, "Thanks for nodding.")
Good luck and God bless you
both.
DEAR ABBY: Will you
please say something in your
column about letter-writing?
Some people seem to think
that they cannot send a letter
to a friend or relative unless it
is long, so they put off writing
until they have time to write
10 or 12 pages.
I don't know about others,
but to me, a short letter now is
a lot more appreciated than a
long letter later.
DOTTY
DEAR DOTTY: I agree.
Most long letters are so long
the recipients put olf reading
them until they have more
time.

"Tha Magnificent Beginning"
Dame Margol Fonteyn lraces Ihe
rootl of belief from fherr royal
beginnings in Versailles, end
reveals the secrets ol an 18th-cen­
tury (healer, guests include Roland
Pent. Zxi Jean mane end atudents
of the Peking Dance School
10:05

III (17) NEWS
10:30

(U) (IS)W SEARCH Of...

11:00
03KDONCW S
11 (SS) SOAP
CD (101 ALFRED HITCHCOCK PRE­
SENTS

4:00
0

a LITTLE HOUSE ON THE
PRAIRIE
5 O HOUR MAGAZINE |MONTHU)
7 O MERV GRIFFIN
It |35| TOM AND JERRY
CD|10|SESAME S TR E E T(R ig

4:05

1:30

11 (17) THE MUNSTERS

4:30
II (35ISCOOBY DOO

4:35
11 (17) LEAVE IT TO BEAVER

4 ANOTHER WORLD
7 O ONE LIFE TO LIVE (MONTHU)
(D (10) MAGIC OF OIL PAINTING
(FRI)

5.00
0

4 LAVERNE 4 SHIRLEY i
COMPANY
J O THREE S COMPANY (MONTHU)
7 O ALL IN THE FAMILY
II (35) EIGHT IS ENOUGH
(D |10) MISTER ROGERS (R)

2:30

II (35)GREAT SPACE COASTER
CD (101 MISTER ROGERS (R)

10:00

3:35
11 (17) THE FLINTSTONES

iD O AS THE WORLD TURNS
(MON-WED)
5 O TO BE ANNOUNCED (THU)
CD (10) THIS OLD HOUSE (FRI)

7:35
11 (17) I DREAM OF JEANNIE

8:05
12 (17) MY THREE SONS

8:30

0.00

3:30
5 O MORE REAL PEOPLE (THU)
11 (35) BUOS BUNNY AND
FRIENDS
fD 1101 ELECTRIC COMPANY(R)

0

CD 110) AM WEATHER

6:30
(2 1O PRIVATE BENJAMIN

,3) O
CAGNEY « LACEY
0) (35) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
NEWS
S ) (10) THE MAGIC OF DANCE

1:05
41 (IT) MOVIE

3:05
11 (17) FUNTIME

2:00

Tin* I,nkr
Mary
Woman’s (Tub held a
Leadership Hreakfast
Thursday morning at
Hack's R esta u ra n t,
Sanford. Vivian Ruck,
center, conducted a
leadership s em in ar
assisted by lie I.ores
Lash,
d u ll
vice
president, left, and
Kathleen
Reale.
president.

NEWHART

1:00

4 OAYS OF OUR LIVES
7 0 ALL MY CHILDREN (MONTHU)
11 (35) MOVIE
CD|10) MOVIE |MON. TUEI
CD HOI MATINEE AT THE BIJOU
(WED)
CD(10) SPORTS AMERICA (THU)
ED (101 FLORIDA HOME OROWN
(FRI)

7:15

8.00

O ® MOVIE A Day For Thanks
On Waltons Mountain |Prem«fe|
Ralph Waite Judy Norton-Taytor
At the Thanksgiving holiday
approaches, members olthe widely
dispersed Walton clan Iry to orga­
nic# a family reunion
(J1 O M*A*S*H
(T) O MOVIE "The China Syn­
drome ' (1979) Jack Lemmon, Jane
Fonda After hit warnings that an
atomic power plant it headed for a
meltdown go unheeded a nuclear
engine#' lakes over the control
room
il I (35| GUNSMOKE
CD (10) GREAT PERFORMANCES
' The Charterhouse Of Parma ‘
Gma poisons the Prince of Parma
lo avenge the imprisonment of her
nephew after he escape! from the
fortress Fabrmo It oblivious 10 all
but his lovt for Clefia (Part 51

RESTLESS (MON-WED)
5 O TO BE ANNOUNCED (THU)
5 O RASCALS ANO ROBBERS
(FRI)
&gt; O RYAN S HOPE (MON-THU)

0

8:30

LEADERSHIP
BREAKFAST

lime when his wife died. He’s
been living with his sister
ever since. He is handsome,
refined, charming and welleducated. (Would you think
me terrible if I told you that
he Is also a wonderful lover?)

. w

TUESDAY .

ill (35) FRED FLINT8TONE AND
FRIENDS

DEAR ABBY: When I was a
student nurse in Chicago, I
used an effective method of
dealing with unwanted at­
tention, whether It came from
an obscene phone call, men
trying to pick me up in the
lioop or panhandlers who
hung around the train station.
I pretended I couldn’t un­
derstand English!
No m atter what was said to
me, I rattled off two sentences
1 had learned in my high
school German class. The
ones I used were, "Let us go to
the library" and "I would go
with you but I don’t have my

&lt;s

2:30

7:30
0 4 ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
S O T C TAC DOUGH
® O FAMILY FEUO
11! (35) BARNEY MILLER
tD (10) W110 AMERICA At The
Crostroads ' An eiploration ol wild­
life a struggle lor survival in modern
America features many endangered
mammals birds and fishes that
have never been filmed before

0 :30

lr

involved m an illegal gun running
operation wbife rep resen flog an
if isb peace group |R)

0 4 ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
5 O CBS NEWS NIGHTWATCH

7:05

6:05

'False' Language Barrier
Halts Unwanted Attention

Aw a y !

1:10

12 117( BOB NEWHART

(1) a

We D JbN T P tA V A T/U .L
W W iie i o o w e p e

; O th e last w o r o
12 (17) MOVIE
Goodbye Char
lie |196f) Tony Curtis Debbie Rey­
nold!

(It (17) MOVIE
Another Tima
Anolhet Place (1958) Lana Tumor
Barry Sullivan A femala war corre­
spondent sutlers a breakdown over
the death ol her married lover

Herald Photo by Tom Vincent

i b le w : c A £ ili£ ,
lilA 'ft Ji&gt;bT A P f t * W '

0
J LATE NIGHT WITH DAVID
LETTERMAN Guests Mm d-rector
Frank Capra comedian Marry
Anderson actress Carol Kane

12:35

8:00
My husband. Larry, and children, Diana and Doug, recently
visited our ex-neighbors, Joyce, Bear and Cub Baila in Miami.
The Bailas took us to the Florida Renaissance Fayre at
Crandon Gardens in Key Biscayne. If you've never been to one
and can get to Miami by Nov. 30, it is well worth attending.

by Larry Wright

KIT ’N' C A R L Y L E "

12:05

O * S O T O new s
11 (35) CHARLIE'S ANGELS
(ZH10IOCEANUS

Winter Springs
Correspondent
327-0378

There's no need to be lonely on Thanksgiving for residents at
Hacienda Village. The residents will have a Thanksgiving
dinner at the clubhouse. Several merchants have donated gifts
for door prizes.

ed prospective bride when he saves
the liteotan Arab-an shei* sdaughter iRI
11 (35) STREETS OF SAN FRAN­
CISCO

.M ONDAY,

5 O CAPITOL (MON-WED)
5 O TO BE ANNOUNCED (THU)
5 O NCAA FOOTBALL (FRI)
CD(10) EVERDAY COOKINO WITH
JACQUES PEPIN (MON)
CD(101 INSIDE BUSINESS TODAY
(WED)
(D (10| WILD AMERICA (THU)
iD (10) PORTRAITS IN PASTELS
(FRI)

6:35

ANNE BONN IK’S
TAVEHN
AND
C IIA H HAH

2:35

17 (17) THAT GIRL

Crab Hour S 30 4 10
Garlic Crab 25c Each
Rnaitfed O y ifrrt tOc Each
Smoked Mullet

13 (17) WOMAN W ATCH (WED)

9:00
0 4 RICHARD SIMMONS
i o DONAHUE
7 0 MOVIE
II (351 LEAVE IT TO BEAVER
CD (10| SESAME STREET (fl| g

9:05
&lt;12 (17) MOVIE

9:30
0
4 SO YOU THINK YOU GOT
TROUBLES
ill; (35) FAMILY AFFAIR

10:00
O Cf OIFF'RENT STROKES (R)
(MON-WEO. FRI)
0 (j ) MACY'S THANKSGIVING

DAY PARADE (THU)
(S) O MARY TYLER MOORE
(MON-WED)
Li)
O
ALL-AMERICAN
THANKSGIVING DAY PARADE
(THU)
( D O MR MAGOOSCHRISTMAS
CAROL (FRI)
(ID (38| ANDY GRIFFITH
CD ( 10) ELECTRIC COMPANY (R)

2:45
II (35)YESTERDAY'S NEWSREEL
(MON, TUE)
II (35) LAUREL AND HARDY (FRI)

11:00
0 f4' TEXAS (MON-WED. FRI)

(D O T he PRICE IS RIGHT (MONWEO)
(1) O CSS AFTERNOON PLAY-.
HOUSE (FRI)
(2 )
0 LOVE BOAT (R)
(IT (35) 35 LIVE
CD (10) OVER EASY
11:05
31 (17) PERRY MASON
11:30

31 (35) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
NEWS

I I 10 A M lo ft 10 P M
10 P M TilC lO i.n q
) F o r 1 A ll Highballs
A n d Most Cockfaili
lo c a lr d InvtJf

3:00
0 4 FANTASY
J 0
GUIDING LIGHT (MONWED)
5 O TO BE ANNOUNCED (THU)
f O GENERAL HOSPITAL
It (35)CASPER
iD (101 FRENCH CHEF (MON)
CD(101 COOKIN' CAJUN (TUEI
CD(10) WORLD OF BOOKS (WED)
CD (10) PROFILES IN AMERICAN
ART (THU)

JJalwulil (sTixiV
7S0I f » rnch A v r

^

( H r t Y llt n
Sanford

CD(10) THE LAWMAKERS (FRI)

K jF ta y d T b e tr— I

FREE
SPIN AL E X A M IN A T IO N
lH h jP V j'h *
MN«t S

I f raqutot M*ad*th#t
1 Lout Back or Mip
Pam
1 D if it n o t i or l o t i el

10:30
0
(2) WHEEL OF FORTUNE
(UON-WED. FRI)

1 D O CHILD’S PLAY (MON-WED)
41 (351OOFUS DAY
CD (10) 3-2-1 CONTACT (R |g

Ol U H A P P Y 1101 IIS

4 Nu nstm ttt in Hands!

MITiatAita . •'
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SAN FO RD P A IN
CONTROL CLINIC
DH T H O M A S Y A N D E l L
C h iro p ra rtic P h ysician

2017 FRENCH AVE
SANFORD

323-5763

CD 110) POSTSCRIPTS
AFTERNOON

11:05

11(17) WOMAN WATCH
11:30
O (3) THE BEST OF CARSON
Holt Johnny Caraon Guetls
Beverly Silla. David Brinkley. Buddy
Rich |R|
(2) O MORI REAL PEOPLE

ill (34) MAOAMC'S PUCE
11:35

GDQNEW B
11 (17) DETROIT FIGHTS BACK
Peter Arnelt eiammee the plight
of (he American auto Industry and
what leclorm in Detroit ere trying
lo do lo improve the Mtuition

12:00
(S) O
TRAPPER JOHN, M O
Goruo gets stuck with an unwant­

12:00

0 (3) SOAP WORLD
} O NEWS
0 ) 0 NEWS (MON-THU)
0 ) 0 NCAA FOOTBALL (FRI)

41 (35) BIG VALLEY
CD(10) MYSTERY (MON)
CD (10) MASTERPIECE THEATRE
(TUE)
CD (10) NATURE (WED)
8 (10) SPORTS AMERICA (TMUI
(10) EVENING AT POPS (FRI)

NOW OPEN
UN D ER NEW OW NERSHIP
RESTAU R A N T OPEN MON THRU 5AT. I a.m.-2:30p.m.
LOUNOE OPEN MON. THRU SAT. II a.m 10 p.m

12:05

31 (17) PEOPLE NOW
12:30

0 ( 3 ) NEWS
ID O THE YOUNG ANO THE

B R E A K F A S T S P E C IA L
INCLUDES:
2 EGGS

RESTA U RA N T

A LOUNGE

2 PANCAKES

SANTORO AVK.B 270 STREET SANTORO
S0S-SS1-S7S1

DAILY LUNCHEON SPECIALS

2 -1
INTIMATE DINING AT ITS BIST

LU N CH EO N BU FFET

MON.-FRI. 11:30-2:30
ALL YOU CAN EAT

$ 2 ® 5

PRIME RIB

$ y o s

W ITH T H IS C O U P O N O N L Y

'
,/\

Wa Will Bt Adding Dinnar
To Our Many In Th« N«ar
Future. Watch Our Ads

COMPLETE QTR. FRY DINNER
IN A HURRY? PHONE AHEAD 221S7J2

I
I
I

ALL SPAGHETTI ORi
ZITI DINNERS

~
11AM I ,

set.

M EN U CHANGES D A ILY
FAST S E R V I C E -T A K E O U T SERVICE
A V A ILA B LE

BUY ONE O C T ONE j

• HAPPY HOUR 3-7 RHXJCED
PRICES A FREE HORS OOEUVRES
4TUFFBwma MM) t UTTTM

14881. French Ave.-laniard

-------------- C O U P O N --------------;

SANDWICH MENU AVAIJLABLE

mowsana H/iasss&gt; sa lw urn

FAM OUS-FRIED CH ICKEN

INCLUDES S0UPT0SSH) SALAD $ 0 0 5
STUFFBA MASHED POTATOES
_
CRANBERRY SAUCE. BREADS BUTTB. DESSERT
CHUMM U W » 1011ZD LESS

bclude*

BAUMKAo atunst

!
:

h

q q

SKYPORT

THANK W IVING SPECIAL
12-PC NEW OUY'S CHICKEN

RESTAURANT l LOUNGE

1 PT OP COLK SLAW -M B D . ONION AND IR O L L I

A IR P O R T TERM INAL B U ILD IN G
PH. 323-5104 SANFORD

* T .* »
"WITH COUPON*'- IX P ItS I II-IM1

I

�^^~ E v t n i n q Herald, Sanlord, F I.

Monday. Nov. 32.

1987

Ancient Scandinavian Tradition Is To Offer Christmas Goodies To A ll
Scandinavians
share their
their
Scandinavians share
Rood thinRs from the kitchen
in a unique way: with a
Christm as tree-shaped lattice
decorated with cookies, ap­
ples and a small sheaf of
wheat at the top.
Once friends and family
have eaten the Roodies, the
tree is put outside so birds can
feast on the wheat,
The ancient Scandinavian
custom is offering something
good to eat to everyone, friend
or stranger, who comes to
your
door during the
Christm as season.
Enjoy baking, serving and
eating the following treats
from Scandinavia
PEPPARKAKOR
(Swedish filngrrinaps)
1 cup sugar
4 cup shortening
4 cup (1 stick* butter or
m argarine
2 eggs
4 cup molasses
3 4 cups sifted plain flour
2 teaspoons soda
1 4 teaspoons ginger
4 teaspoon cloves
4 teaspoon cinnamon
4 teaspoon nutmeg
4 teaspoon salt
O rnam ental Icing, candied
fruit and colored sugar for
decoration
Mix
together
sugar,
shortening, butter, eggs and
molasses. Sift together dry
ingredients and stir into sugar
m ix tu re . Cover and chill
several hours or overnight.
Heat oven to 375 degrees. On
lightly floured board or pastrycloth, roll out a small amount
of dough about 4-inch thick
(K eep rem aining dough
re frig e ra te d .) Cut with
floured cookie cutters. Place
on ungreased baking sheet.
Hake 6 to 8 minutes. Cool and
decorate, if desired. Makes 8*
9 dozen cookies.
For use on Christmas Tree:
Choose baked cookies to be
used on tree and place on
cookie sheet. Reduce oven
tem perature to 225 degrees.
Return cookies to oven and
allow to dry for 1 hour. Use a
straw to make a hole in the top
of each cookie. Cool; decorate
as desired. Thread ribbon or
twine through hole.
NORWEGIAN
BUTTER WREATHS
These rich, buttery cookies
are brushed with egg while
before baking. This makes the
colored sugar cling to the
dough and a shiny glaze on the
baked cookies.
1 cup (2 sticks i butter or
m argarine
4 cup sugar
1 egg, separated
4 teaspoon vanilla
2 4 cups sifted plain flour
red sugar
Cream butter; gradually
add sugar. Beat until light and
fluffy. Beat in egg yolk and
vanilla. Stir in flour.
Heat oven to 350 degrees.
Pinch off walnut-sized pieces
of dough. On lightly floured
board or cloth, roll dough with
hands Into a 6-inch rope.
Form in a circle on ungreased
baking sh eet overlapping
about 1 inch from ends.
Ijghtly beat egg while and
brush over cookies. Sprinkle
with red sugar. Bake 10 to 12
minutes. Makes about 3 dozen
cookies.
Christmas rut-out rookies
The N orw egian Butter
Wreath dough also makes
delicious,
crisp cut-out
cookies. M ake dough us
directed above, except add
the whole egg to the dough. On
a lightly floured board or
pastry cloth roll dough about
4-inch thick. Cut with floured
cu tters
und
place on
ungreased baking sheet. Bake
at 350 degrees for 10 to 12
minutes. Remove to wire rack
to cool. Decorate as desired.
SOURCREAM
POUNDCAKE
Butter and sour cream give
this pound cake a rich flavor
and moist texture.
1 cup (2 sticks) butter
3 cups sugar
6 eggs
2 teaspoons vanilla
4 teaspoon almond extract
3 cups plain flour
4 ea spoon salt
4 teaspoon soda
1 cup (B ounces) dairy sour
cream
Heat oven to 325 degrees.
Grease and flour a 10-lnch
tube pan or 12-cup Bundt pan.
In large mixer bowl, cream
butter. Gradually add sugar;
beat until light and fluffy. Add
eggs, one at a time, and
flavorings. Sift together flour,
salt and soda. Add to creamed
mixture alternately with sour
cream. Pour batter into
prepared pan and bake for 1
hour 15 minutes or until a
wooden pick Inserted in cake
comes out clean. Cool about 15

minutes in
in pan
pan
minutes
ORNAMENTAL ICING
FOR COOKIES
4 cup shortening
1 teaspoon vanilla

4 4tablesDoons
^ r / ,. mixer,
tablespoonshot
hottan
tapwainr
water vaniiir.
vanilla uin,
with ..lelectric
1 box il pound! unsifted Beat in 2 tablespoons hot
confectioners’ sugar
water, then gradually add
food coloring, if desired
sugar. Add 2 tablespoons
Blend shortening
and more hoi water and beat uni il

smnnth Fnr
u ir
a
»&gt;•&gt;• cream cofsmooth.
For tinted irinu
icing, stir
A mr.iu
moist sour
in a few drops of food feecake. topped with pools of
coloring.
cranberry sauce. Bake ahead
CRANBERRY
and freeze for a special
COFFEECAKF
holiday brunch

cups
sifted
CUPS
sifted
selfrising flour
1 cup 18 ounces i dairy sour
cream
See YULE, Rage 3R

i1 cup '2 sticks*
clicks&gt; butter
butter or
or
margarine
1 cup sugar
2 eggs
*- teaspoon almond extract

U .S .D .A . G R A D E A
N O N -B A S T E D

YOUNG
TURKEYS

cP t id e

LIMIT-1 WITH S 5 OO OR MORE ADDITIONAL PURCHASES

10 T O 16 LB S

6

5

LB

p r ic e s e f f e c t iv e t h r u

w e d

.

NOVEM BER 24, 1982.

LARGE M E A TY

TURKEY
DRUMSTICKS

BONELESS
BOTTOM ROUND
ROAST

BONELESS
SMOKED HAM
■ $ 2 3 9

5 LB
AVG.
PKG.

PER
POUND

$169

PER

t r rYTTl
. t e a

^

p o u n d

SAVE 70* PER LB

S A V E 30* P E R LB

U.S.D.A. GRADE A
FARM ER G R A Y Y O U N G

SAVE S I OO PER LB

BASTED
TURKEY
10 LBS &amp; UP

CO M PARE

CHECK THESE
PRICES

SAVE
PER LB

JENNIE-O UGHT &amp; DARK, ALL DARK OR MEAT LOAF

T u r k e y

P a n

$ 4 9 9

W ITH GRAVY P A C K E D
2 LB P A N S

R o a s t

no

U.S.D.A. GRADE A LONG ISLAND

F a r m e r G r a y

A TO to
111 AVO

D u c k s

LB 8

■

9

30

°

T u r k e y

R o a s t

■

SAVF

E X C E L LE N T F O R T H A N K S G IV IN G DINNER
M R S KIN SER S
_
_

R e l i s h ICRANBERRY)

CIA&gt;

9

9

e

20

3b

m

AO

LB

iftojr

S a u s a g e i s m o k e d ) P*G

$ 4 3 9

B a c o n

W h o le

S^99

20

■

■ A V G PKG

•

R ib

E y e s

50

■ LB

■

M e a t B o lo g n a

•Ooi S ^ 1 9
•
t;

9

G ra te d

9 C L ^j

*169

g

M*C»
*

QQ

C h e e s e

1

m

O J C A R M A Y E R M E A T O R BEEF

.

$ 0 9 9

C U T &amp; W RAPPED
•

free

60

F r a n k s (s k in l e s s )

rVlHYOAv
low

SAV E

PM CI

COM PARE

I KOZIN

iVfMvOA*
LOW
wet

SAVE

PANTRY PRIDE PARTY FLAKE

S a b V m B i'
R o lls
..........................^ . 5 9 *
BLUE TIN BOX

t A

.

.

.

.

ORIFFEN

, Q

2 29
|7 »

P u m p k in P ie

• ■ IOdi

ORIFFEN

tjQ Q

M in c e M e a t P ie

^ * 1 "

I— l
0

COfFEE
U g h te n o r .

. . . .

PANTRY PRIDE WHIPPED

T o p p in g

I— I
0

_

• • (MOAN 9

COM PARE

FLAKED

»

COFFEE

*
$

. . CRUST

.

s119 0

I m p u l s e OCOOOMAMT Ho, * 2

□QUO

Pot Pies. ."&amp; *2/79* 0

P e p to l B is m o l

SA V E

C O C A C O LA , I

la o lC A N
WTTH TH B COUPON OOOO
THRU WED , DEC 1. 1982.

YOU PAY 99* PLUS DEPOSIT
WTTH THIS COUPON OOOO
THRU WED.. NOV. 24, 1982.

■
^

85

ISO. FT.
S A V E 10*

•I

, .1 H.IJA .
LOA

5AVE

[

.

.

.

„,*2M 0

i

^OEUCjOUSOjESSERT

0

Confetti creme

•

HA i j

m 7

9

bncaM
C R E A M YY

e 0
r- —I

Cota Slaw.......„89e E
A G R E A T G I F T IDEA!

h o l id a y

GIFT
CERTIFICATES

TAB, SPRITE, MR. P1BB |
OR MELLO YELLO
|
g

Buffet Ham

79

. ~ * 2 4#

KLEENEX
TOWELS

PHI PA HI l&gt;
FOODS

Picnic Hams. . .,.*139

I------1

Vicks Nyqull .

* 1 M

COM PARE

LE A N GLAZED.
REDt T O SERVE

MEDICINE
COLD MEDCINE

PANTRY PRBE FROZEN

'0 T O 12 LQ T U R K E Y (P R E C O O K E D W EIG H 'D
W ITH 2 Q U A R T S OF OLD F A S H IO N S T U F F IN G .
I O T G iU LET G R A V Y HA LF P IN T C R A N B E R R Y
REUSE, A N O A N 8 IN C H P U M P K IN PIE

FU LLY C O O K E D
S M O K E D G LAZED

79

^

. * ,s 1

TURKEY DINNER

IN TH E D E U B A K E R Y S T O R E S O N LY

A s p i r i n ..................... . . 2 1 * 1

8 P A C K - 16 o z B T L S .

Im h a m h M

nt Alii » Allis

ST. JOSEPHS FOR CHILDREN

9

LOW

SPRAY- MUSK. DARING. SASSY
OR INNOCENT

S A V E 30c C A S H
F O LG E R ’S

P ie C r u s t .

'

FULLY C O O K E D C O M P L E TE

tVfnvDAv

M| Al ' M(

PANTRY PHOE CHICKEN. BEEF
OR TURKEY

Cob C o m ________

PILLSBURY A LR E A D Y REFRIGEFtATED
IN TH E DAIRY C A S E
„ _ „ IVj*

PMCiSGOOOOULT IN4fMi*Olf COUNTY CJUl TOOUMLOWPRCES Wl ttfM vl Tl,l MNL»HT TOUMfTrjUANmil 4
SOLDTODfAUWb NOT HfSIX**ritli* FORTYPOGRAPHICALEWOftt

1-8

Y t U O W C LIN G P E A C H H A L V E S OR S U C E S
1*1 AM H A l V E S » H U IT C O C K T Ail

BAKfcNY

Bo* 4 9 = y
. • CU«'

S o u r C re a m

CANNED FRUIT

m

. H

B u t t e r (CREAMERY)

0

P A N T R Y P R ID E

|

SAVl

S EA LTES T

S lic e d

Cake

O ra n g e J u ic e
P A N T R Y PRIDE P U R E

.

S U N N Y L A N O S LIC ED

BONELESS RIB EYE STEAKS LB S3
U.S.D.A CHOICE IN THE BAG

F ru it

C&gt;«, , •
Ha I ■.

DAIRY

P A N T R Y PRIDE C H ILLE D
IN TH E DAIRY C A S E

O LD S M ITH FIE LD F O R BR EAK
O R TU R K E Y S T U F F IN G

LYK ES C A B IN C O O K IN G

MARKET STYLE

COM PARE

COM PARE

A X E L R O D S IM P O R T E D

$ 4 5 9

3 TO 5
L1JAVG

TMtfrf

R o ll S a u s a g e

SHENANDOAH BONELESS UGHT 8. DARK MEAT

R o lle d

COM PARE

R E O E E M A B l£ in m e r c h a n d i s e
„
A T ALL
P A N T R Y PRIDE s t o r e s .

�Standby Meatloaf
All Gussied Up

f venmq Hera Id Sanford f i

2 teaspoons herbes dc Provence
1 small onion, grated
pound sliced bacon
1 clove garlic, mashed
l . cup French Henujolats wine
2 eggs, well beaten
2 teaspoons salt
l: teaspoon ground black pepper

This French main course may require special shopping, but
it's time to pam per yourself and your family Pate Villageois,
otherwise known as that reliable standby, meatloaf, has some
interesting ingredients.
PATE VILLAf.F.OIS
1 can '2 pounds. 2' j ounces) Strasbourg liver pate
2 pounds ground round, ground 3 to 4 times
I's cups French biscotte crumbs ibiscuit)

U.S. NO. 1

M ond.i, Nov

Combine all ingredients m a large bowl except t)&lt;i ’ 'A.\
well and pack tightly into a well greased l 1: quart mold PI, To
mold n a shallow baking pan to catch dripping Hi:* m.v
lure can also be shaped into a loaf on a foil-lined
■
baking pan Place bacon slices over top of loaf Bake in
preheated 350-degree oven for l' v hours Drain off &gt;&lt;cess •
Serve hot or cold, cut into slices

... Yule

10 L B B A G

O m t'd From Page 2It
t ran B ounces' whole
berry cranberry sauce
1. cup chopped almonds
Confectioners' Glaze !» ! "
Heat oven t 35(1 decr&lt; • s
G rease a 13 x 9 x 2-tnch sheet
cake pan In large mixer
bowl,
cream
butte:
Gradually add sugar, beat
until light and fluffy Add
eggs, one at a time, beat in.
well after each addition M
m almond exlrnii Stir
flour alternately with * ■.:
c re a m
Pour hatter mi
prepared pan Spoon •ratberry sau ce evenly
batter; spread slightly. bul
not try to cover hutt&lt;
Sprinkle with almond* I •
;I5 to 40 minutes or until )k
pulls slightly away from -idof pan Drizzle with Gian
Serve warm M HF If usim
w hite plain flour *ift
teaspoons baking powder i;
teaspoon salt with flour
Confectioners' Glare:
1 cup confectioners &gt;ur
2 tablespoons milk
*: teaspoon vanilla
Combine all ingredient* and
stir until smooth

WHITE
POTATOES

c P rid e

SHOP

P R IC ES E F F E C TIV E TH R U WED.
N O V EM B ER 24. 1982.

N iE D S

ytu s £ - w ' " j

SAVE 20‘

1

C lo s e d
,T h a n K » 9 » v » n g

n

Day!

EMPEROR
GRAPES

S A V E 30

J U IC Y

2

69*

S A V E 40*

FRESH

Q

IIOPMJS |

DANISH ItXM'ltl KitN
HAIt s
A traditional Scandinavian
fav o rite, these crisp bar
cookies are layered with
raspberry jam
l*a cups sifted plain flour
teaspoon baking powder
1‘; cups quick i .Hiking oats
1 cup granulated -ugar
*. cup firmly packed brown
sugar
5t cup butter or margiiritn
melted
1 1 cup red raspberry
preserves
cup chopped almonds
Confectioners' sugai

____

SWEET ' '
POTATOES
&lt;

1 5

PER
POUND

L!"M
J

SAVE 2 0

GEORGIA RED

GREEN
CABBAGE

C

FOR
U M IT-2 W ITH O T H F R P U R C H A S E S

HEAD

SAVE 30'

S U N K IS T

T

CALIFORNIA
CAULIFLOWER

CALIFORNIA
BROCCOLI

P E R LB

C A L IF O R N IA
ll&gt;IO\S
1

SNO W HITE

FRESH

LARG E
BUNCH

PER
PO UN D

18.5oz P A C K A G E

y

c

1 4 9

SAVE 10 PER LB

SAVE 20

OUTSTANDING PRODUCE BUYS!

NORTHWESTERN

1 4 Karat ^
G old I n itia ls 9
with Genuine Diamond

A n jo u

C H E C K TH ESE P R IC E S

P e a r s

c

0

l0 1

5 C

0

7

9 °

S

9

0

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

4

9

Heat oven to 375 degrees In
mixing Itowl. combine flour,
baking pow der, oats and
sugars Add melted biittei
and stir to blend Press .ilmu'
two-thirds of oat mixture mi
tlu‘ bottom of mi increased *
inch square cake pan Spread
evenly with preserves Add
almonds to remaining oal
mixture and sprinkle &gt;ver
preserves. |&gt;.it down light!'

SAVE

FRESH

C a n a d ia n

R u ta b a g a s

.

..

SWEET

JU ST

R e d

byjt Prospector 1849

D e lic io u s

A p p l e s . 3

PACKAGED FRESH DAILY

S la w

o r S a l a d ................................ ..

4

c

Hake 30 to 35 minutes or until
golden brown Sift eon
fectioners sugar over ioj&gt;
Cool and cut into bars

FRESH

16" 14 Karat Gold C h a in .. .’9'

F la . W h ite

G r a p e f r u it s

.

. 6 / $ 1

0

C h ic k e n

P A N T R Y P R ID E

CANNED
VEGETABLES

W H IT E H O U S E

PANTRY PRIDE

APPLE
JU IC E

MAYONNAISE
3202
JA R

89*

48oz
BTL.

SAVE 20‘

MICHELOB
BEER

W .S W ltl
M / &lt; i M I N I t t N b S 4 J L I O ( A &gt; *« &gt; r s
I I I H# I T S
I* IT S
S t A f l ) IJH *Y « U I V U I U « S

9 9

F o r A ll
Se a so n s

REGULAR OR LIGHT

? 3 / $l

SAVE 3 6

39

8 PA CK
1 2 o z N .R .
BOTTLES

CHICK KN HKKAKTS

IIOLIj\M)AISK
2 whole
broiler-fryer
chicken b re a sts, halved,
boned and skinned
1'
h cup wheat germ
2 tablespoons butter
h lemon, juiced
'a teaspoon salt
l i teaspoon white jiepper
1 sm all bunch seedless
grapes
Hollandaise Saute: recipe
follows
2 tablespoons minced
Itars ley

SAVE 19 TO 29

S A V E 10

P A N T R Y P R ID E

CRANBERRY

SAUCE
G E N E R IC

BLACK
PEPPER

2 /8 9

G R E E N G IA N T L 0

N1BLETS
CORN

4oz BOX

A 4 piece
P lace Setting* of
' S w eet F low ers
S tonew are
* 4 PIECE PLACE SETTINGS IN YOUR CHOICE OF
TWO PATTERNS CONSIST OF DINNER PLATE.
CUP. SAUCER AND DESSERT DISH.

COM PARE

h ju c i

SAVE 9 ‘

SAVE 9

12ozCAN

7 .2 5 o z B O X

GOLDEN G R A IN

MACARONI
&amp; CHEDDAR

2 /8 9
C H O n HY

t V IH YD AV

&lt;'Zr&gt;

I

MarahmallowsZ/8 9
PANTRY PRIDE CUT SW EE T

1

Mushrooms

I-------- 1

NABISCO

FAMILY

I-------- 1

,

Viva Napkins . s? *139 W

BREYERS
ICE
:&gt;! CREAM

HUNGRY JACK COMPLETE
BUTTERMILK

Sox JA R

«|

W JB . m w

A ^

WITH TH B COUPON OOOO I
THRU WED., DEC. 1, 1902.

■

GROCERY

.

t

LOW
II*

t

$434

Crackers iqrahami

SAVE

□
l 40 1

21

PARADISE

I------ 1

,6.

NABISCO

Bucket Olives

)lo,$120 Li]

G arn ish with grapes arid
parsley. Makes 4 servings; ; •

E j

FRITO LAY I
TO
STITOS ■■
REGULAR Oft N A T m

MASTER
BLEND

REGULAR OR NACHO

■■

20OZ C A N

^•■ U |a a a....... .

. .

20“ OFF

MAXWELL HOUSE

WITH T&gt;«6 COUPON GOOO
i H n u WED.,
H t U , UfcC
THRU
DEC. I,
t. 1902

»,*&gt;.79 C Ll°J
(------1

Cheese Nips

S A N F O R D 2944 O R L A N D O R O A D . ZAYRE P L A Z A A T T H E C O R N E R O F 17 92 &amp; O R L A N D O R O A D

On hard surface with meat
mallet or similar flattening
utensil, pound thicken to
inch thickness In shallow,
bowl, place wheat germ; add.
chicken, one piece at a time,
dredging to coat. In large
trypan, place butter and melt
over m edium heat. Add
chicken; saute over mediuip
high heat 4 minutes or until
brown on all sides. Reduce
heat; add lemon juite, salt
and white [topper. Cover and
cook 20 minutes. Cut grapes in
half; add to chicken and cook
10 minutes nr until grapes are
soft. Serve chicken with pan
luices and Hollandaise Sauce.

WITH OR WITHOUT
MARSHMALLOWS

301OFF

y

$ 3 9 9

CHABlJ£ BUMGUUUf
WM -M O H H W i

Nestles HOT COCOA MIX p'A

.

Pancake Mix .,*9 9 *

insTAfttcorm

H ALF GALLON

*1,# 0

,*1M □

Johnsons pudoi

TASTER’S I
CHOICE *
■

■ • CAN

LEMON» wOR
SCENT
t i WOOO
T * W W W
W fcTI I

2(7 OFF

|

NABISCO

■* ' *

lid

SAVE SI OO
t .5 U T E R

INGLENOOK
WINES

COM PARE

,5£i

4 6cm

Nutter Buttor

Cooking Bags ^ '8 9

$ 4 4 9

L A M H H u ^C O IkA f# o
0 « RU^A^O

t v t MYIIAY

GREEN GIANT WHOLE
OR SUCED

Ld

Potatoes . . is 6 9 * H

3/$l

GUO* I HY
C O M PA R E______

SAVE

P A N TR Y PWOC MINI- 10 S o z _ -

WITH THIS COUPON GOOD
THRU WED , DEC. 1. 1982

3/$l

c k u s h id

CM LM t C V 4 S U C E0

SAVE S I 5 0
1 .5 U T E R

CELLA
WINES

Box

3 DIAMOND
PINEAPPLE

3 /8 9

ASSORTED

N A T IO N A L BRANO
P R C E S I 03

SAVE 41*

SAVE 10'
10O ZB TL

FAYGO
SODAS

16oz

i

&gt;
I

■

Box B A G
WITH THIS COUPON OOOO I
THRU WED . DEC I. 1982

'

H ollandaise Sauce: in'
saucepan, place 3'egg yoDnb)
Add juice of '* lemon and r.
drops of hot pepper saucct!
Beat well with wire whisk'.!
Place saucepan over very loji,
heat for about 2 minutes.,
beating constantly. Hemqv*
saucepan from heat and bg.v.'
in 1 slick of butter, which hit*;
been cut in 'z-inch slices.'
Heturn sauce to heat for jq,
seconds before serving,, ’j t
necessary.

�4B — Evening Herald. Sanford, F I

B L O N D IE
a u M S r E A O .T V c a e ASE

A &amp;UNCH 0= MISTAKES
IN NOUC3 REPORT/

b e e t l e

4 I Family
member
1 Paradit*
42 Turned over
dweller
44 Like a pasture
4 Degree
46 Nautical
8 Oe'ete»
assent
opposite
47 Opinionated
12 Part o* corn
faction
plant
48 Noun Suffn
'3 Baltic r&gt;.er
50 Civil War
' 4 forme' head
general
Of Iran
52 Greek slave
15 lysergic acid 56 Evening (Fr |
diethylamide 58 Cross
i f nde'.nite per
inscription
son*
60 Mrs Peron
17 Vetch
6 1 Shortly
18 former SE
62 Sub|ect o*
Asian
verb
63 Short sleep
a'liance
20 indefinite in 64 mdian com
order
65 Energy unit
22 Compass
IP' I
point
66 Beverage
23 Monkeys
25 Acorn fee
DOWN
27 Thyroid ill
30 Style of type
Electric fish
33 Graduate of
Pyus
Energy
Annapohs
(abbr)
agency (abbr)
34 Small amount
Pried
36 Air |prefii|
Sawbuck
37 On the peak
levels
39 Jacob s twin
Time gone by

Answer to Previous Puizle

ACRO SS

Monday, Nov, 33, 1983

by Mort Walker

b a il e y

D*&lt;\TA
V |
DO R I E S
O R E S
1A *Z +
—+0} * -

|°* u *R**i s *s

[ A T O M I C

Negative Rh Factor

I N I M A

- 4- *

Can Cause Problems

o *

DEAR DR. LAMB - I ain
an 18-year-old female college
, 1° * P P 4 4 |0 | - — student. In our biology class
O H O M O I T i " H b « H
recently we took sam ples of
d ‘ i ' m i a' nJ- | o*n v r*c*t
o » » :«
° x o »
our blood and found our blood
R A N T T 0 | |t R A S t P
type am) Rh factor. According
8 Swift aircraft 40 Street Arabs
io the results my blood type is
(abbr |
43 Conger
0 with a negative Rh factor.
9 Without
45 Broke bread
I've been told that a negative
reward
47 Mister (Sp I
Rh factor could cause
10 Deserve
48 Weather
1 1 Sinew
problems if I were to have
bureau (abbr} childreli.
'9 Make an
edging
49 Rush hour at
What type of problem s
21 Sultry
the dmer
could occur? Are there ways
24 Went astray
51 One iGer)
to avoid these problems?
26 Auto Club
27 Machine part 53 Songstress
What bearing would the
Horne
28 Upon
father’s Rh factor have’ I am
29 Loneliness
54 Racecourse
concerned
about
any
30 Reflection
55 Strip of cloth
problems that could arise
3 1 Flag
57 Genetic
32 Warm
when I want to start a familv.
material
35 Since
DEAR READER - It Is
59 Mat
38 Wield
good that you know you are
Rh negative. The fact that you
1
4
7
6
8
9
10 11
2
3
5
are type 0 m akes no dif­
14
12
13
ference.
As you probably know,
17
15
16
being Hh negative means you
contain no Hh factor. If you
18
19
have a baby that is Rh
*
”
"
”
positive the baby will have the
24
26
23
Rh (actor. As some of the lUi
factor
leaks through the
27 28 29
3.
31 32
placenta it will be received by
your body as a foreign sub­
33
35
36
stance. Your body then forms
antibodies to th is foreign
37
38
.0
factor. This will not hurt you;
"
"
44
42
43
45
it is a body defense
mechanism.
46
Hut the antibody your body
develops ag a in st the Rh
48 49
51
53 54 55
factor can react with the
"
baby's Hh factor. This will
56
57
60
58
cause destruction of the
baby’s red blood cells and
61
62
63
other problems.
This usually will not happen
64
66
65
with the first pregnancy
because your body will not be
exposed lo the Rh factor from
the baby long enough lo cause
your body to form Rh factor
antibody in large quantities.
But with each succeeding
lly HEHNU’E BF.UEOSOL
pregnancy w ith an Rh
positive baby vnur antibody
For Tuesday, N ovem ber 23, 1982
liter will get higher and tinrisk of problems for the baby
VOL K BIRTHDAY
today. Make more of them
increases.
November 23,1982
than they really are and they
If the baby is Rh negative
You’re likely lo be more may become overwhelming.
successful this coming year
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 191 there will be no Rh factor to
react with and nothing will
with ventures or projects Financial transactions with
happen. It follows that if your
already well under way than ' mds could lead to problems
baby's father is Rh negative
you will be in starting up if not handled properly today.
loo there will be no Rh
something new. He a finisher. He careful about m aking
positive baby
and no
SCORPIO l Oct. 24-Nov. 22) loans, or borrowing.
This could be one of those
TAURUS (April 20-May 201 problems.
days when you’ll attempt to Unless those you deal with
do too many things, and be today feel they’ll somehow
unable to complete any one benefit from what you hope to
satisfactorily. New predic­ accomplish, you're not likely
tions for the year following to gain their support.
your birthday are now ready.
GEMINI (May 21-June 201
Send $1 to Astro-Graph, Box
To avoid mistakes with new
NORTH
I) 13-11
189, Radio City Station, N.Y.
• A 1D9 2
tools or products today, read
10019. Be sure to specify birth
» K .I 4
the directions carefully or
date. Send an additional $2 for
• gs a
• kh:
the NEW Astro-Graph Match­ have someone knowledgeable
explain in detail how the
WEST
EAST
maker wheel and booklet.
should be used.
♦ 861
♦ 4
R eveals rom antic com­
♦ it)
¥ Q I7 ilI
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
binations and compatibilities
♦AKJ 1«62
♦4
You
are
basically
en­
for all signs.
♦ 97 6 4 J
♦ WJ 10
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23- terprising and adventurous.
SOUTH
Dec.
21)
Prejudging These qualities often con­
♦ K g J 75
♦ A9«
situations could cause you trib u te to your success.
♦ 875
problems today. They may be However, today beware of
♦ A5
the opposite of what you taking foolish risks.
Vulnerable Both
expect. Be ready to make onLEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
Dealer South
the-spot adjustments.
Resolve minor squabbles with

■

■

■

■

■

] ■

■

■

■

■

■ 50

i

HOROSCOPE

EEK &amp; MEEK

by Howie Schneider

Dr.
Lamb

Women who are Rh
negative should receive an Rh
inununc globulin within 72
hours after giving birth to an
Hh positive baby or following
an abortion imiscarriagei of
a fetus of two months age or
more. Then you should never
have a blood transfusion with
Hh positive blood.
These points are included in
The Health le tte r 6-4, Blood
Type. Hh Factor and Tran­
sfusions, which 1 am sending
you. Others can send 75 cents
with a long, stamped, selfaddressed envelope for it to
me, in care of this newspaper,
P.. Box 1551, Hadio City
Station, New York, NY 10019.
DEAR DR. [*AMB - I am
now 28 years old. I served in
the Army in Europe and the
Orient. I found that European
and Oriental women are more
sexually responsive than most
American women I've taken
out. Is it true that Musk Oil
perfum e and other body
powders and creams have
hormones that arouse the
female sex or is that a lot of
baloney? My friends claim
they work but with me they
rate zero.
DEAR
READER
Perhaps your sampling
technique leaves something to
be desired. You will find all
levels of sex drive in both
sexes in most societies. Such
generalizations as you make
seldom apply across the
board; what counts is the
individual.
Scents are important in
sexual aro u sa l. Hut what
turns one person on turns
another one off. A lot of sexual
response is in the mind. The
brain is one of the most im­
portant sexual organs we
have. And speaking of that,
your own attitude toward
American women as opposed
to Oriental or European may
have a bearing on what
happens.

WIN AT BRIDGE

by Ed Sullivan

P R I S C I L L A 'S P O P
H A Z E L , I CAN F E E L N
IT IN AW [J O N E S ' IM
G O IN G TO L O S E AW
J O B - T J U S T KNOW' IT '

UNEMPLOYMENT IS

GETTING WORSE ANP
WORSE’
WHAT IF [AN

R R E P ? A MAN

HAS TO WORK '
ITS HIS LIFE.'

ILL G O ^ Y 'W H A T LL
TO PIECES
t P O IF
IF I CANT
I CAN T
WORK '
GO TO THE
OFFICE
EVERY
k
% ) PAY**

I LL HAVE TO HANG
ON TO MY JO B AT
ALL C O ST S /
a

by Stoffei &amp; Heimdahl

BUGS BU N N Y

CAPRICORN l Dec. 22-Jan.
19) Keep a tight rein on your
finances today, or your
spending could get out of
hand. If you're doing things
with friends, let everybody
share the cost.
ARUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) You’re capable of wor­
thw hile accomplishments
today, provided you don’t take
on more than you can handle.
He very selective about your
goals.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
You could have a few more
responsibilities than usual

your mate as promptly as
possible today. T here’s a
chance
additional
disagreements could cause a
serious chain reaction.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
You’re very observant today.
It will be easy to spot flaws in
others. However, keep what
you see to yourself or they’ll
point out your shortcomings.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct 23 1 An
inexpensive shopping ex­
cursion today could turn Into
an extravagant spree if you
let your impulses dominate
your purchases.

Writ

North Ea»l

:♦

14
i’MS

Pm*

Pat*

South

14
44

Pat*

Opening lead #K

By Oiwild Jacoby
and Jamei Jacoby
Oswald "We sure took
good care of East and West
last Week What point can
you suggest for declarers
this week?"
Jim: “I want to amend our
acronym 'Arch' to read
'Analyze the lead. ffeview

the bidding Count’ How can

l make mv contract'"
Oswald "In other words,
you w an t fo stress
counting "
Jim "Let s start with a
irpm hand Irom a
Fred Karpin
recent Popular
’opular Bridge
B
issue Sot that it is a new
hand It has appeared in one
lorn or another in columns
and books since the days of
Edmond Hoyle "
Oswald "West starts with
king, ace and a small
diamond Blast ruffs and
leads back a club to South's
ace South starts on trumps
and is surprised when East
shows out
Jim "The countdown has
started West was dealt six
diamonds and three spades
and has followed to one club.
South draws West's trumps,
p/ais dummy's king olclubs
ana ruffs dummy's last club
He sees West continue to fol­
low so that 12 of West's
cards have been other than
hearts "
Oswald "This leaves West
with /ust one heart, if any If
that heart is the queen or 10.
South can make his contract
He leads the six of hearts to
dummy. West produces the
10"
Jim: "The count has paid
off South takes the surething finesse against East's
queen and is home "
by Jim Davis

G A R F IE L D

WF DON’T chtdfi

90

. ---------- , r M F E t e N C t t
* i fo i

&amp;

-

1

mr

H FpE,

. g r o z n ik . . .

;

MY A$SVT*NT H^R£
(cNOW/ IF \O W yE &amp; B N \
N/KU6HTY OR NICE.
TH^Vli (1*11

by Leonard Starr

A N N IE
by T, K. R yan

TU M BLEW EEDS

F IR S T T IM E I'VE E V E R '
S E E N A CAVALRY WIVAJER
w nn
O N IT.

-UR .JWT OUT 0 CURIOSITY, i \ m
L W Y -N W C O Y F K 56K
YOUKE
Y‘RUN FASTER H' RE
HOT CALLING
WHENI5 ft»rWU?
R E A UAX,
AHHtE

p u F f.

4 PUFF

I
&gt;

ER-rtEC%H O !
OCOUKSe NOT.'J

�Evening Herald. Sanford. F I.

Mond.i/ Nov 12, 1982—SB

Herald Photo* by Tom Vincent

STUDENTS
GET A
TASTE OF WAR

Woodland Klrmi'iilnn School in Hollywood was (In* scent* of a living history
lesson Iasi week as Vern Crofoot. a member of the Historic rioritla Militia,
tlisplavetl weapons and uniforms of the American Hevolution. At left, Crofoot
lets teacher ltill Young test fire a imuzh'-ltKiilmg musket. At right, lit*
demonstrates tin* use of a bayonet in combat. As part of the program,
students also were shown how 1Nth Centur) women made bread at home.

Gore: Gene Splicing Must Be Monitored
NASHVIIJ.E, Tcnn.
lUIMl Advances in genetic engineering, which
one day could transform animals into
subhuman slaves, are developing much
faster than expected and Congress must
monitor the field, says Hep. Albert Gore
Jr., D-Tcnn.
Gore, chairman of the subcommittee
on investigations and oversight of the
House Com m ittee on Science and
Technology, said he will propose
legislation to give Congress such a

monitoring role.
*'Our legal and ethical structures are
unprepared for the questions that will be
forced upon us by human genetic
engineering,” Gore said during the
weekend.
" I t is imperative that we monitor these
new developments and accelerate the
creation of a new body of ethics to guide
us in making the decisions we will con­
front."
Gore’s subcommittee heard testimony

last week on the application of genetic
engineering on humans.
The lawmaker said Ihe applicalions of
genetic engineering are developing much
faster th an anyone predicted and
Congress needs the machinery to keep
abreast of developments.
A special presidential conunission has
reported that development of sub-human
slaves by genetic transfer is a possibility
and must be guarded against.

HOW TO ERASE A GOOD
I

PART OF YOUR FUTURE..

,Y
v

I t ’s t h e n e w s p a p e r h a b i t !
Here ii comes again . . . another shoplifting

Herald readert enjoy:
• YOUR FAVOR IT ! C O M IC DAILY
and In full color tabloid on Sunday

• OURS! IVES
ABOUT PEOPLE YOU KNOW

• COMPLETE AREA SPORTS COVERAGE DAILY A N D SUNDAY

pitch. Vie know you've heard it before, hut read
fin. Shoplifting is stealing. It is punishable by law

•High School* College •Little League *lowling«Rec. League ^Hunting and Flihlng

• A COMPLETE VARIETY OF GROCERY ADS
with valuable monty saving coupons

Special Introductory
offer 3 months home
d e live ry for *10°°
Call or writ* tha

E v e n in g H e r a ld
P.O. BOX 14J7
SANFORD, FL.
332-1411

• LEISURE MAGAZINE

Complete week's TV listings every Friday

and it labels you a criminal. It can wipe out yo u r
hopes for the future. It gels you a court record
that can't be erased. Say good by to college plans

NAME
ADDRESS

o r landing a jo b .

CITY
PHONE

Em ployers

K ill

think

before they hire a thief. Is that wallet, necklace

Evening Herald
P.O. »O X 1457
Sanford, FI. J177I

or lipstick you pocket worth tin* price you must
pay in the end?
A Community Service Message From The Herald

EA

twice

t.

JT

�6B— Evening Herald, Sanford. F I.

Monday Now. I I , 1983

Legal Notice

Retired 70-Year-Old

NOTICE

Feels Socially Secure
AP0I.1.0 BEACH &lt;UPI i — W alter Sala has
collected about 126,000 in Social Security
payments and now he plans to pay it back.
With interest.
Sala, 70, has made the financially strapped
Social Security system the beneficiary of a
time deposit cavings account worth $34,000.
Next week, he plans to go to his bank and make
it an even $40,000.
‘ Everybody tells me I’m crazy, but I’m just
trying to satisfy myself," i.» said. "All 1 want
is when they put me in the ground, 1 want them
to say 1 was no leech I was no deadbeat."
Sala said if more people were giving instead
of taking, Social Security and the United
States w ould be in much better shape

"The way I see it," said Sala, who lives in a
waterfront mobile home park, "I'm an
American and that’s like being bom a
billionaire."
Sala. who had a successful career in the
concession business, went to the Social
Security office in Tampa about a month ago to
find out how much the system had given him.
It amounted to about $2fi,000, but he told
officials he would leave the agency $40,000.
The $40,000 is not a gift, Sala said.
"I'm just going to give it back." he said. T
wish I had a trillion dollars or whatever it is
Social Security is in the hole. I’d give every
penny of it."

legal Notice

REALTY TRANSFERS
G to rg t D Vanginhoven A wt
Martha to Donald Dondov i wt
Rhode. lot 61, Wekiva Hills, tec 9.
SI»A.tOO
T 1 S Prop Inv .Inc to Bruce F
Williamson &amp; * 1 Sybil 6 , lot I.
Osceola Ac ms, 112 000
H a rv e y D Johnson ig l to
Pamela J Johnson, s g l, Lot 20,
Bit 2. North Orlando 2nd addn,
1100
Ben E Butler A wt Nancy to
Dennli M flarborka A Linda C , W
160' of E 295' ol N E 1&lt; Of NE'x Ol
NW'x sec t5 TO 30. 1110.000
Thomas B Aldrich A at Vivian
lo Bichard E Miller A wt Doreen
J , Lot 33, Wekiva Hills sec 9,
SI 14.000
(O C D I Lake ol the Woods tnc to
Donald K Lang lilt A wt Marjorie
S, Lot *13. Lake ol the Woods,
Townhouse. Sec It. S100
BMA Prop inc to Donald
Lanqtilt A a t, same as above.
111600
Francis H Phillips A at Sandra
to M arvin L
A Dortha M
Knowles. beq NE cor ol Lot 9, Bik
E. Seminole Sites. 1600
Patricia Mishoae A Pearl D
Forbes to William Thornloa. sgt .
Lot 2*. Blk J. Mobile Manor 2nd
Sec . 19.000
FI Land Co to Barbara Ann
Craig, sgl . Lot l*, Heron Cove,

in.™
Mark A Rupert, sgl lo Steven
W Stag** A at Patricia M . Lots 11
A 12. Bik D. Semmole terrace
Replat. 110,000
Marguerite H Haynes, aid to
treetop Properties Inc , Lot 2, Blk
B. Hanson s Acres. I l l , WO
FI Res Comm , Inc to timothy
J Lesch A a t Laura B„ Lot I.
Iiberon Cove, 174,000
David M knnavel A at Bonnie
L lo Sarnpuran S Khalsa. Lot 7.
Blk J, North Orlando terr Sec
Four. Un One, 162.000
Edqar E Smart J r . sgl lo In
vestment Specialists Inc . Lot IS,
Blk 3, North Orlando 2nd Addn,
131.600
Stuhrke Constr A Enqr Inc lo
John W Spade A a t Nora Lot 12.
Blk D. Columbus Harbor. S96 000
Cassel Creek Corp to Carl M
Famende* A a t Patricia B , Un S.
Townhouse C, Cassrt Creek Ph l.
171.900
Jerome H Johns Jr to Edwin C
Wolek Jr A a f Judy J . Lot 79
Wekiva Club Ests , Sec 9.1104.000

Kurron. Inc . Lot 16 A E ' . ot IS.
Blk F. lonqwood Park, SS9.000
Russell C
Sumner A a t
M a r qaret
T . to Allen
E
Baqnieaski A at Oiane O . Lot 3,
B'k D. Cleaves i d . (71.900
Marilyn Gay Mubler to William
D Hubler. Un USB Springaood
Vill Cond . S100
Doris A Ramirez, sgl to James
M Clarke A af Linda L . Lof t, Blk
G. Nortn Orlando Ranches, Sec 2
A. S it,BOO
Springaood Vill Apt Corp to
Donald R Turkelson Im arr ) Un
158 A Springaood V ill Cond .
111.300
Springaood Village Apt Corp
To Bart j Murphy, sgl , Un t i l C
Springaood Village Cond , 111,800
William P K Rochtort Im a rr I
to Virginia L Florian Reynolds
Im arr I Lot .3. Blk E . Sunland
Estates. 12*.100
Virginia L F
Reynolds to
Timothy J McCauley A at Anita
C . Lot 3, Bit E. Sunland Ests.,
1*1.500
William R Llttteton A wf Linda
lo Michael K O'Brien, sgt , Lot IS.
Blk L, Foimoor Un 3, 161.000
Keith E Dllley A at Ethel M to
Douqlas G Moorhead A a t Irene
I . Lot 290. Spring Oaks Un 2.
177.000
Rose E Hansen A Mitii H Long
to Rose E Hansen. Lot 11, Hlk A,
Lake Harney Shores, $100
Rose E Hansen A M itjl M Long
to Rose E Hansen. S ' j of W ' i of
E 'j o f S W '.o f S W '. Hess E IS) 8.
W 31 links) Sec. IS 20 32. S10O
IQ C D I Cathy J Peatross fo
Julia J Simmons. Lot 28. Blk d,
Columbus Harbor, 1100
j.im esA Heinrich A af Barbara
C lo C a rl T FairesA at Patricia
N , Lot 2. Tuskaallla Acres.
128.000
Janice Gail Smith A H arry M
P alm g u isl. sgl lo Jared F
Marline/ A at Andrea M . Lot 66.
Hidden Lake Ph il. Un I, 112,600
A ll Slate Homes, tnc. to
American Housing Group Inc . N
78 92’ all of 30. Blk C. Seminole
Terr Replat, mlg incl other prop
to SWD. 19,000
Paul E Brock A at Janice L to
Robert W Collesler Jr A a l Doris
P . Lot 2, Blk j. The Woodlands.
183.100
Janet E Leibin, sgl. to Gene
Schmitt, sql , Lot It. less E 100',
Edyvean Park. S17.I00

CALEN D AR
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 22
Seminole League u( Civic Associations, 7:30 p in.,
Westmonte Civic Center, Spring Oaks Ikmlevard.
Altamonte Springs. Speakers: Bill Subcr, county
property appraiser and Troy Hay Jr., tax collector.
Open to public.
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 23
W ilson Elem entary School I’arenl-Teacher
Association, 7:30 p.m. Urogram: Children's Pageant,
"O ur Country Tis of Thee,"
Winter Sprtngi Sertuma, 7:30 a.m., Big Cypress.
Longwood Rotary Club, 7:30 a.m ., Longwood Village
Inn.
Sanford T oastm uten, 7:15
R estaurant,

a .m . Sanford

Airport

Sanford Lions Club, noon, Holiday Inn on U k e
Monroe.
Longwood Sertoma, noon, Sundance, State Road 436.
Seminole Al-Anon., noon, Altamonte Community
Church. 436 a t Hermits Trail, Altamonte Springs.
Oviedo Rotary Club, 7:30 a.m., Town House
Restaurant.

C ITY OF C A S S E L B E R R Y
PLANNING A N D Z O N IN G
COMM ISSION
NOTICE IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
that the City ot Casselberry
Planning and Zoning Commission
will hold a Public Hearing lo
review
and
m ake
recom
mendations on the proposed
enactment ot Ordinance No 17$
entitled
ANO R O IN A N CE OF TH E C ITY
OF C A SSELBER R Y. FLO R ID A .
AM ENDING S E C TIO N 157 128 OF
THE C ITY CODE TO C O R R E C T A
S C R I V E N E R 'S
ERROR
C H A N G IN G A R E F E R E N C E
FROM C t TO C 2. P R O V ID IN G
FOR
C O N F L I C T S .
S E V E R A B IL IT Y .
AND
EF
F E C TIV E D A TE
Public Hearing will be held on
Wednesday. Oec ember 8. 1982, at
7 30 P M m Ihe Casselberry City
Hall, 9S Lake T rip le t Drive.
Casselberry, Florida, or as soon
thereafter as possible At the
hearing interested parties may
appear and be heard with respect
lo the proposed oedmanee Copies
ot the proposed ordinance are
available at Ihe City Hall with the
Clerk ol the City and the same may
tv inspected by Ihe public during
normal busmen hours
Dated this 18th day ot Novem
ber, A D IN2
Mary W Hawthorne,
City Clerk
ADVICE TO t h e P U B L IC It a
per son dec ides to appeal a decision
made with respect to any matter
considered al the above hearing,
he will need a verbatim record ot
all proceedings, including Ihe
testimony and evidence, which
record is not provided by the City
ot Casselberry (Chapter 80 ISO
Laws ol Florida. 19801
Publish November 27. 1982
D E B 113
IN THE C IR C UIT C O U R T FOR
SEM INOLE C O U N T Y . F LO R ID A
PROBATE DIVISION
File Number 12 SU CP
Division Probate
IN RE E S TA TE OF
ROSCOE M TA Y LO R
Deceased
NO TICE OF A D M IN IS TR A TIO N
The administration ot the estate
Ot
ROSCOE
H
TAYLO R
deceased. File Number 87 5*6 CP.
■spending in Ihe Circuit Court tor
Seminole County. Florida, Probate
Division, the address ol which is
Seminole County Courthouse.
Santord, Florida. 32771
The
names and addresses ol the per
sona) representative and the
personal representative's attorney
are set forth below
All interested persons are
required to Me with this court.
W ITHIN TH R EE M O N TH S OF
THE FIRST P U B L IC A TIO N OF
THIS N O TIC E : (1) all claims
against the rslate and 171 any
obifction by an Interested person
to whom notice was mailed that
challenges the validity ot the will,
the qualifications ol Ihe personal
representative,
venue.
or
lurisdiction ol Ihe court
ALL
C LA IM S
AND
OB
JECTIONS NOT SO F IL E D W ILL
BE FOREVER B A R R E D
' Publication ol this Notice has
begun on November 22. 1982
Personal Representative
Ronald D Taylor
Routr J. Boi I7JBO
Santord. FL 37771
Attorney tor Personal
Representative
A Edwin Shinholser
Post Ollice Boa 7779
Santord. FL 12771 0079
Telephone 1305) 373 1660
Publish November 77. 79, 19*7
D E B 110

CITY OF CASSELBERRY
PLANNING ANDZONING
COMMISSION
N O TICE IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
that the City of C asselberry
Planning and Zoning Commission
will hold a Public Hearing lo
review
and
make
recom
mendations on the proposed
enactment ol Ordinance No *7*
entitled
AN ORDINANCE OF T H E C IT Y
OF CASSELBERR Y, F L O R ID A .
ADDING A NEW S E C TIO N TO
TH E C IT Y CODE TO BE NUM
B E R E O 157 111 IM P O SIN G A
H E IG H T R ES TR IC TIO N IN A C 1
ZONING DISTRICT OF T H IR T Y
F IV E 111) F E E T , P R O V ID IN G
FO R
C O N F L I C T S ,
S E V E R A B IL IT Y .
AND
EF
F E C T IV E DATE

Public Hearing will be held on
Wednesday. December I. 1912. al
7 30 P M m the Casselberry City
Hall, 91 Lake Triplet Drive,
Cassefberry, Florida, or as soon
thereafter as possible. Al Use
hearing Interested parlies may
appear and be heard with respect
to the proposed ordinance Copies
of the proposed ordinance are
available at the City Hall with the
Cierkot the City and Iht same may
be inspected by the public during
normal business hours.
Dated this llih day of Novem
ber. A D 1982
Mary W Hawthorne. City Clerk
ADVICE TO THE P U B LIC : If a
per son decides to appeal a decision
made with respect to any mailer
considered at the above hearing,
he will need a verbatim record ot
all proceedings, including Ihe
testimony and evidence, which
record is not provided by Ihe City
ot Cassefberry (Chapter 00 ISO.
Laws ot Florida. 19101
Publish Nov 32. 1982
DEB til

*6„‘i • ■'W -

The City ot Longwood Florida
has submitted its report to the
Census Bureau on the actual uses
ol general revenue sharing lunds
tor llscal year 1981 8? A copy ot
the report and supporting data are
available at Longwood City Hall,
I7S West
W arren
Avenue,
Longwood, Florida during the
hours of 8 00 a m and 5 00 p m for
public Inspection
D L TER R Y
C IT Y C L E R K
Publish November 27. 1982
OEB I0S

C IT Y OF CASSELBERR Y
P L A N N IN G AN D ZO N IN G
COM M ISSION
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y GIVEN
that the C ity ot Casselberry
Planning and Zonmq Commission
will hold a Public Hearing to
review
and
make
recom
mendations on the proposed
enactment o* Ordinance No *78
entitled
A N O R D IN A N C E OF THE CITY
OF C A S S E L B E R R Y . FLORIDA.
ADDING A N EW SECTION TO
THE C IT Y C O D E T O B E -NUM
B E R E D 157 t!9 P R O V ID IN G
TH AT Y A R D R EQ U IR E M EN TS
IN A C IZ O N IN G O IS TR IC T
SHALL B E T H E SAME AS
THO SE
IN A C 7 ZONING
D IS T R IC T . P R O V ID IN G FOR
C O N FL IC TS .
S E V E R A B IL ITY .
AND E F F E C T I V E D ATE
Public Hearing will be held on
Wednesday. December 8, 1982, at
7 30 P M in the Casselberry City
Hall, 9S Lake Trip le t Drive.
Casselberry, Florida, or as soon
thereafter as possible At the
hearing interested parties may
appear and be heard with respect
lo the proposed ordinance Copies
of the p'oposed ordinance are
available at the City Hall with Ihe
Clerk of the City and ihe same may
be inspected by the public during
normal business hours
Dated this 18th day ol hovem
ber. A D 1987
Mary w Hawthorne.
City Clerk
AD V IC E T O T H E PUBLIC II a
person decides to appeal a decision
made with respect lo any matter
ronsidered at Ihe above hearing,
he will nerd a verbatim record ot
all proceedings, including the
testimony and evidence, which
record is not provided by the City
ol Casselberry (Chapter 80 ISO.
Laws ol F lorida 19801
Publish November 77, 1982
DEB It*

C IT Y OF C AS S ELB ER R Y
P L A N N IN G AN D ZONING
COM M ISSION
N O TIC E IS H E R E B Y GIVEN
that the C ity ot Casselberry
Planning and Zoninq Commission
will hold a Public Hearing to
review
and
make
recom
mendations on the proposed
mactmcml ol Ordinance ho *79
entitled
AN O R D IN A N C E OF T H E C IT Y
OF C A S S E L B E R R Y , FLORIDA
A M E N D IN G S E C TIO N IS7 290 OF
THE C IT Y C O D E PROVIOlNG
FOR ZO N IN G A M E N D M E N TS IN
C O M P L IA N C E
W IT H
F S
SECTIONS 161215 and t66 0*t
(C l. P R O V ID IN G FOR CON
FLtCTS, S E V E R A B IL IT Y . AND
E F F E C T IV E D A T E
Public Hearing will be held cm
Wednesday. December 8, 1982 at
7 JO P M in the Casselberry City
Hall. 9S Lake Trip le t Drive,
Casselberry, Florida, or as soon
thereafter as possible Al the
hearing interested parties may
appear and be heard with respect
to the proposed ordinance Copies
ol Ihe proposed ordinance are
available at the City Hall with the
Cierkot the City and the same may
be inspected by Ihe public during
normal business hours
Dated this 18th day ol Novem
ber. A D 1912
Mary W Hawthorne.
City Clerk
ADVICE TO T H E PUBLIC II a
person decides lo appeal a decision
made with respect to any matter
considered at the above hearing,
he will need a verbatim record ol
all proceedings, including the
testimony and evidence, which
rrcord is not provided by the City
ot Casselberry (Chapter 80 ISO.
Laws ol Florida. 19801
Publish November 27. 198?
DEB IIS

Legal Notice
N O T IC E
OF
PROPOSED
A G E N C Y ACTION
The
Department
ol
En
viro nm e nt.il Regulation gives
notice ot its intent lo issue a permit
to Brown Boverl Electric. Inc , tor
construction of a 2S6 It
7
evaporation pond
Proposed
location 701 Hickman Drive. I *
industrial Park Santord Florida
A person who Is substantially
affected by the Department s
proposed permitting decision may
request a hearing In accordance
with Section 120 57, Flo rid a
Statutes, and Chapters 17 I and 28
5. Florida Administrative Code
The request lor hearing must be
tiled (received) in the Ollice ot
General Counsel of the Depart
men! at 2600 Bia,r Stone Road.
T w in Tow ers Office B uilding.
Tallahassee Florida 32301. within
fourteen (1*1 daysot publication ol
thisnotice Failure to tile a request
for hearing within this time period
shall constitute a waiver ot any
right such person may have to
request a hearing under Section
120 S7, Florida Statutes
The application is available tor
public inspection during normal
business hours, 8 00 A M to 5 00
P M . Monday throuqh Friday,
except legal holidays.
al the
Departm ent ot Environm ental
Regulation. St Johns R ive r
D istrict Oltice, 3319 M aguire
Boulevard Suite 21? Orlando,
Florida 17803
Publish November 22, 1982
O E B 116

FICTITIOUSNAME
Notice is hereby given that I am
enqaged In business at 3820
Orlando Dr , Santord. Seminole
County. Florida under Me tic
titious name ot S E M IN O L E
S E W IN G IS VACUUM, and that I
•ntend to register said name with
the Clerk of the Circuit Court,
Seminole County, Florida in ac
cordance with the provisions ot the
Fictitious Name Statutes. To Wit
Section 865 09 Florida Statutes
1917
L A R R Y R SALTER
Publish November 22. 29 N
December 6. II. 1982
D E B 109

S E M IN O LE COUNTY
BOARD OF COUNTY
COMMISSIONERS
N O TIC E O F
P U B LIC HEARING
D E C E M B E R I*. 1(82 7 00 P M
The Board ot County Com
missionary of Seminole County,
F lorida. will hold a public hraring
to consider the following
I SHOP A GO. INC
BAHO 18
821 38E
C 3 Commercial Zone
Appeal aqamst the Buard ot Ad
lustment in denying a Special
Evception lo permit gas pumps as
an accessory use to convenience
store on the following described
property
Begin at SE corner ol Section A
21 30 run N 271 It. thence W *10 It,
thence S 275 It. thence E 450 It fo
POB Less R W lor roads Subiect
to easements or restrictions ot
record Furth er described as
located on the Northwest corner ot
Charlotte Street and County Rond
*27
* this public hearing will be held
in Room 200 ol the Seminole
County Courthouse, Santord
Florida, on December 1* 1982 at
7 00 P M . or as soon thereafter as
possible
Written comments Med with Me
Land Management Manager will
be considered Persons appearing
at Me public hearing will be heard
Hearings may be continued Irom
lime to lime as found necessary
F u rth e r details available by
calling 121 *J30, E »l IS9
Persons are advised Mat. It Mey
decide lo appeal any decision
made at this hearing they will
need a record ot the proceedings,
and. tor such purpose, they may
need to Insure that a verbatim
record ol the proceedings is made,
which
record
includes
Ihe testimony and evidence upon
which the appeal is to be based,
per Section 286 0101. Florida
Statutes
B O AR D OF COUNTY
CO M M ISSIO N ER S
S E M IN O L E
C O U N TY.
F L O R ID A
BY R O B E R T STURM.
C H A IR M A N
Attest Arthur H Beckwith Jr
Publish November 22. 1982
D E B 97

legal Notice
ATTENTION VOTER S
OF
CITY OF LAKE M ARY
T H R E E IM P O R TA N T ISSUES W IL L A P P E A R ON TH E
BALLO T IN T H E C IT Y ELECTIO N S O F D E C E M B E R 7. 198?
VOTERS W IL L B E AFFO R D ED TH E O P P O R T U N IT Y TO ADOPT
OR R E J E C T TH E FOLLOWING P R O P O S ITIO N S R E L A TIN G TO
THE A M E N D M E N T O F THE C H A R TER O F T H E C IT Y OF LAKE
MARY

ORDINANCE NO. IS7
Provides lor « General Revision ol Me City Charier but does NOT
chanqe the terms ot office ot elected officials and does NOT change
the general provisions lor election ot Council (Commission)
Members
This General Revision DOES provide lor the following changes in
the Charier
1 Consolidates and abbreviates Ihe legal description ot the City's
corporate lim its- does not change the city limits
7 Changes designation ol Council and Council Member to Com
mission and Commissioners
3 Changes number ol voles required to override Mayor’s veto
Irom two thirds to lour tilths

* Provides tor removal of City Manager, City Treasurer. City
Attorney and City Clerk by three tilths vote rather than tour tilths
vole and eliminates necessity lor severance pay for City Manager
5 Provides restrictions on power ot City Manager lo remove
appointed Administrative officers
6 Transfers responsibility for preparation ot City budget irom
City Manager to City Treasurer
7 Renumber s and reorgamtes various sections ol the Charter.
• In the event that multipit cendldates shall quality for election
tga single oltice, thal candidate receiving a plurality of votes cast
sheit be Haded. T here shall be r.o runoff eled Ion
» Make the appointment of Ihe City Manager mandatory
OROINANCI NO. IM
Provides lor the increase ol length ot terms of office lor Mayor
and Council (Commission) Members Irom two (7) to four (*) years
O RO IN AN CKN O .il*
Provides lor the elect'on ot tour City Commissioners ICouncil
Members I from four separate single member districts in which the
candidate must reside; temporary dislrldlng procedures;
procedures and guidelines lor pmodi. rcoistriding on population
basis and establishment ot Redistricting Committee.
The loregoing description is an abbreviated statement ot the
major points involved in each ot the three proposed Amendments.
Copies ol Ihe full ted of each proposad Amendment are available in
the City Hall ot Lake Mary, Florida The registered voters of the
City are inv Ited to review said documents and to obtain a tree copy
ihereof Irom the City Clerk during usual working hours ot I 00 a m
to * 30 p m Monday through Friday.
CONNIE MAJOR
CITY CLERK
Publish November», IS, 17.7*. 4 December«, 1913
OEB as

Legal Notice
IN T HE CI RCUI T C O U R T OF
THE E I G H T E E N T H JUDI CI AL
CI RCUI T . IN AND F OR SEMI N
OLE COUNT Y. F LOR 10A
Civil Action No 81 2790 CA Of E
AM M IE C E LLM A N
Plaintiff,
vs
D AV ID A H A T T A W A Y . JO AN E
HO TT AM E R IC A N BANK OF
M A R TIN C O U N TY, a Florida
corporation, L S D A N T O N E . and
TH E DINERS C LU B , INC , d b a
D IN ERS CLUB a toreign cor
poration.
Defendants
N OTICE OF A C T IO N
TO
L S D A N TO N E . Defendant,
and all others whom it may con
tern Residence t/Aknown
c o E Louts Fields. Attorney
the Fields Building
1699 E Oakland Park Blvd
Ft Lauderdale. FL 3333*
YOU ARE N O T IF IE D Mat an
action to foreclose a mortgage on
the loliowinq real property located
in Seminole County, Florida
Lot 19. Of SAM UEL A ROBIN
SON S SUBDIVISION ol Blocks I,
2, 1 and * ot SAM UEL A ROBIN
SON S AD D ITIO N OF O V IE D O ,
Seminole County, Florida, ac
cording to the Plat thereof as
recorded in Plat Book 3, Page 8, ot
the Public Records ot Semmole
County. Florida,
has been liledagainst you. and you
are required to serve a copy ot
your written detenses, if any, to It
on ARTHUR G LE O N M A R D T.
JR . Plaintiff* attorney, whose
address is 39 West Pine Street.
Orlando F la , on or before
December 70 1987. and Hie the
original with the Clerk ot this
Court either before service on
P la intiff* attorney
or
im
mediately thereafter. olherwi*e a
default will be entered again*! yn’i
lor the rebel demanded in the
Complaint or Petition
D A T E O thi* 17th day ol
November. 1982
IS E A LI
Arthur H BecKwlth, Jr
Clerk ot sitid Court
By Eve Crabtree
Deputy Clerk
Publish November 15. 72. 29.
December 6. 1982
D E B 86

CLASSIFIED ADS
Seminole

Orlando ■Winter Park

322-2611

831-9993

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
HOURS
8:00 A.M. - 5:30 P.M.
MONDAY thro F R ID A Y
S ATURD AY 9 Noon

D EA D LIN ES
Noon The Day Before Publication
Sunday Noon Friday
Monday 5:30P.M. Friday

IS— Help W anted

■$— Personals

1 WILL N O T BE RESPONSl
BLE FOR A N Y D E B TS IN
CURRED
BY
ANYONE
OTHER TH A N m y s e l f as
OF NOV 19, 198?
Clilton A Scott Jr

S— Lost &amp; Found
LOST 5 mo old pit bull, female,
brmdlf A white No collar
Lost in area ot Orange A Yalf
Aye tiv svu days 37108*7
eves
LOST GOG jm . brown trimmed
&gt;n black, temale about 3 yrs
old It anyone has seen or
knows where this dog &gt;s please
call 377 39S7 Owner grieving
Reward’

6 — C h ild G ire
CHILD C A R E specialljing In
infants 0 6 months But will
lake alder children
in
formation 372 93*3 until 17
C H IL D C A R E IS yrs e&gt;p
Affordable rates references
M othcrdl? 373 7759
C H IL D Care in my
home I 130. 7 S*S Break,
lunch 1 snack 323 1616

N O TICE T O G E N E R A L
E L E C TIO N
TO WHOM IT M AY C O N C ER N
You will please take notice that a
general election wilt be held m the
City of Lake Mary. Florida, on the
7th day of December. 1982. tor the
purpose ol electing
Mayor lor a two year term
Councilman Seat I tor a term ot
one year
Councilman Seat 2 lor a term ot
two years
Councilman Seat * tor a term ol
two years
Councilman Sea! S tor a term ol
one year
Included on the ballot are three
referendum questions pertaining
to proposed revisions to the City
Charter
The place lor vntinq will Pc* the
Council Chambers, City Hall. IS8
North Country Ctub Road, lake
M ary. Florida
The polls will be open Irom 7 00
A M lo 7 00 P M
Chairmanof the Election Board
Pat Thompson
Serving on Ihe Election Board
Virginia Nelson,Gwen Butler. Pita
Hughes and Millie Murray
All persons legally registered in
Semmole County and living within
the boundaries ol the City ot Lake
M a ry
Florida
m ay
avail
themselves ot their Rights ol
Franchise
D A T E D Novembers. 198?
Connie V Maior
City Clerk
Publish November IS, 77, 1982
D E B *6

NO TICE OF S H E R IF F ’S
SALE
N O TIC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
that by virtue ol that certain Writ
ot Execution issued out ol and
under the seal ot the C O U N T Y
Court ot Seminole County, Florida,
upon a final judgement rendered
m Me aforesaid court on the *th
day ol August, A D , 1982, in that
certain case entitled. David J,
Bulmahn and Linda L Bulmahn
Plaintiff, vs Betty L Redmond.
Defendant, which aforesaid Writ
of Eaccufon was delivered fo me
as Shenll ol Semmole County,
F lorida, and I have levied upon the
lollowm g described property
owned by Belly L Redmond, said
properly being located in Seminole
County. Florida, m ore par
ticularly described as follows
One 1982 Chevrolet 2 door
Automobile, ID No IAW27J6B
D4739S7 being stored al Spankys
in Longwood, Florida
and the undersigned as Sherifl of
Semmole County. Florida, will at
II 00 A M on the 30th day ol
November. A D , 1982, otter lor
vale and sell to the highest bidder,
tor cash, subject to any and all
existing liens, at Ihe Front I West)
Door at Me steps ol the Semmole
County Courthouse In Santord.
F lo rid a , the above described
personal property
That said sale is being made lo
satisfy the terms ot said Writ ot
Execution
John E Polk,
Sherifl
Semmole County, Florida
Publish November I, is. 22. 29,
with ihe sale on November 30. 19*7
D E B IS

NOTICE UNDER FICTITIO U S
NAME STATUTE
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN
Notic* i* hereby given that the
undersigned pursuant to the
"Fictitious Name Statute,"
Chapter I6S09, Florida Statute*,
will register with the County
Clerk, in end tor Seminole County,
Florida, upon receipt ol proof of
the publication ot this notice, the
fictitious name, to wit FLOR ID A
IN S T IT U T E
FOR
LEGAL
ASSISTANTS under which we
expect to engage in business at MS
South Highway 17*7. Casselberry,
Florida 327S7.
That the corporation interested
in said business enterprise it as
follows FAME Enterprise*. Inc.,
a Florida corporation
Dated at Casselberry, Seminole
Courtly, Florida. November 10,
1*07.
Feitti K Stainaker.
President
Publish Nov IS. 77. 7*. Oec. *.
1*07
O EB 81

RATES
(lime
5*c a lino
j consecutive limes 54c a line
7 consecutive times Ucalme
10consecutive times *7c a line
57.00 Minimum
3 Lines Minimum

Spring n here and it's a good
time to choose a new home
Irom the pages ot our
classified ads
C H IL D C A R E
Alma Ave , Lake Mary
377 09*5
I M A M ATU R E lady who gives
exctllenl care to children in
my home 323 8359

9— Good T h in g s to Eat
I G r nk grapefruit, Iq micy
tangerines. Navel oranges,
langelos Orange Ave . Citrus
Heights oil *27 122 *686

L E G A L S E C R E TA R V
Temporary.— Part Time, bring
complete Resume to Room
260. Semmole County
Courthouse
NO E X P E R IE N C E R EQ U IR ED
tor this high Income op
portunity with national oil
company in SANFORD area
Reqardless ol experience
Write P M Read, Bo* 696
Dayton. Ohio *5501
C U STO M ER service. Earn from
$4 hr or more Work from
homr on established telephone
program, Ilex hrs_ 33) 0183

COOK

................... $3.35

Will tram some counter work
and cashier possible Flexible
hours raises
AAA E M P L O Y M E N T
107 French Ave
1230 76
C A B IN E T M A K E R S EXPERI
E N C E D , LAM IN ATO R S, AS
S E M B L E R S 339 59*3

LA N D S C A P IN G ...$3.50
Will train dependable, strong
sod work and planting, raises
permanent
AAA E M P L O Y M E N T
107 French Ave
1315176
AVON products needs ladies A
men, sell or buy On iob
training, advancement
177 5910
F U LL time Manaqer trainee live
day week, salary plus com
mission on bonus. Potential
advancement, hospilali/ation
and retirement Must work
Some evenings, also part time
position avail , apply ABC
Liquor Santord

ROOFER

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

$*

Experienced needed, must have
some tools Growing company
some overtime, raises, needs
now
AA A E M P L O Y M E N T
1917 French Ave
1215174

II—Special Notices
I am no lonqer atllliated with
DAE Carpentry as ol Sept 3.
1982. and am not liable tor any
debts alter that date
Edward W Piatt
J f THE B AR G AIN S TO R E £
Ladies shoes N E W S ! up
60* W llth St.
LOSE 10 I* LBS IN 1* DAYS
G U A R A N TE E D W IT H TH E
DOCTORS’ D IE T
S3 00 A
DAY 323 8797

M E C H A N IC ...............$$$
Have several positions available
lor experienced people with
own tools Good money to be
made, call early
AAA E M P L O Y M E N T

37)117*

AVON Needs you! Supplement
your
income!
Retirees
Welcome Too!! 177 0*S9

STOP AND THINK A M INUTE
it Classified Ads didn't
work there wouldn't be any

IN S U R A N C E .............. $4
Part time can go lull time, will
train lor license Exciting new
idea Can make excellent
money Fee reimbursed when
proven

AAA EM PLO YM EN T
t*17 French Ay*.
171-1171
OYSTER Shuckers exp only
Apply Uncle Nick’s Liquor and
O ylltr Bar 1J7 7807

G IR L
FR ID AY ...........

SHARE M Y new 3 barm. ) bath
townhouse in Winter Springs
150 week 37/ 3734_________

29— Rooms
SANFORD Furnished rooms by
the week Reasonable rales,
maid service Catering to
working people Unfurnished
Apartments I A 7 Bedrooms
373 *507 500 Palmetto Ave.
SANFORD. Reas weekly IS
monthly rates Util inc ett 500
Oak Adults I 8*1 718)

IS— Help W anted

1917 French Ave.

28—Apts. &amp; Houses
To Share

$$$

Light typing work with invoices,
some phone w ork, sharp,
dependable, needs now

AAA EM P LO YM EN T
TSI7 French Ave.
3711176

Legal Notice
FICTITIOUS NAMK
Notice i$ hereby given that I am
engaged m business at 473 E *th
St Santord Seminole County,
Florida under tne fictitious name
ot ED UPHOLSTERY, and thal l
intend to register said name with
Clerk of the Circuit Court,
Semmole County, Florida in ac
cordance with the provisions ot the
F ictit-ous Name Statutes. To Wit
Section 143 09 Florida Statutes
1957
Signature Etekiel Dingle
Publish Nov I. IS, 77. 79. 1917
DEB 17_______________________
FICTITIO U SN A M E
Notice is hereby given that we
are engaged in business at 107 b
Concord D r , Casselberry, Fla
(17707), Srmmote County, Florida
under the fictitious name ot Lake
Distributors, and tnat we intend to
rtgisier said name with the Clerk
ot the Circuit Court. Seminole
County, Florida m accordance
with ihe provisions ol the Fic­
titious Name Statute*. To Wit:
Section 165 0* Florida Statutes
1*S7
Signature
Gladys C Broderick
John P Broderick
Publish Nov (S. 77. 7* I Dec. A
1*17
DEB IS

ROOM lor rent with maid ser
vice Fam ily atmosphere 135
wk or pay by the mo 377 9066

30 Apartments Unfurnished
t. 2 A N D 3 BDR M From 1260
R'dgewood Arm s Apt 2510
Ridgewood Ave 37)6*20

lW

O T

v

A P A R TM EN TS

F a m ily i Adults section
Poolside. 7 Bdrms, Master
Cove Apts 37) 7900 Open on
weekends
E X TR A nice 1 bdrm apt Heat A
Air 1700 mo plus 1150 dep
Century 21
June Poriig, Realtor
327 1678
M EL L O N V IL LE
TR A CE
AP A R TM EN TS
spc.iou*.
modern 7 bdrm. I bath a p t,
carpeted, xitctten equipped
Cent HA Walk to town fc lake
no pets I TVS 371 310).
ENJOY country living? 7 Bdrm,
Duplex A p ts . Olympic si
pool Shenandoah Village
Open 9 10 6 J 2) 2970

G EN EV A GARDENS
7 Bdrm apartments
W D Hook up
F rom 1300 per mo
1505W 2Slh St_________ 3?; 3gyp
OARAGE Apt I bdrm, I bath
1275 mo Unturn 1750 mo
turn 1st last, damage. 37? 1469
Relerences req Avail Dec I
BAMBOO c o v
300 E Airpor
107Borms
Phone 323

Manner’s Village on Lake Ada. I
bdrm Irom 12*5, I bdrm Irom
VW0 Located (7 *2 just south
ot Airport Blvd. in Santord All
Adults 1731*70

SANFORD Art#, efficiency apt.
completely remodeled 1775
mo Call 1 *73 155* Monday
thru Friday * a Aik (or Steve.

SP*'/ic T

h o u s e cl e an in g ?

N F F n J n ° 5T N0 ‘•ONCER
N EED ED ITEM S WITH A
CLASSIFIED AD
hurmshed apartments
Cituen* 111 Palmed
Cowan No phono ca

31—Apartments Furnished
I BDRM. Carpeted and panel
wails, am cond. over » pn
red. No children 377JU 14

�41— Houses

31— Apartments Furnished
F U k N l$ H E D 1 Bdrm apt
no pets or kids S27Smo
327 SB34

NO qualifying 2 Bdrm. 1 bath
and Study Large lot $5,800
down and assume $75,000
Mortgaqe at 8 ';% $115 pays
all Owner 331 &gt;08$____________

j

CHU LU OTA Free utilities. I
txlrm appl *2J0 See 339 7200
Sav On Rmtals. Inc U n i t o r
LA RGE n.ce, partly furnished
W-ter turrushed Adulti no
pets Sits mo $150 dep IIS
French Ave 322 681) or
628 4652
|

JU N E P O R Z IG R E A L T Y
REALTOR
807 S French Ave

MLS

322-8678

SANFORD Fr util. I DR no
lease $45 wk See 339 7200
Sav On Rentals, Inc Realtor

THREE g r e a t b u y s
Reduced to $37,900 this 7 bdrm 2
bath charmer w ll please you
with its large rooms. I r p l . and
tented m yard with lots ot
Garaqe sales'are in season Teif’ i
citrus Go VA or F h a or cash
the people about .t *.th a,
to mortQagr
Class.t.rd Ad m the Meraid
322 2611 t i l e,vj.
RE D U C E D to $15 000 situated on
2 j acres, this mobile home
T O W N H O U S E No pets, no
has 7 bdrm. I ' , baths Owner
children S1S0 Mo taso dep . t
financing with $7500 down
yr. lease
KISH R EAL E S T A T E
R E O U C E D to $69,900 Sellers
111 0941
Alicia
123.7154
are motivated' And you will be
too. when you see this 3 or 4
bdrm 7 bath, immaculate
31A — Rjplexes
large pool home with building
tor laundry and recreation
1 ON R I D G E W O O D Lane,
Completely lenced
screened porch $380 mo
ftJUNE PORZIG R E A L T Y ,
R EAL TO R
1231676
LO N G W O O D Area Z Bdrm
duple, STtS mo Call I 42) 3558
Monday thru Friday 9 6 Ask
lor Steve

PARK AVE 2 bdrm kids, lull
kit. Irpl S2SO See 319 7200
Sav On Rentals, Inc. Realtor
2 BDRM. I Bath, wall wall
carpet Cent HA. fenced yard,
kitchen appl 111 6718
SANFORO unfurnished duplei
2 Bdrm. Bath, appl . utility
room S3SO mo 139 IS42

WE N E E D LISTINGS

323-5774
7806 H W Y . 17 92

W IN TER Springs. 1 2, kids. pets,
appl, $150 See 339 7200

Sav On Rentals. Inc. Realtor
SANFORD 1 bedrooms. S32S
month.
$100
sec
dep
References Call 322 1477
CASSELBERRY Coiy cottage,
air. appl $775 See 139 7200

Sav On Rentals. Inc Realtor

OWNER financing 11‘ j . needs
repair $24,900

321 0759

EVE

3227M3

114 GARR ISON DR
2 Bdrm. t Bath
$100 mo Plus Security
2 bdrm I bath. LR &amp; FR appl .
quiet area S12S plus dep
377 0716 or 171 3050
SORRENTO*3 7. eat in kit . Irpl
Country setting, kids, pets OK
904 111 5641 or 111 7845

34-Mobile Homes
2 BDRM T R A I L E R , built on
room and big screened porch
1250 mo NO P E T S and fenced
in yard Rifhlo area 3216X4

STENSTROM
REALTY -

WE LIST AND SELL
MORE HOMES THAN
ANYONE IN NORTH
SEMINOLE COUNTYI

37— Business Property
100SQ F T O F F I C E
space on French Ave
123 7140

37 B— Rental Offices
6RIME
O F F IC E
SPACE.
Providence Blvd.. Deltona.
7166 Sq. Ft. Can Be Divided
With Parking. Oays 30S S74
1434
Evenings ft Weekends
________ 904 736 3693.__________
4 cdMMERICAL Offices
Newly remodeled S9Spermo.
121 9090
1600 Sq It otf.ee. IIS Maple
Ave. Sanlord Avail Immed
Broker Owner 172 7209
O FF IC E SPACE
FOR L E A S E
810 7773

___37C For Lease
SPACE FOR Lease at Sanlord
Airport. For iioraqe or small
business 327 4403

41— Houses

B E A U TIFU L! 3 Bdrm. I Bath,
energy efficient home! Alum,
pool w-decking. Ig FR. split
bdrm plan. CH4AC. ntw root,
lust painted ft immacvlattt
$$7,900!
SPECIALI 3 Bdrm. 2 Bath homt
near Maylair Co. Clubl Ntw
roof, carptt ft compltttly
rtdontl Split bdrm plan,
laundry, workshop. Ig. cprntr
lot ft moral $44.1001
MOBILE HOMEI 1 Bdrm. I
Both, rtmodelid homo w-ntw
root ft many titra tl Nico FR,
tat in kit, ft horstl wtlcomtl
Country living at 174.1001
JUST FOR YOU! Nawly pointed
2 Bdrm. 1 Bath homy In CCM
on a Ig. cornar lancatf tall
Wallpapar, panalling. built
Ins. FR. aot In kit. WWC ft
moral S39.900I
MAYFAIR VILLAS! 2ft 3 Bdrm.
2 Bath Condo Villas, nail la
Maylair Country Club Salad
your tat. Iloor plan ft intanar
decori Quality constructed by
Shoemaker for $47,200 t upl

IS4S

LEAVING TOWN ■ 1 BORM
Home. $29,900. Assumable
FMA Mort. $22,000. 122 1427.

!&amp; m
BeUtoe

Call Keyw
FOR ALL YOUR
R I A L K S T A T B N IiO S

323-3200
I. L6kt Mary BlvB.
Suite*
•Mary, Fla. JIMS

322-2420

N E E O to sail yaur houia
quickly!
Wa can altar
luarantaad sola within 38
days. Coll 331-lftSS.

R O B B I I ’S

BIALTY
REALTOR, MLS
m i S French
Suila 8
Sanlord. Fla

24 HOUR B 322-9283
STEMPER

AGENCY

ARE YOU CROWDED? Than
you should sea this nawly
"dollad up” 4 Bdrm. 7 Bath
homo in suburban Loch Arbor
just a hop. skip and jump from
tha Colt Cour so Realistically
priced at $59,500
THIS SQUEAKY CLEAN and
attractive 3 Bdrm. 2 Bath
homo is In first class condition,
and you'll ba surprised by the
aitras. .This "lust on the
market" noma is only $45,000

821 0041
REALTOR
Alter Hrs 32) 7468 5 323 7154

CallBart
RF At ESTATE
HI ALtOH lit f ill

If you don’t believe that want ads
bring results, try one. and
Hsian to your phone ring. Dial
M2 2*11 or |311«»3.

u

REALTOR 322 4991 pay grjt,gh]

$1450 DOWN I Buys this 3 1 with
screened porch, lenced yard,
in Sunland. Just $19.0001
The Wall St. Company
Raaltors

w)

mj t , &lt; d f s

'u m ,

A***" gou cart* * Class •»*3
n T*r E . a*o nq Herald \*a»
losr to *OUf pfo^r brCAuSf
nq AOfMjrrfyl S atHXj*

SANDALW OOD Villas by owner,
I bdrm. I bath, all elec,
washer, dryer. CHA. porch,
club house, pool, must sell
$29,900 Call 327 1031 days 373
3102 eve

42— Mobile Homes
SEE S K Y I I N I 5 N E W E5T
Palm Springs 6 Palm Manor
G R E G O R Y MOBILE HOMES
J80) Or lando O'
12) 5200
VA A I HA F.nanc.nq
I BDRM 1970 10x36
good condition $7795
37) 17)0
1981 S K Y L I N E Mobile Home
24,52 It screen enclosure
porch
utility shed. Central
|
heat and a r ) Bdrm 2 Bath
Lot sue IS 50,100 sale price
|
$41 900 l.nancmg available at
80 ' ot sales price .merest rale
14 M l » 2 Points Can be seen
at
126 Leisure D'
North
O eBary .
Fla
In
me
Meadowlea on Ihe River
Mobile Home community
Please contact Tom Lyon or
G.b Edmonds First Federal ot
Semmole 105 172 1742

ST JOHNS R ver Ironlage 7',
acre parcels also nter,or
parcels river access $1) 900
Public water JO m n 'o Alta
IWOttfe Wall
12 •. 70 yr
l. nancmg
no qua' ly m g
Broker 678 483).
6 5 A C R E S Lake Sylvan "area
V43.500 W MALICZOWSKI
R E A L T O R 327 7913

M&gt;— Commercial Property
B U I L D I N G w oll.ee 6 bath on
leased properly, w security
guards, on U S 17 92 12)2 sq
It Bidding at Sanlord Flea
Market Call 321 6463

47

P O RTABLE Dishwasher good
cond
$95
Glamorous
imitation lur jacket 135
3714339
Work boots &amp; shoes
AR MY NAVY SURPLUS

310 Sanford Ayr

322 5791

ID E A S .
inventions.
new
products wanted tor presen
tation to industry Call tree I
800 528 6050 Ext 1)1 •

DIN IN G antique solid walnut
glasMront chma $75 Matching
bullet $75 Both $145 Walnut
bullet $60 867 996)
SOFA.Loveseatft chair,
green, good cond $275
32) 1570

ft

Real Estate Wanted

WE B U Y equity in Houses,
apartments vacant land and
acreage
LUCKY
IN
V E S T M E N T S P O Bo, 2500.
Sanlord. Fla 32771 372 4741

47-A— Mortgages Bought
A Sold
WE PAY cash lor HI ft 2nd
mortgages Ray Legg L'C
Mortgage Broker 7|| 2199

T g T jn /L
J U N E PORZIG R E A L T Y
REALTOR
102 S French Ava

MLS

322-6678
IF YOU A i l leaking t.r the
Farfggl spot to g«t away from
if all consider this fisherman's
heaven 2 bdrm. 7 bin, elegant
ft fully lurmsned double wide
mobile home W large lot on
canal on St. Johns River. Even
has covered Gaiebo ft fishing
docks $44,500 with owner
willing to help finance.

k pnmoreparts,

service, used
washers 32)0697
MOONEY A P P L IA N C E S

53— TV Radio-Stereo
RE POSSE55E D COLOR TV'S
We sell repossessed color
televisions, all name brands,
consoles and portables E X
AMPLE Zenith 25” color in
walnut console Original price
over $750. balance due $196
cash or payments $17 month
NO M O N E Y DOWN 51*11 HI 1
warranty Call 21st Century
Sales 862 5)94day or mte Free j
home trial, no obligation
Good Used TV s$7S ft up
M ILLE R S
2619 Orlando Or
Ph 722 0152

tOW Sale Carpenter fools, hand
tools also power tools 370 Old
Monroe Wd 323 8749

CARS sell lor $1 17 95 laveragel
Also Jeeps. Pickups Available
at local Gov't Auctions For
Directory call 805 687 6000 E&gt;l
6496 Call refundable

FORD 82 Granada 4 d r » 6 c , t
luvury t r i m p k y |$ hundred
miles F ac warr $7995 AuS.
tam Ahsle Outlet. 371 1660
74 GR A N D PRIX
Like new $99 Down
3)9 9100 8) 4 4605
80 Firebird 74 000 miles $6 600
cash or lake over the
payments Ot $724 mo 32) 9)1)
| or 327 7811

CONSULT OUR

*&gt; , o .

E
AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB

A - - r z -M ___•

-&gt;xwi

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

Aloe Products

79 H0 B IE Cal 16' lull racing
equip galv. trailer near new
cond $2500 or best otter Days
321 7490. nights 371 5388

62— Lawn-Garden

Ceramic Tile

HAV': YOUR financial dreams
become a reality w*lh Aloe
PT no investment 37) 7288

,c

COOD * A snss
r ir Contractors
3?t OH?

Cleaning Services
Arts &amp; Crafts
HO M EOW NERS. rela« on your
days oil Let us dean your
home at affordable rales Call
now 371 3566 Pally'S Hofne
Pampering Service

AF O ir » , H AR T
FOR " S P E C I A L ” GIF T5
377 385)

A M Kelly cleaning service
Specialittng in restaurant ft
office buildings. 421 OlSft

Additions &amp;
Remodeling

D U S T E R ' S home or ollice
cleaning Daily or weekly
cleaning Reas rales 327 0485

BATHS kitchen* r*&gt;of.nq block.
concrete windows .idd a
room free estimates 323 8463
I
NEW. R EM O DEL REPAIR
All types and phases ol con
struclion. S G Balml 37) 48)2
T7J 8665 State Licensed

Bt'.Tijfy Girt*
1979 15’ I In Lucral! boal 70 hp
Johnson power trim, hawg.
trolling motor.
Hardeen
galvaniled lilt trailer with
depth finder 321 2177

C O N C R E T E work all types
Footers, driveways, pads,
floors, pools, complete or
fctmish Free csl 322 7103

TOWER'S BE A U t Y SALON
F O R M E R LY Harrietts Beauty
Nook 519 E 1st 51 . 372 5742

Firewood

Bicycle Repairs

B ICYCLE R EPAIR S
I ree pickup ft delivery
121 1906
2107 S French Ave

F IR E W O O D $40 ft up Tree
trim m in g, removal Trash
hauled Free csl . 377 9410

65— Pets Supplies
CANARY and Cockatiel
and cages $50
322 I I I )

LOVING home needed
lor Tiny Terrier
322 1093

$2 tt per bale.
25 or more Ire* del
Other feeds avail 149 5194
hay

$8 Wanted to But
ALUMINUM, cans, cooper, lead,
brass, silver, gold Weekdays
1 4 30. Sal I I 8 KoMo Tool
Co 91$ W 1st SI 323 1100
NICE CLEAN baby items lor
resale Musi be cheap Toys,
dolls, clothes 372 9504
Have soma camping equipmra
you no longer use1 Sell it all
with a Classified Ad m The
Herald Call 372 7S1I or 111
999) and a friendly ad visor
w ll help you

Carslops. sand patio blocks
OiSt bo». rock, drywell
Ready m ii concrete, steps.
Brown river rock, windowsills.
Miracle Concrete Company
309 Elm
372 S7S1

FOR FSTA TE. Commercial or
Residential Auctions ft Ap
praisais Call Dell’s Auction
37) 5620

PUBLIC AUCTION
MON., NOV. 227 PM
Lots *1 lurnltvre indvdln*
saveeal households consigned.
• little Ml •« everything

ANIMAL Haven Boardmq and
Grooming Kennels Shad,. In
suiated. serrered. fly proof n
S'de. out$&lt;de runs Fans Also
AC cages We cater to your
bets »&lt;n )2’ S7S|

BookkMping
DeGarmeau Bookkeeping Ser
Bookkeeping, consulting, Taits,
322 2207

Brick A Block
StooeWork
p ia z z a m a s o n r y

Quality Work At Reasonable
Prices Free Estimates
________ Ph 149 5500________
ATLAS M ASONRY
Brick,
chimneys. Slone art, foun
dation walls, steps, patios,
slabs 331 1562

Carpentry
CARPENTER repairsand
additions. 20 yrs e«p
Call 237 1)52
ALL TYPES CARPEN TRY
Custom Built additions. Patios,
screen rooms, carport Door
locks, panelling, shingles,
retooling For last service.
call 3*5 2371, 32) 4912.________

t l t l t . French Ave.
32)7)40
C O M M U N IT Y
B U L L E T IN
BOARDS A R E G R E A T C L A S S IFIE D
AOS
ARE
EVEN B ETTER .

HANDYMAN Services Painting,
repairs, etc
Reasonable
guar work 425 0651, 677 47*1

Home Improvement
SEAMLESS aluminum gutters,
cover those overhangs waluminum solfit ft fascia. (9041
775-799* collect. Free est.
P A I N T I N G and rrpa r p.it o and
screen porch built
Call
an,t.mr 377 9411

OUR R ATES ARE LO W ER
Ldftev ew Nufvnq Center
219 E Second St Sanford
322 6707

Oil Heaters
Cleaned
OIL Healer cleaning
and serve &gt;nq
Call Ralph 37) 718)

•CALL A N Y T IM E •
Free Est. No tob toe largo or
small Lie. ft Insur. 373 (071.
C L A S S IF IE D ADS A R E F U N
ADS R E A D ft USE T H E M
O F T E N Y O U 'L L L I K E T H E
R ES U L TS
P A I N T I N G and sheet rock
specialist Free Estimates,
quality work Financing —
yes 371 7*05

HEILM AN rooting, painting ft
repairs
Quality
work,
rrasonaolt
rales
Free
estimates Anytime (34 (490

E O W E IM E R PAINTING
Quality work guaranteed
Licensed
373 *74)
Insured

Roofing

A A B ROOFIN
2) yrs experience. Licensed ft
Insured
Free Estimates on Rooting.
Re Rooting and Repairs
Shingles. Built Up and Til*

JA M E S A N D ER S O N
G. F. BOH AN NO N

322-9417
ROOFING ot all kirniv commer
cial ft residential Bonded ft
.mured 373 2597 .1 no answer
*34 1517
some i &gt;i i , i (&gt; nq r q t j . p m v P
,uu no lorigi-r use’ Sell .1 all
A lb a Class l'eil All .n tbe
Herald Call )72 2lH or *11
W91 and a fr.i-ndl, ad •.so,
will help you

H a ,•

j e a n -s r o o f i n g

Licensed, insured, lowest pnci
m town 323 1144
R E R OO F ING carpentry, root
repair ft pamting 15 years
e«p 377 1976

B8L ROOFING
S60 A Square Shingle
TH IS A D W O R TH
150O F F T O T A L JO B

___ (305)323-7183
Built up and Shingle roof,
licensed and insured.
Free estimates. 322-1936.
JA M E S E. L E E INC.

Secretarial Services
PERSONNEL U N L IM ITE D
Public Stenographers and
temporary help available
Call today 337 5649

P A IN T IN G ft R OOFING
Licensed, guaranteed work
371 594V

Tree Service

Home Repairs
CARPEN TER 2) yrs exp Small
remodeling jobs, reasonable
rates Chuck 371 9*45
M*mten«nc*of alltypes
Carpentry, painting, plumbing
ft electric. 22) *011

Lawn Service

¥ A-1 l&gt;W N SERVICE *

CEILING FAN INSTALLATION
Quality Work
W» Do Most Anything
29)9)7$ •
427 47$!

SHAMROCK LANOSCAPI
M A IN TIN A N C R
"A Cm! Above The R est"
Complete lawncare ft leelllliing
service Serving industrial,
commercial and residential
customers Fret soil sampling
and estimates 321 657*__

MEINTZER T IL E Exp S'hc*
1953 New ft old work comm ft
r*sid. Fr** *slim»tt $**$V7

jo h nntri Appliances
We
service all maior appliances
Weas rates. 32 yr eapenence
323 8336

C O L L IE R 'S Home Repairs
carpentry, rooting, painting,
window repair 371 6422

Ceiling Fan Imtallation

Ceramic Tile

REPAIRS ft leaks Fast ft de
pendabie service Reasonable
rates No 10b too small L n
Plumber
tree est
SftV
Plumb no 149 SS57

Repair

P L U M B ' S Painting finest
material and work 3 yr
guarantee Licensed 677 4032

WINDOWS, doors, carpentry.
Concrete slabs, ctrimic ft Iloor
lilt. Minor rtpairs. Iireplacts.
insulation. Lie Bond 321*131.

Fredd e Robinson Plumbing
Repa rs faucets W C
Sprinklers 32) 8510. )2) 0708

AM jor Appliance

WINDOW repair and mstalla
lion,
screen
repair
ft
re p la c e m e n t,
window
cleaning. 321 5994

Mow. weed. trim, haul Regular
Service I time clean up ) (
hrs. best rates. *2$ 6411

SANFORD AUCTION

MAKE
ROOM T O S T O R E
YOUR W IN T E R I T E M S . .
SELL
" D O N 'T
NEEDS"
FAST W ITH A W A N T AD
Phone 372 2611 Of 1)1 9993 and
a friendly Ad Visor will help
you

Painting

Handyman
Boarding &amp; Grooming

MIS TE R F u l l jo* McAdams
will repair your mowers at
vour home Call 327 7055

Nut ',mg Ci iiti'i
HI Ac Concrete I man quality
operation pai.qs dr&gt;ve*a&gt;s
Da,s ))1 7)1) E*ts 12' 1 321

Plumbing

Lawn Mower;

Cnncti'fi ,Vork

F ILL Ol R T ft TO P S O IL
Y E L LO W SANO
Call Clark ft Hirl 12) 75*0

72— Auction

DO YOU LIKE PARTIES?
Name brand toys and gilt items?
Just call me. I demonstrate
toys and gilts AM art low
priced Shop in Ihe comlort ol
your home SAVE M ONEY
and get your shopping dona
F R E E Have a Housaol Lloyd
party Vicky Phillips. 329 3120

1971 SU PER B E E T L E New
motor, new clutch, new paint
12)0616

t

55— Boats &amp; Accessories

30— Miscellaneous for Sale

26 INCH 10 speed boys bike $S0.
Wall recliner chair, brown
vinyl $6S. 122 7525 att. 4.

1977 C H E V R O L E T Pickup 6 cyl
AC. PS. PB. camper top. new
tires $3000 or trade lor 4,4 ot
equal value 372 1117

It s like pennies Irom heaven
when you sell "Don l Needs”
with a want ad

YO U are thinking about
leasing a new car or truck
Find out HOW you can at an
incredibly low cost Engage A
Car a new idea in leasing
WHOSE T IM E HAS COME 1
Call 371 7044 lor information

M O T O R H U M E Lhevy 4UJ
19 300* miles Great condition
bv owner 7207 French Ave

62 C H E V Y Van. side door like
new. must sell $6 500 574 2)51

-_________i---------------------

O AVTO N A A U T O A U C TIO N
Mw, 92 t m.ie west ot 5p, ed
wa, Da,'0'*a Bi-ach w it t*o'd
a pubic A U T O A U C TIO N
e»er, Aed-esda&gt; a' * TO o m
p s me only one in Flor da
You set tne reserved pr ce
Ca'I 934 255 8)1 1 tor tu-the'
■tula,is_______

Denary Auto ft Mar.ne Se'es
.xross 'he river too ol hill 17a
Mwy If 97 DeBar, 668 Ms*

FORD 14 It high cube van. roll
up door, only 10.000 miles
$5 000 574 7)51

MOTOR HOME Chevy 402
• miles Great condition by
owner 2202 French Ave

-

52— Appliances

67A— Feed
49-B— Water Front
Property

IF

75— Recreational Vehicles

78 PONTIAC Sunbird Power
Steermq Auto Trans . A r
Hatch Back $4 50 Down Cash
or Trade 3)9 9100 834 4605

B U Y IN G A N E W
CAR OR TRUCK*
Save a bundle by having the
tacts lirstt Send $) 00 lor
Dealer Colt quote and Facts
List make, model, your name,
address and phone number.
Florida Auto Brokers 206 E
lit St Suite 704. Sanlord Fla
37771

eVt p a y topdo'iar fo*
Ju"k Car* and True III
CBS A u»0 Parts .N) 4«S

/ / • I*

321 4075

80— Autos for Sale

\ »0 »apprn

WILSON MAlER F U R N I T U R E
111 315 E F IR S T ST
312 5427

54— Garage Sales

43- -Lotv Acreage

Alt 5 30 )22 1)61

H O NDA 7SV0
Needs work $150
323 5474

s »&gt; &gt; -k» - _______________

BadCred't*
NoCredt*
WE F IN A N C E
No Credit Cnetk Easy Trrn.s
NAT ION Al A U T O S A L E S
1170 Sanford Ay r

pickup $1000

'

A N IM A L IN U S -

Autos for Sale

HUNTING interna* onal Scou*

79— Trucks Trailers
^

Monday, Nov 22. 1»82—7R

79— Trucks Trailers

TOP Do'ia*
0 9or
^
U\rd &lt; af\ *fUCM * *****
equ pmm* 12? $**0

78— Motorcycles

51 A — Furniture

41-B— Condominiums
For Sale

Evening Herald. Sanlord. FI.

Junk G m Removed

3UY JU N * CARS TRUCKS
f rom $10 to ISO or more
Call 322 1674

KISH REAL E S T A T E

ASSOCIATES N IK OR O
UNDER $2,000 DOWN
1 bdrm. doll hous* Alfordabl*
monthly payments.
Call
Owner Broker 111 1SI1_______

HUMANE 3 E A T E A C h
OTHER UP.

50— Miscellaneous for Sale

CALL A N Y TIM E
Park

BY OWNER Attractive 1 bdrm.
2 bath house, screened en
closed pool. $49,300. 200 S
Laurel Ave., Sanlord. 121 0*52
By appointment only.

S A N f O R D Sanora South. 3
ivirm. 7 bath, double qaraqe.
CHA. $55,000 32) 4850

REALTORS

Sanford’s Sales Leader

HAH *Arc\ : MAY IMPOST SOME. &lt; 'iCJ (SET
BCTNfi K A N f i . V \ .
FOR PROMOTING
AUfTRMlA! CANT YCJ i l l THE ( ANIMAL c’.6MT* 3'JT
C\TV 3C\&amp; \5llPCVER K t + J t t i } YOi 5=CJ&gt;'E A
~3 'NONE'? ______ / CE-EBSlTY HE!.R‘N&lt;S

C L E A N 1 I in town Cpt. tirepl,
new drapes, fence $37,750 w
negotiable seller Iman Rent
opt ALSO available early
3 t near new hosp New drapes
1)8.750 seller hold Rent opl
Owner Associate 830 0IQ7

C O U N T R Y I acre with 3 2 block,
carport, more acreage avail
159.900
3 1 DINING room, truit trees,
workshop, nice neighborhood
priced right $37,500

MdSTuv l £&gt;VL l“
T W uBl S ^
N0U HANENT HLKRD,

HAL C O L B E R T R E A L T Y
REALTOR
207 E 7$th St
17)7112

B A TEM A N R E A L TY
Lie. Real Estate Broker
7*40 Sanlord Ave

$70RT$ FANS A5E. WEMT&gt; Ce
ThE ?E?r=TdM VCN£v

„

SANFORD R E A L T Y
REALTOR
32) $374
Alt Hrs 327 4154 12) 4345

PLA NT LO VE R S ! Double sited
house ft lot. w garden t pot
ting shed, detached garage w
workshop 141,000. 121 5774
LA RGE CO R N E R L O T ! 1 bdrm
w family room. CHA com
pirtely lenced. citrus trees A
much morel $41.$00

w.th Major Hoople

2544 S French
327 0211
Alter Hours 139 )910 377 0779

CALL U S Q U I C K ! 3 barmienced
yard citrus trees, dtan A
convenient 1)1.900 111 $771

32— Houses Unfurnished
1 BDR 2 Hath w.th Double tar
qaracje. and executive type
home ,n Oeitona Call S74 1432
days. 7)6 36V3 eves
and
weekends

A L L F LO R ID A R E A L T Y
OF SA N FO R D R E A LTO R

C O U N T R Y LIVIN G
5 Acres cleared high and dry
land Suitable lor horses Near
Geneva Price $22,500 with
$2500 down. 120 payments ol
$769 87 including 10'..• m
lerest Must see

L A K E MARY 2 bdrm. kit. appl.
fenced S2IS See 319 7200
Sav On Rentals. Inc Realtor
U NFURNISHED. Sanlord Lake
Mary area 2 bdrm I child, no
pets. S2IS mo 788 IMS Alt 4

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

41— Houses

MOW Edge. Trim . Renew
Landscaping. Clean ups.
Hauhng Thatching. Weed ng.
Mulch Lmdsey's 2210*At

t

LONGWOOD Services Interior ft
Exterior Painting. Dona at
raasonabl* rates. I l l 9002.

Plastering
ALL
Phases ot Plastering
Plastering repair, stucco, hard
rr.tr. Simulated brick 371 599)

Remodeling

Remodeling Specialist

TRI Coun'v Tre* Service Trim,
remoyt, trash, hauling, tire
wood Fr Est 327 9410
JOHN ALLEN Y A R D ft T R E E i
SERVICE. We'll remova pin*
trtet. Reas price 3)1 53(0
TR EE ft STUMP REM OVAL
Hrdgev ft shrubs cut back. Sail
employed Rem Tree U t a if i
F R b E estimates. UeGroats •
Palm
tree trim m ing ft ;
removal Hauling, lawncare ft *
odd tobs 37) 0167

Typewriter Repair

We Handle The
Whole Ball Ol Wax

B. E. Link Const.
322-7029
Financing Available

Modernmng your Home / Sell no
longer needed but useful items
with a Classified Ad

T Y P E W R IT E R R e p a tf por
tables lo IBM Seiectric, Guar
Low Rales Bill 37)4917
Hava some cempmg equipment
you no longer use? Sell it all
with a Classified Ad in Tha
Herald Call m u \ \ or « )i
999) and a friendly ad visoi
will help you

j

�IB - E v e n in g Herald, Sanford, Ft.

Monday, Nov. 22, I9B2

Double
manufacturers'
Coupons
PRICES G O O D
N O V . 21-24, 1982

GOOD SUN., MON., TUES. &amp; WED.,
NOVEMBER 21-24, 1982 ONLY!
BRING ALL OF YOUR MANUFACTURER'S
COUPONS TO WINN-DIXIE
AND WE'LL GIVE YOU DOUBLE THE VALUE
TOWARD THE PURCHASE OF THEIR PRODUCT.
THIS OFFER EXCLUDES SUPER B O N U S SPECIALS,
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ORANGE, LAKE, SEMINOLE
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THE FOLLOWIN8 FLORIDA COUNTIES ONLTI
0I1NGE SEMINOLE O SU O U IIEVLID
VOLUSIA U X ( CInUS SUMTII
MttlON. INDIAN NIVEN A St lUOf

S O IM M
TH R IFTY MAID

MAXWELL HO USE

SUGAR

B O U N TY

COFFEE

TOWELS
J

LB
BAG

D OZ.
WITH ONE FILLED SUPER BONUS CERTIFICATE
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WITH ONE FILLED SUPER BONUS CERTIFICATE
GOOD NOVEMBER 21-24, 1982

TAB, SPRITE,
MELLO YELLO OR

DEL M O NTE
SLICED OR HALVES

WITH ONE FILLED SUPER BONUS CERTIFICATE
OOOD NOVEMBER 21-24, 1982

JUMBO
ROLL

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GOOD NOVEMBER 21-24, 1982

*
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(f)

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COPYRIGHT — 1982

FOR ALL OTHER COUNTIES
PLEASE SEE TOUR LOCAL NEWSPAPER.

SUPERBRAND GRADE 'A'

(T )

QUANTITY RIGHTS
RESERVED

SAUSAGE
1-LB.
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WITH ONE FILLED SUPER BONUS CERTIFICATE
0 0 0 0 NOVEMBER 21-2*, 1982

WITH ONE FILLED SUPER BONUS CERTIFICATE
GOOD NOVEMBER 21-24, 1982

IE FILLED SUPER BONUS CERTIFICATE
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WITH ONE FILLED SUPER BONUS CERTIFICATE
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Whan you chacfcout,present one Med
i Staler Bonus Certificate foreach Supet

H e r e ’ s h o w it w o r k s !

'

SAVE 70

----------

SAVE
M*°
LB.

SAVE M

USDA ONADI A'
W-D I NANO
NON-BAST ID

*

W -D BBAND
'

U .S . C H O IC I

1 0 0 ' . PUN I

FRESH DOMESTIC
W H O LI OR RUMP HALF

Broadbreasted
TURKEYS

|IO-LB. PKO )

GROUND
BEEF

RIB

ROAST

IB LBS.
* UP

$069

LB.
USDA GNADE A W D MAND
BROADBREASTED (NON BASTED
10 TO 17 IBS )

Turkeys

NIDI BASTED | 10 IBS A UP)

h CXOR y

SW OMO SHANK PORTION

USDA CHOICE (10 TO 12 18 AVG |
WHOLE UNTNlMMfD NIB EYES

( I I I CUU CUT FOUND

Turkeys....... .

Delmonicos . . ..

mm

W-0 BRAND W HOU HOO (MHO. MlDFUM OR HOT)

BAG SAUSAGC......
......
FROZfN
1*514

AVAILABLE A T TOOK RUEMOLY WINN-DIXIE A
CONFUTE SSUCTKW OF TURKEY PARTS,
GEESE. STUFVKD TU1KEYS, FRESH TURKEYS,
INDEED TURKEYS, SWIFT PREMIUM
W TTER IA U . TURKEYS, IROIUR TURKEYS.
CAPONS, COUNTRY CURED RAMS. BONELESS
H U T COOKED KAMI fc BONELESS CANNED HAMS

riCNNSMXAD.

FtYW GIZZARDS
URGE OTSTUS

WISH

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2

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UNBLEACHED OB PLAIN

SALAD
DRESSING

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$100

CANS

Gold M edal
FLOUR
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ALL PURPOSE
IM C H O H O U

«*rt punksit eatl- lift

6 PAK

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HAWAIIAN (All VARiltlfS)

SAVE 20

SAVE 30

S A V E 10

SAVE 20

DUIE DARLING ( A l l

vari I T iESi

CAM

DEEP SOUTH SWEET

NIDI MAO CHERNY

G A U O PREMIUM (All VARIETIES)

Mixes . . . .

.Wines........1i." ‘3"
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10-13 LB. T U IK IV
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O B IS IIN O 4 LBS.
CBANBIBBV SAUCI 1 LB.
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MRS. SMITH

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POTATOES

PU M PK IN
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JUKE

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�Evening]

75th Year No 81 — Tuesday November 23 1982— Sanford F lo rid a 32771

Evening Herald— ( USPS 481 7901 - Price 70 Cents

■

Alachua Official Succeeds Neiswender

Seminole Selects New County Administrator
T. Duncan Knse, 3fi. has been named la succeed Huger
Neiswender ns Seminole County administrator Commissioner
Robert Sturm announced today.
Hose, who is now assistant county administrator in Alachua
County, has agreed to assume the position effective Jan 17 at a
*44,000 per year salary
In addition to his responsibilities m Alachua County which
have included both supervision of key operating departments
as well as working closely with staff agencies to develop
sophisticated computerized operations and management im­
provement systems, Rose formerly worked in the office of the
city manager of Dallas. Texas, supervising the financial and
management activities related to dealing with the extremely
high growth experienced by tliat city.

Rose's educational background includes an undergraduate
degree in economics and management from Grove City
College in Pennsylvania, as well as a Master of Science in
Planning from the University of Tennessee and Master of Arts
tn Public Administration from Ohio State University
Commissioners approved Rose’s appointment at today's
meeting They also appointed Assistant County Administrator
Jim Easton as acting administrator until Rose takes over
Easton also agreed to stay on as assistant under Rose He
was one of four finalists interviewed this weekend by com­
missioners.
Hose said today from his Alachua County office in
Gainesville that he applied for the administrator job here
because the rumor among the professionals is that Seminole

County is a good county to work for and it has sharp county
commissioners who work well as a team
1 was looking for that kind of challenge," he said, adding
that Roger 1 Neiswender! has done an excellent job "
Rose said he plans lo "lay low for the first six months" as
Seminole County administrator
"I plan lo listen to folks and go around talking to employees
about their problems and talk to each commissioner in­
dividually to work out an action agenda setting priorities for
problems and opportunities," he said.
Rose praised Neiswender for the job he has done die past
seven years and said Seminole County has an efficient
reputation.
Sturm said the deciding factor was the "opportunity for

Officials
Scratching,
Scraping
Every Cent
TALLAHASSEE (U P ll
sta te
agency m anagers mast reduce their
spending by $139 million to balance the
budget, so they are tryuig to decide what
— and in some cases, whom — to cut.
Many programs will be cut back or
eliminated. Many vacant positions won't
be filled. And some state employees will
lose their jobs, with probably most of the
layoffs coming in education and the
Department of Health and Rehabilitative
Services, which have the biggest budgets
in stale government and, therefore, are
seeing the largest dollar reductions.
"Oh. It’s tight," Pam Davis, an
assistant secretary for the Department
of Corrections, told the Tallahassee
D em ocrat. "W e've scratched and
scraped for every little penny we can
find."
Although the cutting is creating
problems, the reductions are not as
severe as once seemed likely.
Up to a 10 percent cut for HRS and
other agencies appeared likely at one
point Thai would have meant the firing
of as many as 3,000 people in Florida’s
social services agency.
Gov. Bob Graham and the Cabinet
ordered a 2.5 percent across-the-board
spending rollback last week as purl of a
plan lo offset a projected 1300 million
deficit in the $10 billion stale budget.
The recession has laster longer than
expected, causing state taxes lo lag and
not produce enough to fully fund the
budget.
Agency managers have to report to
Graham by the end of the week on how
they plan to reduce spending.

U tilitie s
Mystery Industry To G et
Sanford Water, Sewer
H&gt; IHINNA ESTES
Herald Staff Writer
A mystery industry is "working on
something very nice" for the 10 acres of
industrially zoned property adjacent to
Hush-Hamptnn off Silver l.ikc at Us
intersection with Mellonvillc Avenue

4 -A ,

And the city of Sanford is doing its part
by providing water and sewer service to
the site in a cooperative agreement with
Tom McDonald, representing the trust
which owns the property
At the same tune. Cit\ Manager W K
"Pete" Knowles is searching for a site m
the same area for an overhead water
storage tank to provide better service
and to handle future growth

H rrjld Photo by Bonnit Wioboldt

IT'S BEGINNING TO LOOK...
You know i t ’s t i m e in p r e p a r e f o r C h r is tm a s
w h en c re w s s t a r t tn p u t C h rist m a s d e c o r a tio n s
on si re e l p u les a n d e ls e w h e re . T h is c re w is
w o rk in g in d o w n to w n S a n fo rd , d e s p ite th e Ml-

p lu s d e g r e e s , iie rl H arry is B ein g h o isted in th e
b u c k e t to m a k e a d ju s tm e n ts on th e c o lo rfu l
d e c o r a tio n s .

Reorganization
Facilities-Parks Division M ay Be Split
By MICIIEAL BEHA
Herald Staff Writer
Seminole County commissioners are
studying a plan lo separate the facilities,
parks and recreation division into two
divisions and add eight more positions.
The plan, submitted Monday by John
Percy, director of public services and
development, calls for the parks and
recreatio n division and a facilities
maintenance division.
The division has been troubled over the
past few months with labor problems.
Two workers were fired and several
more resigned following an investigation
into practices within the division.
Percy said the re-organization plus the
addition of eight employees will allow Ihe
county to solve the problems that have
plagued Ihe division and meel main­
tenance needs at county parks.
Over the past three years, the number

SLAM

DUNK
Sem inole
Com m unity
College’* Deivln Everett
■lam* home two points during
a practice session.
The former Apopka High
standout poured in 24 points
Saturday to help the Raiders
whip Mlaml-Dade North.
Everett was lingering on the
bench two weeks ago.
See Sports, page 5A for the
strange circumstances for his
move into the starting lineup.

additional leadership abilities Mr Rose &gt;.111 brine 1* the uinti
in the next five years
Sturm indicatedcounty officials judged Hose w as th e most
innovative of the four finalists
Hose declined an offer two years ago from the Altamonte
Springs City Commission to become that city's first it'
m anager Instead, he accepted the position in Alachua &lt;'mini'
At that time, he said Gainesville'^ progressive, college-tout
atmosphere was more in line with h;s professional goals
Today was N’eiswender's las! day on the job after l1' years i
employment with Seminole County the last seven ,ts ad
mintstrator
Neiswender. who was paid about ISfl.OOn a year has ,0
cepted a position with an Orlando consulting firm

of employees working in the division, get new titles to better reflect the type of
which is responsible for the county's work called for.
parks, buildings and recreation
"1 don't think the board lowered its
programs, has declined from 95 to 63. The
number of full-time employees has in­ expectations one bit after we lost a whole
creased by two but 34 Comprehensive slew of CETA w orkers,” County
Employment Training Act employees Administrator Huger Neiswender said.
have been cut out of the division.
Robert G. "Bud" Feather said he liked
"Supervisors cut com ers to make ends ihe reorganization but felt fewer jobs
m eet," Percy said. "Frankly, we think could be added.
we made a mistake.”
Barbara Christensen was opposed lo
the
addition of any new jobs. She com­
The plan devised by Percy, Personnel
plained
that Percy’s plan has “too many
Director ljois Martin and Assistant
County Administrator Jim Easton calls chiefs and no Indians.”
for elimination of the facilities and parks
M rs. C hristensen criticized the
coordinator and facilities, parks and division, saying she often goes by county
recreation manager positions. Two new facilities and workers aren't doing their
positions — managers of the separate jobs.
divisions — wouid be created. Three new
Her comments angered Neiswender.
positions would be created in parks and
recreation and five new posts in facilities "You've never once reported it to me.
maintenance. Several other jobs would Vague aspersions are no help. The others

TODAY
Action Reports % ............ 2A
Around The Clock
4A
Bridge................
6R
Calendar.......................... 3A
Classified Ads .................4-SB
Comics ............................ SB
Crossword .........................SB
DrarAbby ......................... lit
Deaths....... .......................3A
Dr. Lamb............................ SB
Horoscope ..................... SB
Hospital ....................... 2A
Sports
..........................5-6 A
Television
IB
Weather
..................... 2A

come and tell me when they see
something."
Neiswender said feedback is necessary
to let the employees know Ihe com­
missioners are concerned about the
quality of the work being performed.
Robert Sturm and Bill Kirchhoff said
they favor a plan to make three divisions,
separating parks and recreation.
Neiswender and Acting Facilities.
Parks and Recreation Manager I-eonard
Carswell said such a separation wouid
cause problems in staffing.
Various county crews now do work on a
rotating basis at various parks and
facilities. Under Ihe three divisions,
some of the duties would be duplicated,
Carswell said.
Commissioners said they want more
time to study the plan and directed
Carswell to bring more information on
use of county facilities and staffing.

With the city's water and sewer service
expansion, city officials are boasting that
the city charges its customers the lowest
water and sewer rates in the county That
information was found in a study of 16
public and private utilities operating In
the area
McDonald declined today to name the
single industry that is purchasing 10
acres of the trust's 251 acres in the Silver
Uike area He noted the industry is
planning "something nice and dean with
no smokestacks."
He said it will be providing Jobs for the
area, but couldn't estim ate how many
"They intend to build a high quality
building," McDonald said
The Sanford City Commission Monday
night approved a plan to extend water
and sewer service to the McDonald
property. Under the arrangem ent, it will
cost $11,334.09 for m aterials, $2,787 40 for
labor and $1,380.60 for equipment.
The total cost of the project is
$15,502.09.
McDonald is to pay the $11,334.09 in
m aterials' cost with the city picking up
the balance.

The utility service extensions "ill
Include installation of 6-meh sewer fore,
mains and installation of 8 and HVmeh
water lines
Knowles is searching in the same
general area for a site for an elevated
w ater storage lank
Noting the city is prophesying future
w ater pressure needs tn the system, he
said the city needs only .1 lOO-fool-squart
piece of property for the storage tank
The tank, when built. would be filled
from the water mam to maintain
pressure, not just to have a quality of
w ater in reserve, but also to help with
fire flows
Meanwhile. Knowles in a report to the
City Commission said the city has tinlow est water and sewn monthly costs in
Central Florida
Noting these slatislics were cotmnled
after a survey of neighlmring utilities,
Knowles based the costs on an average
custom er use of 10,5(10 gallons of water
per month A cost comparison of these 16
utilities for water and sewer service is as
follows
Greenwood lakes. $17 i»i per month
Utilities, Inc . $35,05. Southern States
$30 48, Casselberry Utilities, $30 14
Orange County. $28 87. Seminole Comity
$27,871; North Orlando Utilities. $27 C
City of Winter Park, $26 49. .Senunolt
Utilities. $25 38; Central Utilities, $23 21
city of Altamonte Springs, $24.62. city of
O rlando, $23 82. Sanlando. $19 43
D eltona U tilities, $19 18. city of
lo g w o o d $18.59; city of Sanford $16 98
Of the 16 utilities, rune are publiclyowned and seven are privately owned,
Knowles said, of the 16, the three highest
charges are by privately-owned, but the
next five are publicly owned
The difference between the high and
the low rate is $30.08 per month or $360 96
annually

City Stands Firm On
Recreation Land Rule
Construction of "The Country Place"
development, a 12-unit group housing
project by CiaUimore Homes at 119
Upsala Road, is progressing.
But once construction is completed, the
builder is going to have difficulty moving
home buyers into the new structures until
he pays the city of Sanford some $7,112
City Manager W. E. "P ete" Knowles
told the Sanford City Commission
Monday night the city's zoning inspector
has been unable to contact the
development company's principals.
He said the city’s Planning and Zoning
Commission early in the year told Hafirm the recreational area in the plan for
the 2.9-acre site does not meet city
requirements.
The developers w ere informed,
Knowles said, that a fee could tie paid to
the city in lieu of a donation of recreation
land. The fee amounts to $592 per unit or

a total of $7,112
The normal process is for the
developer to ask the commission m
writing to accept the fee instead of land
The total of the land donation would have
been about 16 of an acre.
"This is a strange situation," Knowles
told th e commission, adding th at
nu m ero u s telephone calls to the
Gailimore office tn Altamonte Springs,
have gone without a response.
Asking the commission to perm it the
donation of cash, Knowles said in this
fashion when the developer is ready to
ask the city for certificates to allow the
homes to be occupied, the staff will not
have to hold up the developer by waiting
for a city commission meeting.
Principals of the development com­
pany could not lx- reached for comment
today.
---- DONNA ESTES

Second Youth Hospitalized

Sanford Youth Dies After Wreck
By TEN1 YARBOROUGH
Herald SUff Writer
A 17-year-old Sanford youth is dead and another Sanford
man is in critical but stable condition today at the Central
Florida Regional Hospital in Sanford following a traffic ac­
cident Saturday near Paola.
Raymond E. Palm er Jr., 17, of 204 Ridge Road, died Monday
night at Winter Park Memorial Hospital from injuries he
received when he apparently lost control of his motorcycle
along fake M arkham Road, near Paola at about 11:30 p m.
Saturday, officials said
In addition, Palm er's passenger, Steven Davis, 18, of 2413

Marshall Ave., was listed in critical but stable condition ;tl the
Sanford hospital where he is being treated for injuries
sustained in the crash, hospital officials said.
Florida Highway Patrol officers investigated the accident,
which resulted in the 31st traffic-related fatality in Seminole
County this year, but few details of the accident have been
released. Troopers said the crash involved only P alm er’s
vehicle.
Palm er, Ihe son of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond E. Palm er Sr of
Sanford, was a student at Seminole Community College and
had six sisters and one brother, including a twin sister.

\

&gt;#

1 H *%* %v t % -f

-V"i

ip*- *■
-*•*

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                    <text>75th Y e a r, No 36—F rid a y , October 1,1982—Sanford, Florida 32771

Evening Herald— (U S P S 481 280)—Price 20 Cents

5 Killed In C hicago; M e d icin e
R e m o v e d From Local S h e lv es
By M1CHEALDEHA
Herald Staff Writer
Consumers won’t be able to find
Tylenol extra-strength capsules on the
shelves of Sanford drog stores for a while
and it m ay be quite some time before
sales of the headache remedy return to
normal, local pharmacists predict.
Area s to re s began removing the
product from their shelves Thursday
night when accounts from Chicago
revealed that several people had died
from taking capsules laced with cyanide.
As of this morning, five people were dead
and a sixth hovered near death from
cyanide poisoning.
McNeil laboratories, Inc., of Fort
Washington, Pn., has recalled Tylenol
extra-strength capsules in lots MC2880
and MD1910. l» cal pharmacists 3uid
they don't believe those lots were
distributed in Florida. But pharmacists
are taking no chances. They’ve taken all
the capsules off the shelves, pending

notification that other batches of the pain
killer are not contaminated.
“ We removed it from the shelves
yesterday," Duane Ziglcr at Walgreen’s
in Sanford said. “ We will keep it off until
we know for certain it’s safe."
Aubrey Moran, owner of Lake Mary
Pharmacy, said he has taken all the
capsules off the shelves.
Other stores reported they have taken
the product off their shelves and are
uncertain how long it will remain off.
" It’s probably going to be a month or so
until the scare is over," said Bob Burns
of Super X in Sanford.
But even if the product is returned to
the shelves, Burns said people probably
won’t buy it for a while. "The word
Tylenol is poison to their minds right
now." '
Todd Winchester, pharm acist at TruValue Drugs in Sanford, said sales of
Tylenol may be slowed for a year or
more.

“ I think it depends on how long it takes
to clear this thing up," he said.
But he warned customers, "Don’t take
them until you know for sure.”
Surprisingly, few people have called
the drug stores for information about the
tainted capsules. The most any phar­
macist reported receiving was five at
F aust’s. Other pharmacists said they
have received one or two calls.
Most said they believe people are just
throwing their pills away to be sure.
Store owners In 31 states pulled a
93,000-bottle lot of E xtra-S trength
Tylenol labeled MC2880off their shelves,
fearful they may have some of the
cyanide-laced capsules.
E arly today, the Du Page County
(Illinois) coroner’s office confirmed
cyanide was also found in a capsule taken
from a bottle with the lot number
MD1910. The bottle was found in the

Htrald Photo by Tom Vinctnt

Duane Ziglcr, manager of Walgreen’s Drug Store
in Sanford, takes several boxes of Tylenol extra-

See TYLENOU Page 2A

r

strength capsules off the shelf today,

Boy Killed; Driver
Si

■ j.'

S - m

*

m .'

&amp;

V

/ r

I

Charged With DUI

r

&gt;.

By TENI YARBOROUGH
Herald Staff Writer
A 13-year-old tangwood boy is dead
following a collision between a van and his
bicycle at midnight Thursday and the driver of
the vehicle has been charged with drunk
driving with additional charges pending.
Anthony Gerald Farnam of 515 Pasadena
Ave. was pronounced dead at 2:20 a.m. today
by Florida Hospital-Altamonte officials as a
result of injuries received in a collision with a
CUvroUl van whU* paddling hia btcycW along
State Road 436 near take Howell Road,
Casselberry police said.
Hospital officials said the young boy suf­
fered head injuries and multiple scrapes and
bruises in the crash.
Meanwhile, police have charged Joe Roger
Blankenship, 32, of 1649 Redbtrd ta n e in
Apopka with driving under the Influence of
alcoholic beverages in connection with the
fatal accident. Blankenship was being held in
the Seminole County jail on 1500 bond, jail
officials said.
"Our investigators are continuing their

»
M«r4U Phot* by Jwo CbtMlbtrry

2 1 S T C EN TU RY B E G IN S !
With the dawn of a new day for Disney and Central Florida,
the Kpcot’s IHO-foot-high Spaceship Karth rises behind this
spectacular fountain in the F uture World section of the new
$1 billion, 260-acrc attraction. Epcot opened officially today,

Workers were on the job at midnight Thursday putting on
final touches and “ getting the bugs out" of complicated
electronic gadgetry behind the scenes. Head more about the
opening on Page 2A.

Lake Mary Blvd. Ideas Set

TODAY

Panel Backs 6-Lane Plan
Acquisition of property for widening of
take Mary Boulevard should begin as
soon as possible, a citizens advisory
committee recommended Thursday.
The panel accepted a consultant's
report on the tak e Mary corridor and
recommended right-of-way acquisition
begin immediately for the project which
is expected to take 20 years to complete
and cost from $40 million to $50 million.
Funds to purchase rights-of-way from
property owners are not available at this
time but Seminole County, take Mary
and Sanford officials should work
together with developers to provide the
necessary footage, committee members
said.
tarry Dale, chairman of a sub­
committee on right-of-ways, recom ­
mended voluntary or mandatory
acquisition of the property.
“I’m a big one for land use but if
someone is going to develop land it might
be in their best Interest to dedicate the
right-of-way," he said.
Most of the corridor is planned as a sixlane urban highway requiring 123 feet of
right-of-way. Current rights-of-way
along ta k e Mary Boulevard range from
50 feet to more than 100 feet.
M. Russell Davidson, chairman of a
subcommittee on government co­
operation, also recommended planners
from the three entities draw up com­
patible com prehensive plans which
would set uniform rights-of-way along
the corridor from U.S. 17-92 to Interstate
4.
Dale said the corridor will be a local
access road and most development along

the highway will De commercial.
Residential development such as along
State Road 434 also is compatible with
the highway plan. Because of limited
sewage capacity in the area, most of the
commercial and residential develop­
ments will be served by septic tanks.

for road construction could be a viable
source.
An increase in drivers' license and
license plate fees, an optional one-penny
sales tax and a special tax on residents in
the district are other alternatives,
Edmonds said.

Devere Foxworth, the Georgia con­
He recommended the Implementation
sultant who drew up the plans, said, "The of a Seminole County Expressway
plan, we feel, meets the needs and Authority to explore various funding
desires of people who live and work in the alternatives.
corridor.”
Several people who live along take
He said the plan will function through Mary Boulevard complained the com­
the year 2000. Figures used for con­ mittee was proceeding with plans for the
struction, population and employment widening of the road under the assump­
projections are conservative estimates, tion the project is necessary.
Foxworth said, but the six-lane road
They said growth is not a foregone
should exceed the traffic volumn In 2000 conclusion in the area.
by 20 to 30 percent.
Price said development of the area
Foxworth recommended construction already is underway. He cited The
of the first four-lane portion of the road Crossings, a 5,000-unlt planned unit
begin when the traffic count reaches development, and Heathrow, a 4,000 unit
12,000 cars per day. At several spots development, as projects which already
along the road near 1-4, more than 12,000 have been approved.
cars already use the highway.
Dick F ess said the committee explored
When a two-mile stretch of the road the "do-nothing” alternative. "That’s the
begins to receive that kind of use con­ most expensive of all the options."
struction should begin, Foxworth said.
F ess said the loss of development,
Gib Edmonds, chairman of a sub­
committee on funding, said numerous
funding sources will be required for
construction of the highway. Most of
those sources require state or federal
approval, he said.
Edmonds suggested an increase in the
state gasoline tax with funds earmarked

employment and commercial expansion,
as well as the congestion that would be
created, would be far greater than the
costs of the project.
•

“ The alternative to having this
corridor is not being able to get on the
road in its present condition," Dale said.
— M1CHEAL BEHA

Action Reports................... ZA
Around The C lock.............. 4A
Bridge................................. IA
Calendar................................12A
Classified A d s.............. 19-11A
Comics...................................8A
Crossword..............................8A
Dear Abby..............................9A
Deaths..................................2A
Dr. Lamb ...........................8A
Editorial................................. 4A
Florida................................. 12A
Horoscope..............................8A
Nation................................... 12A
People.....................................9A
Sports...................................5-7A
Television...................Leisure
Weather.............................. 2A
World................................. 12A

Beauties
Eighteen
high
school
students from Seminole
County are contestants In the
Junior Miss Pageant to be
staged Saturday night at Lake
Mary High School See the
girls In Sunday’s Herald.

Football
Seminole County prep
teams are ready to go tonight.
If you cannot see the action
tonight, read all about it In
Sunday’s Herald.

Cleet/on '82
Did you vote last month?
Are you going to vote
Tuesday? Why should you?
What is at stake? If you’re
unsure, be sure to read
Sunday’s Herald.

probe of the accident to determine what other
charges will be filed against Blankenship, if
any," said Casselberry police Chief Fred
McGowan. "We have to determine if the boy
was negligent in any way and if he contributed
to the accident by, for example, not having
proper lights mounted on the bicycle or by
riding the bicycle in the path of the vehicle. We
just don't have those answers right now."
McGowan said the boy had been returning
home after visiting his girlfriend's home when
lha aoddani occurred.
Police said that when they arrived on the
scene, sheriff’s deputies were attending to the
injured boy who was lying in a ditch alongside
the westbound lane of State Road 436. The
boy’s bicycle was lying in the grass beside the
roadway with a broken bike pedal lying in the
road, police said.
No injuries to Blankenship, a construction
laborer, as a result of the crash were reported
by police.
Young F arnam 's death marks the 24th
traffic fatality in Seminole County this year,
according to the Florida Highway Patrol.

Sanford Man Saves
Swiss Womans Life
By DONNA ESTES
Herald Staff Writer
A Sanford man serving on a work release
program from prison may receive his freedom
early because he saved a woman's life by
using a procedure he had seen on television.
Edward O'Neal Ware. 21. on work release
from the Orlando Community Correctional
Center In Pine Hills, as a bus boy at the Quality
Inn on International Drive, Orlando, used the
Heimlich maneuver Thursday to save the life
of a woman, choking on a piece of grapefruit.
"I was busing tables and heard her
coughing. I could see she was choking. She was
trying to drink water and couldn't swallow it,”
Ware said today.
"I had seen the Heimlich maneuver
demonstrated on television, put pressure Just
below her ribs and squeezed twice and up
came the chunk of grapefruit,” he said.
Although the French-speaking woman,
Evelyn Suter, a tourist from Geneva, Switzerland apparently tried to thank Ware af­
terwards, he could not understand her words
nor could other employees there.
Mrs. Suter and her husband were having
breakfast at the motel before leaving on a bus
tour for New York.
Garritt Toohey, motel general manager,
said he has had good luck with prisoners on
work release. He said his dining room
supervisor works closely with officials In
charge of the program at the correctional
facility.

As for Ware, Toohey said he is an excellent
employee and has received one promotion
during the four to five months he has been
working at the motel.
"He started in the kitchen as a dishwasher
and was promoted to bus-person," Toohey
said. And Ware can keep the job when he is
released from prison and goes on probation if
he chooses to, Toohey said.
Prisoners on work release at the Quality Inn
on International Drive get paid the same
wages, get raises and receive promotions just
like any other employee, Toohey said.
Meanwhile, Terry Dowd, chief counselor at
the Orlando Community Correctional Center
in Pine Hills, said Ware arrived at the center
from the Appalachee Correctional Institution
in Snead March 29 and began working at the
Quality Inn April 18.
Ware had served a year in state prison
before being sent on to the Orlando facility
where prisoners with good records and with
less than a year left to serve are given the
opportunity for work-release.
Ware is scheduled for parole on Dec. 8, but
may receive earlier release because of his
action Thursday.
Dowd said counselors and other officials at
the Pine Hills center. are considering
recommending that the state grant releajse for
probation earlier because of Ware's
"meritorius act." His release could be moved
See MAN, Page 2A

S hark A ttacks Longw ood M a n
After freeing himself from the jaws of a
shark, a 19-year-old Longwood man ran 50
yards across the beach at Daytona Shores to a
lifeguard station before collapsing in a pool of
blood.
Lifeguard Capt. Joe Wooden said Dave
Wagonsomer of 216 Aibrighton Court was
swimming in chest-deep water about 12:80
P-m. when a shark grabbed his ankle and
pulled him under. Wagonsomer tried to get
away and the shark bit his right foot. Wooden
said.
After receiving first aid from the Daytona

Beach Shores Rescue Squad, Wagonsomer
was taken to the Halifax Hospital Medical
Center where he was treated for six severe
cuts and released.
Wooden said there had been quite a few
sightings of schools of bait fish swimming
close to shore in the area and apparently the
shark was feeding on mullet and bit Wagon­
somer by accident.
Wooden said there have been quite a few
shark attacks so far this year with ap­
proximately 10 such incidents on Volusia
County beaches since January.

�3A— Even in g Herald, Sanford, F I.

Friday, Oct. 1,1912

NATION
IN BRIEF
Govt. Out Of Money;
Spending Plan Expected
WASHINGTON (U PI) — The federal government
technically ran out of money at midnight, the fiscal
198.1 New Year, but the financial crunch was not ex­
pected to last long and all federal employees were told
to report to work today.
The House and Senate were expected to approve a
compromise stopgap funding measure today, which
was hammered out by conferees Thursday and would
keep the government operating until D«:. 17. The
president also was expected to sign it. In the mean­
time, however, there was no money to pay 2.1 million
federal employees.
The administration told all employees to report to
work, although spokesman Patrick Korten of the Office
of Personnel Management, said:
If the lack ol funds lasted much past midday, of­
ficials would have to start sending all but essential
employees home on “ furloughs." This happened a year
ago when Congress let the money run out for a day.

EPCOT: Disney's Last Dream Opens
LAKE BUENA VISTA (UPI) - Wall
Disney's grandest vision of a futuristic
toytown sprang to life today sans MickeyMouse but still in splendid Disney fashion —
with a blast of smoke, balloons and pigeons to
cover the sky and plenty of people.
Epcot C en ter,
which stands
for
Experim ental P rototype Community of
Tomorrow, opened its gates to its first visitors
at 9 a.m. EDT sharp.
Up until the final moments before the
opening, workmen frantically swept, washed
windows and painted. The last piece of sod was
laid just four and a half hours before the
opening.
In pre-dawn darkness, thousands of Disney
workers, clad in blue and white space-age
costumes, stood single-file at attention, getting
their final instructions.
Under clear skies, the opening cermonies in
front of Epcot's symbol, a 180-foot geosphere
called “Spaceship E arth," were attended by
Florida Gov. Bob Graham and Disney

Judge Threatens Teachers
United Press International
An angry New Jersey judge, tired of a school dispute
in a New York City suburb, threatened to jail more
strikers today for violating his order to stop striking
and start teaching.
The action was the most severe in teacher strikes
that disrupted school for more than 300,000 youngsters
in' Michigan, Illinois, Pennsylvania, New York and
New Jersey.
The judge said Thursday 75 striking Teaneck, N.J.,
teachers, secretaries and aides were to be jailed in an
elementary school auditorium today. And, for the first
time, he warned the nearly 600 strikers they could be
fired if the dispute goes into next week.

WEATHER
NATIONAL REPORT: The remnants of Hurricane Paul
packed a long-distance snow-and-rain punch through the
Kockies to Texas, piling snow 18 inches high in Idaho and
flooding West Texas streets wills 4 feet of water. Tem­
peratures in the 80s broke records in Michigan. Winter storm
advisories were posted Thursday night as a storm system
continued to produce snow in the higher elevations of the
Rocky Mountains. The storm dumped 18 inches of snow on
central Idaho, Ihe National Weather Service said, and more
than 3 feet of snow covered the ground at Mount Nebo, Utah.
Utah braced for another round of rain and snow today after
once-in-a-century storms flooded Salt lake City earlier this
week. The record ruins caused at least $25 million damage.
Winds gusling to 80 mph ripped along the Wasatch Front at
Kaysville, Utah, north of waterlogged Salt Ijike City,
uprooting trees and knocking out electricity. The remains of
Hurricane Paul sent rain and snow flying through Colorado
Thursday and swamped West Texas and southeastern New
Mexico with torrentiul ruins. More Ilian 2 inches of rain doused
Village Grove, Colo., and 3-inch rains flooded El Paso, Texas,
streets with 4 feet of water. Stalled cars littered the streets and
an apartment complex was evacuuted due to minor flooding.
Alpena, Mich., reported a record-breaking high of 84 Thur­
sday, beating by 6 degrees the 1968 mark. The high of 95 at
Brownsville, Texas, tied the record for Sept. 30.
AREA It FADINGS (9 a.m .i: temperature: 77; overnight
low: 73; Thursday high: 89; barometric pressure: 30.00;
relative humidity: 90 percent; winds: northeast at 8 tnph;
rain: .56; sunrise 7:17 n.m., sunset 7:12 p.m.
SATURDAY TIDES: DAYTONA REACH: highs, 8:15 a.m.,
8:38 p.m.; lows, 1:48 a.m ., 2:04 p.m.; PORT CANAVERAL:
highs, 8:07 a.m., 8:30 p.m .; lows, 1:39 a.in., 1:55 p.m.;
BAYPORT: highs, 1:51 a.m ., 1:58 p.m.; lows, 8:05 a.m ., 8:23
p.m.
BOATING FORECAST: S t Augustine to Jupiter Inlet, Out
50 Miles:
Winds from the east at 10-15 knots through tonight. Seas 4-6
feet.
AREA FORECAST: Variable cloudiness with a 50 percent
chance of thundershowers through tonight. Highs in the upper
80s, lows in the lower 70s with easterly winds at 10-15 miles per
hour.
EXTENDED FORECAST — Florida except northwest —
Partly cloudy with scattered showers and thunderstorms more
numerous extreme north Monday night and Tuesday. Ixiws in
60s north and 70s south. Highs in the 80s.

HOSPITAL NOTES
Central Florida Rational
Haipital
Thursday
ADMISSIONS
Bobby W. Thomas. Sanlord
Barney F . Griggs J r , Altamonte
Springs
Nancy Garwood. Casselberry
John E . Kent. Deltona
Elltabeth A Melton. Deltona
AAacFarlano C West. Deltona
Velma L. Smith. Long wood
Marie J. Thompson. Winter
Springs

Argument At Bar Leads To Shooting
Ily TEN! YARBOROUGH
Herald Staff Writer
A 31-year-old luike Monroe man has been charged with
shooting a 25-year-old Sanford man during an argument in a
bar [larking lot near Sanford Thursday.
I-eroy Hardy, 31, of Gilbert Street, turned himself in to
Seminole County sheriff’s deputies at 4:35 p.m. Thursday to
fuce aggravated battery charges in connection with the
shooting of Greg L. Vance, 25, of 1010 Holly Ave., deputies said.
Bond for Hardy was set at $8,000
Vance, who is listed in satisfactory condition at Central
Florida Regional Hospital in Sanford, is being treated for
gunshot wounds in chest and right side, hospital officials said.
Deputies said the two men became involved in an argument
in the parking lot of Joe’s Tavern, Southwest Hoad Hoad in the
Midway section east of Sanford, at about 11:10 a.m. Thursday.
Vance told deputies that during the argument, Hardy pulled
out a 38-caliber handgun and shot him several times.
Deputies said Vance ran to a nearby car driven by Johnny
E. Beverett, 24, of 404 Celery- Ave., Sanford, who transported
the injured Vance to the hospital
JEWELRY STOLEN IN SANFOIU)
A39-year-old Sanford woman told police that someone broke
into her home between 2:30 a.m. Monday and 2:45 a.m.
Tuesday and stole jewelry valued at more than $1,175
Barbara L. Muller, 2106 Magnolia Ave., told police the
thieves apparently entered her home through a bedroom
window.

Friends O f Library
Book Sale Scheduled
Seminole Friends of the Library will hold its second annual
hook sale Oct. 15 and 16 at Interstate Mall on State Road 436 in
MlwwnW Bprinftu.
The hours will be 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. on Friday and 10 a.m. to 1
p.m. on Saturday. A special preview sale for members onlywill be held on Thursday, Oct. 14, from 6-9 p.m. Anyone not a
member who wishes to attend may join for $2 a year.
More than 10,000 used books of all kinds — children's books,
adult novels and biographies, informative technical and
professional textbooks — will be offered at a fraction of their
original cost.
AH proceeds will go to the betterment of the Seminole CountyLibrary System. I-ast year, $1,700 was raised for this purpose.

AREA DEATHS
MRS. EDNA MAE
HENDERSON
Mrs. Edna Mae Henderson,
64, of Miami, died Tuesday at
the Baptist Hospital, Miami.
Bom April 7, 1918 in
Titusville, she moved to
Sanford as a child. She moved
to Miami in 1970 from New
Jersey. She was a member of
Martin M em orial African
Methodist Episcopal Church,
Miami.
Survivors
include
a
daughter, Jo a n BeverlyWhite, Miami; u son, Otha
Henderson Jr., Miami; five
grandchildren; three sisters,
Pearlle T iggs, Catherine
Owens, both of Titusville, and
Alberta Corbett, Miami; six
brothers, John, Alfred and
Frank Smith, all of Titusville,
Clinton Smith, Detroit, Mich.,
Edgar and Fred Smith, both
of New York City.
W ilson E i c h e l b e r g e r
Mortuary is in charge of
arrangements.
MRS ADELAIDE RIVOT
Mrs. Adelaide I. Rivot of the
Bram Towers in Sanford died
Thursday morning at Central
Florida Regional Hospital.
She was born In Hoboken,
N.J., and came to Sanford in

1977 from St. Petersburg.
Mrs. Rivot was a housewife
and a member of Holy Cross
Episcopal Church of Sanford.
She was a member of the
Order of the Eastern Star,
where she had served as a
past matron and was past
district deputy of the Order of
Amaranth. She is survived by
a brother, Alvin G. Davis, of
DeBary; several nephews.
Brisson Funeral Home-PA
is in charge of arrangements.

Funoral Notices
R IVOT. M RS A D E LA ID E I. —
Funeral services lor Mrs
Adelaide l Rivot. ot the Oram
Towers in Sanford, who died
Thursday, will be at 10 U a m
Saturday
at
Holy
Cross
Episcopal Church with Father
Leroy D Soper Jr officiating
Burial in Deltona Cemetery
Brisson Funeral Home PA in
charge
H E N D E R S O N . MRS. E D N A
MAE — Funeral services tor
Mrs Edna Mae Henderson, *4.
ot M'ami, whodied Tuesday will
be held at It a m Saturday at
St
Jam es
AM E
Church,
Titusville, with the Rev. Edoras
Page, pastor in charge Burial in
Oakridge Cemetery, Titusville
Calling hours, noon to 9 p m.
today.
W ilto n Eichelberger
Mortuary In charge.

Action Reports
★

Fires
★

Courts
★

SAT., O C T. 2
9 a.m.-5 p.m.

D IS C H A R G E S

ONE DAY
WORKSHOP

EX-POLICEMAN, BROTHER CHARGED
A former Dei-and [tolice officer and his brother are free
today on $1,500 bond each following their arrests Wednesday
on charges of possessing and manufacturing 50 marijuana
plants which investigators found at an Orange City home.
Ronald Petracca, of 880 W. Minnesota Ave., Orange City,
who served as an officer with the Del-and Police Department
from July 1976 until August 1978, was arrested at his home
along with his brother, Raymond, 31, of Sanford, Volusia
County deputies said.

Sanlord:
Sarah A Jermgan
George W. Rankin
Luther I. Russell
Alberthe G Scott
John Ehnis. Deltona
Frank C. Koilowshl, Deltona
Pedro Sanabrla. Deltona
Eileen C. Sasenick. Deltona

Continued From Page IA
up by 30-to-60 days.
"He has already received some merit gain
time (time knocked off his sentence) for verygood behavior," Dowd said.
A native of Sanford, Ware dropped out of
school after the ninth grade at Crooms High
School. Ware said today that after his release
he hopes to move home with his mother, Helen
Ware of William Clark Court.
“ I want to work and help her out finan­
cially," he said today. "I don’t know whether
I'll be able to work at the Quality Inn because I
have no transportation," he said.
Mrs. Ware today said she is pleased and
proud her son was able to save Mrs. Suter's
life.

Friday, October 1, 1982—VoL 75. No.

f t V

*
36

Publislwd Daily and Sunday, c i c e f l Saturday l y The Sanlord
H erald. I * - . S M N .Fren ch A y e .. Sanlord. F la. m i l .

*

»I -

s

Continued From Page 1A
home of one of the victims.
Police say the capsules were poisoned
by a "very sophisticated, very' malicious
person."
Hundreds of worried people nationwide
flooded police stations and city poison
control centers with calls seeking In­
formation.
Police considered the deaths possible
homicides. Two of the dead men and the
critically ill woman were members of the
same family.
“ Until we can figure out If this Is an
isolated thing or if this Is widespread, we
recommend that no one take ExtraStrength Tylenol," Cook County medical
examiner spokesman Roy Dames said.

Ham a OaUrery: Week. S I-M ; Month. H U i 4 M e rita . W M i
Y e a r. S4S.II. By M all: Weoh I M S ; Month, I S I S ; I M onths.

1-4 * H W Y 434

322*8432

He was ultimately convicted of the grand
theft for stealing more than $100 worth of tires
and clothing from the boxcar. Ware was
arrested at the site immediately after the
burglary by eight deputies at the scene, ap­
parently acting on a tip.
Ware was sentenced to five years in prison,
making him eligible for release with good
behavior after two years and to serve the
remaining three years on probation.

EDW ARD

W ARE

Tylenol manufacturer, McNeil Con­
sum er P roducts Co. of McNeil
laboratories Inc., Fort Washington, Pa.,
a subsidiary of Johnson &amp; Johnson,
urgently recalled the suspected lot of the
pain killer, MC2880.
1-arry Foster, a spokesman for New
Brunswick, N .J.-based Johnson &amp;
Johnson, warned consumers not to buy or
take Tylenol with the MC2880 lot marking
on the bottle. He said there was "clear
evidence" the bottles had been "tam ­
pered with."
Police in the Chicago suburb of
Elmhurst found two bottles of the cap­
sules In one victim 's home bearing lot
numbers other than MC2880 —giving rise
to fears that more than one batch of

capsules might be involved.
Assistant medical examiner Edmund
R. Donoghue said Tylenol taken by the
first victim, Mary Kellerman, 12, of Elk
Grove Village, was purchased at an Osco
drug store in her town.
Another victim, Adam Janus, 27, of
Arlington Heights, was not feeling well
and purchased the capsules Wednesday.
He "cam e home and took a few and
promptly died," said Arlington Heights
Deputy Police Chief Paul Buckholz.
Other members of the Janus family
also took the capsules to relieve the
stress after learning that Adam had died.
His brother, Stanley, 25, of lisle , died
and his wife, Theresa, 19, fell critically
ill. She remains hospitalized.

We otter complete information on pr
arrangements and pre financing, availat
without cost or obligation ot any kind Fe
tree to contact us at your convenience.

LEARN TO TES T AND FIND WHAT IS GOOD FOR
YOU THROUOH MUSCLE-TESTING. LEARN MORE
IN ONE DAY THAN A WHOLE LIFE TIM E I
CALL FOR INFO

Ware was arrested by the Seminole County
Sheriff’s Department on Oct. 30, 1980, and
charged with burglary' to a Seaboard Coast
Line Railroad freight car. He also was
charged with grand theft, trespassing and
possession of marijuana, found in the hatband
of his hat.

The funeral serves a wide range of pu
poses with religious, psychological ai
physical significances There are mai
aspects and details to the meaningful tuner
that are arranged with the assistance of tl
professional funeral director, usually at tl
time of need. However, some people prel
counseling prior to need

i

SUNDANCE INN

SANFORD FIRE CALLS
v The Sanford Fire Department responded to the follow ing fire
alarms.
Wednesday
—10:30 a.m., 2445 Mellonville Ave., man fell off roof, taken to
Central Florida Regional Hospital for treatment. Jeff Dun. 21,
of Wekiva Falls, was treated and released hospital officials
said.
Thursday
—2:53 a.m.. Apt. 5, Edward Higgins Terrace, women down
—3:10 p.m., 12th St. and Mulberry Ave., child hit by car, no
apparent injuries, advised parent to seek additional medical
attention for Kerintha Ammons, 5, of 22 William Clark Court.
No charges filed against Kimberly Green, 22, of 1606 W. 8th Si.,
driver of Ihe 1975 Mercury involved in the accident, police said
—8:50 p.m., 38 Higgins Terrace, man down.

PRE-ARRANGEMENTS

iis A ir a
i *■MtilAH

Second Class Postage P aid at Sanlord. Florida H IM

MONEY MISSING FROM MAITLAND HOME
Thieves broke into a Maitland man’s home between noon and
4 p.m. Wednesday and stole about $120 worth of cash and coins.
Hobert Clinton Wiggins, 23, of Wright Road, in south
Seminole County, told deputies the culprits broke the lock on
his rear door, searched the home and stole a basket of cash,
antique coins and three silver certificates.

... Tylenol Removed From Local Shelves

N U T R IT IO N A L
EX P ER TSFR O M
HO U S TO N . TEXAS

o '-&gt;

MAN TEST DRIVES CAR, TAKES IT
Police said that a man who was allowed to test drive a car
from a Sanford dealership Wednesday never returned with the
vehicle.
According to police, a man asked car dealers at Seminole
Ford, 3786 U.S. Highway 17-92, if he could test drive a 1979
Pontiac Trans-Am to his wife’s place of employ ment in San­
ford to show her the car, but he never returned.
However, police said they located the vehicle abandoned in a
Sanford grocery store par kinglot later that day and returned
the vehicle, valued at $7,995.

...Sanford Man Saves Woman's Life

WITH
OR. RAM B
OR. HEMBREE

I

Police

EMPLOYEES STALL SHOPLIFTERS
Employees of a Sanford drug store attempted unsuccessfully
to stall two men who entered the store, then tried to leave
without paying for several items at about 11:50 a.m. Wed­
nesday.
Police said two men entered the Super X drug store, 2438
French Ave., and after gathering several items, attempted to
leave without paying for the merchandise.
Store manager Lisa Renee Klein, 27, told police that she and
two employees approached the suspected shoplifters and the
men began punching, kicking and biting them. Police said the
men then fled the store to a grey vehicle but not before em­
ployees stripped them of their stolen goods and the shirt from
one of the bandits.
Employees added that one of the would-be thieves was
wearing a shower cap, police said.

B IR T H S

Lawrence and Marie Thompson,
a baby girl. Winter Springs

E irn in j; llciuld

S U M ; Y ea r. IS M I

Instead, Epcot is the world's first 'thinking-

m an's theme park," with exhibits of history, keep the “community" name.
Three years in the making. Epcot is located
transportation and agriculture.
some
2 miles from Disney world and can be
Gov. Bob Graham and Disney Board
reached
from there by boat or monorail
Chairman E. Cardon Walker will honor the
first family who walks through the gates. Officials say it will take two to three days to
Disney officials expect some 10.000 enthusiasts visit the entire Epcot Center. The admission is
to flock to Epcot today. They have already sold $15 a day for adults.
There are six major pavilions in the 110
$9 million worth of advance tickets.
Built at a cost of $1 billion, the 260-acre acres of Future World and nine countries
toytown is the last dream of the late Disney, featured in the World Showcase. More at­
who outlined the futuristic wonderland only- tractions will he built in coming years, officials said.
months before he died in 1966.
Billed as the world’s largest private con­
Future World is anchored by "Spaceship
struction project, Epcot is really two parks in
E arth," a huge spherical structure 18 stories
one: Future World and World Showcase, a
high and 164 feet diameter. Tourists entering it
permanent world's fair. Also, it is more than
are taken on a time machine beginning with a
twice the size of its neighbor. Disney World. Disney-adapted movie that tells of com­
Visitors will find a world where they can
munications from the days of the cave man
return to the age of dinosaurs, stroll down the
Champs Elysees in Paris or soar through
There are exhibits on imagination, tran­
space in a simulated rocket plane.
sportation, energy and a giant greenhouse
Disney officials once planned to make the where tomatoes grow from the ceiling, melons
center a permanent home for 20,000 residents. cling to the walls and lettuce grown in
They have abandoned the idea but will still styrofoam floats in a pond.

M an Ja ile d , A n o th e r H ospitalized

Gas Keeps Residents Away
LIVINGSTON, I-a. &lt;UPI) — State police monitoring
43 derailed tank cars burning for the third day refused
to let 2,400 people return to their homes today until
environmentalists say there is no danger of poisonous
Has.
State police Sgt. Steve Campbell said, "It’s hard to
estimate Just how long a fire like this will burn. We
don't know how much of the chemicals were spilled and
how much are still in the cars."
The 101-car Burlington Central Gulf Railroad train
dumped nearly half its tank cars in the small southern
I-ouisiana parish seat of Livingston early Tuesday,
causing explosions and a fire that has raged con­
tinuously since then. Up to 3,000 people were
evacuated, leaving the community a ghost town.

chairman E. Cardon Walker.
Walker told the crowd he hopes that Epcot
will do more than entertain and that it will also
"inform, inspire and instill in our guests a new
sense of belief that the world offers real hope."
Several thousand enthusiasts thronged the
gates before Epcot opened and were treated to
a jazz band playing the theme from the movie
Star Wars and other popular songs. They also
watched tens of thousands of multi-colored
balloons and pigeons soar into the sky.
The first family to wiggle through the turnstyles were Dick and Paula Cason and their
four teenage children of nearby Winter Park.
TheCasonsgot up at 4:30 a.m. to he among the
first to arrive.
Walker presented the family with a life-time
pass to Epcot and its neighbor. Disney World.
Epcot is not a replica of Disney's other
successful theme parks, Disney World and
California's Disneyland. Mickey Mouse and
Tweedle-Dec and Tweedle-Dum are not at
home at Epcot.

Brisson FUNERAL HOME P.A.
322-2131

905 Laurel Ave., Sanford
Robert Brisson, Director

�Casselberry Council

P aram edic Q u e stio n
B ack O n The A g e n d a
The Advanced Life Saving ordinance will be
back on the agenda when the Casselberry City
Council meets at 7:30 p.m. Monday in City
Hall, 95 Like Triplet Drive.
Tlie ordinance, which calls for a referendum
to be held Dec. 7 on a proposed fire department
paramedic program, was not voted on at last
Monday's meeting because of a few minor
changes that were needed
If passed by the voters, the paramedic
program would not be implemented for
another year It would be financed with a
special tax levy of $1.25 per $1,000 assessed
property valuation for two years.
The $3,580,207 general fund budget for 198283 and the $8,834,474 utility fund budget were
given final approval at Monday night’s council
meeting and the tax rate was set at $1.12 per
$1,000 assessed valuation. The commission
declined to include funds for the paramedics in
the budget
Other items on the agenda Monday night will
include:

F'idav O rl '

Evening Herald Sanford FI

—Designating Oct. 22-Nov. 3 as the
qualifying period for candidates to run for the
council seats now held by Jam es Lavigne,
Frank Schutte, and Hill Grier. The election is
Dec. 7.
—Appointing F rank K ruppenbacher of
Winter Springs as special counsel to Mayor
Owen Sheppard and Ned Julian, the city’s
negotiator with the police union, when they
represent the city at a Public Employees
Relations Commission hearing scheduled for 9
a.m Oct. fi at the Casselberry City Hall. The
Orange County Police Benevolent Association
t PBA), which represents the city’s patrolmen
and detectives, has brought charges of unfair
labor practices against the city which the PBA
says has not been bargaining in good faith.
—A proposed change in the Senior Citizens
Multipurpose Center by-laws to change the
number of members on the board of directors
from 5 to 7.
—An ordinance prohibiting bicyclists
from wearing headsets.

SUPER
SATURDAY
E ven t sta r ts

fo r y o u

an d

9

a .m . S u p e r

y o u r

fa m ily .

s a v in g s

1 2

H our

s a le .

C asu al
S la c k s
Y our

C h o ic e

Corduroy
Flannel Blends
Washable Poly Cotton
Tw ills

REALTY TRANSFERS
Sprmqwood Vill Apt Corp to
David Marvel, iql . un
I3S D
Sprmqwood Village 133.700
Sprmqwood V II Apti Corp to
Ruth D Dematttiew vql . un 161 C,
Sprmqwood VIII . 147 600
Bruce Marqolis &amp; wl Andrea tL
Jerome G Behn to P GW Molding
C o . un I0S A. Ashwood Cond ,
1}1.300
Sober! W Birks K wt Jeanne to
James L Mugnec A wt Mary S .
Lot 3. Blk B Idyliwilde ol Loch
Arbor, sec 3. MS,000
Florida Land Co to Wayne L
Carse. part ol sec 18 JO 10 etc .
? 771 acres m I 1771,000
Robert Lee to Lee Ranch Inc .
E ' j ot SE i * ot sec JS JI 33 etc
130 000
Perma Bill Ho mey Inc to Ron
G Tompkm v L wt Brenda, lot 8
repl part ot Semmola Park 18,000
Deve&gt;. Inc
to Robert A
Goodwin A wl Anne B lot 14 A
replat ot Springdale, M9.900
Bermce A Teiton to Lanny Joe
Kern A wl Patricia IV 83 1 ot N
848 9 ol S W &lt; ot cec 2» JO 31, me I
m home 140 000
Olm Amer Homes to Vanderion
DeLima. lot 4 Clulter N Deer
Run. un 22. 162.300
Olm Amer Home! to Glenn C
Mill! A wt Patricia, lot 12. blk E.
Greenwood Lakes, un one. 163,000
Anthony T. Lasisic A wt Stella
to F rancli C Studenc A Sharon L .
lot 228. Trailwood Ests sec two.
164 000
Herbert L Mogdahl A wt Northa
B to Morris AbramowitJ A wt
Lillian, lot 26. Jansen s d 160.000
Dunhill. Inc to Theodore E
Baiedes A wl Ann C . lot 11. blk A,
The Springs Whispering Pines
sec one. 1118.000
IQ CD l
P h ill ip
K obr in
to
Theodore E Baiedes A wt Ann C ,
W 0 20' ot lot 10. Blk A. The
Springs, Whispering Pines sec one

1100
(Q C D I William ft Lundquis! A
wl Jack'e to Visual Arts Prod .
Inc
lot 6. blk 12. Townsite ol
North Chuluota etc 1100
Barbara E Ta co a . sgl to Karl
to Fleshtr A wt Judith A , lot 24.
blk A. Sterling Park Unn , 127,400

Ernest L Matchell A wt Sheila to
Ellis E Knickerbocker (m a rr l lot
9, Dorell s d 1100
Woo dro w Pope to K i a m b u
Chaka Narania FI lots 20 A 2t,
blk l. Lockhart's s d 111.000
Judy L Germain, sgl to La r ry
J Germain, sgl , lot 27, South
Pmecrest. 1st addn.
(Q C D I Gary j
Kramer A
Gerald R Zerbe to Marianne
G a b l e r . sec
27 19 29. Peter
Miranda Grant, 16 700
Paul F Shear A wt Margaret to
J Thomas Graham A wt Joanne
B lot 38, Wekiva Club Ests . sec
si«. 1112.100
I Q C D l Daniel C Carrmgton to
Judith M
Carrington, lot 719
Wekiva Hunt Club. Fo i Hunt, sec
3 1100
Robert w Rmella A wt Patricia
to Ma rk K Carli A wt Sandra J .
tot 21 A W S' ol 20, blk F. replat ot
Sanora Units t A J. 111000
C om pl ete Interiors
Inc
to
James M Mill A wl Karen M lot
32 Huntmgton Mills. 178 600
Central FI
D'St Churth ot
Na /arene . Inc to Daniel C
Duncan, I J, Wm T Duncan I 3
int A flonna Lucas A no Louis I 1
ml . beg 191' E A 119 N ot S ', sec
post, sec 21 19 29 etc 175 000
R C A to M Curtis Stordahl. sgl .
lot 186, Hidden Lake, ph II, un V.
110,400
E A E Inv Co . Inc to Pioneer
Fed , lot 31. Wekiva Cove, pn one.
(lieu ot tell 190 000
Sprmqwood Vill Apt corp to
Alan C Chen A wl Lucia W . un
138 G Sprmqwood Village. Cond ,
134.000
W. L Kirk to George A Speer
Jr 1, ml Lot 4. less E IS 93 A E
31 86' ol Lot 1. Blk 49. Sanlando.

1100
George A Speer Jr to W L
Kirk. ' j int Lot 3 A E 1193' Ol 4
Blk 49. Sanlando. 1100
Rodney G Green. Inc to Evelyn
W Cloninger A James J Files,
part ot Lot A. Blk B. W ot SR 426,
Woodland Heights. 1133.000
Paul E Denney A wl Betty L to
Debra L Miller. S 20 Ot N 31' A E
150 ol N 311 S' Ot S ' ! ol S W ' . ot
N W ' . o l N W '| Sec 16 20 31. less l i ­

Orig. to $28
on East $100
Fr ed erlckM StuhrkeA wl Doris
to Roy A
Dunderdale A wl
Kathleen W . Lot 32 Wekiva Hills.
Sec 9 1106 000
A M Kasten Ind A Tr to Cathy
J Peatross. Lot 61. Wellington.
136.100

Save 5 0 %
M e n 's

IN T H E C I R C U I T C O U R T . IN
AND FOR SEM IN O LE C O U N T Y .
F L O R ID A
CASE NO 13 1977 CA 09 L
V E N TE R P R IS E S .
IN C . a
Florida corporation.
Plamtilt,
vs
MAJOR
W HEELER
and
C A R E T H A W H E E L E R his wile.
Detendants
N O TIC E OF SALE
N O T I C E IS H E R E B Y G I V E N
that pur sua nt to the F mal
Judgment ot Foreclosure entered
m the above styled cause the
undersigned Clerk will sell tne
pro pe rty located m Semino le
County described as
Lot 1 Block 4 L I N C O L N
H E I G H T S . S E C T I O N 1 acc or dn q
to the Plat thereo* as recorded n
Plat Book 13. Page 99. Public
Records ot Seminole C ou nt y.
F lor ida
at public sale, to the highest and
best bidder tor cash, at It 00 a m
0 clock on the 22nd day ot October.
1982. at the West front door ot the
Seminole County Courthou se.
Santord. Florida
W I T N E S S my hand and tne seal
ot this Court th'S the 29th day ot
September. 1982
(Seal)
A R T H U R M B E C K W I T H JR
as Clerk ot the Circuit Court
By Patricia Rob nson
as Deputy Clerk
DAVID K E R B E N
Attorney lor Plamtilt
118 Cast Robmson Street
Orlando. F L 32801
(301) 421 1611
Publish Oct I. 8. 1982
DEA 7

Sale

1100 FRENCH A V E . S A N F O R D

322-7953

S h ir ts

T99

Men’s Shirts

Men’s Suits

Ski Jacket

Short and Long Sleeve
Dress or Casual
Plaid and Stripes

3 Piece Polyester
Some Blends

Z ip O f f

Orig. to 99.99

S p e c ia l

Orig. to $18

Sale

499

Men’s

Slacks or Jeans
Solid &amp; Pattern

Sale

Sale

S le e v e

59"

34"

Men’s Vest

Basketball Shoes

1 0 0 %

Black Low Cut
Men's, Big Boys

N y lo n .

Orig. 6.99

S p e c ia l

Orig. to $24

J9 9

19 "

Sale

Men’s Shoes

Women’s Shoes

Girls’ Shoes

Casual Styles.
Leather Oxford or Slipons

Dress, Casual, Sport.

Back To School Styles

Orig. to $24
Orig. to $12

Sale 1 2 "
Gym Bag
Orig. 6.99

Sale
F U R N IT U R E &amp; A P P L IA N C E

D r e ss

Orig. to $16

Orig. to $34

DON’T
MISS

S le e v e

Button Down Styles

15 "

Legal Notice

L on g

299

Sale

6"

Orig. to $17
Orig. to $24

Sale 5 "
Sale 1200
Sale 1 6 "

Women’s
Sportswear

Girls' Shorts

Misses and Junior
Tops, Pants, and Skirls.

orig. 7.50

Orig. to $22

Sale

White te n n is shorts

T99

S a le

1 99

S a le

2 99

Twill fashion shorts
Orig. 8.50

Tennis Apparel

Junior Dresses

Junior Blazers

Spalding Men's
Shorts or Shirts.

T-Shirt Style
Engineered Stripes.

Corduroy Fashion
Blazers in Tuxedo Look
Styles.

Orig. to $14
Orig. $42

12-HOUR
SUPER
SALE!
SATURDAY ONLY
8 TIL 8

Sale

9"

Sale

999

Sleepwear
Clearance

Fan 5 0 % oft
20" Deluxe Boxed,
o rig 34.99

Sale
Lim ited Q u an tities
Mon. •Sat.
10 to 9
Sunday 12:30 - 5:30

Orig. to $13

Sale

19"

Women’s
Handbag
Large Selection of Styles.

Assorted Styles in
Long &amp; Short Gowns,
Dusters, Sleepshlrts.

I 749

Sale

499

Orig. to $7

Orig. to $27

JCPenney
S A N F O R D PLA Z A O N LY

*

3 99
Sale 14 "
Sale

Limited
Q uantities

�Evening Herald

N ational Handicapped Week has been
declared in Seminole County by the county board
of commissioners.
The observance, sponsored by the Easter Seal
Society, is designed to bring attention to the
accomplishments and problems of handicapped
people.

(U S PS M l 280!

300 N. FRENCH AVE., SANFORD, FI A 32771
Area Code 305-322-2611 or 831-9993
Friday, O ctober 1, 1982—4A
Wayne D Doyle. Publisher
Thomas Giordano, Managing Editor
Robert Lovenbury. Advertising and Circulation Director

A 6-kilometer footrace •• planned by NCR
Corp. of I^ake Mary on Oct. 9 Several hundred
runners are expected to participate in the race
which will be run on I,ake Emma Road.

Home Delivery: Week, 11.00; Month, $4.25; 6 Months. $24.00;
Year, $45.00. By Mail: Week. $1.25; Month. $5.25; 6 Months,
$30.00; Year. $57.00.

ROBERT WAGMAN

TryOn Pope's
Life: KGB Plot?
“ M urder,” as the adage goes, “will out." So,
also, we are learning will attem pted murder and
especially when it involves a beloved world
figure.
Some startling revelations recently have im­
plicated the Soviet Union as the primary suspect
for the almost successful attem pt on the life of
Pope John Paul II on May 13, 1981. The would-be
assassin, a Turkish terrorist named Mehmet Ali
Agca, was an agent of the Soviet KGB, according
to Claire Sterling, perhaps the leading authority
on international terrorism and author of the
widely acclaimed book on the subject, “ The
Terror Network."
In a significant article in the September
H eader’s Digest, Sterling constructs a convincing
case against the Soviet Union,, based on evidence
gathered during four months of tapping prim ary
sources in Turkey, West Germany, Italy, Tunisia,
and other countries.
She traces Agca’s life back to his impoverished
childhood in provincial Turkey and through his
student days at Ankara and Istanbul universities.
There his mother said “ those villains got him ,"
and he fell under the spell of terrorists engaged in
the Soviet Union’s successful campaign to
destabilize its NATO neighbor. Agca is thought to
have been sent to Beirut for terrorist training by
the Palentine Liberation Organization in 1977.
By the end of that year, substantial deposits —
"a fortune to a hard-up student” — were being
made to Agca’s account in one of Turkey’s m ajor
banks. Following the murder in February, 1979, of
Abdi Ipekci, Turkey’s most influential editor and
commentator, Agca readily confessed to the
crime, posing as a right-wing terrorist, although
there was no proof against him and no witness.
A few months later, Agca walked out of prison
in disguise in a way that would hardly have been
possible without high-level connivance. It is
suggestive at least that the interior minister, a
radical leftist who was personally involved in the
Agca affair, comes from a family with direct links
to the underground Communist Party in Turkey.
F ro m

T u rX c y , A g c a

w a n s p ir ite d

Commissioners have set a meeting on Oct. 21

to discuss safety problems with Tanglewood
subdivision residents.
R ecom m endations for installing flashing
lights, a crosswalk, stricter weight limits and
eventual construction of a third lane have been
made by Traffic Engineer Gary Icster.
The subdivision is where a tragic auto accident
on July 26 resulted in the death of 7-year-old
Dana Dietrick.
Her playmate. Shawm Balencie, 10, has
returned home from a lengthy stay in the
hospital but still has about eight more weeks
before a body cast will be removed from his
body.

to

S o fia ,

Bulgaria, to the Soviet Union’s most supine ally,
where he received the assassination weapon and
expertly forged papers. He lingered for 50 days in
the best hotels as a protege of the Bulgarian
secret police, whom Sterling describes as having
closer links with the KGB than any other group
outside the Soviet Union.
Sterling’s investigation ascertained that "from
the tim e of his (Agca’s) escape to his capture in
Home, he spent some $50,000 on plane fares and
first-class hotels."
As his sponsors must surely have wished, Agca
was identified around the world after shooting the
pope as a "right-wing terrorist." Moreover,
Sterling emphasizes that his Turkish identity
served an additional Soviet purpose of engen­
dering hatred between Western Christendom and
Moslem Turkey.
The Soviets were the first to be suspected. It has
been reliably reported by a close associate of the
pope, who rode with him to the hospital after the
shooting, that John Paul gasped out only two
statem ents at the tim e: "The Soviets did it,” and
“ I will survive."
Much of Sterling’s evidence was presented
dram atically on Sept. 21 in an NBC Documentary,
"The Man Who Shot the Pope, a Study in
T errorism ." Its conclusion: "The evidence
suggests the possibility that the Russians hatched
the plot against the pope or, at a minimum, knew’
about the plot and did nothing to stop it.”
According to NBC, the Polish-born pope sent a
secret letter to the Kremlin during the mounting
Solidarity Labor crisis in Poland in which, ac­
cording to NBC, he said "if the Russians moved
against Poland, he would lay down the crown of
St. P eter and return to his homeland to stand
shoulder to shoulder with his people."
Even if he were inclined to talk, Agca probably
could not tell much more than is already known
because his Bulgarian benefactors would cer­
tainly have concealed any connection with their
Soviet masters.
And what the world outside the Iron Curtain
knows at this timq about the attempt on Pope John
Paul’s life may Well be all that can be learned, the
KGB being what it is. But the difficulties of un­
covering so sinister a Soviet secret have not
deterred the European media, which have been
digging hard for some time to discover what lay
behind Agca’s smoking gun. The European press
lias also accused the Soviets.
Even without the convincing evidence Sterling,
NBC and others have turned up, the Soviet Union
would have been suspect for no other reason than
that it had the most to gain by the pope’s death; it
had the chief motive in removing him from the
Polish equation.
Tlie world is led to perceive, therefore, that
even though the Kremlin may be partially
paralyzed by a succession struggle, it is still
capable of ordering a heinous crime.

should show

Will Cash
Decide
Elections?
WASHINGTON (NEA) — How important is
money to the modem political process?
That question is being much debated this
year by politicians, Journalists and political
analysts. And many think that the November
elections will provide an answer, at least for
the time being.
On paper this looks like a big Democratic
year.
Traditionally the president’s party suffers
significant losses in the mid-term elections.
Add to this the condition of the economy, the
recently enacted lax increase and the per­
ceived disarray in the administration’s
domestic and foreign policies, and you might
have almost a textbook prescription for a
major Democratic victory at the polls this
November.
Many political analysts expect just that.
They predict that the Democrats will gain
from 25 to 40 seats in the House and may even
pick up the five seats needed to regain control
of the Seante.
But other political professionals side with
Nancy Sinnott, executive director of the
National Republican Congressional Com­
mittee.
She predicts that the Democrats will pick
up fewer than 20 seats in the House and no
more than two in the Seahte — and that very
possibly the Republicans “will end up with
about the same number of House seats (192)
we have right now.”
What’s behind her optimism? Simply put,
money.
The GOP has built up a huge advantage in
dollars raised. The Republicans believe that
this will allow most of their candidates, and
the party itself, to so outspend the opposition
that they will dominate the coming debate
and thus minimize their losses.
The figures are startling. The Republican
National Committee has reported raising $54
million in the past 15 months. Meanwhile, the
Republican Senatorial Campaign Committee
has raised $26.4 million, and the Republican
Congressional Campaign Committee has
raised $39.6 million.
The Democratic National Committee —
which, unlike its Republican counterpart, had
a debt to retire — raised only $8.9 million over
the same period. The Democratic Senatorial
Committee raised $2.6 million, and th e .
Democratic Congressional Committee raised
$2.8 million.
In other words, the Republicans have
raised almost nine times as much money as
the Democrats.
Political analyst Alan Barron recently
surveyed all House races since 1974 in which a
seat changed parties.
In 1974, the two parties' spending in these
races was about equal; the Republicans
outspent the Democrats by an insignificant
$1,000 per race.
But the GOP advantage in these key races
rose steadily to $31,000 per race in 1976,
$86,000 in 1978 and $114,000 in 1980.
This does not mean that entrenched
Democrats will lack sufficient funds to run
winning campaigns this fall. Longtime in­
cumbents can almost always raise the money
they need to retain their seats.
But it does mean that in the 70 to 80 “ swing”
districts — those that are really up for grabs
— the Republicans will be able to' spend
significantly more than the Democrats.
For instance, the Republican National
Committee plans to spend upwards of $7
million on national television advertising in
the weeks before the election. The
Democratic National Committee has no
money to counter this ad blitz.
In addition, the Republicans have identified
at least 80 swing races In which their can­
didates will get from $25,000 to $50,000 from
the party. Democrats say that their can­
didates are pretty much on their own in terms
of fund-raising.

Just as many people have been using the
phrase “at this point in time,” (remember
Watergate?) and the phrase “memorializing''
has gotten a lot of use lately too.
Memorializing is what two attorneys agreed
will be done to ensure that terms of an
agreement between their clients will be carried
out.
Commissioner Bill Kirchhoff liked the term so
much that he used it a few times as well. But he
also explained that he prefers to write things
down.
By MICHEAL BEHA

WILLIAM A. RUSHER

m sm of life soon!

On The
Beirut
M assacres

JACK ANDERSON

G o o n s H arass Iranians
WASHINGTON — Iranians in the United Khomeini students were injured. The attack
States, who used to live in dread of the shah’s served.its purpose: The meeting was broken
secret police, now apparently find themselves up and the lesson was driven home that public
in similar fear of Ayatollah Khomeini's goon opposition to Khomeini can be dangerous.
An investigation of the SMU fracas
squads.
Intelligence sources suspect that an un­ developed the information that many of the
dercover campaign of intimidation and pro-Khomeini intruders were from various
harassment against anti-Khomeini Iranians parts of the country and were considered
in this country is coordinated, if not directly “pros” who had participated in similar in­
planned, by Khomeini agents at the Iranian cidents at other colleges.
Intelligence sources believe that the melee
Interest Section in Washington. The interest
section, part of the Algerian Embassy, has in Texas was planned at the Iranian Interest
handled Iranian affairs since President Section in Washington. If so. it demonstrates
Carter closed the Iranian Embassy three the thoroughness of Khomeini's surveillance
years ago.
over dissidents in the United States. Not an
Intelligence sources told my associate anti-Khomeini sparrow falls without creating
Lucette I-agnado that Iranians living here interest at the Iranian Interest Section.
have contacted the State Department on
Khomeini’s hit squads have not yet made
several occasions to express their fear of the
the FBI’s list of most dangerous terrorist
Iranian Interest Section. They are convinced
groups. That dubious honor is shared by
that the interest section is behind some ugly
Armenian nationalists and Ihierto Rican
incidents directed at Khomeini’s opponents in
independence advocates, according to FBI
the United States.
sources.
Indeed, Khomeini's minions ure believed to
This is scant comfort to Iranian students
be modeling their behavior after the
“diplomats” of another dictator, Muammar and exiles living in this country. Where once
Qaddafi of Libya. Qaddafi hits not shrunk they feared Savak, the notorious secret police
from sending assassins into the United States of the late shah, they now fear Svainah, the
ayatollah's version.
to deal with troublesome exiles.
There is no evidence that Khomeini's secret
Footnote: Incidents of terrorism in the
police have gone to that extreme, at least not United States have made a quantum jump in
yet. But the Iranian Interest Section's the past year. As of Sept. 1, the FBI reports,
methods of harassment have been only there have been 28 such incidents, in which
slightly subtler. Employees of the interest five persons were killed and 23 injured. In all
section have been identified on the fringes of of last year, one death and fpur injuries were
anti-Khomeini
dem onstrations
in attributed to acts of terrorism .
Washington. The supposition is that they are
there to identify dissidents for future reprisal
— if not directly, then against their families ir,
P LE A S E W RITE
Iran.
Letters to the editor are Wfclconed for
In a little-noticed incident last summer,
publication. All letters must be signed,
Khomeini’s thugs came out of the closet. It
with a mailing address and, If possible, a
occurred at the student center of Southern
telephone
number so the Identity of the
Methodist University in Dallas.
writer may be verified. The Evening
SMU students held a meeting to protest the
Herald will respect the wishes of writers
excesses of the Khomeini regime. The lec­
who do not want their names In print The
tures and songs were suddenly interrupted
Evening Herald also reserves the right to
when about 75 hoodlums carrying guns and
edit letters to eliminate libel or to conform
knives tried to enter the meeting place.
to space requirements.
Quick action by local police prevented a
major disaster, but not before three anti-

SCIEN CE W O RLD

NEW YORK — It is greatly to the credit of
the people of Israel that so many of them are
refusing to join Prime Minister Menachem
Begin in his attempt to stonewall the issue of
Israeli responsibility for the recent
massacres of Palestinians in Beirut.
Begin is in many respects an admirable
man, but he has — spectacularly — the
defects of his virtues. For one thing, he began
his own long service to Israel as the leader of
a terrorist gang- in the 1940s, and it seems
possible that this background simply gives
him a different perspective on the ghastly
events that have long characterized the
fratricidal politics of the Middle East.
For another, he appears to think that the
sufferings the Jewish people have undergone
throughout history confer on them, and
through them on his government, some sort of
immunity from the normal moral obligations
of mankind. When Begin instructed a
spokesman to assert that no one will speak to
the Jewish people about ethics or the sanctity
of human life, his implication was, un­
mistakably, that the record of the Jewish
people in these respects is impressive (which
is true) and that it precludes any possible
criticism of his government’s behavior
(which is most certainly not true).
From the very start, Israel's invasion of
l&gt;ebanon has been characterized by an
element of excess and indifference to ob­
jections that seems, in retrospect, almost
fated to end in the tragedies at the Sabra and
Shatila refugee camps. The P ID ’s in­
discriminate bombardment of towns on
Israel’s northern border, from secure bases
within Lebanon, certainly justified what was
originally proclaimed as Israel's intention:
the occupation of a 25-mile strip of I^banese
territory. Instead, however, Defense Minister
Sharon persuaded Begin to allow him to oc­
cupy all of I&gt;ebanon up to the outskirts of
Beirut, and to besiege Beirut itself until the
PIX) agreed to leave I&gt;ebanon altogether.
Perhaps the military and propaganda
advantages of such a course justified it —
though it is noteworthy that the PIX)
managed to turn its departure from U*banon
into som ething very like a victory
celebration, with its soldiers being greeted
like heroes in half a dozen Arab states and
Yassir Arafat sailing off to Greece to be
welcomed with open arms by the leftist Greek
premier, Andreas Papandreou.
But Iibanon, at any rate, was free of PIX)
domination at last, and quickly elected as its
new president the leader of the Phalange, the
Christian bloc that has always been Israel’s
staunch ally against the Arabs. Alas, he was
assassinated even before he could take office
— and Israeli forces promptly Invaded and
occupied Beirut.
Did Begin and Sharon fully understand the
significance of that step? They appear to have
thought of it largely as one more demon­
stration of the awesome muscle of the Israeli
armed forces, offering assurance that the
assassination would not benefit the cause of
its perpetrators. But the assertion of total
authority over an area necessarily entails
responsibility for what thereafter goes on in
that area. It simply won’t do for Begin and
Sharon to argue that their officers on the spot
“didn't know” what was happening in the
Sabra and Shatila camps.
In the first place, the rage of the Phalange
against the assassins of their leader was, at
that point, the single most obvious emotion in
the whole mosaic of Lebanese politics, and
such tragedies as the massacres ought to
have been anticipated and guarded against
(just as the New York police Increased the
protection of the Arab U.N. embassies after
the slaying of the Israeli athletes at the
Munich Olympics).

B ER R Y 'S W O RLD

Babies Still Get D rea d ed RLF
By PATRICIA McCORMACK
UPI Health Editor
NEW YORK (UPI) — Two words that worried parents of
premature infants years ago can still cause agony. They are
retrolental fibroplasia.
Retrolental fibroplasia, called RLF for short, is a
proliferative disorder of the blood vessels in the eye's retina. It
is linked to the administration of oxygen that helps tiny babies
survive and is found almost exclusively in prematurely born
infants.
Marks of the condition Include growth of new blood vessels in
the retinal periphery some weeks after birth, often after
oxygen administration has been discontinued. Blood vessel
closure results in part from exposure to oxygen.
Dr. Robert E. Kalina, of the University of Washington School
of Medicine, said the concentrations of oxygen that can cause
this may be low. He said Just oxygen from breathing room air
may be too much for the very fragile infants.
Retrolental fibroplasia was first recognised in 1941. It
became the number one cause of blindness in childhood.
In the early 1950s, clinical and animal experimentation led to
the discovery that the major cause of RLF was administration
of more oxygen than was needed.
“Restriction of supplemental oxygen administration to in-

.

fants resulted in a dramatic decline in RLF incidence, but
mortality rates rose,” Kalina said at a recent National Society
to Prevent Blindness conference.
As a result, doctors had to give enough oxygen to keep the
tiny premature babies alive but not enougftto cause blindness.
In that delicate balancing act, many times doctors are suc­
cessful these days, Kalina said. But not always.
“It is estimated that as many as 500 infants are blinded
annually by RLF in this country alone,” he said.
The chairman of the university’s department of ophthal­
mology told of attem pts to reduce that number through better
surveillance of premature babies receiving oxygen in neonatal
units.
“The most commonly used and effective monitoring tech­
nique has been sampling of arterial blood for analysis of
oxygen and other blood gases but this invasive technique is
limited to intermittent sampling during the early days of life,”
he said.
“More recently transcutaneous monitoring devices have
become available and more reliable.
“Whether or not transcutaneous or other techniques that
provide more frequent and more accurate monitoring of
oxygen concentrations reaching the retina will result in a
further reduction in the Incidence of RLF remains to be
determined."

"Do you think wo should demand titty percent
o f the gross from our universities?"

�SPORTS
Silver Hawks
Try To Keep
Patriots Winless

r

How do you prepare for a team which hasn’t won or
scored in three games'?
Very carefully, says l^ake Howell coach Mike Bisceglia,
who takes his 2-1 Silver Hawks to Altamonte Springs tonight
for an 8 o’clock encounter with I j k e Brantley.
“You have to disregard their record,” said Bisceglia
Thursday. “This is a big cross-town rivalry and it’s our
second conference game.
"Besides, last year we played a team i Boone) which had
an 0-9 record and we got swamped,” he added.
Bisceglia is guarding against the same thing happening
tonight, although injuries to Kendall Wherry (ankle),
running back Jeff Solomon (back) and quarterback Troy
Quackenbush (back) have him worried.
Wherry, a defensive lineman, is lost for two weeks..
Quackenbush is questionable and Solomon is doubtful.
Backup Darin Slack is chomping at the bit to call the signals
if "Quack" can’t go. Kicker Tito Martorell will miss
another week, but Robert Kerr hit a field goal and an extra
point last week in his absence.
Despite last Friday's loss to Titusville, Astronaut, the
Hawks (1-0 in conference) have been impressive in wins
over Bishop Moore and Seminole.
Huge offensive linemen Dan Rae, Bill Norton and Jim
Royal have made the ground game go by opening holes for
Solomon, Mike Palowitch and fullback Jay Robey. Robey Is
second in the county in rushing with 254 yards for a 6.2
average. Palowitch is fifth with 156 yards for an Identical
6.2 average.
While the backs have been superb, Tullis is most im­
pressed with the offensive line.
"They're the best offensive line we'll see this year," says
Tullis. "They really block. It sounds simple, but 1 coach
offensive line and I’m really impressed with them. That
number 77 (Norton) is really good."
Although the Patriots have lost to Colonial, Apopka and
Boone, Tullis isn’t about to pull up anchor and change the
course of the Brantley game plan.
"We evaluated our attack and asked ourselves, ‘are we
asking too much of the kids'," informed the second-year
Patriot boss. "We don't think we are. We're going to run the
same plays."
Tullis feels sophomore Dennis Grosclose "is throwing the
ball better" and running backs Chuck Stalling, Bill Black,
Andy Reardon, Allen Armstrong and Steve Emmons have
been "m ore consistent.”
Consistent is something linebacker Donnie O'Brian has
been all year. The aggressive junior collected 12 tackles
last week and intercepted a pass which he returned 35
yards. It earned him the Burger King Player of the Week
award for defense.
Seminole's Rendell Manley, who rumbled for 158 yards
and two touchdowns including a 73-yarder, picked up the
Burger King award for the offense. — SAM COOK

JOE NAVARRO
...Hawk Hit-Man

CHARLIE LUCAItELLI
...speedy Ram

KEITH WALLACE
...Lake Mary (ill

GREG PILOT
defender

...L y m a n

[Will Tonight Be The Night?
H u n g ry Rams Seek First Win Against Wymore Tech
By CHRIS FISTER
Herald Sports Writer
At Wymore Tech the line between a
football program and a joke is a very
thin one. The only thing that keeps this
program from sinking is the players'
love for the game, take that away and
you have nothing. No tradition. No
spirit. No football team.
The highlight of W ymore Tech
Bobcats' football history came last
season when Wymore beat Heritage
Prep last year for its first victory in five
years. Now it is Ijtke M ary's turn to get
that elusive first victory, but, the
Rams are a first-year varsity team and
compared to Wymore Tech, they don't
have a clue as to what the agony of
defeat feels like.
"It doesn't look good for us this
season," Wymore coach Alfred Rogers
said. "We lost our best two players in
the first game of the season."
If there is one thing that stands out on
the Bobcats squad it is desire. “We
have a lot of young kids that are thrilled
just to be out (here on the field," Rogers
said. “Actually we only have 13 players
that might play on other high school
teams if they didn’t go here."
So far in 1982 the strongest aspect of
the Bobcats' squad has been defense.
Wymore has allowed its opponents just
110 total yards over a two-game span.
The top defensive performers are end
Mark Haynes and tackle Vincent

Prep Football
Harris. "Defense is definitely our
strongest point," Rogers said.
But even thought the defense has kept
the Bobcats within striking distance on
occasions, the offense has sputtered
time after time. “I'm not worried about
the defense," Rogers said. “We just
need to score some points."
Offensively the Bobcats are led by
running backs Patrick Johnson and
George Redding. Johnson rushed for 80
yards last week in Wymore's (21-0) loss
to Florida Air Academy (Melbourne).
The Bobcats lost to Heritage Prep in the
season opener.
William Spurting, 6-1, 195. is the top
offensive lineman and Charlie Hawks is
another offensive leader.
"We’re trying to figure out what we
can do on offense,” Rogers said.
“Every time we get a quarterback who
looks good, he gets bumped and that's
it. We don't have anyone who really
knows how to play quarterback."
The I-iikc Mary defense has been on
the field a lot of minutes so far and has
allowed 77 (joints in three games. Many
of those points were allowed after of­
fensive mistakes.
But the Rams' offense was produc­
tive against Bishop Moore and coach
Roger Beathard's squad established an

adequate passing attack with quar­
terbacks Keith W allace and Jim
Boghos both capable signal callers. The
two lake Mary QB’s combined for a
total of 154 yards passing, surpassing
the Rams’ combined total offense for its
first two games.
"1 don’t know much about lak e Mary
other than they are a young team,"
Rogers said. "We won't be able to beat
them with size so maybe we will have to
use finesse."
If the Rams can put two halves of
good football together, the second half
against Bishop Moore was en­
couraging, it could add up to lake
Mary’s first varsity victory.
"The second half was ours against
Bishop Moore," Beathard said. “ But
we need two good halves to win football
games."
About the q u a rte rb a ck position.
Beathard intends to go with Wallace as
his starter and use Boghos a lot more.
"We always knew Jim i Boghos) could
throw the ball, now he needs to learn to
hang on to it a little better."
Even though the Rams have been
outscored 77-7 in three games,
Beathard believes they are improving
all the time. "We have good practices
all the time, all we need to do now is ait
out on mistakes in the games and 1
believe we will win some games."

DELAND — Lyman's Greyhounds try to get their Fivi
Star Conference title hopes back on the track here tonight
when they take on DeLand's unpredictable 2-1 Bulldogs
Unpredictable, indeed. How do you assess a team which
began the season by breaking Seabreeze's three-year losing
streak, but then upset highly-regarded Mainland eight days
ago1 In between, Del-and beat Spruce Creek
Very simple. You don't.
"We dominated the first half in the first two games
(Seabreeze and Spruce Creek)," points out coach D o
Stowers. "But we played poorly on defense in the second
half and our offense choked and panicked."
Against Mainland, however, the dogs did get it together
Aided by eight Buccaneer turnovers. Del-and pulled out n
14-7 victory over the team the coaches picked to win the
conference.
"But if you'll remember, I picked Lyman," Stowers
reminded about his choice for the best team. "They had tin
most starters returning on offense plus that quarterback
(Jerry Axley) and that good wide receiver i Todd Marriott
are back."
Although Del-and is wary of the Axley-Marriott tandem,
the Bulldog scouts must have been aghast last Friday when
that duo didn't produce any yardage.
In fact, Axley didn't once throw in Marriott's direction
The 5-ll slinger suffered through his worst game as a prep,
throwing for just nine yards and completing 2 of 9 passes
"I don’t know what they were doing," said Stowers. "All I
know is they ate us up throwing the ball last year i2(V6)
They threw the ball for over 300 yards."
This year, however, Stowers feels it may lx* different
Two of his best defenders — Victor Edwards and Ferrell
Gibson — anchor the Bulldogs defensive backfield.
Up front, 165-pound noseguard Amp Graham has terrified
opponents all year with his quickness and strength
Graham bench presses 200 pounds more than his weight and
can go by centers like they're standing still Tim Herndon,
an 185-pound defensive end, is another top-notch pass
rusher and defender.
Offensively, Stowers says the 'Dogs have to block people
better. Duane Kindall, 6-0 and 250 pounds, is solid, but there
has been little else.
At quarterback is Terry Nettles is the junior quarterback
with Jeff Miles and Otis Robinson lined up behind him
Robinson, a senior, sparkled last spring in the jamboree at
Like Howell.
Lyman, too, had offensive troubles last week in the 20-1.3
loss to Winter Park. In the second half, I.yman ran just nine
offensive plays and had the ball for only four minutes.
The defense, led by linebacker Mike Hill and defensive
back Greg Pilot, was solid until it finally crumbled in the
final half under the Wildcats' relentless rushing game.
Pilot had the 'Hounds only second-half score on a 35-yard
(wm blti recovery (or u louckulowu.

Lions Chase Chicken Rivers A t Osceola I
lately a certain member of the
Osceola High Kowboys' offensive backfield has been running around like a
chicken with its head cut off. But
Osceola fans don't cry foul because
when I-orenzo "Chicken" Rivers gets
the ball it's hard for opposing tacklers
to bring him down.
Rivers has run for 262 yards in three
games and is the second most prolific
scoring machine in the Central Florida
area. The fleet-footed tailback has
scored five touchdowns in helping the
Kowboys to a 2-l record. Rivers trails
only St. Cloud’s Brent Fullwood, who
has scored eight TD's in the scoring
column.
Tonight, Rivers will try to elude a
tough Oviedo defense as the Lions
travel to Kissimmee to battle the
Kowboys.
"We Just faced Brent Fullwood and
now we have to turn around and try to
stop another top back In 'Chicken'
Rivers," Oviedo coach Jack Blanton
said.
The Lions had an open date last week
after dropping a 2l-7 decision to St.
Cloud and Fullwood, who rushed for
over 200 yards against Oviedo.
"They (Oviedo) have an outstanding
defense," Osceola coach Ken Baker
said. "I'm concerned about moving the
ball on them ."

Unpredictable
Bulldogs Host
Wary Lyman

After opening the season with shutout watch out for their speed," Baker said.
victories over H aines City and "Yarborough (J.W.) is faster than
I-eesburg, the tables were turned on the anyone we have and he's pretty big too,
Kowboys last week as Palm Bay 5-9,205. Their offensive line does a good
Job and they have some of the l&gt;est
blanked Baker's squad, 13-0.
"Palm Bay was rugged and we had athletes in the district."
Osceola's pass defense has been
about five or six starters injured in that
game that could be out against outstanding so far in '82 allowing just 70
yards in three games while the defense
Oviedo," Baker said.
Even though it lost last week, Osceola against the run has yielded 327 yards.
In two game Oviedo's pass defense
still received votes in this week’s A high
has allowed Just 39 yards while the
school football rankings.
Alongside Rivers is fullback Ronnie IJons’ opponents have gained 315 yards
Wilson who Baker called a fine blocking on the ground.
The way it looks, tonight’s game will
back and quarterback Marcus Paul.
Paul has completed eight of 18 passes be mostly a ground oriented one of­
for llO yards and has yet to be in­ fensively with the two key performers
tercepted. Paul’s main target is Jim being Yarborough and Rivers.
Chaveli who has caught three passes
for 28 yards. Bill Ward, at tackle, an­
chors the offensive line for Osceola.
"We’re going to have to be sharp to
move the ball on Oviedo's defense,"
CLAKK
Baker said. “ Number 99 (Tom John­
HEILMAN
son) and number 77 (E ric Putman) are
...tough
tough and looked good from what I've
lin
ebacker
seen of them."
Defensively a pair of brothers head
up the squad. Kenny Blanford is a mean
middle linebacker and brother Tony is
a hard hitting safety. Other defensive
standouts are tackles William Pate and
Radney Tilley.
"Defensively we are going to have to

__H A M C O O K

Vierling Plans Houdini Act For Heritage
ORI.ANDO — Heritage Prep lost 10
football games last fall for coach Dan
Fowler.
So, when the season ended, Fowler
went to work He recruited players
from some area high schooLs and
showed up for the spring jamboree
loaded for bear.
Unfortunately for Fowler, he played
his renegades in the jamboree. He got
the ax, but the recruits stayed, which is
one reason Trinity Prep coach Ron
Vierling is concerned about tonight’s 8
o'clock kickoff with the Praetorians.
"I know they have a good quar­
te rb a c k ,” said Vierling about
Heritage's Chris Young. "Every week
you’ve got to key on somebody, so this
week we’re keying on him."
, Young has thrown for 270 yards and
ran for 80 more. He specializes in the
option. His favorite target is Randy
F.isenhardt, a converted quarterback.
Vierling, not your usual run-of-themill coach, has created a "Houdini
Puzzle" for the elusive Young. He plans
to use an outside linebacker (Andy
Duda or Steve Phillips) to control the
pitch m an, then key on Young with
strong inside linebacker Brian Butler.
Weakside linebacker Chris Lucas will
cover any mis-direction efforts by the
Praetorians.
Vierling feels Butler, a top candidate

for all-state laurels, is the key to the
defense. The 6-3, 210-pounder was in­
strumental in shutting down St. Pete
Shorecrest’s fullback Rob Johnson in
the Prep's 27-15 victory last week.
"Heritage P rep is a very intense
team,” points out Vierling. "If we're
ahead of them it’s probably in
organization. They haven’t been
together too long. In about six weeks
though, they'll be very tough to beat."
One of the most intense is defensive
lineman Bruce Piper. "He's the most
violent-hitting lineman I’ve seen on the
high school level," said new coach
Charlier Whipple who played for the
Orlando Panthers. Cedric Golden is
another top defender for Heritage.
The Praetorians opened the season
with two victories— an IB-0 victory over
Alachua Rolling Green Academy and a
narrow 8-6 victory over Wymore Tech.
Trinity, meanwhile, is 2-l. The Saints
are listed among the "those receiving
votes" category of the lA prep poll
which is compiled by Vince Murray of
the Ocala Star Banner.
Vierling feels un impressive victory
could vault Trinity into the Top 10.
The Saints will look to Butler to
shoulder the offensive burden. He has
accumulated 260 yards in three games.
Running mate Gerald Sutton is a
breakaway threat while quarterback

Richard Millimari is a steadying infuence in the backfield

Here’s a look at this week Wymore
Tech by 12 over Like Mary. Like
Howell by 21 over Like Brantley.
Lyman by 10 over Del-and. Osceola by 8
over Oviedo. Trinity Prep by 15 over
Heritage Prep.UCF by 3 over Valdosta
State. Florida by 14 over Ixmislana
State. Ohio Slate by 17 over Florida
State. Miami by 10 over Liuisville
Georgia by 7 over Mississippi. Pitt­
sburgh by l.3 over West Virginia. And
Notre Dame by 19 over Michigan State.
- SAM COOK

RON
VIEHLING
. . . Houdini
at work

*

Underwood, Ram s H andle Tribe
By GEOFFREY GIORDANO
Herald Sports Writer
Lake Mary's junior varsity Rams
remained undefeated Thursday night
by toppling Seminole, 14-6, at
Seminole High School.
Turnovers were the name of the
game. Lake Mary fumbled twice and
lost both, but the Fighting Seminoles
found it much tougher to handle the
pigskin, giving away all four fumbles.
"Fortunately for us, they had more
turnovers," said Seminole coach Bill
McDaniel who saw his team's record
Improve to 34). "If they hadn't
(fumbled so much), it would have
been nip and tuck."
The first period, which ended
scoreless, began with Sem inole
recovering a Ram fumble, and the
Rams recovering a loose Tribe ball
only seconds later. Though the Rams
had great position on the Seminole 31
yard line, the tenacious 'Noles con­
tinually tracked down Lake Mary’s
runners for losses In their backfield.
Eventually, Scott Underwood at­
tempted a 51 yard field goal for Lake
Mary, which was sorely short.
The Rams got another chance,

JV Football
however, as the Tribe quickly fum­
bled a second time. Nothing came of it
though, as Tim Hall of Seminole ended
Lake Mary’s hopes of scoring by
picking off a pass by Ram quar­
terback Mike Huff.
Both offenses seemed extremely
tight during the first quarter, but they
quickly loosened up for the second.
Seminole fumbled a third time at the
beginning of the quarter. They went
through four downs unsuccessfully,
but Intercepted a pass by Tribe signalcaller Mike Whelchel to give them a
fresh breath of air at the Seminole 23.
A key pass from Underwood to
receiver WUlle Meadows put the ball
on the Seminole one-inch line, and
Underwood himself plunged for the
score on the next play. Underwood
also made his conversion kick count,
and U k e Mary held a 7-0 lead.
The Sem inoles were suddenly
aroused by Lake Mary’s touchdown,
and quickly began a drive to counter
it. Jo Jo McCloud brought Lake

Mary's kickoff to the Ram 47, giving
Seminole good position to work with.
Relying heavily on strong rushing
performances by backs Dexter Jones
and Clifton Campbell, the 'Noles
made it to the Ram one with a little
over one minute to play in the half.
Campbell ran in the yard for the TD,
but Whelchel’s pass to end Ricky
Whittaker failed for the two points,
leaving it 7-6 Lake Mary.
Seminole's rushing apparantly had
a bad effect on McDaniel’s defense,
but they finally caught on, and closed
that aspect of the game up for the
Tribe.
"I was scared to death. They were
running the old Seminole off-tackle,
which I should know by now, and they
cross-blocked and pulled the guards
well on us. But our kids made the
adjustment,” said McDaniel who
coached the Tribe JV last year.
The third period started as the first
had, with Seminole recovering a Lake
Mary fumble, then fumbling away to
them again. This time, the Rams
capitalized on their advantage, and,
led by big yardage gains by UnderHoroti Phots by B ill Murphy

See UNDERWOOD, Page 7A

Clifton Campbell (right) puts an inside move on Lake Mary defensive back Ryan Watthouse

V

�*A— Evening Herald. Sanford, FI.

Friday. Oct. 1. Mil

National League
East
W L Pet. GB
x-St. Louis
91 69 .569 —
Phila
87 72 .547 3 4
Montreal
84 75 .528 6 4
Pittsbrgh
83 76 .522 7 4
Chicago
72 88 .450 19
New York
64 95 .403 264
West
Atlanta
87 72 . 547 —
Los Ang
86 73 .541 1
San Fran
66 73 .541 1
San Diego
60 79 .503 7
Houston
75 84 .472 12
60 99 .377 27
Cincl
x-ellnched division title
Thursday’s Results
Cincinnati 6, San Ditgo 4
Pittsburgh 7, St. Louis 2
Philadelphia 5, Montreal 4
Chicago 3, New York 1
• San Francisco 7, Houston 6
Los Angeles 10, Atlanta 3
Today’s Game*
(AU Times EDT)
Montreal
(Lea
12-10)
at
Pittsburgh
(McWilliams
8-8),
7:35 p.m.
New York (Leach 1-1) at
Philadelphia
(Krukow
13-11),
8:05 p.m.
Cincinnati (Shirley 7-13
at
Houston (Ryan 16-11), 8:35 p.m.
Atlanta (P erez 3-4) at San
Diego (Show 10-5), 10:05 p.m.
Los Angeles (Reuss 17-11) at
San Francisco (Breintng 1-5),
10:35 p.m.
Saturday*! Game*
St. Louis at Chicago
Los Angeles at San Fran
New York at Phila, night
Montreal at Pittsbrgh, night
Cincinnati at Houston, night
Atlanta at San Diego, night

American League
East
W L Pet. GB
Milwauke
94 64 .595
Balt
91 67 .576 3
Boston
86 73 .541 8 4
Detroit
80 77 .510 134
New York
79 80 .497 154
Clevelnd
76 81 .484 174
Toronto
75 84 .472 194
West
Calif
90 69 .566 _
Kan City
88 71 .553 2
Chicago
85 74 535
5
Seattle
76 83 .478 14
Oakland
67 92 .421 23
Texas
64 95 .403 26
Minn
59 100 .371 31
Thursday's Results
Toronto 6 Minnesota 4
New York 7, Cleveland 5
Boston 9, Milwaukee 4
Baltimore 6, Detroit 5
Kansas City 11, Oakland 4
Today’s Games
(AU Times EDT)
Detroit
(Wilcox
12-9
and
Underwood 3-8) at Cleveland
(Barker 14-11 and Anderson 33). 2, 5:35 p.m.
Milwaukee
(Caldwell
17-12
and Vuckovich 18-5) at Baltimore (D. Martinez 15-12 and
Davis 7-4), 2, 5:35 p.m.
Seattle (Bannister 12-12) at
Toronto (Stieb 16-14), 7:30 p.m.
Boston (Torrez 9-9) at New
York (Guidry 14-8), 8 p.m.
Oakland (Kingman 3-11) at
Kansas City (Castro 2-2), 8:35
p.m.
Chicago (Dotson
11-14)
at
Minnesota (Castillo 12-11), 8:35
p.m.
Texas
(Hough
16-12)
at
California (Zahn 17-8), 10:30
p.m.

Major League Reiulti
United Preia International
National League
Clnci
000 121 2 00- 6 10 2
San
Dgo
101 020 0 0 0 - 4 10 1
Scherrer,
Harris
(5),
Leibrand! (5), Hayes (8) and Van
Gorder;
Hawkins, Chiller (6),
Lucas (8)
and
Tlngley.
W—
Lelbrandt (5-7). L—Chiller (43).
HRs—Cincinnati,
Walker
(5), Oester (0), Driessen (17).

(6)
7).

By

and Scloscia. W—Hooton
L—Camp (11-12).

Orioles Score 4 In Ninth, Tip Detroit
By United Press International
Milwaukee leads Baltimore by three
games and can clinch the title by beating
the Orioles in any one of their four games
this w eekend. But Baltimore beat
Detroit, 6-5, Thursday night to prevent
the Brewers from clinching a tie.
"It would have been nice if they
(Baltimore) lost but we still have to win
one," M ilwaukee Manager H arvey
Kuenn said after the Brewers lost, 9-4, in
Boston.
"We were hoping to celebrate on the
way down to Baltimore, now we have to
wait," added Milwaukee’s Paul Molitor.
“Deep down, I don’t see how we can lose
four straight. But crazier things have
happened and we can't assume any­
thing.”
Dennis
Eckersley
prevented
Milwaukee from clinching a tie and Wade
Boggs broke out of a batting slump with

Mtl
300 000 0 10- 4 5 0
* pt &gt;u *
ooo o n o o \ - o to a
Sanderson,
Burris
(6),
Schatzeder
(6 ),
Reardon
(7)
and Carter;
Bailer,
Bahnsen
(5), Farmer
(8),
Altamirano
(8) and Virgil. W—Altamirano
(4-0). L—Reardon (7-4). HRs—
Montreal, Wallach (26); Phila­
delphia, Sanchez (2).

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Hurt Hooton, Los Angeles righthander, went six innings lust night ns
the Dodgers whipped the Braves, IO-3.

Kuhn Says WTBS Broadcast
Will Cost Baseball Millions
Turner also owns the Braves.

NEW YORK (UPIi - Baseball
Commissioner Bowie Kuhn testified a
nationwide broadcast of any majorleague championship games by Ted
Turner’s cable network would ad­
versely affect ha sobiill to the tune of
millions of dollars.
"I have no question we arc tulking
about a multi-multimillion dollar effect
on baseball," Kuhn said Thursday in
U.S. District Court in Manhattan,
where a battle is under way to block
Turner’s plans.
Turner was to testify today.
T u rn e r’s Atlanta-based WTBS-TV
"Superstation" has vowed to send
series games to the 21.5 million homes
in its cable network should the
hometown Atlanta Braves earn a spot
in the post regular-season playoffs.

jL

ABC Sports, supported by Kuhn and
the 10 teams on m ajor league baseball's
television committee, claim a nation­
wide cable broadcast would violate
ABC's exclusive $9 million contract to
broadcast 1982 championship series
games.
Prior to the advent of cable
television, those contracts restricted
broadcasts by a team 's flagship station
to hometown audiences.
ABC is seeking a preliminary in­
junction to stop Turner.
WTBS-TV claims it has the right to
broadcast Braves games over cable
system because it is the team's flagship
station in Atlanta.

r '»••

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P o o r** B am b aro tr to * on tytar
contract far 1141

ANGEI.ES (UPI) - lik e great
hibernating bears, the to s Angeles
Dodgers lumbered out of their dens,
stretching and flexing their muscles. And
then, just to get the feel of it again, they
beat up on the Atlanta Braves.
The Dodgers’ 10-day deep sleep — in
which they lost eight straight and ap­
peared to have put themselves out of the
running in the National leag u e West —
ended Thursday night. And it may have
been the headlines, which used the word
“ c h o k e rs" liberally, in T hu rsd ay 's
newspapers that brought them out of the
near-coma.
Dusty Baker drove in three runs and
Rick Monday two, powering the Dodgers
to a 10-3 rout of Atlanta that snapped
their eight-game skid and cut the Braves'
NL West lead to one game.
Atlanta, seeking its first division title
since 1969, finishes the regular season
with three games at San Diego while to s
Angeles is at San Francisco for three
games. Both series begin tonight.
"People want to call us chokers, let
'em ," said an angry Baker. "Call us what
you want to call us. Our record over the
years speaks for itself. We’ve been here
year after year, fighting for the pennant.
And we’re right here again."
to s Angeles manager Tom tosorda
said Friday night will be the key.
"We’ve got to beat the Giants in that
first game and pray the Padres knock off
A tlanta," he said. "Then we’re dead
even. Then wc see what happens in a twogame stretch. I like our chances."
Atlanta manager Joe Torre said the
closing stages of the race are unfolding
just about they way he figured they
would.
"Nothing has been easy for us all
season," he said. "Now it's going down to
the last weekend, maybe the last game,
of the season. I said a few weeks ago that
this would happen, that it would lx*
decided at the wire. I hoped my team
would make a liar out of me, but they
didn’t."
Burt Hooton, 4-7, lasted into the sixth
inning to gain the victory while starter
Rick Camp, 11-12, took the defeat.
The Dodgers, on a three-run third, took
a 4-2 lead. Bill Russell led off with a
single, was sacrificed to second, took
third on Steve Sax's single and scored on
Claudell Washington’s throwing error
with Sax taking third. Ken tondreaux
walked and Sax scored on Baker's
sacrifice fly.
The Dodgers reached three hurlers in
the seventh for four runs. Steve
Bedrosian gave up a single to Russell and
Joe Beckwith sacrificed but was safe on a
fielder's choice. Russell was out at third
on Sax's fielder's choice but tondreaux
doubled in Beckwith and Baker singled in
Sax and tondreaux then scored on Jose
Morales' single.

Beckwith picked up his first save by
working the final 3 2-3 innings.
“ I never understood anyone calling us
chokers," said Sax, the Dodgers’ super­
rookie who also doubled in a run in the
eighth. “ Choking is not being able to
handle pressure. Hell, if these guys who
have been through the wars for so many
years can't handle pressure, 1 honestly
can’t think of anyone in the world who
can handle it.
"If Atlanta drops one game in San
Diego, we’re tied with them. I know we
can beat the Giants. We've gotten our­
selves back into the damn race."
The Braves took a brief lead in the first
inning, when Rafael Ramirez singled and
scored on Dale Murphy’s double, with
Murphy coming home on Chris Cham­
bliss’ single.
The Dodgers got back one run in the
second, when Steve Garvey led off with a
single, took second on an error and
scored on Monday’s single. to s Angeles
scored its fifth run in the sixth when
Dusty Baker was hit by a pitch, took third
on Garvey’s single and scored on Mon­
day's single.
Atlanta scored its third run in the sixth,
when R am irez collected his third
straight single, stole second and tallied
on Chambliss’ single.
So now, with 159 games in the books,
the season comes down to three games
for both the Braves and Dodgers. Atlanta
shortstop Jerry Royster said the Braves
have to be considered the favorites.
"As long as we’re confident that a onegame lead is enough to win it, then we’re
OK," Royster said, "and we are con­
fident. The iXxlgers and Giants have
uphill climbs. We just have to keep the
ship steady."
Reds 6, Padres 4
Dan Driessen slugged a two-run homer
in the seventh inning at San Diego to
break a 4-4 tie and lead the Reds.
Pirates 7, Cardinals 2
At Pittsburgh, Dale Berra drove in two
runs with a sacrifice fly and a single and
Manny S arm iento and Rod Scurry
combined on a five-hitter to give the
Pirates a triumph over the East cham­
pion Cardinals.
Cubs 3, Mets 1
Dickie Noles scattered nine hits over 8
1-3 innings and Ryne Sandberg scored
twice to pace the Cubs to a Shea Stadium
triumph.
Phillies 5, Expos 4
At P hiladelphia, G arry Maddox
singled home Manny Trillo from third
base with one out in the ninth inning to
help Porfi Altamirano raise his record to
4-0.

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At Cleveland, Oscar Gamble’s two-out
single in the ninth snapped a 5-5 tie and
capped a four-run outburst that lifted the
Yankees. Cleveland's Andre Thornton
cracked his 32nd home run of the season
and 31st as a designated hitter - tying
the AI. mark held by Jim Rice and Rico
Carty.

UOS

N.Y.
001 000 2 0 4 - 7 80
Cleve
012 020 0 0 0 - 5 121
Rawley, Morgan (8 ), Gossage
(9)
and
Cerone;
Heaton,
Splllner
(7), Glynn
(9) and
Nahorodny. W—Morgan
(7-10).
L—Splllner (12-10).
H R-Cleveland, Thornton (32).

5 Art* MmHi

At Toronto, Jesse Bartield slammed a
tic-breaking, fifthinning solo home run
and Lloyd Moseby capped a four-run first
with a two-run single as the Twins
became the first team in the majors this
season to lose 100 games.
Yankees 7, Indians 5

Label, Strangle A tlanta

(10).

Scorecard
A tO rts a * * f a i l * * ) *
Th arthay rt«ht rasatts
F irs t
I F its F r y * *
1*.** * » 500
IS Im o n O o Irl
10*0 4.40
I Ricardo Z a rra u *
4.40

"Now they (Milwaukee) have to beat baseball." Anderson said. "There's not
the club they’ve been battling the last another club with the all-around depth
couple of weeks to win, which is the way and talent they have."
it should be," said Red Sox Manager
E lsew here, Kansas City ripped
Ralph Houk.
Oakland, 11-4, Toronto topped Minnesota,
At Detroit, Cal Ripken, Jim Dwyer and 6- 4, and New York rallied past Cleveland,
Gary Roenicke delivered consecutive, 7- 5.
In the National league, it was: Cin­
two-out RBI singles to highlight a fourrun ninth inning that rallied the Orioles. cinnati 6, San Diego 4; Pittsburgh 7, St.
If it's any consolation to Baltimore, at to u ts 2; Philadelphia 5, Montreal 4;
least the series will settle the race one Chicago 3, New York 1; San Francisco 7,
Houston 6; and tos Angeles 10, Atlanta 3.
way or another, without any ties.
"We still have to win all four," said Royals 11, A’s 4

At Kansas City. Mo.. Willie Aikens
knocked in seven runs with a pair of
homers to pull the Royals within two
games of the first-place California
Angels.
Blue Jays 6. Twins 4

Dodgers Decry C h oke

Mllw
ooo ooo 040- 4 M \
Boston
001 302 12x— 9 16 0
Slaton,
Easterly
(4),
Huas
(6 ) ,
Ladd (7),
Bernard
(8),
McClure
(8)
and
Allenson;
Eckersley,
Stanley
(8)
and
Allenson.
W—Eckersley
(13-13).
L—Slaton
(10-6).H R s-Boston.
Evans
(30), Perez
(6); Mil­
waukee,
Molitor (19),
Cooper
Chi
000 100 0 20- 3 8 0
(31).
N.V.
000 000 0 0 1 - 1 10 1
Notes, Hernandez (9), Smith Balt
000 000 11 4 - 6 12 0
(9)
and
Moreland;
Gorman,
Detroit
Oil 111 OOx-5 90
Orosco (6) and Bochte, Hodges
Flanagan,
Fllnn
(5)
and
(8).
W -N o le s
(10-13).
LDempsey,
Nolan (4); Morris,
Gorman (1-1).
Bailey (9), Toblk (9), Rucker
(9) and Parrish. W—Fllnn (2Hous
102 200 0 0 1 -6 15 0
0).
L-Toblk
(4-9).
HRs—
San
Fran
000 000 3 2 2 - 7 15 1
Baltimore,
Ripken
(27);
De­
LaCoss,
Roberge (7),
Boone
troit, Lemon (19).
(8 ) , D.Smith (9) and Ashby;
Barr, Chris (4), Holland (6 ),
002 000 0 2 0 - 4 5 2
Minton ( I ) , Gale (9), Lavelle Oaklnd
City
011 030 Six—1110 1
(9) and May, Brenly (8). W— Kan
Norris,
D'Acqulsto
(8), OwLavelle (10-7). L-B oone (1-1).
chlnko
(7), Beard
(8)
and
HRs—Houston, Spilman 2 (3).
Kearney;
Spllttorlf,
Armstrong
Wathan, Quirk (8). W Atlanta
200 001 0 0 0 - 3 9 3 (7) and
Los
Ang
013 001 4 U -1 0 14 0 Spllttorll (10-10). L -N o rris (7Camp, Moore (5), Perez (8), 11). HRs—Kansas City. McRae
Bedroslan
(7 ),
Dayley
(7), (26), Aikens 2 (16), White (11);
(2 ),
Murphy
Hauiman
(7)
and
Benedict, Oakland, Stanley
Slnatro
(I );
Hooton,Beckwith
(* ).
___

4-

American League

League
American
210 010 0 0 0 - 4 10 0
Minn
400 010 Olx— 6110
Toronto
O'Connor and Laudner; Leal,
Geisel
(7),
Senteney
(6),
Murray (8) and Martinez. W Leal (12-15). L -O ’Connor (8-9).
(23);
Hrbek
HRs—Minnesota,

000 101 0 00- 2 5 2
Sl.L
201 121 0 0 s - 7 10 2
Ptsbrg
Mura, Kaat (5), Lahti (7),
Bair (8) and Porter, Brummer
(8); Sarmiento, Scurry (7) and
Ortiz. W -Sarm iento (9-4).
Mura (12-11).

Jal-alai

Baltimore Manager Earl Weaver. "But
at least we don't have to go to Milwaukee
Monday if we do."
Detroit Manager Sparky Anderson,
three RBI to lead the Red Sox. Eckersley whose Tigers made things rough for the
carried a five-hit shutout into the eighth O rioles, believes the B rew ers will
before being tagged for two-run homers emerge with the title.
by Molitor and Cecil Cooper.
"Milwaukee has the best club in

L5* ■

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I u if M i

144.4*

TUN f UP

OWNED &amp; OPERATED BT MIKE CATT0 INC.

G O O D YEA R

TIRE CENTER

SSS W .

1st ST. S A N F O R D , FL.

322-2821

3 E3

Sa a&amp;U m-A_m 3d H6M i“ 5

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�Politowicz Runs

Evening Herald, Sanford. FI

From JV Pack

Burgess Leads Tribe Victory

Lymon Boys, H o w e ll G irls T a k e F re s h m a n -S o p h o m o re M e e t
Trinity Prep's Adrienne Politowicz
and Bishop M oore’s Richard
McKenna ran away from the field
Thursday to post impressive victories
in the Third A nnual Freshm anSophomore meet at Lyman High
School.
Politowicz. a talented freshman,
raced to a 15-yard lead during the first
mile and whipped I-ake Mary's Kim
Averill by 11 seconds to take the girls
two mile in 12:15. The time is Just
three seconds off the county’s best of
12:12 by I^ake Brantley’s Kathryn
Hayward. It also established a new
Freshman-Sophomore record.
‘‘They really went at it that first
mile," said Seminole coach Ted
Tombros. "It was a furious pace."
Averill, who finished seventh in the
2A State Meet last year as a frosh,
finished in 12:26.3. Joanne Hayward,
who was expected to battle the
leaders, was a distant third in 12:49.
Trinity's Kathy Sams was fourth
and followed by Lake Howell's Lyn
Lucas (12:58). Coach Tom Ham-

Cross Country
m ontree's Silver Hawks packed two
more runners in the top 10 (Angie
Smith. 6th, 13:05 and Debbie Van
Orden, 10th, 13:27) to edge Trinity to
team honors, 37-43. I,ake Mary was
third.
In the boys matchup, McKenna
blistered to a 15:50 record run, but it
wasn't enough to keep coach David
Huggins Lyman harriers from up­
setting the Hornets.
Sophom ores Carl Schm alm aack
(4th, 16:57), Wayne Straw (5th, 17:02),
Steve Howe (7th, 17:14) and freshman
Pat Bell (9th, 17:21) jammed the top
nine to give Lyman a 25-34 victory.
I-ake Brantley was third.
"It was an excellent m eet," said
co o rd in ato r Joe Laughlin, who
coaches the Lyman girls. "We had 17
girls break 14 minutes and 12 boys
break 18 minutes.
"The past few years only eight have

Chuck Burgess set two school records while
leading the Seminole High boys swimmers to
their first victory in over two years Thursday,
58-45, over Apopka at the Sanford Bath and
Tennis Club.
Burgess, a sophom ore transfer from
Lyman, zipped to a 2:10.9 clocking in the 200
intermediate and a 5:06 time in the 500 free
The first clocking broke the old mark of Frank
Rowe’s (19801 by over five seconds. His second
time nipped his old m ark by 1.3 seconds.
The blond-haired 10th grader also anchored
the 200 medley relay team of Bruce Nelson,
Tim Dycusand Howard Harrison to first place
in 2:05.2.
Nelson added top spots in the 50 free ( :25i
and the 100 back (1:09). John Dubois topped
the 200 free in 3 06 and Greg Carter won the
diving with 1:20.15 points.
The Seminole girls also won Thursday,
dropping Delaind, 81-38, to capture their
second win in five meets.
Lisa Polgar, Dana Ray and Bridget Deere
led the onslaught. Polgar won the 200 free
(2:24.1) and the 100 free (1:03.9). Ray took the

done it in each group."
Tombros' Sem inole girls were
without Vera K anunassar who in­
jured herself riding a bicycle from
Crooins to Seminole prior to the meet.
"We could have moved up a couple
of spots with V era,” said Tombros
who didn't have enough girls to
register a team score because of
Rammassar's absence. Only four
performers were scored instead of the
five.
Lisa Grant finished 20th 1 14:12) and
Tammy Chaudoin 1 15:431 was 29th for
Seminole. Tanya Payne was 39th
(17:12).
For the boys, Billy Penick, a
Grooms freshman, demolished the
freshman record with an 18:19
clocking for 14th place. His previous
best was 19:05. E ric Jackson &lt;30th,
19:20), Gary Barnett (46th, 20:56) and
Steve Chung (47th, 21:23) were the
next ’Noles in line.
The next big meet on tap for varsity
team s in the D aytona Beach
Sedbreeze Invitational which will be
run on the beach Saturday morning.

ADHIENNE POLITOWICZ
...1 2 :1 5 two milt*

...Underwood, Rams Handle Seminoles, 14-6
Continued from page 5A
wood, scored the touchdown that
broke the F ig h tin ’ Seminoles.
Underwood bulled his way for 10
yards to the end zone, and kicked the
extra point, making it 14-6.
I.ake Mary ended up blocking a
punt, and eating up most of the fourth
quarter clock to seal its third victory,
which lowered the Tribe to 1-2.
Oct. 7 will see the Rams put their
undefeated record on the line against

the Blue-Darters at Apopka, while the
Seminoles will try to get back on the
winning track by playing the Lyman
Greyhounds at Seminole.
Lake Mary
0 7 7 (T-^14
Seminole
0 6 0 0 — 6
1-ake Mary — Underwood 1 run
(Underwood kick)
Seminole — Campbell 1 run i pass
failed)
Lake Mary — Underwood 10 run

(Underwood kicki

In other JV' action Thursday, Brad
Dunn made a diving grab of a tipped
pass in the end zone to give lake
Brantley a 6-0 overtime victory over
I-akc Howell at la k e Howell.
After a scoreless tw o halves, Howell
began the overtime on the Brantley

SPORTS

50 free i :291 ami the 100 back 1:20.5i. Polgir
and Ray then joined Gigi Hunt and Susie
Porter to capture the 400 free relay i 4:38Y)
Deere took the diving competition with 8419
points and the 100 breast with a time of 1:243
Alison McCall (200 IM, 3:04), Susan Matin
(100 fly, 1:25.4) and Porter 1 300 free. 7:04.lb
also registered first places.
"We had a couple of tough meets (Mainland
and Lyman), but we had to have them to be
pushed," said coach Donalyn Knight.
i’olgar (100 free). Deere (100 breast), Rd&gt;
1 50 free), Nelson &lt;50 free) and Burgess i2fc)
breast, 100 kick, 500 free'and 200 IM) have ;jll
qualified for the prestigous Gator Invitational
at the University of Florida Oct. 23 whi$h
draws all of the top swimmers in the state;
In other action Thursday, Lyman trip(«}d
DeLand. The boys won, 67-59, and the gills
won, 69-47.
I-tura Cook paced the girls effort with firit
places in the 500 frt*e and 100 breast Brian
Thayer (100 fly and 100 breast) teamed wijh
Johan Niklasson 1 100 and 200 free) to lead the
boys with two top spots each
,

M A STERCA RE B Y
F ir e s t o n e
601 W. FIRST ST.

10. A procedure penalty set the Hawks
back to the 15 and Brantley’s TonyWise then picked off n pass to end the
threat.
After two plays gained nothing for
the Patriots from the 10, quarterback
Bobby Garrison let fly with a pass,
which was tipped by a Silver Hawk,
but grabbed in the end zone by Dunn.
B ran tley , 2-2, hosts DeLand
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. The Silver
Hawks next game is Oct. 14 at Oviedo.

Dunn s Grab
Beats Howell

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IN BRIEF
Smith Runs For 320 Yards
As Lions Trample Osceola
A total of 320 yards rushing in something most
running backs would love to have after three or maybe
even four games. But that statistic, 320 yards, is what
Oviedo freshm an Andrew Smith compiled in just one
game.
Smith ran crazy on the Osceola freshman defense
and scored three touchdowns as Oviedo raised its
record to 2-1 with a 28-16 rout of the Kowboys Wed­
nesday night at Oviedo.
"He(Smith) already looks a little better than Marvin
McClennon (ex-Ovledo standout running back),"
Lions coach Don Gustafson said.
Oviedo’s first score came in the opening quarter
when Smith took the ball on a reverse and darted 64yards for a TD after Osceola had taken an 8-0 lead.
Dave Wood kicked the extra point to make it 8-7.
In the second period, Smith settled under a punt and
returned It 76 yards for the freshman I Jons’ second TD.
Smith caught a pass from Cory Baloon for the two point
conversion and a 15-8 Oviedo lead.
Batoon bootlegged for five-yards and the Lions’
third TD, the kick was blocked but Oviedo led, 21-8.
Oviedo put the game out of reach when Smith
scampered 20-yards for his third touchdown, Woods'
kick made it 28-8. Osceola scored again but it was too
little, too late.
Oviedo's defensive effort was led by Craig Duncan,
eight tackles and two assists and Rick Beckstrom, six
tackles, six assists and a fumble recovery. Jeremy
Missaud also recovered a fumble.

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Lions Net Win; Rams Lose
Eustis trimmed Lake Mary, 153, 15-17, 15-2, in 3A
varsity volleyball action Thursday at I.ake Mary.
"We’re playing very up and down," said Ram coach
Cindy Henry. “Amy Kantarjlan hit the winning serve
in the set we won." The Rams scrambled back for a 137 deficit in that set.
Elsewhere, Oviedo manhandled Leesburg, 154,15-3,
as Lion coach Anita Carlson flooded the floor with
reserves in the second set.
Mary Lokers hit the final five points in the first-set
win. Oviedo travels to Lake Mary Tuesday for a junior
varsity and varsity match beginning at 4 p.m.
In Junior varsity action, coach Cindy Frank captured
her first victory of her career when Lake Howell ripped
Lyman, 15-1,15-11.
Melissa Schneider hit 10 straight points in set one,
while Kim Newell broke a 10-10 tie In set two and Kim
Montegny capped the win with the final three points.

No Progress
In NFL Talks
WASHINGTON (UPI) - If NFL defenses were as inpeneble on the field as both sides have been at the negotiating
le, nobody would ever score.
Representatives of the NFL Players Association and the
NFL Management Council recessed late Thursday night after
meeting for 10 hours In a Washington hotel Both sides said
little has changed since the on-and-off talks began in
February.

3

"We’ll meet tomorrow (Friday) at 11:30 (a.m. EDT) and
that’s all that was agreed upon," said Los Angeles Raiders'
guard Gene Upshaw, president of the players union, which has
been on strike since Sept. 21.
Aside from that, Upshaw and Jack Donlan, the management
council’s executive director, agreed on almost nothing.
"No progress was made," said Donlan. "We talk money and
the union talks control They describe us as Insensitive
became we won’t buy proposals we consider outrageous.
“They reminded us several times that they are on strike. We
reminded them we know they are serious about their demands.
They should also realize, though, we won’t accede to their
proposals. We just aren't going to dump a working system."

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�SA—Evening Herald, Sanlord, FI.

B L O N D IE

Frid ay, Oct. 1 ,1982

’ DO

b y Chic Y o u n g

40 Negative
conjunction
1 Keepsake boi 42 Hometite
YOU HAVE ANY
NO, STUPID...
6 Inflame
43 Biblical
^ ID E A W H V ? ^
I S U R E DON'T
11 Worlds
character
13 Wears a*ay 44 Thrash
14 Disperse
soundly
15 Island m the 46 Horn
Mediterranean 49 Errors
16 Arrival-time 52 Like metal
guess |abbr) 53 Swam
17 Gold |Sp|
54 Dead Sea city
19 Troian
55 Revise
mountain
20 It it (contr)
DOWN
22 Sawbuck
23 Dance step
1 Give up
24 Animal park 2 Caribbean
26 Half score and
island nation
two
3 Counterfeit
28 Escape
4 Ideal gas
by Mort Walker 30 Least (abbr)
condition
(abbr)
31 Wateriest
32 Over there
5 Article
WhATE/ER e j e e t l e 's g o t
33 David t father 6 Call out
I MOPE IT ISN'T CATCHING
35 French
7 Leap
negative
8 Man s name
37 Mountain
9 Fights
peak
10 Weather
38 Scatter
bureau (abbr)
acro ss

Answer to Previous PuHle

^ —Atr;

B E E T L E B A IL E Y

V

1

2

3

4

5

11
14
16
■

|

20

THE BORN LO SER

by Art Sansom

nmi

24
!S
28
31
33
37
42
48

_

|

■
47

48

52

A RCH IE

by Bob Montana

54

HM M M '

vtXJ KNOW ,
I T H IN K I LIKEP IT
B ETTEt? WHEN I
DIDN'T UNDERSTAND
IT

DEAR DR. LAMB - After
years of perms, hair color and
just everyday pollution, I find
Y
my hair is really dried out and
.0 5
u
0 *
unmanageable. 1 look like a
T • N T
month-old Brillo pad. I’ve
0 s
E
asked my beautician what to
12 Com opening 37 Lone Ranger s
do about this, but somehow,
companion
13 Frugality
knowing she sells "this or
18 Revolutionary 39 Perishes
that" hair product I’m not to
41 Boca______
21 Join
sure she gives me the true
23 Flag
Florida
25 Rowing tools 42 Young woman low-down.
I need to know just what to
27 Heavenly city 45 Ointment
use to restore my hair to its
29 Something
47 Fifth aodiac
former condition. I am a
uneiplamed
sign
33 Wrote down 48 Tree
female, 39 and in good health;
34 Conger
50 Regret
I cat a fairly balanced diet
36 Mark down
51 Raised border and take no medication.
How can I find out which
7
8
6
9
10
hair products are good and
which to stay away from?
12
13
How often should I use con­
ditioners? I’ve heard you can
IS
use too much too often. Is that
right?
18
”
■ ■ r
DEAR READER - Keep in
mind
that the hair shaft itself
33
is not living tissue. It is like a
27
piece of dead wood. If it is
■
”
abused by chemicals and
29
30
physical factors such as sun
|
and wind it begins to look like
fi
weather-beaten old boards.
"
36
You may still have perfectly
34 ■
"
healthy hair follicles that will
41
38
3,
grow healthy new hair shafts.
■
If you leave it alone long
1
45
enough the undamaged new
■
“
0
hair shaft grows out and you
49 50 51
can cut off the old "Brillo
pad." While the new hair is
53
growing out from its roots you
must refrain from damaging
55
/
it, too. That means stopping
the perms, hair color and
exposure to wind and sun. To
put it plainly, “ leave it
alone."

HOROSCOPE
By BERNICE BEDE OSOL

For Saturday, October 2, 1982

EEK &amp; M EEK

"ITiS A Q U A R T E R
TO T H R E E ...

by Howie Schneider

&lt;C STICK ’EM

THERE'S NO OWE IN THE
PLACE EXCEPT V O ) AWP ME..."

UP, JO E..
~ y

P R ISC ILLA 'S POP

by Ed Sullivan

BUGS BUNNY

by Stoffel A Heimdahl

I'LL BE S A F E ” "IMlS SHOULD BE
HERE, ALL RIGHT AW EASY PUTf.

w /'\C X 1
w

W O d!

Tips On Treating
Dried Out Hair

YOUR BIRTHDAY
October 2,1982
This coming year you are
likely to form a number of
new alliances. Some will
fizzle, but two will be with
unusual persons and the
bonds will hold.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23)
Basically,
you’re
very
cooperative, and you ap­
preciate the benefits of
making a compromise, but
today you may only bend up to
a point — and no further.
Predictions of what’s in store
for you in the seasons
following your birthday and
where to look for your luck
and opportunities are in your
Astro-Graph. Mall $1 for each
to Astro-Graph, Box 489,
Radio City Station, N.Y.
10019. Be sure to specify birth
date.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
A proposal may be offered
you today which will contain a
number of advantages but if
you analyze it carefully you
may find too many strings
attached.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) Have an alternative
social plan ready today, just
in case what you’ve planned
with friends falls through.
There is a chance that it
might.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22Jan.
19) Do something quiet today
with a few select pals, or Just
your family. If you attem pt to
mix career or business
contacts Into the happening, it
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) Try to keep touchy sub­
jects, politics or religion out of
conversations w ith close
chum s today. T h ere’s a
possibility somebody may aay
something which could offend

another.
PISCES l Feb. 20-March20)
Your potential for acquiring
goods or money is better than
usual today. By the same
token, foolish moves either by
you or another could offset
your advantages.
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
You’ll feel more comfortable
today in activities where you
can call your own shots,
rather than in a situation
which calls for a team effort.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Those who are in a position to
be helpful to you today may
back off if they think you are
not prepared to do anything
for them in return.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
This could be a rather unusual
day socially, in that you might
feel completely at ease with
strangers, but uncomfortable
with close firends.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
Your objectives today will be
the right ones. Unfortunately,
you may permit others to
dissuade you from them.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) If
you permit your pride to get in
the way today it will work to
your disadvantage in com­
petitive situations. Don’t give
your opposition this edge.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Joint ventures offer promise
today, but there’s also the
possibility their benefits will
not be fairly proportioned.
You might come out on the
short end.

&lt;4,
m -

ft

’
(iM n am f*
CALLTOLLFREE
l-SM-MMUl

Treat the dried out hair
shaft like a dried out piece of
wood furniture. Don’t dry it
out even more. Wash it when
needed with a gentle sham­
poo. You might use a drop or
two of oil to the point the hair
soaks it up but is not ex­
cessively oily. Cover your
hair when outside in the sun
and wind. Of course, if you
have an oily scalp your
natural oils will be enough.
H air conditioners vary.
Avoid hair preparations that
contain ANY alcohol Alcohol
dries out hair and scalp. You
would probably be better off
with a few drops of oil and

nothing else.
O ther
tips
on
hair
management are included in
The Health le tte r number 126, Hair Care, which I am
sending you. Others 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.
DEAR DR. IAMB - I
would appreciate any in­
formation you can give me on
a heart pill called digoxin. My
father takes this pill and we
would like to know the side
effects it has. I’ve been told it
can cause diarrhea.
DEAR
READER
Digoxin, also marketed as
Lanoxin, is one of a group of
drugs
called
digitalis.
Originally the medicine was
obtained from the foxglove
plant and has an unusual
history. It was first used as an
herbal tea to help people who
accum ulated w ater from
heart failure to eliminate the
water.
The purified products have
long since been m ade
chemically and one of these is
digoxin. Digitalis is one of the
m ost
im portant
heart
medicines in all history.
All of these medicines are
used to strengthen the heart
muscle contraction, thereby
im proving
the
h e a rt’s
pumping action and relieving
heart failure. They are also
used in controlling certain
heart irregularities.
Too much digitalis can
cause h e a rt irregularities,
nausea and vomiting, and,
ra re ly , diarrhea. Anyone
taking these medicines should
follow exactly what his doctor
has told him for the best ef­
fects. The medicine can be life
saving. Stopping it on your
own can be dangerous.

WIN AT BRIDGE
NORTH

10-1-82

♦ ••••
♦A2
♦ 6 543

♦ J 1065* 32
WEST
♦ 7 532
f 854
♦ 1092
♦ K87

EAST
♦ 64
♦ J 10 9 7
♦ KQ87
♦ A (J 9

SOUTH
♦ AKQJ 10*1
VKQ63
♦ AJ
♦ ....

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer South
West North East
Pass
Pass
Pass

2 NT
6e

Pass
Pass

South
2^
$♦
Pass

unusual to reach some of the
c o n tra c ts his d eclarer
arrives at. but that is one of
the perils faced by compos­
ers of problems in play.
In any event South is in six
spades with little hope of
making his contract after
West’s seven of clubs open­
ing
There is a key play at
trick one South must plav a
low club from dummy. East
plays his ace South ruffs
and runs off the rest of his
trumps while discarding
four clubs and two diamonds
from dummy.
East will feel a lot of pres­
sure. He will have to make
four discards. They will be
two diamonds and two clubs
since he will see the need to
keep all his hearts.
Now South leads a heart
to dummy’s ace and leads
the jack of clubs to squeeze
East out of either his heart
;uard or a diamond honor.
rill make the appro­
priate discard after Ea:
and score his slam.
He was lucky to find Easl
with both diamond picture
cards and the heart protec­
tion, but he gave the cards a
chance and they behaved for
him.

K

Opening lead: 47

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag
Paul Lukacs concocts
some real tough
tugh piroblems
lor his "Bridge World" read­
ers His bidding has .to be

G A R F IE LD

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN |

by Jim Davis

FRANK AND ER N EST

’ TUMBLEWEEDS

/w,cuAom] Al
I W H A T tH A
j t o l N G ? y f Cl a u d e c iju si

by T. K. Ryan

7

■ rn m n u y m m m ih e
"
^ ~
( | MioCJ W D lu t'P K l r
afW AT M YSTERY o f L IF E . Y u l
7'

H ue LONE RANGE* WARS
^ HIS MASK TO REP. -

‘J-

ANNIE
mYNXjLDNMNCIlSNOT
TELL YOU NHEKE OR RHEN HE 1 HE’$ ft
N5HK TO RKT WITH MXJ H rRMTY
UNTIL B E LAST AOKEHTi
OLPTOX'S il?
^

by Ltonard Starr

-MO HE PROBABLY HAS I MR-STILLSORE 1KICKS UPHIS H I HAP
StffW A- NT HMAT
BETTER
QOOO KILL THEY 00
CONTRIVE
HIMRHEN HS POCKETS TUBE AT
WLWTV
THAT
AEETIN6-

-AN’ THIS ‘CR065U5*/ no- tmwn
HA0 THESE FWRlR f iL g J ]
^ «HIMw
Jetohn!
FOR
. * U
OUT NIATJUNE
•PAPPY’ ?/
ABOUT THEM
COMWEHTA

a

i

�PEOPLE

i

Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Friday, Ocf. I,t » l2 - 9 A

Gardening

In And Around Geneva

Juniper Low

Open Forum Set Monday

M aintenance
O rnam ental

By Citizens Association

Homeowners usually desire
ornamental plants adapted to
a wide v a rie ty of en­
v iro n m e n ta l c o n d itio n s ,
requiring little maintenance
Urban
and having
few
pest
Horticulturist
problems. If this is the type
323-2500
plant you want, then consider
Ext. 181
Junipers.
A number of Juniperus
species are currently In use very important for plantings
by
n urserym en
and in urban situations such as
homeowners, however, those cities, along streets, parking
commonly seen rep resen t lots, and also around some
only a few of many varieties. homes. Ju n ip ers require
The Juniperus genus contains irrigation only under extreme
about forty species and many conditions.
named varieties from these
Unfortunately, junipers are
species. Junipers range in not trouble free as many
size from the very dwarf people believe. They can be
types, four to six inches tall, severely damaged by spider
which can be as ground mites. The hotter and drier
covers to large trees like our the growing conditions, the
Southern red cedar which is greater the mite problems.
really a juniper.
This tremendous size range Mites can be controlled
and alm ost n ev er ending however. The second pest
array of growth forms make problem is a disease called
Juniper or twig blight. During
J u n ip e r s
o u ts ta n d in g
specimens for use in land­ moist seasons in areas having
scaping. Their versatility and high humidity, juniper blight
adaptability to a wide range can be a real problem. Tips of
of soils and climates, com­ branches turn brown and
bined with their relatively eventually the entire branch
easy maintenance make the will die back. If not sprayed
junipers o utstanding or­ the entire plant may die.
nam entals. They certain ly
One
final
cultural
deserve m ore recognition requirem ent
should
be
than they have received in the stressed. Junipers are full sun
past.
plants. This should be kept in
Junipers have excellent mind when using these plants
tolerance to salt spray and in the landscape. Plant
salty soils. Shore juniper has junipers are where they will
been used extensively for receive at least full sun for
seaside plantings but other half a day, such as on the east
varieties could also be used. or west side of a building. In
Junipers grow from Alaska heavy shade junipers grow
to the southwest, tolerating little and are more suscep­
extremes in temperatures. tible to disease.
There should be no where in
Check your local nurseries
Florida where these plants
for v a rie tie s of Junipers.
couldn't be grown.
These plants, If used properly,
They respond well to fer­
will make an excellent ad­
tilization so growth rate can
dition to your home grounds.
be speeded up If necessary.
All Extension Programs are
Another ad v an tag e to
junipers is their excellent open to anyone regardless of
drought tolerance. Tolerance race, color, sex or national
to desert-like conditions is origin.

One of the most important meetings of
the year lor the Geneva Citizens
Association will be held Monday at 8 p.m.
in the community hall.
Candidates campaigning for county
office have been Invited to meet the
citizens of our community in an open
forum. If you want to know who stands
for what, now Is the time to be asking
questions.
Final plans for the PAPI I People
A gainst Power Intrusion) trip to
Tallahassee will also be discussed at this
meeting. At the present time, according
to Sid Kraftsow, coordinator of the trip,
the chartered buses will depart at 6 a.m.
Wednesday, Oct. 6, in front of the Florida
Power and Light offices In downtown
Sanford.

Desmond
Hastings

t

Herald Photo by Tom Vincent

NAILING DOWN A TROPHY
Carol Johnson, co-owner of "H air ’N Place"
Iteauty Salon, Sanford, shows the trophy she was
awarded as fifth place winner for nail sculpturing
in the state competition at the Kail Hair Fashion
Festival at the Sheraton Twin Towers, Orlando.
She competed with 1H of Florida’s most talented
nail sculpturists.

Junior Pageant
Slated Saturday
The first Seminole Junior Miss Pageant will be held on
Saturday at 8 p.m. at I-ake Mary High School.
Eighteen senior high school girls will be competing for the
title and scholarship awards. A panel of six judges will select
the outstanding senior girl of the community.
Judges are: Cari Haught of PM Magazine; Marsha Kcecc of
WFTV, Channel 9; Tom Seigfried, fire chief of Altamonte
Springs; Kevin Iteinsch of Barnett Bank of Altamonte
Springs; Walter Sorenson, mayor of lak e Mary; and Teri
Hanzel of Elaine Powers Figure Salons. The certified public
accountant will be James Coppens.

DEAR ABBY: My husband
and I own a small cafe in an
area that caters to summer
tourists.
We have two nice, clean rest
rooms for the convenience of
our customers, but because so
many people stop In only to
use our rest rooms, we
decided to put up a sign:
"If you are not a customer,
we charge 50 cents for using
our rest rooms."
Abby, I wish you could have
heard some of the names
we've been called by people
. who have come In only to use
the rest room! Some have
caused terrible scenes, saying
they have never heard of
anything so cheap, and they
will never set foot In our place
again if they are starving!
Don’t these people realize
that we have to pay for the
toilet paper, soap, towels,
water (hot and cold), airfreshener, plus the electricity
for the lights and the fan that
provides ventilation while
they are in there? All these
things add up.
Abby, do you think we’re
out of line to charge non­
customers 50 cents for the use
of our rest rooms?
BAD-MOUTHED
IN CASCADE, COLO.
DEAR BAD-MOUTHED:
Has the revenue collected
since posting the s i p com­
pensated for the badmouthing and noisy scenes
it’s created? U not, take down
the sign. H ie tourists will be
relieved. And so will you.
DEAR
ABBY:
While
shopping at a very nice
supermarket,. I came upon
something I’d never seen
before and wonder if anyone
else has ever encountered a
similar experience.
I saw a woman take a bottle
of ketchup from the shelf,
remove the Ud, extend her

finger down into the bottle,
then lick the ketchup from her
finger! She continued to do
this with several different
brands of ketchup, then chose
a small bottle that she hadn't
opened. I was shocked and a
little sick to my stomach
thinking that someone was
going to buy a bottle of ket­
chup that this woman had
stuck her finger Into. She
looked to be about 80, was
very well dressed, and I doubt
that she was hungry.
Needless to say, I don't shop
in that store anymore. What
would you have done, Abby?
HOLD THE KETCHUP
INHONAKER.VA.
DEAR HOLD: I would have
quietly reported the lady to
the management.
DEAR ABBY: There’s a
problem in our neighborhood,
but maybe if you print this, it
will give the guilty ones
something to think about. We
are stuck with this nuisance
because we’ve let it go for so
long that nobody wants to tell
a nice young man that he has
been disturbing our peace (or
10 years. Except for this
younger couple, everyone in
our neighborhood is retired.
Our young neighbor leaves
for work at 6:45, backs his car
out into the street and honks
his horn with a little "beep
beep" as he drives away. At
first we all thought it was
rather sweet of him to bid his
wife a second goodbye, but
some of us older people do not
sleep well at night, and once
we’re awakened it’s im­
possible to go back to sleep
s p in .
Retired folks have had to
get up early for many years,
and we think we've Anally
earned the right to stay up
late and sleep in the morning.
Please remind people that
unnecessary horn-honking is

mail cam paign to inform various
government officials of their research,
findings, and facts involving the effects
of the huge power towers on humans.
Over 70 students In the fourth and fifth
grades at Geneva Elementary School
wrote letters to the governor this week
expressing their feelings and concerns.
Several individuals have had personal
replies from Governor Graham, in­
cluding Mrs. Nancy McNamara, prin­
cipal. Plans are being formulated at this
lime for several students from the fifth
grade class to represent the school at the
cabinet meeting next Wednesday.
One thing can be said of Geneva,
whether it's a Fourth of July celebration,
a sick child whose parents have no in­
surance, or a power line that threatens
the community, patriotism and a spirit of
unity still exist among the citizens of our
quaint country village.

The PAPI representatives will be
presenting their last appeal to the State
to either move the corridor or bury some
of the lines. They plan in reiterating the
continued strong opposition and concern
generated In Geneva over this Issue.

If you have not made reservations for
the Tallahassee bus trip, it is not too late.
Mr. Kraftsow said, "If people want to go

In the past few months, Geneva
citizens have been actively Involved In a

The Women's M inistries of the
Chuluota First Assembly of God church
will host a luncheon in the fellowship hall
Saturday, Oct. 2. The church is located on
highway 419, two blocks South of Like
Mills Road.
Mrs. Lillie Simpkins, president of Die
WM's says, "Women of all Christian
faiths are invited to join the WM group
for this luncheon for fellowship ami
prayer."
It was announced last Monday at
Oviedo High School that a course on
"How To I’repare for the Scholastic
Aptitude Test" would be offered. A
maximum of 25 students was set. By
Wednesday evening when the program
started, 25 students had paid their $30.30
fees to participate.
According to Mrs. Williams in the
guidance office at the high school the
course will be offered again beginning
Oct. 25, on a "first come, first served
basis". This second session will be in
preparation for the tests to be given Dec.
4 and Jan. 22.
For information call the school office,
365-5671.

If you’re h old in g
m atu rin g
A ll-S avers C ertifica tes,
hold o n u n til
th is Saturday.
On Saturday, October 2,
Shearson/American Express
will be open from 10:00 A.M . to 2:00 P.M.
to offer you advice on how to invest
your maturing All-Savers Certificates.

For information, contact Cathy Cold, 834-1078, or Claudia
Colburn. 327-3291.

necessary horn-honking (and
dog-barking
and
lawn­
mowing and kid-calling) is
inconsiderate. So let all you
guilty ones out there repent,
and sin no more.

Geneva
Correspondent
349-5790

The purpose of the PAPI excursion to
the state's capitol is to attend the final
meeting of the governor and his cabinet
before they decide the fate of Geneva and
other communities regarding the one
mile wide corridor of proposed power
towers.

The pageant is sponsored by the Altamonte South Seminole
Women Jaycecs. The public is invited to attend. Tickets,
available at the door, arc $2.50 for adults and $1.50 for students.

Cafe Is Not A Rest Stop

on this trip and have not made advance
reservations by paying the $15 roundtrip
cost, they may bring their money to the
site of the bus Wednesday morning and
still go on a first come, first served
basis."

Lou
Childers

List year, buying an All-Savers Certificate was a smart way to cut your tax bite.
You were sure of $1,0001$2.000 if filing jointly) in tax-fan* interest.
Now that they are maturing, you’re going to have idle cash. At Shenrson, we
have lots of ways to turn that idle cash into working money. In fact, our olTice
will be open Satualay, October 2, so you can stop in for some financial advice.
Whatever your needs, taxable or tax-free income, long- or short-term
maturities, we can help you select the right federal-tax-free investment.

Com e in or call for the latest yields.
inconsiderate and downright
irritating. Thank you.
NO MORE
BEEP BEEP
DEAR NO: I agree unFOR TH E BEST

Genec &lt;41

t let*i it

W fathertron ( e n l r . l

TV SERVICE

A n C o nd it io ning Syst em

C A L L M IL L E R S
P H m 0157

y m.
| | PI L IM N IN G t
W O I I He A 1 IN G INC

Mlt O* Undo O* l ir »]l
L.nlord

Ft) 172 6567

1007 Santo, d Ave

Sdnlord

TAX-DEFERRED INCOME
■ Major life insurance
com panies can offer
high-ineome annuities
and guaranteed safety
with no current taxes.

TAX-FREE INCOME
■ Municipal Bonds offering
high income and liquidity.
■ Municipal Unit Investment
TlCMts: &lt;-»ach offering a
diversified portfolio with one
simple investment.

FD1C/FSL1C INSURKDt
■ We offer four-year CD’s of
insured hanks and savings
and loan associations with
maximum yield and liquidity.
(Minimum deposit $5,(XX).)

■ ShttirsuiLMttnygod

NtunklpiilsJ-nc.*»

professionally managed,
diversified portfolio of
high-quality, long-term and
intermediate municipal
obligations.

■ Six-month CD's with
attractive rates and
short-term flexibility.
(Minimum deposit $10,000.)
Tb find out more about these investments and other All-Suvers alternatives, come into
our Shearaon/American Express office, October 2 between 10 A.M. and 2 PM., or call
628-0715. or send in this coupon.

HEATING OIL DELIVERY

'For mors complete information, inducing management lees and expenses, request a Prospectus
Pteese read the Prospectus carehAy before you invest or send money
t Substantial Interest penalty lor sarty withdrawal 01W2SftMrtonAfltffC.nEifX.Mlnc MffnOffSIPC

RESIDENTIAL • COMMERCIAL
# PRINTED M ETER DELIVERY
e CALL FOR DELIVERY SERVICE
t AUTOMATIC KEEP FULL SERVICE
RO IL TANKS ALL SIZES
R A D IO D IS P A TC M ID TRUCKS

322-2784
a n N. LAUREL A V E ., SANFORD

Shearaon/American Express Inc
Nicholas J. Mor«e - Local Representative
227 Seabreeze boulevard
Daytens leech FL 22041
20$ 421-47is Winter Park Each

Please send more information on how to invest my muturing All-Savers Certificates.
Namo

iPUASEPMNTl

Address
Cay

State

1 _____ l_____________________

Busmess Phone

m

w

L O W

M

PER OAL.

• 1 . 1 9 PER O A L

)

Home Phone

U C H
C u n t ct SftMraoftrAflwncffi (&gt; im t

• 1 .1 4

Zip
&lt;

N o . 2 H E A TIN G O i l

Riwwmm M

Offttftare) kwwif l w

1tKtAn ftffij. &gt;ou m a r t

SHEARSON/AMERICAN EXPRESS INC j

�IOA—Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Legal N otice

F rid a y , Ocf. I, 1987

le g a l N otice^
IN TH E

IN THE C IR C U IT C O U R T OF
THE E IG H T E E N T H JU D IC IA L
C IR C U IT .
IN
AND
FOR
SEMINOLE C O U N T Y . FLO R IO A
CIVIL ACTIO N
CASE NO Cl IM O D CA Of L
F IRST F E O E R A L S A V I N G S A N D
LOAN
A SSO C IA TIO N
OF
O R L A N D O a corporation.

Plaintiff,

vt

RON M E Y E R C O N S T R U C T I O N
C O , a F lo r i d a
cor por ation.
CENTRAL
A L U M IN U M
S C R E E N S E R V I C E . IN C . a
Florida corporation, V I R G I L 1
B R O T H E R S . I N C . a Flo rid a
corporation. S E M I N O L E CAR
P E T S P E C I A L I S T S . INC . a
r lorida corporation. A I R F L O W
DESIGNS I N . a Florida cor
portion,
and
E D W IN
W
MEWETT.
Defendant*

N O TIC E OF SALE
Notice is hereby given that
pursuant to the Final Judgment
ol Foreclosure and sale entered in
the cause pending in the Circuit
Court .n and lor Seminole County,
Florida bemq Civi l Number Cl It
I 0 J 1 C A 0 9 L , the undersign ed
Clr rk Mill sell the property
situated m S e m m o le County,
Florida, described as
Lot 4. S W E E T W A T E R OAKS.
SW EETW ATER
S H O R E S 1A,
according to the plat thereof as
*e*rorded m Pial Book 74. Page S.
Public R e co r d s ol Seminole
County. Florida
al public sale, tothe highest bidder
lor cash at 11 00 A M on the JSth
day ol October. 1982. at the West
Door ol the Seminole County
•Courthouse in Santord, Florida
D A T E D this 79th day of Sep
lember. 196?
(Seal)
Arthur H Beckwith. Jr
Clerk ol the Circuit Court
fly Patricia Robinson
Deputy Clerk
James M Meade, ol the lirm
GILE S. H E D R I C K A R O BIN S O N
PA
109 E Church Street. Suite Ml
Orlando. F L 37801
Publish Oct I, 8. 1987
D E A A__________

NOTICE OF P U B LIC HEAR ING
THE S E M IN O L E
COUNTY
BOARD O F
C O M M I S S IO N E R S
will hold a public hearing in Room
700 ol the Sem in o le County
Courthouse. Sanford. Florida on
O C TO B E R 78. 1»87 A T 7 00 P M .
or as soon therealter as possible to
ronsider the following

PUBLIC H E A R IN G
FOR C H A N G E OF
TONING R E G U LA TIO N S
TOM B R E V IG R EZO N E
FROM R IA A SIN G LE FAM ILY
O W ELLING D IS T R IC T TO RC I
COUNTRY HO M ES OISTRICT
PZI9 I fJI-SJ —
F r o m a point

C IR C U IT COURT OF
THE E IG H T E E N T H JUDICIAL
C IR C U IT .
IN
AN O
FOR
SEM IN O LE C O U N TY ..F LO R ID A
CASE NO. (2 787 CA 09 L
H O W A R D S T U L B E R G and
FRANK L A U R I E ,
as Jo-nf Trustees.
Pla-nMIs.
vs
E L M R ID G E
DEVELOPMENT
C O R P O R A T I O N , a Florida
corporation.
Oflendant

N O T IC E OF SALE
N O T I C E IS H E R E B Y G I V E N
that pursuant to Default Final
Judgment entered in the above
styled cause in the Circuit Court m
and tor Semmole County. Florida.
I will sell at public auction to the
highest bidder for cash at Wett
Front door ot the Courthouse,
Santord.
Sem in o le
County,
Florida, at the hour t l 00 A 77 on
October 27. 1982 that certain parcel
6f real property situate in the
County ol Semmole. Slate of
Flo rida .
m ore
p a rti cula rl y
described as follows

L E G A L D ESC R IPTIO N
Lois I through 18. Block D. and
Lots I through S, Block C. OAK
C R E S T S U B D I V I S I O N , accord ng
to the plat thereof as recorded in
Plat Book 71. pages 87 and 88.
Public R e c o r d s ol Seminole
County, Flo rida
(C O U R T
SEAL I
Arthur H Beckwith, Jr
Clerk ol the Circuit Court
By C a r n e E Buettner
Deputy Clerk
,
W A R R E N E W I L L I A M S . ESO
Fowler, Williams A Airth, P A
P O Bo» 1715
Orlando, Florida 12802
(1051425 2884
Allotncy tor Plaintiff
Publish October I. 8. 1982
DEA 9

N O TIC E U N D E R FIC TITIO US
NAM E STATU TE
TO W H O M I T M A Y C O N C E R N
NOT I C E is hereby given that Ihe
und er signed pur suan t to the
’’F i c t i t i o u s
Name
Statute"
Chapter 885 09. Florida Statutes,
will register with Ihe Clerk ol Ihe
Circuit Court, in and lor Seminole
County. Florida, upon receipt ol
proof ol the publication ot this
notice, the fictitious name to wit
A G R I M A R T STORES
under which we eipect to engage
in business at 89S B. Highway 477,
Lonqwood. Florida. 127S0
The p a r ly interested in said
business enterprise is as lollows
GANE
E N T E R P R I S E S , INC
B Y E l w i n L Gane, Jr.,
President
Publish Oct I, 8, IS, 27. 198?
DEA 4

N O T IC E OF PUBLIC
H E A R IN G

THE B O A R D OF CO U N TY
C O M M I S S I O N E R S
OF
S E M I N O L E C O U N T Y will hold a
public hearing in Room 700 ol Ihe
Sem mole C o u n t y Courthouse.
Santord. Florida, on O C T 28, 1982
al 7 00 P M . or as soon therealter
as possible, to consider a specific
land use am e n d m e n t to the
Seminole County Comprehensive
Plan and R E Z O N I N G ot the
described property
AN O R D I N A N C E A M E N D I N G
71-78
W H IC H
«*" t »s .s tt more or less to POB. . O k O I N A N C E
Consisting of a lot 95' by 14C * A M E N D S T H E D E T A I L E D L A N D
(Further described as located on US E
ELEM ENT
OF
THE
Maitland
Avenue.
South ol i S E M I N O L E
COUNTY
COM
Floridahaven Dr ive , just South ol P R E H E N S I V E
PLAN FROM
RURAL
TO IN
where Oranole Intersects with G E N E R A L
Maitland Blvd I ( D I S T R I C T No 4) DU ST R I A L F O R T H E P URPO SE
those in attendance will la- OF
R EZ O N IN G
FROM A 1
heard and written comments may A G R I C U L T U R E TO M 1A V E R Y
IN D U S TR IA L.
THE
be
tiled
w it h
Ihe
Land L I G H T
Management Manager Hearings F O L L O W I N G
D E S C R IB E D
may be continued Irom time to P R O P E R T Y
time as tound necessary Further
The Eas t 1y ol Ihe South 455 feet
details available by calling 373
ol Block 50. M M Smith's Sub
4JM, E&gt;l 180
division. Plat Book I. Page 55.
Persons are advised that if they
Seminole County. Florida Con
decide to appeal any decision SiStinq ol 137 acres MOL (F u r
made at these meetings, they will thcr described as West ol Airport
need a record ot the proceedings,
Boulevard. East ot Bevirr Road,
and lor such purpose, they may
un the North side ol Filth Street)
need to ensure that a verbatim
( O I S T No 5)
record ol the proceedings is made,
A P P L IC A TIO N
HAS B E E N
which
record
Includes
the
S U B M ITTE D
BY
O R VILLE
testimony a n d evid en ce upon
J O H N S O N III PZ(9 I 87) S4
which the appeal is to be made
Further. Ihe PLANNING AND
Board of County
Z O N IN G
C O M M ISSIO N
OF
Commissioners
S E M IN O LE C O U N TY will hold a
Seminole County,
public hearing in Room 700ol Ihe
Florida
•
Seminole County Courthouse.
BY Robert Sturm,
Sanlord.
Florida, on SEP
Chairman
T E M B E H I, 1987 AT 7 00 P M . or
Attest A rt h u r H Beckwith. Jr
at soon therealter as possible, lo
Publish October I. 1987
review, hear comments and make

Situated 181 74 tt S B9 degrees OS'
t9 ' E and 1100 ft N of the SW
corner of the SE ' , ol SE 1. of Sec
74 7IS 79E, run N I degree 0t' W
ItOtt tothe N W corner ot Lot 10ol
Roosevelt Place, P B 14, Pg 58. lor
POB run thence S I degree 01’ E 90
tt, thence N 89 degrees 05' 49" W
119 75 11 M O L to th e E ly R W o t SR
t il (Maitland Ave nu e), thence Nly
along said R W 90 It to a point
Situated N 89 degrees 05' 49" W
Iroin POB. thence S 89 degrees OS'

01

1I

IN THE C IR C U IT COURT OF
THE E IG H T E E N T H JUO ICIAL
C IR C U IT
IN
ANO
FOR
SEM IN O LE C O U N T Y . FLORIOA
IN P R O B A TE
FILE NO: 87 713 CP
IN R E: E S T A T E OF
EDM UND E L IA S F R E N .
Deceased.
NOTICE OF AD M IN IS TR A TIO N
The Administration ot the Estate
Ol E D M U N D E L IA S FR E N .
Deceased. File Number 87 711 CP.
&gt;S pending in the Circuit Court lor
Semmole County. Florida. Probate
Division, the address of which is
Sanlord. Florida
The names and addresses of Ihe
Personal Representative and Ihe
Personal R epresenlalive's at
torney are set lorth below
All interested persons are
required to file with this Court.
W ITHIN T H R E E MONTHS OF
THE F IR S T P U B LIC A TIO N OF
THIS N O TIC E
(I I All claims aga nst Ihe Estate
and 17) any objection by an in
lerested person to whom notice
was mailed that challenges the
validity
ol
ihe
Will,
the
qualifications ol the Personal
Representative,
Venue,
or
lurisdidlon ot the Court.
ALL
C L A IM S
AND
OB
JEC TIO N S n o t s o f i l e o w i l l
BE F O R E V E R B A R R E O
Publication of this Notice has
begun on October I. 1917
Personal Representative
S TE P H E N W. B U C K L E Y . ESQ
7701 Main Street
Fori Myers. Florida
Attorney lor Personal
Representative
RAY G O L O S T E IN . ESQ
Post Office Box 7188
Fort Myers. Florida 11902
(111) 114 lu a
Publish Oct I. I . 1912
DEA I

recommendations to Ihe Board ol
County Commissioners on Ihe
o jov c captioned ordinance and
rrtonmg
Additional information may be
obtained by contacting the Land
Management Manaqrr al 121 4110.
Ext. 180
Persons unable to attend the
hearing who wish to comment on
Ihe proposed actions may submit
written slatemenls lo Ihe Land
Management Division prior lo the
scheduled public hearing Persons
appearing al Ihe hearings may
submil written statements or be
heard orally
Persons are advised that. II they
decide to appeal any decision
made at these meetings, they will
need a record ol the proceedings,
and. lor such purpose, they may
need lo ensure that a verbatim
record ol ihe proceedings is made,
which
record
includes the
testimony and evidence upon
which the appeal it to be based,
per Section 218 OIOS. Florida
Statutes
Board ol County
Commissioners
Seminole County, Florida
By Robert Sturm,
Chairman
Altett Arthur H Beckwith Jr.
Publish August 21 1 October I, IS.

1917
D E Y 107
N O IIC I: U N D E R FIC TITIO U S
NAM E STATU TE
TO W HO M IT M AY CONCERN
Notice is hereby given that Ihe
undersigned, pursuant lo Ihe
"F ic titio u s
Name Sfalute",
Chapter US 09, Florida Statutes,
will register with Ihe County
Comptroller. In and lor Orange
County, Florida, upon receipt of
proof of the publication of this
notice, Ihe fictitious name, lo wil:
M O L L Y M A G EE 'S
under which it is engaged In
business at 7S44 S Park Drive.
Sanlord. Florida
That ihe corporation interested
in said business enterprise is as
lollows.
D O R M A JO N . INC
. Oated al Orlando. Orange
County, Florida. September 21,
1917
Publish Sepl 24, Ocf. 1.1. IS. 1912
D E Z 118

Legal N °tice

Legal Notice

Legal Notice

F IC T IT IO U S NAME

N O TIC E TO THE P U B LIC

N O TICE OF P U B LIC
H EAR IN G

Notice is hereby given that l am
Notice is hereby given that the
engaged &gt;n business at P O Bor i Board of Adjustment of the City of
1775 Forest Cdy 32751 Semmole San ford will hold a r e q u l a r
County. Florida under the tic
meetmq on Oct 8. 1982 m the City
litmus na me ot
ACCURATE
Hall at 11 30 A M
jn order to
7A A ILIN G A A D V SERV . and consider a request lor a variance
that I intend to reqister said name m the Zoning Ordinance as it
with the Cler k ol the Circuit Court, pertains to S'de yard setback
Semmole County. Florida in ac
r e q u ir e m e n ts in SR 1 A Zoned
cordance with the provisions ot Ihe District in Lot 3. Bik 1? (less E III
lor alley) Bel Air Subdivision. P B
F.ctifious Nam e Statutes. To Wit
Section 885 09 Florida Statutes 1. Pq 79
1957
Bemq
more
spe cificall y
Signature C Posey
described as located af 270 5 Bel
Publish Sept 24. Oct 1.8,15.191)2 Air Blvd Planned use of the
'property Swimming Pool
P E T 118
B L Perkins
Chairman
F IC T IT IO U S NAME
Board ol Adjustment
Notice is hereby'givrn that I am Publish Sept 72, Oct I, (982
engaged in business at 508 Parson D E Z 108
Brown Way Longwood. Fla 32750
NOTICE
Semmole County, Florida under
OF PUBLIC H E A R IN G
the I ' '-o s -.a n.c of E D I T O R I A L
T H E BOARD OF C O U N T Y
S E R V I C E A S S O C IA TE S , and lhal
C O M M IS S IO N E R S
OF
I intend to register said name with
S E M I N O L E C O U N T Y wilt hold a
the Clerk ol the Circuit Court.
public hearing in Room 700 ol the
Semmole County, Florida In ac
Semin ole County Courthouse.
cordance with the provisions ot the
Santord, Florida, on O C T 12, 1982
Fictitious Nam e Statutes. To Wit
al 7 00 P M . or as soon thereafter
Section 88S 09 Florida Statutes
as possible, to consider a specific
1957
la nd use amendment lo Ihe
Signature
Semmole County Comprehe-.siv.
Elifabeth H Ward
Plan and R E Z O N I N G ol Ihe
Publish September
10. 17. 74 .
described properly
October I. 1987
AN O R D I N A N C E A M E N D I N G
D E Z 19
O R D IN A N C E
II 75 W H I C H
F IC T IT IO U S NAME
A M E N O S THE D E T A I L E D L A N D
Notice is hereby given lhal l a m
USE
ELEM ENT
OF
TH E
enqaged in business at 1708 So
S E M IN O LE
COUNTY
COM
E lm
Ave
S an lord Seminole
P R EH EN S IV E PLAN
FROM
County. Florida under Ihe tic
LOW DENSITY R E S ID E N T IA L
titious
name
ot
L
8.
J
T O R 2 O N E AND T W O F A M I L Y
A U T O M O T I V E , and that I intend
D W E L L I N G OIST F O R T H E
to register said name with Clerk ol
P U R P O S E OF R E Z O N I N G F R O M
Ihe C i r c u i t Co ur t, Seminole
R IA
SINGLE
FA M ILY
County. Florida in accordance
D W E L L I N G OIST T O R 2 O N E 8.
with the provisions ot Ihe Fie
TW O F A M I L Y D W E L L IN G DIST.
titious Nam e Statutes. To Wit
T H E FOLLOW IN G D E S C R I B E D
Section 885 09 Florida Statutes
PROPERTY
1957
Legal Description
Signature Louie Palmer
North Lot
Publish Sept 17. 24. Oct 1,8,1982
Commence at the most Nor
D E Z 80
therly corner al Lot 17, Block " C . "
IN T H E C IR C U IT COURT O F
Meredith Manor, Nob Hill Section,
TH E E IG H T E E N T H JU O IC IA L
as recorded in Plat Book 9. Paqes
C I R C U IT
IN
AND
FOR
54 IS SS ol the public records ol
S E M IN O L E C O U N TY. FLO R IO A
Semmole County, Florida and run
C IV IL NO 87 2215 CA 84 E
S 12 degrees 43' 10" W. along Ihe
In Re: The M arriiqe ol
Westerly line ol said Lot 17. a
P L U M M I E L E E TH OM AS, Wile,
distance ol 70 0 I t . thence N 57
and E L I J A H TH OM A S. Husband
degrees 14' W " W 29 00 II lo the
N O T IC E OF SUIT
Easterly line ol Re located Nor
TO E L I J A H TH O M A S
Ihwood Drive, thence run North
Residence Unknown
easterly along Ihe arc of a curve
YOU ARE HEREBY
nolilied
concave to the Northwest havmg a
that a Petition lor Dissolution ol
radius ol 972 97 It a distance ol
7/arriage has been tiled agamsl
IIS 21 It lor a pomt ol beginning,
you and you are required to serve
thence continue along the arc ol
a copy ot your written defenses, it
said curve a distance ot 120 00 tt to
any, to it, on H A R V E Y C O U L T E R .
the Southerly line ol Gene Gables
Esquire. Attorney tor Petitioner,
Circle, thence S 66 degrees 45' 00"
whose address Is P O Box 1238,
E 171 58 It to the Westerly R W
Forest City. Florida. 17751. and tile
line ot East Lake Brantley Drive,
ihe oriqmal with the Clerk ol Ihe
thence Southwesterly along said
above styled Court on or belorc the
R W and along Ihe arc ot a curve
21st day ot October. 1987. other
concave lo the Northwest havmq a
wise a ludqmcnt may be entered
radius ol 1112 92 II . a distance ol
against
you
tor Ihe relief
170 00 tt thence N 66 degrees SI'
demanded in the Petition
55 " W 188 80 II lo Ihe point ot
W I T N E S S my hand and seal ol
beginning
said Court on the 15th day ol
(Further described as on the
September. 1987
West Side ot East Lake Brantley
(Seat)
Drive. Norlhol SR 414. adiacent to
A R T H U R H BECKW ITH , J R ,
Sweetwater Academy )
Clerk
A P P L IC A T IO N HAS B E E N
By E v e Crabtree
S U B M ITTE D
BY
W
OON
Deputy Clerk
D e V O R E P Z I 9 I B71 SO
Publish
September 17. 74, Oc
Further, the P L A N N I N G A N D
lober I. 8. 1987
ZO N IN G
CO M M ISSIO N
OF
D E Z 78
S E M I N O L E C O U N T Y will hold a
public hearing in Room 70U ot the
N O TIC B O f k U IL IC
Seminote County Courthouse,
HEARING
Santord
Florida,
on
SEP
T H E B O A R O OF C O U N T Y
T E M B E R I. 1982 A T 7 00 P M . or
C O M M I S S IO N E R S
OF
as soon therealter as possible, to
S E M I N O L E C O U N T Y will hold a
review, hear comments and make
public hearing in Room TOO ol the
recommendations to Ihe Board ot
Semin ole County Courthouse.
County Commissioners on the
Sanford. F lor.da on O C T O B E R 17.
above captioned or dn ance and
1987 at 7 00 P M . or as soon
rejonmg
therealter as possible, lo consider
Additional information may be
a specific land use amendment lo
obtained by contacting Ihe Land
the
S e m m o le County
Com
Management Manager at 121 4330.
prehensive Plan and R E Z O N I N G
Eat 180
ot the described property
Persons unable lo attend Ihe
AN O R D I N A N C E A M E N D I N G
hearing who wish to comment on
O R D IN A N C E
77 75
W H IC H
the proposed actions may submit
AM ENDS TH E D E TA ILED LAND
written statements to the Land
USE
ELEM ENT
OF
TH E
Management Division prior to the
S EM IN O LE
COUNTY
COM
scheduled public hearing Persons
P R E H EN S IV E
PLAN
FROM
appearing al the hearings may
LO W D E N S I T Y R E S I D E N T I A L
submit written statements or be
TO L O W
IN TEN S ITY
COM
heard orally
M E R C IA L FOR THE P UR PO SE
Persons are advised that, if they
OF
R EZ O N IN G
FROM
A I
decide lo appeal any decision
A G R IC U L TU R E
TO
CN
made al these meetings, they will
R E S T R IC T E D NEIGHBORHOOD
need a record ol Ihe proceedings,
C O M M E R C I A L A N D OP O F F I C E
and. lor such purpose, they may
O IS T R IC T . T H E FO LLO W IN G
need lo ensure lhal a verbatim
DESC RIB ED PROPERTY
record ol the proceedings is made,
PROPOSED CN D IS TR IC T:
w hich
record
includes
the
The South 484 leetol the West •» ol
te stimon y and evidence upon
Ihe E a s t ' j ol Ihe N W ' i O l Sec 74
which Ihe appeal is to be based per
71S 10E.
Seminole
C ounty,
Section 286 OIOS. Florida Statute*
Florida L E S S The West 140 leel
Board ol County
thereof and L E S S Right ol W a y
Commissioners
lor Red Uuq Road, being a 100 loot
Seminole County, Florida
R W width Containing 1 32 acres
By
Robert Slurm, Chairman
MOL
Attest Arthur H Beckwith Jr
PROPO SED O P D ISTR IC T: The
North 248 leel ol the South 710 leel Publish August 21 ft September 17
ol the W est1j ol the East 1» ol Ihe ft October I. 1917
D E Y 101

NW
ol Sec 74 21S10E. LESS:
The West 140 leel thereof Con
taming I 98 acres MOL
(O IS T R IC T No II
(Further described as on the
North side ol Red Bug Lake Road.
West ol Tuskawilla Road and
abutting the West side ol
Tuskawilla Point.)
A P P L IC A T IO N MAS B E E N
S U B M ITT E O BY ROY R PARM
PZI9 1 82) SS
Further. Ihe PLANNING AN O
Z O N IN G
CO M M ISSIO N
OF
S E M IN O LE CO UN TY will hold a
public hearing in Room 700 ol the
Seminole County Courthouse,
Sanlord. Florida, on SEPT. I, 1912
A T 7 00 P M . or as soon therealter
as possible, to review, hear
comments and make recom
mendations to Ihe Board ol County
Com m issioners on Ihe above
captioned ordinance and reioning.
Additional information may be
obtained.by contacting tht Land
Management Manager al 1714110,
Ext. 180.
Persons unable lo attend Ihe
hearing who wish to comment on
Ihe proposed actions may submit
written statements to the Land
Management Division prior lo the
scheduled public hearing. Persons
appearing at the hearings may
submit written statements or be
heard orally
Persons are advised that, II they
decide to appeal any decision
made al these meetings, they will
need a record ol Ihe proceedings,
and, lor such purpose, they may
need to ensure that a verbatim
record ol the proceedings is made,
which record Includes the
testim ony and evidence upon
which the appeal is lo be based.
Board ol County
Commissioners
Seminole County, Florida
By: Robert Sturm,
Chairman
Attest: Arthur H. Beckwith. Jr.
Publish August 22 ft September 17,
ft October l. 1912
D E Y 104

IN TH E C IR C U IT CO U R T OF
T H E E IG H T E E N T H JU D IC IA L
C IR C U IT ,
IN
AND
FOR
SEM IN O LE CO U N TY, F LO R ID A .
C IV IL ACTION NO. II 2214 CA11-

JAMES H DYSON.
Plaintilt,
O LE D A DYSON CASSCELLS.
Defendant
NOTICE OF AC TIO N
TO
Oledj Dyson Casscell*,
whose residence is Guyan Court,
Montchanin, Delaware, and whose
mailing address it Guyan Court,
Bo&gt; 76. Montchanin. Delaware
19710
YOU ARC N O T IF IE D that an
action lo partition the following
properly In Seminole County,
Florida, lo wit:
That portion ol Lot I. Block A.
D R M IT C H E L L S S U R V E Y OF
TH E L E V Y G R A N T, according lo
plat thereof as recorded In Plat
Book I. page S. Public Records ol
Semmole County, Florida, lying
westerly ol Tuskawilla Road and
containing approximately 0 I I I
acre*.
has been tiled against you and you
are required to serve a copy ol
your written defenses, it any, lo it
on w C. Hutchison. Jr., plaint ill's
attorney, whose address is Hut
chiton ft Mamele, 210 North Park
Avenue. Post Office Drawer H.
Sanlord. Florida 12771. on or
before October 21.1912. and III* Ihe
original with the clerk ol this court
either before service on plaintiffs
attorney
or
im m ediately
therealter. otherwise a default
will be entered agamsl you lor the
relief demanded in Ihe complaint
or petition
D A T E D on September 72. 19(2.
(Seal)
A R TH U R H B E C K W IT H . JR
Clerk ol Ihe Court
By Cynthia Proctor
Deputy Clerk
Publish: Sept. 74, Oct 1,1, IS. 1912
C E Z 119

THE BOARD OF C O U N T Y
C O M M I S S IO N E R S
OF
S E M I N O L E C O U N T Y will hold a
public hearing in Room 700 ol Ihe
Semino le County C ou rthou se,
Sanford. Florida, on O C T 26 1987
al 7 00 P M . or as soon therealter
as possible, lo consider a specific
land use am e ndm ent to the
Seminole County Comprehensive
Plan and R E Z O N I N G of the
described properly
AN O R D I N A N C E A M E N D I N G
O R D IN A N C E
77 25
W H IC H
AM EN D STH E D E TA IL E D LAND
USE
ELEM ENT
OF
TH E
S E M IN O LE
COUNTY
COM
P R EH EN S IV E
PLAN
FROM
LO W D E N S I T Y R E S I D E N T I A L
PRESERVATIO N TO P L A N N E D
U N IT 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 R 1A S I N G L E F A M I L Y
D W E LLIN G
O ISTR IC T
TO
P LA N N E D U N IT D E V E L O P
M E N T (P U D I TH E F O L L O W IN G
DESCRIBED P R O P E R TY
Th e S E 'a of the N E 'a of Section
IS 2IS 30E. less Ihe East ’ &gt; of Ihe
South ' a thereof, less road right ol
ways. Seminole County, Florida
Consist.ng ol 14 4S acres M O L
(Further described as located on
Ihe Northeast corner ot Bear Gully
Road and Howell Branch Road )
( D I S T R I C T No II
A P P L IC A T IO N HAS B E E N
S U B M I T T E D BY J I M M A C K
PZI9 t 821 5?
Further, the P L A N N I N G A N D
ZO N IN G
C O M M ISSIO N
OF
S E M I N O L E C O U N T Y will hold a
public hearing in Room 700 ot the
Semmole County Courthouse.
Santord. Florida, on September 1,
1982 at 7 00 P M . or as soon
therealter as possible, to review,
hear
comments
and
make
recommendations to the Board ot
County Commissioners on the
above captioned ordinance and
reroning
Additional information may be
obtained by contacting the Land
Management Manager at 321 4330.
Eat 160
Persons unable to attend the
hearing who wish to comment on
the proposed actions may submit
written statements to the Land
Management Division prior to Ihe
scheduled public hearinq Persons
appearing at the hearings may
submit written statements or be
heard orally
Persons are a d v s r d that, if they
decide to appeal any decision
made at these meetings, they will
need a record ol Ihe proceedings,
and. tor such purpose, they may
need to ensure that a verbatim
record ol the proceedings is made,
which
recor d
inclu des
the
testimony and ev ide nce upon
which the appeal Is to be based,
per Section 786 OIOS. F lo r i d a
Statutes
Board ot County
Commissioners
Seminole County. Florida
By Robert Sturm.
Chairman
Attest Arthur H Beckwith. Jr
Publish August 71 A October I ft
IS. 1982
D E Y 115

N O T I C E OF P U B L I C

HR AR IN O
T H E BOARD O F C O U N T Y
COMMISSIONERS
OF
SEMINOLE C O U N TY will hold a
public hearing in Room 700 of Ihe
Seminole County Courthouse.
Sanlord. Florida, on O CT 12. 191?
al 7 00 P M . or as soon thereafter
as possible, to consider a specific
land use amendment to the
Seminole County Comprehensive
Plan and R EZO N IN G ol the
described property
AN ORD IN AN CE A M E N D IN G
O R D IN A N C E
77 ?S
W H IC H
AMENOS TH E DE T A IL E D LANO
USE
ELEM EN T
OF
TH E
S E M IN O L E
C O U N TY
COM
P R E H E N S IV E P L A N FR O M
LOW D EN SITY 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
FO R
TH E
PURPOSE OF R EZ O N IN G FROM
R IA
S IN G L E
F A M IL Y
D W E L L IN G
O IS T
TO
RP
R ES ID E N TIA L
PR OFESSIO N
AL. TH E F O L L O W IN G OES
C R IB ED P R O P E R TY
Begin al the SW corner ol Lot I,
Block 0. Goltylew
Estates,
Meredith Manor, run South 57
degrees S6' X&gt;" East ISO leet. South
170feet. West 414 leel. thence NEly
on road R W to POB (less beg-n
ning 40 84 leet SWIy on road ol
most Northerly corner run South
S4 degrees 31' 2?" East 150 feet,
South 77 degrees 44' 70" West I I 44
leel, thence North l l degrees 59'
14" West 150 leet ihence N Ely on
road R W 106 77 leel to beginning),
all being located in Sec. 4 2IS 79E
Consisting ol 1*5 acres MOL
(Further described as North ol SR
414. on the East side ol East Lake
Brantley Drive. North and South ol
the Meredith u tilitie s Water
Plant) (D IS T No 11
A P P L IC A T IO N H A S B E E N
S U B M ITTE D BY D O R O TH Y T
DeVORE PZI9 I (71 SI
Further. Ihe P LA N N IN G AND
ZO N IN G
C O M M IS S IO N
OF
SEM IN O LE C O U N TY will hold a
public hearing in Room 700 ot the
Seminole County Courthouse,
Sanlord.
Florida,
on SEP
TEM B E R I, 19(2 A T 7 00 P M . or
as soon Iherealter as possible, lo
review, hear comments and make
recommendations to the Board of
County Commissioners on ihe
above captioned ordinance and
reioning.
Additional information may be
obtained by contacting the Land
Management Manager at 171 4110,
Exl. 180
Persons unable to attend the
hearing who wish lo comment on
Ihe proposed actions may submit
written statements to the Land
Management Division prior to the
scheduled public hearing. Persons
appearing al the hearings may
submit written slatemenls or be
heard orally.
Persons a rt advised that, il they
decide lo appeal any decision
made at theta mattings, they will
need a record ol Ihe proceedings,
and. lor such purpose, they may
need lo ensure that a verbatim
record ol the proceedings Is made,
which record
In d u d ts
lha
testimony end evidence upon
which Ihe eppeel Is to be beted per
Section 718 OIOS. Florida Statutes.
Board ol County
Committionert
Seminole County, Florida
By: Robert Sturm,
Chairmen
Attest: Arthur H Beckwith, Jr.
Publish August 71 ft September 17
ft October 1. 19(7
D E Y 101

32—H ouses U nfurnished

CLASSIFIED ADS

P A R K A V E kids, no lease. S100
sec $750 319 7700

O rla n d o -W in te r P o rk

S e m in o le

Sav On Rentals. Inc Realtor

831-9993

322-2611
C L A S S IF IE D D E P T

A V A I L A B L E OCT 1st
4 B d rm
1* a bath living and
•amily room appliances Cent
H A S190MO plus deposit
172 0216

RATES

HOURS
8 00 A M . — S 10 P M
M O N D A Y thru F R I D A Y
S A T U R D A Y 9 Noon

It im e
1 c o n se c u tiv e tim e s
7 c o n s e c u tiv e t im e s

50c a lin e
50c a lin e
42c

10 c o n se c u tiv e t im a s

17c a lin e

S A N F O R D 4 bdrm. 1'i bath,
kids, lence. $435 339 7200

57.00 M in im u m

Sav On Rentals, Inc Realtor

------------------- 1 L in e s M in im u m

DEADLINES

!

N o o n T h e D a y B e fo re P u b lic a tio n
S u n d a y - N o o n F r id a y

I M M A C U L A T E 3 Bdrm. V j
Bath, ranqe. carpeted, fenced
yard. Central H A 821 Valencia
Ct 5350 plus deposit All 5.

64S 2124

____ -________________

18— Help Wanted

5— Lost &amp; Found

S A N F O R D 3 bdrm. 1'j bath,
eac condition $370 mo 1st.
last security deposit 322 4494

P ERSO N N EL U N L IM IT E D has
LOST
Shiny black cat with
green eyes, male, vie Chase ft
20th St 172 8477. 647 3604

an innovative, new. low cost
way to provide quality em
ployment services Interviews
by appointment Call 322 5849

^—Child Caro

3 B D R M . 7 Bath, Cent H A ?',
acr es
P a r t l y fenced
In
Geneva $350 Mo 1st and last
149 569]

25— Loans

W I L L keep children in m y home
Fenced yard, hot meals Ret

3 BOR 2 Bath with Double car
garaqe. and executive type
|
home in Deltona Call 574 143?
days.
736 3691 eves
and
weekends

H O M E E Q U I T Y LO A N S
No pomls or broker lees loans to
S2S.000 to Homeowners G FC
Credit C o r p . Sant. FI 3218H0

37? 5015
C H ILD C A R E.
MY HOME
C A L L 811 9791

•! 3 B D R M . I Balh, Fenced yard
No indoor pets Oct 1st oc
cupancy SISOmo 5100 deposit
Phone 834 7576 alt 7 p m

28— Apts. &amp; Houses
.________ To Share

B A B Y S I T T I N G in m y home
Lots ot T L C Lonqwood Area
References 831 1652

F R E E r oom to Mat ur e C hr 1st ian
woman to share home with
elderly lady 177 8147

WILL W A T C H your child in my
home days Mon thru Fri Hot
meals ft T L C 377 6196
173 1377.

S A N F O R D . Reas
weekly ft
monthly rales Util inc elt 500
Oak Adults 1 841 7883

W E S T E R N Auto has Moved to
770? French Ave Watch our
sign lor hot specials

S A N F O R D Furnished rooms by
the week Reasonable rates,
mai d service C ate ring to
w ork ing people
Also un

18— Help Wanted

---— --- -- ------------------------ n
★

★

★

★

★

★

★

★

LO W FEE -T E R M S
NO CHARG E TO EM P LO Y E R S
1917 FR E N C H A V E
121 5178
BEVER LY
PAT

★

★

★

★

★

★

★

★

H IR I N G E X T E N D E D till Oct 5
tor House ol Lloyd Toy ft Gill
demonstrators Ear n 58 lo S10
an hour 339 3170
OPEN
Avon
T e r r it o r i e s
Christmas Selling now For
more into call Harri et Mixon
37? 0659
COOK F O R F I N E
DIN IN G
Experie nced o n ly ,
regular
breakfast shit! plus lunch and
dinner knowledge Apply 9 5
Deltona Inn
R E T I R E D piano player — no
vocalist
req
to
play
background dinner music. 5
Evemngs per week In local
Restaurant 123 1910
NEEOED
Com plete
Food
P erso n n e l
W a lte rs ,
waitresses, busboys. cooks,
bartenders, banquet per
sonnet Apply in person be I
ween
t 5 pm
Skyport
Restaurant ft Lounge Sanford
Airport Term in al Building

30-Apartments Unfurnished
I

P AR K A V E I bdrm, kids, porch,
fireplace S200 339 7700
Sav On Rentals. Inc Realtor

WHY RENT?
SI 650 down pa ym e nt with
payments starting below S350
mo buys a new 7 B drm home
m Deltona 20 minutes North ot
Orlando on I 4 Call 628 5656
weekdays 9 5 or I 574 1408 on
weekends S29,900 buy* a home
on lot
MELLONVILLE
TRACE
APARTM ENTS
Spacious,
modern 2 bdrm. 1 bath apt .
carpeted, kitchen equipped
Cent H A Walk to town ft lake
Adults, no pels S29S 322 4176
LUXURY
APAR TM ENTS
F a m i l y ft A d u lts section
Poolside, 2 Bdrms. Master
Cove Apts 323 7900 Open on
weekends
B A M B O O C O VE A PT S
300 E Airport Blvd
I A 2 Bdrms
FromS?JOmo.
Phone 323 1140
E N J O Y country living? 7 Bdrm,
Duplex A p t s , Olympic SI
pool
Sh6nanduah Villa ge
Open 9 to 6 373 7920

F I N A N C E Management We are
interested in career minded
and ambitious people 19 or
older, totrain lor management
positions in our Branch otlices
G F C branch manager training
p r o g r a m , o i le r s security,
challenge, involvement with
people, and unlimited oppor
tunily lor advancement. Out
standing employee benefits
General Finance Corp 7678
Orlando Dr., Sanford. Fla
373 61 10 Equal Opportunity
Employer

A rm s

Apt

Marmer s Village on Cake Ada. 1
bdrm trom $250. 2 bd rm from
5790 Located 17 92 jus) south
of Airport Blvd. in Sanlord All
Adults 323 8670

SANFORD, lovely 2 Bdrm.
air, furnitureavailable
5760 mo 841 7883

Furnished apartments lor Senior'
Cltliens 111 Palmetto Aye , J
Cowan No phone calls

2 H E A V Y Equipment Operators
(M must have foreman
capabilities. Must be able to
operate motor grader, back
hoe, loader and fork lilt.
Others need not apply S4 7S
Minimum lo start or com
menturate with atHIty Apply
City ol Longwood 175 W
Warren Ave ( 5 Monday thru
Friday. E O E AA Employer
PARTS remover mechanic lor
salvage yard. Experience in
tools necessary Contact Carl
at 66( 8000 9 S.

21— Situations Wanted
E X P E R I E N C E D 2&lt;i years
assembly mechanic and crew
leader, table top cony .rinsers,
warmers. *cc beds depalt.
pallltliers. also 7 years ooier.
loader, backhoe. pan, fork lltt,
roller, operator for lend
seeping company ft septic
systems, black top, light
carpenty, painting exterior.
Phona 373 1(84
W'-en you pia.»- a Ciassit .-0 Aj
n Tn.. E , m nq H rr a 'd Stax
.lose io yOur phone because
someth ng wonderful S abou*
to hapocn

41— Houses
B U Y OR L E A S E
W IT H O PTIO N
3 BH 2 Bath, new carpet, indoor
laundry, tile root, appliances,
on I ' j lots in nice area ot
Sanlord 549,400 with below
m a r k e t ow ner financing
14 5*. mlg w 51500 dn. 1] 5*.
mtg w S6S00 dn. 12 S*. mlg w
110.000 dn. or It S*. mtg w
$14,000 dn Will consider lease
w option to buy Call 122 6632
after 5 p m lor appt

B A TEM A N R EA LTY
Lie Real Estate Broker
2640 Sanlord Aye

321 0759

Eve

322 7643

SUM
B U fK .I
HOL S t r WF D A
i ROM
t Mf

I

AU|
I '

AO

ROBBIE’S
REALTY

G P N EV A GARDENS
2 Bdrm apartments
W D Hook up
Fr om 1300 per mo
ISOSW 2SthSt.
322 2090

M A TU R E W OM AN lor con
cession stand
Weekends
Apply Flea World 17 9?

PART Time or Full lime person
lor yard work, and cleaning
Call
Sanlando
United
Methodist Church 319 1288 9 S
Weekdays.

C O N D O F O R R E N T 2 Bdrm. 2
Bath, Airport Blvd Sanlord
Includes
was he r,
dr y e r,
community pool, clubhouse. 1
yr lease or wilt lease option
Bi-rme Wang 323 1200 Eves
869 SI21

) S80

31— Apartments Furnished

F U L L time inspectors, sewing
mach oper .cutler. Exp only
Apply Antro Fashions Inc , 710
Power C t . I 4 Ind. Park, or
call 121 7110

40— Condominiums

R dgi-wood A,r 17) 8420

PN or RN — pari time Busy
Medical office in S W Volusia
E x p e rie n c e d
preferred
G en era l o l lic e help Send
resume loBox I l f c o Evening
Herald. P O Box I6S7, San
lord. Fla 37771

l

PA

BOB M B ALL JR
R E A L TO R
313 4111

I. 7 and 3 BDRM From S260
» 'due wood

H AIR S T Y L I S T needed
immediately Zayre Pla;a
Santord 323 7530

6 C O M M E R C I A L Offices
Newly Remodeled S9S per mo
323 9090

7 S M A L L offices available,
also Cold Storage space
323 7000

furnished apt 373 4507
422 Palmetto Ave

★

AAA E M P L O Y M E N T
T R Y US F IR S T
W E PLACE PEO PLE

37 B R ental Offices
-____________ t ~
~
O F F I C E SPAC E
FOR LEASE
_____________830 7773_________

29— Rooms

12—Special Notices

3 bd rm fenced yard, kids OK.
option to buy S3?S mo call
owner 111 1611

■u R E A L T O R . M LS
7261 S French
Suite 4

Sanlord. Fla

24 HOUR □ 322-9283
M AKE
ROOM TO S TO R E
YOUR
W IN T E R
IT E M
S
S E L L "D O N 'T N E E D S "
F A S T W ITH A W ANT AD
Phone 372 7811 or 111 999] and
a friendly Ad Visor will help
you.

C H U L U O TA 1 bdrm. kids, on
lake, util paid. S26S 339 7200
Sov-On Rentals, Inc. Realtor

L O V E L Y I Bdrm nicely lur
n.shed S70 Wk plus utilities,
*700 Sec Dep 321 6947 alt 5
E F F IC IE N C Y Apartment
$150 mo. No pets
Alt. Sp m 1217011
2 BED RO O M , upstairs.
1225 mo plustlOO deposit.
321 0121.

31A—Duplexes
SANFORD. 3 bdrm, no leate.
porch 5100 339 7200
-Sav-On Rentals. Inc. Realtor
LA R G E 2 bdrm, air, heal,
carpeted, appliances, no pets
1325 mo SISOdep 322 1500,
323 2331
7 ON R ID G E W O O D Lane.
screened porch. *1(0 mo
2419 and 7421 Cedar Ave. S150
mo.
7415 Chase Ave $150
2510 Georgia Ave S1(0 Mo
JU N E PO RZIG R E A L T Y ,
R E A L TO R
172 (87(
2 BDRM. I Bath, large inside
utility with washer dryer hook
up Cent HA. Fully carpeted
Refrigerator, stove ft dish
washer S12S mo Sec. Dep. re
Quired. For appt 122 8727.
M OO ERN 2 Bdrm. 2 Bath,
unfurnished Fully equipped,
CHA, carpel, screen patio,
attached garage Quiet at
tractive neighborhood, walk to
shopping ft schools.
Call 221170(

STENSTROM
REALTY -

REALTORS

S a n fo rd 's Sales Leader
W E L IS T AND SftLL
M O R E HOMES THAN
A N Y O N E IN NORTH
S E M IN O LE C O U N TY I
JU S T L I S T E D I 1 Bdrm, 1V| Bath
home w new carpet B roof,
earth lone decor, paddle Ian,
•to rear yd. and spetlessl Nice
areal S84.*0(i
E X Q U IS IT E ! S Bdrm, 1W Bath
hema in exclusive areal Enc.
pool, potto ft Atrium! F P L,
wot bor, poddlo tom, (root
room ft moral .Yours lor
SIIS.0MI
JU S T FOR Y O U I 2 Bdrm, 1 Both
homo on o nlco landscaped loti
Just pointod, completely
fenced, eat-in kitchen. FR ft
priced to tolll 111,9001
C H A R M IN G ! 2 Bdrm, 1 Both
homo completely renovated wnew C H 4A , ter. perch, FPL,
new appliances. mony decor
touches ft moral 989.90(1

M A Y F A IR VILLA S I 2ft 2 Bdrm,
2 Both Condo Villas, next to
Mayfair Country Club. Select
your lot. tloor plan B interior
decorl Quality constructed by
Shoemaker tor S47.2M ft upl

C A LLA N YTIM E
)$*!
Pork

322-2420
i

�OUR BOARDING HOUSE

41—Houses

41—Houses

U N D E R $7 000 0 0 W N
J bdrm don house Affordable
monthly
p a y m e n t^
fall
Owner Broker )3I 1611

J B dr m . 1&gt;» bath located ,n
Country Club Estates $t? 000
with
assumable
» &gt; . ,•
mortqaqe 311 6700 or Orlando
04 ) 000 1 9 5

STEMPER

AGENCY

WANT A C A R D EN )
This new listing a 3 B drm . 1 Bath
home in Lake Monroe could be
what you're lookmq lor F o r a
well kept home. In the country,
call us soon Only U S . 000
ASSO CIA TESN EED ED

50— Miscellaneous for Sale
TH E E A R T H STOVE

HAL C O L B E R T R E A L T Y
107 E . 25th St
111 7011

SANFORD R E A L T Y
realtor
m in i
Alt Mrs 172 6«54, 311 alas
U N D E R S1.000 D O W N
3 bdrm. doll house Affordable
monthly
paym ents
Call
Owner Broker 331 1611

Levi jeans 4 jackets
ARMY N A V Y SURPLUS
310 Santord Ave
331 S79I

3S44 S French*
) j j o jjt
Alter Hours 339 3910 j j j 0779

C U S T O M Made Roller
SkaVs ' ad'CSR' i like new
Snyders Call 333 466S

SUNLAND OW NER
FIN A N C IN G
Large family home on cul de sac
and extra big lot Convenient
to SCC
Features
3 car
garage, family room, paddle
tans, excellent condition, and
owner wil l accep t super
linancuig Call - o * to see

CallBart
real
rf

Cad Keyet

estate

Ac t o r

n; im

O S T E E N small 3 bd rm home
Newly r e m o d e le d Fenced .
73«159$ S1A.SOO 339 8113
3

BDRM,
Pool
home, no
gualilying. SIS.000 down Take
Over payments 331 0318

M O B ILE HOM E S IT E
S Acres, near Osteen goll course
Deeded access to St. Johns.
Owner lo hold 1st of S1S.OOO at
10 ♦ APR lor IS yrs., S l l i 86
mo. PI. Only SIO.OOO down
Land is high and dry. Bernard
Wang Broker Salesman
111 A C R E H O M E S I T E Lake
Mary, heavly wooded
Art
Lane oil Lake M a ry Blvd In
area ol nice homes. All ready
eligible lor building permit
Possibly maybe split into 1
building lots. Owner will hold
short (use. O n ly U S . 000
Bern ard
Wanq
B ro k e r
Salesman
1)4.900 J U S T R E D U C E D ! 1
Bdrm. 1 Bath home in T H E
F O R E S T . The most beautilul
Mobile community. Split plan,
c o m m u n ity pool spa. and
clubhouse Huge screened
porch. Owner may help buyer
Bern ard
Wan g
B ro k e r
Salesman.
S49W. Lake M a ry Blvd
Suite B
Lake Ma ry. Fla. 31744
31)3100

BDRM. 1'. bath located m
Country Club Estates 132.000
with assumab'e 9'&lt; t
mor
tage 333 6700 or Orlando 843
0001 9 5

KISH R E A L E S T A T E
3)1 0041
REALTOR
Alter Hrs 333 7468 A 333 7154
L E A V IN G TO W N
3 BDRM
Home. S39.900
Assumable
F HA Mori . S33.000 313 1477

N O CLO SIN G CO STS
13*. I N T E R E S T
S7.500 D O W N
Beaulilul large 3 Br 2' i Bath
con dom in iu m
Like
new
Carpeted, drapes and paint,
$63,500
P a y m e n t s S570 33
monthly, with 12 year balloon
R E A D Y T O M O V E IN

CallBart
41-B— Condominiums
F o r Sale

42—M obile Hom es'

D E L T O N A — Corner lot, high 4
dry,build now! In last growing
area, near elem schools, close
lo Hwy. 41S, Osteen 4 Santord.
S3.97S.
DELTONA —
L k . D u p ont,
lakelronl, good lishing, close
to country club area, approa.
141 It. lake frontage. H ig h and
dr yl $12,500
D E L T O N A — Building lot, high
A dry, near elem. school, close
to Osteen A Santord. Lge
irreg shape lot in country
settmgl 43,450.
D R Y C L E A N E R S — Volusia's
last growing area. Shopping
center. Net 39/ Oood lamily
operation business. Financing
OW H some 171.000.
e e e e e e . e e e e e e e
C U R R E N T L Y seeking new and
eiperienced Sales Associates,
tgition tree school, new profit
sharin g plan. Call B e ck y
Courson, Mgr. lor Interview.
a e e e e e e e a a e e e
D R IFTW O O D V IL L A O E
S49W. Lake M a r y Blvd.
Lake Mary. Florida 31744

Office: (305) 321-5005

SF E S K Y L I N E S N E W E S T
Palm Sprinqs A Palm Manor
GREGORY M O B ILE MOVES
JI01 Orlando Dr
333 5300
VA A F M A Financing
1911 S K Y L I N E Mobile Home
74«52 It s c re en enclosure
porch, utility shed. Central
heat and air 3 B drm . 7 Bath
Lot sue i» 50«t00 Sale price
$41,900 financing available at
80 ol sales price interest rale
15 3« * 2 Pomls Can Be seen
at 136 Leisure D r
North
DrBary.
Fla
In
the
Meadow lea on ihe R iv er
Mobile H o m e c o m m u n i t y
Please contact T o m Lyon or
G'b Edmonds First Federal ol
Seminole 305 373 1742
s
&gt; Y
JUN1
N
• y P0RZIC R IA IT Y V
1 r ealtor
m is
l
333 1678
MOB ILE H O M E W I T H ACRE
A G E . 2 B d r m . I '&gt; Bath,
Mobile H om e on 2 ' i acres
West ot Santord Owner will
consider bolding $39,500

43--Lots- Acreage
ST JO HN S River frontage V i
acre parcels, also interior
parcels, riv er access $13,900
Public water, 20 m m to Alta
monte M a l l
12 *• 20 yr
financing
no q u a li fy i n g
Broker 678 41)3,
6 5 A C R E S La ke Sylvan area
$43,500
W
M ALICZOW 5KI
R E A L T O R 372 7983

[HAROLD HALL]
REALTY, INC.
. REALTOR
11) » ) ) ‘
H Y E A R S EX P E R IE N C E

$ A C R E S Gene va. Live Oaks,
power and water, $9K and
assume da*, on 11K, 311 6477

L A R O E C O R N E R L O T ) B drm
with tarn, room. Cent H A ,
complttoty Itn ctd , citrus trooa
and much moro. 143.soo.
F H A OR VA F I N A N C I N O 1
Bdrm. Naat a» a pin, low down
p A y m o n l,
low
m o n t h ly
payments. $32,300.
SWIM A N O F I S H . Walk to
Cry ito l L a k t and Lak a M a ry
from this lovtly r t m o d d t d 2
bdrm homt. F tn c a d yard,
maturo citrvs troos and larga
w orkshop. S u p t r b location .
Won t last long at $37,400.

Property
:

7406 H W Y . 17 92

W 0ULD

35 C S

UP6!
r

.

■

,N fiW T u tA * rg L \

\c \

P j B ' ____

6 ? lR lT E F C lT iZ E N I P .E A V E ,V\\
C AR EER ,
A

51 A — Furtiifun?

S E A L Y Mismatched mattress
sale Tw in set. $119 95 Full sel
115995 They don't have to
match to be good 331 5381
F L O R I D A S L E E P SHOPS

WILSON M A I E R F U R N I T U R E
311 315 E F I R S T ST
M3 5633

52—Appliances
Kenmore parts, service, used
washers 333 0697
M OONEY APPLIANCES

REFRIGERATORS,
many
sires g u a r a n te e d Sanford
Auction 1315 S French Aye.
333 7340

53—TV R a d ia Stereo

R E P O S S E S S E D C O L O R TV'S
We sell repossessed color
televisions, all name brands,
consoles and portables EX
AMPLE
Zenith 35" color in
walnut console Original price
over $750. balance due 5196
cash or payments SI7 month
NO M O N E Y D O W N Still in
warranty Call li s t Century
Sales863 S394day or nitu Free
home trial, no obligation

54—Garage Sales
7 F A M I L Y sale S A T U R D A Y
only turnilurc. misc 2305 Lisa
Cl East oft ot 74th St
CARPORT
Sale,
furniture,
clothing, misc
Frid ay and
Saturday 9 5 160 Wilson Dr at
Lakcview. Lake M a ry
M U L T I F A M I L Y carport sale,
misc household Items, lur
niture , Jo n boat
104 W
Coleman Cir , Saturday only
93
W I C K E R sofa, chairs, table,
baby scale. Victorian chairs,
sola bed, La Z Boy recliner,
misc 9 5 Fri. Sat 1313 Park

DIS H ES , glassware, pots and
pans,
c lo th in g,
camping
supplies Saturday 8 till? 400
E. 1st St
MAKE
ROOM
TO STORE
YOUR W IN T E R ITEM S
SELL
"D O N ’T
NEEDS
FA S T W I T H A W A N T AO
Phone 372 2611 or 8)1 999) and
a Ir.pndly Ad Visor will help
you
2 FA M ILY
Sale, antiques,
collectibles, misc items F r l ,
Sat A Sun 8 a m till. 210 and
212 Tangerine Dr (Revenna
Park)
4 F A M I L Y garage sale. Fur
niture. stereo, pictures, lamps,
lots ot misc 504 Dew Drop
Cove Deer Run, Casselberry.

Oct 2 A 3 9 4
MISC
G a r a g e Sale
Many
clothes not priced over $1 00
different sires
Friday and
S a t u rd a y 9 3
Alpin e St
Altamonte Springs

S A T U R O A Y 9 a m till
All sorts ot things.
7411 Summe rlin Ave. O H 0144

REALTOR

Ml S

l

S A N F O R D 4 Unit apartment
building
O wner will hold
Very anxious Will consider all
otters. $90,000.

H I O D E N L A K E 304 Laurel Cl
L a r g e m u l t i f a m i l y sale
Furniture, toys, glassware,
children's and adults clothing,
begins 8 a m Saturday

SS— Boats &amp; Accessories

4/-Real Estate Wanted
W E B U Y equity In houses,
apartments, vacant land and
acreage
LUCKY
IN
V E S T M E N T S P O Box 2)00.
Sanford. Fla 37771 122 4741.
L O O K I N G Zonpd R M O I , older
single or two story, 1 bdrm,
dwelling with barn or large
garage.
M inim um
down
payment with owner holding
mortgage. I l l 0211.

47 A — Mortgages Bought
&amp; Sold
W E P A Y cash lor 1st 1 2nd
mortgages R a y Leqg Lie
Mortgage Broker 1 U 2199

1979 20 H P E L E C T R I C Merc,
with Mlt boat and trailer
Troll motor, exc cond 322 4730

O R G A N H am m on d, model T
S14C. rh y th m section, partial
dr aw bars, built in cassttt*
1)9 1264 weekdays 9 $.

1968 F O R D F.llcon 6 Cyl
cond asking $400
327 5621

FO R D 97 G ra nad a 4 dr 6 cy
luxury t r » m pkg 15 hundred
miles F ac w a r r a n t, $799 5
Austam Whsle
Outlet
32'

good

1660
C A V A R O Sharp hiack ti a p
stereo low m.ies cream pull
$1 495 377 0026 or 647 7|$o

1969 I N T E R N A T I O N A L P'Ck Up
good condition $995
Alt i p m 373 5500

PAVtONA A U T O A U C TIO N
« » r *1 1 m.le we$' ot Sp&lt;ed
nay Day'ona Beach w It hold
a Public A U T O
A U CTIO N
every iVednesdav at 7 30 p m
1' s the only one *n Fi or da
You se' 'he reserved p e t e
Can 904 255 8)11 tor further
details

1965 F O R D Pick Up With
topper Drive,
makeotter 323 0489
1981 F O R D F 100 Custom. 6 Cyl.
AC PS PB chrome wheels,
maroon A silver tinted wm
clows
short bed. A M F M
stereo auto The truck lor
your lady J65 3209 or alt 6
349 9225

s r Law n Garden

M O D A K A 250 SL Ervluro
runs oood. $4S0
371 6779aft 7 p rn

65— Pets-Supplies
R E G I S T E R E D A K C toy poodle

T E M P O R A R Y home needed tor
. y- ww
.......
female dog Looks like guard
dog. but is only a pel Will
provide lood, and vel care
Fenced yard, necessary Call
323 0522
________________________________ _

NO CREDIT • BAD CREDIT

1978 Firebird Formula 400 Red
with black interior $4750 Call
371 2110

it's like pennies Irom heaven
when you sell Don 1 Needs"
with a *ant rtd

creafn 7 ,nos All shots. $17$
372 7917

n

i

&amp; iJ t j p

67—Livestock Poultry

Acrott from
Longwood Lincoln
Mff(ucy_________

321-2200
WE BUY

•

SELL • TRADE

C O N SU LT OUR

J

BISINESSSERVIGELISim
e
AND L E T AN EXPER T DO TH E JO B

67 A —Feed
h

To List Your Business...

~ i

Dial 322-2611 or 831-9993
$47$
$595
15 90
SSSO
$410
)$30

Cone►
*»i tVor k

Aloe Prod ucts

HAY
H A V ' . Y O U R financial dream s
become a reality w t h Aloe
PT. no investment 323 7788

&lt;O A S T 6*41

B t*r mu &lt;1*
»V rrt
* rtM* \ ? SO o**r Orflf C .|H K&gt;S

bo

r

A U S T A M Buys cars 4 trucks
Prty oft anywhere Crtsh to
yOU lll 371 1660

B E E F C A T T L E Sale Angus
Brafurd, while lace some with
calves 671 6679

w il c o sa les N U T R E N A FEEDS
H w v 44 W. 377 4170
W Corn
Rabbit Pellets
14 Vitality horse pell*t»
Lay er pellet
B e e tK w i k
Hog Finisher

WE FINANCE EVERYONEI
ESTABLISH YOUR CREDIT HERE!

1970 Hwy 17 97
Longwood. FI

vkyfit;

M

7$ V O N t F C A R L O
loadr d no money down
339 9 IOC C34 4605

76 Olds S tarfire GT • $500 Dn. $30 Wk.
'68 Chevy M alibu • $300 Dn, - $25 Wk.
74 Cadillac Eldorado • $500 Dn. $30 Wk.
74 Chevy Monte Carlo • $400 Dn. • $30 Wk.
74 AMC Matador - $300 Dn. • $25 Wk.
72 Olds Toronado • $200 Dn. • $25 W k.

80— Autos tor Sole

H O N D A JSOacyl .33 Not
running 5195 or best otter
Call 37) 1735

77 BUICk R e q a l j d o o r
cm *
loaded $500 down Cas&gt; or
trade J39 9IOO 914 4605

STRADA AUTO SALES

J E E P 80 CJ7 19 000 m. 6 cy l. 4
speed v n y l lop, hard doors.
PS
trai ler hitch
Asking
$5,900 371 5)5)

78 -M otorcycles

F I L L O I R T A TO P SOIL
Y E L L O W SAND
Call Clark A Mir! 32) 75*0

G A R A G E sales are m season
Tell ihe people about it with a
Classified Ad in the Herald
111 741 1 83) 9993

Wiiiifcd ID Buy

A L U M I N U M cans, cooper, lead
brass, silver, gold Weekdays
8 4 30. Sat 9 1 K ko M o Tool
Co 918 W 1st St 37) 1100
U S E D P I A N O Corwnl*. Spinet
or Gra nd Playability, holding
tune important Consider up to
51000 373 1910
P A P E R B A C K BOOKS
Best
sellers
Romance
Western
Horror Comics 377 9504

Additions 7$
Rrinodoltnq
i

B A t MS. kitchen*, rooting, bl ock .

B E A l Loncrrte I man qualify
operation pat'os dr .yeways
Days 3)1 7)3) Eves 337 1371

S T O P A N D T H IN K A M I N U T E
•I Classified
Ads
di dn 't

CONCRfTC
rtork .ill types
Footers d f u ' A c i f S
prtds
ttoors pools c o m p le t e or
ralmith Fro* •%( ) ) ] n o i

concrete win do ws a d d a
room, tree estimates 323 846)
N E W R E M O D I3 L R E P A I R
All types and phases ol con
Slruction. S G Bahnt 32) 48)7
327 866$ V ale Licensed

71— Antiques

A N TIQ U E S &amp; CO LLECTIBLES.
O ld e
Tymes
Connection,
B r o w s e r 's
Ba rn , 150 W
Jessup. Longwood

Lawn &amp; Garden
Service

f, lu rn ().i,(j

JOHN A L L E N Y A R D 6 T R E E
S E R V I C E fr coes ti m ates
We do tf all 331 5380

it's easy to place a Classified Md
We ll even help you word
■t Call 37? 7611
M IS TE R

Ply 11

carpentry.

mm m

B eauty C ) 'P

T O W E R S BE A U T Y S A L O N
F O R M E R L Y Harr ie tt s Beauty
Nook $19 E 1st St 327 5747

n
f ven-ng Herald \*a»
ctOSe »o »our phone because
something Aonderful *s ar*out
tiapoen

FIREPLACES
bricks, block
concrete, stucco and repairs
Quality Fred 371 $784

A N T IQ U E M A R K ET
SHO W AN DSALE
D E L A N D , F L O R ID A
O C T O B E R 2 &amp; 3,1982

_________ R epair________

S A T . 9 S p.m . S U N I O Sp m
F R E E A D M IS S IO N
O VER7S DEALERS
H W Y 41 I 1, Ml C OF I II

Borifdmq &lt;$ G toom m q

A N I M A L Haven Board ng and
Grcxjmmg kennels Shady, In
sulaled. screenrd. Ily proof 'h
Side, outside runs Fans Also
AC cages We catct lo your
r«tz r'h 37’ 17 $7

H A U L I N G and Clean Up.
tree trimming and removal
349 9230

Johnnies Service We service all
rnaiorappliances Reas rates
37 yr experience 373 8)34

Nursing Ci'it1«*t
U G H i H A U L I N G , yard
work and odd jobs
323 9064

OUR R A T E S A R E L O W E R
Lakev&gt;e* Nursing Center
219 E Second SI . Santord
377 6707

Home Improvement
72— Auction
A u c tio n Sale
F r id a y N ile 7 P .M .
Come early and enjoy an hour ol
sonqs and music. Complete
red w o o d set. several nice
couches, and chairs. TV's,
dinette set. a lot ol hand and
power tools Plus all kinds ol
misc

^»-en vou p'ar»* 4 Oass ♦ #*fl A j
n Yf i* f
ng Hera'd s’ a»
lose •&lt; iOuf phone because
someth ng *&lt;&gt;r.der»j s about
tQ happen

DeGarmeau Bookkeeping
Service
Quality service lor the small
business 377 7707

W IN O O W repa.r and nstalla
lion,
screen
repair
A
r e pl a c emen t .
window
cleaning 321 $994

C A S H D O O R F R IZ E S

D e li's Auction

F O R E S T A T E . Commercial or
Residential Auctions 4 Ap
praisals Call Dells Auction
323 5670

C O L L IE R 'S Home
Repairs
carpentry, rooting, painting,
window repair 321 6423

Brick &amp; Block
Stone Work

m o w . H w y . 44
333-1410

P IA Z ZA M A S O N R Y
Quality Work At Reasonable
Prices Fre e Estimates
PH 349 )100

75— Recreational Vehicles
19 F T F U L L Y sell contained,
air, good condition $1000 or
best otter. 322 7472. 444 5919
1972 W I N N E B E G O Chiefton II,
Deluxe, 2 root i i r , dash air, S
K W Onan Gen 7 new Michelln
tires, lull bath, lull bedroom
E x c . condition Can be seen at
Flea Wor ld 321 1792 or
291 1792

Ceiling Fan Installation
C EILIN G r \N IN S TA LLA TIO N
Quality Work
We Do /Most Anything
29S9.T7I
677 4711

S LIM
BUDGETS
ARE
BOLSTER E D W ITH V A L U E S
FROM
TH E
WANT
AD
COLUMNS

WIN DO WS
carpentry, doors,
minimum repairs Floor tile,
cabmets I do it alt 327 8121
Licensed 4 bonded

Home Repairs
C A R P E N T E R 2$ yrs exp Small
remodeling iobs, reasonable
rales Chuck 333 9645
Have some' camping equipment
you no longer use? Sell it all
with a Classified A d in The
Herald Call 372 7611 or 1)1
9993 and a friendly ad visor
will help ygu
Maintenances all types
Carpentry, painting, plumbing
4 electric. 323 6038

CoMitnc Tile

75-A—Vans
1944 F O R D Van Runs good.
F o r sal* or trade.
1410 Magnolia

T O P Dollar Pa&gt;d lor Junk 1
Used cars, trucks i heavy
equipment 322 $990
W E P A Y top dollar tor
Junk Cars and Trucks
C B S Auto Parts 29) 410$
B U Y J U N K C A R S ! TRUCKS
F ro m $10 to $10 or more
Call 372 1424

M E I N T Z E R T I L E E x p Since
I9S3 New &amp; old work c o m m A
r t t i d F r e e estimate (491142
Complete C er am ic T i l t Serv
walls. Moors, countertops, r o
model, repair F r est 339 0211

uic

COO D Y A SONS
Tile Contractors
J2I01S2

L A N D C L E A R I N G fi lld rt.
tOOVO'l shale. diSk.nq
mo* nq 327 34)3

Lawn Service

E X P E R T Cleaning lor home

orotlice Call for estimate
321 137)

Landscaping

ins

Cleaning Services

)23 1/24

JA M E S ANDERSO N
G. F. B O H A N N O N

1141 R O O F IN G
Insured 4 Bonded References
$60 per square w t h tree est
Call 373 7 18)

L IT T IK E N CONTRACTORS
R O O FIN G
L censed, bonded, low pr.ee*
Quality workmanship
Free Esti ma te s 788 3719
Have some camp-nq equ (e- en
,Ou rio longer use* Sell I an
* t h a Class-lied Act n tin
Herald Call 177 761! or 311
9991 and a Iru-ndiy advisor
will help you

Oil Heaters Cleaned
CARPENTRY,
co n c re t e
8,
plumbing Minor repairs lo
addmg a room Don 3?) 3974
PAl N T i NG andrepa r pa* o and
screen porch d u h i
C all
anytime 37? 9481

Bookkeeping

3) yrs experience. Licensed 6
Insured
Free Eslimal-.-* on Rooting
Re Rooting and Repairs
Shingles. Built U p and Tile

Major Appliance
Hauling

C E N T R A L F L O R ID A

Rooting

A &amp; B ROOFIN

M asonry
Ha ui mg,

Fast A
WiMsoMiUf
small i c
set
SAV

joe M cA dam s \

your home Call 327 70S5

LIG H T

FrrdcJ'P WoDinson Plumbing
r v f.tu crfv A C
Sprinkler* 1?) 6*10. 32 )0&gt;0ft
wt P A IR S *.
pen da bio s e r v e ?
rates No tob too
P lu m b e r ,
tree
Plumbing )49 SSV

Lawn M o vw rs

H b tidy n u n

)nS877

77— Junk Cars Removed

5 9 -M u s ic a l Merchandise

DeBar, A u '0 4 V a ' ne Sales
across "he r . y f . too 0* h 11 1 7a
May It 97 D e B a r , 664 »SM

1976 C O R V E T T P;V PS PB T
'op new stamless steel brakes
new ' res $8795 o r best otter
32) 5540

,A M A J Z 7 R

I. 1 9 8 2 - H A

80 Autos for Sale

79—Trucks T ra ile rs

574-Gum A Ammo
O U N A U C T I O N , Sunday, Oc­
tober 10 1 p.m. Sanlord Auc­
tion, 121$ *- Fr ench, 133 7348.

F rid a y , O ct

80-Autos for Sale

H O N D A t w n SMr modt-l CM
TOOT
81 rc a
windshield
sa tr t, Ij.tf ' t ’ OOOor Best O iler
127 8)08
I9S7 H A R L E Y panhead
M nt cond * on $2500 F ,rm
Call Frank 371 3794

I.M ALRE/ADY
NVtfLVEP iN

n

»

IRS N E E D L I S T I N G S

323-3774

N I A G A R A C v d o Massage bed
never used, couch, desk Must
H I 8 ' 80 Eves

3 F A M Y A R D Sale Sat t Sun 9
till 1301 Scott Ave Something
for everyone

111 1671
IPARKLINO POOL H O M E 1
M e m with lamily room, tatIn-kitchen. Scroonad porch,
manicurtd Itncod yard. Many
t i t r a t . Only MI.OOO. Own or

'w lS T E R *

3&gt; v
■C--------T i NCj u
) ( P
------------------t^ 'M Z Z l
5\EhN
i

46B—Investm ent

i
I A N A N A L A K E R D . Country
living. 1 Bdrm gorgoout. 1.45
acres. Hug* ook trtas. horsos
O K . F o r tho h a n d y m a n .
$37,500.

J

122 *48S &lt;1*v 1?» 6404 rvrs

■ ' i — :-----------------S A N D A L W O O D La rg e 1 Bdrm. '
Bath All appliances, i n d W
D steal at $17,900 I 433 8876

R E A L T O R S

1978 Suruki SS7S. good cond
Tiller brand new, Briggs and
Stratton motor S375. exercise
bicycle w t h timer, excellent
cond S75 Punchinq bag. 545
Call 349 S686 Alt 4 p m

Good Used T v s 135 A up
M ILLER S
3619Orlando Dr
Ph J33 0152

REAL ESTATE
R E A L T O R JJ1 74*4

V A N A 5 E R .IP
^
3
PlAN A MEDIA Bj T I T hAT v ^U lP **AWE (
j&gt;
IHE UWERV0RLD B* SURPRISE:
T4K t * '- £ )
155: N\&gt; M
*\S- •

e i C i W 3 . £&gt;'ES T «E M0B

Evening Herald, Sanlord, FI.

78—Motorcycles

PLANTS
Nursery aomg out ol business,
100 s ol landscapinq plants
Saturday only 900 Cherokee
Cir (Sunland Estatesl

A L L Steel bed tor I' j ton truck, 3
It sides, S100 M U R R Y ! 333
4130 or 333 357S

FOR ALL Y O U R
REAL ESTATE NEEDS

323-3200

Brown root rock pat io stones
Dr y wells, grease traps
Car stops, steps, cement
Yellow vement color. 10c lb
Miracle Concrete Co
309 Elm Ave
311 S75I

A L L F L O R ID A R E A L T Y
OF SANFO RD R E A L TO R

R E A L T O R 3)3 4991 Day or N.ght
N E W House set tar back on 1
arre Large s»»a in front
Have your own tlea market,
well traveled si to advertise
you r goods
A s s u m e I0.*
SS4 900 3)1 47S4

Free standing wood stove plus
fireplace inserts and ac
cessories
Thermostatically
controlled burns 14 hrs on one
tilling Converts to open lire
instantly New 904 7)4 8184
DcLand

with Major Hoople

MOW. E D G E . W E E D E A T I N G
Cleanups 4 light hauimg
Free estimates, call 32) 0150.
M O W . bug*. T r i m ,
Rene w
La ndscaping
C lean
ups.
Hauling. Thatching. Weeding.
Mulch Lmdsey's 323 Oka t

OIL Healer cleaning
and servicing
Call Ralph 37) 7183

R O O F I N G ot all kinds commer*
cul 4 residential Bonded 4
insured 3?) 2597 it no answer
834 8537
R E R O O F ifjr,
carpentry 1 , 1
repair 4 painting 15 years
e.p 377 1976

Paintinq

H E I L M A N rooting, painting 4
repairs
Q u a lity
work,
reasonaole
rates
Fr ee
estimates A n y t i m e 834 8490
E D W E IM E R P A IN TIN G
Quality work guaranteed
Licensed
373 674)
Insured
P AIN TIN G 4 R O O F I N G
Licensed, guaranteed work
371 $949
Whatever the occasion there is a
classified ad to salve &lt;t Try
one soon

Painting A or
Pressure Cleaning

Built up and Shingle roof,
licensed and insured.
Free estimates. 322 1936.
J A M E S E . L E E INC.

EXPERT ROOFING
No Big Waiting List
Root ng Special 10 *, d 1
with this ad when pre'
lo E x p e r t Roofing
f
specialists
We hono
surance cla im s Fo r the)
rooting and remodel.nc
Expert Rooting 4 Remo
Asso T he One stop she
center Built up. Shmqlt
and tin roolm g Deal d.
with a local contracfoi
has a reputable busmes
Licensed. Bonded 4 Insu
24 Hour Service

323 7473
FOR
THE
Best
Q u a li ty ,
Reasonable.
R e li a b l e
4
References Call anytime
372 0071 A Cormo
Wien you piare a Classified Ad
n The F ,en-ng Hera ld Sla,
close to your phone because
someth.ng wonderful .5 abou'
to hapoen

Piano Lessons
E L E M E N T A R Y Piano Lessons
ottered lor beginners ages 4
.and up Debbie 371 5971

Plastarina
ALL
Phaser of Plastering
Piasterinq rep ai r, stucco, hard
rote simulated brick 321 $99)

Tree Service
7RI County Tree Service Trim,
remove, trash, hauimg and
clean up F r Est 377 9410
T R E E Stu m premov al
11 00 mch d-ameler
R e m Tr e e Service 339 4791
F R E E e s t i m a t e s . O eG ro a's
P a lm ,
tr e e
trim m ing 4
removal Hauling, lawn care 4
odd jobs 3710(47

Typewriter Repair
T Y P E W R I T E R Repairs t
tables to IBM Selectru. Gi
l o w Rates

B ill 32) 4917

�1JA—Evening H erald, Sanford, FI.

F rid a y , Oct. 1, &gt;982

FLORDA
IN BRIEF
Bill Filed To Raise
Drinking Age To 21
TALLAHASSEE (UPI) — A bill to raise Florida’s
legal drinking age from 19 to 21 already has drawn five
co-sponsors in the House and the lawmaker who in­
troduced it says she expects many more.
Hep. F ran Carlton, who prefiled the bill Thursday,
said hundreds of lives have been saved since Florida
raised its legal drinking from 18 to 19 two years ago.
Hep. Carlton noted that a majority of the House
favored her bill raising the drinking age to 21 in 1980
but it was amended to 19 in a compromise with the
Senate.

Pot Protected By Fence
TALI.AHASSEE lUF’I) — A recent federal ruling
has forced the Florida Supreme Court to reverse itself
and decide that police unlawfully seized a patch of
home-grown marijuana without a w arrant because it
was shielded by a fence.
A neighbor informed police of m arijuana allegedly
growing in William Rickard's Polk County backyard
and a police detective later said he could plainly see It
from about 50 feet away from an orange grove to the
rear of Rickard's trailer home.
Acting without a warrant, police later arrested
Rickard and seized the alleged m arijuana.
Rickard argued that the warrantless seizure was
illegal because he had demonstrated a “ reasonable
expectation of privacy" by erecting a plywood par­
tition between the plants and his neighbor. The state
Supreme Court decided in its new ruling that Rickard
was correct based on the recent federal case.

Amerasicm Kids To U.S.
BANGKOK, Thailand (U PI) — Eleven
Vietnamese children fathered by American
soldiers and civilians during the Vie tnam War
picked up their new passports today, enabling
them to fly to new homes in the Uniled States
this weekend.
It was the largest group of Amerasian
children ever to leave Vietnam. I ^ le r in the
day, they arrived in Bangkok tind U.S.
Embassy officials worked long horn's to cut
through red tape and issue their passports
today.
The children — 7 to 15 — were scheduled to
fly Saturday to their new homes in
Washington, Oregon, California, (leorgia,
Texas, Arizona and Washington, D.C. They
were scheduled to arrive in I&gt;os Angeles
Sunday.
Only 23 other Amerasian children have been
recognized by their fathers and allowed to
leave Vienam previously. The Vietnamese
government estimates there are 15,000 to
20,000 such children in the non-communist
country.

DOUBLE S A V IN G S O N REPLACEMENT
CENTRAL H E A TIN G &amp; C O O L IN G

The U.S. embassy in Bangkok said it had on
record the names of at least 77 more
Amerasian children who qualified for U.S.
citizenship and were eligible for immediate
entry into the United States.
The only father on hand to greet his child in
Bangkok was Gary Tanous, 42, of Camas,
Wash., who quit his job three years ago to
devote his efforts to finding his daughter in
Vietnam.

S

The startled newsman, Mike Botuia of
KTI.A-TV, jerked his hand away and the rat
fell back into the cage, where It could rot be
distinguished from the others.
Officials quarantined the rats at least 20

E « pues 10-16 67

Amazing! Different!

SAVE COOLING

" I t’s been a long, hard road, but it's been
worth it,” he said as he embraced his
daughter, Jean Marie, 15. “If I felt any better I
couldn't stand it."

ONESysttn
COOUtHEMS

and HEATING
DOLLARS ALL

Some of the children clutched faded
photographs of their fathers, all of whom have
recognized the children.

YEAR 'ROUND
With High Efficiency
Climate Control
For All Seasons

The children were to be accompanied by
nine relatives also going to the United States.
One family group of three children, a grand­
parent and two aunts was headed for San
Diego, Calif.

days to check for strange behavior.
"I shudder to think of a family adopting one
of these critters and having it attack a child."
The rats were turned over to the I xjs Angeles
County Health Department Sept. 16 when their
owner, Robert Ehman, 57, a retired security
guard, was arrested for creating a health
hazard by allowing the rodents to roam free
through his apartment.
Officials decided it would be nice if they
could sell the rats as pets for $2.13 each.

Q CASH
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G E 's Executive Heat Pump A ir Conditioner

your entire home
efficiently and dependably.

PLUS
UP TO

&gt;800

Dirty Rat Bites Reporter
IX)S ANGELES (UPI) — The county's
"adopt-a-rat" program — designed to find
homes for 53 rodents captured in a run down
apartm ent two weeks ago — has been stalled
because a reporter was bitten by one of the
potential pets.

5

GE*% Refund

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FOR MORE INFORMATION

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SA N FO R D ___________

Winn-Dixie Head Buried
JACKSONVILLE (UPI) — Funeral services were
Scheduled today for Bert L. Thomas, president of
Winn-Dixie Stores, who died Wednesday.
Thomas, 64, had been president and chief executive
officer of the Jacksonville-based grocery chain since
1965. Winn-Dixie, the sunbelt's largest supermarket
firm, operates 1,229 stores in 13 states and 11 stores in
the Bahama Islands.

W ORLD
IN BRIEF
Schmidt Is Replaced
W ith K o h l In G e r m a n y
BONN, West Germany (UPI) — The West German
parliament today ended Helmut Schmidt's 8-year
chancellorship, ousting him in a no-confidence vote
and electing Christian Democratic leader Helmut Kohl
the nation’s sixth chancellor.
The conservative Christian Democrats and the small
but pivotal Free Democrats rejected Schmidt despite a
savage attack by the outgoing chancellor In which he
disputed their “moral right” to end his minority Social
Democratic government without Immediately holding
new nationul elections.
The two parties promised to hold new elections
March 6.

Did U.S. Bomb Kill Marine?
United Press International
The explosive device that accidentally killed a U.S.
Marine and wounded three others — one seriously —at
the Beirut airport may have been a U.S.-made cluster
bomb, used by Israel in lebanon ugainst the wishes of
the Reagan administration.
U.S. Marine Cpl. David L Reagan, 21, of
Chesapeake, Va., died Thursday during surgery
aboard the USS Guam helicopter carrier and Pfc.
U slie R. Norris, 19, of Pasadena, Calif., was reported
in serious but stable condition. The two less-seriously
wounded men in the accident, which occurred while
they were clearing minefields, were identified as Cpl.
Anthony D. Noran, 21, of Macon, Ga., and Lance Cpl.
George Washington, 19, of Elgin, 111.
Israel used cluster bombs during its June 6 invasion
of Lebanon.

S o m

e

c a r ss

g r e a t m

CALENDAR
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1
Weldva AA, (no smoking), 8 p.m., Wekiva
Presbyterian Church, State Road 434 and Wekiva
Springs Road. Closed.
Fall Festival, 6 p.m., Sts. Peter &amp; Paul Church,
Howell Branch Road, Goldenrod. International foods,
rides, arts and crafts, entertainment.
South Seminole Family AA, (no smoking), 8 p.m.,
open discussion, Community United Methodist Church,
Casselberry.
Seminole AA^ p.m., open discussion, 891 Lake
Minnie Drive, (Crossroads), Sanford.
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 2
DeBary Fair, beginning at 10 a.m., DeBary Chamber
of Commerce, Highway 17-92. Exhibits, games and
food. Prizes.
Docent training class, 9 a.m. to 2 p.m., Central
Florida Zoo, Highway 17-92 northwest of Sanford for 7
consecutive Saturdays. Volunteers must be at least 16
years old.
Rebos and Live Oak AA, 10:30 a.m., open discussion;
8:30 p.m., open, 220 Uv« Oak Center, Casselberry.
Musical concert featuring Larry Brooks of Tampa,
7:30 p.m., New Salem Primitive Baptist Church, 1500
W. 12th St., Sanford. Open to public.
Sanford AA Women's Group, 2 p.m., 1201 W. First

S o

d o s o m

e

m v e yj

o u

ile a g e .
r e f r ig e r a t o r s .

Here’s how to select one that does:

Like cars, not all refrigerators are created equal. Some are more
energy-efficient than others.
So look for this symbol at participating dealers. It’s your
assurance that a refrigerator, freezer or room air conditioner
has met FPCs rigid standards for energy efficiency. Fbr higher
value and lower eneigy costs. All the way down the road.
And while you’re there ask for an FPL Guide to EnergyEfficient Refrigerators and FVeezers or an FPL Guide to EnergyEfficient Room Air Conditioners.(Obtain a list of participating
dealers by calling the Watt-Wise Line, weekdays only 9-5 at
1-800-432-6563.)
Helping you buy energy-efficient appliances is another way

®5ICRGY-

€FFICf€NT
/s..

we’re working hard a t being the kind o f power company you want.

St., Sanford.
Junior Miss Pageant, 8 p.m., Lake Mary High
School.
Seminole County 4-H Achievement Banquet, 7:30
p.m., Agri-Center auditorium.

I
.- i

« .x

~ * '-

—A -

U C k t

/
w &lt; 4 &gt; &lt;♦*

�E v e n in g Ilcn tk J

LEISURE
Complete Week's TV Listings

Sanford, Florida — Friday, October 1, l t t l

Artis “ F a t” Hardy of Sanford enjoys barbecuing, even for upwards to 70 people. Hardy fires up one of his barbecue pits at least twice a week.

1 M ans G u id e To G ourm et Barbecuing
By JOE HOEDDINGHAUS
Herald Newt Editor
Everybody can do it. It's that easy.
All you need is a Uttle wood or charcoal, a grill and your
favorite m eat.
And the chances of failure are alm ost n i l .
Open pit cooking is, for those who have learned to nuke
the most o f it, a simple delight.
But, like everything else, some do not have the knack.
And others dislike the time required or the m ess that can

be Involved.
Some have come to resort to gas-fed pits to bypass the
grim e that has been associated with open pit cooking.
Others have resorted to cooking food in a stove for a while
to reduce the time spent grilling the food over an open fire.
Those, however, are not the ways of a true connoisseur
barbccuer.
Take “Fat" Hardy of 718 WlUow Ave., Sanford. He’s
recognized as a master.
Artis "Fat” Hardy derives personal satisfaction from

barbecuing for his family........or for 60-70 people.
He barbecues regularly and tuts attained some notoriety
for tils culinary expertise. He is Invited at least once a
week by a large group, such as a chtfrch organization, to
barbecue a special meal for them.
Hardy's popularity may be due to his steadfast refusal
to compromise. But he has not remained stuck in his
ways.
For those wishing to benefit from Hardy’s vast exSee BARBECUING, Page 3

Cool cougar

C h in a a n d tv

B e a u t y a n d b r a in s

Not too long ago, John Cougar was
ju st a n o th er a v e ra g e guy in
Bloomington, Ind. Now, h e ’s a major
rock star. But he says he tries to keep
life sim ple, avoiding life in the fast
lane. P a g e 2.

Tbe Chinese are fast entering the
electronic age and they’re being led
in part by television. The tube is
enjoying the sa m e success in China
that it did in the U.S. in the 1950s.
Page 7.

Beauty and brains, if you hadn’t
noticed, are not mutually exclusive.
Take Celeste Yarnall, for example.
Once a Hollywood starlet, she now
runs her own real estate office in
L.A. P age 8.

�J — Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Friday, Oct. 1, IMJ

I

Stallone Dedicated 'Rocky To Manager
DKAIt DICK: My fam ily and I have seen all three
“ Rocky" films and we have a question about the last two.
At the end of both, the films are dedicated to a Jane
Oliver. Is this J a n e Oliver, the singer, or som eone else?
Why are the film s d e d lra te d to her? MRS. J.I). J ., Beverly
Shores, Ind.
No, it's not Ja n e O liver, the singer. It’s another Jane
Oliver, a lady who w as Sylvester Stallone’s m anager. She
died while he w as film ing "F IST ," and it w as a blow to
him , and he didicated the two "R ockys" to her out of
respect to her m em ory.
DF.AR DICK: Could you please tell me w hat the nam e of
the hospital Is th a t’s shown on “ General H ospital" each
day? Also, w here Is the hospital, and w here Is the show
taped? GENERAL HOSPITAL FAN, L ethbridge, Alberta,
Canada
T hat's USC County M edical Center, in l/&gt;s Angeles, and
the show is taped at the old Columbia studio in Hollywood.
DEAR DICK: I know Dinah Shore was m arried to
George M ontgomery. Did she have any children and, if so,
where arc they now? D.S. Albuquerque, N.M.
Mr. and Mrs. M ontgom ery have two children. Melissa,
known to one und all a s Missy, is a m arried lady now. And
John is presently a luw school student.
DEAR DICK: In a 1979 TV movie, based on B arbara
C artland's novel, called "T h e Flame Is L ove," what was
the name of the c h a ra c te r played by Linda P u rl? L,M.,
Blytheville, Ark.
Linda played a p e a rl nam ed Vada.
DKAIt DICK: I think the theme music to “ D ynasty" Is
beautiful. As a tru m p e t player, I would like to get my
hands on the m usic. Can you tell me Its nam e and whether
it's available In sheet m usic? F.S., Trenton, N .J.
You'll have to v am p until it’s ready. The piece has no
nam e — it’s just the “ D ynasty" theme — an d it is not yet

friendly with a black baseball player, which m ay or may
not have been tru e, but certainly no m arriage.
DEAR DICK: We see a man named H arvey Best on
"T he Dukes of H nzzard." When he was a young boy, did
he live in Owen, W’ls., with his m other? We knew n
youngster there who moved away so we don't know what
happened to him ILN., Marshfield, Wis.
Wrong person. The Best on “ Dukes” is Jam es, not
Harvey, and, anyhow, our Best spent his boyhood in
Kentucky and Indiana.

A sk Dick
Kleiner
available. For your inform ation, it was written by Bill
Conti.
DEAR DICK: I was In California in April 1970. They
w ere film ing a movie on Broadway, starring Jason
Ilobards and Katharine Ross. Could you please tell me the
nam e of the movie, and what happened to it? Please tell
m e the story line and what y ear it cam e out. Z.B.,
P leasanton, Kan.
It w as called "Fools," and it cam e and went very
quickly, because it w asn't very good.
DEAR DICK: Please tell me what you can about the
movie “ The Third M an." Did M ichael Rennie and Claude
Rains s ta r in it? Please tell m e the story line and what
y ear it cam e out. A.B., Pleasanton, Kan.
“ The Third M an," a great one, w as about an A m erican
w riter who went back to V ienna, after World War II, to
find an old friend named H a rry Lime. The 1949 movie
sta rre d Joseph Cottcn, Trevor Howard and Orson Welles.
M ichael Rennie played H arry Lim e in the 1959 TV series
based on the movie, which is how you associate his nam e
with it.
DEAR DICK: Has Doris Day ever been m arried to a
black m an? A friend and I have a bet on this. B.S., Quincy,
III.
No. F o r a tim e, there w ere rum ors about her being

DEAR DICK: E ver since I saw "On Golden Pond" I’ve
been bugged by the m em ory of the sam e movie seen
many, m any y ears ago. I even seem to rem em ber
Gregory Peck in It, but I m ay be m istaken. I’m guessing
that Ingrid B ergm an was in it, too, but I'm probably
wrong. The m ain thing is I’m positive I’ve seen the movie
before. Can you confirm my memory? S.R., E ast Wind­
sor, N.J.
No, I don’t think so. Of course, supposedly there is no
new plot in this world and everything is m erely a new
twist on an old them e. But this particular story is based on
a play by E rn est Thompson that was only w ritten a few
years ago. So, if you saw something y ears ago, it may
have had the sam e general theme, but it w as certainly not
the identical story or characters.
DEAR DICK: Was there or was there not a fourth
brother nam ed Eugene on “ The Big V alley"? Rum or has
it that the B arkley fam ily sent him aw ay to college
throughout the entire scries. If there was, who played the
role and In how m any episodes did he app ear? II.W.,
Bloomington, Ind.
Yes, kid brother Eugene — played by C harles Briles —
did appear in a few episodes early on. But he soon
vanished.

John Cougar Is A Simple Rock Star
HOLLYWOOD (N E A )Not all rock sta rs dye their
h a ir purple and bite the
heads off porcupines bet­
ween num bers. There are a
few who a re normal folks,
give or take u quirk.
On such is billed as John
Cougar—his name being one
of
the
aforem entioned
quirks. Really, he's plain old
John M ellencam p from
Bloomington, Ind.—"me and
Hoagy Carmichael are the
only people who came from
Bloomington"—and he still
lives back home in Indiana,
despite his fame and fortune.
“I stay home and try to
be normal," says Cougar. "I
try to stay away from the
rock ‘n roll life style."
He separates his music­
making from the rest of his
life. They are two distinct
parts of his world. He enjoys
them both, but they don't
mix.
"There is a time to work,"
he says, “and a time to live."
H is sin gin g and per­
forming constitute his job.
And he does his job well, but
that's all it is—a job. It is not
to be confused with his life.
He says he grew up with a
song on his Ups-but never
really thought that he could
make a living that way. To
understand that, he says,
you have to understand how
a kid from Bloomington,
Ind., would look at the world
of entertainment stars.
"When I was a kid," he

W illiams— is untrained. And
so 1 didn't train , eith er."
The one thing he may
study, how ever, is the
business end of the music
industry. He says there may
come a day when he decides
he doesn’t want to sing
anymore, but he thinks on
that day he'll simply segue
into the behind-the-scenes
area of music. And he wants
to be trained for that day.

Cougar’s tra d e m a rk is the
earthy, everyinan simplicity
of his lyrics. As he puts it, "I
write songs about the real
insignificant p a rts of life,
like ju st w alking around."
"To say that I'm a writer,’’
he sa y s “ would be
pretentious. I really don’t
have anything much to say."
And, when he performs, he
follow s through on that
m essa g e,
or
lack
of
message.

"I lost 913,000 last week,"
Cougar says. "That was
"In person," he says, "I
because it costs m e so much want my audience to have a
says, “ I thought movie stars
to stage my show on the good time and go home as
and record stars were from
road. But off the record I've tired a s I am . I run around
outer space. I grew up in a
got going for m e now, I'd and dance and laugh and
town that was like the town
probably not have to work cuss ’em . My biggest fear is
in ‘Last Picture Show.' My
again— if I'm smart. And that some day I’U get thrown
idols when I was growing up
I'm planning to be sm art.” in jail for cussing on stage."
were the high school football
stars. I couldn’t Identify with
That record is his Riva
So he is a singer-performer
the rock stars—they had album, "American Fool," without delusions of gran­
nothing to do with us."
and the hit singles, "Hurts So deur, which is a distinct
He sang with a soul band Good" and “ Jack and novelty act in show biz these
when he was a teen-ager, but Diane." He's had hit records days.
he says that was "basically b e f o r e —s i n g l e s a n d
to get girls." He went on and album s—but nothing to
“I’m a sim ple guy for
g o t a degree in co m ­ approach the magnitude of simple people,” says John
munications from Vincennes these.
Cougar.
University.
"I never studied m usic,"
he says, "because I've got a
theory— a guy who has a
degree In something can't do
it. A guy who has a degree in
literature can’t write a book.
Education has stifled him.
But the uneducated know no
bounds. My favorite singers
The first movie to use scent was "Behind the Great Wall,"
are untrained. My favorite
a travelogue of modern China shown in December, 1959.
playwright-Tennessee
The scent was forced through ceiling vents in tha theater.

JOHNCOUGAR

••i

&lt;

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r ,.

�Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

TELEVISION

..Barbecuing

O ctober 1 thru 7
Cable Ch.

Continued From P ag e 1

Cable Ch.

CD O
©O
© e

(A B C ) Orlando
(C B S ) Orlando
(N B C ) Daytona Beach
Orlando

0 (35)
® ( 17)
( 10) ©

Independent
Orlando
independent
Atlanta. Ga.
Orlando Public
Broadcasting System

In addition to the channels listed, cablevition subscribers may tun* in to independent channel 44.
St. Petersburg, by tuning to channel 1; tuning to channel 1), which carries sports and the Christian
Broadcasting Network (C B N ).

S p e c ia ls
SATURDAY
EVENING

6:00
£D ( 10) PLIMPTONI The Man On
The Flying Trapeze George Plimp­
ton decides the circus is the world
to eiplore

SUNDAY

MONDAY
AFTERNOON

2:30

9:00

3:30
t c I 10) THE GOLDEN AGE OF
TELEVISION A Doll s House A
woman (Julie Harris) asserts her
own identity alter confronting her
husband s (Christopher Plummer)
immorality in a leleplay based on
the play by Henrik Ibsen
EVENING

8:00
O
J BOB HOPE'S SPOOF OF
THE NEW TV 8 EASON Boo Hope
previews the new television season
with guest stars Elizabeth Taylor.
Tom Selleck. Brooke Shields. Linda
Evans and Ricky Schroder

S O BARE ESSENCE A spunky,
young girl develops a successful
perfume business to help bring a
faltering conglomerate back to
financial stability. Genie Francis,
Bruce Boiieitner. Linda Evans and
Lee Grant star (Part 1)

9:30
(D (10) PURSUIT OF THE MAR­
V E LO U S Host George Melly
reviews the intellectual, historical
and creative factors which resulted
in the surrealist movement

'4

THE

TO N IG H T

SHOW

WEDNESDAY
AFTERNOON
ff)
( 10)
TH E
D A N C IN G
PRINCESSES Jim Dale and princi­
pal dancers (torn London s Royal
Ballet perform in this musical fanta­
sy adapted Irom a (airy tale by the
Brothers Grimm (R)

9:00
Oh. Boy!

10:00
{£

( 10) WORLD SPECIAL

The

Killing Ol Sadat Why Was Cairo
Calm? On the hist anniversary ol
Egyptian President Anwar Sadat s
assassination, the leader s rise to
world acclaim and his concurrent
isolation horn his own countrymen
are eiammed

THURSDAY
AFTERNOON

12:00
t £ | 101 NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC
SPECIAL Polar Bear Alert The
great white polar bear and a Mani­
toba town s efforts to co omst with
them am the subiects of a docu­
mentary hosted by E G Marshall
and narrated by Jason Robards (R|

Q

2:30

AFTERNOON
4 SPECIAL TREAT

scenes horn Francis Ford C o p p o ­
la s new movie about the author
and interviews with his longtime
companion Lillian Heilman

9:00
S O BARE ESSENCE A spunky
young girl develops a successful
perfume business to help bring a
faltering conglomerate back to
financial stability, Genie Francis.
Bruce Boaleitner. Linda Evans and
Lee Grant star (Part 2)

EVENING

4:00
Q

8:00
{ 10) NATIONAL GEOORAPHIC
SPECIAL Polar Bear Alert" The
great white polar bear and a Mani­
toba town’s efforts to co-eust with
them are the subjects ot a docu­
mentary hosted by E G Marshall
and narrated by Jason Robards |R|

TUESDAY

9:00
Q

Babies! Si&gt; young boys Irom New
York take an unusual course in
mlant care
EVENING

U

tD ( 10) TH E RIVER IN THE
DESERT A film about the Colorado
Rtver examines the water crisis in
the Southwest and the attitudes
and historical forces which have
precipitated it
EVENING

AFTERNOON

f fl 110) THE CASE OF DASHIELL
HAM M ETT A him portrait ot Samu­
el Dashiell Hammett Includes

1:00
t£&gt; I 101 LEAGUE OF WOMEN
V O TER 3
C O N G R E S S IO N A L
DEBATES Prominent members ot
both the House and Senate debate
the issues facing voters in the
November elections

2:30
€D (1 0 ) BISHOP LUER8 SWING
CHOIR CONTEST The finals of the
8th annual competition for high
school swing choirs are highlighted

S p o rts O n T h e A i r
SUNDAY

SATURDAY

MORNING

AFTERNOON

10:00

12:00

&lt;&gt; O CEN TR AL FLORIDA F O O TBALL HtQ HUO H TB

1 / o NCAA FOO TBALL

1:00
a

11:30

4 W R ES T LIN G

O

2:00
0 4 BASEBALL Regional cover­
age ol Milwaukee Brewer* al Bellimore Orioles or another game to be
announced

3:30

* 5:35

M OTORW EEK

ILLUS­

6:05

11:20
i ) O SPORTS SUNDAY

O 4 1 NFL FOOTBALL Tha regu­
larly scheduled games may be pre­
empted ll the NFL owner / player
dispute remains unresolved, with
alternate programming scheduled
on a week-lo-weak basis
I J I O N F L FOOTBALL Minnesota
Vikings at Chicago Bears (Tanta-

trve)

THURSDAY
AFTERNOON

2:59

TUESDAY
EVENING

8:00
i/ ' O
B A S E B A LL American
League playott gams 1

WEDNESDAY

i?
O
B A S E B A L L National
League playott game 2 (II Atlanta it
NL West winner, then game will be
played at • 00 p m EOT)
EVENING

7:59
•7
O
B A S E B A L L N ational
League playott game 2 (It Atlanta fa
NL Waal winner)

AFTERNOON

FRIDAY

3:00

AFTERNOON

l£ ) O
B A S E B A LL Am arlcan
League playott gam# 2 (if Atlanta Is
NL West winner, then game will be
NL playott game 1)
EVENING

i/J O
B A S E B A L L Am erican
laegue playott game 3
EVENING

8:00
UD O
B A S E B A L L N ational
League playott game t (It Atlanta Is

3:00

8:00
t7l O
BASEBALL
League playott game 3

National

3:35

i ) l ( 17) TH IS WEEK IN BASEBALL

7:55
FOOTBALL

6:05
1)1 (1 7 ) NCAA FO O TBALL

L U O BARRYFARM R

1:00

lU O S A S E B A L L

i l l (1 7 ) W R CSTUNQ

11:30

«&gt; NFL S2

2:00

EVENING

REDMAN

12:30

NL West wmnar, then gama will be
AL playott game 2)

7:05
12 (1 7 ) WRESTLING

i v q n f l to d a y

I ; o W tOf W ORLD O F SPORTS
Scheduled live coverage ol the
Trevor Berblck / Renaido Snipes
10-round heavyweight bout (from
Atlantic City. N.J ). coverage of the
Women's Masters Surfing Cham­
pionship (from Oahu. Hawaii)

01 (1 7 )
REPORT

12:00
JO H N MCKAY

17 o CHARLIE PELL

5:00

•It (1 7 )
TRATED

EVENING

AFTERNOON

O

i) O N C A A fo o tb a ll

4 BOBBY BOWDEN

1) 0

perience, the old ways as the best ways.
For ex am p le, Hardy uses a n a tu ra l fire built with
charcoal and often oak chips. Occasionally, he uses
hickory chips, but usually oak. He say s water-soaked oak
chips a re good in the fire because they help m ake a hotter
fire and b ecau se they smoke up m ore, adding to the flavor
of the m eat.
Hardy also recom m ends barbecue enthusiasts develop
their own sty le and that they avoid cutting corners.
He’d n ev er think of pre-cooking m eat in an oven for .10
minutes o r so to reduce the tim e over an open pit.
"I can te ll w hen I go to a re sta u ra n t when they don’t
cook the food on an open fire," H ardy clainus. He said the
flavor is affected.
He also recom m ends closed-lid barbecuing.
"It adds to the flavor," he points out.
And the conscientious barbecuer should use a sauce to
frequently b a ste the meat.
"it keeps the juices in anti keeps the m eat or fish from
drying o u t," he explains.
Hardy should know, lie ’s been cooking since he was 8
and barbecuing utmost us long.
Hardy’s fa th e r died when he w as a boy and he helped his
mother w ith the chores. At a young age, he began wat­
ching his m o th e r cooking meals for th e fam ily. He got the
job of helping mom in the kitchen because he was the
oldest.
And barbecuing "just cam e alo n g " with that.
Today, H ard y would rather barbecue a m eal than cook
one in the kitchen.
"1 don’t know why; 1 just like it b e tte r," he says.
Hardy, 51, is not your average b arb ecu er.
He has th re e portable 50-gallon half-drum barbecue pits
which he u ses for catering large groups.
He b ecam e known in the area som e tim e ago because of
the occasional m eals he prepared for needy youngsters.
And he d islikes store-bought sauces. H ardy, although a
traditionalist w hen it comes to open pit barbecuing, does
experim ent. It took him several y e a rs of trial and error
before he developed his popular F a t H ardy’s Natural
Taste B arbecue Sauce.
And, he claim s, it has become his se c re t to success.
He reco m m en d s backyard b arb e c u e rs do the same —
e x p e rim e n t w ith v in eg ar, b u tte r an d w h atev er
ingredients they prefer until just the right tasting mix is
found.
The p ro p er sauce is very im portant to good barbecuing,
Hardy em phasizes. First, the p roper sauce spices up the
desired flavor and second it helps to lock in the flavorful
juices of the m e a t or fish.

O fThe W e e k

8TARRING JO HNNY CAR80N:
?0TH ANNIVERSARY Johnny Carson celebrates his 20th year as host
ol the popular late-night show with
segments from memorable past
shows and clips ot early TV appear­
ances by Richard Pryor. David
Brenner and many others

8:00
fD | 10| APPOINTM ENT WITH
OESTINY Cortez And Monlezuma The Conquest Ot An Empire
lorne Greene narrates the story ot
the tatelul meeting between Span­
ish conquistador and Artec king,
which ultimately led to the destruc­
tion ol a civilization

Frid a y, Oct. 1 ,198J-3

4:00
O NFL FOOTBALL New York
Giants at Dallas Cowboys (Tentslive)

4:05
ill
(1 7 )
B A S IB A L L Atlanta
Braves at San Diego Padres

Am erica's f in t p a rkin g matar wai tha P a rk -O Mater, installed in O klahom a C ity . O klahom a
on J u ly 16, 1935. T h a charge wai five c e n t).

Matthew Star (Peter Barton) befriends a
student genius (Margaret Dirolf) who has
invented a new — exploding — paint on “ The
Powers of Matthew Star," to air Friday, Oct. 8
on

�4— Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Friday, Oct. 1, 1982

FRIDAY

October 1

EVENING

9 =9

■» M i O &gt; O NEWS
(3 5 ) CHARLIE'S A NOELS
(1 0 ) ART OF BEING HUMAN

6:05
IT (1 7 1 CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS

C J 4 ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT

iS O TIC TA C DOUGH
7
FAMILY FEUO
HI (3 5 ) BARNEY MILLER
( D f lO l DICK CAVETT Ouest
author Eudora Welty (R)

o

7:35
iU (1 7 ) ANOY QRIFFITH

6:30
NBC NEWS
o CBS NEWS
' OTl'ABC NEWS □
tf)iTo0 ) ART OF BEING HUMAN

0:00

f j4

6:35
IT ( 17) BOB NEWHART

7:00
O 4 TH EM U P P ETS
5 o P M. MAGAZINE A visit with
Brenda Starr" comic strip creator
Dale Messick. a Los Angeles caba­
ret lor child performers only
7 O JOKER'S WILD
it ( 3 5 ) THE JEFFERSONS
fD (1 0 ) MACNEIL / LEHRER
REPORT

7:05

IT (1 7 ) WINNERS

fcfjRoyd Theatres B

4 GLEN CAMPBELL
■5 O THE DUKES OF HAZZARD
Boss Hogg sells a worthless piece
01 gold to a gullible young couple
i/
o
W ORLD'S G REATEST
E S C A P E A R TIS T Adventurous
Chris Shayland challenges the leg­
end ol Houdini with an array ol
seemingly Impossible escape
attempts
It (3 5 ) THE ROCKFORD FILES
CD 110) WASHINGTON WEEK IN
REVIEW
0

8:05
IT (1 7 ) MOVIE
"The Amazing
Spider-Man" (1977) Nicholas Ham­
mond. David While The arachnoid
superhero attempts to thwart an
eitortion plot endangering the lives
ot 10 world leaders

8:30

Hwy t r *j x n i v n

^^U SH O W S
| ( PLAZA I 1

l{ PLAZA 11

T 41 t i l l

O
4 LAVERNE 4 SHIRLEY A
COMPANY
CD I 10) WALL STREET WEEK
"Will The Bull Roar?" Guest Stan
Weinstein, editor and publisher ol
the Professional Tape Reader

9:00
O
4 KNIGHT RIDER (Premiere)
Michael Knight uncovers a plot by
high ranking military personnel lo
sell nuclear weapons lo terrorists
5 O DALLAS (Season Premiere)
J R is the locus ol everyone s wrath
at Southlork when he is blamed lor
driving Chit to suicide, and Lucy
waits lor the results ol her prognan-

)

EX

/ O B ATTLE OF THE NETWORK
3TAR S Twenty-tour stars from
ABC. CBS and NBC display their
athletic prowess and endurance In
this annual competition hosted by
Howard Cosell and Debbie Allen
It (3 5 ) OUNSMOKE
CD (1 0 ) EVENING A T POPS The
great \atl pianist Oscar Peterson
performs with the Boston Pops
conducted by John Williams (R)

10:00
t)

4

REM INGTON

STEELE

(Premiere) Private investigator
Laura Holt is hired to protact a tortune in fewels from a handful of
people, including a handsome, mys­
terious stranger
3 O
FALCON CRE8T (Season
Premiere) Angie laces a new rival In
her lata a*-husband s illegitimate
son as she schemes to regain full
power ot Fatcon Crest
it (3 5 ) INDEPENDENT NETWORK

NEWS
CD &lt; 10) HARO CHOICES

Death
And Dying" An eiploration ol the
growing interest In patients' rights
and medical ethics is presented |R)

10:05
IT
( 17)
B A S E B A LL Atlanta
Braves at San Diego Padres

RITZ THEATRE :
MMk'OWM M4»0«t

&gt;*l »AAS»Ol a 4(1

action

&lt;,c r 'O*

DO UBLE FEA TU R ES
B L IN D R A O E
AND
D R .B L A C K
M R . H Y D E (R )
S H O W T IM E 7:10
M I O N I T E SHOW
C IN D E R A L L A 7000 (R )

11:30
fc) 4 TONIGHT Guest host Mar­
tin Mull Guests Margot Kidder.
Anthony Newtey

S o MORE REAL PEOPLE
i Q ABC NEWS NIGHTLINE
it (3 5 1STREETS OF SAN FRAN­
CISCO
5 O
MOVIE "T h e Getaway
( 1 9 7 2 ) S te v e M c Q u e e n ,
All
MacGraw
&gt; U MOVIE
Suspicion" (1941)
Cary Grant. Joan Fontaine Direct­
ed by Allied Hitchcock

12:30
0
4 LATE NIGHT WITH 0AV1D
LETTERM AN Featured comedian
nobert Klein, a bar mitzvah recep­
tion. stupid pet tricks, actor Divine.
1 sraine Newman

it (3 5 ) WANTED: DEAD OR ALIVE

1:20
i l l ( 17) NEWS

T*

2:00

e d

VISION and FASHION
Need Not Be Ixpentive
7

J

f e )4

NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT

17 O

NEWS

youwtfi

ZT Ts A Ketu OuKetkl
H I T E O LA S S L E N S E S
IN C L U D E S F R A M E

1:50
IT ( 1 7 ) MOVIE "Whatever Happened To Baby Jane?" (1962) Bette
Davis. Joan Crawford

S IN O L E
V IS IO N

2:10

o MOVIE
Call II A Day"
(1937) Okvia de Havrtand. Ian Hunt­
er

3:00
f ) 4 ENTERTAINMENT TONKJHT

3:30
O

5:30
V o

TO BE ANNOUNCED

5:35

4:00
Q

4 NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT

IT ( 17) MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE

Q
4
LE G EN DA RY
SPRINO T O U F E
) O L A W A ND Y O U
7 O DR. SNU QO LE S

IT ( 17) NEWS

6:30
3 O

SPECTRUM
7 O SPACE KIDETTE8

7:00

7:05
IT (17) BETWEEN THE LINES

7:30
Q 4 FLASH G O R D O N
i? O TH IR TY MIN UTE S
7 O LAVERNE A SHIRLEY

7:35

•

(ACROSS FKOM SAMBO’S)
(NEXTTOAOOliS)

M m . Thee F rl.
9 a .rn .-B p .in .
C I o m O W N . alter twee at Ip .

Saturday
ta.m.-l p.m

8:00
a
4 T H E FL I N T S T O N E FU NNIES
s O SP EE D BUG G Y
7 O SUPERFRIENDS

11 (3 5 ) SUPERMAN
€ D ( 10) THIS OLD HOUSE

8:05

2:00
Q

4 BASEBALL Regional cover­
age ol Milwaukee Brewers at Balti­
more Orioles or another game to be
announced
11 (35) MOVIE
‘ Macho Cal­
lahan' (1970) David Janssen. Jean
Seberg A woman otters a huge
bounty lor the capture ol the man
who raped her and killed her hus­
band
CD (10) IT'S EVERYBODY'S BUSI­
NESS
CD (10) r r s EVERYBODY'S BUSI­
NESS
12 117) MOVIE
The Third Day
(1965) George Peppard. Elizabeth
Ashley An amnesiac
accused by
his wile and cousin ol murdering a
woman and her child

3:00
CD 11 0 )PRESENTE

0:30
Q

4 THE SHIRT TALES

3 O 8YLVE3TER A TW EETY /
DAFFY A SPEEDY
7 O PAC-MAN / LITTLE RAS­
CALS / RICHIE RICH
n ( 35) GRAND PRIX ALL-STAR
SHOW
ID ( 10) QUILTING

3:30

O

NCAA FOOTBALL
CD ( 10) TONY BROWN'S JOUR­
Black
N AL " C o n g i e s s i o n a l
Caucus Yes Or N o ?" Tony Brown
analyzes the merits ol a proposal by
the Congressional Black Caucus tor
a national self-help movement |R)

3:45

8:35

/ O AMATEUR BOXJNG

IT ( 17) TH A T OIRL

0
III

4 8MURFS
(351 HERALD OF TRUTH
ED (10) FLORIDA HOME GROWN

9:30
iV O
BUGS BUNNY / ROAD
RUNNER
17 0 PAC-MAN
III ( 35) UFE BEGINS A T C AL­
VARY
CD ( 10) FRENCH CHEF

10:00
1 7 O MORK A MINOY / LAVERNE
4 SHIRLEY
CD (10) MAGIC OF OIL PAINTING

4:00

10:30

O 4 EMERGENCY
&lt;7 O WIOE WORLD OF 8PORT8
Scheduled live coverage ol the
Trevor Berbick / Renaldo Snipe*
10-round heavyweight bout (from
Atlantic City. N J ). coverage ol the
Women* Master* Surfing Cham­
pionship (from Oahu. Hawaii)
in (35) DANIEL BOONE
CD (10) W ASHINGTON WEEK IN
REVIEW
5:05
HT (17) RAT PATROL

THE GARY

COLEMAN

5:35
ILLUS­

7 O

■3 Q MEATBALLS A SP AG H ETTI
ill (3 5 1A T THE MOVIES
CD (10) AMERICAN G OVER N­
MENT

O 4 DAN C SFIVER
&lt;V Q POPCY8 A OLIVE
17 O NCAA FOOTBALL
HI ( 35) M O V * "Th# Wyoming
KM" (1947) Dannie Morgan, Jane
Wyman A gambler marriee an out­
law'« arte after he captures the
bedman

0(1 0 )1

&lt; ll'(3 5 )W ILD . WILD WEST
CD ( 10) APPOINTMENT WITH
DESTINY "Cortez And Montezu­
ma The Conquest Ol An Empire
Lome Greene narrates the story ol
Ihe latelul meeting between Span­
ish conquistador and Aztec king,
which ultimately led lo the destruc­
tion ol a civilization

8:05
IT (17) NCAA FOOTBALL

O

6:30
14

SILVER 8 POO NS Edward

hires the menacing Mr T as
Ricky's personal bodyguard when
his son returns from his first day at
school with a black eye

9:00
4 GIMME A BREAK (Season
Premiere) The telephone company
Imds itself in big trouble when it
disconnects Nell's phone

3 O
MISS FLORIDA U S A
PAGEANT
1 7 &lt;O LOVE B O A T (Season Prem­
iere) Captain Stubmg. his crew and
passengers sail to the eternal city ol
nome, glorious Capri, and Venice
TJ

It (35) OUNSMOKE
CD (10) JA N E QOOOALL AND THE
WORLD OF ANIMAL BEHAVIOR

9:30

O

4
LOVE. SIDNEY (Season
Premiere) Sidney and Laurie dis­
cover that the woman claming to
tie Sidney's lust babysitter is realty
a charming con artist

10:00

O

&lt;11 (35) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
NEWS
fD ( 10) NO. HONESTLYI

10:30
I 3 I O M*A*8*H
in (351 A T TH E MOVIES
CD (10) DAVE ALLEN A T LARGE

11:00
0 '4 M 3 l0 '7 i0 N E W 8
III ( 35) BENNY HILL
0 ( 10) FALL ANO RISE OF REGI­
NALD PERRIN
92 117) NEWS

11:30
O ' 4 1 SATUR DAY NIGHT LIVE
Host Lou Gossett Jr. Guests Th*
Slave Miller Band
1 3 * 0 BARRY FARBCR
1 7 O MOVIE "Our Very Own"
(1950) Ann Bfyth. Farley Glanger
ill ( 3 5 ) M AD A M FS P LA C E

EVENING

IV O GILUQAN'S PLANET
KiOeWORLD
M ( 35) THREE STO OG ES
CD i 10) PORTRAITS IN P A S TE L8

M OTORW EEK

6:00
f ) ' 4 NEWS
&lt;ll (3 5 ) KUNQ FU
CD 110) PUM PTONI "The Man On
Th* Flying Trapeze" George Plimp­
ton decides th* circus is th* world
toesplore

6:05

12:05
92 ( 1 7 )
M OVIE
Goodbye.
Columbus'' (1969) Richard B*n|amm. All MacGraw

12:30
13 O
MOVIE
"Ruby" (1977)
Piper Laurie. Stuart Whitman
91 ( 35) MOVIE "The Black Cas­
tle" (1933) Richard Green*. Boris
Kartell

IT (17) WRESTLING

6:30
0 4 NBC NEWS
7 O T O BE ANNOUNCED

1:00

O

4 LAUGH TRAX

0

4 NEWS

2:00

7:00
O 4 H E R TS RICHARD
i3 O H E E H A W
i7 O MEMORIES WITH LAW­
RENCE WELK
Hi (351 THE JEFFERSONS
0 (10) U N O E R M A WORLD OF
JACQUES C O U STEAU

2:30
t7 O N E W S

2:40
91 ( 17) M O V * "Cry. Th* Beloved
Country" (1951) Canada La*. SidneyPodier.

7:30
0 &gt;4 FLORKM'S W ATCHING
in (35) BARNEY MILLER

3:00
t/ l O

M O V * -Th e Outcasts 0 (
Pofcar Flat" (1932) Arm* Bailer.
Dale Robertson.

7:55
01

STROKES

(Season Premiere) Arnold is deter
mined to beat Willis at his own
game and dethrone him as local
video game champion
(3 1 O W A L T DISNEY "The Apple
Dumpling Gang Rides Again" A pan
ol Western outlaws trying to walk
the strait and narrow are mistaken
lor bank robbers. Tim Conway and
DooKnolts star (Pari 2)
(71 O T J . HOOKER Hooker goes
alter a gang ol supermarket
robbers in order lo clear an old rac­
ing buddy

11:05

5:30
CD (10) WALL STREET WEEK
"Will The Bull Roar?" Guest Sian
Wemsletn, editor and publisher ol
the Professional Tap* Reader
IT (17)
TRATED

DIFFERENT

comes out ot retirement when his
private-eye son is injected with a
deadly virus while trying lo protect
an eccentric scientist

it (3 5 ) INCREDIBLE HULK
CD (10) PAPER CHASE

10:05
III ( 17) MOVIE
-King Richard
And The Crusaders" (1954) Ret
Harriion. Virginia Mayo The adven­
ture* ol Richard the Lionhearted
during the light lor the Holy Land
are portrayed

4

4 TH E DEVLIN CONNECTION
(Premiere) A former detective

5:00

9:05
IT ( 1 7 1CIVILISATION

O
4
SHOW

USA

Vs Poland"

9:00

Q

o

2:30

12 ( 17) ROMPER ROOM

12:00

Americans drink it only
one-tenth of the amount
of coffee that sett drunk
each year.

5 O
MOVIE
"Sanctuary Ol
Fear" (1979) Barnard Hughes. Kay
Lent A New York City priest
belnen ds an aspi ring young
actress, who it determined to keep
working in spile ol the eerie, nervewracking events happening to her

IT 117) VEGETABLE SOUP

AFTERNOON

2S44 $. FRENCH A V E . (17-92)

CD (10) FAMILY PORTRAIT

CD (10) FAMILY PORTRAIT

O ' * OtlLIOAN'8 ISLAND
&lt;3 I o BLACK AWARENESS
7 O MORK I MINDY / LAVERNE
A SHIRLEY
it (3 5 ) JIM BAKKER

11:30

The
peanut
it really
a bean,
not a nut.

1:00
4 W RES TLING

1:30

11:00

YOUR EYEGLASSES
SAVIN G S CENTER

BUDGET
OPTICAL
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HEROES

O 4 INCREDIBLE HULK / AM AZINQ 8PIOER-MAN
I* O PANDAMONIUM
17 o 8COOSY B SCRAPPY DOO
/PUPPY
CD (10) AMERICAN GOVERN­
MENT

• G la sse s D u p lic a t e d * F re e A d ju s t m erits ft R e p a irs

The Sons Ol The Sun" (1963) Mark
Forrest. Anna Maria Pace Hercules
leads a spectacular revolt against a
tyrannical Incan king
Q

6:00

T I N T S A F H O T O O R E Y A V A IL A B L E

• Your Doctors Proscription Filled

J AMERICA'S TO P TEN
3 O SOLID GOLD
CD (10) QROWINO YEARS
IIT ( 17) MOVIE "He/cules Against

&lt;12 ( 17) WORLD A T LARGE

4 ROMANCE THEATRE

4:35

LARGE SELECTION OF FRAMES

5:25
I? O CELEBRITY REVUE

2:40
(7

O

4 NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT

11:00
O 4 1 n
' ( 3 NEWS
it (3 5 ) SOAP
CD (1 0 ) POSTSCRIPTS

11:00
SO cO FF FO R A L L
F O O T B A L L T IC K E T S

Q

8:00

12:30

5:00

10:30
It (3 5 ) IN SEARCH OF.„

12:00

•III I \ ' H \ 11 141,1

October 2

MORNING

Cy test

7:30

6:00

SATURDAY

(171 REDMAN FO O TEA U
r»•
* •'

I t 117) R A T PATROL

�Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

SUNDAY
MORNING

6:00
&gt; O MORMON W ORLD CON­
FERENCE
r a AGRICULTURE U S A.
II

' 171NEWS

October 3
its prominent citirens otter predic­
tions for the future (R)

12:30
O 4 NFL 82
5 O NFL TODAY
7 O CHARLIE PELL

6:30

I

O VIEWPOINT ON NUTRITION

7:00
0 ' 4 OPPORTUNITY LINE
/ O TOOAY'8 BLACK WOMAN
II (35) BEN HADEN

7:05
1} (17) JAMES ROBISON

7:30
o 4 2"8 COMPANY
;i O
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH Of O RLAN D O
ii (35) E J. DANIEL8

7:35
11 ( 1 7 ) ITIS W R ITTEN

8:00
0 4 VOICE O F VICTORY
■&gt; O R E X H U M B A R O
i o BOB JO N ES
M (351JONNY Q U E S T
iC 110) 8ESAME S TR E E T (R )g

8:05
13 ( 171CARTOONS

8:30
0 4 SUNDAY M ASS
1 O DAY OF DISCOVERY
I u ORAL R OBERTS
il (35) JOS IE AND TH E PUSSY­
CATS

9:00
O 4 THE W ORLD TOMORROW
S O SUNDAY MORNINO
&gt; o BEST O F KIDS ARE PEO­
PLE TOO G u «sti Cathy Leo Cros­
by. Ben Vereen. Irene Cara, tumor
table Iannis champions Sean
0 Neill and Scolt Butler |R|
li (35) BUG S BUNNY AND
FRIENDS
0 ) ( 10) MATINEE A T THE BUOU
Featured Leo Gorcey and Hunt!
Hall in Million Dollar Kid" (1943). a
1944 short starring Edgar Kennedy,
and Chapter 4 ol "Zorio's Fighting
Legion " (R)

9:05
13 (17) LOST IN 8P AC E

9:30
0 &lt;41 M ONTAOE: TH E BLACK
PRES8
II (3 5 )T H E J E T 8 0 N 8

10:00
O '4 MOVIE 'When Worlds Col­
lide" (1951) Barbara Rush. Richard
Derr A rocket ship Is hurriedly
erected in case Earth Is subjected
to a meteorite shower.
&gt; O CENTRAL FLORIDA FOOT-

BALL HIGHLIGHTS
ll (35) MOVIE "Abbott And Cos­
tello Meat The Invisible Man" (1951)
Nancy Oudd. William Frawtey The
Invisible Man hires the scalierbrained duo aa detectives

10:05
&gt;3 (17) LIGHTER SIDE OF THE
NEWS

10:30
1) I O BLACK AWARENESS
' /) O FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
2 ) (10) MOVIE "Judge Priest '
(1934) W* Rogers. Anita Louise A
small town judge with a common
sense approach to the law laces
tough political opposition

10:35
13 (17) MOVIE "Ounllght At The
0 K. Corral" (1957) Burt Lancaster.
Kirk Douglas Wyalt Earp heads a
small posse m a shootout with Doc
Holliday and the Clantons In Tomb­
stone. Antons, during the 1870s

50

11:00
THIRTY MINUTE8

11:30
O

4i BOSSY BOWDEN

5 0 FACE THE NATION

1 O THIS WEEK WITH DAV10
BRINKLEY

11:45
til ( 3 5 ) LAURELANOHARDY

AFTERNOON

12:00
Q 141MEET TH E PRESS
15 ) 0 JOHN MCKAY
in; (35) M OV* "Nrghl And Day"
(1948) Cary Grant. Eve Arden. The
Me ol Cols Porter provides some ol
the greeteet music In American ht»lory
8 ) (10) I REMEMEER HARLEM
"Toward A New Dey 1988-1980"
Hartem's decline, rebirth and devel­
opment are traced and several ol

previews Ihe new television season
with guest stars Elizabeth Taylor.
T o m Selleck. Brooke Shields. Linda
Evans and Ricky Schroder

5 O ARCHIE BUNKER'8 PLACE
3
O M A TT HOUSTON
it ( 3 5 ) MAUDE
2)
( 10) EVENING AT POPS

1:00
O 4 NFL FOO TBALL The regu­
larly scheduled games may be pre­
empted it the NFL owner / player
dispute remains unresolvod. with
alternate programming scheduled
on a week-to-week basis
5 O NFL FO O TBALL Minnesota
Vikings at Chicago Bears (Tenta­
tive)

International opera star Marilyn
Horne |oms John Williams and the
Boston Pops tor an evening ol
music ranging from Bizet to Broad­
way

2 ) I 10) MAGIC OF OIL PAINTING

5 o GLORIA Gloria accepts her
first date since her separation

1:05

8:05
13 ( 17) NA8HVILLE ALIVEI

8:30

13 (17) MOVIE

"Th e Tiger Makes
Out" (1967) Ell Wallach, Anne Jackson A mailman kidnaps a middleaged woman attar making plans to
setre only young girls

1:30
1 O MORAL ISSUES
2 ) 110) FLORIDA HOME GROWN

2:00
I O BASEBALL
2 ) I 10) MOVIE
Happy Go Love­
ly" (1951) Vera Ellen. David Niven
A producer believing a chorine is a
millionaire s girlfriend casts her in
his leading role

2 :30
11( 35) MOVIE
Second Chance
(1953) Robert Milchum. Linda Dar­
nell A fighter takes a lour of South
America in hopes of forgetting the
fight in which he accidentally killed
a man

3 :0 5
13 ( 1 7 1LA S T OF TH E WILD

3 :3 0
2 ) (10) TH E GOLDEN AGE OF
TELEVISION "A Dolls House" A
woman (Julie Harris) asserts her
uwn identity alter confronting her
husbands (Christopher Plummer)
immorality in a leleplay based on
the play by Henrik Ibsen

4 :0 0
0

4 MOVIE
"T h e Conversa­
tion" (1974) Gene Hackman. John
Cazale A professional wiretapper
begins to question the ethics ol his
profession

0

NFL FOO TBALL New York
Giants at Oallaa Cowboys (Tenta­
tive)
ill (35) INCREDIBLE HULK

4 :0 5
BA8EBALL Atlanta

(17)
Braves at San Diego Padres

&lt;13

son celebrates his 20th year as host
01 the popular late-night show with
segments from memorable past
shows and clips ot earty TV appear­
ances by Richard Pryor. David
Brenner and many others
5 O THE JEFFERS0NS George
decides to accept his competitor s
otter to buy out Jefferson Cleaners
(Part 2)
z O MOVIE
Smokey And The
Bandit I f (1980) Burt Reynolds.
Jackie Gleason Shentt Bulord T
Justice calls In his two lawman
brothers to stop a retired boot­
legger. Ihe Bandit, horn transport­
ing a baby elephant

2 ) &lt; 10) MASTERPIECE THEATRE
Testament O l Youth With World
War II finally over Vera returns to
O i l o r d where she meets Winifred
Holtby. they launch their writing
car ee rs and become lifelong
friends (Part 5)|R)EJ

9:05
13 ( 17) WEEK IN REVIEW

9:30
% O ONE DAY A T A TIME
n ( 3 5 ) JIMMY 8WA0GART

10:00

3 :3 5
13( 17) T H IS W E E K IN BASEBALL

15

9:00
0
(4 - THE TONIGHT 8H0W
STAR RING JOHNNY CARSON:
20TH ANNIVERSARY Johnny Car-

5
o
TRAPPER JOHN. M.D.
Trapper and Gonzo are led lo
some disturbing discoveries when
they unknowingly purchase a driedup vineyard, and Stanley tails in
love (Part t)

2 ) ( 10) T O THE MANOR BORN

10:05
•13 ( 1 7 ) NEW8

10:30

III (35) JIM BAKKER
23 (10) BUTTERFLIES

11:00
O I 4 &gt; I V O i 7iO N E W 8

4:30
1 / &gt;O TO BE ANNOUNCED

5:00

2 ) ( 10) 8NEAK PREVIEWS Neal
Gabler and Jeffrey Lyons host an
mformalive look at what's new at
the movies (R)

I r O TO BE ANNOUNCED
-It (35) DANIEL BOONE
2 ) (10) FIRING UNE Is Thera A

11:05
til (17) JERRY FALWELL

New China?" Quest Fos Butlerheld, author ot "China Alive In The
Biller Sea "

15 I O SPORTS SUN0AY

EVENING

6:00
O 4 - m o NEWS
ill (35) K UNQ FU
2 ) (10) NO VA "Living Machines"
The work and remarkable discover­
ies ot a new generation ol biologists
called natural engineers promise
benefits and applications yet to be
eiplored (R) r j

6:30
O 4i NBC NEWS
If o ABC NEWS

11:20

11:30
O
(4 1 ENTERTAINMENT THIS
WEEK
I 7 ) Q JA C K ANOERSON CONFI­
DENTIAL

iii! (35) rrs YOUR BUSINESS
11:35
) 5' O SOLID GOLD

12:00

7:00

7:05

Seven is the magic num ber
on CBS anti ABC; at NBC.
it’s 11 — they try h ard er.
T h a t’s how many new series
each network is prem iering
this week.
On
CBS,
the
m o st
p ro m isin g
sit-corn
is
"S q u are Pegs," prom ising
because it's w ritten and
p ro d u c e d by " S a tu r d a y
Night IJv e" and "N ational
L a m p o o n " w rite r A nne
B eatts. The comedy featu res
two high-school freshm en,
the “ square pegs," who find
it difficult to fit into the
hig h -sch o o l cliq u es th e y
desire.
O ther CBS scries include
"Seven Brides for Seven
B r o th e r s ," an h o u r-lo n g
d ra m a that includes m usical
n u m b e r s ; ‘‘N e w h a r t , "
sta rrin g Bob Newhart a s a
happily m arried m an who
buys u Vermont inn; “ B ring
’E m
Back
A liv e ,"
a
"R aid e rs of the L ist A rk"ty p e ad v e n tu re , s t a r r i n g
B ruce Boxleitner as a biggam e trapper; "T u c k e r’s
W itc h ,”
s ta rrin g
T im
M ath cso n and C a th e rin e
H icks; "G loria,” s ta rrin g
Sally Struthers and B urgess
M e re d ith ; and " F i l t h y
R ic h ," a " D a lla s ’’-s ty le
spoof.
The big seven at ABC are
"Star of the Family," about
an ambitious pop singer
(Kathy Malsnlk) and her
not-so-thrilled father (Brian
Dennehy); "The New Odd
Couple," with Ron G lass and
Demond Wilson as Felix and
Oscar; "Tales of the Gold
M onkey,”
another
"Ralders"-type adventure
show; "The Quest," about
battlin g
heirs
to
a
M editerranean k ingdom ;
"Matt Houston," about the
exploits of a man-about-town
millionaire; and "Ripley’s
Believe It or Not!," new but
true stories of the Incredible.
The most appealing show
on ABC appears to be "It

17) O MOVIE
"Toward The
Unknown" (1958) William Holden.
Lloyd Nolan

12:05
12 (17) OPEN UP
12:30
&lt;1 MOVIE " Point Ol Terror"

O
(1971) Peter Carpenter. Dyanne
Thorne

12:35
( 5 ) 0 M O V* “Ten Me My Name"
(1977) Arthur Hill. Barbara Barrie

1:05
i l l (17) M OV* "Strange Lady In
Town”

17) O NEWS

2:10
2:30

111 (17) WRESTLING

e tiiM n v s

7:30
2 ) (10) ROCK SHOWCASE: MIS­

2:40

8.-00

M O V*
"The Secret Of
Santa Vltlorla" (1989) Anthony
Oulnn. Anna Magnanl.

O (4&gt; 8 0 8 H O S TS SPOOF OF
THE M W TV SEASON Bob Hope

3 :30
(ID (1 7 ) M OV*' "Thunder Akey"

TRESS

»• i • »\

Mediterranean Kingdom
And Telekinetic Teens

V/e« e» i

O) O

T a k e s T w o,”
s ta r r in g
R ichard Crenna and Patty
Duke Astin as a physician
and his assistant D.A. wife,
which was created by Susan
H arris of "S oap" fam e.
Anti at NBC: "F am ily
T ies," a role re v e rsa l story
about liberal p a re n ts and
conservative kids, starrin g
Meredilh B axter-B irney and
M ichael G ro ss; " S ilv e r
Spoons," another rev ersal,
about a m ature child and his
childlike dad, sta rrin g Ricky
Schroder and Jo el Higgins;
“ G avilan," sta rrin g Robert
Urich as a fo rm er CIA
o p e ra tiv e who s till liv es
dangerously ;
‘ ‘S t.
Elsew here" (not prem iering
until November), about the

staff at a Boston hospital.
"V oyagers” is a timetra v e l
fa n ta s y
for
y o u n g ste rs; " R e m in g to n
S te e le ," a b o u t n fem ale
private in v estig ato r; "The
Powers of M atthew Star,"
featuring a teen-ager with
telekinetic pow ers; "Knight
R id e r," a b o u t a crim efighter
w ith
an
in­
destructible black c a r; "The
Devlin Connection,” starring
Hock Hudson a s a former
detective lu red back to the
work.
The big w inner here could
be "C h eers," which stars
Shelley L ong a n d Ted
Danson an d is s e t in a Boston
bar.

im iN C . YOUH FAMILY
&amp; F ill ENDS TO

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O 4 VOYAQER8I (Premiers) An
adventurous rogue and a young
orphan )ourney through lima to help
Wilbur and OrvtUe Wnghl perfect
the airplane
i s - O « 0 M INUTES
(71 O RIPLEY S BELIEVE IT OR
NOT) Featured: a mud-slinging fes­
tival m France: the world's largest
merry-go-round; flying snakes and
vampire beta, the story ol three
courageous men.
in: (35) WILD, WILD W IST
2 ) (10) NASHVILLE MUSIC

Friday, Oct. 1, 1982—-5

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D E l I V E R Y O N OH D f WS V I J SuOW M O R E

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�Friday, Oct. 1, 1982

4— Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Ernie Kovacs On Showtime
NEW Y O R K (U PI) — E die
A dam s, who divides her tim e
th e se d a y s between almonds
and actin g , has one central
m ission — to resurrect the
com ed ic genius of her late
husb an d , E rnie Kovacs, for
television.
B ut first she had to rescue
clips from shows they did
to g e th e r between 1952 and
1962
fro m
a n etw o rk
d ete rm in e d to cannibalize
th em to the last dollar sign.
T h an k s to John Barbour,
c o h o s t of NBC’s " R e a l
P e o p le ,” the resurrection
will occur on Showtime cable
O ct. 10 in a 90-minute pilot
M iss Adam s hopes even­
tu ally will grow into a series.
She said Barbour, long a
K ovacs fan, has put together
se g m e n ts from her late hus­

b a n d 's days as king of video
com edy, not only from his
reg u lar CBS series but from
a show called “Take a Good
I/jo k " — a parody K ovacs
did of "W hat’s My L ine."
It involved burlesque-style
blackouts as "c lu e s," but
when contestants Jum ped the
gun and gave the rig h t an­
sw er before getting th eir
clues, Kovacs found him self
stuck with footage he never
could use again. As a resu lt,
when the Showtime special
uses them they will b e seen
by the public for the first
tim e.
The special will fe a tu re the
best of Kovacs with such
form er Kovac cohorts and
colleagues as Jack I,em m on,
Steve Allen and Miss A dam s
h e rs e lf
h andling
th e
narration.

Following K ovacs’ death
20 years ago in a traffic
accident, videotapes from
the old shows — som e of the
first in the business — were
stored in a w arehouse where
Miss Adams’ own production
crew discovered they were
system atically being used to
dub other m aterial.
"The guys on the crew said
the network w as using the
tapes, since he (K ovacs)
owed the netw ork a lot of
money," she said . "So I said,
'No — you c a n ’t do th a t,’ and
I took the insu ran ce money
and paid the netw ork off and
put the tapes aw ay.
" I have 200-som e-odd
hours of som ething, but I
don’t know w hat Is there &lt;..
They were using them for the
weather and the new s and all
that stuff."

5:00
12 ( 17)
(FRI)

MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE

5:10
12

( 17) W O n iO AT LARQE (TU E)

5:25
7 O CELCaniTY REVUE (MON.
TU E . TH U . FRI)
12 ( 17) HAT PATROL (THU)

5:30
O •&gt; WEATHER (TUE-FRI)
■2 ( 17) IT'S YOUR BUSINESS
(M O N )
12 | 17) A CONVERSATION W ITH
JA C Q U E S COUSTEAU (TUE)

5:50
7 ( J CELEBRITY REVUE (WED)
12 ( 17) WORLD AT LARGE (WED)

6:00

9:30
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TROUBLES
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10:30
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11:00
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CD (10) MASTERPIECE TH E A TR E
(TUE)
CD (10) PUBLIC SCHO O LS. PRI­
VATE LIVES (WED)
CD (10) NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC
SPECIAL (THU)
CD (10) EVENINO A T POPS (FRI)

7:05
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12:05

12 (17) PEOPLE NOW

7:15

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7:30
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8:00
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8:05
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12:30
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CD ( 10) COOKIN' CAJUN (TUE)
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(10) THIS OLD H O U SE (FR I)
2:00

0 ( 4 1ANOTHER WORLD
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8 ) (10) MAGIC OF OIL PAINTING

12 117) BOB NEWHART

0

7 :00
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a P.M. MAGAZINE

A low-cost
di«i camp lor the average woman, a
young woman's 11-day t-Msconiinental bicycle trip
S

1 7 Q JOKER'S WILD

11 (35) TH E JEFFERSON8
CD ( 10) MACNEIL / LEHRER
REPORT

7 :0 5
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7 :3 0
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S O TIC TAC DOUGH
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11 (35) BARNEY MILLER

CD (10)

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3:05
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BUGS

Featured a man |umps from an
auplane at 10.000 feel without a
parachute, a French dentist who
operate* on himself, an invention
created by a man who watched vic­
tims ol a ptane crash llounder in
heeling water
II ( 35) TH E ROCKFORD FILES
CD 1101 G R E A T PERFORMANCES

(MON. TUE. THU)
CD (10) WHY IN THE WORLD

3:35
12 (17) THE FLINT8TONE8

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4:00

LITTLE HOUSE ON THE
PRAIRIE (MON. WEO-FRI)
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4:30

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5:05
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17j Q NEWS (MON, TUE, THU)

CD ( T C ) POSTSCRIPTS

5:35
ill (17) BEVERLY HILL SILLIES

11:30
0

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Host Johnny Carson Guests
Cions Leachman. Barbara Mandrell. Argus Hamilton. Gay Talese
(Rl
1 ) O NEWS
ti ( 3 5 ) 8TREET8 OF 8AN FRAN­
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11:35
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NEWS

11:40
12 ( 17) ALL IN THE FAMILY

12:00
MORE REAL PEOPLE

9:00
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Walter Matthau. Glenda Jackson A
former intelligence agent is aided
by an old llama in dodging Ihe KGB
and the CIA. who are trying lo pre­
vent him from publishing hi* mem­
oirs
S O BARE ESSENCE A spunky,
young girl develops a successful
perfume business to help bring a
(altering conglomerate back lo
financial stability. Geme Francis.
Bruce Bonleilner. Linda Evans and
tee Grant star (Part 1)
i
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Coal Miner's
Daughter " (1980) Sissy Spacek.
Tommy Lee Jones Based on Loret­
ta Lynn s autobiography A young
girl from a poor family in rural Ken­
tucky marries a much older local
boy who engineers her rise lo star­
dom in Ihe music mduslry
it |35l QUNSMOKE

9:30

10:00
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12:05
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12:10
12 ( 17) MOVIE
The Bad Seed
(1966) Nancy Kelly. Patty M cCor­
mack

12:30
O
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LETTERM AN Guests Sieve Landesberg. British writer Clement
Freud
5 O
MOVIE "Baby Comes
Home" (1980) Colleen Dewhursl.
Warren Oates
It ( 35) WANTED: DEAD OR ALIVE

12:35
7 O
MOVIE
"April In P a n s'
(1953) Oorts Day, Ray Bolgei

1:30
O

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2:25

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2:30

( | 4 ENTERTAINMENT TO N IG H T
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2:50
12 ( 17) MOVIE
"Silver River
(1948) Errol Flynn, Ann Shoridan

2:55
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(1951) William
Olson

10:30
11 |35| IN SEARCH OF...
10:40
12 ( 17) NEWS

3:00
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11:00
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EVENINO

8:00
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FRIENDS

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3:30

O cto b er 5
mentary hosted by EG Marshall
and narrated by Jason Robardt. (R)
Q

8:05

12 ( 17) MOVIE "Stringers When
We Meal" (1960) Kirk Douglas. Kim
Novak A successful architect Is
torn between the security ol home
and lamity and tut lovt lor a mar­
ried woman

6:30
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'7 O ABC NEWS □
CD ( 1 0 )
UNDERSTANDING
HUMAN BEHAVIOR
635
12 ( 17) BOB NEWHART

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&gt;4

9:00

MOVIE

"Hard Country"
(1981) Jan-Mtchaal Vincant. Kim
Basinger. A Tessa factory worker Is
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tions
&lt; )i O BARE ESSENCE A spunky,
7:00
young gal develops a successful
0 4 THEMUPPETS
perfume business to help bring a
1 » ' O P.M. MAGAZINE An aerobic laltanng conglomerate back to
dance class lor Ihe Lot Angeles
financial stability; Gants Francis.
Rams, Ihe process ol picking conBroca Bosleilnar. Linda Evans and
testsnts for s TV gsme show
Lee Oram star. (Pari 2)
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8 ) (10)
REPORT

MACNEIL / LEHRER

7:05

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7:30
0 41 ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
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03( 10) DICK CAVETT Guest Bar­

CD (10)

MYSTERY "Or. Jakytl And
Mr. Hyde'' Or Jakytl becomes
engaged to Ann Coggenshall who
tries repeatedly to visit the doctor
but hods Edward Hyda more readily
available to her. (Pari 2) (R) g

10:00
Hi ( 35) INDEPENDENT NETWORK

7:35

NCWS
CD (10) NOVA "Tha Science Of
Murder" Scientists, law enforce­
ment professional*, doctors and
convicted murderers discus* the
realities ol murdar. (R) g

8:00

II t. (3 5 ) M MARCH OF™

onets de Rothschild. (Part 2)(R)
12 117) ANOY GRIFFITH

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FA TH ER MURPHY
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B A S E B A L L Amancsn
League playoff game 1
ll 1, (35) TH B ROCKFORD FILM
8 ) 110) N A TIO N A L GEOORAPHIC
SPECIAL "Polar Bear Atari" The
great while polar be«r and a Mani­
toba town's efforts to co-enst with
them are the subjects of a docu­

F or ce Ol A r m s
Holden. Nancy

7

TUESDAY

FRIENDS

(WED, FRI)

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8:30
PRIVATE BENJAMIN

tD I 101 PURSUIT OF THE MARV E L O U S M oil George Melly
reviews the intellectual, historical
and creative factors *h»ch resulted
•n the surrealist movement

HUMAN BEHAVIOR

3:30

8:05
12 ( 17) MOVIE
PT 109 (1963)
Chit Robertson. Ty Hardm John
Kennedy and his crew, stranded in
Ihe Pacihc during World Wai II, are
rescued with Ihe help ol two
natives

try lo console then depressed
young niece Jenny, who blames
her sell when her lather dies ot a
heart attack (Part ?|

12 117) FUNTIME

■i i O AS THE WORLD TURNS
8)

ANO HARDY

2 :5 9
1 a BASEBALL (TH U )

12 (17) MOVIE

0:00
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1 i 1O OONAH US
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CD (1 0 ) BEBAMS S T R U T (R )g

2 :4 5

( 10) MATINEE AT TH E BIJOU

F ? . o . LEAGUE OF WOMEN
VOTERS
C O N G R E S S I ON A L
DEBATES (THU)
CD (10) FLORIDA HOME GROWN

6 :3 5

8:00

(10) THE RIVER IN THE
DESERT (MON)
CD 110|8LIM CUISINE (TU E)
CD H O )
TH E
DANCINQ
PRINCESSES (WED)
CD 110) BISHOP LUERS SWING
CHOIR CO NTEST (TH U )
CD I 10l P O R T R A I T S IN P A 8 T E L S
(FRI)

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6 :3 0
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5 O CSS NEWS
7 O ABC NEWS Q
CD(10) OCEANUS

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6 :0 5
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FRIENDS

12 I 17) AMERICAN PROFESSION­
ALS

2 :3 0
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11 (35) LAUREL
(MON TUE)

CD 110) OCEANUS

7 :3 5

D a y tim e S c h e d u le
MORNINO

6:00
o 4 s o 7 a new s
11 (35) CHARLIE'8 ANGELS

"Lincoln Center Special Balan­
chine / Stravinsky 100th Birthday"
Performance* ol 'Apollo" and
"Orpheus" taped al Ihe New York
City Ballet's recent Stravinsky Cen­
tennial Celebration are presented in
honor ol Igor Stravinsky's 100th
birthday

10:30
10:35
(IX (1 7 ) NEWS

11:00
0 ( .4 U ) ) O N S W B
III) (3 5 ) SOAP
CD ( 10) POSTSCRIPTS

11:15
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11:30
0
'4
TONIGHT Host Johnny
Carson Gutats The Smothers
Brolhar*. Jon Vorght
5 O MORE REAL PEOPLE
in (35) STREETS O F SAN FRAN­
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11:35
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11:45
1 7 . O ABC NEWS NIGHTLINE
t)i

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12:00
QUINCY

12:05
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Jack Wabb. Don Dubbins.

12:15
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12:30

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LETTERMAN Gussts: comedian

Georg* Millar. Jarry Lewis

it l. (35) WANTED: DEAD OR ALIVE

1:10

t ) l O MCMILLAN A WIFE Mac
and Sally’s paacaful weekend is
interruptad by th* disappearance ol
a dog. a kidnapping and a murdar.

1:25
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MOVIE "The Weal Point
Story" (19)0) Virginia Mayo. Jama*
Cagney

1:30
0 (4

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2:20
t il (17) M O W "Amazing Dr. 0 "
( I MS) Franco Franchl. Cicclo
Ingrassia.

2:30
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3:00

O I4&gt; ROMANCE THEATRE
3:20
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3:30

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�Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

WEDNESDAY
EVENING

6:00
Q 4 J O
' O NEWS
II l 3 5 l C H A R L IE S ANGELS
f D ( 1 0 ) F O C U S O N SOCIETY

October 6

Andre Previn, drummer Shelly
Manne. bassist Red Mitchell and
guitarist Jim Hall team up to make a
|axi album at Pittsburgh s Hein*
Hall

6:05

6:30
Q 4 N B C N EWS
s O CBS NEWS
I O ABC NEWS Q
f D M O ) F O C U S O N SOCIETY

6:35
13 I 17) B O B NE WHA RT

7:00
O
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Hollywood columnist Marilyn Beck,
the birth ol a dolphin m captivity
r O J O K E R S WILD
n ( 3 5 ) T H E JEFF ERS ONS
CD M 0 | MACNE IL / LE HR ER
REPORT

7:05
13 I 17) Q O M E R PYLE

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■&gt; O TIC T A C DOUGH
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CD (10) DIC K C A V E TT Guests
Rosemary Clooney and Margaret
Whttmg (R)

7:35
13 ( 17) A N D Y GRIFFITH

8:00
Q 4 R EA L PEOPLE A look at the
baseball legends ol Wngley Field, a
visit to the Billy Goal Tavern and a
day with Mayor Jane Byrne are fea­
tured in "Beal People s ' salute to
the city ot Chicaqo
S O S E V E N BRIDES FOR S E V E N
B R O T H E R S Crane s romance with
veterinarian Molly McGraw Is
Ihroatened when she wins a surgi­
cal internship that will keep them
apart lor three years
7
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B A S E B A L L N atio nal
le ag ue playott game I (II Atlanta is
NL West winner, then game will be
AL playoll game 2)
H (35) T H E R O CK FOR D FILES
CD I 10) PREVIN AND TH E P I T T S ­
BURGH
Perlman Cool And Clas­
sic ' Violinist Itihak Perlman, pianist

13 I 17) MOVIE
It Happened One
Night" &lt;1934) Claudette Colbert.
Clark Gable
A newspaperman
shields an heiress Irom her lather s
agents hoping to get a scoop
Q
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5 O
ALICE (Season Premierei
Mel is convinced that he is the
famous kisser named in a tempes­
tuous movie star s autobiography
H 13!&gt;i QUNSMOKE
CD I 101 TH E CASE O F D A S H IE L L
H A M M E T T A Mm portrait ot S a m u ­
el Dashieil Hammett includes
scenes trom Francis Ford C o p p o ­
la's new movie about the author
and interviews with his longtime
companion Lillian Heilman

9:30
4 FAMILY TIES
O
FILTHY RICH (Season

*
Premiere) The Becks scheme lo
break up the happily-married
Wostchesters

4 QUINCY

O

5

TU C K ER 'S

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13 « 1 7 1 MOVIE
"Fo ri Worth
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12:00
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A very tnendly lady sets up a busi­
ness ot her own in Archie and Mur­
ray sbar (R)

12:15
r

a

LOVE B O A T

12:30
O
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L E TTE R M A N G u e sls
artisl
Edwaid Ruscha. comedian Paul
Mooney, Ann and Nancy Wilson ol
the rock group "Heart "
n (35) W A N TE D : D E A D O R ALIVE

12:35

10:00
Q

4
T O N I G H T Most Johnny
Carson Guesls T o m Jones. Miss
America Debra Sue Matfetl
MORE R EA L P E O P L E
it (.15) S T R E E T S O F S A N FRAN­
CISCO

11:45

9:00

il

11:30
O

8:05

13 ( 1 7 ) C A R O L BURNETT A N D
FR IE ND S

11:15

; Q NEWS
13 (17* ALL IN T H E FAMIL Y

W ITC H

(Premiere) Private detectives
Amanda and Rick Tucker wind up
as the targets ol the killer they re
trailing when Amanda s witchcraft
turns out to be highly unreliable
ll ( 35) INDEPENDENT N E T W O R K
NEWS
©
&lt; 10) WORLD S P E C I A L The
Killing Of Sadat Why Waa Cairo
Calm? On the first anniversary of
Egyptian President Anwar Sadat s
assassination the leader s rise to
world acclaim and his concurrent
isolation from his own countrymen
are eiammed

10:15

y O MOVIE
(1979) Richard
Kavner

1:25
&gt; O MOVIE

King Richard And
The Crusaders ' (1954| Rev Hamson. Virginia Mayo

1:30
t ) 4 NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT
1:35
13 ( 17) MOVIE
Ghost In The
Invisible Bikini " (1966) Deborah
Wailey. Tommy Kirk

2 :3 0
6 ) 4 E N T E R T A I N M E N T TO NIG HT
y O CBS N E W S N t G H T W A T C H

13 ( 171NEWS

3 :0 0

10:30
11 ( 3 5 1IN SEARCH OF...

11:00
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3 :2 0
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Miracle In Soho
11958| John Gregson. Belinda Lee

3 :3 0
C l 4 NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT

TH U R SD AY
EVENING

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6:00

4

5

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NEWS

111 (35) CHARLIE'S ANGELS
CD (10) EARTH, SEA ANO 8KY

6:05
112 (17) CAROL BURNETT ANO
FRIENDS

6:30
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5 0 CBS NEWS
&gt; 7 &gt; Q ABC NEWS g
CD (10) EARTH. SEA ANO SKY

6:35

HI (17) BOB NEWHART
0

7:00

4 TH SM UM STS
P.M. MAGAZINE Go to the
National Lifeguard Championships
held in Daytona Beach; the search
lor the legendary Bigloot creature.
17 &gt; Q JOKER'S WILD
ill (3 5) THE JEFFERSONS
SI MO) MACNEIL / LEHRER
REPORT

1 &gt;I o

7:05
'1% (17) QOMER PYLE

7:30

0 &lt; 4 ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
i J O TIC TAC DOUGH
17 ) 0 FAMILY FEUD
Hi (35) BARNEY MILLER
CD (10) DICK CAVETT Guest phi­
losopher Paul WetM (Part 3) |R)

7:35
il) (17) ANOYGRIFFITH

7:59
O
BASEBALL National
Laagua playott gam# 2 (It Atlanta is
NL Waal winner)

(7

8:00

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Thomas. Julie

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8:05
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MOVIE " K o tc h " (1971)
Waller Mallhau. Deborah Winters
A widower refuses to let his children
put him oul to pasture.

8:30
17 O STAR OF THE FAMILY
Jennie Lea’s tinging engagement
at a local night spot draws a mliad
review Irom the local newspaper
critic

9:00
O 14 CHEERS Diane forces Sam
lo siamine hit preference lor dat­
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i » l O SIMON S SIMON (Season
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follow socialite Catherine Hailey to
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9:30

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trom Ins late lathar, but mutt con­
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171 O IT TAKES TW O (Season
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decides to pursue a career as a
prosecuting attorney.

10:00
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11:00
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1 7 Q ABC NEWS
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Andrea McNichol. who analytes
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1 J O MORE REAL PEOPLE
1 7 Q ABC NEWS NIGHT LINE
(II (35) STR EETS OP SAN FRANCISCO
(I) (17) ALL IN T H E FAMILY

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Friday, Oct. 1,1982— 7

TV Addiction Grows In China
PE K IN G ( UPI i - The about 30 hours per week.
“ T elev isio n is c o m in g
Chinese m ay not know who
sho( J.H . y et, but more and along very, very rapidly
m ore of them are becoming h e re ," a Western diplom at
addicted lo television — a said. “ It’s now about w here
developm ent (bat offers both it w as in the 1950s in the
prom ise and problems for U nited States.”
T h e m ajor limitation now
China’s leadership.
is
program m ing which, for
A rm ed with m a rc h in g
o r d e r s to go forth an d technological and ideological
“en rich ihe cultural life of reasons, still lags far behind
die m a sse s," !he television the dem and it has created.
G eneral program m ing in
industry has been at the
forefront of China's effort to the evenings and on Sundays
shrug off the legacy of the is s till d o m in a te d by a
chaotic C ultural Revolution h a n d fu l of " p r o le ta r ia n "
and m e rg e into Ihe modern d ra m a s whose predictable
plots have been run and
world.
T h e re
a re
now
a n re ru n ad nauseam .
“ T h ey show th e s a m e
estim ated 1G million TV sets
in China reaching 400 million shows over and over and I
people •— 40 percent of alread y know what’s going to
C h in a 's population an d h a p p e n ,” confided one
v iew er,
w ho
nearly tw ice the population C h in e se
r e q u e s te d a n o n y m ity b e­
of the U nited States.
Production of TV sets — c a u s e re v o lu tio n a ry in ­
still m ostly sm all black-and- spiration in China is not
white m odels — increased supposed to lie boring.
M aybe because of this, the
from 3,000 sets in 1968 to 4.8
most popular program in
million in 1981.
A 12-inch black-and-white China is the nightly new s, 30
set, at $210, is fast becoming
sta n d a rd equipment in urban
households. A top-of-the-line.
E N J
20-inch color TV is a status
sym bol whose $1,100 price
tag, eq u al lo llircc years
s a la r y fo r th e a v e ra g e
w orker, apparently is no
d eterren t to the new Chinese
consum er.
C h in a 's one n a tio n a l
channel and its 29 regional
s ta tio n s each b ro a d c a st

minutes of local, national
and international reportage.
The news in China is one of
the few p ro g ram s th a t’s
a lw a y s c h a n g in g , w hich
helps account for its appeal
F aced w ith in c re a s in g
dem and, officials a rc ex­
panding production of m adefor-TV d ram as and looking
abroad for foreign fare.
The C h in ese re c e n tly
concluded an agreem ent for
24 N atio n al G e o g ra p h ic
specials and a delegation is
going to the U nited S tates
this October to talk to serial
distributors.
“ The p r o b le m ,”
one
Western diplom at said, “ is
that up to now th e Chinese
have been unwilling to pay
the going ra te ."
They a re only ju st coming
to accept they m ust part with
some of their foreign ex ­
ch an g e for th e lik e s of
“ K ram er Vs. K ra m e r," a
film they have ex pressed an
interest in.

O Y

GRAPEFRUIT
F R O M F L O R ID A

�8— Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Friday, Oct. 1,198]

Ex-Starlet Relocates To L.A. Real Estate World
HOIJ,YWOOD (NEA) Did you ever wonder what
happens to starlets after the
bloom is off the rose?
P erh ap s the only thing that
is of less value than a used
s t a r l e t is a seco n d -h an d
chocolate eclair. Mostly, the
poor things either go back
hom e to Podunk to m arry the
box boy in the superm arket
o r h a n d around h e re ,
w orking a s extras and telling
sto ries about how close they
cam e to stardom.
E v ery once in a while,
how ever, you run into an
exception.
M eet tiie most beautiful
an d successful exception in

Southern California, a sliver
of blond loveliness called
Celeste Y am all.
She was once a S tarlet To
Be Reckoned With. She had
been the last Miss Rheingold
— a big, heftily prom oted
c o n te st th a t p ic k e d the
prettiest model and m ade
h e r q u e e n -fo r-a-m o n th —
a n d she h a d com e to
Hollywood and been in a few
movies and had a lot of
publicity and posed for so
m any pictures the Kodak
people declared h e r a n asset.
She w as th in , blond,
beautiful. She looked like
M organ F a ir c h ild
only
wishes she looked. (Still
does, as a m a tte r of fact, but

that’s getting ahead of the
story).

are m ade, And, obviously,
she m ade a smashing appearance.

“Ten y ears ago," says
Celeste Y am all, “ I had a 2year-old d au ghter and I’d
been divorced and I had a lot
of bills to pay. And I won­
dered w hat I w as going to do.
I liked acting. It w as OK, but
it w as a v e ry chancey
career.”

“ So I got to know some
re a l e s ta te p eo p le,” she
says. “ And, at one big firm ,
they said they would hire
m e, but which division did I
want to work in — Industrial,
retail, investm ent, office?"

Many of h er friends kept
telling h e r she should go into
real estate. They said she
had the personality for it.
She liked — m aybe even
loved — people. She could
talk forever about nothing in
particular, and th at’s the
stuff of which salespeople

She w a s n ’t even su re
which division did what.
W hen th e y p a tie n tly e x ­
plained, she said th at in­
d u s tr ia l w as out — “ I
couldn't see myself roam ing
around m achine shops in my
Gucci shoes" — and retail
was out — "1 didn't w ant to
spend m y life finding spots
for 7-1 Is or McDonald’s " —
and investm ent was out —

' Bare Essence': First N ovel Success
By

DEBRA M ORGENSTERN KATZ
F irst novels rarely m ake it
p ast the author’s typew riter;
occasionally they go all the

way lo a publisher; and
sometimes actually onto the
shelves of a bookstore —
w here th e y ’re p ro m p tly
forgotten.

G O GUIDE
'l l you’re thinking of getting out of the house and are
looking for something to do this weekend, here a re a
few suggestions;
All Souls Church F all Festival, Saturday, Oct. 2« 11
u.m . to 7 p.m., Oak and 8th, Sanford. Spaghetti dinner
served 3-7 p.m. G am es, food, boutique, Moonwalk and
plants. Open to public.
DeBary Fair, beginning a t 10 a.rn. Oct. 2 at DeBury
C ham ber of Com m erce, Highway 17-92, D eBary.
Exhibits, games, food and prizes. In case of ra in fair
will be held Oct. 3.
African Art on display a t Ixich Haven Art C enter,
2418 N. Mills Ave., O rlando opens at noon Sept. 25
continues through Nov. 10. Hours T uesday-Frlday, 10
a.m . to 5 p.m.; S atu rd ay , noon to 5; Sunday 2-5 and
closed Mondays.
Ju n io r Miss P ageant, 8 p.m ., Oct. 2, l^ake M ary High
School, sponsored by the Altamonte-South Seminole
Jayceettes.
Special children’s concert by the Florida Sym phony
O rchestra featuring Bob M cGrath — Bob of Sesam e
S treet, 3 p.m., Sunday, O ct. 10, Bob C arr P erform ing
A rts Centre, Orlando. Contemporary m usic with
audience participation. T ickets available a t box office
and m all ticket agencies.

“ It sounded kind of dull.”
So, through elim ination,
she went to work in the office
division of the company.
T hey told h e r th a t th e
a v e r a g e new em p lo y ee
m akes 8600 in the first y ear.
She m ade a deal within 90
days and her first y e a r’s
take w as in six figures.
T oday, she h as h er own
com pany — Celeste Y am all
&amp; Associates — which is one
of L.A.’s top office realestate firms. T here is a
penthouse office. A lot of
people working for her. And
an income th at is, certainly,
hefty.
Besides, she is now a
recognized authority in the
field of office real estate. An
educational
publisher
recently cam e to her and
asked her to w rite a book on
the office condominium. She
is now in the process of doing
Ju st th a t. She w rite s a
colum n, “The Real E sta te
M ark et," for a local C entury
City newspaper.
She is considering b ran ­
ching out into other things.
She is a health nut — “ I ride
m y s ta tio n a ry bik e 30
m inutes every m orning" —
and is mulling over w ays and
m eans to move into the
health m arket. She m ay
s ta rt a spa or some sort of
fitness spot.

\ijif

CELESTE YARN AIX
She w as recently nam ed to
a
g ro u p
of
young
m illionaires — people who
m ade their m illion before
they were 35. She w as the
only woman in the group.
Still, the show-biz bug is
tough to exterm inate. She
d o es an o c c a sio n a l TV
c o m m e rc ia l.
A nd
she
probably would do m ore if
anybody asked.
" I ’ll never get it out of my
s y s te m ," she s a y s . “ I
started when I w as 12 and, by
the tim e I was a teen-ager, I
w as already a top m odel. It's
h ard to forget som ething
that m eant so m uch to you."
Given a choice — a big
movie role or a milliondollar real-estate deal —
which would she pick?
" I wish I had th a t choice,"
she says. "P lease don't ask
m e which I’d choose. My
clients would hate m e ."

What first novels almost at the point where 1 can get
never do is m ake it to a ex cited."
Miss Rich says she didn't
bestseller list - or to a TV
producer to becom e a four- im agine h er book as a movie
and-a-half-hour mini-series. all along but, "it does have
all the ingredients.” The
Ask M eredith Rich.
c e n te rs
on
the
She w as so sure her first s to ry
perfume
novel would find its way into w o r l d w i d e
obscurity th at she used a pen business, taking place in
name — M eredith Rich — New Y ork, P a ris an d
lest her other businesses and Hollywood, with rich, worldnonfiction w riting be ad­ w e a ry J e t-s e tte rs a s its
d u n d eters. It is, according
versely affected.
“That w ay," she says, “ if to CBS, a story of “ w ealth,
in trig u e
and
the novel didn’t work out 1 p o w er,
could alw ays go back to ro m an ce."
Claudia Jessu p and no one
would know !"
Miss Jessu p , a.k.a. Miss
Rich, h as no need to return to
her form er — albeit, real —
name. "B are E ssence" is the
title of h e r first novel and the
name of a best-seller, and a
at an
four-hour TV m ini-series on
AMERICAN
HEALTH
&amp;
WEIGHT CONTROL CLINIC!
CBS this week.
"B are E ssen ce," starring
I not only feel better about myselt . . . But find
Linda E v an s, Donna Mills,
others treat me differently!
G enie
F r a n c is ,
B ruce
If you need professional help with your weight
Boxleitner, l&gt;ee G rant and
problem . . . You couldn’t choose more knowled­
John D chner, a irs Monday,
geable or caring people than those at American
Oct. 4. and Tuesday, Oct. 5.
Health and Weight Control.
" I ’m still slightly dumb­
founded," she says. " I t’s
They have several programs fitted to suit your
extraordinary — the odds of
needs that are safe and inexpensive . . . Best of
one’s first novel becoming a
all they really work . . . Call today!
TV m ini-series. I kept saying
to m yself, ‘Don’t get excited.
Don’t get excited.’ Now I’m

MASTERCARE BY
Firestone
601 W. FIRST ST.

O W N U N D O I N IW M A N A G E M IN T
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                    <text>74th Y ear, No 309—W ednesday, August 10, 1902—Sanford. Florida 32771

Evening H erald —(USPS 401 2001—P rice 20 Cents
■i

C la im
By TEN IYARBOROUGH
Herald Stall Writer
A Senunole circuit judge is investigating accusations today
that a court clerk has been illegally preparing legal documents
and pocketing fees which she charges for the service.
The accused woman, however, vigorously denies the
allegations and her boss. Clerk of the Court Arthur Beckwith
Jr., said today he thought the m atter was closed and has no
reason to suspect the employee of any wrongdoing.
The allegations came to light last week during divorce
procedures before Circuit Judge Joseph Davis Jr It was
claimed by Beatrice l-ee Baker, of 2411 Granby St., Sanford,
that her divorce papers were prepared by a clerk's office
employee and that she paid the woman $180 cash for the work.
Mrs Baker said Davis expressed surprise and asked her who
prepared the paperwork and charged the fee. According to
Beckwith, clerk’s office employees are not permitted to
prepare legal documents or offer legal counsel except in filing
small claims petitions.
"I don’t have anything against the woman and I sure don’t
want to get anybody in trouble," said Beatrice Lee Baker, of
2411 Granby St., Sanford. But if she knew what she was doing

by taking my money and doing my papers was illegal, then she
ought not to have done it."
"The judge asked me who it was and 1 told him ," Ms. Baker
said.
“ I also told him t the judge) she prepared the papers and did
so for $180 that she said I had to pay for fees to somebody," Ms.
Baker continued. "Then she told me to take my affidavit to The
Evening Herald and pay them to advertise i a legal divorce
notice).
“I did what she told me because I don't know any thing about
such things," Ms Raker said "Rut Pin not a lying woman. She
did do my papers and I paid her $180. I'm an honest woman and
one day when I stand before Jesus, if He asks me about this, I
want to tell Him the truth like I've told you
"She told me I had to plead my own case before the judge,”
Ms. Baker said.
Ms. Baker said she paid the clerk’s office employee "in
cash" and did not receive a receipt for the fee. She added that
her daughter in Lmgwood also paid the same clerk's office
employee $180 to prepare divorce papers for her "But my
daughter didn't go through with the proceedings although she
still had to pay her the money," Ms. Baker said.

Seminole County sheriff’s officials say they will ask
state and county traffic engineers to post signs at the
Douglas Stenstrom Bridge — which replaced the Osteen
Bridge in 1975 — prohibiting people from jumping or
diving from the bridge and trespassing on the structure
"Something needs to be done," said Sheriff’s
spokesman John Spolski. "We have heard of people
parking their cars on the bridge, then diving off, some of
them nearly hitting boats passing beneath them There
are also those who park their cars elsewhere, swim out

See Editorial On Page 4A

!
(

Spolski said w ith the posting of such signs, "if we catch
someone there after the signs go up, we can charge them
with trespassing and take them, who by the way, are
mostly juveniles, to the correctional center and hold
them on the charge."
Currently, Spolski said his departm ent can ticket
motorists who park their cars on the bridge and could, if
they catch a person jumping or diving from the bridge,
charge them with interfering and posing a hazard to
navigation on the river.

When confronted with Ms. Baker's allegations, the clerk's
office employee named by Ms. Baker as the woman who
prepared the papers and charged the fee said "the m atter has
been resolved through mediation talks (with Davis, the ac­
cused employee and her supervisor, Beckwith)."
"None of the accusations are true," the suspected employee
said. "I talked with the woman but that is all."
When told that Davis is continuing his probe of the incident,
the woman declined to comment further concerning the
allegations.
" I ’ve talked with i the employee)." said Beckw ith. "She has
denied preparing any paperwork for Ms. Baker and denied
receiving any money from her She only said she talked with
the woman. She told me she was called to the judge’s office but
that when she went to see him, he was in a hearing so she left a
message for him that she would be willing to see him at his
convenience. To my knowledge they have not talked since. I,
personally , have not talked w ith the judge."
"She has been here a long time, about eight years," Beckwith said. "If there ever comes a time when she feels she has to
disclose anything to me, I believe she will."

P o c k e te d

F e e s

Beckwith added it is against this office’s policy for any
employee to assist with legal work or offer legal advice to
anyone, except in small claims petitions.”
R is also against the law for anyone not licensed by the state
bar to practice law,” adding that the accused employee is not a
licensed lawyer
" I’ve never encountered this problem with her before,
Beckwith said. "I personally don't plan to take any action
until Judge Davis completes his probe 1 don’t feel employees
here should suffer double jeopardy by the judge probing it and
then this office looking into it I will wait on the judge's
decision."
Prosecutors of the Seminole state attorney’s office said their
office is not currently conducting any investigation into the
incident but "would be more than willing to do so if it is
requested by Davis or another party."
Prosecutor Alan Robinson declined to comment concerning
possible changes which could be filed against the accused
employee if the accusations prove to 1m* true.

Book Closed On County
Library Vote: Its Oct. 5

Jumpers
Concern
Officials

to the base of the bridge then climb the maintenance
ladder to the top and Jump otf."
There have been reports that people have broken
amis, legs and received other injuries while jumping
from the 30-foot bridge which spans the St. Johns River
at the Seminole and Volusia county lines.
"People just don't realize how dangerous it is,”
Spolski said. "That current beneath the seemingly calm
surface is really rough As a m atter of fact, when we
were sending divers into the water this week in search of
the 16-year-old Sanford boy who drowned, those
professional divers had a very difficult time in the
water The water tumbled them head over heels because
it moves so swiftly."
While it is unknown if the drowned boy, Robert Daren
Sherman J r , of 1508 Summerlin Ave„ Sanford, whose
body was found Tuesday, was swimming toward the
bridge »o climb it and jump off into the water, Spolski
said many area youths do swim in the fast-moving
water, climb the maintenance ladder and jump.
Spolski said one of the biggest problems his depart­
ment faces concerning control over the bridge and ac­
tivities there is that "we have little enforcement power
to stop people from jumping off the bridge or swimming
there because there are no signs saying keep off, no
parking, no fishing, no jumping or diving. That is what
we need.”

C le r k

Herald Photo by Tom Vincent

Douglas Stenstrom Bridge Jumpers
"If the sheriff makes a formal request through the
County Commission and if our legal department has no
problems with the posting of signs, my department will
post signs at the bridge prohibiting diving and jumping
from the bridge," said County Traffic Engineer Garry
Ixster. "But, the sheriff is the one who will be enforcing
the regulations there and it is appropriate that such a
request and such action be generated from his office."
"We have no probltm with making the request,"
Spolski said. "In fact, we'll be glad to if that will help us
get the situation at the bridge under control. We don't
need another drowning out there or someone getting
injured or killed by jumping off the bridge into anywhere
from eight to 18-feet of w ater."
Meanwhile, sheriff's deputies will continue their
patrol of the Douglas Stens'.rom Bridge.
- TEN1 YARBOROUGH

By MICHEALBFJIA
Herald Staff Writer
Despite efforts by County Com­
missioner Robert G "Bud" Feather to
move it, Seminole County's $7 million
library referendum will be held Oct 5
Feather quoted election figures for the
past four elections showing the October
election, the run-off for primary election
contests, usually has the lowest voter
turnout of any election
"If we are truly seeking to find the
pulse of the community regarding the
library referendum, we should put it on
the primary or general election ballot,"
he said.
According to figures supplied by
Feather, the second primary has had the
lowest turnout in every election except
1980. In 1974, the turnout was 19 percent
as compared to 28 74 percent for the first
primary. In 1976, the second primary
drew only 15 percent of the voters as
compared to 31 percent in the first
primary. The 1978 turnout was 32.9
percent in the run-off and 37.1 percent in
the first primary.
In 1980 the second primary drew 36.5
percent of the eligible voters, compared
to 32.5 percent in the first primary.
The general election attracted more
voters than either of the primaries,
F'eather's figures show. The general
election turnout was 59.2 percent in 1974,
83 percent in 1976,69.4 percent in 1978 and
82.5 percent in 1980.
A re p re se n ta tiv e of the lib rary
referendum committee said brochures

E x a m in e r

already have been printed using the Oct
5 date for the election Other forums,
including an appearance on television,
also have been set up using the Oct 5
date, she said.
The referendum, which will let voters
decide whether they want expanded
library service, would provide for a $7
million bond issue to construct four
branch libraries and double the staff
from 16 to 32.
If the issue passes, branch libraries
will be built in the Wekiva-F’orcst City
area, Oviedo, Like Mary and the Like
llowell-Tuskawilla area. Additionally,
existing libraries in Casselberry and
Sanford also will receive improvements
The referendum follows the efforts of a
referendum study committee which was
appointed in November to examine the

DDAY
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Deaths
Dr. Lamb
Editorial
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Weather

O ffic e

A proposal to separate Seminole
County from a tri-county m edical
examiner's office has been submitted to
Seminole County officials by the chief
district medical examiner.
Dr. Thomas F. llegert, chief medical
examiner for the district composed of
Seminole, Orange and Osceola counties,
has proposed that Seminole County be
removed from the district.
Hegert said Dr. G.V. Garay, currently
associate medical examiner in Seminole
County, should be named to head the new
office.

SB
7A
10-11A
SB
SB
IB
10A
KB
4A
SB
2A
K-9A
SB
2A

anticipated needs and costs for library
services.
Seminole County has had a county wide
library program since 1975 when com­
missioners contracted with the Orlando
Public Library In 1978, Seminole County
took over its own library system and soon
after a long range plan for expanded
services was formed
Feather lias estimated costs for the
bond issue at about $100 million but
County Attorney Nikki Clayton said last
month the total payback for the bond
issue will be between $18 million and $25
million, depending upon the interest
rates and the term of the bond issue
Feather said commissioners are not
telling the public the true costs of the
program. He said commissioners won't
allow the county’s office of management
and budget to prepare an estimate of the
costs involved.
Feather said an accurate gauge of the
people’s feelings on the library question
will be impossible "if you put it on the
ballot when the least number of people
will turn out and not tell people all the
information."
F'eather’s motion to change the date of
the referendum died for lack of a second
List week, a similar motion by Feather
was defeated because it did not get a
majority vote. At that time. Com­
missioner Barbara Christensen voted
with F'eather Commissioners Sandra
Glenn and Robert Sturm voted against
that motion. Commissioner William
Kirchhoff was absent.

C h a n g e

The proposal would not affect the
operation of the office, Hegert says, and
is merely a paperwork changeover since
the medical exam iner's office, is funded
by the state.
In addition to his duties as ad­
ministrator for the district medical
examiner’s office, Hegert is also the
appointed medical examiner for Orange
and Osceola counties.
The day-to-day operation of the
Seminole County office has been left to
Garay for some time, Hegert said.
The separation makes sense from a

E y e d

budgeting standpoint as well, he said,
since the district office Lis been
responsible for preparing the budget for
the Seminole County office.
Budgeting could be more effectively
done by Garay since he knows more
about the operation of the office, Hegert
said.
•Seminole County Attorney Nikki
Clayton has been given a copy of the
proposal to review to ensure that
Seminole County would continue to gel
•he same amount of funding from the
s,ale
- MICHKAL BKIIA

Impaired Physician
M o d e l F lo r id a

S ic k

D o c to r L a w

Editor's Note — Few In the medical
profession will argue that there is a
serious need to address the problem of
physicians who are Impaired by alcohol
or drug abuse. The state of Florida
became a frontrunner in dealing with the
problem in 1968 when it passed Its Sick
Doctor law which has served as a model
tor other states. But doctors on both sides
of the abuse-treatment fence agree that
the law is ambiguous and that in many
instances it senes as a double-edged
sword against those who want to
voluntarily seek help, and other doctors
who fear their licenses will be suspended
if they fall to "turn in” a colleague If they
become aware he or she has a drug or
alcohol problem.

want to even get involved with it," says
Dr. Dolores Morgan, Addiction Treat­
ment Director at South Miami Hospital.
Dr. Morgan is referring to Florida’s
Sick Doctor Law, passed in 1969. Once
thought to be a milestone in identifying
and dealing with physicians who abuse
alcohol or drugs, the law is coming under
fire by doctors at both ends of the im­
paired physician spectrum.
Those physicians who realize they have
a problem with drugs or alcohol and are
willing to seek voluntary help feel
•breatened by it. Those physicians who
are aware of a peer’s predicament feel
equally threatened.

The Sick Doctor I^aw defines a "sick
doctor" as someone who cannot practice
By JOE DeSANTlS
with reaso n ab le skill because of
Herald Staff Writer
alcoholism, drug abuse, illness, or a
Last in a series
mental or physical handicap. It enables
"The law is a mess. Most doctors don't the State Board of Medical Examiners to

Shop
\

N o w

C a lle d

order a physician to take an exam if the
board has reasonable cause to believe the
physician is impaired.
The law, in effect, can force physicians
to suspend their practice and undergo
treatment before a patient is harmed.
The Florida law lias been used as a
model for similar statutes in more than
20 other states. The American Medical
Association (AMA) has taken parts of
those statutes and incorporated it in the
AMA’s own rules.
,

In a d e q u a te
hospitals and medical societies notify
state licensing boards of any disciplinary
actions taken ag ain st im paired
physicians.
The AMA recen tly reported that
although most im paired physicians
initially refuse to cooperate with
rehabilitation clinics, nearly all even­
tually agree to go along.
"The law is a Catch-22 situation for
doctors on both sides of the issue," says
Dr. Morgan.
"It puts pressure on the people in the
profession to turn each other in.

The AMA’s proposal (there a re
currently three versions pending) en­
"The legislature passed the law and
courages close cooperation betw een
most
legislators are attorneys. But you
medical societies and licensing boards
but discourages medical societies from don’t see anything in the law that deals
participating in the actual disciplinary with impaired attorneys and you should
process. It requires strict confidentiality see some of the attorneys I get here."
for those reporting instances of alleged
While Morgan feels the Sick Doctor law
impairment, seeks civil immunity for is less than perfect, she feels it’s a
peer review activities and asks that necessary evil.

B y

S o m e

"With no laws dealing with impaired
physicians, very few would seek help on
their own," she said.
One Seminole County doctor who has
been through the South Miami Hospital
program illustrates the "damned-if-wed o -d am n ed -if-w e-d o n ’t " q u a n d a ry
doctors find themselves in over the law.
"The law tends to make doctors
suspicious of each other because by law,
if a doctor knows of a peer's problem, he
must turn that individual in. Otherwise
he runs the risk of losing his own li­
cense," he said.
“That tends to cause those who have
problems to hide them from their peers.
Unless the law is revised," said
another local physician who also has
been through the treatment center, "It
will drive a lot of impaired physicians
underground. That would discourage the
See SICK, Page 10A

InSanford Thursday, Friday And Saturday During Nickel Days
'

�J A - E v e n in q Herald, Sanlord. F I

Wednesday, Aug. 18, 198J

NATION
IN BRIEF
Convicted Draft Resister
Says He Won't Register
HOANOKE, Va. (U PIi — A minister 's son who
became the first man convicted for refusing to register
for the draft says he will "follow God" and defy a
judge's order to register despite'the threat of a sixyear prison sentence.
Enten Eller, 20. a clean-cut, straight-A science
student at Virginia's Bridgewater College, conducted
his own defense in a federal courtroom Tuesday.
While 150 supporters joined hands in front of the
cour'house to sing hymns and pray for justice, Eller,
the son of .a Brethren minister, told Judge James Turk
God is a higher authority than the federal government.
Eller was put on probation for three years, ordered to
do 250 hours of community service, and given 90 days
to comply with the law and register for the draft.

Racist Acquitted In Ambush
SOUTH BEND, Ind. (UIM) - Joseph Paul Franklin,
an avowed racist already serving life sentences for
slaying two black joggers, was found innocent by a
federal jury of shooting civil-rights leader Vernon
Jordan.
Franklin flashed a “V" for victory sign when the
jury. which deliberated a little more than eight hours
Tuesday, acquitted him of charges he violated Jor­
dan's civil rights by blasting a hole in his back with a
high-powered rifle, nearly killing him, in May 1980, in a
motel (larking lot.
No one saw who shot Jordan, who was ambushed as
he got out of a white woman's car, and the Remington
:t(W. rine used was never located.

Millionaire Winter Park Builder

Suspected Drug Kingpin On Trial
By TF.N1 YARBOROUGH
Herald Stall Writer
The trial of suspected drug-smuggling kingpin Robert
Govern and six associates, including an Altamonte Springs
businessman, continued today in U S District Court in Ocala.
Govern. 34. a millionaire Winter Park builder, was arrested
in April along with Ieon Mausser of Altamonte Springs,
president of Govem-owned GM Rudders Inc. of Winter Park;
Steven l.iberatore, a Columbus, Ohio entertainment promoter;
Keith Gustafson of Key West; Thomas Wilkerson of lady
lake, Fla.; Chan Ziele, a stereo salesman from F.dgewater;
and Grabriel Quintero of Ocala. The men were charged with
dnig possession, conspiracy, racketeering and income tax
violations. Three other who were indicted by the grand jury in
April have pleaded guilty to their participation in the illegal
drug activities.
Assistant U S. Attorney John I aw lor said in court Tuesday
that Govern headed an illegal drug ring importing up to 700,000
pounds of marijuana from South America into the central
Florida area and then shijjped the drug to storehouses in four
southern slates for sale between 1977 and 1981, netting more
than (150 i llion.
Govern’s lawyer, Cap Wilson of Gainesville, said the
government was basing its case against his client on the
testimony of "convicted felons and liars” who agreed to testify
against Govern in exchange for a reduction of their own prison
sentences.
Since Govern's arrest, the Internal Revenue Service has
seized four farms allegedly used as storehouses for the illegal
drugs, three homes owned by Govern, and an Orlando apart­
ment complex Dovetail Villas, valued in excess of (5 million.
Drug agents said the properties seized were purchased with
profits from the illegal drug-smuggling operation.
Govern, who had been held in the Seminole County jail while

—About $200 worth of damage was caused to a Sanford
man's unattended 1977 Pontiac when a hit-and-run motorist
struck the vehicle in a Sanford supermarket parking lot at 3:20
p.m. Friday. No injuries were reported and police are still
seeking the offender.

Action Reports
★ Fires
★

C o u rts

* Police
awaiting trial in Ocala, was recently married in the jail’s
courtroom to his long-time girlfriend Bonnie Druminski.
GAS GUI l.l. GR ABBED
A gas barbeque grill was stolen from a Ijingwood woman's
home between 5 p.m. Aug. 7 and 2 p.m. Friday.
Patricia Krallinger, 38, 433 Wild Oaks Circle, reported the
theft of her grill to deputies.
BURGLARS TAKE BIRD BATH
A white birdbath was stolen from the front lawn of Simone
Rohr’s home at 121 I-ea Ave., l/mgwood, between 8 p.m.
Sunday and 12:30 p.m. Monday, deputies said.
Rohr, 35, said the birdbath is valued at $20.
TRIO CHARGED WITH FIGHTING
Two Winter Park men and a New York man are free from
the Seminolr County today on $500 bond each after deputies
arrested them for fighting at a tire store along State Road 436.
Casselberry, at 2:22 a.m Tuesday.
Christopher Delano Bellows, 20, and Robert Jam es
Mucl-eod, 22, both of Winter Park, and Walter Greg
Hocukauser. 22. of Mamaronccu, N Y. were charged with
fighting after deputies observed three men pushing and
shoving each other and then wrestling on the ground.
SANFORD ACCIDENTS
The Sanford Police Department reported the following
traffic accidents:

—Clifford Clyde, 59, of Sanford, was charged wilh improper
passing after his 1976 Ford collided with a 1979 AMC car driven
by Annie Ward, of Like Mary. About $200 worth of damage
was caused to both vehicles and no injuries were reported. The
accident occurred at about 3:53 p.m. Friday at First St. and
Myrtle Ave.
—Catherine Multari, 32, of Deltona, was charged with
careless driving in a two-car collision at 25th St. and U S High­
way 17-92 involved a which also involved a car driven by Albert
Anderson. 35, of 2217 Alexander Ave., Sanford. About $1,000
damage was caused to Ms. Multari's 1982 Ford and about $100
damage to Anderson’s 1981 Ford.
MOTORCYCLE MISSING
A $6,000 Harley Davidson motorcycle was stolen from the
parking lot of the ABC liquor store between 4 30 p.m. and 5 45
p.rn. Sunday, police said.
Cecil Vernon Maynard, 32, of 819 Rosalia Drive, Sanford,
toid police he parked his 1977 motorcycle behind the store and
upon his return, the vehicle was gone
ARSON ATTEMPT AT SANFORD HOME
A 65-year-old Sanford woman told police someone set fire to
new spapers and boxes stacked on her back porch at about 10
p.m. Monday.
Alzada Wooten, of 91 Castle Brewer Court, said she
discovered the fire on her porch and extinguished it prior to
calling police. No injuries were reported and the incident is
under investigation.

Housing, Stocks Set Record
WASHINGTON (UPIi — Two record improvements
in the economy in housing starts and on Wall Street
- pleased the Reagan administration.
'Hie number of bousing starts increased in July by
one-third — the biggest jump since the government
began keeping such records in 1959 — because of
government subsidies set to end soon, probably in
November
On Wall Street, the Dow Jones stock average rose
38.31 (joints. Tin* jump in the Dow come on the second
busiest day in New York Stock Exchange history —
92.8 million shares were traded — in a buying frenzy
sparked by a major breakthrough in interest rates.
Several more banks, notably Citibank, the nation’s
second largest, announced further half-percent
declines to 14 percent in the benchmark prime rate of
interest, following the lead Monday of Bankers Trust
and other banks, a trend that could eventually touch
commercial mortgage rates.

WEATHER
NATIONAL REPORT: Three people trying to outrun floods
fed by a second straight day of heavy rains in Tennessee were
missing and believed dead, and rescuers searched w aters off
Annapolis, Mo., for two boaters feared drowned in storms that
lashed the Northeast. Arizona rains prompted flash-flood
warnings today and a Florida storm Tuesday spawned at least
one twister about 10 miles northwest of Fort Pierce. No
dam ages or injuries were reported The apparent deaths
Tuesday in Tennessee brought to five the number of fatalities
in two days of storms. Two elderly women drowned Monday
when their frame home was swept off its foundations and
carried away by rampaging waters. Authorities said damage
to roads, bridges and crops would exceed $10 million. Gusty
winds knocked out power to thousands of residential customers
in the Washington D.C. area and heavy rains stranded
numerous boaters in tw o bordering rivers. All were rescued by
D.C. Harbor Police and no injuries were reported. A storm
packing tornado-like winds that "hit all of a sudden” ripjK.il
the roofs from eight buildings in Orange, Conn., carried one
building across a street, uprooted trees, and left half of the
town without electrical power. Up to 8 inches of rain doused the
Georgia-Tennessec border area in five hours, erasing homes
on Mount Aetna southwest of Chattanogga.
AREA READINGS (9 a.m .): temperature: 79; overnight
low: 72: Tuesday high: 90; barometric pressure: 30.00;
relative humidity: 79 percent; winds: south at 9 inph; rain:
07; sunrise 6:56 a.m., sunset 8:02 p.m.
THURSDAY TIDES: DAYTONA BEACH: highs, 9:03 a.m .
9:32 p in.; lows, 2:40 a m., 2:50 p.m.; PORT CANAVERAL:
highs. 8.55 u in., 9:24 p.m.; lows, 2:31 a.m., 2:41 p.m.
BAYPORT: highs, 2:56 a.m. 2:11 p.m.; lows, 8:24 a.m ., 9:16
p.m.
BOATING FORECAST: St. Augustine to Jupiter Inlet. Out
50 Miles: Wind southeast to south 10 knots or less through
Thursday. Seas 3 feet or less. Florida Bay will be smooth to a
light chop. Winds and seas higher near scattered showers and
thunderstorms.
AREA FORECAST: Considerable cloudiness today with a 70
percent chance of thunderstorms. Highs in the upper 80s. Wind
south to southeast 10 mph. Tonight mostly cloudy with a 10
percent chance of thunderstorms early tonight. Variable light
wind, Thursday considerable cloudiness with a 60 percent
chance of thunderstorms. Highs near 90.

HOSPITAL NOTES
C entral Florida Regional Hoipital
Tueiday
ADMISSIONS
Sanlord
Bessie M Burkhtad
ja c k H Crews Jr
Nancy D Hanuom
Sue J Hutchison
Irene M M iller
M yra A Muse
Jud ith A O liver •
W illie A Riggins
Catherine T Smith
Ruth E Wurlenbcrg. DeOary
U re a l Fishm an. Deltona
Joseph Rehak. Long wood

L rro y J Fink. Orange City
BIRTH S
S t e e n P andW anncIla D u lle r,
a baby boy, Sanlord
David S and Lrano ra P i l l , a
baby boy. Altamonte Spring!
D ISCH ARGES
Sanlord
Dolly R ulli Moore
Selma E Sech'esl
Alice M Mackcyroy and baby
girl
Pa tricia M O vorvlrrrt and baby
girl
R u ite ll E McCain. Deltona

O n e o f o u r th re e W a tt-W is e ,S1 u i u m iv c s iu m u pay y u u u p iu
s e v e ra l h u n d re d d o lla r s . Our water heater incentive program applies to
customers who replace or modify their cura’nt electric water heaters w ith
either I) a solar water heater, 2) a water heating heat pump or 2) a heat
recovery unit. All three are designed to saw electricity.
An FPL Home Energy Audit w ill determine if you qualify and how much
you can saw. Then we'll help cow r the cost o f purchase and installation of
the new system. Water heaters must meet o u r standards and be installed by
a participating dealer/contractor. In most cases, payment w ill be in the form
o f a Watt-Saver™ certificate redeemable w ith the contractor.
Will everyone benefit from Watt-Wise incentives?

Yes.
These incentives aw less costly than the o il necessary to generate the
electricity wasted by inefficient homes. Every 600 kilowatt-hours o f electricity
not used is a barrel o f oil no one has to pay for. This also helps us postpone
the building of expensive povwr plants. The less oil we use, and the less new
bu ild in g we have to do, the more we can help hold the line of everyone's
electric bill.
For more inform ation, or to arrange for a Home Energy Audit, send us
the coupon or call the Watt-Wise Line at 1-800-432-6563.
The Watt-Wise Products Program. Another way we're w orking hard at
being the kind of power company you want.

I’d like more inform ation on the following
Watt-Wise incentives:
[ j Water Heating.
□ Cooling &amp; Heating.
Solar-Reflective Film .
Ceiling Insulation.
] I would like to have an FPL Home Energy
Audit.
Name
Address
City

FL Zip

Daytime Tel.
Mail to: Energy Conservation Department
Florida tower &amp; Light
RO. Box 529100, Miami. FL 33152

F P lf f iP

�Evening Herald Santord FI

AH Americans Below
l Poverty Line 0 5 3 ' -Jj'

Prices Outstrip Income

W a te r-S e w e r Rate
S tudy To Be R e w ritte n

Americans Getting Poorer
WASHINGTON i Ul’l i — Americans continue to net poorer,
losing spending power despite a decreasing inflation rate
because of factorsasdiver.se as divorce and the 'baby boom,"
government analysts say.

-••A disproportionately large age group t of about fin million
people i born during the "baby boom" years between 1946 and
1965 ... has been entering the labor force in ever increasing

ABC. AMERICA’S LARGEST

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AursDC «

B0TTL4DINCALIF ATWINERY
AVOIDTANk CAfl TASTE ABC
WINE IS NOT RECONSTITUTED

H

R

5

V S S jJ CASE OF 12-35.85__ CASEJIF 4J9.95_

CANADIAN

SCOTCH 6 ”

9

26 5^

Poverty Line
Income

Under the plan, customers would pay a flat fee for ad­
m inistrative services and then would pay rates in accordance
w ith the amount of water they u&gt;&lt;Th. rate increase, if approved by commissioners, will go
into effect Oct 1 \ public hearing on the rates is scheduled
Sept 2fl
Tie- rate increase is related to sophisticated water treatment
technique costs .it the Iron Bridge Regional sewage treatment
plant. But the new rates will apply to all customers because of
countv bond convonants

AS MUCH AS $3 A BOTTLE

SAVE UP TO 4 0 %

Jim Beam

6

GORDON’S

VODKA

4 YR. STR. KY.

BOURBON

99
L IT E R

L IT E R

.'./CASE OF 12-71.85

CASE OF 12-75.45

5 01 o z 6000 rat.. Aui.n

(000 THUDS . AUt 19
Staff Sqt John C Gilbert, son of c o o o w tim ii
John C and M ary Gilbert of 7*70
Spring Hollo* D rive Orange C*1y, O i D S M U G G L E R
5 9
has arrived for duty n lu d
*igsburg West Germ any
G ilb e rt, petroleum
supply
UNT 0R( PEI CUSTOMER W/C0UP0N [ UNIT Oat PID CUSTOMER W/C0UF0N
sergeant *ith the 7th Support
(000 TNURS.. RU6. I I
Group, was previously assigned at • (OOOWTO .AUC t l
FoH Lee. Va
I

F ra i

EVERYDAY PRICE

m

G in

99 A 99
7 5 0 ML

County 'taff officers have projected 147 jierrent iru reesc for
most customers As an example, customers using IS.Oho
rm
gallons would see an inc rease from $22 811 to *33 50 in their
monthly hills
But because the county staff has no uu; ended changing
r
i i9 0 i
$0,414 IS9.’e ;:i r J from a flat rale to a dual hilling system, some consumers could
see a decrease in their charges

Hispanics Below
Poverty Line

I’lm r A m e r ic a n s a r c on th e i n c r e a s e , both in
a b s o lu te n u m b e r s a n d a s a s h a r e n f th e to ta l p o p u ­
la tio n . T h e C e n s u s Itiire a u r e p o r ts th a t in IIts I a
to ta l of '.VI m illio n p eo p le, II p e r c e n t of all
A m e ric a n s , liv e d below th e p o v e rty le v e l incom e
of $!I,2K7 fo r a fa m ily of fo u r, a d j u s t e d up w ard
fro m th e p ro s io n s y e a r 's SH. 111 to r e f le c t in flatio n .
It w as th e t h i r d y e a r in a row to sh o w a n in c re a s e
in p o v erty s t a t i s t i c s , re v e rs in g a d o w n w a r d tre n d
th a t b e g a n in I'.Kii.

J^i'bcys

3 UTER ABC WINE

ANUKEOR
• CHIANTI • VIN ROSE
M O U L IN R O U G E • burgundy • claret
CH AM PA GN E
• PINK CHABLIS
m u ir r\a uzuitc
UN H u t u

34?^'

Whites Below
Poverty Line

LIQ U O R - LESS

ItlCOIlDA SAlw\MANTA

JOHN (\ CilLHKKT

E 2 3

WINE AND SPIRITS DEALER HAS THE LOWER
J

H

Blacks Below
Poverty L i n e

Tlic researchers said the effect of married women joining
the work force has helped build family incomes and promises
to continue to do so.
They also said while the median income for men dropped 3.4
percent in 1980 after inflation, the median income for women
did not change. Yet the median income for women, midway
between the top and bottom, was so much lower to begin with
- 14,920 compared to $12,530 for men — that the lack of change
could hardly be encouraging.

Researchers F.dward J Welniak and Mary F Henson pin­
pointed two major factors as reasons why family income is not
keeping up with inflation:

2

The study is a recommendation I projected water and
sewer rates He said the couniy's last rate increase was in 1979

Another factor adding to income and offsetting the negative
trends is the influx of women workers, going to 51 percent of
the work force in 1980 from 43 percent in 1970

The newest Census Bureau report, said family income went
down 3.5 percent last year after inflation and was down 5.5
percent in 1980, not counting foof stamps or subsidized housing
and health benefits

f &amp; L ,! A

lie said the changes are no' expected ' have an impact "ti
the study itself

Such households now constitute 15 percent of all housholds.
"These families tend to have considerably lower incomes
than m arried couples," they said. "This trend may continue
into the next decade, especially if there are increases in the
number of separations, divorces and children born out of
wedlock "

June's Labor Department report which compares Income
and inflation numbers showed earnings adjusted for inflation
are down 2.1 percent from a year ago.

R'CorcJa Salamanca %on of Mr
and
M rs
Pablo
E m ilio
Sa m aia n ca . of 9$ O vtrb ro o k
Dr*vf C aw fibo rry na\ enlisted -n
the United States M arine Corps
Salamanca will depart March 10
for 11 weeks of recro 'f fra ninq at
the Marine Corps Recru-t Depot.
P a rris Island. S C Upon com
piefton of r e c ru it
fra m in g ,
Salamanca w ll be home for a 10
day leave before going on for
further technical training in a
formal Marine Corps school
Salamanca enlisted for four
years and is presently employed
by Ultimate Motor Works and will
be a senior at Lym an High School
this commg *ear

Hooper said the firm. I’ost, Buckley. Si hull 4 Jernigan "I
Orlando, has been asked '•• rewriti parts t die repor'.
changing its language

However, as they grow into their peak earning, savings and
taxpaying years "an upward influence should be fell."
—•'One of the most dramatic changes in the composition of
households during the 1970's was the increase in the number of
family households maintained by women with no husband
present," Welniak and Henson said

Two reports prepared by the Census Bureau and the regular
monthly real earnings reports issued by the Libor Depart­
ment show that incomes are not keeping up with price hikes
and Americans are, on the whole, getting poorer month by
month.

IN THE
SERVICE

A consulting firm h.is Ix-cn given until Friday t*&lt; rewrite
portions of .i water and sew r rate study. Seminole County
(environmental Services Director Ken 11 "per vtul

numbers These young adults tend to earn less, and their lark
of experience and training tends to lower productivity "

The influx of women into the workforce has hel|&gt;ed build
family income but not enough to overcome price hikes, they
say.

Wednesday Aug 18. 1*82 —3A

99

11.99
• 1 .0 0

59 3 O Z
DEFUIDFROM
0IST1UER

59.2 OZ.

1 0 .9 9

'W

CASE OF 6-71.90

CASE_Q_f 6 1 MI_(in
6000 MOD . AUE 23

(000 SAT. 1U( 21

CALVERT p i q KENTUCKY _
GENT. BRB. 5
LITERG IN
URRT 0ME PER CUSTOMER V/CNPOI

KESSLER « 7Q

5Q

BLEND579

footer 6 9 '

LITER

LIMIT ODE PER CUSIOMED HI/COUFON

STURDY STYROFO AM

6000 UT.. AW 11

6000 FRI. AUG 20

Crown

TA YLO R

TONY A. PARRISH
N.ivy Seaman Apprentice Tony
A P a rn th . ton ol Becky F
Crenehaw ol 1011 W F .tlh S .
Santoro hat reported lor duty
aboard the guided m itt.le frigate
USS Copeland, homeported In San
Diego

JOSEPH LEO SENAHT

Sebastians u m i
ICE CHESTS
CELLA
4 3 9 IK . COUNTRY # | 1 9 MATEUS *
M O U N T A IN
1
Y Y
■ 750 ML
LAMBRUSCOvA 750M
LPIN K
WHITE 2 isoml CHABLIS
A 750 ML LIMIT
UNIT M l PEI CUSTOMER INf C0UP0D
ONE r(R CUS10MED W/COUPON

1

limit OM FID CUSIOmtD W COUPON

BARTON V.O.
W 10 YR. STR. KY.

Joseph Leo Senart. son of fhe
late Gordon Cochrane Senart and
Mrs Mary Ann Senart. of Wt 3.
Sanford nas enlisted m the United
States Marine Corps
Senart will depart October 12 for
tl weeks of recruit framing at the
M arine Corps R e c ru it Depot.
P a rn s Island. S C Upon com
pletion ol recruif framing Senart
will be home for a 10 day leave
before gomg on tor fu rth e r
technical framing m a formal
Marme Corps school
Senart enlisted for lour years
w fh a guaranteed assignment n
the Corps com bat
support
program Senart graduated from
Semmole C om m unity College
Adult H&gt;gh School with a General
Education ’Optoma in December
1960 and com pleted Sem m ole
Com m unity College V ocational
framing m December 1981 in the
area of mechanics

JA C K
D A N IE LS

1 LITER

JACQUIN LONDON TOWtR

9 4 * G IN

B EEFEA TER

♦SANFORD

94° GIN

HI-WAY 17-92 SO U TH CITY LIM ITS

69

♦L O N G W O O D

LITER

W

HI-WAY 17-92 N EA R 434 - OPEN SUNDAY

BLACK LABEL
VENN. SOUR MASH

^ S k S e a p ra m s

♦♦CASSELBERRY

Sroproo*

HI-WAY 17-92 AT 436 OPEN SUNDAY

VISA'

CASE OF 12-107.85

C A S E O F 6 - 1 1 9 .7 0

IMPORTED ABC

Y0

ABC HAS _________
LOftfcR PRICES

CASE
____OF 6

la d y Tlmei Brb.
6 8 .9 4
“ It*# e i g h t A It’s g r e a t " Ancient Age Brb.
7 3 .5 0
Old Crow Brb.
6 2 .9 5
Ten High Brb.
6 6 .9 5
LITER Cutty Sark s&lt;oKh 1 1 5 .9 5
7.79 EA. BY THE CASE 93.50 J. W alker Red 1 1 7 .5 0

7

99

GALLON
L OAF A T
GU1 T 4 MON

M ILK

i79

i k R O i tTO R C S O N LY

UOUOR FOH _________________
LE S S AT ABC

CASE OF 6

Clan MacGregor
Harvey’s Scotch
Lord Calvert Can.
Black Velvet Can.
Rich A Rare Can.
Canadian Mi»f

65.94
69.95
73.95
73.95
63.95
71.50

MINIATURES

CRYSTAL CLEAR

fffifJ iM f
0 PK D R Y
A LL T Y P E S

f ix e r s

1 ow

u u a in im

1.7SLTB

ROSSI
BURGUNDY

6 .7 9

5 .4 9

ALMADEN Scbastiani
CHABLIS MT. ROSE

|
I

H

Q

MINI BAG 3 S 1

SOUtH S IAAGZST
S tltC tlO N

H M i V h i I*

86° SCOTCH

59
750 ML
4 33 EA BT THE CASE 51

mnmm m

s

• ALL BRANDS • ALL SIZES
• ALL PKG. DEPTS. A LOUNGES

76*

k .6 .7 9

* ^ M ille r U tc
.

24 3. 9.49

(iood OriBfB, Samlaolt. Osciola Cly*

»w 4

HAWAII
io ox. nrn
O .r m o n y 'l f l n . d I . . ,

CAN AD IAN
PREM
IU M
rw rnauM is ih thi

6 -

KONIGSBACHER*
ULTRALIGHT* urs
B U C K LABEL*
WIEDEMANN*
SGA GOLD* “ aj
ABC BEER
un

lo rn i ROT THt PRlCt u i *

M m m 6 BOTS.
------

NEW GERMAN ARRIVALS

JABOULET VERCHERRE

W H in W IN !
750 ML
i l 6riuM r Htiulnicl Qti-Grifl
4A9
' l l IriM ttaritr Jvflir KiLGrifl
4.P9
81Wikliur Saiiiukr Oh Grin
4.69
81GrncNr Kieetiriicl (ik-Grifl
4.99
80Barakitl Csat Cizdalikl Qti-Ukt 5^9
81It .N r Tripp In KAiriN
5^49
81Erdaaar Tnppckaa Spil Sritl
4.49
'81 Urzifar Win|ir1i i Spit Grin
6^49
81Barikttl-Caai Wiuitti Kak-Lxkl
6.99
71 t r . n r TnppcNi Spit Crifl
7A9
818wiUtl Can CirWttri Spil-UtM 7.99
79 netpen GatArpfcka Att-SriH
14.9S

reiNCM
750 M L
79 Frir* Jicq u ii Raugi ar Ran 2.99
79 Calls du Rhoai • CNusy
3.99
79 Biiuiolils G inlla
sa9
79B«iu)oliii Villages
s .79
79 Piial G ird o n ip
5.99
79 Baujoliis St. Asaar
7.99
79 Fliarii B a ia w ilii
7.99
*79Moulii A Veit
$A9
‘78C kitiiM al da Pips
7.99
79 Cksblli
7.99
79 CksMis 1or Cm
MS
79 C k is ii( ii M oitrickit
12.95

G E R M A N M OSELS
RCATNI AS OOeotN
79 Barakitl Scklsukri
81Zillsr Sckmirzikitz
78OckliMr Backstna
81Erdsiir Trsppckai Kak
71Pisspert Goldlrptcks Qkz
81Pisspah Trippckaa Spat
81Birikitlz 8zlttik* Spzl
79 WikiiMr Soutkikr Spit
79Ayter Kipp Spat
‘91Pisipofl SoidtrptUz Spot
76SUvtick t i l l B tiniiizliu
71 Sckwtck B itriu ii Eitwtts

STRAW BERRY
D AIQUIRI MIX

750 ML
4.29
4^49
4.49
4.99
4.99
Sy49
6.29
6A 9
6.99
8.99
17.95
35.95

D A IL Y ’ S
Vi O A L

HU
MU

3 .9 9
1 .6 9
1 .6 9
1 .7 9
1 .5 9
1 .7 9

3 .9 9 mm.
BUY 10 GET 2 FREE

1 . 1 9
12 OZ. JAR

COCA-COLA
SPRITE ..TA B
99*

ZITA
N.R BOT.

OOLDSIAL

LA BELLA
LAMBRUSCO

PINK
CATAWBA

3 .9 9

4 .2 9

TAYLOR

LA K R COUN TRY

CARLO
ROSSI

CHABLIS

19
S c b a s tia n i
liO H T C O U N T ! Y

W H IT I

BUY 10 BO nLIS G IT 2 BOTTLES FREE OF SAMI WINE, SAVES 16% MORE

PEANUTS

8

BIENDEO IN SCOTLAND

54.50
57.95
56.95
63.50
56.50
72 I q c I

IM PORTED

WINE GLASSES BEAUJOLAIS
FO .

Taaka Vodka
Schenley Vodka
Wolfschmidt vodka
Schenley Naur.*
Philadelphia eund
Bacardi Rum

N U T BRITTLE
UUINA A
M A
LOA
M e"V T

DRY ROASTED

4
s oz.

89

KILT CASTLE

CA Sl ° * 6 |

T T -rT fri t l

IMPORTED LA GROLET

C R Y S TA L CLEAR PLASTIC

■ W 59.2 0Z

CASE OF 6 - 64.70

*AOOM TIM# CAM M U CIt CXftCOONTIO

CARLO

5 .9 9

79

UTER

PLA. SOUVENIR DIPT BOX

hia mni u u u

D U IM B
K I1 IN K

8 .2 9

9

ABC SAyfcS YOU

6 6 .5 0
1 1 0 .9 5
6 8 .9 5
6 7 .9 5
5 6 .5 0
5 5 .5 0

C

ICE
0VlR
CUBES 8m'

V00KJL GIN. RUM. SCOTCH
CANADIANCLUB
JAB SCOTCH
6ILBEY GIN
KESSLER BLEND
BACARDI RUM
SMIRNOFF 80* VODKA

UUCTI0 IT Will I IHRlTt
( uiidof xmzRiuuKtr rut

GALLO

- 69

M I X A N Y 12 - 116.25

C A S t OF 6

Schenley Gin
Tanqueray Gin
Gordon’s Gin
Seagram ’s Gin
Relska Vodka
Popov Vodka

LIQUEUR DOMAINE

UTIH

D RIN K

HUY A C A S E A SAVE AT AUC

PEPPERMINT
SCHNAPPS 3 . 1 9

6 «

W H IT E

yr.

C A N A D IA N
CMOICI

SPECIALS

6

1.75 LTR — LOW, LOW CASE PRICES GIANT PARTY SIZE — 59.2 OZ.

8 YR. 86°
SCOTCH

•ijf}

50'

D AILY
4 T il 6

H A P P Y H O UR

RON RICO

CANADIAN BOND

IT S 4 Y R S . B E T T E R

1 • • 6up.» loony* A Pkg • CockUII lounge A Pkg

59.2 OZ.

750 Ml
C A S E O F 12 - 9 3 . 4 5

W ISER’S 10 YR.

HI-WAY 438 ONE BLO CK
EAST OF 1-4 - O PEN SUNDAY

Si

79

750 ML

CASE OF 12 • 101.50

♦♦ A LTA M O N TE

Grant’s
8 YR.

EDWARD S. IlKNDEI.

Airm an Jam es W Cook, son ol
W illiam E and E v e ly n D Cook ol
IZCunningham Road, D eB ary, has
been assigned to Lo w ry A ir Force
Base. Colo , after completing A ir
Force basic training
D uring the s is w eeks at
Lackland Air Fo rce Base. Texas,
the airm an studied the A ir Force
m issio n .
o rg an izatio n
and
customs and received special
training in human relations
Cook
w in
now
re c e iv e
sp ecia lized in stru c tio n in the
munitions and weapons m ain
tenance held
He is a 1973 graduate of DeL and
High School

750 Ml1,

umit o«t mcusTomu w,court* 1

AMERICA'S LARGEST
WINE &amp; SPIRITS DEALER

1 9 9

SMIRNOFF
80° VODKA

6

PATRICK A. RENO

JAMES W. COOK

ABC 100*
VODKA

______________ _

C A S E O F 12 - 8 0 . 2 5

Navy Enjign P a trick A Reno,
son of Andrew F and Suzanne
Reno ot t l ) Lak e Minnie D rive.
Santord. has been commissioned
in h is present
ran k
upon
graduation from the U S Naval
Academy. Annapolis. Md
During lour y e a rs at the
A cad em y.
Reno
studied
e n g in e e rin g .
m a t h e m a t ic s ,
p h ysical and m a rin e sc ie n c e ,
management and government In
addition to an active physical
Illn e s s c u rric u lu m , they also
studied m ilitary justice, leader
ship and naval history, plus a wide
variety ol elective courses, leading
to a baccalaureate degree and
commissioning in the Navy or
Marine Corps

Ejtward Scott Mendel, sonol Mr
and M rs Raymond Lee Mendel ol
J57S Semoran Blvd . Winter Park,
has enlisted In the United States
Marine Corps
Mendel will depart Janu ary S lor
II weeks ol recruit training at the
M arine Corps R e c ru it Depot.
P a rris Island, S C
Upon com
pletion ot recruit training, Mendel
will be home tor a 10 day leave
oelore going on lo r fu rth e r
technical framing in a tormal
Marine Corps school
Mendel enlisted lor lour years
with a guaranteed assignment in
the M arine Corps combat support
program
P rio r to e n listin g .
Mendel workedlor B ig "10" T ire o l
Orlando and attended Lake Mowell
High School

1 .9 9

UNIT ONE PCI CUSTOMER W/C00P0N

Ui

79 i

4 .4 9

0- Com
bos
CHEDDAR CHEESE

‘ imbosj 1 . 1 9
TOZ.PKCL

IMPORTED DENMARK

PLUMROSE
HAM
2 .6 9 I

•AYR
■0«

2 * 9 _ _

GALLO
CHABLIS
BLANC

3 .9 9

'81 GERMAN M. MORT
P ie t p o H a r
I . S c h w a rx a K a t x
S p a t le t e

3 .9 9
3 .9 9
4 .9 9

7S0 M L-B U Y 10 G ET 3 F R EE

�Evening Herald
(USPS M l 1101

300 N. FRENCH AVK.. SANFORD. FT*A. 32771
Area Code 305-322-2611 or 831-9993
W ednesday, August 18, I982-4A
Wayne D Doyle, Publisher
Thomas Giordano, Managing Editor
Robert Lovenbury, Advertising and Circulation Director
Home Delivery: Week. 11.00; Month, M 25; 6 Months, 124.00;
Year, MS.00. By Mail: Week, *1.25; Month, *5 25; 6 Months,
*30.00; Year. *57.00.

Diving From Bridge
Can Be Hazardous
Not too long ago we published a se rie s of photos
on page one of the E vening H erald depicting som e
young people diving off the D ouglas Sten&amp;irom
Bridge (fo rm e rly called the O steen bridge! into
the St. Jo h n s R iver 30 or so feet below.
While th e e ffo rts of our staff photographer w ere
aim ed p rim a rily at getting a spot news photo, we
also pointed out in one of the cap tio n s that the
practice is dangerous.
The sh e riff's d ep artm en t, acco rd in g to John
Spolski, d e p a rtm e n t spokesm an, is concerned
about the d a n g e rs to citizens who dive from the
bridge or even attem p t sw im m ing in that a re a .
A pparently th e u n d ercu rren t in the St. Johns at
and in th e vicinity of the D ouglas S tenslrom
Bridge c a n be treacherous at tim es and con­
siderably dangerous to b ath ers.
The sh e riff’s departm ent is speculating today
that the d a n g ero u s und ercu rren t m ay have been
responsible for the death of a 16-year-old Sanford
boy. The boy was sw im m ing last S atu rd ay with a
friend a m ile north of the bridge w hen, according
to his friend, he disappeared u n d er the w ater and
never re su rfa c e d . The boy’s hotly was recovered
from the riv e r Tuesday m orning.
Not only does the sw irling un d ercu rren t w orry
the sh e riff's d e p a rtm e n t, th e re apparently also
are o th er d a n g e rs involved. Spolski points out
tltose who dive from the bridge risk plunging into
a passing vessel. That could e a rn the diver a
broken leg or, worse, a broken neck.
Longtim e a re a residents pointed out to us
shortly a fte r we published the photos of the
Douglas S tenstrom bridge d iv e rs th a t over the
past few y e a rs there have been som e serious
accidents th ere.
The sh e riff’s d e p a rtm e n t, acco rd in g to Sjxilski,
will ask the D epartm ent of T ran sp o rtatio n to
consider posfing signs w arning prospective (livers
of the d a n g e rs.
Not only th a t, Spolski said th ey 'll ask the DOT to
post “ no p a rk in g " signs along the bridge. Ap­
parently d iv e rs often leave th e ir vehicles parked
on the b rid g e while they ta k e a sw im .
The DOT should do so im m ediately.

A Leaner Detroit
The U S. auto industry is still m ire d in a virtual
depression m ark ed bv anem ic sales, burgeoning
debt and m assive layoffs of sa la rie d and hourly
w orkers. But, here and th ere, a ray of hope is
beginning to shine through the gloom.
Consider, for exam ple, the in d u stry ’s progress
in cu ttin g costs and in creasin g productivity.
G eneral M otors, Ford. C hrysler and A m erican
M otors h a v e slashed th eir o v erh ead by $8 billion.
They have negotiated contract concessions with
the U nited Auto W orkers w orth $4 billion in sav ed
lal&gt;or costs.
As a resu lt of these sav in g s and generally
leaner, m o re efficient operations, th e a u to m ak ers
have red u c e d the num bers of vehicles they m ust
sell to b re a k even by 3 m illion units. This is a n
im pressive achievem ent by any stan d ard s.
That th e s e sav in g s h av e been accom plished in
the m idst of the in d u stry ’s m ost expensive
retooling in history m ak es it all the m ore
re m a rk a b le . By 1985, the A m erican autom obile
industry will have spent $7l» billion or m ore to
redesign its e n tire line in acco rd an ce with a
changing m ark e t.
W hether the industry can then sta g e its long
aw aited com e-back and re c a p tu re a t least a
portion of the 28 percent m a rk e t s h a re lost to
foreign com petition rem a in s un certain .
Continued cooperation from the UAW will be
essential, s ta rtin g with this y e a r 's co n tract talks
Iiower in te re st rate s will be needed, both to sp u r
new c a r sa le s and to cut the cost of obtaining new
capital.
A period of sta b ility in w orld energy m a rk e ts
• and a p re d ic ta b le reg u lato ry c lim a te would also
help im m ensely.
D espite these huge question m ark s, the industry
. has a t le a st confounded the doom sayers on one
' score. A m e ric an a u to m a k ers a r e d em o n stratin g
‘ that they c a n , in fact, re s tru c tu re th eir industry
|i and boost productivity. Doubts about that had led
R som e c ritic s to predict that D etro it would lum ber,
like a dying dinosaur, into oblivion.

b

"I'm going to display more vigor. Prop me up
right here, comrades."

n&gt; TF.M YARBOROUGH

Rapes, murders, burglaries, assaults, rob­
beries — these are the things that pop into our
minds when someone says the word crime. But,
there is another crime which has reached
epidemic proportions here and is expected to
increase as area children return to the
schoolhouses in Septem ber. That crim e,
although not as dangerous as those previously
mentioned but just as costly — is bicycle thefts.
True, bicycle thefts have become big business
for some, including those who operate bike­
stealing rings employing youths from 12 to 20
years, to steal the two-wheeling vehicles from
unsuspecting victims — usually other children.
These thieves steal bicycles for personal gain,
whether or not the bike will be actually used by
them for pleasure and transportation, sold ns is,
or disassembled and sold for parts.
Sanford police say they have “an enormous

collection of bicycles," which have been turned
in or have been recovered from thefts. Police
add that many of the bicycles will never be
returned to their rightful owner because the
owner cannot positively identify the bike as his
by showing proof of ownership or picking it out
by means of an Identifiable mark or serial

number.
The Special Operations Division of the
Seminole County sheriff’s department provides a
way for bike owners to register their bicycles but
the program is strictly volunteer and the cyclist
must visit the department to do so. Once there,
his bicycle is given a serial number and that
number, the owner’s owner's name and a
description of the bike goes on file in the event it
is ever stolen.
While police say bicycle cliain locks may deter
a bike thief, but "they can always cut the chain

with wire cutters and they’ve got the bike."
However, if the bicycle is registered or has an
identifiable mark, the chances are better for
returning the bike, if recovered, to the owner
Police added that what most bicycle thiefs fail
to understood, especially the youthful offenders,
is that stealing a bicycle these days, with bikes
costing *100 or more, constitutes grand theft - a
felony.
So, police and deputies give this advice,
register your bicycle, use a strong chain lock
when you have to leave your bicycle out of your
sight and make additional identifiable marks on
the bicycle that only you know about. Any and
every precaution, increases the chance your bike
— if stolen and later recovered — will be
returned to you in a time when bike thefts are on
the increase.

WILLIAM A. RUSHER

Seeing
Living
Room W ar
NEW YORK (NEAj - The television
coverage of the war in l^banon, especially
when considered in conjunction with the in­
tensive TV coverage of the U S. militaryeffort in Vietnam, makes it clear that we are
in the presence of a brand new factor in the
art and science of warfare. Unless we learn to
cope with it better than we have thus far, it
may prove a serious, even fatal handicap to
open societies like this one.
Time was when soldiers marched off to
w ai, and all the folks on the home front got
was a written dispatch, often days or even
weeks old, describing more or less what was
going on, After a while one side won and the
other lost, and the soldiers — or most of them
— came home. Some of the survivors were
maimed for life, and Just about all of them
agreed that the war had been a miserable
experience. But for those at home it
remained, forever, an event remote from
their ken.
That, broadly speaking, continued to be the
case right up through World War II and even
Korea. Cities like l/indon, Berlin and Tokyo
became familiar with the special horrors of
massive air bombardment, but even their
citizens would have had difficulty imagining
what Anzio or two Jima was like. The still
photos and black-and-w hite newsreels simply
didn't convey the immediacy, or the color, or
the horror.
It was in Vietnam that television coverage
of war came of age, and I am not aware of any
study that has tried seriously to assess the
relation in that coverage to the outcome of the
war — particularly in terms of its effect on
U .S.home-front morale and die indispensable
•'will to win."
Iait’s be careful not to sell the American
people short here: Dragged into the conflict
as they were without the slightest preparation
by their leaders, without even a formal
declaration of war, realizing that diere was
no strategic plan for victory, they nonetheless
g' iinly sent off their sons to battle. As late as
1973, the only way the pollsters could stitch
together a popular majority against the war
was to combine those who opposed it outright
with those who had a cold contempt for the
way It was being run.
But there was indeed an out-and-out anti­
war minority in this country, diligently
carrying symbolic coffins around the White
House and reading casualty lists in front of
the Washington Monument, and it was their
cause that television aided. Who will ever
forget the sight of the protesting Buddhist
monk in Saigon who soaked liimself in
gasoline and then put a match to his clothes?
Or the Vietcong prisoner being shot in cold
blood by a South Vietnamese colonel?
Vietnam was the first war in which such
scenes had ever been viewed by civilians on
the home front in living (or dying) color, and
a lot of people couldn’t take it. It seems likely
lliat a large part of the pressure on the
American government to end its military
effort in Vietnam on virtually any terms
w hatever stem m ed from this perfectly
natural (and skillfully mobilized) revulsion.
Significantly, the B ritish government
during the recent battle for the Fulklands
managed to shield the eyes of its squeamish
citizens from the grinuner aspects of the
operation because it had the rare good luck to
control all access to the remote battle zone
and all communications with it.
The Israeli armed forces in Lebanon
haven’t been so fortunate.

BUSINESS WORLD
—

W&gt; n

&lt; ic v T

M O V it-

-

%

Thrift
Wasn't
So Bad

_

ReaL LiFe.

§TeiNVl

Rce*(t MTU

JEFFREY HART

Conservatives Hit Reagan
The July 1982 issue of the Conservative ceptual revolution.
Digest hit the Washington political com­
Reagan's New Federalism would result in
munity as something of a mini-sensation. It the cutting of much in the way of federal
consists, cover to cover, of conservative spending, some of it for esoteric programs.
attacks upon... President Ronald Reagan.
In foreign policy, Reagan has been firm on
Now the Conservative Digest does not fan Taiw an when the middle echelons of the Slate
out across the country to a mass audience, but Department and the departed Al Haig were
it does have considerable importance in the urging sell-out. On the forthcoming armsconservative com m unity, especially in limitation talks, Reagan has been much
Washington, and so iLs performance here is firm er than the State Department desired,
and Reagan's position on some quite
worth a few comments.
tecluiica) matters possessed in my judgement
The overall thrust of its attack is very well
suggested by the cover, which bears the overwhelming justification.
On the whole range of social issues, Reagan
headline question, "Has Reagan Deserted the
Conservatives?" and features six color has spoken clearly. Reagan cannot bring
photographs of the president. The sequence about reforms in this area overnight. He is not
gets fainter and fainter until Reagan can omnipotent, conservatives — sober — would
barely be recognized. Under these photos we not wish him to lie omnipotent.
In his public addresses, Reagan has cut
read the caption, "Where’s the Best of Me?" a
take-off on "Where’s the Best of Me?", the through the murk of recent presidential
title of an autobiographical Reagan memoir. prose, speak’ng with a clarity we have not
Now, first of all, by using selective heard for years. His speech to Parliament
and his address to the United Nations were
quotations, editor John I-ofton has created an
rem arkable for the frankness with which he
impression that is in important respects
addressed our situation vis-a-vis the Soviets.
seriously misleading. Much of the nr.gazine
To readers of this column, il will come as no
consists of short quotations hum con­
surprise that I am dismayed by White House
servatives, neo-conservatives, economic
support of the major lax increase engineered
conservatives, supply-siders, Righl-to-Ufe
people, anti-communists and others, all of by Senator Dole —but hope remains that this
whom have indeed expressed criticisms of the can tie scuttled in the House, or that Reagan
can be persuaded to veto it.
administration,
The Conservative Digest, in my judgment,
Some of my own critical comments ar
has made a major strategic blunder in giving
reprinted. Hut I, in fact, consider Rona.u
Reagan the most successful American con­ the im pression that the Reagan ad­
ministration is beyond redemption, sold-out
servative political leader of this century. That
judgement is reflected elsewhere in things— to "Fordis Republican moderates.
With an administration that has done as
unquoted in this context—that I have '.vrilten.
much good as this one, the rule must be:
The same is true of many of the other
Criticism, yes; Excommunication, no.
writers excerpted here, with live dubious aim
of suggesting that we have all joined in a
m assive conservative defection from
Reagan.
Reagan is not beyond criticism, but it is
only fair to give credit where it is due.
le tte rs to the editor are welcomed for
During 1981, the Reagan administration
publication. All letters must be signed,
succeeded in reversing the trends of a halfwith a mailing address and, If possible, a
century by getting Congress to enact the
telephone number so the identity of the
three-year supply-side tax reductions.
writer may be verified. The Evening
The Reagan agenda dominated the whole
Herald will respect the wishes of writers
national discussion. We were no longer
who do not want their names In print. The
hearing about vast new federal social
Evening Herald also reserves the right to
programs; the questions being debated
edit letters to eliminate libel or to conform
concerned how much to cut, and where to cut
to space requirements.
it. Reagan himself spearheaded that con­

PLEASE WRITE

NEW YORK (UPI) — Twenty years ago a
young man used to regale college friends with
tales of his summer job at a major depart­
ment store where in order to receive a new
pencil he had to turn in an old stub.
Tills is an extreme example of good old
American thrift that used to be practiced
routinely and that has fallen by the wayside.
Rut hard-pressed businesses might do well
not to laugh.
Employee pilfering of pencils, paper clips,
pens, paper and other supplies could mean
the difference between profit and loss for a
small-to medium-sized firm, especially now
with profits being bit by the recession anil
high interest rates.
Cecil Byrd, vice president in Rank of
America's urban affairs department that
administers its small business loan program,
said when a business fails " it’s almost never
due to outside circumstances but because
management didn't do the right things. One of
the right things to do now is lighten up on
expenses,"
"When things are going well people become
complacent.” said Molly Bograd, who in­
stituted many cost-saving measures as
controller at Keyes Martin, Springfield. N J
advertising firm, "No one notices possible
profits slipping through the cracks."
Miss Bograd, for example, realized savings
by moving one person's starting hours back to
8:30 a.m.
"The whole office started to work at 9, but
nothing was accomplished until the mail was
sorted and delivered," she said. “ By having
the person who does that come in one-half
hour earlier we saved hundreds of hours each
year."
Bank of America finds most errors are
made in payroll expense. "The salary of one
employee for one year can equal profits for
some businesses," Byrd said.
Businesses that have peak hours can save
substantially by using part-tim e people, or by
re-examining the hours they are open to make
sure they arc not missing potential sales, he
said.
Keeping track of sales expense also is
important, Byrd said. An example is a meal
wholesaler who was having profitability
problems.
“The more business the firm did the less
profits il made," he said. "We checked its
routes and found the company was making
daily deliveries of 10 pounds of hamburger 40
miles away, ILs whole route system was full of
sales it couldn’t afford to make and profits
were eaten away in the driver's salary,
gasoline and wear and tear on the truck."
Although Byrd said use of outside con­
sulting services often is recommended, "it's a
difficult area, especially for the entrepreneur
who by definition is a hearty breed of rugged
individualist and doesn't take advice easily."
The other extreme is the person who latches
on to outside advice without using his own
good judgment.
The entrepreneurial firm also often runs
into problems when it begins to succeed.
"When a firm Is starting out, the owners
often do everything from clean the rest rooms
to take care of the books," Byrd said. "Their
talents are developing the product or
business. Many don't have Uie managerial
talents necessary to keep it going.
"There comes a point tn many successful
operations where the firm outgrows live
founder. Sometimes he needs to step down
and bring in someone who can take i( from
there.”

JACK ANDERSON

Double Chin Cost G l His News Job
WASHINGTON - You’d think the Army
would have enough to worry about these days,
what with tanks that break down every few
miles, gun crews that can't shoot straight and
recruits who can barely read "Peter Rabbit."
But the brass hats still found time to get all
bent out of shape over Spec-5 Ralph Stinson's
double chin.
The 29-year-old Stinson, of South Portland,
Me., was a television newscaster on the
A m erican F orces Network in Europe,
bringing news o[ the world to U.S. troops each
day. He was happy in his work.
Suddenly last November he was bounced
from his newscasting job and relegated to
unglamorous, off-the-alr chores. When he
asked why he had been demoted, the only
reason given was that he was "too fat,"
This outraged Stinson. He is, in fact, not
overweight. But he does have a perceptible
double chin - a family characteristic he
unfortunately inherited.
On a subsequent stateside leave, Stinson —
no dummy, he — contacted his senator,

William Cohen, R Maine. He pointed out that
the Army had spent a lot of time and lax
money training him as a newscaster. He also
said he felt his abrupt demotion had been
handled in an arbitrary and capricious
manner.
Cohen's staff did a little checking around,
and on Jan. 28, after learning that his
unhappy constituent was still languishing in
off-camera exile, the senator wrote a polite
but pointed letter to Maj. Gen. Charles
Franklin, the Army's congressional liaison
chief. Cohen enclosed some pictures of
Stinson, to show that, despite the double chin,
he was not fat.
"The Assistant Surgeon General’s office
has advised my office that the inherited
nature of an individual's facial structure can
lend itself to the development of a double
chin," Cohen wrote. He asked the two-star
general to keep him abreast of developments
in the case of the soldier's double chin.
Thirteen days later, Stinson was back
before the cameras dispensing the evening

news. Though Cohen is a member ol the
Senate Armed Services Conunittee, the Army
stoutly denied that his letter to the general
had anything to do with Stinson’s rein­
statement.
Indeed, in a letter to Cohen two weeks later,
the Army insisted that weight had never been
a factor in Stinson's disappearance from the
air. It was his thick hair style and heavy
mustache, the Army explained, plus a lightfitting uniform that somehow enhanced
television’s tendency to make people look
heavier than they are.
Stinson, the Army told Cohen, got his old Job
back only after "receiving professional
assistance on how to improve his appearance
by changing his hair style, reducing the size
of his mustache and using different facial
makeup techniques,"
The Army couldn't explain why Stinson
liudn't been given this prufc»siunal guidance
instead of the sack last November. An aide to
Cohen speculated that "some general was
probably visiting the base, went back to his

room, popped a can of beer, saw Stinson on
TV and arbitrarily decided he didn’t like his
looks."
Cohen told my associate Cltarles Bermant:
"I find it difficult to believe that a matter like
this is worth this much of the Army’s time.
Their efforts could be spent far more
profitably."
Amen.
WATCH ON WASTE: Millions of dollars are
going down the drain in the construction of
federally financed sewage treatment plants,
government auditors recently concluded. And
it’s all because of a technicality.
About *30 million could be saved If the
Environmental Protection Agency’s 1978
guidelines were followed in building 13
treatm ent plants begun after Sept. 30, 1978.
The new guidelines were more cost-efficient
than the old ones. But because funds for the 13
plants were approved before the Sept. 30
cutoff date, the old, wasteful guidelines
prevailed — even though construction didn’t
begin till after that date.

�•

■
V

SHOP
-A*M

J&gt;

V l J

.■-■..■..‘ J
THURSDAY-FRIDAY-SATURDAYl

J •l -rr v

■♦;* •*=

j 6J

Evening H erald, Sanford, FI

Wednesday, Aug, 18.1983—5A

♦ * T T T

S~i. DOWNTOWN

SA N FO R D

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�6A— Evening Herald, Sanford, F I.

Wednesday, Aug. 18. 1982

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T h u r.-Fri.-Sat.
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6 "

�Evening Herald, Sanford. FI

Job Census Being Conducted Locally
Ever wonder where the U S. Department of
l.abor nets those figures for the unem­
ployment rate announced on the first Friday of
each month'*
During the middle of each month the Census
Bureau surveys 71,000 households around the
country to d e te rm in e the “ employment
situation" for that month,
On the local level, (Seminole and Orange
counties are lumped together in the survey i
three census workers obtain employment
information from 150 area households, ac­

cording to Paul McAllister, supervisorysurvey statistician with the Atlanta regional
office of the Census Bureau.
These households are selected through a
scientific random address method, he said.
They participate in the sampling for four
months the first year and the same four
months of the following year. First, they are
sent a letter of explanation and then contacted
in person. For the three following months they,
are contacted by phone. Data is collected on
all members of the household H years and
over.

They are asked if they are working, looking
for work, keeping house, going to school or
something else. The households are chosen to
reflect characteristics of the population as a
whole as determined by the census taken
every 10 years. Each sample contains the
same percentages of urban, suburban, rural
and smalltown households as the nation as a
whole.
For example, in June the survey indicated
that of the U0,2 million men and women in the
civilian labor force, 99.8 million were em­
ployed. The nation’s unemployment rate was

FLORIDA

9.5 percent, the same as in May.
The federal government defines the work
force" as members of the nnn-inslitutional,
non-farm population over age 16 who were
employed or seeking employment during the
previous month. Not included are the
discouraged workers who are no longer
looking for jobs because they think none are
available."

IN BRIEF
Florida's Major Crime Rate
Drops In First Half Of '82

Each month unemployment figures are also
adjusted to reflect seasonal factors affecting
employment,

T AIJ .AHASSKE i li 1*11 - Increased state and loca 1
government funding of law enforcement is being
credited for a drop in the number of major crimes
reported in Florida during the first six months of this
year
The Florida Department of Liw Enforcement said
Tuesday that the volume of serious crimes was 4.4
percent lower from January to June compared to the
same period hist year.
Besides the increased law enforcement funding,
officials attributed the drop to a crackdown on drug
smugglers and the accelerating development of neigh­
borhood crime watch and prevention progratas at the
grassroots level.
The decline continues an apparent leveling off since
June of 1981 of Florida’s crime volume, which had
leaped a staggering 18 percent in 1980

Sanford, Seminole Fire Calls And DUl Arrests
Tile Sanford Fire Department responded to the following fire
calls
Friday
— 154 a.m.. 306 Elm Ave., woman down.
— 7:51 a.m„ 101 E. 25th St., car motor fire.
— 8:29 a.m., 950 Mcllonville Ave.. rescue.
— 10:16 a.m., 185 W. Airport Blvd., rescue.
— 4:5G p in., 206 W. First St., rescue.
— 6:03 p.m , 2380 W. 25th St., dumpster fire.
— 7.50 p.m., 1407 S. French Ave., car fire.
— 8:23 p.m., 2904 S. Orlando Drive, car fire.

— 10:04 p.m., 13th St. and French Ave., rescue.
Saturday
— 1:29 a.m., 2944 Orlando Drive, rescue.
— 2:35 a.m., 2544 S Park Drive, false alarm
— 4:32 a.m.. Douglas Ave. and Montezuma Ave., rescue.
— 11:30 a.m., 2518 S French Ave., automobile accident, no
injuries reported.
— 11:37 a.m., 66 William Clark Hoad, rescue.
— 7:11 p.m., 1895 E Airport Blvd., rescue.
— 9:22 p.m., 1010‘s W. 13th v , man down,

Wednesday, Aug 18, 1982—7A

Sunday
— 4:08 a.m., 519 E. First St., woman down.
— 6:25 a.m ., 2550 El Cnpitan Drive, rescue.
— 9:01 a.m., 519 E. First St., rescue
1:27 p.m., 24th St. and French Ave., automobile accident
with possible injuries.
— 1:49 p.m., 309 S. Magnolia Ave., woman down
— 2:11 p.m., 1010'j W 13th St., man down.

Monday
—8:09 a.m., 25th St. and French Ave., automobile accident,
minor injuries.
—12:26 p.m., 2523 Park Drive, person down, fell off bicycle.

Slowing Island Development

Tuesday

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30 C apsules
R e g . 57.50

Sale *4”
Sale H ”

Stop in a n d b r o w s e — a s k for y o u r
F R E E copy ot " B e t t e r N u t r i t i o n "
Sale p ric e s in e i l e c t w h ile
o u r s u p p ly lasts.

Taylor's Natural Foods
305 323 6760

Kidnapped Sisters Home
Git I AN DO O Ji'li — Two pre-leenage sisters who
were abducted and taken to Alabama have returned
home to Florida, but they will remain in state custody
until a judge determines if the girts should be reunited
with their mother
Holding hands with a sheriff's deputy. Haquel Hose
Kaur, 11, and her 7-year-old sister Myra Lynn Faur
arrived home Tuesday night
The youngsters spent three nights in a private foster
home in the northeast Alabama town of Centre after
fleeing Saturday from a man they said kidnapped them
Aug. 2 from an Interstate 4 rest area near hike Buena
Vista.

Airport Restaurant
Gets New Management

W O RLD

Beginning Sept 15, a new firm will lie operating the
restaurant and lounge at the Sanford Airport.
The Sanford Airport Authority has signed a contract with
Frank Bolton Catering Services Inc. of Altamonte Springs to
operate the facility.
In return for the contract, the Altamonte Springs firm will be
paying the authority seven percent of its business income.
J.S. “ Bed" Cleveland, execuilve director of the airport, said
the new firm will be purchasing some of the restaurant
equipment owned by the present lease-holder, Jerry’s
Catering Service of Miami.
Jerry’s lease expires in November and Cleveland said the
firm didn’t intend to renew the contract because its main
business is flight catering.
Cleveland said the Bolton firm will be handling catering plus
banquet service at the facility, in addition to operating the
restaurant and lounge.

IN BRIEF
PLO May Withdraw
By This Weekend
United Press International
Isiael pulled back slightly along the U banon War
front to allow the country's Parliament to vote in this
week’s presidential election, with all sides predicting
an imminent Palestinian withdrawal from Beirut.
The U banese Cabinet was scheduled to meet today
and approve the final draft agreement for the removal,
possibly starting this weekend, of the Ptdestine
Liberation Organization's battered forces from west
Beirut.
With Israeli trooops already pulling back from
several main crossing points between Christian cast
Beirut and the Moslem west, a senior Ij -ban esc source
said only two issues remained outstanding.
The Palestinians want some of the 7,000 prisoners
Israel captured during the war in return for handing
over a downed Israeli pilot and the remains of nine
Israeli soldiers missing since Israel's 1978 invasion of
U'banon, he said.
The Israelis also are still demanding some method of
insuring all the PIG guerrillas in Beirut actually
leave, the source said.

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 18
Starlight Promenaders, 8 p.m., DeBary Community
Center, Shell Road.
FRIDAY, AUGUST 20
Seminole Sunrise Klwuni*, 7 a.m., Jerry ’s Airport
Restaurant, Sanford.
Seminole South Rotary, 7:50 a.m ., U rii Cl mm ley's,
Altamonte Springs.

c

A U G . 49 - 20 - 21

plaza

Tlie following people were arrested in Seminole County on
charges of driving under the influence 1DUI1 of alcoholic
beverages:
- Howell Porter I bicker. 40. of 901*3 23rd St., Orlando,
arrested 3:22 a.m ., today, charged with DUI and failure to
maintain a single lane of traffic. Deputies arrested Duiker
along Interstate 4 near State Hoad 434, l/ingwood. Bond was
set at $500.
- Richard Claude Stuart, 40, of 256 Gary Blvd , Dingwood.
arrested 1:23 a.m ., Tuesday, charged with DUI. Stuart was
arrested by Ixmgwood police along County Hoad 427 near
Palmetto Ave. Bond was set at $500
Ymgfai, it. ot 6340 FoiecaMle Cou*i, i-rla&gt;.Uo,
arrested I 56 a m. today, charged with DUI Yingai, who Ls
also known as Yingai, was arrested by deputies along State
Hoad 436. Casselberry, near the Seminole-Orange County line
Bond was set at $500.
Marc Michael Hoffman, 25, of 2744 Ridgewood Ave.,
Sanford, arrested 8:15 p.m. Tuesday, charged with DUI and
leaving the scene of an accident, lxmgwood police charged
Hoffman after responding to an accident at the ABC lounge at
U S Highway 17-92 and Slate Hoad 436, Casselberry , and
learning from witnesses that a motorist fled the scene after
being involved in the three-vehicle collision. Police said they
broadcast a description of the hit-and-run vehicle and driver
and were notified that Casselberry jxilice had stopped the
suspected vehicle and motorist. Bond was set at $5,000

CALENDAR

R-C, Diet Rite,
R-C 100 or
Decaf - R-C
32 o z -

United Press International
A proposal to disqualify more tluin half of Florida's
undeveloped private beachfront from federally sub­
sidized flood insurance will slow or even stop con­
struction on barrier islands, environmentalists say,
Suggested by Interior Secretary James Watt, the
insurance proposal would affect ISO miles of Florida's
coastline at 35 siles The sites are among 748 miles in 16
states along the Atlantic and Gulf coasts that Watt
would have designated “ undeveloped coastal
barriers."
A portion of the beaches lie in areas with a high risk
of weather damage Others beaches affected are
barrier islands that protect wetlands and other wildlife
habitats. Barrier islands are the thin strips of sand
protecting mainland beaches from die ocean
A 90-day period for citizens to comment on the
proposed designations started Tuesday. Unless the
proposal is successfully challenged, the insurance
cutoff will go into effect Oct 1, 1983.

—10:55 a.m ., 709 W. 9th St., man down.
—12:14 p.m., 815 S. French Ave., woman down.
-1:32 pm ., 113 Sterling Court, boy fell off bicycle.
—5:02 p.m,, 2701 S. Orlando Drive, Second linage, fire
caused by overloading of circuit connecting ceiling fans, fire
damage to fan and control unit. No injuries reported
—1:48 p.m., 103 Bethune Circle, child down.
-9:13 p.m., 2403 Hally Ave.. child down.

REALTY TRANSFERS
Earle V Oakley (V wl Nanette to
Karl Schoepflln t K a rl E . Lot 18 &amp;
W 11 of to. Edgewood Manor,
122.500
John G iallo urakis 4 wt Anna S
to Fred W allace, trustee, Lot 5*.
Pme Heights, 118,500
(QCD) Kenneyi R Hartshorn,
sgl to Pauline M Hartshorn, s g l,
Lot IS, Blk L , Long wood Pk, 1100
(QCD) Rosa L Johnson lo Sara
Jacobson. Lot « W&gt; &gt; ot vacated
alley adj to E line ot Lot t , Bik 10.
Tier H. 1IOO
Lam ar H W illia m s to Dick
W illiam s. Inc . Lots 3 &amp; 4. Blk H,
Sanlando Springs. T r 74. 2nd
R e p !, 110,000
(QCD) R ich ard E
Peck &amp;
Catherine lo Catherine W Peck,
Lot 1, Blk C. The Springs, 1)00
FI Res Comm . Inc toTnnolhy
D Jordan 4 wl Dona L y n , Lot II ,
The Highland! Sec 7 4 8. 175,800
Samuel Zell etc T r lo Equity
R e illy In c., Un 1, Sandy Cove,

1100
Equity R eally Inc lo C Neal
W'lliS &amp; wl Susan, Un I, Sandy
Cove, 118.900
Equity R e a lly , Inc. lo Robert E
Cornwell 4 wt Dorothy W . Un 165
B Destiny Springs, 121,400
Samuel Zell etc. to Equity
Realty Inc , Un lea Sandy Cove

1100
Equity Realty Inc to Michael M
Co« 4 w l R osem ary. Un 75, Sandy
Cove. 141,900
Neil L Yoder «. wl Ju lie K to
Richard Steiner 4 w l Annie M O ,
lo t 5, Blk L , Howell Cove 2nd Sec ,
lea uyi
W illiam Yates S r , Repr Est

Annie to Raymon R Schmitt &amp; wl
Melanie S . Lot 1. Gindervillc
Heights. 117.000
(QCD) Madclyn S Phelps lo
Charles M Phelps J r , Lois 10 4 31,
Blk 19. Sanlando The Suburb
Beaulilul. 1)00
Gerald R
M cGratty Jr
lo
Thomas R Risher,Trustee. S 4 c
ot E 10 c ot S E 'v ot Sec 9 21 31,
1125.000
(Q CDI Stephen Wolk &amp; wl Helen
lo Steven J Wolk. Lois 20 &amp; 21, 4
part ot 19. Longwood Hills. 1100
Flo rida Land Co to Cardinal
Industries Oev Corp part ot Sec
17 20 30, desc 13 137 acres m l,
1161.300
F I Land Co lo Cardinal Ind
Dev Corp part ot SW'v ot Sec 17
20 30 . 6 acres m I, 1145.000
Maronda Homes, Inc to E a r l E
Danley, sgl , Lot 7, Cedar Ridge
Un, II, 151.900
Tim o th y J
M urphy &amp; wf
Mildred lo P a trick M Hcaty 4 wl
Cristina M . Lot 14, Underoaks,
less part, 172,800
John M R in a 4 wl Mary C lo
Arm cl D enij U ral 4 wl E lcin , Lot
697 W ekiva Hunt Club Foa Hunt
Sec 3, 181.000
G re a te r C o n str
Corp
to
Timothy R
Schtagheck &amp; wt
Nancy K . Lot 187, R iver Run Sec
Four. 141.900
Springs Landing Venture to Gino
a
Ratti I I I , Trustee. Lot 134.
Sp ring s L a n d in g , Un
F o u r,
110.200
Edw ard L D ale y 4 wt Barbara
L to Susan G Harrim an. Lot 9,

B'k 12. EaviLrouk &gt;u, un
151.500

5,

P a trick R C ycm am tk, sgl 4
M ary, wit to M arqarel E M orris,
R aym o n d P
Bren n an 4 wt
Elizabeth, Lot 208 Wrenwood Hts ,
Un It. 565.000
Rambow Ranch Inc to Lo Bros
E n tr , Inc , E 277‘ ot Lt 68 Spring
Hammock. 1200,000
Greater Constr Corp to Koes
Starrenburg 4 At E ls ie . Lot 53.
M andarin. Sec Two, 590.000
Q ID ) Donald F
Hobson to
Mattie B Hobson. N 350’ ot E &gt;, ot
N *) ot S ': ol NEW less E 1240* ot
Sec 28 70 37. eta at , itoo
Everett A M arshall 4 *1 Jean
M lo Robert W Cuthill Sr 8. wt
Helen L . Lot 384. L a k e ot the
Woods Townhouse; Sec 8. 583, 500
Seminole Fa rm s. Ltd to Glenn
R Snyder, Lot | A 29 Seminole
F a rm s. Ph One, 512.000
FI Land Co lo Southern Bell
Tel 4 le i , part ot Lots 52 4 53, Blk
D O R Mitchells Survey ol Moses
E L e v y Grant, 111,300
Richard L M orris 4 w l M ary j
lo Jo Aon Hahm sgl . 5 338 39p ol
SW’ j , less E 454 55* Sec 14 20 32, E
ol S E 46. 52,000
Edith T Lee to Stephen G
Brem er. K a rl W Brem er j c *,
Arthur M B fenter, • , int, S 10’ ol
Lot 7 4 N I I I 3rd' ol Lot 4, B lk J,
T'er l , Sanlord. 115.000
C h a rle s L e G e tte , H elen C
LeGette 4 Eddh T Lee, trustees to
Stephen Brem er, K a rl w Brem er
J r 4 Arthur M Brem er,
nl
same as above. 115,000
W allace R V ickery 4 Gewelma
v tr,(-,-w.i^ .3 •• V i ; U r „ L u l l&gt;,
Blk F . Ph 8 Sweetwater Oaks,

1100
John E Harnson 8, wl M a ry O
to John A lo w n e in 4
E liia b c lh M . Lot 99, Oak Forest
Un I. 176.300
Nader Constr C o . Inc to An
thony L Cerra 4 wl Dorothy j ,
Lot 33. Tuscawilla. Un 9. 190,900
Sabal Poml Prop Inc. to R .L
Pealross 4 Huebcr, In c ., Lot 39,
Timber Ridge at Sabal Point, Un
one. 145.000
Samuel Zell etc , tr to Eq uity
R eally Inc , Un 194. Sandy Cove

1100

Equity Realty Inc lo Stanley M
4 wt Margie D . Un 194, Sandv
Cove. 125,900
Dunhlll inc lo Springfield Prop ,
Inc . Lol 3 Springs Landing, Un
One, 150,000
John E Polk, Sh eriff's deed lo :
Hutchison4 M amele, Lot 7, Blk B,
Country Ctub M anor, Un 3^1100
Fiv e Points L k M ary, L id tg
Wilhe V Graham 4 wl E t ii H ,
Lot 71. Countryside. 17.500
Joel J M irsky 4 wl N atalie to
Jam es P Hanagan 4 wt Diana S .
Lol 19. English Woods. 190.700
Russell Bennett 4 G ayle to
G ayle B en nett, sqi . L o l 28,
Sanlando the Suburb B ea u lilu l.
Argyle sec , 1100
Gerald R M cG ratty J r . 4 tr to
Michael J Sheahjan. trustee, beg
E '* cor ol Sec 33 21 30 etc 1100
Clark E M yall 4 wt C harla to
Anthony R islo rce lli 4 wl Jud y D ,
Let 31, iV ik u d Hunt G u o . F c *
Hunt. Sec 7. ItOS.lOO

�,

SPORTS
.

_________________

8A—Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Wednesday, Aug. 18,1982

P o lo

Eyes ESPN

S lo t W it h

The toughest kid in town is coming to
Orlando Friday.
"S lam m in ' Sam m y" Horne, an
Anderson. S.C., native, will headline
Friday’s card as boxing returns to the
F.ddie Graham Sports Complex at 8:15
Sports Editor
p.m.
Prom oter Dominick Polo, a veteran
fight trainer whose proteges included
Duran had difficulty finding sparring
Casselberry's Scotty Clark, Edgar
partners
who could stand up to his
"Mad Dog" Ross, Mike Quarry and
Irish Gene Wells, is excited about brutal attack. When he found Horne, he
Horne’s battle with Orlando’s William found a guy who could dish it out and
take a punch. More importantly, Duran
"Teacher" Telfair.
" I’ve seen Sammy Home fight on found a guy who didn't run away.
D uran’s opponent, Talfair, is
F.SPN and I think he has the potential to
be an outstanding fighter,’1 said Polo. originally from Indiana, Telfair picked
“We're fortunate to have him appear on up his nickname because he does a lot
of work with kids, teaching them to box
our first card.”
Horne earned his nickname because and trying to keep them off the streets.
He has an Impressive 11-1 record with
he was acknowledged the toughest
eight
knockouts. "1 want the op­
“street fighter" in Anderson. Horne's
trainer, Nick Ometo, who had trained portunity to knock out Home so I have a
fighters in California, went to Anderson cluince at making the big money," said
Telfair.
strictly for that purpose.
In Friday's semifinal. Polo matches a
Everybody Ometo talked to told him
Home was the toughest man in town. pair of rugged 118 pounders in Kevin
When Ometo finally ran Horne down, he "The Stinger" Seabrook and Terry
convinced him to give up his back alley "The Puerto Rican Bomber" Pizzaro.
Seabrook has six pro wins and also
battles and to go pro.
That was four years ago. Since then. has performed on ESPN. In a sparkling
Home has slammed 21 foes, including amateur career, be won 188 fights, lost
15 by knockout. Tbe bard-punching Just eight and kayoed 104 opponents
f’izzaro is 11-5 with nine KOs.
welterweight has lost just once.
Four other bouts will be included on
Resides demonstrating he can throw
a punch, Horne can take one too. Ex- the card. Keith Cameron of Apopka will
welterweight champion Roberto Duran make his pro debut. Cameron, at 100
knows both sides of that situation. pounds, was 45-6 as an amateur. He
Home helped Duran get ready for his fought in the District Golden Gloves
first Sugar Hay I-eonard fight, which he Tournament at Sanford last January.
Orlando's Vint Hammock, a flashy
won.

Sam

Cook

H t r ild Photo b y T o m V ln e t fll

Sem inole High School I'rin c lp a l Way nr Epps
(m iddlel gets a boost from supporters (left to
right) Mill I'nsw qrllt, Hose F u tre ll. Jerry Posey
and Suzy Menu. U nsw orlh. president of the

Sem inole High Monsters, and .Mrs. F utrH I.
m em bership c h a irm a n , launch a m em b ersh ip
push Friday m orning at the G re a te r Sanford
C ham ber of C om m erce building.

F ig h t C a r d s
welterweight with a 2-0 record, and
Manny Vega, formerly of Puerto Rico
and now Orlando, will be on the card
Vega will fight at 136 pounds.
polo is attempting to rekindle the
boxing flame at the Eddie Graham
Complex. He feels boxing is on the
upswing again in Orlando and the
surrounding areas.
“ I know Sanford is a good boxing
town by the way the Golden Gloves
drew there," said Polo. "We’re looking
to draw a lot of Seminole County people
to the fight,"
polo has been told by ESPN that
three good shows at the complex would
w arran t the sports program m ing
network to come to Orlando to cover the
fights.
"I'd like to make this area the
Southern capital of boxing," said Polo.
"Boxing is on television Thursay,
Friday, Saturday and Sunday. That
should be enough to convince you that
it’s on the upswing."
Polo feels boxing went under last
time because some people felt Polo’s
fighters would always win. He has
solved that problem this time by
disassociating himself with the
fighters. He now does Just promotion
"We're bringing in the people that
are seen on television because we feel
people can identify with them," said
Polo. "Las Vegas and Atlantic City are
the big boxing areas now. We'd like to
be the third."
Tickets are $15 for the Golden Row,
$12 for ringside, $8.50 for reserved and
$5 for general admission. They are on
sale at the box office. •

Friday Morning At Chamber

Boosters Push For Members
The push is on.
accompanied by adults canvassing the
On Friday between 8:30 a.m. and 12 neighborhoods," said Seminole Mem­
noon, the Seminole High School Boosters bership Drive Chairman Rose Futrell.
Club will operate its membership drive
"We’re going all out to renew the interest
(rum the Greater Sanford Chamber of
in the Seminole High Boosters Club."
Commerce building.
"We'll have players and cheerleaders
Memberships are available for $5. This

contribution qualifies a member to park
in llie boosters’ parking lot for any
Seminole athletic event.
Tribe jackets ami shirts w ill also be
available at the chamber offiee.
-S A M COOK

Heady Theismann At Reins For Redskins
COACH JOE GIBBS. "We
won eiRht of our last 11
games last year, losing only
to Dallas, Miami and Buffalo
(and we could have won two
of those three). We also have
everybody back healthy, and
feel we had a productive
draft. So, we should have a
good team. Plus we've had a
year together. Rut we do
have the toughest schedule."
In 1981: ft-fl, fourth in NEC East
OFFENSE
PASSING Joe Theismann is m ature,
heady, still mobile. Comes off the most
productive of his eight years in the NFL.
lie's solidly entrenched. He'll throw to
Art Monk, developing Into one of the
NFI.’s best, and Virgil Seay, with Terry
Metcalf doing swing duty as receiverrunner. Don Warren is plugger at tight
end. GOOD

only veteran, Three *81 rookies — Joe
Jacoby, Russ Grimm, Mark May —
made spectacular debuts. Free agent
Jacoby at tackle is future All-Pro.
Another youngster, Jeff Bostic, set at
center, with Darryl Grant spare. VERY
GOOD

DEFENSE
U N E Two first-y ear men, Dexter
Manley and Matt Mendenhall, at the ends
worked themselves into starting jobs and
improved pass rush. Experience quotient
is provided by huge Dave Butz, Perry
Brooks at the tackles. Manley par­
ticularly deserves to be singled out as
RUNNING Joe Washington, John terror on QBs. Bulz has finally learned
Riggins are proven HB-FB combo. how to maximize his impressive hulk.
Former had big year, also caught 70 FAIR to GOOD
[asses. Riggins tailed off from usual
LINEBACKING The names won’t make
running totals, but Is still threat, They'll
All-Pro lists, hut Neal Olkewicz in middle
use some single sets, a la San Diego, with
flanked by Brad Dusek and Monte
slippery Washington as the deep man, Coleman comprise tested unit. Couple
GOOD
more from Penn State School of
BLOCKING Forw ard wall allow ed
fewest sacks in NET and keeps getting
better since George Starke at tackle is

Linehacking offer competition — Rich
Milol, Larry Kubin. Keep an eye on
Kuhin. FAIR

SECONDARY Let v eteran Lernar
Parrish go, but don't feel he'll he missed
with Jeris White an experienced standin; or top draftee Vernon Dean could
develop quickly. Other corner is Joe
Lavender, with hard-hitting Mark
M urphy, Tony Peters as safeties.
Murphy specializes in turnovers. Return
specialist Mike Nelms is safety spare.
FAIR
SPECIAL TEAMS
KICKING Mark Moseley is one of only
two straight-kicking field goal specialists
in NFL. His foot remains strong, but
drafted Dan Miller to compete. Mike
Connell is mediocre punter who could
stand some competition. FAIR
RETURNS There are none better set­
tling under kicks and breaking loose than
Pro Bowler Nelms, who broke two punts
for TDs and led NFL in kickoff returns.
Skins special teams excelled in coverage,
too. VERY GOOD
()UTIX)()K
The way Gibbs kept his cool after
disastrous 0-5 start in his head-coaching
debut — and infused both offense and
defense with young players — denotes
continued improvement. Only risk would
be injury to Theismann, who has
emerged as true leader. This is a team on
the rise.
PREDICTION Tie for second in NFC
East, over .500, at 9-7.
-----ByMURRAY OLDKHMAN

G ia n t s N e e d B a c k W ith O u t s id e S p e e d
COACH RAY PERKINS; "We
have to build on what has
already been accomplished.
A ‘m ust’ for us offensively is
a running back with great
outside speed —a gamebreaker type —and a wide
receiver who can also run
away from people. We’re
ulso looking for depth in
most areas. Reaching the
playoffs only signals a begin­
ning for this team ."
In 1981:9-7, third in NFC East; wildcard
By MURRAY OLDEKMAN
NEA Sports Editor
OFFENSE
PASSING If Perkins could have QB
composite, it would be athletic ability,
arm of Phil Simms plus generalship,
height of Scott Brunner. For a start, at
least, lie’ll go with Simms. For receivers,
Johnny Perkins is most reliable, Earnest
G ray co ntinues to have g re a te st
potential. Gary Shirk somehow m anages
to hang on at tight end. Dave Young is TE
of future. FAIR
RUNNING
Hob Carpenter's arrival
from Houston made all the difference in
Giants last season, and lie’ll be heavyduty force again. But drafted Butch
Woolfolk, Joe Morris 1-2 to provide
Elusive com plem ent to C a rp e n te r’s
plunges. M ollis is prototypal small
breakaway threat. GOOD

BLOCKING Jim Clark returned to
retirement now' that center Ernie Hughes
is whole again. This unit played well with
surprise rookied Billy Ard and J.T.
Turner at guards, Grodon King (finally
justifying Giant investment in him) and
Jeff Weston at tackles. But Turner could
find himself pushed by rookie hopeful
Gerry Raymond. GOOD
DEFENSE
U NE Giants were able to stay In 3-4
because of unexpected development of
first-year man Bill Belli at nose tackle.
He was flanked by Gary Jeter and
George Martin, experienced ends. Depth
is provided by Myron l-apka in middle,
Curtis McGriff outside. Unit excels
against rush. FAIR
LINEBACKING There may be none
better in world. That’s due ’n large part
to brilliance of I-awrence Taylor, u
defense unto himself and most disruptive
blitzer of last decade. Byron Hunt filled
in expertly for vet Brad Van Pelt. Harry
Carson’s always among best inside.
Dramatic story of ’82 could be comeback
of Dan IJu)d from cancer siege. EX­
CELLENT

SECONDARY Benefited by super
progress of Mark Haynes as second-year
cornerback, team ing with Terry
Jackson. Also set at free safety, where
Beasley Reece capitalized on his speed,
and Bill Currier was steady at other
safety after arrival from New England.
For insurance, Giants also traded for
Pete Shaw, capable veteran from Sim
Diego. GOOD
SPECIAL TEAMS
KICKING Dave Jennings for eight years
has been among class punters of pro
football, and there’s no reason he
shouldn't make it nine. Joe Danelo
booted 24 field goals, his top total ever,
one for 55 yards. VERY GOOD
RETURNS Joe Morris, who’s in the
Cribbs-Delaney mold will brighten the
kickoff-return picture, can also assist
I-eon Bright as punt runback specialist.
Special team play in general will im­
prove. GOOD
OUTLOOK
Perkins learned to relax more in second
year as head man, and Giants responded
to his acknowledged skill as tactician.
The defense made rem arkable strides.
But uncertainty over QB situation and a
shade of doubt about running game make
me think they'll slip.
PREDICTION Fourth in NFC East,
tough division, at 7-9.

H t n l d P h o lD b y T o m V in c e n t

RUNNIN'
RAMS

L ake M ary High School’s H am s a re off and ru n n in g under the w atchful eye of
coach Roger H ealhard (left) during p reseaso n football drills Tuesday at (lie
high school. The H am s, in th e ir second y e a r of operation, are p re p a rin g for a
tough schedule which includes :t.\ pow erhouse Oviedo and IA Lake Hrantlev
T he H am s open the season at hom e against Hoekledge on Sept, 10,

American League Owners Vote
Unanimous Support For Kuhn
SAN DIEGO (UPI) — A suprisingly
unanimous vote of support may still not
be enough to save Bowie Kuhn’s job.
The vote was 14-0 to keep him on as
baseball commissioner. There was only
one hitch as far as he was concerned. It
was cast by the American I-eague.
At their meeting Tuesday, the 14 AL
owners — even New York’s George
Steinbrenner, who has been opposed to
Kuhn in the past — all pledged their
support for the com m issioners reelection.
But things are not so rosy for Kuhn in
the National I-eague. Only four negative

Baseball
votes are necessary to oust Kuhn and
lliree owners — Nelson Doubleday of
New York, John McMullen of Houston
and 1-ou Sussman, acting on behalf of St,
I-ouis' Gussie Busch — seem ready to do
that.
They need one more negative vote and
they could get it from Atlanta's Ted
Turner, Cincinnati's William Williams or
Chicago’s Andy McKenna. Turner is
known to he opposed to Kuhn but would

not commit himself on how he would vole
today.
"1 have no comment," said Turner.
"Would you tell me how you would vote in
a presidential election?"
Williams and McKenna also have
reasons fur wanting Kuhn ousted, hut are
not committed to either side.
In a meeting that lasted more than an
hour and a half, the NI. owners
vigorously discussed the future of the
commissioner but failed to take a vote,
before adjourning until 9 a.m., today.
Kuhn's status may be determined
today but it's not certain.

New Season, Same Scenario For SEC Football
ATI-ANTA l U P I) — It’s a new season,
but the same scenario for Southeast
college football this fall.
Alabama and Georgia are the llie pre­
season picks In the Southeastern Con­
ference while Miami (Fla.) rates as the
region's top independent.
A labam a, looking for one m ore
national championship before Coach
Paul "B ear" Bryant, who turns 69 in
September, makes a decision about
retirement, figures, with 19 returning
starters, to be a serious contender for the
No. 1 ranking.
I-ast year’s 9-1-1 showing was blamed
on the emphasis placed on Bryant sur­
passing Amos Alonzo Stagg’s career
coaching record and the absence of a
proven q u arterb ack . But B ry a n t's
pursuit ot Stagg ended last November
with career victory No. 315 and the ex­
periences of ’81 should make juniors
Walter 1-ewis and Paul Fields competent
quarterbacks in '82.
Although he has tou many good running
backs to abandon his beloved wishbone
entirely, Bryant has indicated he'll open
up the Crimson Tide offense this fall to
capitalize on his stable of gifted pass
receivers.
Georgia probably won't be quite as

Football
strong as Alabama. But with the in­
com parable H erschel Walker still
bowling over would-be tacklers and
Alabama absent from the schedule, the
Bulldogs are favored to earn at least a
share of their third straight SEC title.
Georgia, paced by Walker, who rushed
for 3,507 yards and scored 35 touchdowns,
lost only one regular-season game the
past two seasons - a 13-3 decision at
national champion Clemson last Sep­
tember.

maturity part. But we still have to
develop the toughness."
Another SEC team that should not be
overlooked is Mississippi State. Those
Bulldogs, 9-2 including an upset of
Alabama in 1980, slipped to 7-4 last
season but beat Kansas in the Hall of
Fam e Bowl.
"Injuries were a definite factor in
some of our '81 losses,” says Mississippi
State Coach Emery Bellard, who has 17
starters returning. “ If we can keep the
maximum number of players on the
court, this could be a banner season for
us."

Mark down Florida as the SEC
darkhurse. Although the Gators have
never won a conference title, they lost
only four starters from last year's team
which won five of its last seven regularseason games.

Tennessee, sporting Ihe fastest set of
wide receivers in college football;
Auburn, aided by playing its first six
games at home, and Louisiana State,
which has an Blmost unbelievable 23
starters returning, are expected to hold
dow n the middle of the 10-member SF.C.

“The highlight of our team was the way
it played in November," says Florida
Coach Charley Pell. "However, we are
very conscious of lhose disappointing
Saturdays which reflect on the emotional
maturity and mental toughness of our
learn.
"Being a year ulder will help the

Kentucky, with form er Maryland
coach Jerry Claiborne taking over for
ousted Fran Curci; Mississippi, plagued
by four straight losing seasons and the
loss of quarterback John Fourcade, and
Vanderbilt, which 1ms won only one of its
last 36 conference games, are expected to
bring up the rear.

�Evening Hera Id, Sanford, FI.

Wednesday, Aug. IS, 1982—9A

Kuhn Nervously Watching Clock
SAN DIEGO i UPI) - Bowie Kuhn is
keeping his head up. He believes his
heart is pure and his hands are dean.
He has committed no crime, certainly
none for which he should be hanged,
yet, to all intents and purposes, he's a
condemned man nervously watching
the dock to find out whether he's going
to get that reprieve or not.
M aiof League Standings
By United Press International
National League
E J lt
W L PCI
GB
68 50 576 —
St Louis
Ph.la
66 S2 559 2
63 55 534 S
Montreal
Pittsbrgh
6t 57 517 7 .
SO 67 427 17’ a
New York •
Chicago
SI 69 435 18
West
Los Ang
66 S3 sss —
Atlanta
63 55 514 2' i
San Diego
63 56 529 3
San F ran
63 58 517 4' &gt;
S4 64 458 I t ’ J
Houston
44 75 370 32
C'nci
Tuesday’s Results
Montreal 13, Atlanta 3, 1st
Mtl 1, Alia 3, 10 inns ind
Los Ang 1, Chicago 1
SUSP alter It in n s, dark
Pittsburgh 4. San Fra n I
Cincinnati 9, New York 3
Houston 3. Philadelphia 0
St Louis 3, San Diego 3
Today's Games
(A ll Tim es E D T )
Los Angeles (R cuss 10 9) at
Chicago (B ird 7 10), 2 35 p m
San Francisco IM artin S 41 at
Pittsburgh IRobinson 13 41, ) 35
pm
New York (Zachry 4 4) at
Cincinnati (Pastore 4 9), 7 35
pm
Montreal (GulliCkson 9 9) at
Atlanta ICam p 8 4), 7 40 p m
San Diego (Hawkins 3 3) at
St
Louis (Forsch It 7), 8 35
pm
Philadelphia IKrukow 117) at
Houston (Niekro
119),
8 3S
pm

American League
East
W L P ci
GB
Milwauke
69 49 511 —
Boston
64 51 547 4
Ball
61 55 576 6‘ ;
Detroit
60 58 SOB 8' (
New York
58 59 496 10
Clevelnd
57 S9 491 10' i
Toronto
59 63 479 13
Call!
Kan City
Chicago
Seattle
Oakland
Te*ai
Minn

West
68
67
64
59
51
47
40

so
51
S3
80
67
69
78

576
568
547
5X
447
405
339

—
1
1’ j
9&gt;i
16
20
78

Tuesday's Results
Seattle S. Detroit 4. 1st
Detroit 3, Seattle 2. 2nd
Cleveland 4. Toronio 5, is!
Cleveland 9. Toronio 5. 2nd
Kansas City 8, New York 4
Baltimore 8. Minnesota 4
Te*as 4. Chicago 3. It inns
California 10. Boston 7
Oakland 10. M ilwaukee 4
Today's Games
I All Tim es E O T )
Seattle I P e rry 7 10) at Detroit
IP etry 12 7), 7 35 p m
Kansas City (F ro st 4 51 at
New York (John I I I . 1 p m
Baltimore (P alm er
9 31 al
Minnesota (V&gt;ota 1 4). 8 15 p m
Chicago (Trout 4 8) at Tc«as
(Tanana S 111, 8 35 p m
Boston (Tudor 8 9) at Cab
lornla ( W-tt 7 31, tO 30 p m
Milwaukee (M cClure 9 4) al
Oakland
(N orris
4 71,
10 is
pm

Linescores
Maior League Results
By United Press International
National League
(F irs t Gam e)
Mtl
143 003 300 13 14 1
Atlanta
010 100 SCO 7 9 5
Lea, Schatjedcr 17), Smith
(71 and C arter, Blackwell 181,
Walk, D ial
(4), Hrabosky (7).
Moore &lt;BI and Sinatro W Lea
(10 41 L Walk (10 9)
HRs Montreal, Dawson (15). Atlan
la. Cham bliss (IS)
(Second Game. 10 Inns.
Mtl
000 010 001 1- 3 13 3
Alla
100 IOOOOOO- 3 7 0
Burris, Reardon 18), Frym an
(10)
and
Carter;
Mahter,
Garber HOI and Benedict W —
Reardon (5 31 L - Mahler (8 9)
HR Monireal, Speler (41
(Susp 17 inns. — dark)
Los Angeles 010 000 000
000 000 OO- t 14 1
C h ic a g o 100 OOO OOO

OOO000 00- t IS 2

Moot on, Nledcntuer (7 ), Howe
19). Stewart ( I t ) , Forster 113),
Beckwith (14), Wright 17) and
Scioscia, Yeager (101, Noles,
Tldrow (4 ), Smith (8 ), Proly
(101, Campbell (131 and Davis
San Fra n
X 0 001 OOO- l 7 3
Ptsbrg
M l 130 0O»— 4 10 3
H a m m a k e r, Holland (4).
Brelning (8) and M ay. Rhoden
and Pena W Rhoden (7 It ) L
-H a m m a k e r (8 71
H R - P it t s
burgh, Thompson 171)
NY
000 700 OOO- ■2 4 0
Cind
Oil 101 30*- 9 11 0
Ownbcy, Hausman (41, Jones
18) and
Hodges;
Solo and
T re vn o W -Soto 0 0 81
L—
Ownbey (0 1) H R s New York,
Slaub (3 ); Cincinnati, Concep
cion (3 ).
Phila
000 0 X 0 0 0 - 0 SO
Hous
Oil OOO 0 0 * - 7 9 1
Christenson,
M cGraw
(8),
Farm er (8)and D iaz. Ruble
and Knicely W—Ruble (7 6) L
-C hristenso n 17 8).
&gt;
San Dgo
000 OX 200- 7 9 )
S' L
XOOOl (0 1 - 3 8 1
Show, Lucas (7 ), DeLeon (9)
and
Kennedy,
Swisher
(8 );
Anduiar, Sutler (9) and Porler
W—Suiter (8 5) L - L u c a s (0 91
American League
(Second Game)
Seattle
070 0 X 000- 2 8 0
Detroit
030 COO 1 0 *- 3 5 0

Stoddard and Bulling . Pash
nick, Toblk (8) and Fahey,
Parrish (91 W -P a s h n lc k (141
L —Stoddard (O il
H R s—Seat!
le. Gray
(41,
T C ru i
(111;
Detroit. Lemon 7 117)
(Second Game)
Cteve
033 210 X 1
9 10 0
toronio
X 0 020 102 5 81
Sulclllle,
Splllner
(9) and
Bando,
Geisel,
Schrom
(31.
Garvin (7)
and Whitt W —
Sulclllle (10 41 L —Geisel ( I t )
H Rs—Cleveland.
Bando
(21.
Toronio. Powell (3)
Kan City
211 000 04 0 8 15 3
NY
OOO 103 X I — 4 4 1
Spllttorll,
Hood
(7) and
Wathan, Morgan, F r a ile r 13),
Ljflo cfie 18) and Cerone W
Splitord (8 4) L Morgan (681
H R s - Kansas C ity, Alkens (7 );
New York. W infield 2 (221
Balt
X t 133 OOO— 8 8 0
Minn
X 2 010 X t - 4 10 t
Flanagan, Stoddard 19) and
Dempsey, O'Connor, Little (SI,
Boris (8) and Laudner
W—
Flanagan
(9 10)
L - O ’Connor
(5 41 H R s -B a ltim o re , Ripken
(17). M urray (tB ), Dauer (41.
Hoenicke (20), M i n n e s o t a ,
Gaelti 1191
( I t innings)
Chi
000 OX X I 03— 3 9 0
Te*
X I OX X 0 01- 4 7 0
Koosrnan, Baroias (9 ), Lamp
( I I I and F is k , Schm ldl, Mira
bella ( I I ) , D arwin ( I I I and
Sundebcrg W—Darw in (9 6) L
— Lam p 18 61 H R — Tcnas.
Hosteller (22).
Boston
000 OX X 2 - 2 8 0
C alil
202 7M 19* —10 II 1
Ojeda. Aponte (4 ), Hurst (7)
and Allenson, L a F ra n c o ls (7 ).
Tian l, Hassler (9) and Fer
guson
W—Tiant
(2 1).
L—
Ojeda
(4 6)
H R s —California.
Baylor
(19).
Downing
(19),
Grlch ( t l ) , Ferguson (2 ), Lynn
(171.
Mitw
003 0 X 0 1 3 - 6 14 0
Oak Ind
203 4 X 1 0 * - 10 IS 3
Haas. Augustine (4), Bernard
(41 and Simmon,
Lariglord,
Jones (9), Underwood (9) and
Heath,
Newman
(8 ).
W—
Langlord (9 13). L —Haas (9 8)
H R s—Milwaukee, Younl 2 (22).
Cooper 124); Oakland. Armas
(19)

Leaders
M aior League Leaders
y United Press Inlernational
Batting
ased on 3,1 plate appearces * number ol games each
■m has played)
National League
g ab h pet.
114.438 144 .179
O liver. M il
T17 411 179 112
Durham . Chi
108 417 179 109
Baker, LA
(18 448 138 308
Knight, Hou
114 438 114 X 4
L , Sm ith, SIL
114 437 132 304
Mad lock. Pit
89 371 98 M3
Jones. SD
111 400 121 M3
Carter, Mtl
103 377 114 M2
Pena, Pit
10S 437 132 M2
Dawson. M il
American League
g ab It pet.
91 403 118 141
KC
117 444 145 335
rah. Cte
110 440 149 134
rr. Mil
t i l 4SS 144 171
t, Mil
117 505 141 119
la, Tor
103 395 124 314
k. Min
118 448 140 313
le . KC
109 154 110 309
ell. Tor
I X 424 131 .309
Bos
104 349 111 M4
a y . Bal
Home Runs
itional League — M urphy,
79.
Kingman.
NY
28.
nidt, Phil 34. Hornef, A ll
C arter, M il, Guerrero, L A
Thompson, Pitt 33nerican League
Thomas,
37. Re Jackson. Cal and
m an. Cley 27, Cooper and
vie. M il. OeCinces. Cal and
ah. Cle 24
Runs Batted In
itional League — O liver,
84,
Murphy,
A ll
82,
tric k , S IL 77. C arter, Mtl
C lark , SF 74
nerican League
M cRae,
101, Thornton, Cloy 73.
&gt;er, M il 88 Thomas. M il.
L u iin s k i, Chi and Yount.

Stolen Bases
National League — Raines,
Mtl 54,
Moreno.
Pitt
and
L Smith, SIL 51, W ilson. NY 44,
Sa», LA 4t
American League — Hender
son, Oak 110; G arcia. Tor 43.
J C rut. Sea i t . Wathan, KC 79
L e F lw e . Chi 28
Pitching
Victories
National League — Carlton.
Phil 168; V aien iu eia, L A 159,
Rogers. Mtl 14 6. W elch, LA 14
7, Robinson. Pitt 134
Am erican League Gura.
KC
14 8.
Hoyt.
Chi
14 10.
M orris, Del 14 11; Burns, Chi
and Vuckovich. M il 13 4, Zahn,
Cal 13 5; Stieb. Tor 13 11,
Earned Run Average
(Based on I inning x number ol
games each team has played)
Nalional League - Laskey,
SF 2.44; Rogers, M tl 2 48; Soto,
C in, 7 S3; Candelaria, P itt 2.S5;
Krukow, Phil and Anduiar, SIL
378
American League
Under
wood. Oak 2 87, Stanley, Bos
3 98, Sutcliffe, Cle 300, W ilt,
Cal 103, Hoyt, Chi 3 05
Strikeouts
National League
Solo, Cin
209; Carlton, Phil 191. Ryan,
Hou 179; V alem uela. L A 134;
Sutton, Hou 117
American League
Bannls
ter. Sea 145. B ark e r. C lev 128;
Beattie. Sea 122. G uid ry. NY
114, Righettl, NY 109
Saves
National League — Sutter,
S IL 34; Minton, SF 2 t; G arber,
Atl, 20. Allen, N Y and Reardon,
Mtl I) .
Am erican League
Fingers,
M il 77; Q u lU fltH rry, KC 36.
Gossage, N Y 25; C audill, Sea
77. Barojas, Chi, D avis, Minn
and Spillner, Cle IS

Milton
Richman
l PI Spurts Editor

He should know sometime Wed­
nesday after the majorleague owners
finish their joint meeting, whether he
has been cashiered. But with all ^heir
indecision, the 26 owners could vote to
table any action until their winter
meetings in Hawaii in December.

not telling anyone how he’s going to
vote.
Ironically, the American Ixague,
from where most of Kuhn’s opposition
has come in past years anil where it
would now lake five votes to fire him, is
almost solidly behind him.

T h at’s w hat Kuhn's strongest
supporters —like Peter O'Malley of the
I j i s Angeles Dodgers, Edward Bennett
Williams of the Baltimore Orioles,
Allan "Hud" Selig of the Milwaukee
B rew ers, Roy E isenhardt of the
Oakland A’s and Bob Lurie of the San
Francisco Giants — arc trying to do
now. They’re lobbying hard in his
behalf.
They’re aware Kuhn could lose his
job in the next 24 hours. Four votes
against him in the National league au­
tomatically would do it and they know
of three already, possibly five and
maybe as many as six.

"These guys trying to get rid of him
now are crazy," said Calvin Griffith of
the Minnesota Twins, candid as always.
"They don’t have a single candidate
in mind lo replace him, not a one, and
with iill the other problems we have
now with TV revenue, the players and
everything else, why would you look to
add to that by creating another
problem?”

The three National leaguers who
want another commissioner are Nelson
Doubleday of the New York Mets, John
McMullen of the Houston Astros and
Ixu Susman, club attorney for the St,
Louis Cardinals and spokesman for
their owner, Gussie Busch.
Without showing his hand entirely,
Susman is saying he knows of six
National leaguers who are ready to
vote against Kuhn and if he’s right, it’s
bye, bye Bowie.
Two others known not to be in the
forefront supporting Kuhn are Bill
Williams, one of the Cincinnati Reds’
owners, and Ted Turner, the unpredict­
able boss of the Atlanta Braves, who’s

severely reduce Kuhn’s authority.
Some of those who want to fire him
say they would withdraw their op­
position to Kulm if he'd agree to having
the businessman "in charge,"
Right now, a compromise seems to be
the only way Kulm will survive. His
su p e rio rs are doing all they humanly
can to persuade those who oppose him
not to do a n y t h i n g "precipitate."
"There's every indication both sides
want to reach a compromise and avoid
a big fight," said Ballard Smith, ser­
ving as "host" al these meetings in his
capacity as president of the Padres.
If those seeking to oast Kuhn do
prevail, chaos could result because the
restructuring process hasn’t even lxvn
completed yet.
Cleveland Indians President Gabc
Paul, who then was an executive of the
Reds, remembers what happened when
the owners sacked Commissioner A.B.
“ Happy” Chandler in 1951.
"It was sad," said Paul, a close
personal friend of Chandler "I was in
the lobby of the hotel when Happy came
over to see me and said, ‘They just
voted not to renew my contract,’ The
owners gave him the right to make his
own annnuncemenl to the press and he
asked me if I'd do it for him. 1 said sure.
Then he said, 'C'mon, let's take a walk
around the block,' The only thing he
wanted lo do first was call ‘M ama’ —
his wife."

SPORTS
IN BRIEF
Fundamentals Stressed
At Fall Baseball Classes
Fall baseball classes for boys 14 and older will begin
Saturday, September 11 at Wes Rinker’s Florida
Baseball Schools i Sanford M em orial Stadium).
Classes wilt be for 10 Saturdays from 10 a.m. through 1
p.nt. on each Saturday.
Classes will be devoted to teaching sinple fun­
damentals with plenty ol scrimmage games. Many of
the students will also take part in ‘He Zinn Beck Fall
league The league has a 26 game schedule that runs
through the fall months in conjunction with the ciasses.
Cost for the 10 Saturday classes will be 185 00. To
register, write to Florida Baseball Schools or call 3231046 for registration forms. Registration will be
limited

Twins, Braves Tied After 15

Griffith is absolutely right.
There’s no one candidate so far in the
forefront he could be considered the
“ leading" one to replace Kuhn
A so-called "re stric tu rin g com­
mittee” was created al last winter's
m eetings in Hollywood, F la., to
recom m end changes in the ad­
ministrative areas of the game. One of
those changes would deal with the way
the commissioner's office would be
organized and function in the future.
One of the recommendations lias
been that some outsider from the
business world, one who is highly ex­ b o w i i :
KUHN
perienced and respected, be brought in
to oversee all the financial aspects ol ...on edge
the game and that he be accountable
only to the executive council.
In effect, he, and not Kuhn, then
would become b aseb all's chief
executive officer. E ssentially, this
would be a compromise that would

It’s been quite a few hours since the Orlando Twins
game against the Savannah Braves started Tuesday
night at Tinker Field. But, it still isn't finished.
After 15 innings the score stands tied at 4-4. The 16th
inning won't begin until 7.30 tonight because of the
Southern league curfew. The curfew does not allow a
Southern league contest to start an inning after 12:50
am .
Tuesday night’s game lasted four hours and 45
minutes leaving Bryan Oelkers a forgotten man.
Oelkers, the Twins' first-round draft pick this year,
gave up only one earned run and six hits in nine innings
of work.
Steve C urry's twiwiul solo home run in the 13th
seemed to rap up the game for Savannah, but the
Twins came back m the bottom of the inning with a
two-out rally of its own to keep the game tied.
A second game with Savannah, if they get the first
one over with early enough, will follow the conclusion
of the 15 inning fiasco,

Men's Softball Needs Team
The Sanford Men’s Softball Association will open its
Fall League on Sept. 13, according to league secretary
Renee Hughes.
Eleven teams attended Monday’s meeting. The
SMSA is looking for one team to complete its 12-team
league. Any interested party may contact the Sanford
Recreation Department at 322-3161 and ask for Jeff
Munson.
'Hie league will consist of a 16-game schedule played
two nights a week. The entry fee is 1305. An out-of-city
player fee has been set at
per player, not to exceed
$45'
New officers elected were Buddy Stunipf, president,
Herman Bridges, vice-president, Renee Hughes,
secretary, Charlotte Nooney, treasurer, and Alan
Buky, umpire-ln-chief.

Hostetler Sox' Chicago;
Soto Whiffs 15, Reds Win
United Press International
Texas slugger Dave Hostetler is en­
joying a hot month and Tuesday night he
put a dent in the Chicago White Sox’
pennant chase.
“ It’s definitely the biggest thrill for me
since I’ve been down here," said
Hosteller, after he hit his eighth home
run uf August and 22nd of the season in
the bottom of the lllh inning to rally the
Rangers to a 4-3 victory over the White
Sox at Arlington, Texas.
Hostetler, who leads the team in
homers and in RBI with 57, connected for
a three-run shot with one out, to over­
come the two runs Chicago had scored in
the lop of the 11th.
"I hit a fastball,” he said. "I was just
trying to get a base hit, and that would
have tied the gam e." (I-airy) Parrish
was coining up next and he's been hitting
well lately (.514 in his last 10 games)."
Royals 8, Yankees 4
At New York, Paul Splittorff and Dan
Hood combined on a six-hitter to help
Kansas City overcome a pair of home
runs by the Yankees' Dave Winfield.
Mariners 5-2, Tigers 4-3
Al Detroit, Diet Union hit a pair of
homers lo drive in three runs, including a
tie-breaking shot in the seventh that
earned the Tigers a split. In the first
game, Dave Revering's three-run homer
capped a four-run sixth to lead the
•Mariners.
Orioles 8, Twins 4
Al Minneapolis, Eddie Murray blasted

B aseb all
a three-run homer, Rich Dauer added a
two-run shot and Gary Roenicke and Cal
Ripken contributed solo blasts to power
Baltimore.
Indians 6-9, Blue Jays &gt;5
At Toronto, Chris Bando belted a threerun homer and C arm ello Castillo
knocked in two runs with a bases-loaded
single, leading Cleveland In the sweep in
the nightcap. In the first game, Andre
Thornton hit his 27lh home run lo break a
5-5 tie in the ninth.
Angels 10. Red Sox 2
At Anaheim, Calif., Luis Tiant scat­
tered eight hits over eight innings and
California smashed five home runs.
A’s 10, Brewers 6
At Oakland, Calif., Dave McKay drove
in Ihree runs with three singles and a
sacrifice fly and Tony Armas hit his 19th
homer of the year to beat Eastleading
Milwaukee.

Soto, 10-8, struck out more than 10
batters for the ninth time this season in
hiking his total to 209. He became the
first Cincinnati pitcher to strike out more
than 200 since Tom Seavcr did it with 226
iri 1978. It was Soto's career high in
strikeouts and his eighth complete game
of the season. He did not walk a batter
while yielding jusl four hits and lowering
his ERA to 2.52.

Arguello Seeks 4th Title
MIAMI (UP1) — There’s nothing firm yet, but nearly
everyone Involved thinks Alexis Arguello will make his
historic quest for a record fourth world championship
in Miami next November.
Arum and a group of Miami investors last week
signed a tentative agreement to bring to Miami the
fight between Arguello &lt;75-4) and Aaron Pryor (31-0)
for the World Boxing Association Junior Welterweight
Championship.
Caesars Palace in Lis Vegas, Nev., and Reno, New,
also are bidding lo get the fight, but Arguello’s adopted
hometown of Miami now has the inside track.
If everything goes us expected, an agreement to hold
the fight in the stadium would be signed by the end of
the week, Bob Arum, of New York-based Top Rank,
Ine., said Tuesday.

Pirates 4, Giants 1
At Pittsburgh, Rick Rhoden pitched a
two-hitter and Jason Thompson smashed
a two-run homer to enable the Pirates to
snap a three-game losing streak,
Astros 2, Phillies 0
At Houston, Vern Ituhle hurled a fivehitter and Dickie Thon had three hits and
scored once to lead the Astros.
Philadelphia’s Pete Rose tied Henry
Aaron’s all-time plate appearance record
of 13,940.
Cardinals 3, Padres 2
At St. i/outs, Keith Hernandez' one'out,
bases-loaded single in the bottom of the
ninth scored Ozzie Smith ant! lifted the
Cardinals to their fourth straight victory.

Cincinnati righthander Mario Soto
missed his pitching turn Friday to go
home lo the Dominican Republic and see
his mother who had undergone surgery
— and it didn't hurt his pitching a bit.
"It helped me to see my mother,"
explained Soto after striking out 15 to
become the first major-leaguer to pass
the 200 strikeout mark this season and lilt
Cincinnti to a 9-2 triumph over the New
York Mets.

CUSTOM MADE

HUNTING DOG
BOXES

Expos 13-3, Braves 7-2
At A llans, Warren Cromartie ripped a
twcMiut single in the 10th inning to score
Brad Mills from third base and give
Montreal a sweep of the Braves. In the
o[icncr, Andre Dawson hit a solo homer
and drove in three runs and Montreal
turned five Atlanta errors into eight
unearned runs.

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FOREIGN PICK-UP TRUCKS

GEORGi L. SMITH
W E L D IN G , FA FN IC A T IN G &amp; M A N U FA C T U R IN G CO.
SOS A IR P O R T B L V D . 373 0141

Dog Racing
Al Super Seminole
Tuesday night results
F i r s l r a c e - 5 l i . D : 1144
7 J B M lkkie
8 40 4 40 1 00
5 Jerry Gin
4 40 3 80
IW C
3 40
Q ( 5 7) 13.84; T (7 5 1) 117.14
Second r ic e — 3-8, D : 19.44
7 Friend Ju lie
76 70 10 X 10 40
4 Rush To W in
6 20 6 60
B April Dolly
540
O (4 7) 141.68; T (7 4 8) 1,114 00;
DD (7-7) 108.00
Third race — 5-14, M : 31.58
2CG'5 A lly
12 X 6 20 3 80
1 Devll i Escape
10 X 7 40
4 Road W arrio r
$00
O M l ) 30.80; T (7-14) 57J 48
Fourth race — 3-8 ,0 ; 39.91
4 Love M isty
7 7 20 8 80 6 40
8 Shotgun Ben
8 80 4 00
7 Silk Jersey
1760
Q (4 81 84 00, T (7-7-0 ) 408 40
F iflh r a c e — 5-14.D; 31.64
3 Justanold Dog
6 40 4.(0 3 40
SR endeivousC ale
3 80 3 00
4 BudlOO'S LOvey
4.20
Q (3 5) 17.10; T &lt;1 54 ) 77 80

Siilhrace —3-8, 8: 39 20
7 Fashion Pinup
6 70 3 )0 3 60

O (2 1) 14 60, T (6 1 1) 48 40, DD
I I I ) 16 00
lO Ihrace — 1 1, C : 40 22
I Reach Out
14 40 9 20 9 30
4M i;pah
8 40 3 00
5 Bob s Bilkp
1640
Q (1 4 ) 54 00; T 114 5) 1,947.50;
Super 8 0 4 5 3 4 ) 7 9) no winner
lor 51,OX
l l l h race — 5-14. S: 31.12
7 LOU Lo la
102 60 41 60 3 70
1 A ltaw ay To Go
3 40 2 20
2 M B's Razor Sharp
220
Q (3-7) 174.10; T &lt;1 ) 7) 137 40
17th raca — 3 8. C; 40.11
7 Ju sl Show inO II 6 60 4 8 ) 5 80
SLaM adonna
1.80 12 40
4 Klondike K e rry
)90
O ( M l 30.40; T (3 54) 405 )0

Ulh r a c e - 7-14, 0:45 49
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5 Chico Lafont
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D eals

6 Dainty Dancer
9 , 40 5 40
4 Pete Pelrid es
4 30
Sports Transactions
O (4-7) 23 80; T (74-41 468.40;
By United Press International
Big O I D with 4 7) 105.00
Tuesday
Seventh race — M i, S ; 10 09
Baseball
6 Blue Chip M erit 12 70 4 00 2 80
Cincinnati - Recalled reliever
IM ountain Revenge
2 80 2 20
8 Dr. KirkpatA Kk
280 Ben H ayes from Indianapolis of
the Am erican Association
Q (1 4 ) 11.40; T (4 ) 8) 1)1.60

Basketball
Eighth race — 1-8,T A ; 31.01
I K iss Me Q uick
4 80 3 40 2 80
Kansas C ity — Named Bob
/G eorgeNordt
7.00 3 40 W h ilsitt
v ic e
presiden!
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3 Lady Atissa
4OOmarketing
O (1 7 ) 11.40; T (17.11 117 40
Hotkey
Nlnlh r a c e - 6 1 6 , C : 11.10
Springfield ( A H L )
Named
8 T ra c k Doll 6 80 7 40 3 00
Orland Kurfenbach coach
3 Maid s Day OK
3 80 1 00
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3 Hondo Heathen
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2408 Hwy 17 92. Sanford

(305) 321-0920
15A Spring Garden Ave, DeLand
O d tjlu n l

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O pen Mon.-Fri, 8:00 5 :30 , Sat. 8 00 -3.00
Seminy our neighbors since 1976

�'OA— Evening Herald, Sanlord, FI.

Wednesday, Aug. 18, 1982

...Sick Doctor Law A M odel
Continued From Page 1A
individual from seeking help on his own
before the problem gets out of tvssdJ'i VieaS-Tond physician said he’s heard of
instances where im paired physicians,
fearful that word would get out about
their problem, run off, change their
names and deal with the problem
themselves.
Dr. Morgan said it’s not uncommon for
doctors in that position to keep
moving from small town to small town to
remain in practice.
While physicians aw are of peer alcohol
and drug abuse problems are concerned
about possible harm to patients and the
reputation and credibility of the medical
profession, they’re also concerned about
being sued by the doctors they turn in
And the absence of any significant civil
immunity laws is hampering much of the
good that is being attempted by state
medical associations.
F.fforts to identify and treat the im­
paired physician have steadily increased
over the past decade. But getting a firm
grasp on the national scope of the
problem is difficult. While some medical

societies keep records of treatment and
success rates, many do not. Still others
refuse '&lt;
.Mine in some
states committees dealing, with 'A?
impaired physician problem are in the
infantile stage and have been unable to
compile a clear assessment of the
problem.
In the future, the impaired physician
programs face critical issues. One of the
most severe is impaired physicians'
denial of their problem Alcoholism
experts point to the fact that a significant
number of drunk doctors have not been
identified
The biggest problem facing the
program, however, is the lack of clearly
defined reporting and enforcem ent
procedures within the medical com­
munity itself. The absence of civil im­
munity laws protecting doctors who turn
their peers in is consfdcred another
m ajor stumbling block to a com­
prehensive application of the program.
Reconciliation between legislatures,
licensing boards and medical societies is
necessary to remove the loopholes and

vagueness of laws.
The m edical 'i- U *
.T 1
acknowledges that more must lie done to
improve doctors’ and their families'
awareness of the problem, the danger
signs, funding for committees to deal
with impaired physicians and better
publicity about the problem within the
profession.
There have been several encouraging
trends during recent years which include
the increased usage of statewide hot lines
for impaired physicians, educational re­
entry programs for impaired doctors
returning to practice, and doctors being
taught how to o p e with stress in medical
school and during residency.
Some states even offer financial aid to
doctors who cannot afford treatment.
The AMA also announced earlier this
year that it will set up committees to
study the cause of physician suicides and
determine who is most vulnerable and
how suicide prevention programs can be
most effective Steps that clearly
illustrate that perhaps in no other
profession that doctors are truly their
brother’s keepers.

M u r d e r e r F a c in g L e t h a l In je c t io n
W in s D e la y , S u p r e m e C o u r t H e a r in g
HOUSTON lUI’ll - Just
seven hours before he was to
become the first person in the
United States to be executed
by injection, a man convicted
of killing a city marshal won
an indefinite delay of hts
execution and a hearing
Indore the Supreme Court
Cliarles William Rass, 25,
had already been taken to the
death house in Huntsville
Tuesday and officials were
preparing to take his order for

week, Frank .1, Coppola, 36, a
Griffin said.
A spokeswoman for the high former police officer was
court said it probably would electrocuted
tie weeks before the full court
could act on the case.
Bass was scheduled to die
by injection at 12:01 a.m.
today for the Aug. 16. 1979,
shooting of city m arshal,
Charles Baker.
Five men have been
executed since the Supreme
Court lifted its ban on capital
punishm ent in 1970. Last

a last meal when the 5th U S
Circuit Court of Appeals,
based in New Orleans, issued
the stay of execution.
“ It was a close call," Bass'
attorney, Anthony Griffin,
said. "A stay is generally
granted at the district court
level. This is unusual I've
never heard of it before in this
kind of case. It's shocking nnd
surprising.
"It also was close because
death is not appealable,”

Foxwood Changes Approved
By MICHEAl.nF.HA
Herald Staff
£.***,„
Toe Seminole County Commission has approved over the
object inns of seme residents, a change in the m aster plan of
the Foxwood planned unit development i PUD i on Hunt
Club Boulevard near State Road 436, Forest City.
The changes, approved Tuesday by a 3-to-2 vote with
Commissioners Bill Kirchhoff nnd Sandra Glenn voting in
opposition, would allow the unit's developer to construct
condominiums on a S-acre tract that had previously been
zoned for construction of a church. Another change in the
development would allow commercial buildings to locate in
a 5.6-acre tract which had previously been designated for
offices.
Attorney Kirby Moncreif, Orlando, representing The1
American Pioneer Development Company, said the firm
had experienced difficulty selling those tracts to anyone
interested in constructing the type facilities for which they
were zoned.
Kirchhoff said approval of the zoning change would set a
precedent for other developers establishing planned unit
developments in Seminole County,
He said the changes in zoning actually amount to
changing the density of the property, a decision that was
made when the property was designated as a PUD

"Why are we increasing the density in a PUD We've

never done Hut ’?•.■:•**** t*:rr *r**r.'*?.*:.* ’
He explained that part of the developer's flexibility in
constructing a PUD is exchanged for a decrease in the
density. Approving a PUD at one density and later
amending that density is a dangerous precedent and
eliminates the reason for having PUD's, he said
A group of Foxwood area residents who opposed the
zoning change expressed fear about the kind of buildings
which will go into the tract, noting that the areas were
zoned for other uses when they bought their property
My biggest objection is that the whole thing was subniitted with no plan," Rick Brown, a spokesman for the
group, said, "We don't know what will go in there."
Mrs Glenn also voted against the change saying that the
homeowners had valid complaints, adding that con­
dominiums and commercial property in F oxwixkI would
significantly increase traffic on the development’s roads,
she said.
After approval of the zoning changes, commissioners told
the homeowners they could have input into the final
decision on what will be placed on the property by being
present when commissioners are given the development’s
new site plan.

Competition For Seminole Ambulance Service
A Lungwood firm plans to compete with Herndon Ambulance
Service Inc, fm a contract to provide ambulance service to
Seminole County residents.
Scott Barnes, owner of Aero Emergency Products Inc., a
medical supply and ambulance service company, said he is
preparing a proposal to compete for the Seminole contract.
Herndon s contract expires Sept. 28 and the company has
indicated that it will seek to increase the subsidy it receives
from the county from $125,000 to $133,750
County officials today said it is too early to tell what effect

the new proposal will have on their decision. A commission
work session on the matter has been scheduled for S*-pt 13.
Barnes said his company, does not want in challenge Hern­
don's service in other parts of the state. The only county the
firm is interested in is Seminole County, he said.
Barnes said his company would propose to operate the
service using lighter financial controls and by using better
service and equipment.
"We're not interested in getting into this business by un­
dercutting. Thais is a very expensive business," be said

AMERICAS FAMILY Dl

AREA DEATHS
MRS. DOROTHY E.
WASHINGTON
Mrs.
Dorothy
E
Washington, 62, of Route 1,
Box 207 (Markham Road),
Sanford, died Thursday at the
C entral Florida Regional
Hospital. Born Feb. 26, 1920,
in Warrington, Ga., and has
been a resident of Sanford for
42 years. She w as a
homemaker ami member of
New Ml. Calvary Missionary
Baptist Church,
Survivors include tier
husband, Ivary L ; two sons,
Willie George Washington of
Chesapeake,
Va.,
and
Edmond R. Washington of
Sanford; God-son, Wesley
Wright of Hyannis, Mass.;
two sisters, luds Cobb of
Covington, Ga., and Edith
Williams of Winter Garden;
two
brothers,
Johnny
Williams of Atlanta, Ga., and
Nathaniel
Williams
of
Covington, Ga.; nine grand­

children and one g reat­
grandchild.
W ilson - E ic h e I h e r g e r
Mortuary in charge of funeral
arrangements.

four grandchildren.
Baldw in-Fairchild Funeral
Home, G oldenrod, is in
charge of arrangements.

AUGUST M PATAFItt
August M Patafio, 64, of 70

Partridge

Circle,

Casselberry, died Tuesday at
Florida HospitaUOrlando.
Born Feb, 2, 1918, in New
York City,
lie moved to
C asselberry from Valley
Stream, N.Y. in 1979. He was
a comptroller and a Catholic.
Survivors include his wife,
EiRen; three daughters,
Barbara Szlabnlck, Sclauket,
N.Y., Gail Quinn, ta k e Grove,
N.Y., Christine, Casselberry ;
a brother, F ran k , Mount
Vernon, N.Y,; five sisters,
I.ucille L ongabardi, Annet
Holden, and Nancy Wcge, all
of Mount Vernon, N.Y., and
Sally Fossa and Mary
DeBlasis, both of Tampa;

Funoral Notice
W A S H IN G T O N
DOROTHY E
v&lt;cc%

to r

M rs

M RS
D o ro th y

E

A.nhiogion, 62, of Route i Bo*
701 Martinam Wood6 Road
Sanford whOd'ed Thufvdty will
tup held 1 p tii Saturday at the
New Ml Calvary M B Church,
111S

W

U f h St

S a n fo rd

Rr-y

G W Warren, pastor, in charge
Calling Hours for friends will m
Enday noon unit! t p rn at true
rh a p e l

F r a t e r n a l R ite s w ll be

given at the home o# the
deceased Fnttoy Evening
Burial to to Mow ai RelHawn
Cemetery Wdson Echeltverger
Mortuary &lt;n charge
Hunt M onum ent Co.
Display Yard
Hwy. 17-12 — Fern Park
Ph. 339 6988
Gene Hunt, Owner .
Bronze, M a rb le &amp; Granite.

VETERANS
fttamd baakfti *4 UefMM benebUa recently pubtiiked by the Uelerm
AdtnmlmliM urn amiable la kanarably diickarged Veteran at ns coat,
Fill in and mail coupon to

OAKLAWN'S V ETERA N S DIVISION
Route 4, Box 244
Sanford, F lo rid a 32771
N am e

Phone

A ddress
S ta le

C ity

Zip

F or V eterans w ith m ilita ry service before Feb. 1 ,1955
SANFORD

F or V eterans w ith m ilita ry service since Ja n . 31, 1955--------

Year of Discharge __________________________ — Age

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950 Stale SI

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�P EO P LE
Evening Herald, Santnrrt e L u ,

.4 * ,-

~ — :-=-

Cook Of The Week
g j |

Crockpot Ensures KP Freedom
By LOU CHILDERS
Herald Correspondent
Even though she doesn't
fancy herself as a great cook,
Eva Shelton does have quite a
few sp ecialties that have
evolved from her kitchen over
the years.
"Mainly 1 like to cook things
that are 'quickie foods,’ but of
course they still have to taste
good, too," says this week's
cook. Eva has hud to turn out
a lot of good meals for her
family of six since moving to
Sanford in 1973.
Besides cooking for her
husband, Geve, Eva has three
m arried c h ild re n : Brenda
I-acy, Carol Bertrand and
Alan Shelton who have en­
joyed things like their mom's
special Banana Pudding Her
daughter Trcva Lynn, a high
school senior this year, loves
the great m eals that are a
result of E v a 's crockpot
cooking.
"In 1975 I received a crock­
pot as a gift from the
congregation at Trinity
Assembly of God in Deltona
where my husband was
pasturing," ex p lain s Eva.
From that tim e on, she has
been enjoying the freedom of
crockery conking.
Eva's crockpot came with a
cookbook, but she claims she
read the recipes, but usually
adapted them to the fowls her
family liked. “ I'm just not a
cookbook person," she adds.
The thing that Eva likes
best about her crockpot is that
she can put h er "m ain
course" on to cook late
Saturday evening, and by
Sunday at noon, she can come
home from church and add a
few finishing touches like
vegetables, a salad, and a pan
of her Easy Corn Bread and
her Sunday m eal is done.
The two meat recipes that
Eva uses most in the crockpot
are Roast Beef and Corn Beef
and Cabbage.
Eva also has learned that
"diet recipes" can taste good
When her husband decided to
try the famed "Scarsdale
Medical Diet," she discovered
a recipe that is so good, you'd
never dream it is diet food.
Even the name, Apple-Nut
Acorn Squash, sounds full of

C
t

calories, but it's not, Eva
says.
W hether it's crocking,
dieting or living it up on
Banana Pudding, Eva has a
song in her heart land as
those who know her well will
tell, som etim es in her
m outh!) as she clocks off her
hours of cooking that is all in a
housewife's line of duty.
BANANA PUDDING
P re p a re the following
pudding
and allow to
thoroughly
cool before
assembling the entire banana
pudding:
3« cup all purpose flour
2&gt;a cups sugar
6 tablespoons cornstarch
31 teaspoon salt
9 cups milk
9 eggs yolks, slightly beaten
fi tablespoons butter
6 teaspoons vanilla extract
Com bine flour, sugar,
cornstarch and salt in large
saucepan. Gradually add
m ilk; blend well. Cook,
stirring constantly until thick.
Blend about 1 cup of the hot
mixture into egg yolks; then
add to the hot mixture in
saucepan. Cook 1 minute,
stirring constantly. Blend in
butter and vartilla extract.
Cover and
cool, stirring
occasionally.
Pour a small amount of
pudding in the bottom of a 3quart punch bowl. Slice
bananas, and cover pudding.
Make a third layer of vanilla
w afers. Continue layering,
ending with pudding on top.
Make one package of instant
whipped topping, and frost top
of pudding. Optional: Garnish
sides of pudding dish with
additional vanilla wafers.
Yield: 25 servings.
APPLE-NUT
ACORNSQUASH
1 acorn squash
‘■2 teaspoon salt
1 medium apple, chopped
's teaspoon lemon juice
5 whole pecans or walnuts,
chopped
1 pecan or walnut, halved
1 teaspoon artificial brown
sugar sweetener
P re h e a t oven to 400
degrees. Cut acorn squash
into halves lengthwise and
scrape out seeds and fiber

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CAKE
DONUTS

Herald Photo By Lou Chtldrrt

K v a S h e l t o n sax s s h e lik e s i n e x p e r i m e n t w i t h r e c i p e s .

Place halves in baking pan
with cut sides down and pour
Vi-inch of water into pan
around them . Bake 20
minutes, or until just tender.
Pour off water. Sprinkle salt
inlo squash halves, and fill
them with a mixture of the
chopped apple, chopped nuts,
and lemon juice. Sprinkle
sweetener over tops of filled
halves. Return to oven and
bake 10 minutes, or until
filling is piping hot. Serve
with 4 nut centered on each
half. Serves 1 or 2.
CROCKPOT BEEF ROAST
Place a 5-6 pound top round
beef ro a st in crockpot.
Sprinkle top of roast with 1
package dry onion-mushroom

soup mix, and pour 1 bag of
water over all. Cook on low
setting overnight or at least 12
hours. A good gravy can be
p repared by mixing 2
tablespoons cornstarch into
cup water ami adding to
drippings in crockpot. Cook on
high for 3 to 5 minutes.
CORN BEEF
AND CABBAGE
Place a 5-6 pound garlic
cured corn beef brisket in
crockpot with juice that it is
packed in. and add 1 cup
additional water. Cook on
high setting for 9 hours. When
m eat is tender, remove from
liquid and slice into thin
pieces. Pour liquid from
brisket into saucepan and

Registration is continuing
for Term I, day and evening
classes, at the Vocational
B usiness School, Seminole
Community College.
Individual instruction is
offered in Typing, Advanced
Typing ( 1-anier, Mlcom, Mag
Card I, Memory, and Elec­
tronic Typewriters), Office
M achine, Introduction t*
C om puters, Bookkeeping I
and II, Beginning Shorthand,
Dictation and Transcription,
Office Procedures, Business
M ath, B usiness EnglishC orrespondence, Machine
Shorthand, Record Keeping
and Machine Transcription.
Classes begin Aug. 30.
The registration fee is $15 a
course for Term I, Aug. 30
through Dec. 15. A student

may take a brushnp course, a
full schedule, or individual
classes in office training.
The registration fee for
evening classes is $15 for
Monday and Wednesday 17 to
10 p m .) or Tuesday and
Thursday (7 to 10 p.m.).

To S ta r t

Registration is Monday
ihrough Friday from 9 a m In
4 p.m. and in the evening from
6 to 8 p.m .
in the
Adm inistration
Building.
Schedules for classes are
available. For further in­
formal™, telephone 323-1450.

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W #RLD
“fe e

A DiV'^ONOI U M TfD TROPHY M fQ &lt;NC

12 Acres of Central Florida's

Freshest Produce &amp; Bargains

FRI. 9 AM - 9 PM

Sat. &amp;. Sun. 8 AM - 5 PM
Special Rates: Fri. $5.00 - Sat. or Sun. from $8.00

Dec Talking A. Admisyonl PHONL 321-1 792 or 645-1792

5 9 ( Lb.

Our Own

A l l M E A T W IEN ER S
Duo

nr

R n llv

R n s to rt

$149
®

Lb.

Fresh Daily

GROUND CHUCK3 Lbs. or More * | " u ,
Naturally Aged

HINDQUARTER of BEEF
Cut-Wrapped &amp; Frozen

rf, 1

$ I 69
1

Lb.

Top Round

LONDON BROIL

*2 ™ ^

Extra Lean

SHORT RIBS

* 1

79

Ub.

NEXT TO MR. C'S FRIED CHICKEN

PHONE ORDER AHEAD
It's Ready When Y o u 're Ready

ZINGERS

ROLLS

SNACK
PIES

12 toa Bo*

Delicious
10 toa Box

LA RG E
CINNAMON
A P P L E and
CH ERRY

2

2

2

5

BOXES

BOXES

PKGS

PIES

assorted
flavors

1

$ 1
T u e s d a y is 2 f o r 1 D a y !

coarso-cut a head of cabbage
into this liquid. Cook on top of
the stove about 2a minutes
until lender. Pul cooked
cabbage in a bowl and
arrange sliced corn beef on
top.
EASY CORN BREAD
2 lablespoons drippings
P i cups milk
1 egg
2 cups self-rising while corn
meal mix
Melt drippings in a 10-inrh
iron skillet in hot oven. Add
milk, eggs and melted
drippings to corn meal mix;
stir until well blended. Pour
into hot prepared skillet. Rake
in preheated 425 degree oven
for 20 In 25 minutes,

W HOLE FRYERS

77

GENERAL ELECTRIC
QUALITY-BUILT WASHER
• Porcelain Enameled

V o c a tio n a l B u s in e s s T e r m

SUSANA H U A M A N

-

• Warm Waso A fln s e
l emjteratures

H et CCfloawabo.
And fash io n s that are
easily a d a p ta b le to lec­
tu r e , la b o r lib ra ry .
Bright a n d lively fashions
for the s ta r t of the best
tim e of th e ir life.

BARGAIN PRICED!

-

323*452o

(uiected cake Items only)
OPEN
400 N . HWY. 17-92
MON - SAT 9-6
(opprox. 2 blks. N. of 434, Next to Sobiks)
339-6995
10 N G W 00D , FLA

�J B — Even ing H erald , Sunlord. F I.

W ednesday, Aug l l ,

iv j j

A rum butter rich with shallots, lime juice, pepper sauce and
parsley adds to the succulence of a prime steak
The rum butter is inspired by Caribbean cooker), for
example, in Jam aica where the island's foods reflect the
melange of many different cultures.
And, such a sauce does multiple duty since it goes well with
poultrv and lamb and also can be a dunking sauce for lobster

Rich Rum Butter
Enhances Steak

In small saucepan, combine rum and shallots, bring to a boil,
reduce heat, simmer 2 minutes. Stir in butter, iime juice,
pepper sauce and parsley. Place shell steaks under preheated
broiler 6 inches from heat, brush with rum butter. Broil 4
minutes, turn steaks, brush again and broil 4 minutes longer

STEAK PORT ANTONIO
11 cup dark rum
1 tablespoon chopped shallots
4 cup butter or m argarine ( 4 poundi
2 teaspoons fresh lime juice
4 teaspoon Tabasco pepper sauce
1 tablespoon chopped parsley
t shell steaks cr boneless rib-steaks i about 6 ounces eachi

Sen e with additional rum butter and pepper sauce, if desired.
This kitchen-tested recipe makes 4 senings.

bauce
The rom ance asso ciated j
with cowboys cooking on the
range is so great that it could
easily be at the root of our
mania for meals prepared
and eaten outdoors.
The chuck wagon tailgate
has its present-day coun­
terpart in the station wagon
tailgate. And the cowboycooks have their counterpart
in l he neighborhood men
building
a good
fire,
maneuvering the charcoal,
adjusting the grill and calling
— when the meat's done just
right — “Come and get it!"
Tlie barbecue Ls the one
meal pioneered by men.

PR IC ES E F F E C T IV E WED., AUG. 18
THRU T U E S ., AUG. 24, 1982

Bonus

Bonus |

B(JV

SPICY SAUCE
3 G-oz. cans tomato paste
3 cans water (2 4 cupsi
4 cup vinegar
3 tbsps W orcestershire
sauce
3 tbsps butter
2 tbsps. onion flakes
2 tbsps. celery Hikes
1 tsp black pepper
4 tsp. allspice
4 tsp. cinnamon
4 tsp. chili powder
. I tsp. paprika
1 tsp dry mustard
4 tsp. nutmeg
2 tsps. bart&gt;ecue spice
4 tsp. garlic salt
Dash MSG
11 tsp. red pepper or
cayenne, optional
Combine all ingredients in
saucepan and mix well;
cover Slowly bring to a boil;
reduce heat and simmer 1
hour or longer if time permits.
Use to baste ribs, pork chops
„r chicken. Makes about 5
cups.
ItEAKD’S HASIC
It AltllECUE SAUCE
5 to 7 cloves garlic, chopped
2 isps. coarse salt
2 onions, finely chopped
1 cup olive oil or |&gt;eanut oil
1 cup tomato sauce
1 cup Worcestershire sauce
I cup retl wine vinegar
4 cup brown sugar or honey
I tsp. rosemary
• 4 tsp. thyme
t tbsps. chopped green
l&gt;epper •
1• cup chopped parsley
Press the garlic into the salt
and add the onions, ileal the
oil in a skillet, add the garlic
and onion mixture, and let it
wilt down and
blend
thoroughly. When the garlic
and onions are soft, add the
remaining ingredients. Bring
to a boil, lower the heat, and
simmer for 20 minutes. Taste
tor seasoning. You may strain
H if you wish, or put it in the
container of an electric
blender to get a smooth
mixture.
, To serve. Use sauce hot or
cold with either meat or fish.
Paste with it and serve with
the finished dish. Makes about
\ and one-half cups.
Variations

, Mexican: Add3 tablespoons
chili powder and a few finely
chopped hot chilles to the
sauce before cooking. Add a
few dashes of Tabasco sauce
K you like it extra hot.
Italian: Omit the Wor­
cestershire sauce and the
vinegar. Add 1 cup tomato
puree, 1 tablespoon fresh
basil or dried basil, a pinch of
oregano and 1 cup of red wine.

WEIGHT WATCHERS’
ALL-PURPOSE SAUCE
1 can (47 fluid oz.) tomato
juice
3 tbsps. vinegar
1 2 tbsps. dehydrated onion
flakes
2 tbsps. prepared mustard
• 1 tbsp. lemon juice
•T. | tbsp. W orcestershire
suuce
*•* 4 tsp. garlic powder
b i,, tsp. barbecue spice
• 13 tbsps. brown sugar
replacement
Combine all ingredients in a
saucepan. Heat slowly until
reduced to half its volume (it
becomes quite thick.) Sauce
may be stored in refrigerator
and used as a base or
m arin u d e us desired on
chicken, beef or fish. Makes
1 4 pints. Count 1 tablespoon
of sauce as 2 tablespoons (1
fluid ounce) tomato juice.

Y BUY

C A U F O R N IA RED OR W H ITE

F Y N E OR P A N TR Y PRIDE

ALL VARIETIES

PAPER
TOWELS

CALIFORNIA
PLUMS

CELLO
CARROTS

W HITE O R A S SO R TED

BONUS

* -*

LARGE

Li!

S A V E 10 PER 1 £!

I

COMPARE 5 ^ 2 3

MlOJtl
lOW

COM PA R l

*»A V t

PM CI

D ISPEN SER

GROCERY

COMPARE

•»A V F

PANTRY PRIDE

Mildew Gone

■~99e

REA LEMON

I

1

I22J

Lemon Juice . ^ 9 9
PANTRY PRIDE

_

Quick Oats . .

8 5 C L^J

CONTAWNA

PANTRY PRIDE

_

I

^

1

Solar Salt

RAG

-

-

.

[

PANTRY PRIDE

Mr. Pepper . . s 51
j

»HR

0

Green Cabbage Lll 1 5 C 0

f O U M H (J U A N T I T R 'i ’ *.*«• ‘j O L D T O O t A l l »«*&gt; t t O f ttf

s139 0

G E N E R IC DRY RO ASTED

s4 39 0

Maxwell House

H

A» H t 'd lM

Green Cukes 5 / 8 9 c

Sweet Peas . . its 3 8 C 0

j

Ld

INSTANT C O F F E E

'U O U » » t O W W C P

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PAN TRY PRIDE

C O U R S E O R FIN E

(» ;l

_

Mushrooms. . .mS169 0

Pork &amp; Beans . k 3 /*1 0

I

I

Tea Bags . . . . sr S1

H W . I S G U J U D N I T »4 &lt; 4 M # A A l C O U fft*

1 !;° I

. n.,

FR ESH

79°

Potato Chips .

l_L2J

Royal Pudding £*2/ 5 1 LhJ

S199 E

40 lit

PAN TRY PRIDE TWIN PAK

|

^

Peanuts (BOILING),
id o iu h c i . 2

140

HANOVER

INSTANT PIS TA C H IO . CH OCOLATE
OR VANILLA

Tomato Paste ^ .3 / 1 LllJ
STERLING

A e

SA vt

N EW C R O P G R EE N

Strawberry . .

Bucket Olives . '^.-7 9

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—

COMPARE

SAVf

*■»*• I

FY N E T A S T E P R E S E R V E S

Black Pepper , t»&gt;
■7 9 e

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GROCERY

Peanuts . . . .

JAM

» U « T T K K M A P H C A i [R H O N b

MILLER LITE
••

6 PACK
12oz CAN

GENERIC

BARBQUE

SAUCE
IB o z B T L

G E N E R IC

DRESSING
FRENCH. ITALIAN
OR IOOO ISLAND

16oz B T L

CO M PA RE
G EN ER C

NATIONAL BRAND
PRICE 99

c

5 9

If J

-r,

I

Baby Shampoo re 1
_

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m

.

PM*II

^

^

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CO M PA RE

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BACK T O S C H O O L

1

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SAVE

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Scotch Tape . . 2 / 51 0
* ^ on

Lunch K it s _____* 4 "

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$i "

U E D F R A U M IL C H

| .»
lO a

750 M L

COM PARE

i- .i h

*u a *

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GROCERY

PflCI

SAVE

LUC K Y LEAF- REG OR NATURAL

Apple Sauce .

*sx $1 19 0

I

Ld

White Vinegar sf $1 79 0
_

*

I------- 1

Theme Book . c'?2/$1 0

Elmers Glue All «st 5 9

Macaroni 4B^t . ^ 2 f* 1 0

CRAYOLA

BACK T O S C H O O L

POLKA D O T

_

—

,

Crayons . . . . £ 8 9

Pear Halves • . CAN7 W

20* O FF
MAXIM, b r im ;
ORSANKA
FREEZE DRIED
|
COFFEE

-/Nnot

UPTON
FAMILY
TEABAGS

4oz JAR
|
a

$129

p act

SA VE SI 00

LEONARD
KRUESCH

46o z

BUITON I

I

.

w r r :: t h is c o u p o n g o o d
TH R U W E D . AUG 25. 1982

SAVE

OH Mf A P I Y

BUMGONOy

SA VE 50

KOSHER
DILLS

THERM OS S C H O O L

[

.

i I .1

Theme Book , ^ 7 9

Veg.Oil....iir 9 7 e H
G EN ER C

BACK TO
SCHOOL

Filler Paper . . i r 6 9 e L lJ

„

«

CO M PA RE
BACK TO S C H O O L

I

. .£ ,*8 9

G EN ER C

$219

DETERGENT

•••WDA*'»A»D4A

-

G EN ER C

PUNCH

3 U TER

FV4* CMABlJB HID

5 / $l

VLA SIC

72oz BO X

S A V E S2 OO

CHAUUS Hm #*(

POHR b H H M 1 C » « C * IN
Bf IF O H M U * A d «O M

SAVE 3

C

8 9

NOODLES

8 9

GALLO
WINE

SA VE 53oz PKG.

SANWA
RAMEN PRIDE

PANTRY P R ID E

MAYONNAISE

NATIONAL BRAND
PRICE SI 54

SA1Q

Dry Bleach

SAVE 20

32oz JA R

_

Pencil............. s 7 9 e

*

|------- j

Long Grain Rice '&amp;?$2 5 0

S A V E 4 0 c CASH
MELLOW ROAST
DRIP

COFFEE

24 COUNT

IBoz C A N

W ITH THIS C O UPON G O O D
TH R U W ED . AUG 25. 1082

WITH THIS C O U P O N G O O D
THRU WED . AUQ . 25. 1082

■

S A N F O R D 2 9 4 4 O R L A N D O R O A D . Z A Y R L P L A Z A A I I H h C O R N E R O F 17-92 8 O R L A N D O ROAD

KEEBLER
ZESTA
SALTINES
16 o z B O X
WITH TH IS C O U P O N GOOD
IriM U WED.,
W t lJ ., A U G
U 25.
2 5 . 1082
1982
THRU

�Apple Dessert
An Old Favorite

Apple brown belly is an old-fashioned favorite that ts en­
joyed by a new generation, much as is the classic rice Duddimt
APPLE HIIDWN BETTY
4 cup wheat germ, regular or brown sugar and honey
4 cup fresh bread crumbs ( 1 slice bread) •
11 teaspoon cinnamon
11 teaspoon nutmeg
2 tablespoons butter or m argarine, melted
2 4 nips peeled, sliced apples i2 large i

Evening Herald, Sanford. FI

3 tablespoons packed brown sugar
1 tablespoon lemon juice
1 teaspoon grated lemon rind
3 tablespoons hot water
Combine wheat germ, bread crumbs, cinnamon and nutmeg
Add melted butter, tossing to combine Set aside Combine
apples, sugar, lemon juice and rind. Mix well to coat apples
Place 1 tablespoon wheat germ ixlure in each of three 10-ounce
custard cups Divide apple mixture into 3 portion' .'A ud^r:portion equally into custard cups Repeat layers of wteat germ

Wednesday, Aug I I , i? |? —]B

and apples twice Top with remaining wheat germ mixture
tdd 1 tablespoon hot water to each custard cup. Cover with
foil Bake at 350 degrees for 15 minutes. Uncover and bake 10
minutes longer Serve warm with ice cream, whipped cream
r ( ream if desired This kitchen-tested recipe makes 3 ser­
vings
NOTE: Dessert may be baked in 1-quart casserole. Bake,
cvered ai 330 degrees for 25 minutes Uncover and bake 15
minutes longer

Maybe it's time to try some
new ideas for refreshments
when friends drop in, come to
a bridge party or a committee
meeting. Instead of a fancy
dessert or a tray of rich
sandwiches, offer them a
tasty tray of lower-calorie
sandwiches made with cot­
tage cheese
These co ttag e cheese
spreads may bo made in
advance, as welt as their
garnishes and their breads set
nut, covered, but ready to use,
You can then assemble and
refrigerate the sandwiches
shortly before guests arrive
The O pen-Face Triple
Decker Sandwich is a savory
blend of co ttag e cheese,
shredded carrots and chopped
nuts, spiced with doves and
a bit of parsley. It starts with
a toasted, buttered English
muffin half, topped with a
slice of cooked ham, then a
pineapple ring and finally, a
crown of the cheese mixture

CHECK
THESE
PRICES

COM PARE

SAVE

MRS KINSERSKISSERS- CHICKEN,
CH
HAM. CHEESE.
POTATO. COLE SU
SLAW
_ _

Ass’td Salads .

1lot
CUP

OSCAR MAYER SLICED
SPEC IA L TRIM

BO

.^ 9 9

LYKES-POWER PAK

99

Turkey Ham

20

. .

PANTRY PfDD€- SUCED SALAMI
OR SPICED
LiJ
Luncheon Meat wtO

40

Pork Hocks

30

lbS

1 59

30

30‘

KITCHEN READY COOKED
CHARBRCXLED

_ « .
50
. ?rs LH9 9

Beef Patties

30

HADOOCK OH COO
FLASH FROZEN

5^39

. . , . „ s 1 79

IN THE MEAT FREEZER CASE
SUCED SIRLOIN

0

Orange Juice

SAVE

•MU/ S^19
GAL
. ctn

50

MRS FILBERTS- WHIPPED

2Ul
. . . (ICWl 9 9 *

Spread 25

| 50'

BREYERS- ALL VARIETIES

Y o g u rt...........

Box
CUTO3 9 *

2 0'

AXELRODS WHOLE MILK

Fish Fillets

40

^
. rJ£ L o 0 9

SMOKED

S449

ss

N.Y. Strip Steaks s 9 ? . ?

S

lb

Freezer Queen.i s

PRICES

CHECK
THESE
PRICES

DAIRY

COM PARE
OLD SOUTH CHILLED
IN THE DAIRY CASE

OivCor Patties

c

5^69

FROZEN ENTREES
ALL VARIETIES
LD

9

SAVE
PER LB

THESE

MEAT

COOKED BREADED
ALL VARIETIES

S-J59

BONELESS ^MOKED

SUNNYLAND- MEAT OR BEEF

Jumbo Franks

lb5

Breakfast strips ilz

20

__

Bologna (chicken)

. . . ? ^

SWIFT SIZZLEAN

_^

Cooked Ham

Sausage

COM PARE

_, _

BRAUNSCHWEtGER STICK UVER

99c

CH ECK

CHECK
THESE SAVE„
PRICES pERLB

MEAT

COM PARE

Pork Chops

.

20'

1/Of $&lt;j79
. . . imo

PANTRY PRIDE SUCED

»
lb5

Mozzarella

40

1

American

16.&gt;2 S*|99

PRO

50

50'

IN THE D EU -BA K ER Y S T O R E S ONLY

COMPARE

BAKERY

IvlNtDAf
IOVW
w ef

SA V E

r v u iT P * *

COMPARE

Is s .

P A N TR Y PRJDE- FROZEN

ROIIS HAMBURG Eft

P o t a t o e s (IHOU IIWQI L i 6 9 *

CO UNTRY SQUIRE

Bread (BAR-&amp;GUE)LOAfl2 / 8 9 * 0
*2 04 '

f% I

Rolls ( C L O V E R L E A F ) e iZ f J J
PANTRY PWOC

Apple Pie

10ot
■ • BOX

Q

F H Q JZ J + O O t. 94 B A Q B Q U C t D B O F , B A 1 M U M Y
6TCAM . O U C f U T U f K f r C M C * A LA K JH Q C H A f l B H O L
V IA L P A H M O fl C H t A M
M U
^
| |

Lemonade . . .

O

•1“ 0

GOLD M EDAL u
FLOUR
g
PLAIN OR SELF RSINO
8 LB B A G
WTTH T H f i COUPON O O O O
TH R U WED . AUO. 20. 1962.

FR O S TY A C R E S- FROZEN
C H O P P ED O R LEAF

m

b

* *

&lt; £.4/1
^

.

I

w

\

Spinach . . . . ^ 3 / $1 IE

^

St

_

.

Toothbrushes . 5/*1

S ig n a l................sc

C O F FE E

#

EP, OR A.D.C.

®
§
|

\

PREPARED f\lH»DAY
FOODS

Ma n

______
I
1

U

I------1

*18B L d

SA VE

OLD FASHION G ERM A N S T Y L E

Bologna . . . . ^ 9 9 *
_

30'

_

Pork Sandwich ix 9 9 c

1

»

CO M PA RE

B A R B-QUE

35* O F F

MASTER BLEND I

WTTH THB COUPON OOOO
THRU WED , AUQ. 26, 1062.

TEK - SO FT,
M E D IU M OR HARD

i40

j

40" OFF LABEL MOUTHWASH

!

1302 C A N

|

I

SA V E

. «

Clearasil . . . . ^

20* OFF

10* O FF

p*«c i

ACNE TREATMENTVANBHINO OR TINTED

-

F re e z e r Q ueen £ r ,o / 1
p in k o r r e g u l a r

G

H|A| VHC
«l* AUf V AIDS

Q - T ip s ...........&amp;° *1

-

P A N TR Y PRIDE- FROZEN

PANTRY PRIOCPARTY
H
A H IT rFLAKE
i A A C uOR
n

COM PARE
CO
u
v Ti Ti O
u nNi SWABS

PANTRY PRIDE- HOT DOG
• PAM

SAVE

CVCMfOAv

20'

O U R FA M O U S
F R E S H BAKED

Torpedo Rolls 6 / 7 9 C

20 '

M ADE FRESH DAILY
RING GLAZED

Donuts . . . 1 2 /*1 69

30'

SAVE 2 0 c CASH

SEALTEST
IC E C R E A M

;
fc

HALF GALLON

1

WTTH TH fi COUPON OOOO I
THRU WED., AUQ. 20, 1082. |

•I

ii&amp; to

COKE,
SPRITE, TAB, MR. PIBB k
OR MELLO YELLO
S
8 PAK 16oz BTL
S
P LU S DEPOSIT
#
Y O U PAY t l tB WTTH TH IS
I
C O U P O N GOOO THRU W ED , ■
A U G U S T 20, 1082

OPEN FACE TRIPLEDECKED SANDWICH
1 cup cottage cheese
1 cup grated raw carrots
One-third cup chopped nuts
i cup finely chopped fresh '
parsley
4 teaspoon salt
Dash of cloves (optional i
1 English muffins, split,
buttered and toasted
8 slices cooked ham i about
l i-inch thick)
1 can (1 lb 4 oz.) pineapple
slices, drained 18 slices)
Beat cottage cheese in a
small mixing bowl until
smooth. Blend in carrots,
nuts, parsley, salt and doves;
set aside. To assemble sand­
wiches, on individual serving
plates layer English muffin
half, a slice of ham and a slice
of pineapple. Spoon about 3
tablespoons cottage cheese
mixture on top of pineapple.
Yield: 8
MUSTARD COTTAGE
CHEESE SANDWICH
SPREAD
1 cup cottage cheese
2 tablespoons prepared
mustard
4 teaspoon salt
1pi teaspoon vinegar
Beal cottage cheese in a
small mixing bowl until fairly
smooth. Blend in mustard,
salt and vinegar, Serve as a
spread on ham or cheese
sandwiches Yield about 1
cup.
DATE NUT
SANDWICH FILLING
1 cup cottage cheese
4 cup finely chopped dates
4 cup raisins
One-third chopped pecans
4 teaspoon salt
Boston brown bread
Beat cottage cheese in a
small mixing bowl until fairly
smooth. Blend in dates,
raisins, pecans and salt. Use
as u filling between slices of
buttered, toasted Boston
brown bread. Yield: one an
two-thirds cups.
CHEESY VEGETABLE
SANDWICHES
two-thirds cup dairy sour
cream
one-third cup
chunky
peanut butter
4 teaspoon celery salt
14 cups (6 oz.) shredded
Provolone OR Swiss cheese
1 cup shredded carrot (3
medium-sized carrots)
4 cup chopped nuts
4 cup chopped celery
12 slices while bread
4 cup ( 4 stick ) butter,
melted
l&gt;ea( Udtuce
Combine so u r cream ,
peanut butter and celery salt
until well blended. Stir in
cheese, c a rro t, nuts and
celery until well combined.
Chill, covered, 2 to 3 hours to
allow flavors to blend. To
serve, toast bread on both
sides; lightly brush one side of
each slice with melted butter.
Cover 6 slices with lettuce.
Spread cheese mixture over
lettuce. Top with second slice
of toast, buttered side facing
filling. Serve im m ediately
with Pineapple Frosty.
Yield: » sandwiches

�4B— Evening Mirald. Sanford, F I.

Wednesday, Aug. 18, 1982

Now more than ever, we’re right for you!
Wj u cjrt 1 S u p M B n r ^ n S U m p k* r * r « v

SOJIM R M )M JS SIP B O TA M

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&gt;f t r * S u p e i B&lt;w x j « O f t W c j B r *

1992

all Go"*« !«k»*i art iki»*K/i*&gt;l

WINN-DIXIE STORES, INC
CO m tG M T — 1982

PRICES GOOD
AUGUST 1 9 -2 1 , 1982

ODDS (HART: AS Of AUGUST I , 1912
(Xjo\ tat ntOt K)0 OCjO) too
•• (.AMI
•HJ O* *.l &lt;&gt;M| *GAME
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B n rvi Spaa* you )

UP TO

No«**er [V*oRW# U p l&gt; rv o «&gt;ltc«Oy

QUANTITY RIGHTS
RESERVED

W tW f) yo u tlW C il OUl p r w n t o n * fOrel

)• 2U »tl *0 • II ft* t»&gt;1 •) HP to 1
f» •i n t »o » • ait to • « )t| to 1
in ;l Of TOi 1It) to 1 1 HI to l
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$2,000.00 WINNER
DORIS DETER
OtlANDO. FUL

$200.00 WINNERS
VERA H. SEALE
u rn

ISUNO, FIA

DEBRA ALAFFTTA
HUM. IU

STANLEY ROBINSON
unoiu huh . ru

PRECIOUS ROUSE
AROfVA. ru
MRS. A. T. WILUAMS

PATRICIA ZYM0WSKI
OILAMO. ru
M ART, F U
JoANN STAGAARD
DEBBIE FARRIS
OILAMO ru
atuwo, ru
BRINDA
K. COATES
SIDNEY HENSLEY
MINI SHIVER
OllAMO, ru
0*1AMO. ru
okun d o . ru.
HELEN KOSTK
MILES SWIFT
J0TCE ANNE KROUFOWSKI
tUNMUON. F\A
a i i an »o . ru
pomci h u t . ru
HELEN
ROLLER
JANE M. H0LL0WELL
GAIL HARRIS
rnusYUU. r a •
a nriT u h v ir . r u
ana m o . ru
CLARA R. DAWSON
ORMOND H U H , I U

$100.00 WINNERS

�Evening Herald. Sanford FI

T O N IG H T 'S T V
M

2.05

WfDNFSnflV

Cable Ch

(D O
s-o
® 0

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60 0

0 ? 5 O t o HEWS

M (35) ANDY G r if f it h
6D 110) MOVIE
Vigilant** 01
Boomtown 119A7i Allan Rock,
Lane Bobby flu,Ye A *M&gt;natnr s
daughter has a prnelighter kidnapped because she obiects to I is
prolession.

0
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7
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tCBSi Orlando
• NBC) Daytona B ratti
Orlando

indfpendent
Orlando

4 ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT

THURSDAY

Orlando Public
Broadcasting System

0
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&gt;
'i
(D

4 ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
0 YOU ASKED EOR It
O F AMILY FEUD
(35) b a r n e y m il l e r
(10) OICK CAVETT

ton Pfaco • 19611 Carol l ynl*y J«»tt
Chandler A book written about Ihe
intimacies ftl a small town causes a
fuf O' whf*fi I tip schooll principal
a'lowt the book in the library

(10) FLORIDA HOME GROWN
SPECIAL

7:35

6:35

13 ( 17| BASEBALL Montreal
Fipn* it Atlanta Braves

11 ( 17| FATHER KNOWS BEST

7 00

800

the m u p p e ts

G

S O p m m a g a z in e
1 O JOKER S w il d
I I (35) THE JEFFERSONS
(D 1101 MACNEIL / LEHRER
REPORT

7:05
(171 GREEN ACRES

4

REAL PEOPLE

S O MR MERLIN A jrinl Mat
(3&gt;Wpp6(ifj 6h#n h*» hoi lo go tnlo
ttT»* How'tal *ith ton$ihT&gt;% (R|
? □ Th e GREATEST AMERICAN
HERO
II 135) MOVIE
Re lute To Pey

0:30
J O MOVIE
a P#K* Of Tb*.
Action 1 19771 Sidney Poitter Bill
C vbf Tam liMatto croofc» attempt
tii rmiktff thi* art j f I he fip-Ott white
being £!;*• fcmailed into tackling **?*
eml community problem* {R|

9:00
0
4 THE FACTS OF LIFE
7 Q
THE FALL GUY Howie
meets up with a man who is being
paroled alter serving Irme lot the
then ol a Navy pjyrotl that was nev
e&lt; reco.ered (R)
f f i (10) WHAT SKILLIN G FLORI­
DA'S LAKES the problem* effect &gt;
eg Florida ijk ps , both natural and
man-mado .« eihl as Ihe plausible
result* should conservation warn­
ings go unheeded are* eta mined

11:35

12:00
J O MOVIE
The Henderson
Monster
1 1960) Jason Miller
Chnsime Lahti
t O LOVE BOA I

12:05
U (17) MOVIE These Three
119361 Joel McCrea Miriam Hop
kins

10:00
O 4 QUINCY Quincy works with
a r«*f&gt;red Nw&gt; huntwr to track down
the k 1 or r.it i Holocaust survivor
|R|
f' 0 DYNASTY Btik® awaits the
results ot a blood test to sne i! Fal­
lon s his da .ghter and Jett catches
Claudia stealing Denver Carrington 5 secret nil trie (Ri
Ell (10) THE MAGIC WORLD OF
MARCEL MARCEAU The world s
greatest y o g practitioner Dt the
ancient art ot Si’encn performs sev­
en ot his mosl famous pantomimes

CfifTlERA READY C O P Y
2 4 HO U R SERVICE

£elkilimit• Emiefcpeo
Coi('mfa» F&lt;w»w. £( c.

10:30
II (3 5) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
NEWS

10:35

QUALITY DOES NOT HAVE TO COST
MORE...AIL T0U NEED IS A GUALITY

12 1 171 NEWS

11 00
«

PRINTER

10 %

OFF ALL PRINTING
WITH THIS COUPON
«r

i

Cool Knight
from Carrier
cools your castle

... new cooling
economy from
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conditioning
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A l t ,!
A SK

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$594

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N O TIC E OF S H E R IF F S
S A LE
N OTICE IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
lb.11 by virtue dt that certain W nl
ol t&gt; e cu i' 0n n u rd out ol and
under the 'm l ol the COUNTY
C ouflol Seminole County. Florida
upon a tmai lodgement rendered
in the aforesaid court on the I4tti
day ol August. A D 1981. in that
certa.n ca\e entitled. Atlantic
Hank ul Seminole Pla nt .It, v i
Thomas K Wilk and Debra W llk.
Detendant. which aloreiald W rit
hi Execution wax delivered to me
as Sherill ol Seminole County,
Florida and i nave leved upon the
follow ing describ ed property
owned by D ebra W ilk, 'a id
property being located n Seminole
County
F lo rid a
m ore par
ticular ly detcrib edat lollows One
1978 Ford van Blue in Color. ID
No EUHltCFV799
One
IV7J
C a d illa c
4 door
Automobile Yellow In Color. ID
No GD49MTQJ4IW bemg stored at
Sem inole P a in t and Body In
Santord. F lorida
and the undersigned as Sher tt ol
Seminole County. Florida, w ill at
II 00 A M on the 9th day ot Sep
tember, a p 198?, otter lor sale
and sell lo the highest bidder, tor
cash, subiect lo any and all
ey.sling liens, at the Front IW esll
Door at the steps of the Seminole
County Courthouse in Sanford.
F lo r id a , the above describ ed
personal property
That sa&gt;d sale is being made to
satisfy ihe term s ol sa d W ril ot
Eiecution
John E Polk, Sherill
Seminole County, Florida
Publish August 18, JS. a. Sep
lember I. 8 w th the Sate on
September 9, 198?
D E Y 9?

, qw0 II'0»I*C

mi

SOUTHERN AIR
S k ill MI 111 wORft

OF SANFORD INC.
P H . (305) 322 8321
100 N O R T H M A P L E A V E .

3.00

S O SUMMER SEM ESTER
11 (17) IT S YOUR BUSINESS
|MON|

5:35
11 117) WORLD AT LARGE (WED
TMU)

3:30
,11 (35) TOM AND JERRY and
FRIENDS
tD (10) ELECTRIC COMPANY (R)

0
S
7
K
11

4 EARLY TODAY
O CABLE NEWS
0 SUNRISE
(35) JIM BAKKER
117) NEWS

3:35
4.00

6:30
0 4 TODAY IN FLORIDA
7 i O ABC NEWS THIS MORNING
(7 O N E W S
(D ( 10) AM WEATHER

V

F A C IA

11 (3 5 1SCOOBY DOO
tD (10) SESAME STREET (R) g

7:35

OUR CEDAR
TRIMMED
FLORIDA ROOMS

0«e

THESE D A Y S O N L Y

AUGUST:

5:35
I I 117) HAZEL (MON WED f Rl|
I J (17) BASEBALL (TUE)

Are For Flow*re
Not Poopto
General

3 1 0 1 O R L A N D O DRIVE,

Electric

SANFORD

W u t h e r t r e n C e n tra l
A ir C o n d itio n in g I r i t a m

u fe e . 11 PLUMBINO A
■ W O II HEATING INC
Ph. m 1541
im t

S a n fo rd A v e .

WE CAPTURE THE MOMENTS!

S a n fo rd

B e a t 9 k T m d Uahie F a t £ m !
-------------------------------- S p e c i a l --------------------------------------------------------

G rade A

49c

Fryers
T u rk ,y

W ings

CHICKEN
BACKS

5

Grade

0 0 $

7

$149

10

a

7T

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69c m

sm o ked Picnic

Q Q C

Shoulders

7

Chuck Roast

PLAZA II )

&gt;» * »«

‘J

m k

W

S3.99 .b

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

S1.49 tb

Whole Corn 2 ^

59c n&gt;
Jiffy Corn Muffin

D eild aut

Bananas.........3 it.$1.00

Sweet

Mix 4

Potatoes ................3 n» $1.00

Eggs .

GOOD ALL OAY WEDNESDAY
OPEN 19.H i m ,10pm E X C E P T F R I H A T ClOilNO 10.Mp m
1194 S French Aye IH w y TM 1I
SANFORD

m uM

61 N H«y 17 91
CASSELEERRY
m u se

Not Included Substitutions Al E e i r i CTierge

T H E W W W E M A K E IT
IS M A K IN G U S FA M O U S.
MEMBER
FLA. H.B A.

Onions ......................3im 99c

ICE CREAM

J purrs ujgoldai bnnvn Famous ffm /v Fried Chickrn
Mashed potatoes and yniry
Creamy cole slaw ami tu o fresh, hot biscuits

L IC E N S E D - B O N D E D -IN S U R E D
O V E R 20 Y E A R S E X P E R I E N C E

Yellow

A n t Flavo r
*8 gal
Heritage

GH O ST STORY
CAT P E O P L E

Quiggle &amp; Sons

White Potatoes ............ 99c

b

f\f\

&gt;1 W
pkq

■

Zarmix All Vegetable

Shortening .................3 16 $1.19
with lie Order
Trend Giant Sue

r

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

47 ounce

99c

i 1’
Sugar
,bba0g#0 #4

Dutch Holland

177I7H

s11000,o

S10°

'Ooity Fwwb

ik k im k m i

K IT C H E N S

S1.79 •«&gt;

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

Heritage Cream Corn or

PW w x

u String Beans

Steaks

Detergent

([ M O V I E L A N D j
H .f c llt J S

»

............. S1.69

steaks

•H|

EX

lit ; I

l

Chuck

Hamburger

Eat In
or Carry Out

»

-

Beef Liver

U SDA

^

to

O x T o ll

tr0 0

i

PinsFoot

o r N ock B ones

58c I. M o a , y
c „ .,,a u ,.

Chitterlings

WEDNESDAY
SPECIAL.

SAT SUN MON
21
22
23

S U N D A Y : 1 2 N - 5 PM

... .
j

FRI
30

D A I L Y : 10 A M - 8 P M

~

H m l/H ailiiuyitg

THU R
19

H o t H o u to a

Pork Chops

Valid unfits 23 I?

it s / A

CUSTOM HOMES

Pho ne 3 2 3 -8 4 6 3

5:30
0 : 4 PEOPLE. 5 COURT
} O HOGAN S HEROES
Q NEWS
m&lt; 101 POSTSCRIPTS

69&lt; ■

M inim um one coupon per person

lim it ''

S ID IN G
ASK ABOUT

5:05

; ANY DRY CLEANING WITH
i THIS COUPON

Corner of 2nd &amp; Oak Ave., Sanford

$ 1 2 e 9 5

11(1 7) THE PARTRIDGE FAMILY

CHICKEN
WINGS

2.00 OFF

9 5 &lt;

J Lb. Bag

V IN Y L A N D A L U M IN U M

DOW NSPOUTS

4:35
11 (1 7)0 Z Z IE AND HARRIET

9

7 at » to

R O O M A D D IT IO N S
SQ MOST ROOFS

4:30
11 (35) I DREAM OF JEANNIE

0
4 LAVERNE 8 SHIRLEY 8
COMPANY
I O HAPPY DAYS AGAIN
i l l O ALL IN THE FAMILY
ill- (35) CHARLIE S ANGELS
tD (10) MISTER ROGERS |R|

IN TH E C IR C U IT CO U RT. FOR
8:00
SEM IN O LE COUNTY F L O R ID A
U (3 5) GREAT SPACE COASTER
CASE NO 81 3818 CA 09
8:05
SU BU RBA N C O ASTAL
COR
11 11 7) MT THREE SONS
POR A TI ON
Plain tiffs
8:30
15
H (3 5) KROFFT SUPERSTARS
IOHN A COO PER A
tD (10) MISTER ROGERS (H)
A L IC E l COOPER
8:35
Oelendants,
l1 l( 17) THAT GIRL
vs
9:00
C R E D lT T M R lF T OF A M E R IC A .
0 4 HOUR MAGAZINE
INC ,
I Q DONAHUE
Cross P ij.n t.H
&gt; o MOVIE
N O TICE OF F O R E C L O S U R E
I I (351 GOMER PYLE
SA LE
m l 10) SESAME STREET ( R ) g
NOT ICE is heri-h* g veh that Ihe
undersigned Clerk ol the Circuit
9 .0 5
Court ol Semmole County. Florida
11 (17) MOVIE
will on the 10th day ol September
9:30
I9B7 at II 00 o Clock A M at the
11 (35) ANDY GRIFFITH
A'esi front door ot the S E M IN O LE
1000
County Courthouse SAN FO RD
Florida otter tor sale and sell at : O 4 OIFF RENT STRO KES(R|
5
0
RICHARO
SIMMONS
public outcry id the TngheSI and
11 (351 FAMILY AFFAIR
best bidder lor cash, the following
tD 110) ELECTRIC COMPANY (R)
described properly situated in
10:30
SEM IN O LE County Florida
Q 4 WHEEL OF FORTUNE
Lot
IS
BLO CK
F.
ol
S O ALICE (R)
W A SH IN G S Oft SH O R E
SEC
, l j (35) LEAVE IT TO BEAVER
TION ONE according to the plat
Ihcreot. as recorded in Plat Book
11:00
16 Pages t 6 1. Public Records ot
C M TEXAS
Semmole County, Florida
( D O THE PRICE IS RK3MT
pursuant to the Fm al Judgment
( 7 1 0 LOVE BOAT (R)
OE (35) 38 LIVE
entered In a cate pending in said
Court. Ihe style ot which is n
11:05
d cated above
U (17) MOVIE
W ITN ESS my hand and official
11 30
seal ol said Court this 16th day ot
ll! (35) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
August 198?
(S E A L I
NFWS
AHERNOON
Arthur H Beckw th Jr
12:00
C L E R K OF TH E C IR C U IT
0 i 4j COUPLES
COURT
( } Q 17 O N E W S
B Y Cynthia Prodor
J P (35) BIG VALLEY
Deputy Clerk
12:30
Publish August 18, ?S 198?
0 4 NEWS
O E Y 119

MW, 17 I J WJ 7SOJ Q Q .
a h sea ts y y

ROOFS
S A R O °

11 ( 17| THE AOOAMS FAMILY

5:00

iH ( 171 FUNTIME

FAMOUS RECIPE S CHICKEN DINNER

GUTTER

0
4 l i t t l e h o u s e o n THE
PRAIRIE
1 o STAR TREK
T O MERV g r if f in
11 (35) s u p e r m a n
tD (10) SESAME STREET ( R i g

4:05

7:00

H ( 17)1 DREAM OF JEANNIE

j

AS A BONUS WHEN YOU
MAKE A 95C DEPOSIT
ON YOUR PROFESSIONAL
"MOMENTS TO REMEMBER"
PORTRAIT SERIES.

11 | 17) THE FLINTSTONES

7:30

Legal Notice

3:05
f u n t im e

6.00

1:30
4 NBC NEWS OVERNGHT

AND

11 (17) WORLD AT LARGE (TUE)

7:05

0

o 4 CHIPS (RI
5 O GUIDING LIGHT
J O GENERAL HOSPITAI
11 {3 5 j BL7GS BUNNY
FRIENDS
11 (17)

l'7V Q
MOVIE
Words And
Musrc i 194Bi Mickey Rooney Bet­
ty Garrett

1:10

CAPITOL

O 4 WEATHER(TUE FRI)

0 4 TODAY
J' O MORNING NEWS
7 O GOOD MORNING AMERICA
11 (35) CASPER AND FRIENDS
fD ( 10) VILLA ALEGRE ( R i g

f |||! o |I jh

C o o l c o m fo rt at lo w e r c o s t—C a rrie r S ie rra
R oom A ir C o n d itio n e rs w ith E c o n o -Z o n e
te m p e ra tu re c o n tr o l S ie rra has s o m e o l the
fin e s t e ffic ie n c y ra tin g s in the la n d
C a p a c itie s fro m 9,000 to 17,900 B lu hr Let
C o o l K n ig h t in tro d u c e you to S ie rra w ith
h ig h s ty lin g a p p o in tm e n ts , d e lu x e fe a tu re s ,
a nd o p e ra tin g e c o n o m y C a rrie r S ie rra

Ml AH'

J n

Legal Notice

Sierra Model FE709A1
9,000 Blu hr.: EER 11.0

n n m iih ip

4

2:30

6:45

12:30
O 4 LATE NIGHT WITH DAVID
LETTERMAN Guests Lily Tdmlm
Father Andrew Greeley (R)
IV (35) WANTED DEAD OR ALIVE

m

WORLD TURNS

2:00

s Ia

5:45

11 (17) ALL IN THE FAMILY

j

0 4 ANOTHER WORLD
T O ONE LIFE TO LIVE

O CELEBRITY REVUE
5:30

Rivers Guests Rock Hudson Paul
Williams, Marcia Wa'lace
5 O MARY TYLER MOORE
J O *BC NEWS NIGHTLINE
III (35) STREETS OF SAN FRAN
CISCO

f

1:30
as the

520

11:30

9.30
0
4 LOVE SIDNEY Patti is
teiected b* bet classmates when
her illegitimacy becomes known to
then patents |R|

o

) o

11 (1 7 ) WORLD AT LARGE (MON)

4 TONIGHT Guest host Jb an

0

O 4 DAYS OF OUR LIVES
&gt;
ALL MY CHILDREN
IT (351 MOVIE

5:05

1

the

1:05

11 (17) RAT PATROL (THU)

II (35) BENNY HILL
tD (10) POSTSCRIPTS

and

11 (171 M 1VIE

MORNING

525

7:30

J o
THE y o u n g
RESTLESS
7 O RYAN S HOPE

TAKE H O M E
A CUDDLE BEAR

1 00

2:30
0

independent
Atlanta Ga

In addition tothe channel' luted cablevition tu b 'crib e ri may tune in to independent channel 44
Si Pi t i t ' burg, by lumnq to channel a tuning lo channel 13, which car net 'p o rt' and the C hrnlian
Broadcasting Network i C B N i

son s

6 :3 0
4 NBC NEWS
O CBS NEWS
O ABC NEWS
|35) c a r t e r c o u n t r y

0 ill

©(35)
® (17)
(10) @

lA B C I Orlando

60S
11 I1 7 | MY THREE

11 (1 7 ) BA SEBALL Montreal
F ■pos at Atbinfa

Cable Ch

Wednesday. Aug 18. 19B2—SB

$ -J 4 9

.

Monogram Enriched

With 110 Food Order

........................ 3 •«&gt; m g 99c

Rice
Henlage
............................. 2Vl doien

S I.99

Heritage CAN SODAS

M ayonnaise ............................ 69c
B u y O n e M a n o n Royal BLACK P E P P E R
Get F R E E One Heritage SALT
Georgia Red

6/M .00 =r *3.99 case

Tomatoes 2 (J.” .............. $1.00

Assorted Flavors

PRICES GOOD THRU 8-25-82

,. n p -T 0 Pi

■SUPERMARKET
1100 WEST 13TH STREET SANFORD
We Reserve the Right
FOOD STAMPS WELCOME To Lim it Quantities
QUALITY! SERVICE! SAVINGS!

�6B

Evening Herald. Sanlord, FI

Wednesday, Aug it, 19| ]

Microwave Magic

Stuffed Eggplant A Great Meal-In-One
A friend recently gave me a beautiful eggplant from her
Barden. Usually I have sliced, breaded and deep-friend or panfrted this vegetable, but I decided to investigate how I could
put my microwave oven to use.

Midge
Mycoff

I have heard people say they prepared eggplant as a stuffed
vegetable That sounded like it should be baked, and if it can be
baked in the conventional oven it can be baked in the
microwave oven.

Home Economist
Seminole Community College

Microwave 100 percent power, uncovered, 2-3 minutes or until
meat cooks. Stir to break meat into small pieces; drain Drain
eggplant and scoop our center leaving '4-inch shell. Chop the
eggplant. Combine l 'j cups chopped eggplant, onion, garlic,
cucumber and green pepper in a 4 cup glass measure. Cover
with plastic wrap. Microwave 100 percent power 4-5 minutes or
until almost tender; drain Stir into ground beef. Add tomato
sauce, salt. Italian seasoning, basil and pepper; mix well
Spoon into eggplant halves, mounding as necessary

1 can 18 oz.) tomato sauce

This recipe I found turned out to be a great meal-in-one dish,
and such a change from the usual fried eggplant.
STI FFED K (P L A N T - MICROWAVE
I medium eggplant
l ? lb. ground beef

4 teaspoon Italian seasoning
'» teaspoon basil leaves
teaspoon pepper

1 small onion, chopped

Chicken M ncliiladas have h o m em ad e corn meal
crepes (to rtilla s ).

New Twist
To Chicken
Every Sunday

Make Easy Meals
Prepared packaged or frozen potatoes help make a quick
meal in these days of busy schedules.
A scalloped potato dinner is a one-dish meal that includes
ham, green beans and tomatoes.
Soup lovers will enjoy a potato vegetable soup that is a
complete meal when rounded out with a green salad, fresh
bread and dessert. Try blending leftover potato vegetable soup
and serve it chilled as a first course or for lunch on a hot
summer's day.
SUPER SCALLOPED POTATO DINNER
1 package (5.5 ounces) Idaho scalloped potatoes
1 cup diced cooked ham
1 cup fresh green beans, cut in 1-inch pieces ('« pound)
2 tomatoes, peeled and sliced
l l2 cups boiling water
] ( cup milk
In 2-quart casserole, lightly mix potatoes, ham, green
beans and tomatoes. Sprinkle with seasoning mix. Pour water
and milk over all. Bake in 375-degree oven 30 minutes, ac­
cording to package directions. This kitchen-tested recipe
makes 4 servings.
POTATO VEGETABLE SOUP
1 tablespoon butter or margarine
cup thinly sliced celery
2 cans (133» ounces each) chicken broth
2 tomatoes, peeled, seeded and chopped or
1 can (8 ounces) tomatoes
parsley
1 .1 cup chopped
.. . .
•■1 teaspoon dried leaf marjoram
'2 teaspoon salt
»« teaspoon pejiper
4 cups frozen Idaho flash brown potatoes
j i , CUpS cooked vegetables (green beans, carrots, lima.*,
.•as)
In a large saucepan, melt butter. Add celery and cook 5
mutes over m edium heat, until tender. Add chicken broth,
matoes, parsley, m arjoram , salt and pepper. Cover and
11 mer over m edium heal 20 minutes. Add potatoes and
•getables. Cover and cook 10 minutes longer, this kitchensled recipe m akes 8 servings.

Tip: add 1 tablespoon salt to 2 quarts water for salt water in
which to soak eggplant
Next week: Peaches.

Cut eggplant in half lengthwise Soak in salt water about 30
minutes. Crumble ground beef into glass casserole.

SLM P
PRICE
SPECIALS T

Chicken every Sunday once meant the family sitting down to
a roasted or stewed chicken replete with mashed potatoes,
biscuits and gravy.
Chicken continues as a mainstay in menus, but now is served
several times a weeki It is still a less-expensive source of good
protein and also a source ot lower cholesterol. Most chicken
dishes are easy to prepare, too.
However, chicken now appears at the table in many ethnic
recipes, reflecting the widening interests of American in foods
from all areas.
Especially popular are Mexican-style foods Here is a
chicken enchilada dish that features easy-to-make corn meal
crepes or tortillas. It can la* a party or family dish
CHICKEN i:\fH lL \D A S
CIIEI’ES:
1 cup milk
3i nip enriched corn meal
cup all-purpose flour
2 eggs
11 teaspoon salt
KILLING ASDTOI’IMNG:
3 tablespoons butter or margarine
3 tablespoons all-purpose flour
One 10s 1 ounces can condensed chicken broth
1 tablespoon instant minced onion
1 tablespoon dried parsley flakes
1 tablespoon lemon juice
2 teaspoons chili powder
2 cups ehopped cooked chicken
One 16-ounce can refried beans
One 10-ounce can enchilada sauce
For crepes: In medium bowl, combine all ingredients,
mixing until batter is fairly smfmtli le t stand 10 minutes; stir
Heat 6 to 7-inch crepe pan or skillet over medium-high heat
(irease lightly For each crepe, pour about 2 tablespoons
batter into a hot, prepared pan Immediately tilt pan to coal
bottom evenly with thin layer of batter. Cook 45 seconds or
until top looks dry Turn; cook about 20 seconds Stack crepes
between sheets of wax paper Makes 12 crepes.
For filling and topping In medium saucepan, melt butter; .
blend in flour Add chicken broth, onion, parsley, lemon juice
and (hill powder. Bring to a boil; cook 1 minute, stirring
constantly, or until thickened. Add chicken and beans; mix
well
Heat over to 350 degrees Spoon about one-third cup chicken
mixture across center of each crape; roll up, Arrange filled
crepes in ungreased 13-by -9-inch baking dish. Spoon enchilada
sauce over crepes; cover with foil. Bake about 25 minutes or
until heated through Serve with sour cream and pepperoncinis
or chili peppers. Garnish with chopped tomato, avocado or ripe
olive slices, if desired. This kitchen-tested recipe makes 12
enchiladas.

Packaged Spuds

‘j cup shredded Monterey Jack cheese

1 clove garlic, minced
•j unpeeled cucumber, chopped
•v green pepper, chopped

THIS AD
EFFECTIVE
THURSDAY
AUG. 19
THRU
WEDNESDAY,
AUG. 25
1982...
CLOSED
SUNDAY. .

Place in 8 inch square glass baking dish Cover with wax
paper Microwave 100 percent power 7-8 minutes or until
eggplant is tender Sprinkle with cheese Microwave 100
percent power uncovered, h to 1 minute or until cheese is
melted. Using two spatulas, gently lift eggplant onto serving
plate.

teaspoon salt

1401 BOTTif

tf&gt;0/ can 001r
AmfAPPif r.nsrr
»»u»f P'MAAPtf
fM .BAPf »AU*»

• «••• •

6 1 OZ IN WATER
OR OIL CHUNK
LIGHT STAR KIST

HUNT S

Tom ato
Ke t c h u p

Drink

Tuna

• •• 'mm».*•• V»»#
P-««•
f
•••

• • %•••• r •••■»■• •••

B a c f e t o - S c h o o L B e g ln s
a t P u b J i* .

- *»• r " i t *N- j

y

1 .1

\&gt;

It's easy to gef ready
for back to school,
because Publix has almost
everything we need
paper pencils, notebooks
otter school snacks

1V t

m

GALLON SIZE
DAIRI-FRESH
HOMOGENIZED,
2°o LOW FAT, . . . . .
To LOW FAT. SKIM K o "

Milk

Soffuno'*. OtcooiA Brevard

(G ood *
• l * ) | C o u n ty )

With Ona Publix Stamp
Price Saver Booklet ..

R ip e. J u ic y , D e lic io u s
1 5 0 S ize

-

&gt;utiji Tp

Bartlett
Pears

10

*129

Fresh Produce

S e rv e w ith C h e e s e S a u c e
S n o -W h ite

• is

Cauliflower 3

*129

M a d n fro m C o n c e n tra te ,
T ro p ic a n a C h ille d

P e rfe c t fo r S a la d s ,
F re s h , C ris p

Orange
Ju ic e ............ r

Cucumbers .. 5 &gt;.. *1
FOR YOUR SUMMER
SALADS ANO
SANOWICHES WESTERN

Iceberg .
Lettuce
•

largo head

F o r S a la d s o r S tu ffin g
F re s h , G re e n

Tom atoes....

*1

Lemonade

Red
Potatoes ... 5

69c

F re s h , D e lic io u s

pV,* *169

C elery....

*1

3-lb. i
can

599

Wine

G ra p e s

1.5-liter bottle

per Ib.

$469

79c

lir g t

&lt;l«i&gt; *

59e

For yo ur S u m m e r Bean
S a la d , F re s h , C ris p

C o lo rfu l M ix e d B o u q u e t o f

Green
Beans...........

S2&lt; 9

SAVE $1.00
CALIFORNIA V .
CELLARS CHABLIS,
ROSE, RHINE, BURGUNDY

big

F o r S n a c k s , S o u p or
S a la d s , C ris p , F re s h

F re s h , P lu m p , P u rp le

Roses and
Carnations

33c

P e rfe c t fo r P o ta to S a la d

P u b lix B ra n d

Eggplant...... 3

Canned
Ham

*129

P e rfe c t fo r S a la d ,
M e d iu m S iz e , T a s ty

Bell
Peppers ......5

Mushrooms

)

49e

Honey Bran
Bread

2 $ •J2 9

69

20-oz.
loaves

F re s h M ade

Cuban
S an d w ic h ....... 7„c,h s 1 79

(

Ddl|»j Ddl"**)

Sliced

Z e s ty Flavored

Chicken
S a la d ............... r

T asty Honey or

s1 69

R eady-to-take-out S outhern

Fried
C h icken .......... 9bSc, «3 59

.,

Pepper Loaf ...qur ' 89* (
Regular, C a ra w a y or

Munchee
Ch e e s e ............ r

Beef L iv e r...... 7

BraunHostess Ham . 7 s3 39 s c h w e ig e r...... £ s1 19

S w ift's Prem ium (W h ite M eat)

* 1 19

Turkey R oast. X

Seafood Treat,
Medium (51 to 6 0 -c t.)

H ot fro m the Deli!

Seafood T re at, Frozen

Pepper
S t e a k .............. 7' s3 69
M acaroni &amp;
C h eese j S i s 7 s1 79

U.S.D.A. CHOICE
BONELESS BEEF

Round

Steak

S h rim p .............

s3 19

S w ift's Prem ium (D a rk M e a t)

Turkey R oast.

Mb

pkg

$259

Trout F ille t..... ?ib
Seafood T re at. Frozen

Perch F ille t.... 7

Turkey Roast
H am .................. px'S

K ielb asa.......... 7 *2 59
B uddig (All V a rie tie s)

W e in e rs .......... X

* 189

Jim m y Dean P ork M ild,
H of or S age

79* S au sag e.......... JE $1 "

J—

KO SH ER OR
GENUINE DIL

SAVE 20e
M
IN NATURAL
V
JUICE. PUBLIX
SLICED CRUSHED CHUNK

Vlasic
Pickles

99

E ckrich S m oked

$349 O scar M aye r M e a t or Beef

S w ift’s Prem ium S liced
P ickle &amp; Pim ento L o a f,
S piced Luncheon or

B o lo g n a .......... X*

Cooked H am .. X * * 2 39

Chipped
M e a ts .................Vx|‘ 49*

S w ift's Premium
lb

$1 69

Sunnyland S liced

Italian Bread . K't 79*

(E E IE E j)

Rath B la c k h a w k M eat or Beef

Turkey R oast. MS s3 59 W e in e rs .......... X

Plain, P oppy or Seeded

Pum pkin Pie... 7o7 * 1 79
C oconut
C ustard Pie ... •£" s 1 79

S w ilt's Prem ium S tick

S w ift's Prem ium B oneless

S w ift's Prem ium
(Light &amp; D a rk M ix)

F re s h B aked

79*

Pineapple
20 oz

!F

59

�Evening H erald, Sanford, FI

Wednesday, Aug I I . 1?8I— 78

Start With Quality For
Salads As Easy As
The newest trend in American eating is nutritious cold
foods, according to the current Yankelovich Monitor, ;i
national survey of changing lifestyles
Salads dial start with refreshing California table grapes and
quality Swanson canned chicken fit this bill perfectly They
can be made ahead and chilled so they are ready for a party a
picnic or a patio gathering with a minimum of fuss Innovative
use of these two basic ingredients in each of these salads
makes an elegant difference.
Wonderful for an informal luncheon, Chicken and Fruit
Salad combines tender chicken, grapes, seasonal berries and
banana. A honey-kissed dressing tops it off. Serve with fancy
rolls, specialty teas and a rich custard or cookies for dessert
Another time, bring on Grape and Chicken Tossed Salad An
interesting twist on the standard tossed green salad, this
satisfying version goes together fast Crusty rolls and an
assortment of cheeses may be all you need to make an entree
of this delectable salad.

Chicken Anri F ru it Salad is an innovative com bination.

OUR B O N U S T O YOU
coupon

300

Publix

K e o b le r S a lte jj o r U n s a lte d
Z e s ta S a ltin e s

Crackers..... 'IV

79c

S u n s h in e C in n a m o n
G ra h a m s , D o u b le C h o c o la te
o r P e a n u t B u tte r C re a m e rs

Cookies....... '£y

ItsT

89*

hart
gallon

Pillsbury Big Country
Buttery or Buttermilk

$&lt;f 59

B iscuits....... 3

P lain o r K ris p y

Klondike
Bars..........

D airiF resh A ssorted
Swiss-Style

6 p*
phg

High Point
D ecaffeinated Instant

F&amp;P

Tomato
Sauce.......

Y o g u rt..........3

S-J79

49e Coffee

16-ai
can

D airiF resh

Half &amp; H a lf......

........ "S?

L ite W is h -B o n e C re a m y
C u c u m b e r, Ita lia n , C h u n k y
B lu e C h e e s e o r R u s s ia n

Salad
Dressing

78c

D uncan H in es A s s o r te d
D eluxe II

Cake Mix..... ’a:.0* 88*
A s s o rte d D e s s e rt G e la tin

J e ll-0 ......
T e tle y F a m ily S iz e

Tea Bags.....
S uccess

R ice.............
P u b lix P in e a p p le

Ju ic e ...........

fid
phg

2« ct
pag
t-ot

P*g
46 ol
can

Jim Dandy

Dog Ration...

PLUS TAX A D EPO SIT
DIET RITE, R C 100
DECAFFEINATED OR REG.

89c

H u n t’s

99*

RO Cols

Fruit

Cocktail........2 '£[

*1

5 cl
cant

89*

H u n t’ s H a lv e d o r S lice d

Boi
cupi

89*

G reen G ia n t W h o le K e rn e l
o r C re a m S ty le G o ld e n

32 or
cln

S-|09

3 :.87c

Peaches........2 \\°l *1

Corn..........2

88*
IN 12-OZ. CANS
REG. OR LIGHT

Stroh’s
Beer
•lx-pack

s129

Kraft Individually-Wrapped
C h eese Food, Sliced

$ 2 1»

A m e ric a n ........'BV .'

h A w rtw I M l * |

s2 29

Wisconsin C h eese Bar
Mild Brick or

M uenster.........

FOOTED WINE JUICE

( 10c Off Label) A ssorted
or W hite

*2 57

Puff Facial
Tissue ............JX CI 78*

Wisconsin C h eese Bar
S harp or Medium C heddar,
M onterey Jack, Mild
Longhorn C heddar or
M ozzarella .... . pta S-J29

S-f 39

99c

i i oi
pbg

Gatorade

M o z za re lla ..... X

59c

73c

89c

Kraft Individually-Wrapped
Sliced C heese, Natural

Wexford
Crystal
feature
a r

A O a c aol a C o u n t i e s Onlyl

Old English
C h e e s e ........... X ' $1 29

w eek *
_

O r a n g a , Labs, S w m l n o U ,

i§. oj
bo!|l«

S to k o ly O ra n g e o r
L e m o n L im e P o w d e re d
Mb
etna

69

W hite Cloud A ssorted

Bath Tissue

Cottage
Cheese ......

THIS AD EFFECTIVE
THRU WEDNESDAY,
AUG. 25, 1 9 0 2 . . .
CLOSED SUNDAY

Era Liquid
bottle $349
Laundry Detergent P o w der

it

G a in ......... ........ Z V

r m in

12 of

!--&lt;PUll*;• * 1| ' •;-.tM
ll n&lt; •• 4*. »-* M
ran
W

cup

B reakstone Temp-Tee
W hipped

$038

X S1 19

Laundry Detergent

S ealtest Light N' Lively
Lowfat or Small Curd

EACH
Off*f(jewel Ai^utl ii

Ml

)*» T Mf f O U O t NG C O U N T H S

Kraft Sliced

B&amp;M

Baked
Beans.......... ’X* *1°9

T h is AO I f r i C f i v J

WBM fli'ii4m
&gt;gf Cbtrlotl* Dlrwt Co**o*
Nig*i*ntj*
J+2/| Hitt»6oxo Lata ita tianiiaa Ot#ngE Oat a a Paaco
Pffltttjl Pott Satatola SaeriFfl'iHB

Gatorade

B reakfast Club
Regular Q uarters

Corn Oil
Margarine. .. 2

Itfa ilm u m • v a lla 'b tt B o n u i G r t t n S la m pa It 3 0 0 .
_______

S to k e ly O ra n g e o r
L e m o n L im e

Dairy [•] Dairy ^

*•*

Coupon* 1 A 2 with p u re h n e i of $30 0 0
or mora a q u a il 3 0 0 1 lim p a

Haiimum atallakl* Bonus Croon •tamp* I* 100.
THIS »D (MtCfIVf THf FOILOWING COUNtlf S
Brovtrd CForlolto Otru* Com*! H*rnondo M.jM»n&lt;n |
M,ii,boro I#** l** U*n*(#o Orinpo 0*&lt;*ol* P*»to
Pmallat Pol* Sartlolo Somrnolo

S m allest L ig h t 'n L iv e ly
A s s o rte d

Ice Milk....

with coupon and purchat#* of $13.00 lo 120.00.
• ■eluding all tobacco producti.

Coupons 1 A 2 with p u rc h a sss of $30,00
or mors aqualt 300 stam ps.

W H E N YO U C U P A N D RED EEM
THESE BO N U S CO UPO N S

Aug 19 24 IM t)

GREEN STAMPS

with coupon and purchaao* of &gt;7.SO to * 14.90,
■■eluding all tobacco products.

EXTRA
Green Stam ps

if

;

i-p d ia

r-u*I V. m'» '•
.i-'■*•»?'*.»'«
11‘I •»f

Cream
C h e e s e ........... X

Bounty
T o w els

J
J

/■ i-w uzi
1

t

ir, ». n .
Ns ‘if -rr"*
■

s1 89

A sso rted Paper

X r 79*
t « THA

200 ^V/GreenStamps

R
Vi

XS 5' f IS *

|

14-cl pkg .

I ---| 1 ItfUcli.i Aug 16 25 19H2)

200

MINA

^V/GreenStamps

L

1-2-3

lay ered Chicken-Grape Salad, ideal as a first course or
meal accompaniment, Ixiasts unusual flavor and texture
combinations in a (xipular layered salad Tliis easy-totransport salad would also be well-received at potluck dinners
or picnics. Just keep thoroughly chilled in an ice chest until
serving time. A quick toss with the testy mustard dressing and
you're set.
Canned chunk chicken is the perfect convenience food to
keep on hand year-round. Easy to add to salads, appetizers or
entrees, canned chunk chicken is always ready to use at a
moment's notice.
California table grapes, harvested ripe and ready to eat.
may lie enjoyed immediately or refrigerated in plastic bags
for a few days.
CHICK FIN AND FRUIT SAUAD
2 cans i5 ounces eachi chunk or chunk white chicken
2 cups grapes, seeded if necessary
1 cup strawberries, cut in half
l large banana, sliced
‘-j cup mayonnaise
1 tablespoon lime juice
‘i teaspoon honey
Drain chicken, reserving broth Toss chicken with grapes,
strawberries and banana Combine reserved broth, mayon­
naise. lime juice and honey. Serve over chicken mixture
Makes about 4‘z cups, 4 salad servings
GHAI'H AND CHICKEN' TOSSF1I) SAI.AI)
11 cup salad oil
2 tablespoons vinegar
teaspoon sugar
i, teaspoon oregano leaves, crushed
teaspoon basil leaves, crushed
Dash pepper
4 cups lettuce, torn in bite-sire pieces
1 can 15 ounces) chunk chicken
1 cup grafx's, seeded if necessary
2 slices bacon, cooked and crumbled
•z cup croutons
To make dressing, combine salad oil, vinegar, sugar,
oregano, basil and pepper Toss lightly with remaining
ingredients. Makes about 5 cups, 4 or 5 salad servings.
I.AYEItKDUIU'KEN-GKAl’KSAI.AD
1 can 15 ounces l chunk chicken
3 tablespoons salad oil
t tablespoon white wine vinegar
1 tablespoon lemon juice
teaspoon dry mustard
teaspoon ground ginger
•» teaspoon pepper
Dash garlic powder
1 cup red or green grapes, seeded if necessary
2 cups lettuce, cut in lung thin shreds
2 cups bean sprouts
cup diagonally sliced green onions
■« cup jicama, cut in 2-inch thin sticks (optional)
Drain chicken, reserving broth. To make dressing, combine
reserved broth, salad oil, vinegar, lemon Juice and seasonings
In serving bowl, layer chicken and grapes with remaining
ingredients Serve with dressing. Makes about 5 cups, t or 5
appetizer or salad servings
MACARONI YKGFTTAHI.F. SAI-AI)
2 cups 17 uzs. i ellxiw macaroni, cooked, drained
2 cups chopped cabbage
1 cup chopped tomato
cup chopped green |K-p|«-r
Coleslaw dressing
Combine macaroni, cabbage, tomatoes, green pepper and
enough dressing to moisten; toss lightly Chill. Add additional
dressing before serving, if desired. Serve in bowl lined with
cabbage leaves, fi to 8 servings.
FAMILY SIJIM’KRSALAD PLATE
2 peeled nectarines, peeled peaches or plums; sliced
2 cups cantaloupe, honeydew or watermelon balls
1 avocado, pared and sliced
1 medium cucumber, cut in spears or 2 cups salad greens,
torn into bite-size pieces
1 tomatoe. cut in wedges, or 1 cup cherry tomatoes
12 whole radishes or seed lass green grapes
1 small red onion, thinly sliced or 8 scallions, (rimmed
l green pepper, seeded and cut in strips
pound, thinly sliced, cooked chicken, turkey, ham or other
luncheon meat
Mt pound sliced Swiss, American or Muenster cheese
On a large platter arrange fruits, vegetables and sliced
meats and cheese. Serve with Creamy C u ro Dressing, and
slices of whole grain bread. ThiaJdtehen-tested recipe makes 4
servings.

100 c l bo ttle.

CKEAMY CUIlllY DRESSING

A n acin T ablets
2 (Effective Auq t»2S 19S2)

too^ W G r e e n S t a m p s f 5 j
*"*■

J

’ ■ M At * H t » l

. I II ,-J:i

ll

■ PuNli

14-oy. c a n Multi P urp o se

i Holiday Household
! Insect Spray
’

Apple Juice ... ’X* 79*
A ssorted

Mr. 0
Freezes ...... -.. pkg 99*
Totino E xtra P epperom or
Combination (1 3 '? to 14.3-oz )

P iz z a ................ R

s1 «

M orton S alisbury S te a k W ith
G ravy, C hicken A la K ing,
S liced Beef or C ream
Chipped B eef (4 fo 5 -oz.)

Boil ’n B a g ..... 3

100 ^V/GreenStampslJJ

M o rto n C h icken,
T u rke y or Beef

Tree Top C o n ce n tra te

ptgi
lor

* **

Pot P ie s ..........4 pVBV *1
RUBLUREStRVIS THt RIGHT
TOUWiT QUANTITIES SOLD

Cool W h ip ...... 12S 9 9*
Pum pkin
C ustard Pie ... X ' $159
O re-lda

„

*

C ris p e rs ...... ... polybig 9 9 *
P ictS w e e t F re n ch Cut or
R egular Cut

G reen B e a n s . 3

pbga

*1

M rs P a u l’s Fam ily Pak

Deviled
C ra b s ............... X *

.
*2«9

Tam pa B a y B rea d ed Round

'*"*''********“***

aach , A n o ita d

B irds E ye

M rs. S m ifh

3 (Etf*&lt;t*va Swa 19 ZV 198Z1

PENNY SAVER BAGS

16-oz Ant &amp; R oach K iller
or 12-oz. Flying In se ct B o m b

Raid S p ra y ..... can
T oilet Bow l Cleaner

Sno B o l........... XV
(1 3 c OH Label) E le c tric
D ishw ashing D e te rg e n t^

C ascad e....... ... pkg

d

S 99

Trash B a g s ............. X
Tall Garbage

79*

B ag s.............................

p‘

»1«
V

89*

3-Mil Trash Bags.. X

1
J

| PubUi

Tw ice As Fresh
Air Freshener
4 lEfUtli.* »„0 1921 1982)

100 'iwfirasiamp'sR]
- ......—.............

'1 4* J•

is s r

2 2 -0 1 c « n ,

Niagara Spray Starch
$169

5. Illla c li.a &lt;ug 191V 19821

5

100 ^SampsP]

Health &amp; Beauty

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

:

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

I 40-cf. pbg .
.Shrimp .................... X*$159Regular or Extra B ody Finesse
; Scott Baby Fresh Wipes
Hair
Aug 1914, I9»2|
KELLOGG’S CEREAL {L ..6. (EllacU.a
..........................
Conditioner.... bom. *1 49

Sugar Frosted

(30c OH Label)

Pepsodent
Toothpaste....VubV 77*

EXTRA

Flakes................... *1M
Sugar S m a c k s ....... X '

1tm% 40 I M IC T r v t i i 1»* FOU QW W G C O i / w H i V i &gt; H

*1TB

GreenStamps
100^W
«-« •»t(«w#-94iai«t,ai*i ti e&gt;*
m

11-oi. can,

Hot Shot House &amp;
Garden Spray

a

C*SM&lt;
&gt;*(»*»at mrtin IM* (•• «•«»)» &amp;**■• 0*&lt;gw
F»«Im it* $#-**»* $g— aaigtt*lh*««NMtN

7. (EflaCt)l* Aug 19 J4. 1982)

SANFORDPLAZA,
SANFORD

EXTRA

^W
GreenStamps
*«»■•*»(» * **«
ib*oz. can.

IONGWOOD VILLAGE CTR.,
PubllX
LONGWOOD

•
;

■

Hersheys
Chocolate Syrup
8 lEMacDv*Aug 1924, 1942)

4 cup sour cream
4 cup mayonnaise
1 tablespoon honey
** to ‘v teaspoon curry powder
&gt;8 teaspoon salt
In a small, bowl, stir all ingredients until smooth. This kit­
chen-tested recipe makes 1 cup dressing.
GOLDEN GATE SAlJLD
1 12-oz. pkg. frozen shrimp, cooked
2 cups sliced fresh mushrooms
1 green pepper, cut in strips
two-thirds cup French dressing
2 tups (8 ozs. i cubed natural brick cheese
Lettuce
Marinate shrimp, mushrooms and green pepper in dressing
for several hours. Add cheese; mix lightly. Serve on lettuce. 6
servings.
PLUM AND PEACH
SUMMEKSALAU
1 pound red potatoes, cooked'and sliced
l t pound red onions, thinly sliced
1 (round green beans, steamed for 12 minutes or until tendercrisp and drained well
Mustard Vinaigrette Dressing
Frilly lettuce
3 fresh California peaches, cut into wedges
6 fresh California plums, cul Into wedges
l t pound feta cheese, cut Into 4-inch cubes (optional)
2 tablespoons capers, (optional)
Arrange potatoes, onions and green beans separately on a
Iray. Drizzle with '* cup Mustard Vinaigrette Dressing and
marinate for several hours if possible. IJne a large platter with
lettuce. Arrange peach and plum wedges in a ring on lettuce.
Arrange cheese, potatoes, onions and beans inside ring.
Sprinkle potatoes with capers. Drizzle remaining 4 CUp
Dressing over all. Makes 6 servings.
Mustard Vinaigrette Dreislng: Combine 2-3rd cup white
wine vinegar, 2 tablespoon Dijon mustard, 4 teaspoon salt,
teaspoon peppr and 1 medium clove garlic in electric blender.
Whirl to blend. Slowly add 1 cup vegetable oil while blending at
low speed. Stir in l teaspoon basil (crumbled) and Li teaspoon
thyme. Makes 1 cup.
Place potatoes in a large pan of boiling water. Return to boil
and cook 15 minutes or until tender. Dram. When cool enough
to handle, cut into («-inch slices. Place in a bowl and loss with
2 tablespoons white wine or chicken stock, if desired.

�R L O N D IE

SB

E v e n in g Herald, S a n fo rd , F I

W e d n e sd a y , A u g . 18, 1982

b y C h ic Y o u n g

b y M o r i W a lk e r
I GUESS I SHOULP

K EE P MV COOK IE
BOX in / T H E " O U T "
f il e

42 Feel
Answer to Previous PuHle
indisposed
1 Madame
43 Carry across
(abbr)
water
4 Shakespear
45 Artist s
ean villain
equipment
8 Metric foot
47 Befuddled
12 Intermediate 49 Confine
(prefix)
50 Encountered
52 Urgent
13 Athletic
buildings
wireless
14 Life science
signal
(abbr)
54 Horse race
15 Noun suffn
58 Egyptian deity
16 Undiluted.as 60 Regretted
liquor
62 Pay dirt
7 Port of Rome 39 Housewife 5 ti
17 Safety agency 63 Location
8 Cameroon
(abbr)
lie (abbr |
64 Far (prefix)
tnbe
18 S E Asian as­ 65 European gull
4 1 Slid on snow
9 Critic s place
sociation
66 "Auld Lang
44 Of course
|2 wds)
(abbr)
46
Compass
10
M
ohorovicic
20 Water sprite 67 Very dry
point
discontinuity
22 Throw
68 Dance step
1 1 Blurt out
23 G'idder
48 Mam artery
19 Male turkey
Jimmy
DOWN
50 Feminine title
2 1 1 2 . Roman
25 Wing ( f r )
51 Eye
24
Lothario
27 Light
1 Mesdames
53
Plaintiff
26 Pounds(abbr)
(abbr)
Brigade s war
31 Norwegian
2 First word on 27 Make hairdo 55 Frolic
56 La
tar
23 Rank
dramatist
the wall
34 Cereal grass
29 One use of
3 Is (Sp)
pits
35 Swerve
procedure
4 Shuns
57 Hedge plants
37 Hall (prefix)
30 Low tide
5 Indeed
59 Female samt
38 News article
6 Government 32 Send forth
( a b b r)
40 Organs of
33 Egyptian river
agent
6 1 Actor Wallach
hearing
(com pwd)
36 Bundle
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HOROSCOPE
Hy B K R N llK I1EDK 0SOL

For Thursday, August 19, 1982
b y H o w ie S c h n e id e r

EEK &amp; MEEK

ELEK H £ 6 ALWAYS
B LE U LAZY

(V m Y Y u .

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P R IS C IL L A 'S P O P

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'T" S A
THAT ./MAML9TICK
BERN ARD

b y E d S u lliv a n
BUT IL L B E T NO ON ES
EVER HAD TO USE IT
WITH A PAINT ROLLER
B EFO R E

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17
A R T I S T S HANC? ^
S T E A P V W H EN HE
T[ | PAINTS A T AN EASEL

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BUGS B U N N Y

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goal you’ve set for yourself.
CAPRICORN t Doc. 22-Jan
19) Try to associate with
persons today who are, both
enterprising and positive. By
observing their way of doing
things, you can learn how you
might fit their techniques into
your plans.
LEO (July 23-A u k . 22i In
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
order to strengthen your 191 Be am bitious and
financial position it may be assertive today, but move at a
necessary for you to take a measured pace so that each
calculated risk today. If all step you take is made from a
the signals say “go," give it a firm footing.
try. Predictions of what’s in
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
store for you in the seasons Your two g re a te st assets
following your birth date and today are your Judgment and
where to look for your luck your desire to put your
and opportunities arc in your thoughts into action. ForAstro-Graph. Mail $1 for each ’unately, you’ll use them both
to Astro-Graph, Box 489, wisely.
Radio City Station, N.Y.
ARIES (March 21-April 191
10019. Be sure to specify birth
Because you've gone out of
dale.
your way to be extra-helpful
VIRGO Aug. 23-Sept. 221 to another, this person is nowsom ething
ex­
Unless you are involved in doing
some type of m eaningful ceptionally rew arding for
venture today, you’ll not tit- you.
utilizing your time properly. ' TAURUS i April 20-May 20)
Today's aspects favor both
Do something important.
LIBRA iSept. 23-Oct. 23) romance and friendship, so if
It’s wise at this lime not to you’re looking for a social
discuss with outsiders any encounter you shouldn’t have
financial or business dealings any trouble finding it.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
you’re developing. The less
If you are one of those
said the better.
who
hates
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Geminis
Fresh hopes can be awakened housework, today could be a
today if you begin to visualize day when tasks might not be
situations as you would like so distasteful. Gel out the
them to be. Think op­ mops and brooms.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
tim istically and act ac­
Waste r,o time in getting in
cordingly.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23- touch with persons who can
Dec. 21) Persons in a position help you promote your im­
to help will give you a boost m ediate in terests. T hey’re
today if they see you are more likely to cooperate wdn
sincerely trying to achieve the you now than later.
YOUR BIRTHDAY
Auk. 19.1982
The year ahead promises to
bring good fortune to you and
your family as a whole. With
the increase of funds, ac­
tivities on the home front will
escalate as well.

Lower
RiskFac
To Stop Hardening
DEAR DR LAMB - 1
would like to know what you
can do to prevent or get rid of
atherosclerosis, hardening of
the arteries. I have changes in
my arteries in my legs and the
doctor says 1 probably have
charges in other arteries too.
I’d like to avoid having a
heart attack if I can.
amount of changes in the
My doctor says there is no arteries and there is a veryway 1 can reverse the har­ good correlation.
dening of the arteries and he
The influence of the risk
predicts a bleak future for factor on arteries which in
me. He thinks I'll need an turn leads to heart attacks,
operation eventually. If there stro k es and other com ­
is any way to avoid this, 1 plications is discussed in The
would sure like to know about Health Letter number 13-2,
it.
How to Measure Your Risk of
Heart Disease, which I ant
DEAR READER - Doctors
have been pessimistic about sending you. Others who want
reversing changes that occur this issue can send 75 cents
in the arteries. That is partly with a long, stamped. seUaddressed envelope for it to
because it is very difficult to
measure what is happening in me. in care of this newspaper,
the arteries in living people. P.O. Box 1551, Radio CityWe have to depend a lot on Station, New York, NY 10019.
DEAR DR. IAMB - I get
what is seen in animal
black
and blue spots on my
research. But a lot of the work
hands
and arms if 1 bump
that h as been done on
monkeys surely does have an myself. I’m 72 and have liad
application to humans. In this problem for about 10
general doctors are more years. I’ve been to two doc­
optimistic about preventing tors and they haven't helped
changes rather than rever­ me.
1 get so many spots that I’m
sing them.
ashamed
to go out. What
There are some studies that
causes
this?
Is there any
support the idea that you can
r e v e rs e fa tty -c h o le se ro l help?
DEAR READER - This is
deposits in the arteries. A
a
fairly common complaint
small study based on contrary
arteriogram s did show that and 1 hale to tell you this but it
you could stop the progression is called senile purpura. The
in some case and in others black and blue or dark purple
there was actual regression of areas usually have clear-cut
the blockage. There are m argins and are not painful in
studies by X-rays of arteries any way.
Your doctors have not
in the legs which suggest that
helped you because there is
aLso.
In monkeys, changing their very little anyone can do for
diet also cause a reversal of it. The cause is believed to be
fatty-cholesterol deposits. So 1 from a loss of supportive
think you can reverse some tissue. As you will notice the
changes if you are successful skin moves freely over the
in lowering the risk factors. area. As the mobile skin
What are the risk factors? moves, it pulls on and rup­
The main ones you can do tures small blood vessels.
something about are your This mobility may be from
cholesterol, blood pressure loss of collagen for connective
and cigarette smoking. To tissue.
In any case, it is Important
have any change of reversing
changes that have already- to avoid medicines such as
occurred you must not smoke aspirin that may increase
and you must lower the bleeding tendencies. And it is
cholesterol
and
blood a good idea to cat plenty of
pressure to optimal levels. fresh fruits for a plentiful
The risk factors have been supply of Vitamin C. But don’t
studied in relation to the expect miracles.

Dr:
Lamb

WIN AT BRIDGE
NORTH

s in :

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Vulnerable North-South
Dealer: North
Uttl North East South
!♦
14
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24
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34
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34
14
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54
Pass
Pass
Pass

Opening lead: *5
By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag
“Popular Bridge" maga­
zine has a section called
"Test Your Play." Here Is
one from their June issue.
The co n tra c t is five
spades You lose the aee of

hearts at trick one and wish
you had stopped at a safe
four. You have a possible
trump loser and a verv prob­
able diamond loser What is
your best chance?
Your best chance will be
to arrange things so that you
can eliminate the diamond
loser if you have to lose a
trump
A heart is returned at
trick two. You win and cash
your other top heart If West
"ruffs, you overruff and your
tru m p p ro sp e c ts have
improved greatly.
Now you take your king of
trumps and run your three
lop clubs. No one ruffed in
and you now are sure of your
contract You can claim if
you want to be flamboyant,
but you simply play a small
trum p toward dummy. If
West shows out you rise with
dummy's ace and throw
East in with the queen. East
will have been end played
out of his diamond tries.
Actually West follows
You finesse successfully and
can afford a diamond loser
later.
Suppose the finesse lost?
East would be happy about
scoring his queen, but most
unhappy about his potential
diamond trick. It would have
vanished into thin air.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN |

GARFI ELD
by Bob Thaves

UNEMPLOYMENT OFFICE

AN p

THEN o n e p a y t h e
b o s$

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u m p

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A GIANT UN ITED NATIONS

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.. p u t . iv it h a l l t h is p l a s t e p
HAIH I HAFTA STAY UP

— * no KEEP

' HAPPINESS IS WOTA

ANNI E____________________
~ IT’S MY SUITCASE! STELLA HAN
MUST'VE PICKED IT UP AT OATES’

by Leonard S tarr
-A N * SHE MUST’ VE BEEN
MIGHTY PERSUASIVE

NELL,IT’LL BE NICE TV'KESHEN1 * i;
UP AN’ CHANGE WHILE
PINNER’S COOWN’ -

FE^r

�Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Wednesday, Aug. 18, 1982—9B

C O C A C O LA l
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10B— Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Wednesday, Aug. IB, 1982

18—Help Wanted

CLASSIFIED ADS

legal Notice
IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T . 04
AND FOR SEM IN O LE C O U N T Y .
F L O R ID A
C A SE NO. IM tIS C A 04 E
IN R E : TH E M A R R IA G E O F
JOHN C LA U D E IV E Y .
Husband.
and
D O R O T H Y JE A N JO H N S O N
IV E Y .
W ile
N OTICE O F ACTION
T H E ST A TE O F F L O R ID A TO
JOHN C LA U D E IV E Y , whose
address Is unknown
YO U
ARE
H EREBY
N O T IF IE D that DO RO TH Y J E A N
JOHNSON IV E Y has Hied a
Petition in the Circuit Court of
Seminole County, Flo rid a , for
Dissolution of M arriage, and you
are required to serve a copy ol
your written defenses, it a n y , on
FRAN K
C
W H IG M A M .
Of
STEN STRO M ,
M dN TO SH .
J U L IA N .
C O LBERT
A
W HIGH AM . P A . Attorneys tor
Petitioner, whose address is Post
Office Bo« 1)30. Sanford. F lo rid a .
32771. and file the original w ith the
Clerk of the above styled Court on
or before Sept 13. 1»U. A D 1987.
otherwise a default and ultim ate
ludgment will be entered ag ainst
you for the relief demanded in the
Petition
W ITN E S S my hand and o fficial
seal of said Court on this 6th day of
August. A D 1067
(Court Seall
A R TH U R H B E C K W IT H . J R
C lerk ot Circuit Court
Seminole County, Florida
By C arrie E Buettner
Deputy Clerk
STEN STRO M .
M dN TO SH .
J U L IA N .
C O LBER T
A
W H IG H AM . P A
Post Oltice Boa 1330
Flagship Bank
Suite 72
Sanford. Florida 32771
Attorney for Petitioner
Publish August II. I I . 25. Sep
tember 1. 1912
D E Y 70
N O T IC E O F S H E R IF F 'S
SA LE
N O TICE IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
that by virtue of that certain W rit
ot Eaecution issued out of and
under the seal ol the C O U N TY
Court ot Seminole County. F lo rid a ,
upon a final judgement rendered
In the aforesaid court on the 79th
day ot A pril, A D , 1987. in that
certain case entitled. Space Port
U S A , Inc . Plaintiff, vs Ja m e s
Paul Biggs. Defendant, which
aforesaid W ril of Eaecution was
delivered to me as Sheriff of
Seminole County, Florida, and I
have levied upon the following
d escrib ed properly owned by
Jam es Paul Biggs, said property
being located in Seminole County,
F lo r id a ,
more
p a r t ic u la r ly
described as follows
One 1979 Wells Cargo U tility
T ra ile r, Burgandy inColor, ID No
WC73I09
being stored at Jack Prosser Ford .
Lake M ary. Florida
and the undersigned at Sheriff of
Seminole County. Florida, w ill at
I I 00 A M on the 2nd day of
September, A O 1912. o iler lor
sale and sell to the highest bidder,
tor cash, tubiect to any a n d 'a ll
existing liens, at the Front (W estI
Door at the steps ol the Seminole
County Courthouse In Santord.
F lo r id a , the above d e sc rib e d
personal property
That said sale is being made to
s a lis ly the terms of said W ril of
Eaecution
John E Polk. Sheriff
Seminole County. Florida
Publish August I I . II. 75 A Sep
lember I, with the sale on Sep
tember 7. 1987
D E Y 48

C ITY OF LONGW OOD.
F L O R ID A
NOTICE OF P U B L IC
H E A R IN G
TO WHOM IT M A Y C O N C ER N
NOTICE IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
B Y the City ot Longwood, Florida,
that the City Commission w ill h?ld
a public hearing at 7 30 P M on
Monday. August 73. 1982 to
Consider a request for Planned
Unit Development Conditional Use
Application to allow tor con
struc' ■ of a Planned
Unit.
Devt jpment In an R 1 lonmg
class, ‘cation, said property being
S Lu at. in the City of Longwood
Florida and described as follows
TH E S 750 FT O F T H E SW
OF
T H E NW t.a Ol S E C 31. TW P 70S.
R G E 30E (L E S S T H E W 33 FT
T H E R E O F FOR ROAD R IG H T
OF W AY) AND C O M M EN C E AT
T H E SW COR OF T H E NW ’ . OF
TH E SW
OF SEC 31. TW P 70S.
R G E M E. RUN N 00 D E G R E E S
04' SO" W EST ALO N G W EST
L IN E OF SAID NW
OF SW
A
DISTAN CE OF 924 00 F T TO T H E
POINT OF B E G IN N IN G
CON
TIN U E N 00 D E G R E E S 04 50
W EST A D IS TA N C E OF 400 14
F E E T TO TH E NW COR O F SA ID
NW V. OF SW
T H E N C E S 19
D E G R E E S 4 2 ' 24" E 1140 83 F T TO
TH E NE COR OF SA ID NW
OF
SW
TH EN C E S 00 D E G R E E S
I I ' 37" W EST ALONG T H E E A S T
L IN E OF SAID NW
OF SW
A
DISTAN CE OF 713 85 F E E T .
TH EN C E N 19 D E G R E E S 49 77
W 473 60 F E E T . T H E N C E S 00
D E G R E E S 18 37" W E S T M 0
F E E T . TH EN CE N 89 D E G R E E S
47' 26" WEST A D IS T A N C E OF
394 70 F T .
TH EN CE
S 00
D E G R E E S 04' SO" E A S T A
D IS T A N C E
OF
156 00
FT.
TH EN C E N 19 D E G R E E S 43 26W EST A O ISTA N CE OF 320 87
F E E T TO T H E P O IN T OF
BEG IN N IN G (L E S S T H E W EST
33 F E E T T H E R E O F FO R ROAO
RIG H T OF W AY)
(Also the general location
East side of Rangeline Road,
d ire c tly south ol Sandalw ood
Subdivision, and west and north ot
Lake Searcy Shores Subdivision)
The Public Hearing w ill be held
In the Cily Hall. City ot Longwood.
Florida, 175 West W arren Avenue,
at 7 M P M on August 73. 1987. or
as soon thereafter as possible at
which lime interested parties for
and against the request staled
above will be heard Said hearing
may be continued from tim e to
time until final action is taken by
the City Commission
This Notice shall be posted in
three (3) public places within the
City ol Longwood. Flo rid a and
published In the Evening Herald, a
newspaper of general circulation
in the City ol Longwood. one time
at least IS days prior to the
aforesaid hearing and one tim e at
least 5 days prior to the aforesaid
hearing In addition, s a ’d notice
shall be posted in the area to be
considered at least filtecn (IS )
days prior tothe date of the public
hearing Any person deciding to
appeal a decision made by Ihe City
Commission as to any matter
considered at this meeting w ill
need a record of the proceedings
and lor such purpose you must
ensure that a verbatim record ol
proceedings Is made, which record
includes Ihe te stim o n y and
evidence upon which the appeal is
based
City of Longwood.
Florida
D L Terry
City Clerk
Publish August 8. 18. 1987
D E Y 34

IN T H E C IR C U IT COURT FO R
S E M IN O LE COUNTY. F L O R ID A
P R O B A T E DIVISION
F I L E N U M BER 12 29I CP
IN R E : E S T A T E OF
IDA V IO LA C R IS P E L L .
Deceased
N O T IC E OF AD M IN ISTR A TIO N
TO A LL PERSONS H A VIN G
C L A IM S
OR
D EM AN D S
AG A IN ST TH E A BO VE E S T A T E
AND A I L O THER P E R S O N S
IN T E R E S T E D IN THE E S T A T E
YO U
ARE
H EREBY
N O T IF IE D
(h a t
Ih e
ad
ministration of the estate of IDA
V IO L A C R IS P E L L . deceased. F ile
Number 87 398 C P is pending In
Ihe Circuit Court tor Seminole
County. Florida, Probale D ivision,
the address of which is 709 N P a rk
Avenue. Santord, Florida 32771
The personal representallvt of Ihe
r s ta te IS JO S E P H R IC H A R O
C R IS P E L L . whose address is 487
Fo ri Rose, Winter Springs, Florida
37708 Thenam eandaddrtss of Ihe
personal representative's attorney
are set forth below
Alt persons having c laim s or
demands against the estate are
re q u ire d .
W ITH IN
.H i C E E
M ONTHS FROM THE D A T E OF
T H E F IR S T P U B LIC A TIO N OF
T H IS N O T IC E, to lilt with Ihe
clerk of Ihe pbove court a written
statement of any claim or demand
they m ay have Each claim must
be In writing and must indicate the
basis for Ihe claim , the nam e and
address of Ihe creditor or his agent
or attorney, and fhe amount
claim ed If the claim is not yel
due. the dale when if will become
due shall be staled II the claim is
contingent or unlig.iideted, the
nature of the uncertainly shall be
slated If the claim is secured, the
security shall be described. The
claim ant shall deliver sufficient
copies of Ihe claim lo the c le rk lo
enable the clerk to mall one copy
to eech personal represent a liv e .
A ll persons interested in the
estate to whom a copy of this
Notice ol Administration has been
mailed are raquirtd. W IT H IN
T H R E E MONTHS FROM T H E
D ATE
OF
TH E
F IR S T
P U B L IC A T IO N
OF
T H IS
N O T IC E , lo file any objections
they m ay have that challenge the
v alid ity of the decedent's w ill, the
q u a lific a tio n s of the p e rso n al
representative, or the venue or
jurisd ictio n of Ihe court
A L L C L A IM S . DEM AN DS. AN D
O B JE C T IO N S NOT SO F I L E O
W IL L B E F O R E V E R B A R R E O
D ale ol the first publication of
this Notice of Administration
August 17, 1*12
J O S E P H R IC H A R D C R IS P E L L
As Personal Representative
of the E sta te ot
ID A V IO L A C R IS P E L L .
Deceased
G A R Y J BO YN TO N , Esqu.re
Attorney lor Personal
Representative
7 U N F erne reek Avenue
O rlando. Flo rid a 32103
0 0 5 ) 194 7311
Pu blish August II, 75. 1917
D EY t il

L/ v

Seminole

Orlondo- Winter Park

322-2611

831-9993

SALES

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
HOURS
8 00 A M - S 30 P M
MONDAY thru F R ID A Y
S A T U R D A Y » Noon

F U L L time RN 7 3 sh ill.
Lakcview Nursing Center
919 E 2nd St

RATES
Itim *
JOcilln*
3consecutive limes JOcallne
7 consecutive times
41c
10 consecutive times 37c a line
$3.00 Minimum
----------------3 Lines Minimum

DEADLINES
Noon The Day Before Publication

R E P R E S E N T A T IV E S
Expanding firm with unique new
ca rp e t cleaning system is
looking lor sales agents to call
on comm ercial accounts High
earnings potential and chance
to be on ground door ot
dynam ic program G uaran
teed territories Call (MS) 547
0790 Monday thru Frid a y 8 S

y—Cemeteries
7 C E M E T E R Y lots and vaults
Oaklawn M em orial Park {800
377 9771

S—Lost &amp; Found
LOST black cane with silver
head Vicinity 472 W Crystal
Dr . Sa n to rd . R e w a rd lor
return 323 7754
FOUND sm all blond short hair
dog on W ekiva P a rk Dr 377
5721 or 377 8024

6 C h ild G i r t
IF you want a m ature babysitter
who loves children, bring them
to my home 323 8359
W ILL B A B Y S IT
IN M Y HOME
371 0718
CHILD Care in my home Slate
licensed and experienced II
years Prefer 11 p m to 7 a m
shill Sanford Area 327 2215

Legal Notice

Custom er se rv ic e , a c c u ra te
typing, employer needs now
Top company
AAA E M P L O Y M E N T
1917 French Ave.
123 S176
k i t i t t l i i .
ATTEN D AN T
GAS ATTEN
S Seminole Station
Good salary, hospiiaiiiado n. 1
week paid vacation every 6
months
E x p e rie n c e
not
r^iessary Call 323 3443
k e e s t i i t e t l i a t

M A IN TEN A N C E MAN
Experience motels or apart
ments Must nave own tools
Salary tied to capabilities
Phone Mr Robert Deltona inn
MSS74 64J3

ASSEMBLY ..............ss
Will tram PC board work Must
wider
AAA E M P L O Y M E N T
1917 Fren ch Ave
373-5174
E X P E R IE N C E D
B u ill up
Roofers Pay based on e«
penence C all 37? 1934
L A D IE S part time at home 2
hrs ot your tim e SIS or more
guaranteed 1 352 9095 Bruce

CONSULT OUR

n —Instructions

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB

S P E C IA L sum m er program lor
6 17
yenr
olds
Weekly
swim nvnq
movies. SMImq
included C all 323 8474

N EXT
ll l h
14th
Real

To List Vour Business-

Salesm an Class Sepl
Ne»t Brokers Class Sepf
Bob M B all J R School or
E sta te 373 4118

Dial 322-2611 or 831-9993

12—Special Notices
THE C O U N TR Y Attic 604 W
lllh SI is open lor business
and is taking handmade cralts
and arts on consignment Call
» l S758 373 6764

IB—Help Wanted
C O N V E N IE N C E
S T O R E C A SH IER S
Good sa la ry , hospilalna'on l
week paid vacation every 6
m onths
E x p e rie n c e not
n e c e ssa ry
Fo r interview
phone the manaqer at
Airport Blvd 6a
)?1 &lt;){l
Casselberry 66
))* 172J
Celery Ave 66
321 6)3?
Lake M ary 66
32? 834*

Additions is

N EW , R E M O D E L R E P A IR
A ll type* and pnatrt of con
itru ctio n . S G Balint 323 4837
32? 0665 State L.cen\ed

FENCES INSTALLED

W hatever Ihe occasion, there is a
classified ad to solve it Try
one soon

M ISTER F ir It Jo# M cA d im i
will repair your mower* at
your home. C a ll 322 7055

NO
Down Payment
With Approved
IN SU R A N C E

SUNBELT

F re e Estim ates
BO N D ED A IN SU RED

Nursing Care

B x 'i i u t , C m 1

TO W I R S B E A U T Y SALON
F O R M E R L Y H arrietts Beauty
Nook SI9 E 1st St 32? 574?

C A R L 'S L a * n m o * e r . *m a ll
mgine and autom otive repair
Certified A C , P ic k up A
delivery 323 3464

422 4163

All T ypr*

Phil Pastoret

T E L E P H O N E so lic ito rs lor
Ja y c e e s
p ro je c t.
E xp
preferred Phone 32? ISIS

N E E O a Fence’ Com m ercial.
Industrial. Residential
Phone 322 8474

H A T h S kitchens roofing block,
co n cre te
add a
room, free estimate* )73 8463

Roofing

Lawn Mowers

Fencing

W iiix x V ling

BARBS

Diplomatese: When an
issue Is “taken under advise­
ment," it's a way to say the
other side's stalling.

16- H e lp Wanted

IT 'S TOY P A R T Y T IM E
New hostess program ! 200 new
toys, gilts, book e a rly — S20
tree gilts, plus any catalog
item ’ &gt; price tor party now
thru Sept IS H iring toy party
demonstrators too Free 1300
kit 339 3120

RECEPTIONIST ...S185

Sunday - Noon Friday

IN THE C IR C U IT C O U RT OF
THE E IG H T E E N T H JU D IC IA L
C IR CU IT IN AND FO R SEM IN
O LE COUN TY, F L O R ID A
MANAGER
CASE NO 87 1618 CA Of K
Blinds
C H A R LES R M AGNUSON.
TRAINEE ................. $$
Plain till.
Sales experience helplul. some
v
inventory control
Benefits,
BARBARA SIMM ONS. e« al.
IN T E R IO R S BY E L L E N
work into management
Defendants
Complete *mdow dressing*
AAA E M P L O Y M E N T
N O TICE OF ACTIO N
tn Home Service 322 0953
1917 Fren ch A ve
123SI76
TO DR C H A R L E S B A K E R
Guardian of C E C IL E B A K E R .
minor
D IS T R IB U T O R S wanted im
Bcvitdinq 7s Groommq
med*afely Earning from 1700
Address Unknown
to (400 weekly part time or lull
YOU A R E N O T IF IE D lhal an
lim e M F Fo r complete m
action lo foreclose a mortgage on
fo rm atio n w rite Prem iere
Ihe following described properly
A N IM A L Haven Board ng and
Merchandise Company p o
,n Seminole County. Florida
Grooming Kennels Shady. In
Box 118? Dept E b 6 Sanford
Lot 73. Block G. W ASHINGTON
suiated. screened, tly proof ih
Fla 37771
OAKS. Section One. according lo
Side, outside runs Fans Also
Ihe Plal Ihcreol as recorded In
AC caqes We cate' to your
Plat Book It Pages 7 and I ol Ihe
pels Starting stud registry
D E M O N S T R A T O R S wanted,
Public R eco rd s ot Seminole
Ph 373 S7S?
part time or lull tim e No exp
County. Florida
n e c e s sa ry
F rie n d ly per
TLC W ITH "R U TH "
has been tiled against you and you
sonality a must
For ap
Dog grooming, small Breeds (8
are required to serve a copy ol
polntment
ca
ll
377
7079
F re e pick up. del Longwood
your written detenses, if any, to It
area 7 days 831 1913
nn B E R N A R D D
SO M M ERS.
Plaintill s attorney, whose ad
R E G IS T E R E D PH YSICAL
M AKE
ROOM TO S T O R C
dress is P O Box 1393. Maitland.
T H E R A P IS T
YO U R W IN TE R ITEM S
F L 37751. on or before Ihe 6th day
Immediate opening available for
SELL
DON T N E E D S "
ol October. 1982. and Me Ihe
registered physical therapist
F A S T W ITH A WANT AD
original with Ihe C lerk ot this
with w ell established Home
Phone 377 2611 or 811 999j and
Court either before service on
Health Agency F u ll lime or
a friendly Ad Visor will help
P la ln llH 's a tto rn e y
or
Im
contract position available t
YOU
mediately thereafter, otherwise a
year ol experience, car and
default w&gt;ll be entered aqamst you
phone are required Call 323
lor the rebel demanded In the
2700 E O E .
Brick &amp; Block
complaint or petition
NOTICE OF S H E R I F F S
R E G IS T E R E D N U R S E
W ITNESS my hand and official
Stone Work
SA LE
F u lltim e p art time or contract
NOTICE IS H E R E B Y G IV E N seal ol this Court on the 30 day ol
position available with Home
July, 1987
that by virtue ol that certain W rit
Health Agency lor Ihe ex
Arthur M Beckw ith. Jr
Bar B Ques pa'ics fireplaces
ot Execution issued out ol and
perien ced
RN
R eliable
Clerk ol the C ircuit Court
No iob loo sm all
F re e
under Ihe seal ol Ihe C irc u it Court
transportation and phone are
By Eve Crabtree
E stim ates 834 0973
ot Dade County, Flo rid a, upon a
refluired C all 373 7700 EOE
Deputy Clerk
final judgement rendered in Ihe
aforesaid court on the 5th day ol (S E A L )
Publish August 4. It . 18. 25, 1982
F R IE N D L Y home parties has
May. A O . 1982. In lh a l certain
Career Opportunity
D E Y 30
toys A g ifts lor all ages is
case entitled, Rooney, Pace, Inc ,
needmg
dealers
In
your
area
P la in tlll, vs Leonard Trlester,
NOTICE OF SH E R I F F 'S SA LE
No Investment needed Also
Defendant, which aloresald W rit
NOTICE IS H E R E B Y G IV EN
booking p a rtie s
Call tor
ot Eaecution was delivered to me
that by virtue ol that certain Writ
details I30S) 321 0718
as Sheritl ol Seminole County,
of Execution issued out of and
Florida, and I have levied upon the under Ihe seal ol Ihe COUNTY
O R T M O D O N IC
a s s is t a n t
following describ ed p ro p e rly Court ol Orange County. Florida,
position available Will train
owned by Leonard T rle ste r, said upon a final judgement rendered
S a la ry co m m ensurate with
SEMI ifc H O O l
property being located In Seminole in the aloresaid court on the 5th
experience Resumeonly P O
• DOT Certification
County, F lo rid a , m ore par
day ol January. A D 1982, in that
Box
1714
Altamonte
Springs.
ticularly described as follow s:
• Financial Assistance
certain case e n title d , Doctor
Fla 32701
all inleresl ol Ihe Defendant, William p Webb. II P la in till. vs
• Placement Assistance
Leonard Trlester. in the following David Price and Roxanne Price,
UNITED TRUCK MASTERS
described real properly, lo wit
Defendant, which aloresaid Wril
700 E Washington SI
REPRESENTATIVE
Lots IS1 to 147, and Lots A A B ol Execution was delivered to me
Orlando
..................... to $250 wk.
Kew Gardens, according to plat as Sheritl ol Seminole County,
thereof recorded in P la t Book 4. Florida, and I have levied upon the
B u sin e ss
m inded
some
Page S I, P u b lic R e co rd s ot following d e scrib e d property
traveling, wholesale buying
Seminole County, Flo rid a.
owned by David A Price and
experience helplul. Excellent
Lot 168. Kew Gardens, according Roxanne C P ric e , said property
company
Ceram ic Tile
to plat thereof recorded in Plat t*mg located in Seminole County.
AAA E M P L O Y M E N T
Book 4. Page SI. Public Records ol F lo rid a ,
m ore
p a rtic u la rly
1917 Fren ch A ve .
123 JU4
described as follows
Seminole County, Florida
M E I N T i E R T IL E Exp since
The one hall interest ol David
Lois 2. 4.6. 8. 9. 10. I I . 12. 13. 14.
I9S3 New l old work comm A
P A R T T IM E
IS. 16.17. II . 19. 70. 71. 77. 23. 74. 25. Price In Ihe following described
resid Free estimate 869 8 54?
N U R S E S A ID E .
26. 27, 78, 79,30. 31, 32. 33. 34. 35, 36. real properly, lo w if;
37? 3853
Lot 597. Spring O aks. Unil No. S.
37, 38. and 39, and 50, S I. 52. S3, 54.
Complete Ceramic Tile Serv.
SS. 56. 57. 58. 59. 60. 61. and 67. and as described in P la l Book IS. at
w alls, floors, countertops, re
78. 79.80.81.87. 83. 84. (5 .8 6 . 87. 88. page 71 ol the Public Records ol
L IG H T d e liv ery, must have
model repair F r est 339 0211
19 .10. 91, 92,93. 94, 95. and 96. and Seminole County, Florida
vehicle and know area
Lot 121. 172. 123. 174. 134, 136. 138. and Ihe undersigned as Sheritl ol
Phone 322 858S
COODY A SONS
140. 142. 144, 146. and 157. and 103. Seminole County, F lo rid a , w ill at
It
00
A
M
on
Ihe
91h
day
ol
Tile Contractors
M
A
N A G E R W AN TED
104. 105. and 106. and 111, 117. 113.
September. A D 1982. o iler for
321 0152
Famous Recipe Fried Chicken,
Lie
114. IIS . 116. 117. I l l , 119. 120 and
sale and sell to the highest bidder,
minimum 7 years last lood
194. 19$. 196. 197. 198. 199, 700. 701,
lor cash, subject lo any and all
experience, honest, sincere,
702. 703. 704. 705. 206. 207. 708. 709.
existing liens, at the Front IWestl
hard working Apply in person
and 169, 170. 171, 177. 173. 174. 175.
Door al the steps ol Ihe Seminole
at 16 North Highway 17 97.
176. 177. 178. 179, 180. 181, 182. 183.
C oncrete Work
County Courthouse In Santord.
Casselberry No phone calls
184. 115, 186. 187. 188. 189. 190. 191
please
and 197. and 19). and 710, 715. and F lo rid a . Ihe above describ ed
R E A L property
216. 217. 211. 219, 770. 221. 722. 773,
That said sale is being made to
RO K. Inc is now accepting
B E A L Concrete 1 man quality
224. 225. 776. 277. 771. 279. 230. 231,
satisfy the term s ol said W rit ol
a p p lica tio n
lo r
Heavy
operation, patios, driveways
232. 233. 734, 235. 736. 7)7 . 231. 739,
Execution.
Equipment operators, truck
D ays 111 7313 Ev«s 127 t i l l
740. and C. D and E . a ll in K E W
John E Polk.
drivers A laborers Apply at
G A R D EN S, asub division ol the W
Sheriff
Field O ltice Frid ay 8 20 87. 8
Vi of SE &gt;4 ol the N E '4 of Section
C O N C R E T E work all types
Seminole County. Florida
a m to 2 p m Highway 46. tVy
27, Township2l South. Range 31 E .
F o o te rs, d riv e w a y s, pads,
Publish August 18, 25. September
mile
east
ol
14
at
railroad
lyin g and being in Sem inole
flo o rs , pools, complete or
I. 8. 1987
crossing An equal opportunity
County, Florida, according to the D E Y 93
refinish F re e est 172 7101
employer
Plat thereof recorded in P lat Book
4 Page SI of Ihe Public Records of
O S T E E N re sid e n ts - Avon
Seminole County, Florida
representatives needed to sell
Contractor
Lots 145. 147, 149. and IS I in
in Osteen and Deltona Free
K E W G ARD EN S, according to Ihe
kit C all 574 4053
Plat thereof, recorded In P lat Book
A D A IR CONSTRUCTION
4. at Page SI, of the Public Records
New constriction, additions, re
1350 W E E K L Y paychecks dully
ot Seminole County, Florida
mqdeling A blueprint service
guaranteed) working part or
and Ihe undersigned as S h eritl of
R esidential A Commercial
lu ll tim e at home Weekly
Seminole County, Flo rid a , w ill at
Little rules of life: By the
paychecks m ailed directly lo
11 00 A M on Ihe 2nd day ol
Licensed
699 1087
Insured
time you attend your sev­
you Irom Home O ltice every
September, A D 1987. otter lor
enth
garage
sale,
you'll
W ed n esd ay.
S ta rt
im
sale and sell to ihe highest bidder,
m e d ia te ly
No experience
begin to buy back junk you
for cash, subject to any and all
necessary. National company
got rid of months ago.
existing liens, at the Front (W est)
Courtesy Service
Do your w o rk right in the
Door at Ihe steps ol the Seminole
com
lorl
and
security
ol
your
County Courthouse in Sanford.
Our TV set must belong to
own home D etails and ap
F lo r id a . Ihe above d e sc rib e d
an electronic union of some
plication m ailed Send your
R E A L property
T A X I C A B and Delivery Service.
nam e
and
ad d ra ss
to
sort — It usually refuses to
That said sale is being made lo
A ll A irpo rts. We are open 7
Am
erican
F
id
e
lity
Company,
work on weekends.
satisfy the terms of said W rit ot
d ays a week Call 377 S12S.
Hiring
Dept
77.
1040
Lone
Star
Execution.
D r.. New B rau n fe ls. T x . 78130
John E Polk. Sheritl
Seminole County, Florida
Publish August I I . I I . 25. A Sep
tember t, with Ihe sale on Sep
tember 7. 1887
D E Y 47

18—Help Wanted

18—He Ip W a n te d

General Services
n

t r \ rlectr-t
plum
v
i , n ) c a 'O f-'i'i hauimg lawn
care rooting senior c ltiie n s
discount Free est 139 0184

Handy nvt n
L IG H T H auling,carpentry,
small hom erepair.
Odd jobs 321 8877
PA IN T NG. pool service, lawn
care in d ftc Anytime 322 5186
aft 5. 7(8 2407 Message to J im
Kipp

SM ALL HOME R E P A IR S
Pa inting. lA*ncAre. etc
F r w Estimates, call 371 0150

W ILL c a re lor your
eldrrly loved ones &gt;n
my home 173 5375

Nursing Center

ALLSTATE ROOFING,
INC.

OUR R A T E S A R E LO W E R
Lakeview Nursing Center
719 E Second SI . Santord
322 6707

Painting H. or
Pressure Cleaning

Home Im provem ent
C A R P E N T R Y , c o n c re te
A
plumbing Mmor re p a irs to
adding a room Oon 321 1974

. bath’ A additions Q uality
w o rkm anship in a lt hom e
improvements
L IC E N S E D A IN S U R E D
C A L L K E N TAYLOR
8111954

Painting

WEtfOOf IN G carpentry roof
ffpd«r 6 pamtinQ 15 year*
rap 322 1976

H EILM AN roofing, painting A
re p airs
Q u a lity
w ork,
reasonaole
ra te s
F re e
estimates An ytim e 814 8490
L E T USbeauMy your home with
paml Interior or exterior
814 6100or 3?t 671?
Harold R id er Paint Contractor
E x te rio r . In te rio r pain ting
Quality work A guaranteed 35
yrs exp 574 6490 alt 5 30

Plastering

A LL
Phases ol plastering
Plastering rep air, stucco, hard
cote, simulated brick 32 1 5991

k it

PA lN TIN O andrepa r. pat.o and
screen porch b u ilt
C a ll
anytime 322 9481
W IN DO W
repair
and
In .
sta lla tlo n
C elling
fa n s ,
e le c t r ic a l
r e p la c e m e n t ,
window cleaning 121 5994
C O L L IE R 'S Home R e p a ir s
carpentry, rooting, painting,
window repair. 121 6477
HOME Remodeling. Room
Additions Complete
Oarage Door Service
Dick Gross l i t S6t(
WINDOWS, carpentry, doors,
minimum repairs Flo o r tile,
cabinets I do it all 127 1121
Licensed A bonded
N A N 'S
W all
C o v e rin g s ,
v a llp a p e r hanging w ith a
w om an's touch N e a t, ex
perienced, tree est 321 4710.

Landscaping
L A N D C L E A R IN G till dirt,
tooso't shale, a s k in g ,
mowing 322 34)3

Mr L u c ky 'lL a w n
Care Service
Q u a lity
work
g u aran te e d ,
b e a u tilic a tio n w ithout in
Nation Free Estim ates C all
between 9 9 323 3894
M OW . Edge. T rim . R enew
Lan d scap in g , C lean
up s.
Hauling. Thatching, W eeding,
Mulch Lindsey's371084'
MOW. E D G E . W EED E A T IN G
Cleanups A tight hauling
Free estimates, call 121 0150.

Masonry
F IR E P L A C E S , bricks, block,
concrete, stucco and re p a irs.
Q uality. Fred 12132(4

F R E E E S T IM A T E S John F
Herring. Inc * e carry full
workman comp 6 liability
tn*urancc 5 y f* m Ctot Fla
Genera! Conti actor 1 741 2JS1 *

EXPERT ROOFING
No Big Waiting List
Rooting Special 10 * . discount
wdh this ad when presented
to Exp ert Rooting
Reroot
sp e c ia lis ts
We honor in
su ranceclaim s Fo rth eb estm
rooting and remodeling call
Expert Roofing &amp; Remode'mg
Asso The One stop shopjNsq
center B u ilt up. shingles, tile
and tin rooting Deal d.rectly
with a local comnactor wno
has a reputable business
Licensed Bonded A Insured
24 Hour Service

323-7473
P L A S T E R IN G , stucco. S'mu
lated b ric k , p atch work
Quality, Reas 321 7140.
17? 1427

Plumbing
FONSECA P L U M B IN G All
types Em ergency Service.
Sewer Drain Cleaning 323 407$
Freddie Robinson Plumbing
Repairs, faucets. W C
Sprinklers 171 1510.321 0706
R E P A IR S A leaks
pendable service
rates No lob too
Plum ber, tre e
Plumbing 149 SSS7

F a st A de
Reasonable
sm all, Lie
set
SAM

Secretarial Services

PERSO N N EL
U N L IM IT E D
37? 5649

Tree Service
TRI County Tree Sers
remove, tra sh , ha
clean up F r E st 3
T R E E Stump removal
St 00 inch diameter
Rem Tree Service 339 4291

Roofing

A &amp; B ROOFIN
31 Y rs E xp Licensed A Insured
T il*
s p e c ia lis ts
F re e
E stim a te s on R oofing A
Repairs.
,

F R E E e s tim a te s . D eG roats
Pa lm , tre e trim m in g A
removal Hauling, law ncare A
odd jobs 373 0842

Typing Service

G.F. B O H A N N O N
JAMESANDERSON

3 2 2 -9 4 1 7
Lawn Service

ROOFING of all kinds commer
dal A residential Bonded A
insured 323 2597 it no answer
8)4 85)7
B U ILT up and Shingle root.
licen*rd and m*ur rd F r f f
e*Vmate* 322 1936
Jam «**E L f f ln c

R E M O D E LIN G . A D D IT IO N S ,
electrical and rooting Cer
tilled, bonded, licensed Phone
(9041 787 8157

K.T REMODELING

Repair Specialists A Rerooting
Fu lly insured. 1? yrs exp
F R E E E S T IM A T E S
111 $091 or 89MIOO Ort

NO JOB too larqe or sm all Pro
quality w o rk m a n sh ip and
materials Ret 327 0071

Hauling
ANY
iunh tying Arouna
when you can have it hauled
At*A1 today Free estim ates.
CJll Mr Lucky brt*&lt;-t«n 9 9
373 3894

Garage sales are In season Tell
Ihe people about it with a
Classified Ad in the Merxid
127 761 1 811 W vi

B A LR O O F IN G
Insured A Bonded References.
S60 per square w ith tree est
Call 3?) 7183

Want Ads Get People Togett
— Those Buying And The
Selling 322 2411 -or 131 99

Upholstery

ADAIR R O O FIN G

Shhgle roots, carpentry
andsk/lights
Licensed

(99 1087

Insured

L IT T IK E N C O N TR A C TO R S
RO O FIN G
Licensed, bonded, low prices
Quality workmanship
Free Estim ates 788 3219
JE A N 'S Rooting, licensed. In
sured. free estim ates, ask for
Jean Noe. 321 1144

ROOFS permanently fiberglass
ed al a traction of the cost ail
types res t comm 429 4433
W ILL DO Rooting,
painting and odd jobs
321 S771

CUSTOM upholstery alt type
turn Free e s t , pickup A deliv
Sharon B aile y 323 2880

Well Drilling

MANN S W E L L D R IL L IN G
And Pump repair (A ll woi
gu aranteed) 30 y r s exi
Licensed A Bonded Free Es
322 8018 L o ca l C racker

M IO F L A .W E L L D R IL L II
Pump installation A Svc
Deep w ells, 2” lo * "
838-988) or T)T 7819

�IB—Help Wanted
. SPOT PAINTER
®3j

■

$$

gunexperifnce pamt m -urg
helpful Collision work w n s
Call now
AAA E M P LO Y M E N T
H IT French Ave
m s irs

21— S ituations W anted
A C C U R A TE typist, good speller
ittsliM on iob Iram inq Typmg
lor court reporter or medical
transcription in doctors ollice
Sanford area Mature depend
able. 13 years exp personal
lines insurance 323 062S eves

37—B usiness Property

L a k e FRONT apts I I ' i A }
bdrm on LaKe Jenny, in
Santord
Pool, recre a tio n
room outdoor B BO. tennis
courts d isp o sal, w a lk to
Shopp np Adults only sorry no
pet* 323 0242

37 B

EN JO Y country liv in g ' 7 bdrm.
Dup'A Apts
Olympic sr
pool Shenandoan V illa g e
Open 9 to 6 37) »30

TRACE
apartm en ts
Spacious
modern 7 bdfm. 1 bath a o ' ,
carpeted, kitchen equipped
Cent HA Walk to town A lake
Adults no pets S79S 173 6030

£ £ £

Rental Offices

j/f

1

■Lv

■Tv '/£ ,'

Furnished apartments lor Sen o.
Citirens 318 Palmetto Ave . J
Cowan No phone cans

SPACIOUS 3 Bdrm , V j Bath,
double qarage. pool and tennis
courts 321 2397

R EA LTO R
111 5774
34 Y E A R S E a P f R I E N C E I

SANDLCWOOD V.ltas I bdrm. I
ham all appll. draoes. car
pets. Cent air. pool, i ; jo mo,
Pro .lease ATT 5S57 422 887a

C A LL US Q U IC K !!! Gorgeous 3
Bdrm . 2 Bath, family rm . and
lireplace 139,500
TWO S T O R Y B E A U T Y , t bdrm.
7 hth. tow interest assumable
mortgage, large rooms 4 lots
ot p rivacy. 134.900

CONDO W mler Sprirtqs 2 bdrm
2 bath, all appi adults, no pets
1400 plus sec I 851 4S7S

PA RK AVE 1 Bdrm appl. no
lease SI95 139 7200
Sav On Rentals. Inc Realtor

ALMOST NEW 3 bdrm Cent
air. shaded lot 114,900 Term s

4f—Mouses
W E N E E D L IS T IN G S

3 2 3 -5 7 7 4
2*06 H A T lf« 2

2?—Rooms
H ID D EN L A K E room and bath
in quiet lovely home Student
or working woman 312 54? I
mornings.
ROOM For Rent, separate en
tra n c e , use ot household
facilities Alt «. 371 21V7 *
D E B A R Y A R EA
1 C H ILD D K
c a l l J22 2017
SA N TO RO
Reas
w k ly
monthly rates Util me elf SOD
Oak Adults 1 8IWBB1

---------- -

S L E E P IN G rooms with kitchen
priv s couplet, dtvable vet.
singles, no k.ds pets 323 9 228
ROOMS FOR R EN T
P R IV A T E E N TR A N C E
322 3853

l 7 AND l BDRM I tom 1745
Ridgewood Arms Apt 7S80
Ridgewood Ave 371 6420
7 BO RM , wall wall carpet,
kitchen appl , no pets 1225 mo
1100 sec Apply upstairs Apt
No 4, A0A S Park Ave or call
894 9AS8

BRAND new md beautiful I 2
bdrm 2 oath duplex Reduced
V380 mo carport and utility
room June. Por/ig R ealty
Realtor 327 BATS

G EN EV A G A RD EN S
2 1 3 bdrm apartments
Adult and fam ily section
Fro m 1290 per mo
150SW. JJth S t.
371 2090

r

/, hen i-Hir
» 1 *«4*V*"*^
r- f ft» l g**0 •r.y Hrr,|id vfdt.
lrysr ff&gt; tvu* t T‘utie
VCtn*T» DU a ndr'hj* &gt;S .IfJOll1
•o MelED*'"

STEN STRO M
REALTY -

REALTORS

IN T E R V IE W S
Assoc iates needed Newotticeat
907 Lake Mary Blvd Bob M
Ban Jr PA Realtor 323 4118

WE L IS T ANO S E L L
M ORE H O M ES THAN
AN YO N E IN NORTH
SEM IN O LE C O U N TY!

SANFORD 2 Bdrm . Kids, appl .
air. 1275 339 7200
Sav On Rentals. Inc Realtor

Reduced! 1 BH 3 Bath home in
Highland P a rk ! Lg corner lot.
CM AC. WWC. FH B rk lt Bar,
Scr Patio 4 More! Now. |uit
SSI,900!

B A TE M A N REALTY

NEW 3 Bdrm. 2 Bath split plan
all appliances on S Acres T
nnlrs West ot D e la n d 1375
mo 1st, last and security,
177 8844

Super! 3 B R . 2 Bath home in
Oreamwold C oiy eat in Kit.
CM AC . W W C, fenced yd!
Assum e 10 t* M tgl Owner
A lt llt l S41,4001

HANDYM AN S S P E C IA L S
Owner financing 7 Br. 2 . Bath
4 fireplaces, 138,900
1 Brm P ) Bath, 134,900
5 Acre tracts, 318 000, V3.MO
down Owner holdino at I2-,

Lie Real Estate Broker
2640 Santord Ave

Just Fo r Yout 2 B R , I Bath
Starter home on a lg fenced
corner lo ll Pan F R , Breakfast
Bar, Built Ins. in a nice neigh
borhood! Low Down! Assume
FHA M lg.t 531.500!

A L L F L O R ID A R E A L T Y
OF S A N FO R D R E A L T O R
7 BDRM Cent HA. carpeting,
enclosed porch, circular drive
132Smo 1st last and security

321 0759

Beautiful! 1 B R . t Bath home w
lovely decor 4 m any extras!
CH AC. D R. E a t in K it. F P L .
Porch on a lg landscaped
corner lo ll 2 story del garaget
159,000

3 BOR 7 Bath with Double car
qarage. and executive type
home m Deltona C all 57a 1437
d a ys, 736 3693 eves
and
weekends

322 7643

F R E E Schoolin') ioi R ia 1Estate
License’ Call tor details
L A K E U i # V F t A J] r4a
U1 J2Q8
HOME W ITH INCOME
7 Bdrm . living room, dimng
room, lam room, screened
porch w enclosed workshop
M o th e r in taw e llic le n c y
ap artm e n t attached with
p riv a te e n tra n ce Also on
same lot 7.900 sq It apart
ment All lor 190 000 Good
fin a n c in g , c a ll owner tor
appointment 322 1792

M A Y FA IR V IL L A S ! 2 4 3 Bdrm.
7 Bath Condo V illa s, neat to
Mayfair Country Club Select
your lot. Iloor plan 4 interior
decor! Quality constructed by
Shoemaker tot 147.200 4 up!

DELTO N A 1 Bdrm 2 Baths,
(•replace, screen porch, all
appliances, d rap es,
con
veoient location no pets 1420
mo 305 834 1514 alt S p m

CALL A N Y T IM E
CO UN TRY C LU B RO 4 3, kids,
pels, fence, 1400 339 2700
la v On Rentals, Inc Realtor

IS4S
P jrk

322-2420

3 bdrm, fenced yard, kids O K ,
option to buy 1375 mo call
owner 113 1611

QUICK S A L E Allordabte home
7 Bd rm . Fa m
Rm. quiet
neighborhood beautiful oaks
110.000down 331 45S9or
139 5510

R O B B I E ’S
R EA LTY
R E A L T O R . MLS
7781 5 French
Suite 4
Santord. Fla

Houses F u rn ish ed

HAL C O L B E R T R E A L T Y
302 E . lifts SI
313 713)

24 HOUR \B 322-9283

L O V E L Y I Bdrm furnished
175 plus utilities 1200 sec
Call 321 6947 or 323 3769

STEMPER

C E N T U R Y 31
Hayes R ealty Sef v .es mi
t ull Service 371 1030

AGENCY

JUST L IS T E O 3 B d r, 7 Bath
block home on S A cres in Lake
M ary. Cent HA, w all to wall
carpellng, 3 yrs old, owner
will assist 1149,900

H -Mobile Homes
IO N GW O QO 2 B d rm . p e ls ,
appl , 127$ J39 7200
Sav On Rentals, Inc. Realtor

]

B D R M , Pool home
no
guaiilying, 115.000 down Take
over payments 321 0718

10 : MORTGAGE
OWNER FINANCED

OWNER A N X IO U S Must sell
beautiful 1 Bd rm , 2ly Bath
home, pn L a k e H arney, guest
collage, Bar B Que house plus
much more M ake oiler

N IC E unlurn 3 bdrm, I'Y bath,
IS' scr porch, 12 k 24 tarn
room, large storage area,
adults only, no pets 1150 sec
$325 mo , 1st 4 last 327 9150
J
When you place a C iassilied Ao
m The Evening Herald. Slav
dose to your phone because
something wonderful is about
to happen

g

E ve

v s e*

2544 S F rench
373 0231
Alter Hours'339 3910. 332 0229

n

.

R E M O D E L IN G Dm ng • -tv ”
bvinq room breakfast sets
toi kt.i,i tabic C R G ta
vrc*ght bench *ind meNii
weights Nothmtj over
)21 056?

.

JE E P S
Government Surplus
l sled lot 11 196 Sold lor W4
For into Can 1117 9)1 1961 Ext
1746

EA STBR O O k W IN T E R P A R K
lo v e ly 1 Bdrm 7 Bath la m .ly
rm , pool, on a cut de sac
P rice reduced to 175 00O Call
lor details
2544 S French
322 0231
Alter Hours 319 3910 327 0779
UN D ER 12 OOC DOWN
) bdrm doll house Affordable
m onthly paym ents
C all
Owner Broker l i t 1611

Let a Class &lt;ed Ad help you In d
more room tor storage
Classified Ads tmd buyers
last
2 NEW t’res c i f l i 4 Cush on
'ed corduroy couch Clothes
377 1478
Packs Cots, Tarps
ARM Y N AVY S U R P L U S
310 Sanlord Ave
322 5791
C O P P E R T O N E G as Dr yet
d nettr set 6 chairs 7 carpets
9&gt;(7 L ike new 372 7052

Let a Classified Ad help you tmd
m ore room tor sto rag e
Classified Ads find buyers
fast
SAN FO RD H E A L TY
R EA LTO R
321 5324
A l l H rs 177 4934. 121 4163

SANFORD'S F IN E S T
CONDOMINIUM
Large 3 bdrm, 2*5 bath
For less than $65 000 and e«
cellent terms (including n
terest rale W E L L B E L O W
M A R K E T ) you can afford the
best Let us show you th ,j
unusual otlerinq today

19 f t
COL DSF'OT 7 door
retrqerator 1125 Lovcseat
$30 tioth good :ond 322 7057

40 STOVE WOO OBO Butcher
block bktst table 7 S w i v e l
Chairs 160 Vinyl s w v e l rocker
160 AM E xc cond 11.1 6495

No points, 2 bedroom, 3 bath,
large 7 car garage, tall attic,
near g oll course 160,000.
170.000 down 373 5846

HANDYMAN S P E C IA L 3 Bdrm ,
I Bath corner lot, excellent
lotalion, easy term s 129,500

n The Even ng Herald via,

(lose to vOur phoru- because
s o n u -ih .n q w o n d e rlu i

o

about

to happen

R E A LTO R 122 4991 Day or Night

o

real

d

L i n

,’, f P A Y trip dollar tor
kunx c a rs and Trucks
rts A to P a rts 79 1 4505

yard sa le

SAT A SUN
AUG UST 21. 77
1911 LO CUST A V E
SANFORO
Articles and Cash contributions
gratelully accepted Proceeds
to pay lor transportation and
expenses ot Canter patient to
B u rto n s
E xp er im e n la i
C lim e in
the
Bah am as
lor treatm ent For additional
into L ill 323 8113 or &gt;2) 0904
Eves . l i t 51)7 D ays

79

^

12 AAoliile H om es
SE t 5K y LIN E 5 NE WE ST
P,»lm 5prinq\ A P.i!rp V ,ino r
GW £ GO WY M O BILE MOV I 5
110) OrUndo Or
U ) WOO
VA H P HA F in,inf im|

DAY TONA AUTO AUCTION
Hvv, 9J I mile west ot Spr ed
w a, Dav'ona Beach w ill hold
. pi i c AUTO AUCTiON
every vYedbesday at 7 30 p m
It s ihe only one *n Flo r,da.
You set me reserved ty'Ce
fa n 904 256 8)1 ) 'nr further
le n d s

G A PA G E S i in 10 speed 1AAn
mCNyer »\C clothing mt\c
fgrnituTf J57 S Coultlr Club
wq
l S k t V r»CV
196;
Ihu'f'k f n Skit1
VAkF
ROOM TO STOWf
YOUR »VIN T E « IT E M S
SFl l
DON T N E E D 5
F AST W ITH A WANT Af&gt;
Phont* 177 7AM or 8Jt V991 ,if«j
i tf imdlv Ar» ViSOf w-ll help
,OU

71 v E G A WAGON 7 door 4
speed air dependable Iran
sport,H on 1500 STa W3S1
69 C H E V Y Unpaid
337 engine t'300
Can .tit 5 37 1 917)
t9'8 CO RVC T T r\v P5 P n T
toil new stainless steel brakes,
new ' res 5x795 or best otter.
123 5540

GUN AUCTION Sunday Aug 22
1 p m SA N FO RD AUCTION
1215 S Frrn ch Ave 171 7)40

M A TT R ES S S E T S Interspring
by Sprmg A ir Twin $ifi* Vet
f u ll
^et 598 Queen
5t/e \rt 1148 A Ktnq st/e set
1198 See them at
F L O R ID A S L E E P SHOPS
18111 N Ofl«-indo A ye . Hiqhw a y
17 97 Vattland 331 5788

13 -Lois Acreaqo

5? A p plia n ces

ST JOHNS River frontage ?r ,
acre paren s, also interior
parcels » vrr access $11,900
Public a aier 20 rn n »o Alfa
monte M ail
12
20 yr
tin a n c n g
no q u a lify in g
b ro k e r 62* 48)).

W il s o n m a i l h f u r n i i
111 315 L. F IR ST 53
&gt;22 5627

•17 A —AVirlgaqes Bought
&amp; Sold
W E P A Y cash tor 1st &amp; 2nd
mortgages Ray Legg L&gt;c
Mortgage Broker 788 2599

49&amp;—Water Front
Property
ST JO HN S River water front
lots. Excellent financing Bob
M B a ll J r PA Realtor
.
313 4111

FOUR adorable female pupp.es,
tree to good home All are
bldclt with white tips Call 372
5401 alt 6 p m

u« e

7 OR SAL L ) year old mate
Quarter Horse 1600 thione 331
V4$? After ) p ft»

67A

1969 M k t f ll R D AC. AT PS.
PB Good condition, original
owner, maintenance record,
S14O0 37? W79 alter S
; 7 C H E V Y IM PA LA
runs great needs
body xvor k \7tS 377 0201

trS Wanlctl to Bov

HAIL
SALE

ALUM IN UM , cans, copper, lead
brass, silv e r, gold Weekdays
8 4 30, Sat I I * KoMo Tool
Co 918 W 1st St 37) 1TOO

1978 Chevette 4 Dr.

71—Antiques

52795
1976 AMC Pacer

H EN DU IK
A N T IQ U E S
tL
k?i f irush iiiij F * r r | %| MS
i j *0 Day niqht L-n a ted J in
N of O* eito on Ma , 419

S1595
1979 AMC Spirit

A N TIQ U ES K C O L L E C T IB L E S .
Oide
Tym es
Connection,
B ro w se r’ s B a rn ,
ISO W
Jessup, Longwood

aI a

K E ROOM TO S T O R E
YOUR W IN TE R IT E M S
„
SELL
" D O N 'T
N EED S"
FA S T W ITH A WANT AD
Phone 322 7611 or 831 9993 and
a friendly Ad Visor w ill help
you

H a lc h b o o k

D/L Demo

(O R E S T A T E . Com m ercial or
Residential Auctions 8. Ap
praisals Call D ell's Auction
323 5670

AMC JEEP .
SM S . F r t n c h A v# .

r c u

T IL 6 P M • O P E N S U N

s7495

MOTOR CO

C L A S S IF I E D
AO S
M OVE
MOUNTAINS ot m erchandise
every day

e

$3395

1982 Concord 2 Dr.

72—Auction

F R IG
30 In. drop in sell
cleaning oven. Cost 1700 Sell
$395 Sears harvest gold sell
delrosl refrigerator. 15 2 cu II
excellent cond $275, 35,000
BTU 720 volt AC 1750. electric
dryer 1125 377 4796

S M S H I G H W A Y 17- 8 1 . L O N Q W O O O • B J 1 aOBO • 32? 4 6 B4 • O P E N N I G H T L Y T IL B OO S A f 4 S U N

Food

HAY

NE W A PP L IAN C E 1
Fu ll line G E and Tappan
Apartment su es avail
New
Electric A Gas ranges
B A R N E T T S 321 $754

G REN A D A
6 C ylind er,
.tuiom Al «c.
a ir ,
power
Mcer nq AAA f M sfereo 74
eitf .s sfjnrf coupe 4 cyMnder 4
speed -sir conditioning, other
r i f f as No money down, make
payments UV 9100 or 8)4 4605
BARRA&lt; UOA t ,ist Back V
H Wuns qood. qood tires 1600
Eves Weekends 37? 6521

r OA S } AL
her imit | ,$
A mimI
* ff»
NO p**» b.pe t in 'lUS
)2? f48S flay )71 M04 e*es

U S ED A P P L IA N C E S
Refrigerators washers dryers,
ranges 30 day guarantee
Repairs A Parts
B A R N E T T S 321 1714

- M

it

66—Horses

R E F R IG E R A T O R S .
m an y
s u e s , g u arante ed . Sa n lo rd
Auction 1215 S French A v e ,
373 7140

l n

NO C WF Oi T &gt; Bfici C re d iP Need
Lxif^ Cah V rlm a i Auto Salts
W f I inane e our own As low as
ttSO down |7 i wk up 1851 So
Orlando Ave Sanford
r?t tooo

P IT B U L L P U P P IE S
175 each
321 5566

Kenmore parts, service, used
washers 323 0697
MOONEY A P P L IA N C E S

C e n t r a l F l o r i d a ' * tt 1 V o l u m e L i n c o l n M e r c u r y D e a l e r

t&gt;eBary *\uto ^ M anne S a i t \
,Hf
!b r r i’iP f too of bill If#
lU v I? V7 O fP A fy 468 8VM

65 Pels Supplies

17 Real Estale Wanted
WE BU Y equity in Houses,
apartments, vacant land and
acre ag e
LU C KY
in
V E S T M E N T S P O Box 2500.
Santord. Fla 32771 327 4741

it • - i s , to pbtc i* a C bnvhpd Ad
Wc* II even belp yoo word
t C all 372 2611

l IL L DIRT A TO PSO IL
Y E L l OW SAND
Call Clark A H rt 37 1 7540

51 A — F u rm fu rp

19SI S K Y L IN E Mobile Home
24*52 It serpen en clo su re
porch, utility thed* Centtrii
heat and ii»r ) Bdrm . 2 Bath
Lot i tie i i SO- 1l di Sale price
V41.900 imarx-mg available ait
k0 t ol sale\pr-ce interest rate
16 •*
Can be ieen at I2&amp;
t v »%ure Dr Nor Ih De B ar y
F la in Ini* Meadow lea on the
Wivef Mod'le Home corn
m unity P lra ie contact Tom
L yon or G«b Edmonds F irs !
fed e ra l ot Stfhinole
105 )7? 1747

Autos (or Sole

Wr buv Cars and Trucks a
Martin Motor Sales
rot S F rrn c h
313 7434

JON BO'S T .5 motor
17 F t
BOOKS itOtbiinq ji'yy'lry Many
ill
&lt;1'rrn\ Sat K Sun Aid
tre s fv 1rA D '
Casse'h i'f f ,

I H O SPITA L bedcomplcte
with ra ils 3 wheel
Chair 377 3853

ftC V Y V A N
FO R 5 A l E
17? U 3)

80

] f A M ILV Carport S a if F r d.t,
and Saturday 8 30 *o. 5 a’ 7*0*
S Grandview A .e signs Hit at
2Sih and Santo'd Ave

ORAF tiN G Desk custom made
a ih tuj.it m 'ega I tile cah net
Butcher blot k tam nate and
while lortri'ca Contemporaty
design, mint condition 1S2S.
327 0703

T rucks T railers
H6S FO R D F too
Nqw&amp;Cyl Enq nf
ii»pf 6 p m

57A Gurts &amp; Ammo

G IG A N T IC S A L E
Ctothmgaloseout!
Buy 2 ilem s — 3rd tree
Wilto Saiei Mwy UW
4 Miles W ot I 4
323 6170 or 8)1 97*8

junk C m Removed

TOP D qHa * P a d »of junk flk
»rs f ruck\ A* fieavy
p*ritfnf 17? 5-WO

54- Garage Sales
b e n e f it

i T CA M PIN G 'rai'er
1400 O' best otter
17,' 3467 Ask to' Chuck

77

67 Lawn Garden

i . i I 44 4

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work
there wnu'dn » be an.

Estate

H f A t tCIH

19',’ 1» TR Ay TRAIL
ceil coni e , c cond
574 &gt;505

St o p AND TH IN K A V IN U 'f

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( f a i r with wheels
Call 377 2029

Call Bar t

When you piare a C ays * » 1 Ag

A S SO C IA TES N E E D E D

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televisions 'll name brands
consoles
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portah'.-s
E X A M P L E RCA COLOR Tv
IN
W A LN U T
C O N SO LE
O R IG IN A L P R IC E O V fH
1700 B A LA N C E D U E 1188
CASH OR P A Y M E N T S W8
m o n t h N O M O N EY DOWN'I
s t i l l in W A R R A N TY C A LL
Jlst C E N T U R Y S A L E S 862
5394 DAY OR N IG HT T R E E
HOME T R i A l NO OBI. IGA
tlON

COUCH Sleeper
by
Rowe
Wurhirer p-ano organ combo ,
Ma.).ius cord organ w leqs f r
Chevy Chevette 322 4S4?

Sanford's Sales Leader

IM M AC U LATE 3 B d rm , I ' j
Bath, stove, r e lrig e r a to r .
fam ily rm . fenced yard cent
HA 13S0 plus deposit Alt S
AJS 7124

L o

77 L E IS U R E T ,me motor home
1700P 77 Honda 150 W00 17
Jon Boat mdlor i trailer 1700
177 4415

i
A*terM r* 12) 746* A 12) t

L O N H D b N T lA L

2 B D R M . I Bath, upstairs
1250 mo 1100 damage
Phone 131 4429

S E V I L L E G A R D EN S large 1
bdrm apartment, adults, no
pels. 5725 mo with lease
phone 372 4425, 9 S p m

I.

32—Houses Unfurnished

It's easy lo place a Classified Ad
W e'll even help you word
it. C all 377 TAIL

BAM BOO COVE A PTS
300 E Airport Blvd
1 4 ? Bdrm s.
From 1215 mo
Phone 831 4429

KI SH R E A L ESTATE

2 BDRM , extra nice duplex with
carport S350 June Porjig
Realty Realtor. 372 8AT8

SA N FO RD 2 Bdrm, kids, no
lease 1170 111 2300
Sav On Rentals. Inc Realtor

Q

H ID D EN l a k e 1 Bdrm 2 Bath
split plan Cent HA double
garage Reduced to 554 900
Owner a ,II a sv st in l&gt;nanc ng

REALTY, INC.

25—Loans

2 BD RM home in Paolo needs
fin a n c ia lly secured , ab le
tnd'ed female age SO to AS to
share home with female age
A8 139 5731 Or 372 2192

P iT ^ P P

41—Houses

[HAROLD HALL

31A—D uplexes

To Share

:

A L L F L O R ID A R E A L T Y
OF S A N FO R D R E A L T O R

40—Condominiums

31—A partm ents F u rn ish ed

2(3— Apts. &amp; Houses

51 V
BU D G E T5
ARE
BO L5TE R E D Wi T h V A LU E S
‘ ROM
TH E
W AN T
AD
COLUMNS

RecreatiotwI Vehicles

) ' j G RUM M AN a red qualify
oach
15 000 m&gt; A .r, tilt,
ru se C un' Tv A M F M Ia p e
t’ s’ see nter.o' ot th s roach
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Ph T2i 0152

BEDROOM Set k no sue 5
p ece vacuum sola bed 5 pc
dining room a round table
173 4075

C O M M ERC IAL B U ILD IN G on
Highway 17 92. coUeqe area 5
Points lo m jw o o d Suitable
an* type ot business, like
arch ite ct
A ll
or
part
Reasonable 173 7A33

WHY RENT"*
St AS0 down paym ent with
payments starting below S1S9
mo buys a new 7 Bdrm home
m Deltona 70 minutes North ot
Orlando on I 4 C all A78 SASA
weekdays 9 S or t 574 1408 on
weekends 129 900 buys a home
on lot

HOME EQUI TV LOANS
No points or broker tees, loans to
12S.000 to Homeowners. G F C
Credit Corp .Sanf. FI 171 AH0

S3—TV Radio Stereo
MOMf C O M P U TE R
F re e
d e m p n tra t pn
with
educat’On home i.n ,m in and
V deo gam e! Le33 *han 1500
l i t 7501 Eves

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Wednesday, Aug. ) l , 1987—I t B

SO M iscellaneous &lt;or Sale

SM A L L com m ercial offices
heat and AC
701 N Maple Ave . 371 9090

B E A U T IF U L I Bdrm
In Town S775 MO
1 88AAS7I

.M AKE
ROOM TO S T O R E
YO UR W IN TER IT E M S
SELL
"D O N T
N EED S
FA ST WITH A WANT AD
Phone 122 7(11 Or *11 9993 and
a friendly Ad V'Sor will help
you

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

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UN IQ UE O P P O R T U N IT Y
F IR S T TIM E O F F E R E D B E
YO U R OWN BOSS W ITH O U T
C A P IT A L
IN V E S T M E N T .
W ITHOUT H EA D A C H ES'
We are looking tor dependable
people to operate our e i
ceptio nai carpet clean in g
service throughout the state ot
Florida No previous expen
ence required Free trm ninq.
customers suppl ed, very high
earninqs potential Start at
oncel C all I30SI SAT 0790
Sunday thru Tuesday 8 S

------ ^

N ThE

3STTH U RE

MAKE
ROO M To S T O R E
YOUR W IN T E R IT EM S
SELL
DON T N E E D S
FAST W ITH A WANT AO
Phone 37? 7011 or 831 999) and
a tf.endly Ad V so r will help
you

M E L L O N V IllE

Plumbing Hardware, O IY Bus
W wo Real E s ta te
vVm
Malicjowsk* Realtor. 377 7983

RESTST

Of C U E SPACE
FO R t E A S E
830 7773

Marmer s Village on la k e Ada 1
bdrm trom $7S0 7 bdf m from
$280 Located IT 97 &lt;ust sooth
ot Airport Blvd m Sanlord All
Adults 173 BATO

1 24—Business Opportunities

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EATE "BUR* CCV
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H i* W. U th S t . Sanford, F lj
Call n o 0102 or 630 4241
Clayton or Catherine Thomas

LU X U R Y
APARTM EN TS
F a m ily A A d u lts section
Poolside 7 Bdrm s
Master
Cove Apts 321 7000 Open on
weekends

HOUSE C LEA N IN G
Very reasonable references
171 4373

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F U L L Y E Q U IP P ED
BBQ&amp; RESTAURAN T

Evening H erald, Sanlord, FI,

with Major Hoople

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

30 A partm ents U nfurnished

r y

12 - «

USED CA R S P E C IA L S 12 M O S ./12,000 M ILE W A R R A N T Y A V A IL A B L E
1 9 8 0 T -B IR D
Slk # P l4 l4
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*6450

1979 MARK V
S tk s P I 355

BRAND NEW
1982 FOXEY V A N S

1979 XR-7

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7!5

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*5875

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*7350

Lm b Nm . u f r itlu a .

NOW ON DISPLAY

T h u W eek l S p e cia l

tt «n«a

1979 TRANS AM
M « ri4 tl

Slk S P 1 4 0 0
M ust s e e th is beauty.

AbaokiW y Immaculate

5725

FM CC and BANK FINANCING AVAILABLE ON PREM ISES

1981 M A R K VI
Sth S2362A
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�12B Evening Herald, Sanford. F I

Wednesday, Aug 18,198:

NEW ARRIVALS

M/ss Morgan,
D.A. Edwards
Repeat Vows

Mr and Mrs. Glenn Welborn of Sanford, announce the
arrival of a son, Bradford J. Welborn. who weighed in at 8 lb s .
2'x ozs., on Aug. 3, at Central Florida Regional Hospital,
Sanford.
The new baby was welcomed home by two sisters, Leslie and
Lori.
Mrs. Welborn is the former Ann Martindill of Sanford
Maternal grandparents are Mr and Mrs Charles E Willis,
Sanford. Paternal grandparents are Mr and Mrs. Hernion J.
Welborn, Sanford.
Paternal great grandmother is Mrs. Nellie Fryer, Sanford.
Maternal great grandfather is Lowell Martindill Sr of
DcBary.

Sharon Kay Morgan and Douglas Arthur Edwards were
married Aug. 7, at 7 pin., at the Covenant Presbyterian
Church, Sanford The Rev. George Dunn performed the double
ring ceremony.
Die bride is the daughter of Mr and Mrs Virgil D Morgan.
2636 S. Laurel Ave., Sanford. The bridegroom's parents are
Mr and Mrs. Earl E Edwards, 102 Fairlane Circle, Sanford
Given in marriage by her parents, the bride chose for her
vows a formal gown, fashioned with a Queen Anne neckline
and Venise lace appliqued bishop sleeves. The natural waist
bodice was accented with pearls and sequins The full skirt,
lavishly embellished with re-embroidered lace motifs,
featured a ruffled Chantilly lace flounce at the bottom A
graceful chapel train cascaded from the natural waistline
Scattered Venise lace appliques adorned her Venise lace
mantilla. She carried a cascading bouquet of silk flowers
including lily-of-the valley, while roses, blue baby's breath and
foliage. •
Jolene Morgan was the matron of honor. She wore a blue
floral chiffon gown over blue satin She carried a nosegay of
white daisies, blue miniature carnations and blue baby's
breath showered with blue satin stream ers. Her headpiece was
a duster of baby’s breath
Randy Edw ards served the bridegroom as best man. Ushers
were Pat Morgan and Mike Morgan
Amy Lucas was the flower girl and Lindon Daugherty was
the ring bearer
Following the reception at the Woman's Club of Sanford, the
newlyweds departed on a wedding trip to Asheville, N C
They are making their home in Sanford The bride is an
account clerk for the Clerk of the Circuit Court. The
bridegroom is a computer programmer analyst for Seminole
County

M.»*

H r1p * * *'»m
S B* *•€»••
Arws• A 4*9*

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No Extra Out Of Pocket
Expense. We Accept
Insurance Assignments
Group .A uto -Health -Medicare .U nion 1
W orkm an’ s Comp

SANFORD PAIN
CONTROL CLINIC
OH THOMAS Y A N D E L L

Chiropractic Phyticlen

JOI t s FR EN C H A V E I A e ro ,, Irom P u le Hut) SA N FO R D

The Herald welcomes suggestions for Cook Of The
Week. Do you know someone you would like In see
featured in this spot? There is something for everyone
In the line of cooking.
Novice cooks, as well as m aster chefs, add a dif­
ferent dimension to dining.
Please contact PEOPLE Editor Doris Dietrich about
your news and views oil cooking.

323-5763 „
f t f t t r co''%u&lt;i«'*on
evi uat.O" oorx
nclud* » t Dit o* »fM*mpnt •*
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no tat'tovt of pock**
fctryono poi'Cy limit$

MRS. D O U G L A S \. E D W A R D S

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SAVE 50%

IN TODAY. . BACK TOMORROW
or prints art FRCBI

Next D ay

The

New pain aid a i i i i f s

Shopper^
Center

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vvr* i •

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The Prescription Center
While q u a n titie s last.

Kolton Watches made by

WalgrcensCoupon
TYLENOL EXTRA-STRINCTH
P A IN RELIEF

TIMEX
5 groat stylos
for mon, women

at no extra charge!
• O *Prift r. m mo tj* t j j
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Timox accuracy &amp; g u o r o n to e .

A Big M istake

CR A YO LA CR A YO N S
B O X o f 24

40 S H U T S

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For Sick Woman

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P A P IR M A TE
C H O IC E !

lim it J thru Aug 2) 1112

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Want a keepsake of the
best, funniest and most
touching moments of the 25
years of Dear Abby's advice?
H ere's a chance to obtain your
own copy of “ The Best of Dear
Abby," her best-selling book.
Send $9.95 plus
for postage
and handling, to "The Best of
Dear Abby," in rare of this
newspaper, 4400 Johnson Dr.,
Fairway, Kan. 66205. Make
checks payable to Universal
Press Syndicate.

l

J

Who's Cooking?

Extended Youth

about your lather. Then give
your father the same message
concerning your husband. If
they "forget." walk away and
leav e them talking to
themselves.
Choosing between your
husband and your father
should be absolutely the last
resort!
DEAR ABBY: No names or*
cities, please, if you put this in
the paper, which you will have
to do because my jusband
sometimes gets the mail first
and I wouldn't want him to see
your answer.
A neighbor (m arried )
comes over here nearly every­
day to use my phone. She has
a phone of her own, but she
uses mine lo call her
boyfriend. 1 am not a snoop,
but I can tell from her end of
the conversation that he is
also married, and she meets
him every chance she gets.
Her husband seems to be a
decent guy, and 1 have no
intention of telling him what 1
know, but I feel guilty letting
this woman use my phone to
set up these "round-dayvooz" (or however you spell
it).
Should I pretend l don’t
know what's going on and
continue to let her use my
phone? Or should I tell her my
phone is out of order?
FEELING GUILTY
DEAR FEELING: Don’t
lie. If you don't want her to
use your telephone, tell her
the truth.
DEAR ABBY: If someone
mispronounces a word, and in
the course of the conversation
the word must be used by both
p a rtie s, is it rude to
pronounce
that
word
correctly?
GOOD
MANNERS
IN­
TENDED
DEAR GOOD: Hude? Not iu
my buok. To repeat the
mispronunciation in an effort
to be "polite" would be more
phony than helpful.

Grti'DI’’ * ’

1

Allan Marshall and Tracy Lynn Maxey Combs announce the
birth of their first child, a daughter, Amanda Leigh, who was
born Aug. 6, and weighed 5 lb s , 6 ozs.
Maternal grandparents are Mr and Mrs. Randolph Maxwell
of Paula. Paternal grandparents are Mr and Mrs Geo M
Combs of Osteen.

Photofinishing

DEAR
ABBY:
This
problem will certainly be new
toyou. Twenty-five years ago,
when I was 37. my family and
1 moved to the U S. from a
foreign country. When 1 made
my application for a visa, I
stated that I was 33 instead of
37 because I was told that it
would be easier for me to get a
good jot) if I were a few years
younger.
What a big mistake' Now I
am 62. not in the best of health
and would like very much to
have an early retirement, but
I can't because 1 am officially
58 instead of 62. 1 am now an
American citizen, and my
naturalization papers are also
made out with the wrong birth
date.
Can I. without risking being
expelled for fraud, use my
real birth certificate to get
retirement? I know 1 did
wrong, but I didn't think much
about it at the time. As a
punishment for falsifying my
age, must 1 work four more
years unless 1 die first’
FOOLISH WOMAN
BEAK WOMAN: You're
right. This problem is new to
me, but it's not new to the
Social Security office. Call
one near you.
DEAR ABBY: My problem
is the fact that my husband
and my father hate each
other. I realize that they both
have good reasons for feeling
the way they do, but I blame
them for putting me in the
middle.
This ridiculous, exhausting
battle has been going on for 10
years. I am afraid to invite
my father to my house or go to
his house with my husband for
fear one will say something to
antagonize the other. I am
tired of hearing complaints
from one about the other.
This hopeless situation is
ripping me apart, and one of
these days I’ll be forced to
take sides. 1‘U probably have
to side with my husband
simply because 1 take my
m arriag e vows seriously.
Please help me. I don't want
to lose either my husband or
father.
AT A LOSS
DEAR AT: Just because
you were placed in the middle
doesn't mean you have to stay
there.
Plan I: Tell both your father
and your husband that their
hostility toward each other Is
tearing you apart, and for
your sake — as well as theirs
— they
should
seek
professional help from a
competent, Impartial third
party who can help them get
over their hatred.
Plan II: l-ay down some
grouud ru le s . Tell your
husband you do not want to
hear any more complaints

FREE
C o n su lta tio n &amp; E v a lu a tio n

IY« POUND
FIO B A R S

29
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ZA YRE PLA ZA
SANFORD

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LIQUORi a .m . t o tP.M.

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PH O N E 323 *140 R X 3 2 I 0250

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                    <text>EDITION
E v e n in g H e r a ld — ( U S P S 481-280)— P r ic e 35 Cents

75th Y e a r, No. 19— S u n d a y , Septem ber 12, 1982— Sanford, F lo rid a 32771

Interest Up Among Buyers For Old Seminole Hospital
Hy MICHF.AI. RKILA
Ili-rald Stall Writer
One potential buyer has stepped up
efforts to purchase the old Seminole
Memorial Hospital building, but another
has dropped its interest in acquiring the
facility.
George M. Kline of Bethesda, Md., met
privately with county officials Friday to
discuss his plans for the building. Kline
lias refused to discuss how much he is
prepared to offer the county for the
115,000-square-foot building.
Kline submitted a letter of interest at a
July bid opening for the purchase of the

facility but didn’t make an offer at that
time.
County commissioners have said Kline
is interested in using the building as a
nursing home.
New Tribes Mission, headquartered in
Sanford, was interested in purchasing
the building for use as a Bible training
school or Bible college. But it has lost
interest in purchasing the facility, an
official there said.
Macon Hare said the county’s un­
certainty over whether it wants to sell the
building or convert it into office space
has caused the mission to change its

plans.
“ The position the county has taken
doesn’t allow us to m ake any plans,"
Hare said. “So we dropped it. We’re
forgetting it for the time being."
Hare said the mission lias made a
decision to make improvements to its
Bible school in Waukasau, Wis., rather
than move to the Sanford facility.
"We have gone ahead with plans to pay
for needed maintenance there,” he said
"We have a very big building there."
Hare said the mission might bid on the
building if it is put up for bids again but
said the muntv's asking price of SI .5

million is too high.
“ That would be more than we are in­
terested in paying," Hare said.
County commissioners have said $1.5
million is the minimum they must get
from the building to make selling it more
feasible than converting it into office
space.
P ublic Services and Development
Director John Percy said he expects
commissioners to put the building back
up for bids later this year.
Percy said, “at least a dozen" other
people besides Kline have shown some
interest in the hospital building since the

July bid opening.
"1 think it must be the economy but
we’ve gotten letters from more people
lately,” he said. County officials blamed
the lack of bids in July on the poor state
of the economy.
He said the county can sell the building
back to Hospital Corporation of America
for $500,000 if no deal is arranged before
Jan. 14. 19&amp;3.
Percy said he expects some county
action prior to the January deadline. If
nothing is done with the property by
March, the county's agreement with
HCA for maintenance will expire making

Patient Can't Pay Mounting Bills Or Go Home
Program. "I first became aware of their
situation when merchants began receiving
bad checks from Mrs. Hamby. In every
case, the checks were written for survival
items only, such as food and bare
necessities. She just didn’t have the money
to back them up."
Schuckman said he plans to recommend
that the State Attorney’s Office not
prosecute Mrs. Hamby, but allow her to
make restitution for the checks over a
period of time.
"But it'll be hard on her to take care of
the criminal m atter because of their
financial strap," he said.
"Fve done everything I can think of to
find help and some possible relief for
them," Schuckman said. “I’m at the end of
my rope, though. I just don't know where
else I can turn and I don’t know what else
can be done except ask if someone can pitch
id and help.

Danny Smith was the victim of a hit-and-run traffic accident two years ago.
Today, lie’s broke, jobless, and facing eviction from his home.
support themselves, too."
Smith also said his grandparents home
canno* accommodate his special needs.
"The house we're living in now has
ramps, wide doors so my wheelchair can
gel through, a specially-designed tub and
other things that are geared to help me get
around," he said "In my grandparent’s
home, I'm confined to two rooms because
the halls and doors are very narrow."
Smith said his mother has been trying to
work as many hours as possible while he is

in the hospital, but once he is released she
will probably be able to work only part-time
and at night because he requires a nurse.
"We can't afford a professional nurse, so
Mom stays during the day and tries to work
at night," Smith said. "We had boarders
live at home to help us meet expenses, but
they’ve moved out and have left us with a
trem endous telephone bill which we
couldn't pay.
"It’s a sad case," sayl Ed Schuckman,
director of the Citizens Dispute Settlement

Pitman
By JO E IIOEDDIN'GIIAUS
Herald New s Editor
Miss Florida Deanna Pitman may
have hit the low point of her week a daybefore reaching her highest mark.
The former Miss Sanford in a telephone
interview Friday afternoon said she
would be ready for Saturday- night's Miss
America Pageant. .
But Friday, Miss Pitman was suffering
from a headache after rehearsing her
dance routine twice.
And she was not pleased.
"I am used to doing it (dance routine)
six times," she explained. "I did not get
enough time to rehearse,"
Miss Pitman said she lias no idea who
the top contenders are for the crown.
While she and the other contestants in
her group consisting of one-third of the 50
contestants a re going through a
preliminary, those not competing are
kept away from the competition.
"I haven’t seen the competition," Miss
Pitman exclaimed.
The Apopka native did not win her
swimsuit preliminary Wednesday night.
She does not know how well she did in
her evening gown competition Thursday
night because the winners of the evening
gown preliminaries are not revealed.
How does she feel about the evening
gown competition?
"It was beautiful," Deanna said. "It
wuk really elegant, really nice. I had

"This boy and his mother are in a
desperate situation," Schuckman said.
"They want to stay in their home because it
is tailor-made for Danny. But they need
someone to help them get back on track.
Perhaps there is someone, maybe two or
three people, in the community would have
a solution for them or who will be willing to
help them ."
Danny is concerned about what he and
his mother will do if they are forced from
their home, but says he still feels they have
a future.
"If we can get this behind us, I’m going
back to Seminole Community College and
complete work for my architectural degree
then try to get u job," he said. "A friend of
mine has been very encouraging about a
job possibility so I'm looking at that to keep
Mom and me going."
But for now, Danny says all he can do is
hope that he’ll have a home to go home to
and that it'll be there long enough to allow
him to fulfill his dream.

TO D AY
many compliments from the other girls.
They felt my gown was the best."
Deanna has been the subject of a great
deal of attention in the news media this
week. She has referred frequently during
the week of her Miss America activities
in Atlantic City to being from Orlando.
Asked it she ever says anything about
winning the Miss Sanford preliminary,
Miss Pitman said, "I am Miss Florida.
The Miss Sanford title is listed on the
(Miss America) program book."
Speculation is running wild in Atlantic
City. Who will win?
Miss Pitman’s chances were lessened
Friday night when her dance routine to
"I Hope I Get It" from the Broadway
musical, "A Chorus Line" failed to win
her the talent contest. Miss California
won that competition. Miss Tennessee
was the winner of the swimsuit portion of
the pageant. The winner of Thursday
night's evening gown competition will not
be announced until Saturday night.
A daily newspaper this week quoted an
unnamed reporter observing Miss Pit­
man is "too hot" a personality to win
because Miss America judges look for
the girl-next-door image, not necessarily
the most striking beauty- or most popular
contestant.
Miss Pitman said she had not heard
anyone describe her as "too hot" a
personality to win.
She shared that she does have some

concerns about the pageant Saturday
night.
Miss Pitman said her concerns are
"m y mental and phy sical strength. I feel
like I've been up here for weeks. I’m at a
really low point," she said on Friday
afternoon.
Miss Pitman explained she and the
other representatives from the 50 states
expected to be "locked in" at 7:45 a.m.
Saturday for the duration of the day- and
final competition night.
The 10 finalists for this year's Miss
America Pageant are to be announced at
6:30 p.m. Saturday, followed by the
pageant, scheduled to begin at 9 p.m.,
including on national television. The
pageant will be carried by Orlando
Channel 2, beginning at 9 p.m.
Miss Pitman will join the other con­
testants — win or lose — after the
pageant at a Coronation Ball, expected to
last until 3 a.m. Sunday.
After a short night’s rest, Miss Pitman
and members of her family and close
friends will return home at 6:30 p.m.
Sunday at Orlando International Airport.
The Sunday return flight is the con­
tingent plan.
If Miss Pitman is crowned the next
Miss America: "I won't be coming home
for at least a week. I don't know when 1'U
see Florida again."

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The building also is considered a
potential solution to the county's office
space shortage.
It has been plotted as a possible home
for county health department, board of
county commissioners and staff agencies
if it is not sold.

Only 10%
Will Vote
Oct. 5 ?

No Help?
By TENT YARBOROUGH
Herald Staff Writer
Danny Smith hopes to leave his hospital
bed for home soon, but what he hopes even
more is that he will have a home to which
he can go.
Smith, 23. lives at 270 Pine Tree Drive,
Casselberry, with his 40-year-old mother,
Connie Hamby. That is, when he isn’t un­
dergoing surgery’ for injuries stemming
from a 1980 hit-and-run automobile ac­
cident which left him paralyzed from the
waist down, broke his back, legs, pelvis and
arms and has caused numerous other
problems.
“This is my 32nd operation since the
accident and I’ve been in the hospital this
time for about 40 days," Smith said from
his hospital bed. "I got hit by a car while
walking alongside Usler Hoad in Apopka.
Tfiey (police) never arrested the driver of
the car."
But while the Sanford native says he is
concerned ubout his medical condition, he
is more concerned about where he will live
once he's released from the hospital "which
could be this weekend," he said.
Smith said he receives a $284.30 monthlycheck from Social Security, plus Medicare
ami Medicaid pays his medical expenses.
He said his mother, an artist, is currently
waitressing and making about $4 per hour.
But we just don’t make enough to pay all
the bills," he said. “Our electricity has
been turned Off for a long time because we
just couldn’t pay the bills. We have water
now but it, too, was turned off for a little
while. We don't have a telephone because
we can't afford one and our landlord is
going to have to evict us because we can’t
come up with the rent and we're falling
behind in payments."
While Smith has grandparents who live in
Forest City and with whom he and his
mother could live for awhile, “ they’re
retirees and in much of the same fix we are
in. They couldn't support us for long and

the county responsible for its upkeep.
The hospital was built in 1955 and
closed in June when it was replaced by
the Central Florida Regional Hospital
The old hospital building reverted to
county ownership and conunissioners
have been trying to sell the facility.

6B
5A
1-311
5-B
711
.711

By DONNA ESTES
Herald Staff Writer
I First ol two artlclesi
If the 20.2 percent turnout in hist Tuesday’s primary election
in Seminole County was disturbing to some, the expected
turnout for the Oc t. 5 second primary will bother many more.
Seminole Elections Supervisor Camilla Bruce says a 10
percent turnout "sounds reasonable to me."
Mrs. Bruce, the county's 31-year veteran supervisor of
elections, says there just isn't much scheduled for the Oct 5
ballot to encourage a better turnout.
Positively- scheduled is a county referendum seeking voter
approval to pledge the county’s full faith and credit on a $7
million bond issue for up to 30 years to expand and improve the
county library system
The bonds would be repaid by a special tax levied on
property owners.
And as of Friday there was no weird from Secretary of State
George Firestone's office that the expected run-off of Van B
I’oolc and David Bludworth for the GOP nomination for U.S.
Senator will be on the ballot.
This race, at least, might have inspired some Republicans to
go to the polls, officials say.
Mrs. Bruce said that an election division spokesman in
Firestone's office explained that the first GOP primary contest
for the Senate seat is not as yet certified. Several counties in
the state, including Seminole’s neighbor to the south. Orange
County, have not certified their returns to Firestone’s office.
The returns to be certified must include counts on absentee
ballots. And this has been held up in some counties.
Seminole County’s computer voting system worked like
clockwork &gt;n Tuesday’s election with final results available
less than 90 minutes after the 72 polling places closed.
Sandy Guard, Mrs. Bruce's office manager, said she has sent
a proposed ballot on to the printers, asking that printing be­
held up until definite word is received from Firestone on the
status of the Poole-Bludworth contest.
The cost of last Tuesday's election is estimated at $25,000
With only 15,106 of the county's nearly 74,457 eligible voters
turning out to vote, the cost per voter was $.65.
For the Oct. 5 primary, Mrs. Goard said the over-all cost
should be less because fewer ballots will have to be printed.
In the first primary, five different styles of ballots had to be
printed. In the second primary, only two styles will have to be
printed—a Republican one for GOP members only- and a non­
partisan one for other voters on the county library bond issue.
Mrs. Goard said election costs should be one-third less in the
Oct. 5 prim ary. So estimated costs of that election will be about
$16,667.
If only 10 percent of the voters—or 7,446 of the county’s 74.457
eligible voters—turn out, the cost per voter will be $2.24.
But why was there such a poor turnout at the first prim ary
and a poorer one still expected Oct. 5?
Bill Wack, Democratic state committeeman from Seminole
See ELECTION Page7A

Ex-Sanford Cop Guilty Of Arson
A former Sanford policeman, convicted of three counts of
arson stemming from the December, 1980 burning of his house,
has 30 days to think about his punishment.
Circuit Judge Dominick Salfi told Walter Jones to think
about the penalty while a pre-sentence investigation is con­
ducted. Jones could receive 20 years in prison.
A Circuit Court jury deliberated less than two hours Friday
before returning its verdict. Jones was convicted of soliciting
to commit arson, second degree arson and burning to defraud
an insurer.
Jones, a 13-year police veteran, also faces charges of
defrauding an Orange County insurance company which paid a
$28,000 settlement on his policy, and one count of grand theft.
The trial on those charges is scheduled for Sept. 27 and Jones
could receive 15 years in prison if convicted.
Assistant State Attorney Steve Brady said he will seek the
maximum sentence against Jones, who was fired earlier this
year, because of his service as a police officer.
Three people testified in court Friday Ihey were involved in
the plan to burn Jones' home.
Sharon Meeker testified she met Jones in September 1980
and fell in love with him. She said Jones was in debt and asked
her on three occasions to bum his house so Jones could collect
the insurance money.

Ms. Meeker said she enlisted her roommate, Patricia
Williams, in the scheme with u promise of $2,000. Mrs.
Williams said she asked her estranged husband, Jim m y
Williams, to participate in the plan and he burned the house,
Mrs. Williams testified.
Ms. Meeker said Jones asked her not to tell him the details of
the plan so he would be insulated from investigation by *his
insurance company.
Mrs. Williams said she heard the discussion between Jones
and Ms. Meeker through a closed door. She testified that no
direct request was made by Jones to her or her husband.
Jones took the witness stand in his own defense Friday af­
ternoon and testified that he and Ms. Meeker had been in­
timate, but w ere only friends. He denied asking her to burn his
house.
Jones also denied being heavily in debt. At the time of the
arson, he owed only $100 in back rent, $300 to a furniture store
and $100 to a television store, he said.
Defense attorney Jack Bridges said Ms. Meeker and the
Williamses had lied to get leniency for their crimes. The
women pleaded guilty to second degree arson and each
received a year’s probation. Williams also pleaded guilty to
second degree arson and received a one-year sentence in the
Seminole County jail.

1

�JA —Evening Herald, Santord, F I . ___

Sunday, Sept. i j , iygj

NATION
IN BRIEF
Officials Get Tough
In Teacher Strikes
United Press International
Striking teachers in five states kept almost 215.0CK
youngsters away from school to press their demands
but school officials retaliated with “ return or be fired"
ultimatums and the hiring of substitutes.
In many school districts in the five states-N cw
Jersey, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Illinois and M ichigannegotiations were stalemated. The biggest issues were
pay and class time.
In Michigan, Kalamazoo school officials warned its
710 striking teachers to report for classes Monday or be
fired.
North Plainfield, N.J., school officials, who post­
poned the opening day of classes for 2,550 students until
Tuesday, after the district's 203 teachers struck
Wednesday, Friday began advertising for substitute
teachers.

Pollution Rules Eased
WASHINGTON O JPIl - The Environmental
Protection Agency is reversing a Carter ad­
ministration "proposal to enforce highly restrictive
water pollution standards on 2,000 texti le mills in the
United States.
Wastewater discharged directly into rivers and
stream s by textile plants will be controlled under the
standard of "best practical technology," rather than
under the tougher "best available technology" criteria
the Carter administration proposed in 1979, EPA
Administrator Anne Gorsuch announced Friday.
‘ The EPA has concluded that the stricter limits are
not necessary,” the agency’s statement declared.
“Toxic pollutants from textile mills are adequately
controlled by the existing best practical technology
limitations.
“Costs for additional removal would tie relatively
high," it asserted, contending that imposing more
stringent regulations “ would have resulted in the
closure of nine mills and the loss of 1,800 jobs."

Fraser Wants One-Year Pact
DETROIT (UPI)—Vice President Thomas Miner
says Chrysler Corp. would have trouble budgeting for
future labor costs if it signs a one-year contract with
the United Auto Workers (or wages and benefits.
Hut UAW President Douglas Fraser said Friday the
more he thinks about the one-year contract, the more
he wants it.
Chrysler and the UAW are meeting through the
weekend in an effort to write a new contract for 60,000
workers. The old contract expires Wednesday.

Tropical Storm Hits Land
SABINE PASS, Texas (UPI t —Tropical Storm Chris
roared ashore with gale-force winds near the
lxiuislana-Texas border early today, stranding nearly
three dozen daring late-summer beachcombers and
forcing thousands of other people from their homes.
The eye of the storm made landfall about 8 a.m.
today east of Sabine Pass on the northeastern Texas
coast, National Weather Service officials said.
Winds, blowing at speeds of about 50 mph lore down
electrical lines in the Sabine Pass area where about 900
people live. But emergency generators were being sent
in to restore power.

WEATHER
NATIONAL REPORT: Tropical Storm Chris churned
toward the Gulf Coast today, fueling 60 mph winds and stirring
rough seas, and forecasters feared it would develop into a
hurricane. Residents of a l/juislana parish were ordered to
evacuate. Harsh storms pounded the Southwest, Hunoff from
fierce rains washed out two Arizona roads, stranding as many
as 40 campers. A Farmington, N.M., boy was struck bylightning and killed. A September heat wave baked the Mid­
west for the second day Friday. Pierre, S.D., recorded the
nation's high — 102 degrees. Valentine, Neb., reported a
record-setting 101.
AREA READINGS (9 a .m .|: temperature: 78; overnight
low: 73; Friday high: 92; barom etric pressure: 30.06; relative
humidity: 93; winds: east at 5 mph; rain: .06. Sunrise 7:08
a.m., sunset 7:35 p.m.
SUNDAY TIDES: DAYTONA BEACH: highs, 3:50 a.m .,
4:37 p.m .; lows. 9:42 a.m.. 10:47 p.m.; PORT CANAVERAL:
highs, 3:42 a.m., 4:29 p.m.; lows, 9:33 a.m., 10:38 p.m.;
BAYPORT: highs,8:30a.m., 11:55 p.m.; lows, 2:39 a.m ., 4:42
p.m.
BOATING FORECAST: St. Augustine to Jupiter Inlet, Out
50 Miles: Wind east to southeast 10 to 15 knots through Sunday.
Seas mostly 3 to 4 feet. Wind and seas higher'ncar scattered
showers and a few thunderstorms.
AREA FORECAST: Portly cloudy today with a 50 percent
chance of mainly afternoon thunderstorms. Highs upper 80s to
low 90s. Wind southeast 10 to 15 mph. Tonight and Sunday,
partly cloudy with a chance of mainly afternoon or evening
thunderstorms. Lows humid 70s. Highs upper 80s to low 90s.
laghl southeast wind tonight. Chance of rain 20 percent tonight
: and 30 percent Sunday,

HOSPITAL NOTES
Central Florida Rt«lonal Hoipital
Friday
A D M IS S IO N S

Sanlord
•

M a ry G a rm o n
Tim J . Spain
Lewis E . W hile
Teresa F. Mosler,

Altamonle

Sms
Clarence O Finch, Deltona
Reina R a m lr c n Dellona
D IS C H A R G E S

Sanlord
Raym ond S Crabtree

. E u &gt;nin|&gt;ll(rdld

Charlie B Jones
G ary R Larson
Stephanie D M arshall
Leona M. Stewart
B rya n H Townley
Richard L Williams
W illie B Willingham
Vida L Anderson. D e B a ry
Daniel A Driscoll. D e B ary
A rm or M Haughl, Deltona
M argaret A. Maggio. Dellona
Peter R. Mllone, Dellona
W iley Sinks. Dellona
John C Steverson, La k e Monroe
Mildred C Veino. Long wood

hmfuii-mm

Sunday, September 12, 1982—Vof. 73, No. 19
Published Daily and Sunday, c ic t p l Saturday by Tba Sanford
Herald. Inc., IN N. Franch Ava., Sanford, Fla. n tH .
Second Class Postaga Paid at Sanford. FMrfda SITU
Homo Delivery: Weak, 11.00; Month, 14.11; 0 Months, I1 4 .N ;
Yaar, I4S.N . By Mall: Waak I M S ; Manth. SM S; I Months,
SU M ; Voor, SSI 00

Autopsy Shows

Blows From Hammer Killed Girl, 14
By TENI YARBOROUGH
Herald Staff Writer
As expected, the autopsy of a 14-year-old Longwoqd girl
reveals the teen died as a result of cerebral hemorrhaging
from multiple skull fractures inflicted with a metal claw

A c t io n R e p o r t s
*

F ire s

hammer.
Katherine Suzanne Greco of 1685 Glenethel Court died
Thursday at Orlando Regional Medical Center where she lay
comatose since Tuesday, hospital officials said.
Seminole County sheriff’s deputies discovered the brutally
beaten girl at about 7 p.m. Tuesday on the kitchen floor of her
home after the teen's brother, Richard David, 16, notified their
father. Richard J., 37, at work and told him Katherine had
been attacked.
Greco called deputies, asking them to check on his
daughter’s well-being, while also calling a neighbor, Michael
Young, and asking him to go to the home, deputies said.
When deputies arrived at the home, they found the young boy
lying on the front porch, apparently in shock, saying, "My
sister, my sister," deputies said. Deputies said they entered
the home and were met by Young who led them to the girl.
The girl was taken to Florida Hospital-Orlando where
doctors attempted to stabilize her until a court order could be
obtained allowing surgery. The girl’s parents consented to the
operation but would not allow the use of blood transfusioas
because of their religious beliefs as Jehovah’s Witnesses,
deputies said.
After a three-hour delay, the teen was operated on at the
Orlando Regional Medical Center. She was listed In serioas
condition after the surgery, Doctors said she never regained
consciousness.
Meanwhile, sheriff's deputies investigating the incident said
the murder weapon, a small, metal claw hammer, came from
inside the home and belongs to the family*
*. Investigators said
the blood-covered ham m er was found lying on th kitchen floor
near the girl and that they are currently attempting lo
determine if the assailant left fingerprints on the tool.
Deputies said no arrests have been made.
THIEVES TAKE FAN
Thieves stole a fan from the barn at Royal Tres Stables along
Red Rug Road, Casselberry, and apparently tried to steal a
race horse without success.
Deputies said someone broke into the stables between 6:30
p.m. Wednesday and 7 p.m. Friday and stole the fan. Shelia D.
Marchess, 29, a stable employee, told deputies she also
discovered that a racing mare had been bridled in the pasture
with a bridle that had been stolen several weeks before.
11,440 IN PROPERTY TAKEN
Thieves broke into a home near Altamonte Springs between
10 a.m. Aug. 12 and Wednesday and stole about 11,410 worth of
property.
Charles Stacey Lindsey, 39, of 902 Shallow-ford Road in the
Rolling Hills housing complex, told deputies the thieves en­
tered his home through a sliding glass door in the bedroom and
stole a watch, diamond bracelet, diamond and emerald ring,
and another ring.
HOME ROBBED
Deputies are investigating the burglary of a woman’s home
in which the thieves made off with about $1,700 worth of
property.
Marguerite Sheehan, 40, of Emmett Ave., near Sanford, told
deputies the thieves took a lawnmower, bed linens, a
television, chain saw, edger, pool tools, nn electric blanket, an
ax, pots and puns, drafting board, gold cufflinks and a clock.

*

C o u rfs

★

Police

OCOEE MAN CHARGED
A 19-year-old Ocoee man was charged with battery on a
police officer, reckless driving, resisting arrest with violence,
attaching an unassigned tag to a vehicle and fleeing and a t­
tempting to elude police officers at 11:13 p.m. Thursday.
Deputies arrested Darrell Robert Ballard, of 704 Russell
Drive, after clocking a vehicle on radar at 80 mph in a 55 mph
zone. Deputies said they tried lo slop the speeding motorist,
who continued to elude them. When the vehicle stopped,
deputies ordered the driver to stop but the man jumped over a
nearby fence and fled to a house at 131 First St., deputies said.
Deputies said they followed the man to the house and found
him hiding in a bedroom closet. When ordered to get out of the
closet, the man refused to surrender and a struggle ensued,
deputies said.
Deputies arrested Ballard and booked him in to the county
jail.
TRAFFIC ACCIDENTS REPORTED
The Sanford Police Department reported the following
traffic accidents:
— Kyle Edward Bauer, 24, of 1318 Douglas Ave., Sanford,
was charged with careless driving, following a two-car ac­
cident at Sanford Ave. and 25th St. at 4:20 p.m. Tuesday. The
accident also involved a 1974 Chevrolet driven by Cora Bryant
Brown, 38, of 110 McKay Blvd., which suffered about $50
damage while Bauer's 1982 Volkswagen received about $200 in
damages. No injuries were reported.
— Kathy Lynne Beadles, 16, of 2412 Orange Ave., was
charged with failure to yield the right-of-way in a three-car
accident at 8:14 p.m. along Airport Blvd. at U.S. Highway 17-92
Tuesday. About $1,500 dam age was caused to Ms. Beadles 1979
Thunderbird while about $700 damage was caused to Cary l&gt;evi
Burch's 1973 Mercury and no damage was incurred by David
Patrick O'Connor's 1973 Chevrolet. Burch resides at 1800 W.
Jerry Ave., while O'Connor lives at 102 Laurel Drive, police
said. Police said Ms. Beadles may have sustained injuries in
the crash.
— Tim Joe Spain, 21, of 607 E. 29lh St., was charged with
careless driving after his 1974 Honda motorcycle was involved
in a collision with a 1981 American Motors car driven by Carol
CavaUuzzi, 23, of 2550 Talbot Road, Fern Park, at 3:25 a.m.
Friday along Sanford Ave. at 20th St. About $500 in damages
was caused to Spain's motorcycle while about $1 000 in
damages was caused to Ms. Cavalluzzi's vehicle. Spain is
being treated at the Central Florida Regional Hospital in
Sanford, for a broken leg, hospital officials said.
PURSESNATCHED
A purse was stolen from a Sanford woman Thursday as she
stood near the comer of W. 13th St. and Mangoustine Ave.
Kathryn E. Welborn, 24, of 1375 Oleander Ave., told police
she was approached by two men at the street corner at about
9:40 p.m. Ms. Welborn said the men were talking lo her when
one of them grabbed her purse and the two fled.
Police said the purse contained a wallet, a passport and a
driver's license from Germany, but no cash. ,

COUPLE INJURED, MAN CHARGED
An elderly Casselberry couple were listed in fair condition
today at Florida HospUal-Altamonte while a Casselberry
man, charged with crashing into them with his vehicle along
U.S. Highway 17-92 Wednesday, was being held in the Seminole
County jail.
*
Everett Clark, 67, and his wife, Andrella, 68, of 1774 L.S U92, were hospitalized after they were struck by a vehicle while
walking along the side of the highway near the Circus-Circus
bar at 8:30 p.m., Casselberry police said.
Police said Clark was trapped under the car and dragged 618
feet. His wife sustained a broken pelvis und multiple cuts and
bruises, police said.
Michael Rombold, 35, of 1419 Ash Circle, was charged with
driving under the influence of alcohol, leaving the scene of nn
accident and careless driving, jail officials said. Bond was set
at $2,000.
CASSELBERRY MAN CHARGED
A 29-year-old Casselberry man was arrested Wednesday
after police discovered a marijuana plant in his apartment
when they arrived at the home to assist fire personnel in
dousing a fire there.
Dale Robert Robinson of 1406 D Ash Circle is charged with
possession and cultivation of m arijuana and was being In-Id in
the county Jail on $5,000 police said.
Casselberry police said they responded to the home at assist
Die fire personnel after a neighbor reported seeing smokicoming from the apartment.
After no one answered the knock at the apartment door,
firefighters broke into the home and found a burning cloth
lying in a chair and the entire apartm ent filled with smoke,
police said.
Police searched the home to make sure no one had been
injured in the fire and noticed a sheet hanging in front of a
bedroom window, covering what police thought to be about a
100-gram m arijuana plant, police said.
Robinson, who had been visiting a neighbor when the fire
broke out, returned home and was arrested by police for
possession and cultivation of the illegal drug, police said.

Car Theft Nets Man Jail Term
A Lilhia, Fla. man has begun serving a
2'i-year prison term after being sen­
tenced by Circuit Judge Robert B.
McGregor following his conviction on a
charge of grand theft.
l/mnie Edward Poore, 19, was also
sentenced to two years probation for
stealing a car from Strada Auto Sales,
U.S. Highway 17-92,I/&gt;ngwood, on May 9,
court records showed. Poore was also
ordered to pay $500 to the public defen­
der’s office which represented him in the
case.
McGregor ordered that poore would be
adjudged guilty which means that after
he lias served the sentence, his criminal
record will reflect the conviction,
Several other people nude court ap­
pearances Thursday, including:
— Robert Dale Wesley Buie, 20, of
Houston, Texas, was sentenced lo three
months in jail und five years probation to
run consecutively with a previous con­
viction, records showed. Buie was sen­
tenced Thursday by Circuit Judge C.
Vernon Mize Jr. to his escape from the
Seminole County jail on July 9. He turned
himself Into authorities shortly after llie
escape in which he climbed over a fence
at the jail.
— Jeffrey William liatres, 30, of 4443
Edgewater Drive, Orlando, was sen­

tenced lo five years probation to run
consecutively with a sentence imposed
on him in an Orange County case, llaires
was sentenced by McGregor following
his conviction of charges of driving under
the influence of alcoholic beverages and
possession of Q uaaludes, records
showed. McGregor w ithheld adjudication
of guilty, meaning that after he serves
his sentence, Haire's record will not
reflect the arrest or conviction.
— Anna Marie Voss, 32, of 912 Gee
Creek Line, Casselberry, was sentenced
to five years probation, ordered to repay
$2,300 to the First Federal Savings and
Loan of Seminole, in 1/mgwood, required
to continue mental health counseling and
denied the privilege of having a checking
account. McGregor sentenced Ms. Voss
following her conviction on cliargcs of
depositing a check with the Intent to
defraud. McGregor withheld ad­
judication.
— Alford Allen Pritchard, 21, of 1/iko
Monroe Terrace Apt. 89, Sanford, en­
tered a plea of not guilty to robbery
charges before McGregor. Pritchard is
accused of the armed robberies of the UP
Champ food store at 2752 County Club
Road, Sanford, on July 8 and July 18.
— Robert I/\. Johnson, 19, of 522
I/mg wood Ave., Altamonte Springs,

entered n plea of not guilty to a grand
theft charge. Johnson is charged with
stealing u drill, valued at $119, from the
Jefferson Wards department store in
Altamonte Springs on Jan. 22, police
said. Bond was set at $3,000 and
McGregor also set Johnson's hearing
date for 1:30 p.m. Oct. 11.
— William Harold Stark, 20, of 1220
Manchester Hoad, Maitland, entered a
plea of not guilty to a charge of delivery
of cocaine. Stark was arrested May 27
after undercover drug agents said they
purchased one ounce of cocaine from a
man, whom they describe as Stark, for
$2,200. McGregor set Stark's next court
hearing for the week of Oct. 11.
— Patrick Obit Payne, 19, of 98 Castle
Brewer Court, Sanford, entered a plea of
not guilty to charges of grand theft and
possession oj less than 20 gratas of
m arijuana. Payne was arrested by police
at W. 13th St. and Southwest Hoad on
May 27 after police said they discovered
a m arijuana cigarette in his shirt pocket.
Payne is also accused of stealing a
ceiling fan from Scotty’s, French Ave.,
Sanford, police said. McGregor set
Payne's hearing date for the week
beginning Oct. 11.
—TENIYARBOROUGH

For Stealing $500,000

2 Men Serving 10 Years
Two Sanford men, convicted in U.S. District Court in
Orlando of stealing more than $500,000 in uncut U.S. currency,
each began serving 10-year prison terms and owe $10,000 each
in fines following sentencing Friday.
Kenneth Kroesser, 33, of C-5 Sandlewood Villas, 110 Airport
Blvd., and Roger Harmon, 48, of 300 Art Lane, were sentenced
by District Judge John Heed Jr. for their Aug. 16 conviction of
retaining and concealing government property.
Prosecutors said the maximum penalty for their crime
carries a 20-year jail term and $20,000 fine.

The two men were arrested April 28 after Kroesser’s
girlfriend Cynthia l/.*e Queen, 23, informed Sanford police of
their illegal activities.
Miss Queen turned the men in after Kroesser became angry
and jilted her when slie discovered the uncut sheets of money
in their home, police said.
Officials said the money was smuggled from the U.S.
Treasury office under the two men's clothing while otheremployees were out to lunch. Kroesser and Hannon were former
security guards at the Bureau of Printing and Engraving in
Washington, D.C.

GSA Makes Multi-Million Dollar Goof
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Two or more General Services
Administration employees could lose their jobs over a “night­
mare’1of a blunder — a missed renewal deadline on a bargain
lease that could cost taxpayers more than $24 million.
GSA Inspector General Joseph Sickon ordered u full
criminal Investigation and a separate audit when he learned of
the colossal mistake that began when a clerk put (he wrong
renewal date Into a computer, agency officials said.
The Inquiry Into possible criminal wrongdoing, which began
In July, is expected to be completed soon, and officials said
Friday the episode appears to have stemmed from
carelessness.
Richard Haase, commissioner of GSA’s Public Buildings
Service, said the GSA is considering disciplinary' action

against those involved in monitoring the lease but no final
decision lias been made. He said it would be "conjecture" to
say what disciplinary action was expected.
GSA sources said two branch chiefs In the agency's San
Francisco regional office — Kathy Kennedy, head of the
leasing branch, and Joseph Yiakus, director of the real-estate
division — have been told informally they probably will be
given dismissal notices next week.
Yiakus, reached in San Francisco, declined to comment. Ms.
Kennedy is on leave.
Sources said GSA auditors also have found the San Fran­
cisco region missed renewal dates in the last four years on two
other leased buildings In that city and one in San Jose, Calif.,
adding millions of dollars more to die losses.

Concealed weapons — are they necessary for
civilians?

Should State Take
O ver Gun Licensing?
By MICHEAL DEHA
Herald Staff Writer
A Winter Park private investigator, the first man to be
issued a permit to carry a concealed weapon in Seminole
County since 1969, thinks the stqle should take over the
permitting and licensing procedure,
Harvey Morse, 10, president of I/(caters International,
said the county-by-county permitting process in Florida is
unwieldy, expensive and should be taken over by the state.
Morse explained that each county is responsible for
issuing the permits. As a result, someone seeking a permit
must apply, pay for a background check and post bonds in
each county.
The end result is that he may be licensed in one county
and not licensed in the adjacent county. "You must be
cognizant to county lines," Morse said.
Such was the case with Morse until Tuesday when
Seminole County commissioners approved a concealed
weapon perm it for him.
He possessed permits in Orange and Volusia counties but
not in Seminole County.
"I could carry the weapon in Orange County but if I was
traveling to Daytona for a case, I had to take the weapon out
while I was traveling through Seminole County," he said.
It was Morse’s fourth attempt to get a permit in Seminole
County in the past six years. And despite the frustration of
not being able to get a permit earlier, Morse said he never
carried the gun illegally. "It’s part of the law. If you get
caught with one illegally you can’t get your license."
Seminole County Sheriff John Polk agrees with Morse
that the state should take over the permit responsibility.
“The secretary of state already licenses security guards," Polk said. "I t’s not (air to the person applying to have to
get perm its from 67 counties."
But Polk remains steadfast in his opposition to granting
concealed weapon permits. "I Just feel anyone carrying a
concealed weapon should be a law enforcement officer,"
the sheriff said.
Polk was opposed to Morse’s application but only in
principle.
"There was robing in his background that would make
him Ineligible," Polk said. "Everyone knows I'm against it.
But If the county is going to grant one there is no one more
qualified than Morse to carry one."
But Polk said he doesn't feel Morse needs a gun in
delivering civil process papers.
Morse, who said he works in investigations of murders,
rapes and drug cases, said he has been Involved in several
life-threatening situations, including at least one In
Seminole County.
“It's a sign of the times. It’s frightening, but I’m getting
called on more and more In those types of cases," he said.
"You never know when you walk Into the office who’ll be
walling for you."
Morse said Florida’s gun regulations worsen the
situation. “The state is very backward in firearms control.
Anyone can go in and buy a gun. In New England, where
I'm from, you must have a gun permit to buy a gun or
anununition. You can't even look at a gun without a per­
mit."

�Sunday. Sept I?. t»H - JA

Evening Herald, Sanford. FI

FLORIDA
IN BRIEF

PSC Begins Hearings

On FP&amp;L Rate Hike
TAI.1.AHASSKK i Ul’l t—Florida Power &amp; Ught C«.
begins its final pitch fur a $2B1 millinn rate increase
this week, its second rate hike in a year
The Public Service Commission opens two weeks of
hearings Monday on the Miami-based utility's petition
for an extra $281 million a year in revenues.
Commissioners will study the volumes of testimony
to be submitted by FP&amp;I. and Public Counsel Jack
Shreve during nine days of scheduled hearings and
meet for two days in late November to make a final
decision.
FP&amp;I. got a $44.2 million interim increase from the
PSC this summer. It had sought a $65.9 million tem­
porary rate hike
The company requested a $176 million rate increase
in late 1980 and wound up with 1257 million last fall

Oil Leasing Plan Attacked
TA1.1.AHASSKK lUPf)—A state environmental
group has urged Gov. Hob Graham to join officials of
other states in their attack against Interior Secretary
James W att's offshore leasing plan.
"We are in favor of carefully planned offshore oil
drilling but we cannot submit to Secretary Watt’s
reckless and blind schemes,” said a spokesman for the
Florida Public Interest Research Group at Florida
State University
Graham should make Florida a party to a lawsuit
filed by officials in California and Alaska and by
several conservation groups to try to block the Watt
proposal, the research group's spokesman said Friday.
Watt is proposing the leasing of oil and natural gas
rights to over one billion offshore acres by 1987, in­
cluding areas along most of Florida's 1,200-mile
coastline.

Fuels M ix A tFP&amp; L Plant On Back Burnet
By MICIIKAL BF.ilA
licrald Staff Writer
The conversion of Florida Power and lig h t Company’s
Sanford Plant from oil to coal has been placed on hold in­
definitely, a spokesman for FP&amp;I. said.
Stacey Shaw said the plant, which had a one-year ex­
perimental test run of a coal-oil mixture, is currently using nil
as a power source and will continue to burn oil for an indefinite
period
Ms. Shaw said the company is delaying all plans to convert
plants from oil to coal until experiments into other forms of
technology are completed.
"But it certainly would be the first plant to see a conversion
(if some type," she said "The Sanford plant will continue to

have significance for FP&amp;I. and Florida because it already has
been modified and backfitted with equipment."
She said the reasons for delaying the conversion of the
Sanford facility to coal are numerous and include a decline in
the price of oil, experiments with other types of energy and an
expanded contract with Southern Co. for up to 2.000 megawatt *
of power a year through the 1990s
We're looking at a variety of things," Ms Shaw said The
coal-oil mixture which was tested at the Sanford plant for a
year in 1980 and 1981 and a coal slurry technology are among
those energy sources.
“We are anticipating very significant breakthroughs within
the next year to 18 months." she said
The experiment at the Sanford plant, which ended m April

1981, proved the coal-oil mixture was "financially feasible
So plans to convert the plant have been shelved
The cual-oil conversion was supposed to help FP&amp;I. reduce
its dependence on foreign oil
If a decision to go ahead with the conversion is eventually
made, the company will tie required to install precipitators t&lt;
reduce the pollutants emitted from the smoke stack
The company recently reached an agreement w ith the U S
Environmental Protection Agency which delays the con
struction until 30 months after a conversion takes place
"Right now, it's a moot question,” Ms. Shaw said We’n
not burning coal or a coal mixture at that plant "
She said the company has no timetable for converting the
plant from oil to coal

S h o p O r l a n d o a n d S a n f o r d d a i ly 9:30-9:30, Su n . 12-6.

S h o p L e e s b u r g , K is s i m m e e

S h o p M t. D o r a , C le r m o n t d a i l y 9-9, S u n . 12-6.

d a ily 9-9, Sun. 116.
S h o p D e L a n d d a i ly 9-9, S u n . 11-5.

The Saving Place

SU N .
THRU

TU ES .

Super Savers

DOORBUSTER

DOORBUSTER

DOORBUSTER DOORBUSTER

Drinking Water Is A Gas
BF.U.F.VIKW i U P I i —T he 2.000 residents of
Belleview have discovered why their drinking water
stinks. There's gasoline in it.
Citizens of the Marion County town just south of
Ocala were warned Friday not to drink the water from
the city’s three wells
"Most people said it tasted like it was over­
chlorinated," City Clerk Judy Grant said. "We called
in the state and a consulting firm to do some tests—
and, sure enough, we've got gasoline in our drinking
water. We have no idea how it got in there," she said.
The city of Ocala has begun sending tanker-trucks
full of fresh water to Belleview, and residents are
allowed 5 gallons each.

WORLD
IN BRIEF

Swiss Embassy Hostages

Feared Death 'Any Time'
BERN, Switzerland i U P I i—Hostages freed in a
commando raid ending the 72-hour siege of the Swiss
Embassy feared Polish terrorists holding the mission
could have killed them "at any tim e," two of the
captives said.
Mrs. Janina Rojeck, a diplomat's wife released by
the gunmen before the storming of the building, told a
Swiss television interviewer Friday the terrorists kept
their captives "under tremendous psychological
pressure."
Her husband Jerzy, rescued in Thursday’s raid, said
the gunmen’s leader, Florian Kruszyk, threatened to
tie the hostages in one room and blow up the embassy if
authorities refused to meet their demands—which
changed from lifting martial law in Poland to ransom
and safe passage out of Switzerland.

Reagan Loses Budget
Battle With Congress
WASHINGTON (UPIl For the first time in the
presidency of Ronald Reagan,
Congress stood up and refused
to
ru b b er-stam p
the
legislative dictates of the
administration.
In a stunning defeat for the
president, the Senate Friday
voted, 60-30 — precisely the
two-thirds majority needed to override the president’s
veto of a $14.2 billion sup­
plemental funding bill he
called a "budget buster." The
override meant the bill was
enacted into law.
The House had voted by a
comfortable 301-117 margin
Thursday to override the veto.
A loud round of applause
and cheers erupted in the
Senate as the final vote was
announced, and Senate
Republican le a d e r Howard
Baker of Tennessee, who had
backed
R eagan, slowly
walked over to Hatfield and
shook his hand.
Assessing the effects of the
override beforehand, Baker
said, "It would be a serious
loss for the president."
The supplemental bill pro­
vides extra funds for federal
agencies and program s
through Sept. 30, the end of
the fiscal year 1982. But the
dispute was basically one of
guns vs. butter.
In his veto message Aug. 28,
Reagan said the bill contained

P R E S ID E N T R KAGAN
. . . lo s e s b ig o n e
$918 million too much for non­
defense programs — "busting
the budget by nearly a billion
dollars" — and only $500
million of the $2.6 billion he
w anted
for
m ilitary
programs.
But supporters of die bill
noted its total cost was nearly
$2 billion below what Reagan
asked for, and they accused
the administration of trying to
eliminate social welfare pro­
gram s for the elderly, the
poor, the handicapped and
school children.
Some suggested budget
director David Stockman was
the real culprit — he had
deceived Reagan and not told
the president the en tire
contents of the supplemental
bill.
■

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Deanna has not only had her day — she's had
her week — caught up in a whirlwind of activities
equal to the gusty winds of a raging hurricane.
Miss Florida, Deanna Pitman, has a lot of
supporters on the Seminole scene, as well as
those who pout, " I’m tired of reading about Miss
Florida."
For what it’s worth, she's the hottest little
news commodity to come down the Seminole
Pike in a long time. Even if she has to sacrifice
Ihe Miss America crown to another contestant,
let us not forget that she is ours, and will reign as
Miss Florida for the year.
When she left the Orlando International Air­
port last Saturday, Deanna said she had but­
terflies in her stomach. That’s easy to un­
derstand — even without all the unfavorable
notoriety she unjustly brought on herself.
Hut Deanna, has a loving family — third

J*0)

■TOON. FRENCH AVE.,SANFORD. FI A 32771
Area Code 30W22-2611 or 831 -9093
S u n d ay , Septem ber 12, 1982— JA
W ayn e D Doyle. Publisher
Thom as Giordano, M a n a g in g Editor
R o b ert L o ve n b u ry, Advertising and Circulation D irector

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Banks And
The Border

generation Floridians—pulling for her all the
way. They have pageant jitters, loo, and arc
betting with their hearts that their daughter will
win However, her father, Hobert Pitman III,
said he was not a gambling man and didn’t plan
on patronizing the famous casino in Atlantic
City.
Hilda Pitman, Deanna’s mom, is in the
plantscape basincss in Apopka — a subsidiary of
the family foliage and citrus corporation. Hilda's
major area of concern this week, she said, was
how Deanna would hold up under interrogation
regarding the "mailbox incident" although she
was coached by a drama instructor in Miami.
According to a Sanford cousin. Jack Schirard,
Deanna is a "tough competitor" which she
comes by honestly. Her grandfather. Hobert G
Pitman Jr., is a former University of Florida
football coach and is in the sports and

agriculture halls of fame. Also, Deanna's father
was big in sports and won his share of honors.
Deanna's younger sister, Kathleen, is a
member of the horsey set, her claim to fame.
Grandmother Katherine Pitman is formerly
from Sanford and has many friends here
Elizabeth Mebane says. According to Hope
Schirard, Jack’s wife, the Pitman families and
Sanford Schirard families get together oc­
casionally such as Easter and July 4. The
Schirard children and Pitman children have
grown up together and have had a lot of fun,
Hope says.
Deanna’s parents and grandparents are in
Atlantic City for the big night as well as a host of
friends ami supporters from Florida.
Her boyfriend Kenneth Kirchman, a savvy
Seminole scion, left Wednesday from the Sanford
airport via his private plane.

JEFFREY HART

President Jose Lope/ Portillo’s sudden decision
to nationalize Mexican hanks and try to control
the exchange of currency has raised the level of
crisis and confusion in his country and along the
border.
Whatever Portillo might say m defense of Ins
obvious move to pacify M exico's left, it creates
confusion in Ixirder communities, and unnerves
high levels of international finance where Mexico
needs desperately to sustain the confidence of its
creditors.
The seizing of domestic banks would seem to he
an act of economic desperation, hut it may also
reflect a degree of political desperation in Mexico
City. It was evident in Portillo’s recent state of the*
union message that the banks are to he a
scapegoat for his own administration’s economic
failures.
Part of the role of any Mexican president is to
capitalize on revolutionary fervor that remains a
strong element in the country’s politics. By
fastening blame for had times on classic symbols
of leftist rhetoric —bankers and their presu/nably
wealthy clients — Portillo may be hoping to allay
a clamor from the streets. The recent ap­
pointment of a socialist-minded economist to head
the nationalized central bank is further evidence
that he is feeling pressure from the left wing of the
ruling party,
Hut as a former finance minister himself,
Portillo knows that the flight of capital from
Mexico is not the fault of the hanking system, and
it is no recent phenomenon. It was evident when
former President Luis Kcheverria veered left­
ward in his foreign and domestic policies, and it
continued when Portillo showed that he lacked the
political will to make the change of course that
would have benefited Mexico’s own economic
interests.
The shoek of this year's drastic peso
devaluations and disastrous inflation might have
been averted if the government has not persisted
so long in trying to sustain the peso at an artificial
value. U has subsidized the price of basic food­
stuffs. launched development projects it could not
afford, and run up an SIM) billion foreign debt on
the strength of prosjiective oil revenues that did
not materialize.
The flight from pesos into dollars which Portillo
describes as “looting” was no more than the
inevitable flow of wealth from a shaky currency to
a stronger one, a vote of no confidence by Mexican
investors in the policies of their own government
M exico desperately needs a government
dedicated to fiscal discipline, both for its own sake
and to reassure an international hanking com­
munity w h ic h is restructuring M exico’s
staggering foreign debt. Portillo was candid
enough to warn his people that they face “dark
times” and “difficult days” as his government
complies with conditions laid down by the In­
ternational Monetary Fund for the $4.5 billion
rescue mission which the IMF is mounting.
While Portillo can argue that nationalizing
domestic banks is necessary for meeting the
country’s new monetary goals, the companion
effort to control currency exchange surely will
strike bankers as damaging to trade and in­
vestment.
An attempt to limit currency exchange in dayto-day commerce across the border would make a
bad situation infinitely worse for Mexicans
struggling to cope with peso devaluations and
uncertain banking conditions. It appeared that
Mexico City was willing to recognize that blocking
the flow of business in dollar-dcpendent border
communities would be pulling the plug on the lifesupport system of a patient desperately ill. For
that, people on both sides of the border can be
thankful.

BERRY'S WORLD

RUSTY BROWN

KGB
Plot To
Kill Pope
There are two sensational stories out there,
just waiting for coverage by the major
American media So far, they have been
surrounded by silence, with one honorable
exception.
One is that the would-be assassin of Pope
Pope John Paul II, the Turkish terrorist Mehmet Ali Agca, was the instrument of a plot
hatched by the Soviet KGH. This has been
demonstrated by Claire Sterling in a major
article in the current Reader’s Digest.
Mrs. Sterling is an American-born but now
Rome-based journalist, un expert on in­
ternational terrorism , and author of the
recent widely acclaimed book on the subject,
"Tlie Terror Network."
Now the evidence that the assassination
attempt on the pope was a Soviet plot lias
been widely publicized in Eurojie. The British
newspaper "The Daily Telegraph" lias been
full of it It has been reliably reported by a
dose associate of the pope, who rode with him
to the hospital after the shooting, that John
Paul said only two things at that time: "The
Soviets did it," and "I will survive."
Mrs. Sterling shows that the pope was right
on target with that first comment. You would
think Ihe headline SOVIET BEHIND AT­
TACK ON POPE would be a natural for the
American press, or for "CBS Reports" or
"Sixty Minutes."
Why the silence? There we have the second
major stoj-y, important in its way as the story
of the actual assassination attempt.
Mrs. Sterling traces Agca's terrorist career
back to the provincial Turkey of his
childhood, at a time when the Soviets were —
successfully — trying to destabilize their
NATO neighbor. At one point, terrorist ac­
tivity in Turkey resulted in one political
murder per hour. The Turkish military took
over. It was apparently at the Uniyersity
during this turbulent period that Agca fell ir
with the terrorists and was identified as
promising material.
In 1979, jailed for the assassination of a
prominent T urkish journalist, Agca
mysteriously walked out of prison in disguise,
obviously with outside assistance and con­
ceivably high-level official assistance. The
interior minister at that time has now been
revealed to have a brother who is a local
leader of the underground communist [tarty.
The details of Agca's mission to the Vatican
have only now emerged. He spent some 50
days in Sofia, Hulgaris, staying at good
hotels, and received the assassination weapon
and expertly forged papers.
This would have been inconceivable without
the cooperation of the Bulgarian secret
police. Bulgaria is the most Sovielized of the
satellites, and its security forces are really
branches of their Soviet counterparts.
Himself a poor young man, Agca in a short
Iieriod spent *50,000 on plane fares, hotel bills
and other expenses, moving around Europe
on his forged papers.
Mrs. Sterling traces the routing of the
forged papers, the money, and concludes:
"The long and short of it Is that Urgulu (a
terrorist conduit) worked for the Bulgarians.
"The Bulgarians, in turn, do what the
Russians want them to do. No secret police
organization lias more Intimate links with the
KGB than Bulgaria's. What is mure the KGB
keeps tabs on all terrorists as a m atter of
course. It is inconceivable that the KGB
would not have known all there was to know
about a terrorist as closely involved with the
Bulgarian secret as Agca was."
The Soviet motive? The pope, a Pole and
the spiritual father of Solidarity, was de­
stabilizing Poland.

Love
In The
Office

"No, The Market's Doing G reatThat's The Unemployment L in e !..."

JULIAN BOND

Laurens Pierce Flowers
You may not ha ve known his name, but you
surely saw his work. Liurens Pierce could
justly claim some credit for the successes of
the civil rights movement, for the integration
of Southern lunch counters and universities,
and for black Americans winning the right to
vole.
He could have said he was responsible in
pari for building a national movement of
outrage against the old South's brutal ex­
cesses; he might have said tie was the
messenger who brought the freedom
movement to the world.
He did do that, but he never asked for or
received a projier thank you from the people
he helped set free.
Most of lliem never knew that Laurens
Pierce existed, but most of us were touched
by him in some way. Liurens Pierce in­
troduced America to the civil rights
movement.
He was not a minister or a lawyer or even a
civil rights m archer. For 2G years he was a
cameraman for CBS television news and he
managed to carry his camera into Ihe center
of the struggle for civil rights. You’ve seen his
work. You rem em ber watching how George
Wallace was shot dow n by Arthur Bremer in
l-aurel, Md„ in 1972, Liurens Pierce took
Uuise pictures.
David Dick, the CBS reporter assigned to
cover Wallace, had returned to Washington to
edit his report of Wallace’s rally before the
crucial Maryland primary.
Liurens Pierce's job was to follow the
candidate, and he did.
You’ll remember seeing Dallas County
Sheriff Jam es Clark and his mounted posse
charge into a praying crowd of marchers at
the Edmund Pettus bridge outside Selma,
Ala., on Jan. 7, 1965—Liurens Pierce took
those pictures.
They were so graphic they became a part of
the federal law suit which won the injunction
that allowad the march from Selma to
Montgomery to proceed.
Remember when the Montgomery police
turned a mob loose on the freedom riders in
May of 1961, and left half a dozen demon­
strators lying bloody that sunny Alabama
afternoon? liu re n s Pierce was there.
Remember when a young black minister
named Martin Luther King Jr. began urging

Montgomery blacks—we called ourselves
Negroes then—to boycott that city's buses till
they no logger bad to give up their seats to
white passengers. The first pictures you saw
of this marvelous man and his moving
rhetoric were probably taken by Laurens
Pierce.
Liurens Pierce owned a photography shop
in Montgomery, He began his career as a
freelancer when television news was film, not
tape. What began as a job became a crusade.
“ It was easy for us New York Jews to come
down South to cover the civil rights
movement," a network bureau chief said,
"but l-aurens was one of them, a white
Southerner whose friends and neighbors
neither understood nor liked the work be did."
The.Laurens Pierce story goes on and on.
The time he skipped Bogaloosa, La., on a
freight train and became the only television
crew inside the National Guard lines.
The time a sheriff pul a shotgun in his
lightman’s belly. "Turn off those g-d lights."
Pierce stepped between the two men and
shouted, "He works for me! If you want
something done here, you talk to m e,'' and
kept on taking pictures.
The times—too numerous to mention—
when Pierce thought the-reporter wasn’t
asking the right questions and shouted his
own.
The time at Ole Miss when he hired a man
to stand behind him with a baseball bat to
keep white rioters from attacking him from
behind.
"It was easy for the New York Times man
to watch and slip into a motel room to dictate
a story to the desk,” the bureau chief said,
"but Pierce had to go to the action, his back
exposed, one eye closed, the other peering
through the cam era lense. He’d take the
camera off the tripod and wade right in."
You remember him now, this tall whitetiaired Southerner with a camera on his
shoulder, trailing lights and sound as he ran
to the head of the march or the center of the
mob.
His funeral in Atlanta coincided with Ihe
19th anniversary celebration of the 1963
march on Washington, so riiany of the people
whose faces were first shown to you by
laurens Pierce couldn't attend.
George Wallace sent flowers.

Live in the office.
It is still one of the trickiest, most
dangerous occupational hazards.
Somebody always loses.
It is a hazard bound to occur more often
these days as bright, brainy, capable men
find themselves working with equally bright,
brainy, capable women.
As one woman executive in a management
consultant firm said in Savvy magazine
recenty: "Working with equals can tie very
stimulating. The thrill of achievement, the
pleasure of working side by side with bright,
competent people can stir up seductive
feelings,"
Frankly, what woman doesn't want that
kind of relationship with a man?
I have witnessed some sad consequences,
however, and known some broken-hearted
victims.
L 't me tell you about one couple. 1 can
remember the day 1 first sensed the heady
vibes between them. They were walking back
from lunch, oblivious to me behind. I caught
the exhilaration in their glances, her joy at his
murmured rem ark, the gentle touch of
shoulders.
Back at the office, they never let on. Only
when they both look vacation leave at the
same time, a couple months later, did
everyone put it together.
Fortunately, they were executives in dif­
ferent areas, so he could not be accused of
favoritism and she didn’t have to deal with
the suspicion that she slept her way to the top.
There were snickers just the same*
however.
The relationship was stormy, but lasted
several years, until she met another.
His shock at her rejection boiled over. He
bugged her with phone calls, cornered tier in
the corridor for whispered, heated
arguments. In retaliation, she marched into
the executive suite and threatened to file a
sexual harassment suit.
Management recoiled and insisted that he,
a 12-year veteran, leave. When the dust
settled, employees and management alike
were bothered and liewildered. Certainly
nobody acted wisely or kindly — and nobody
won.
I have read of other cases where agony and
anguish followed the ecstasy of office
romance. One couple were rising executives
in an insurance company. Their manager
warned them In stop dating because of office
gossip, but they didn't. After awhile, the
woman realized she was being sidelined from
the fast track.
The mast widely publicized office scandal
was played out by Willium Agee, 43, and Mary
Cunningham, 30, who wed this summer. Two
years ago they were the leading characters in
a nasty scenario dubbed the "Bendix Blun­
der.”
He is the Bendix Corp. chairman and she is
ihe Harvard M.B.A. who came on as his
assistant and rose to a top vice presidency in
15 months. That really put the fizz into the
talk around the water cooler. The scuttlebutt
trickled into the board room where ex­
planations were expected.
V.P. Cunningham fled in a shroud of in­
nuendo, a furor she later called
"psychological ra p e " that very nearly
destroyed her. The pair should have known
that society will laud the meteoric rise of a
man, but be unfairly jealous, cruelly
suspicious and downright unbelieving if it's a
woman. And heaven help her if there's a hint
of a liaison with a supportive male executive.
Ms. Cunningham surfaced as a vice
president of Seagram &amp; Sons Inc., and to this
day, insists she and Agee were not lovers
when the hullabaloo first broke.

JACK ANDERSON

Border Aid W as Not So

"You realize, of course, sir
DON'T EA T QUICHE!"

—

REAL MEN

WASHINGTON The Reagan a d ­
ministration's dram atic announcement last
week of a *200 million aid program for
businessmen along the Mexican border was
an election-year political ploy, nothing more.
It's not that the small businessman in
southern Texas, New Mexico, Arizona and
California aren't being badly hurt by the
devaluation of the Mexican peso. Their er­
stwhile customers from across the border
can’t afford to shop in the United States any
more, while Americans are bargain hunting
in Mexico, where their dollars are worth
twice what they used to be.
But the fact is there's nothing special about
the Small Business Administration's “special
*200 million 'Peso P ack"' of direct loans and
guarantees to the stricken businessmen.
The money was there all along. It is part of
what SBA had left over in funds for this year's
loan program. And one reason it hadn't been
spent is that the SBA has been much more

tightfisted in coming to the rescue or small
businessmen who are drowning from the
effects of high interest rates and the
recession.
There's also nothing special about the loans
themselves. The border businessmen will be
paying the same rates as any of (he SBA’s
other borrowers. Ironically, a program that
would have provided low-interest loans to the
stricken businesses was killed by the Reagan
administration last year.
So how did Scrooge become lady Bountiful
overnight?
Texas Gov. Bill Clements claims a big
share of credit for Hie transformation. He
issued a press release that explained: "The
SBA agreed to Gov. Clements’ proposal to
make available at least $5 million in direct
federal assistance to businesses along the
Texas border ... a tenfold increase over the
amount av aila b le to Texas sm all
businessmen h a rd hit by the peso

devaluation."
Another claimant was San Diego Mayor
Pete Wilson. A spokesman put it this way:
“San Diego's Washington lobbyists were
checking around and not having much luck,
so Wilson went to the White House for help."
Presto! The loan program was announced "in
response to our- request to come down and
give us some a s s is ta n t."
There’s a certain odd truth in both these
claims. Clements and Wilson are Republicans
engaged in tough election cam paigns.
Clements is currently losing ground in his reelection bid, while Wilson is fighting to stop
the erosion of his early lead over Gov. Jerry
Brown in Hie race for California’s senate
vacancy.
So it’s undoubtedly correct — technically —
that the "Peso Pack" loan program was
announced as a result of Clements' and
Wilson’s pleas for help from Hie White House.
Even though the funds were already available

in the SBA kitty, the hardpressed GOP offlceseekers were obviously instrumental in
having the loan money gussied up as a new
“special" program.
To make sure Texas and California voters
got the message, SBA Administrator Jam es
Sanders took pains to praise Clements and
Wilson “for their leadership in working with
us to put this effort together."
Footnote: An SBA spokesman admitted
that the *200 million would have been
available anyway to the border businessmen
"if they had gone hrough the right
procedures." He told my associate P eter
Grant that part of the reason for announcing
the "special program ” was to let the needy
businessmen know that the money was there
waiting. He also denied that poliUcs had
anything to do with the credit given to
Clements and Wilson. But if the funds were
there all along, what was there to give anyone
credit for.

�OPINION
Evening H erald , Sanford, FI.

Who Runs The Federal Reserve?

A pamphlet published by the Federal
Reserve Bank called, "The Hats the
Federal Reserve Wears" says on the
last page: "Congress created the
Federal Reserve back in 1913 but
Congress doesn’t run it. Neither does
the President of the United States.”
Then it adds; “ It is a fairly independent
organization within the Government."
I see a problem, however, with that
last statement. There are only 3

branches of Government — executive
■the P resid en t), Legislative (the
Congress), Judicial (the courtsi. Now,
if the F ed eral Reserve is an
organization within the Government
and the President don’t run it and the
Congress don't run it, does this mean
that the Courts run the Federal
Reserve?
This sam e pam phlet which is
published by the Federal Reserve Bank
of Philadelphia says: "When the
Federal Reserve was created, its stock
was sold to member banks. As
stockholders, they elect some of the
directors of the 12 Federal Reserve
banks. The other directors and the
officers they select run the Federal
Reserve banks and their 20,000 or more
employees, who are not under Civil
Service.”
1 have also learned from other
sources the following: Each of the 12
Federal Reserve banks has nine

directors. Only 3 of these directors are
appointed by the Federal Reserve
Board, while the other 6 are elected by
the member bank stockholders. 1 have
also learned that when the Federal
Reserve Act was passed, it contains a
provision that allows the Dept, of the
Treasury to purchase shares of stock in
the Federal Reserve banks, but that
this option has never been exercised.
I would like to close this letter by
asking our local Congressman three
questions. First, who runs the Federal
R eserve? Second, if the Federal
Reserve is a public organization, why is
it that the Dept, of the Treasury owns
no shares of stock in the System? Last
of all. if the Federal Reserve banks are
owned and controlled by the Govern­
ment, why is it that its 20,000 employees
are not required to take Civil Service
tests? I look forward to your reply.
I/)rraine P. Morrison
Cocoa

Begin Destroying Palestinians?
; I wish to comment on Jack Ander­
son's editorial "D iplom ats Face
Threats From The PI jO," which was in
the Sanford Herald Aug. 30.
You really cannot help but laugh
when you read the way Jack Anderson,
the Zionest; Charlie Reese, the Zionest;
or some of the Jewish Community of
Central Florida view the Middle F.ast.
These people, in American skins, write
about the Middle East and project only
the side they want shown, that of the
Zionest,
Jack Anderson, the Zionest, accuses
the PLO of threatening American
diplomats. The PU ) itself, never, never
issued any statements threatening any
A m ericans. The PLO is after
recognition from the USA and wants a
good relationship with the USA. If Mr
Anderson has any sense at all, nr
knowledge of the PLO, he would not
have written what he did.
The P I jO has never attacked any
American diplomats. Israel has, more
than once attacked Americans. Can
Americans forget the 73 innocent
Americans that died on the USS Liberty
stationed in the M editerranean
assig n ed to help Uegln’s g o v e rn m e n t
during the 1967 War? Israel murdered
these men and got away with it.
Jack Anderson is trying to claim the
Pl£&gt; blames the U S. Government for
the Israel aggression in lebanon. For
Jack Anderson, the Zionest, the
American people are also accusing the

U.S of being involved in the Israel
aggression when Haig gave the green
light for the Sharron and Begin invasion
of U-banon.
The Spot Light, a weekly newspaper
from Washington, D C., wrote of Haig’s
speech from tendon saying we lost one
airplane. We lost one airplane How
could Jack Anderson ever dismiss that?
The U.S. Government was aware of the
invasion, but only on an Israel promise
of a 25-mile zone in 48 hours. The
lsraelles, with the Haig administration,
found nut that the brave PIX") are the
freedom fighters of the Palestinian
l&gt;eople They a re a government fighting
for the sake of their people. The brave
PLO fighters stood and fought for two
months under F-16 and F-15, against the
most modern American tanks, under
cluster bombs and fougbt and broke
Israel's dream of destroying a terrorist
organization in 4B hours, Jack
Anderson, the Zionest, never mentioned
once in his article the cluster bombs or
phosphorus bombs.
Jack Anderson, the Zionest, accused
the PLO of being defeated. For Jack
Anderson, the Jewish Community of
Central Florida, and Charlie Reese to
know, the brave fighters of the PLO and
brave Palestinians in l-ebnnon did not
gel defeated. To get American
recognition and with the American
promise of recognition, the PIX) agreed
to withdraw th eir forces and
head q u arters from Beirut. The

headquarters of the PIX) left lebanon
hanging their flags up in the sky,
carrying their weapons up in the sky.
The same way the Americans withdrew
from Vietnam after 19 years of a bloody
war. For the Zionest Information, only
9,000brave PIX) left lebanon, but there
are 500,000 Palestinians left in Lebanon.
So, Mr. Anderson, the Zionest, Mr
Reese, and the Jewish Community of
Central Florida, the PIX) will exist until
a Palestinian state is formed.
Jack Anderson, the Zionest, accused
the PIX) of being behind the terrorist
acts in France. Washington, D C., Spot
Light Newspaper reports on [’age 1.
August 31 Issue, that it was French
Government officials linked to the
Mossad acts of terror. Mossad is a
secret Israel police and a terrorist
Israeli organization known around the
world. They m urdered top PIX)
diplomats last month, one in France,
one m Italy. If Jack Anderson ever paid
attention to the terrorist attacks in the
Jewish restaurant in Paris on Augusts,
six were dead and 22 were Injured but
none of them were Jews, but Arabs and
French. The Mossad was behind that
bombing. These terrorists acts in
France are to encourage the Jewish
who refuse to move to Israel to move to
Israel.
Hitler tried to destroy the Jews, why
is Begin trying to do the same to the
Palestinians?
Mohammad. Y.lutFi

Keep The Zoo In Seminole!
I have a vested interest in the sur­
vival of the zoo in Seminole County,
having been a member of the Seminole
County Long Range R ecreational
Planning Committee when the land was
acquired where the zoo is it was
acquired for a park. Also, I contributed
to the starting ol the zoo.
However, there are some questions
that need to be answered before the zoo
is funded from the ta x p a y e rs'
pocketbook. That pocketbook does have
a bottom, in spite of the fact that those
who draw their living from it are like
the grave and the barren womb, they
cry not enough, from the President to
the cleaners of the Cloaca Maxmus.
The question.? that need to be an­
swered are:
1. How many tourists use this

facility? For every dollar they spend
there, someone in the area gets $25, at
least that was my experience when I
ran the Fishing Camp on East 46.
2.) How much of the over-head of the
zoo goes to salaries and “freebies” for
zoo personnel?
3.i How much goes for feed and
upkeep of the zoo?
4. ) What are the possibilities of the
zoo being flooded out of existence by
another 1953 high-water? ll is a distinct
possibility considering the possibility of
a hurricane on top of the present high
water.
5. ) Why has there been no Bill-Board
advertising the zoo put on 1-4 like the
one that ad v ertised the Port-ofSanford? We are still paying for the
bonds and-or money that was borrowed

to build this facility and probably for
another 10-15 years.
If the zoo goes to Orlando, we will still
have a very nice park as was originally
intended and the natural flora and
fauna would survive there as nature
intended.
As for the cages that would be left, if
the people decide against funding this
project, "Comes the Revolution” they
could be used to put those politicians in
who do not seem to know that the
taxpayers pocketbook has a bottom.
Keep the zoo in Seminole County, but
do not let it become a reservation for
"fat-cats," unless they are caged for
the people’s education.
S B. "Jim ” Crowe
Sanford

Herald Coverage Is Appreciated
By publicizing our events, The
Evening H erald had consistently
helped Disabled American Veterans
Seminole Chapter 30, We thank you.
This year you and The Evening
Herald helped us again. You publicized
our installation (Sunday, June 27,
1982), and you listed our officers. You

assigned a staff photographer to take
pictures of our installation. You
published these pictures. You even
gave us your file copy of TWs in­
stallation picture;
We sent this file copy and a copy of
the other pictures to the D.A.V.

National Headquarters in Cincinnati,
Ohio.
The m em bers and officers of
Seminole Chapter 30 thank you for
helping us to publicize our events.
John E. Mackey
Commander
Sanford

Sanford Zoo Future Will Improve
The zoo was an attraction in Sanford, of the existing zoo in downtown San­
even when il was in the city and located ford.
in very small, antiquated and un­
We had to make surveys of the rough
san itary q u arters. When the city terrain where the zoo Is now located.
fathers wanted to get rid of the zoo We had to have meetings and con­
while I was a patient at the V.A. ferences with architects and engineers
Hospital in Gainesville during the and have plans drawn for buildings and
months of April, May and June in 1970,1 locations, land clearing, gradings,
read an article in the Sanford Herald in feasibility studies, build access roads
which the Sister Organization went on and finally the buildings.
record to try and save the zoo.
One of the toughest chores was to
I immediately sat down and wrote a
short letter to them congratulating raise the finances to meet the dally,
them on their effort to save the zoo and weekly and monthly obligations. The
I offered my help to the extent of my first big boost came when our good
capacity. I Joined the Zoological Society trustees obligated them selves by
and was one of the trustees during its signing notes so the Zoological Society
organization period and during the could borrow a large sum of money to
most trying early times. We finally got finance the building of the buildings and
organized after much effort. After habitats for the zoo use and necessities.
much more work we were able to get We did receive considerable help from
the land at the present location of the our suppliers and from some sub­
zoo. That was only the beginning as we c o n tr a c ts . Without this extra help the
had already accepted the responsibility zoo would be impossible. We are largely

17 , 1987-SA

Who'll Care Oct. 5?

OUR READERS WRITE
On Jan. 31, 1982, former Vice
President Walter Mondale, speaking at
the opening of the Chicago Gift Show at
McCormick place Mid: "Nobody un­
derstands the Federal Reserve, not
him, not even the Federal Reserve
Board members. It's like following a
blackbird in the night. If anyone says
that they understand the Federal
Reserve Board and just how it works in
the economy, I'd sure like to meet him
because I’ve been looking for 20 years.1’

Sunday. Sept.

indebted to A1 Rozon, the officers and
trustees for their undying endurance
and patience to finally see the zoo
opening on July 4th, 1975.
I cannot see how anyone would want
to turn all this hard work and efforts
over to Orlando to establish a zoo has
been a much greater chore than anyone
can realize and it sure has been a boost
to (he city of Sanford.
The big blows that have hurt the zoo
are as follows: No. 1). Inflation. No. 2)
The hurricane storm. No. 3). The Auto
Train going out of business and No. 4).
The bad rainy weather.
If we can endure for the next couple
months, the weather should Improve
and the Northern tourists will soon be
coming down and I feel sure that the zoo
can and will endure.
Stephen G. BaiintSr.
Sanford

Let's Not Get Vote O u t!
The ballots have been cast, the
winners have been chosen (with the
exception of a few candidates cast into
runoff races on Oct. 5i and as expected
the voter turnout was something less
than a shining example of the American
democratic process at work.
In Seminole County, a. paltry 20.2
percent of the reg istered voters
bothered to go to the polls. And this
despite the usual entreaties to the
electoral masses to get nut and vote.
And that is the rub
We should never plead with people to
vote. It is a perverted sense of civicduty to beg the uncaring and unin­
formed to "Go to the polls and vote for
the Candidate of your choice:" More
often than not, they don’t know who is
running, for what, or where they stand
on the issues.
In the days of our young Republic,
Thomas Jefferson was regarded as
something of a radical since he felt that
yeoman farmers, the men he felt best
able to rule, should be the ones who
actually governed. It was their duty, as
well as their natural right, to keep the
narrow selfishness of H am iltonian
merchants and traders from ruining
the revolutionary ideals of America.
As the nation grew, the right of males
to vote expanded rapidly in the North
and West. By 1850, outside the South,
the common man was in control of his
own government at all levels in
America. Such citizen governments
were not marvels of efficiency, but they
managed to govern effectively. They
were personal, human governments
selected and run bv those who cared

With
A Grain
Of Salt
Itritt Smith

about such things
Granted, the system was not perfect.
The secret ballot did not exist in most
places. The Fifth Amendment gave
blacks the right to vote, but it was
calmly ignored in most of the country
Except m the East, there was no rush to
grant voting rights to immigrants
Even so, America’s great unplanned
system of voluntary governm ents
worked astonishingly well And it was
not necessary to plead and beg the
masses to help carry it out
Somewhere in the middle of the 20th
century, perhaps because of a rampant
guilt complex about the bad old days
when not everyone could vote,
Americans acquired an obsession that
if only we could get all eligible people to
register and vote, we could attain some
sort of political Nirvana
Not so. Why for Pete's sake, should
we all suffer from the negative legacy
of shared ignorance" Why should we
encourage those who do not care and do
not know, those whose vote can be
bought for a catchy jingle or a hand­
some face, to dominate elections’’
So let’s halt this foolishness of trying
to browbeat, brainwash or cajole
people to get out and vote Who needs

them ’ if an individual has to be bogged
to vote, the chances are excellent that
he doesn’t know what Is going on He's
probably, purposely indifferent, voting
only because a special pleader worked
a psychological trick on his moribund
sense of civic duty 13ns person must be
shown a ballot, told how to mark it and
told who is running for what office
before lie shares with us a blind guess
based on i gnorance.
These a re the constituents of
demagogues, willing to sit home and
gripe about the good ol' days, emerging
info politics only a! election time And
they v o lt blindly, unwilling to do more
until their private pet ox is gored
So let’s get away from this silly,
fatuous, undemocratic process of using
sneaky, moral suasion or the latest
psychological gimmick to plead with
the,inert and Ignorant to get out and
vote. Let’s make voter registration
easy and reasonable, open to aU per­
sons Then let’s leave the people to get
involved and vote if they want and to
leave them alone if they don't
Elitism'’ I think not Simply let the
people'who care take part If someone
doesn't want to vote, or forgets, "or
doesn't register, well, to hell, with thorn
But to peddle a hard sell for three
months before an election to justify
irnbecilic notions, of low-powered
political philosophers that the more
people who vote the better the result of
the election — that is sheer lunacy The
notion that , the unwilling should lie
encouraged, to share the fruits of their
ignorance w ith all of us is absurd

Wom en Do Outlive Men
By C U l’DK I’KITKK
Chairman, House Select
Committee on Aging
(J. My husband upset me last evening
hy telling me I should be prepared to
live without him for many years — that
chances are he'll die much earlier than
I will. We're both in our 50s now.
A
Your husband is right that
generally speaking, women do outlive
men. Though women tend to have more
health problems than men throughout
their lives, they are less likely to be
seriously 111. Men more frequently
experience coronary heart disease,
arteriosclerosis, pneum onia, em ­
physema and other serious illnesses
than do women
Iri the group aged 65 and over, there
are about 100 women to every 68 men.
As the age advances to 85 years, there
are only- 45 men per 100 women.
Projections are that by the year 2050,
there will be 33.4 million women and
22.1 million men aged 65 and older in
this country.
Unfortunately, the added years that
women live may be lonely ones; and
often too, women give little thought to
the economic and social realities of
outliving their spouses. While your
husband's concern may have unsettled
you, his underlying message — that one
should prepare for the possibility of
widowhood — is realistic and im­
portant.
No one chooses to think about life
without loved ones, but each of us
should take some time to contemplate
and prepare for independent survival.
Your husband's foresight should also
include the possibility of his living
alone, since statistics ami probabilities
do not encompass our individual

Growing
Older
l .S. Hep.
Claude Pepper

histories and unique characteristics
In 1978, life expectancy at birth was
77.2 years for women and 69.5 for men
It is estimated that hy 2050 the figures
will increase to 81 years for females
and 71.8 for men.
1). I watched the president's speech
about the tax bill with great interest.
My understanding was that the hill’s
major effect would be to raise taxes.
Now I've read some references in the
new spaper to dram atic cuts in
Medicare resulting from the passage of
the tax bill. Is it true that Medicare and
Medicaid were slashed ns part of that
same legislation?
A. U nfortunately, yes. The bill
received most attention publicly with
respect to its lax increase provisions,
as you suggest. But the tax bill was also
used as the mechanism to make
dram atic reductions in the Medicare
and Medicaid programs, and because
of their inclusion in the tax bill
"package," these provisions took many
by surprise.
Of the total 117.2 billion in spending
reductions included in the bill, $14.4
billion, or over 82 percent, come from
the Medicare and Medicaid programs.
The tax bill reductions in these
programs are actually higher lhan
originally recommended by the
Congress in June in its First Budget

Resolution, winch is part of an annual
■blueprint" ft»r congressional action on
spending
Medicare will be cut b&gt; $13 3 billion
by fiscal year 1985 and Medicaid by $1 1
billion over the same three-year period
Tlie bill includes some provisions that
will result in direct out-of-pocket cost
increases for the elderly, others are
uuned at providers of health care such
as hospitals and physicians,
The m onthly prem ium th at in­
dividuals pay for Medicare P art It
coverage
currently $12 20 per month
will increase to $13.70 in July 1983
and $15.30 per month in July 1984 as
part of the new lax bill.
A change that could create problems
for older workers provides that those
65-69 years of age must be offered the
same health plan as that offered by the
employer to younger workers. Prior to
the enactment of this bill, the employer
could shift an employee to Medicare as
soon as he turned 65 This resulted in a
significant cost-savings for employers,
which in turn made older workers more
desirable to employers. Now, however,
an employer must give the older
worker the option to be covered by the
company plan. The increased costs
may cause some employers to shy
away from hiring older workers.
Other provisions Include Medicare
coverage for hospice care with certain
qualifications; reductions in Medicare
reimbursement for radiologist and
pathologist services; removal of the
three-day hospital stay requirement for
skilled nursing facility care, and the
requirement that federal employees
pay the hospital insurance tax and
receive Medicare eligibility based on
length of covered service.

Industrial Espionage Is
Worse Than Crime, Ah, So
By JOHN ADAMS WETTERGREKN
* Special to The Herald
The indictment of 17 employees of
Hitachi and Mitsubishi for industrial
espionage against IBM lias drawn wide
attention.
And rightly so. For the case pits the
commercial honor of Japan against the
technological superiority of the U.S.
But ultimately the m atter involves
more lhan our commercial interest'as
against that of our industrial rival. Our
military advantage, as against that of
our deadly enemies, is also at stake.
Industrial espionage Is a special
problem for the electronics industry
just now, because that industry Is
closely competitive, rapidly growing,
and very profitable. A lead of just a few
months in the design, production, or
marketing of the latest electronic
device can mean tens or even hundreds
of millions in profits. Thus, otherwise
resp ectab le electronics companies
have been caught trying to acquire not
only information about their rivals’
plans, but also their competitors'
prototypes, products, and tools of
design, testing, and production. At the
extrem e, some companies have been

willing to sabotage others’ operations.
Even small electronics firm s, and
even firms not engaged in production
for high-tech weaponry (such as that
used by Israel to defeat the Syrians’
Soviet-supplied airforce) take ex­
traordinary security precautions. The
largest, most innovative firms go far
beyond the usual armed guards, plant
passes, electronic surveiiance, alarms,
and fences. IBM, for example, employs
several former CIA officers, at very
high sa la rie s, to superintend the
secrecy of its plants and employees.
Neverlhuless, IBM Is "penetrated"
often — so often, it is rumored, that the
com pany’s managers have to decide
which cases are worthy of prosecution.
S ecu rity
m easures,
however
rig o ro u s, have not p rev en ted the
development of international black
m arkets fur electronics devices and
information. These m arkets greatly
benefit some electronics compunies in
their struggle with their competitors.
More important, though, these markets
benefit the Soviets’ GRU (military
intelligence agency). Recently, the
Commerce department leaked the news
that some information and good pirated

in the U.S. for. commercial advantage
end up in Hie hands of Soviet agents in
Tokyo. The GRU is also reported to be
active in the black and grey m arkets of
Taiw an. Hong Kong, Singapore,
Thailand, b is Angeles, and St*n Jose.
California.
The Soviet Union is not the only one of
our potential military enemies involved
in industrial espionage. Chipex, a,tiny
electronics firm in Silicon Valley, was
recently alleged in fact to be a Com­
munist Chinese front. Moreover, an
FBI investigation at General Electric
in San Jose indicates that the Mainland
Chinese are involved in an international
high-tech counterfeiting ring.
But it is Moscow that is most active
on the industrial espionage front.
Because they have a highly centralized,
m inutely pervasive intelligence
operation the Soviets can take ad­
vantage of even small lapses in
security, legitim ate Soviet businesses
employ GRU agents: in the past six
months alone, 19 employees of Aeroflot,
the Soviet commercial airline, have
been expelled from 11 countries for
spying.

1 r

�Sunday, Sept. 12, 1983

4A— Evening Herald. Sanford. FI.

Economists: Nation Has Begun Recovery
The nation's economy has begun in­
ching off the bottom in “a slow-motion
recovery," the National Association of
Business Economists (NABE) reported
Friday after a quarterly survey of its
members.
"The survey generally supports earlier
expectations of an economic recovery in
the second half of 1982, but the business
economists now expect the size and scope
of recovery will Ire more limited than
forecast last May," NABE President Don
B. Conlan told a news conference.
Helping nudge up recovery will be
lower interest rates, continued success in
the battle against inflation and better
control of inventories, the economists
predicted. But the NABE members
boosted their unemployment forecast,

said the deficit will be above government
predictions, and changed from positive to
negative their predictions on business
investment.
Drawing on the experiences of their
Ortii manufacturing, trade, business and
banking firms, the 200 participating
economists reported that in the past
three months there has been a “ slight
increase" , in demand, especially in
m anufacturing where 30 percent
reported increased demand compared to
15 percent in a similar survey taken last
May.
"P ro fit m argins appear to be
stabilizing after serious declines in the
past year," Conlan said. "Almost onethird now say that margins are rising, up
from 18 percent in the previous survey.

BUSINESS
IN BRIEF
Chamber, SBDC Sponsors
Four Business Seminars
The Greater Sanford Chamber of Commerce and the
Small Business Development Center of the University
of Central Florida will present four seminars at the
downtown Sanford Chamber of Commerce Building at
400 E. First St., from Sept. 23 through Oct. 14
Each of the seminars is tailored specifically to the
needs of the Central Florida area small business
community.
Topics to be presented during the 7-10 p in. seminars
include small business environment, accounting and
recordkeeping systems, tax planning for the small
business, and effective use of advertising and sales
promotion;
Enrollment is limited, and pre-registration is
recommended. The registration fee *s $5 for each
evening of participation. For further information, call
the UCF Small Business Development Center at 2752796.
The program is additionally co-s|&gt;onsored with the
UCF Management Institute and the Small Business
Administration.

Johnston Joins Tire Firm

‘To be sure." he added, "42 percent
reported profits still falling, but added,
"that's way down from 60 percent last
time.
"This profits improvement seems to be
developing despite evidence that prices
corporations charge still are slowing
down or even declining," Conlan said
"This suggests considerable im ­
provement in productivity." He noted
that economists reporting prices “still
falling” jumped to 35 percent in the new
survey from 21 percent in May.
Also adding to the profit picture, he
said, was "continued moderation of
wages and salaries.” Fifty-one percent of
the econom ists reported unchanged
wages and salaries at their firms,
compared to 40 percent in May.

The employment outlook “remains
fairly bleak," he said with only 9 percent
of those taking part in the survey

spending is declining now . Only 32 per­
cent reported that condition last May,"
he said.

reporting rising employment (compared
to 19 percent in May). The number
reporting falling employment remained
almost unchanged at 34 percent.

On the overall economy, the NABE
members lowered their sights on the
near-term outlook. Real GNP ("The total
output of goods and services in the
nation") for the second half of the year is
now expected to average significantly
less than 3 percent compared to a
forecast of better than 3 percent made
last May.

Spending for plant and equipment
shows "significant deterioration," he
said Only 28 percent reported their
capital investments rising during the
past three months compared to 11 per­
cent last May, and one third now report
"falling" capital outlays compared to 28
percent in May.
"Tlie situation is even worse in the
manufacturing sector, where nearly half
of all respondents report that capital

J.C. Penney Company, Inc. contributed
approximately $179.2 million to the economy of
Florida last year, according to Edward R.
Hemann. store manager of J.C. Penney.
Sanford Plaza.
The company's purchases from suppliers of
goods and services in the state amounted to
$95.2 million, most of which was for mer­
chandise distributed throughout 2.000 retail
outlets in the United States.
Combined payrolls in the state amounted to
$79.4 million, going to J.C. Penney's 19,642
associates (employees), employed in full-or
part-time positions during the year. The

John M. Godfrey, chief economist for
Barnett Banks of Florida, Inc., was
elected to a three-year term on the NABE
governing board.

Keyes Promotes Four
Andrew M Spatafora has recently been
promoted to president of Keyes Florida, Inc.,
according to Nicholas B Johns, chairman
Spatafora started with the Keyes over four
years ago and was the district sales manager
of the company's Hallandale Beach office He
then moved up to the Orlando area to become
the executive vice president and director of
training and recruiting for Keyes five Orlando
area offices.
Spatafora has over $10 million is sales and

holds the company record of 10-4 listings during
one quarter of the calendar year.
In addition to Spatafora's promotion, three
other appointments have been made in the
Orlando area. Bud Weirich has been appointed
district sales manager of Keyes, Fla., Inc.’s
Winter Bark office (372 W. Fairbanks Avo.),
Joan Hoemng has been made assistant
manager of the company's Like Mary office
(549 W. Like Mary Blvd.) and Wallace
Yergler, assistant manager of the Lee Road
office 12211 Lee Road).

WALL ST. OFFICE
•lames A. Weinberg. owner and president of The Wall St. Co., realtors,
congratulates Becky Courson of Sanford, sales manager for the company's
latest real estate office located in Driftwood Village, Lake Mary. She lias
been active in the real estate business for seven years and holds a brokersalesman license. She is married to Dennis Courson and has tw o children.
The Wall St. Company has an office in Altamonte Springs and an Orlando
office opening later this month. The firm began in February.

Florida V isitors
Lik e W hat They S e e
CHUCK JOHNSTON

Southland Is Praised
The Southland Corporation has been cited by the
March of Dimes Birth Defects Foundation for
nationwide fund-raising efforts. Southland employees
contributed more than $1 million to programs comliating birth defects, the nation's most serious child
health problem.
In recognition of this achievement, Joe C. Thompson
Jr., Southland executive vice president-retail, was
presented with a special award at a recent meeting of
the Board of Trustees at March of Dimes headquarters
in White Plains, N.Y. Thompson is a trustee of the
foundation, having joined the board in December 1981.
The award is an original lithograph by Francoise Gilot.
For more than four years, Southland Corporation
employees and franchisees throughout the country
have supported March of Dimes program of research,
medical service, professional and public health
education. All programs are directed ut prevention of
birth defects, which strike more than a quarter-million
infants every year with physical or mental damage.
Since 1980, Southland’s 7-Eleven Stores have spon­
sored the nationwide WalkAmerlca fund-raising
campaign. These efforts have included special
promotions and participation by 7-Eleven teams in
WalkAmerlca.
Southland participation started four years ago when
its Dairies group sponsored the recruitment of
volunteers for the annual Mothers March Against Birth
Defects for the March of Dimes.

WINNERS

H trtld Photo by Tom Vincent

Nickel Day winners in (be Sanford Plaza contest are Catrino Sunders of
Sanford, (left), first place winner. Margaret (lustofson of Sanford, (right),
third place winner, and Bernard Moore, not pictured, second place winner.
Helping the winners with their electric blanket and ice cream freezer is Jack
Stankos. merchandise manager of J.C. Penney's.

An in-depth study of foreign visitors to
Florida shows that the vast majority enjoyed
their stay in the Sunshine State and want to
return again in the future, according to
Secretary of Commerce Stuart Edgerly.
Edgerly said the study, which was prepared
under the direction of the Florida Department
of Commerce Division of Tourism and the
Metropolitan Dade County Tourism Depart­
ment, revealed that 87 percent of the in­
ternational visitors surveyed said they would
visit Florida again.
“Half of the participants in the survey said
they had traveled to Florida at least once
before, and almost none had any major
complaints about their stay here," said
Edgerly.
"Of those who said they would not be
returning, the main reason given was a desire

Analysis St Technology, Inc., has announced the opening of a
new office in Orlando in (he Essex Building at 3101 Maguire
Blvd. to be managed by Samuel C. Worrell of Loogwood.
Worrell lias diversified management and operational ex­
perience in training and program planning.

He said the survey also indicated the
average "foreign visitor" is a family of 2.4
persons, staying 11 nights, mainly in hotels
and motels. The average family income was
$31,000 and the average expenditure while in
Florida was $2,000.
Three leading factors were cited for the
decision to visit Florida, according to Edgerly.
"They were motivated by the state’s
combination of climate and natural ami
manmade attractions. Many mentioned the
ability to visit friends and relatives and many
more indicated that they were influenced by
word-of-mouth recommendation} from travel
agents or friends who had been to Florida," he
said.

Florida No. I
One of the nation's most prestigious business location firms,
the Fantus Co. of Chicago, has confirmed Florida’s ranking as
the number one business climate in America for manufac­
turers, Secretary of Commerce Stuart Edgerly has announced.
Edgerly said an unpublished Fantus study concurs with a
survey of U.S. manufacturers by Alexander Grant Si Co., that
rated Florida the country’s most outstanding business climate.
Fantus cited the unpublished study in a recent report for Lee
County.
The l,ee report was quoted as saying, “The State of Florida
offers an outstanding business climate for manufacturers. In
1981, Florida received the best overall ranking among the 48
contiguous states in a comparative study of a wide range of
factors affecting business climate by Alexander Grant L Co.

"I love the telephone industry und the challenges
that go with it!”
Those are the enthusiastic words of Erwin Fer­
nandes or "Wynn" as he prefers to be called, branch
manager for the Orlando office of National Business
Communications Corp. (NBC), a private com­
munications company based in Pompano Beach.
Before Joining National Business, he was a con­
sultant to the Orange and Seminole County sheriff’s
departments in the field of electronic security systems.
Fernandes Is credited with the design of the security
system currently used by the Florida State Regional
Crime laboratory at the Sanford Airport.
As branch m anager for NBC since January, Fer­
nandes oversees the marketing and operations of the
Orlando office. In addition, he also serves as liaison
with the home office, does personal selling and has
managerial and administrative responsibilities.
•

iLongwood Man Heads Office
i

to see other parts of the U.S., not because
something was wrong with Florida."

Business Attracter

'Wynn' Likes NBC

]fl

The business economists expect the
Consumer Price Index to "hold in the 6
percent area" not only during the next 18
months but in the coming decade as well

retailer employs more than 187,000 in the
United States and overseas.
Hemann said his company paid $4.2 million
in corporate income, property, unemployment
insurance, and other taxes in Florida.
In addition to business related expenditures,
the company’s stores and other facilities
contributed $469,000 in direct support of civic
and charitable causes in the communities
where they are located. Approximately 75 per
cent of the company’s $5 6 million in con­
tributions are made by stores and other field
facilities to organizations providing direct
services to people.

He
form erly
was
manager of the Goodyear
Tire Center in Sanford and
will be the new manager at
It Si E Tire

f

The NABE members think that real
growth from the fourth quarter of this
year to the fourth quarter of 1983 will be
3.4 percent while the Administration
expects 4.4 percent growth. "Even the
Administration's target represents one of
the weakest recoveries in post-war
history," Conlan said.

Penney Contributes
Millions To Economy

J.C . Si Donny Robertson
of It Si E Tire Co., Highway
17-92 in Sanford, have
announced Chuck Johnston
has joined their firm,

He has 15 years ex­
perience in enr and truck
tires, and lias had special
training in auto service
work.

Conlan said the survey “suggests real
GNP grow th for the second half of 1982 at
only 2.7 percent — less than half the 5.2
percent growth rate for the second half
implied in the Administration's recent
mid-year review of the Federal Budget."

"This is a fairly wide difference of
opinion," he noted.

Tlte same conclusion was reached in a recent study by
Fantus Co. comparing the 48 states on the basis of such factors
as corporate and personal income taxes, state debt and ex­
penditure levels, labor legislation and state support for
vocational education."
Edgerly said the Grant study was an objective ranking of the
states by factors selected by the Council of State Manufac­
turers' Associations that directly affect the cost of doing
business.

OAKLAWN MAUSOLEUM
Jim (timer (left), Pres. of Oaklawn Memorial
Park, on Highway 46A near Interstate 4, has
announced Phase One of Oaklawn's new chapel of
serenity mausoleum complex is now under

by Tom V I iw m i I

construction. Assisting It inter are Bob Frazee.
(center), family service director, and Al Isaacs,
owner.

"E ach ranking of Florida as the nation's top business
climate stands on its own m erits," Edgerly said, “ but when
two highly respected professional groups reach the same
conclusion, it is clear that Florida's potential to achieve its
goals to diversify our economy through manufacturing is
unlimited."
"The dramatic broadening of the Florida economy in less
than a decade Is a major economic story that tells the world
that we are not only the leading tourist destination in this
hemisphere, but a growing force In international commerce
and finance, as well as high-technology manufacturing."

�Sunday, Sept. 12. 1982—7A

Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

fliers gocothau fufSMY sen iu m u

nolo,
-S A N F O R D -

154 ABC’S

HWY. 17-92 South City Limits
Liquor Dept Store &amp; Lounge

50* DRINKS
ML
4.59 750
86° Scotch cashi
Smirnoff 80° Vodka 6.69 int.
Ml
8.49 750
Tanqueray Gin
730
9.29 Ml
Wild Turkey 101
6.69 in.
Early Times str. kt. h i .
Canadian LTD "SSSS5T’ 6.19 in.
Beam’s = 90° KY. BRB.6.99 m.
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Bacardi Rum
11.59 m.
Cutty Sark Scotch
Wiser’s 10 yr. Canadian 9.99 m.
1.75
Fleischmann’s Vodka ’.V'8.39 in.
ITI.
11.49 1.75
Gordon’s Gin
in.
11.49 I.7S
Harvey’s Scotch
ABC Wine
4.99 3 in.
1.19 i m.
Pepsi or Diet Pepsi
3.69 6 Ml.
Konigsbacher
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1.59 6 Ml.
DiaTZ
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IVtllK

“

Hpralt) Mfiotoi by Tom Vincent

Assistant Casselberry Police Chief VVintlirop
dales (left) inspects progress on the departmen I's new office.

Spacious lobby of the new Casselberry City Hall
awaits the big move this weekend,

Casselberry Moving Into N ew City Hall
Movers will be at work this weekend moving
the city of Casselberry's various departments
into the new $1,082,390 municipal complex at 95
I^ake Triplett Drive.
All of the city's offices will be in the new twostory. 23,000-square-foot complex except for
the police and fire departm ents which will
occupy the entire building currently serving as
City Hall next door, and the public works and
recreation departments, which have separate
facilities. Work was started on the newcomplex in November, 1981. The building price
also includes renovation of the old City Hall.

The city utility department, which has been
leasing space across U.S. Highway 17-92 in the
Casselberry 1-and Co. building will move into
the new facility.
The City Council will hold its first session in
the new theater-style council chamber
Monday at 7:30 p.m, when a public hearing
will be held on the proposed 1982-83 budget.
The tentative tax rate is $3,586,207, $1.08 per
$1,000 assessed property valuation.
The former council chamber Is being
renovated to provide office space for the police
and fire departments as well as a community

meeting room.
The new complex was paid for by the utility
department from various stabilization fees,
construction funds and a bond issue. The city
will reimburse the utility department from the
general fund by leasing space for city use,
according to Ed Keuling, utility director He
said his department would be reimbursed
completely by next year.
As part of the updating of the old building,
two radio consoles will be installed providing
24-hour dispatch service for the utilitydepartment as well as the police and fire

departments. There will be two dispatchers on
duty seven days a week around the clock,
Keuling said.
Keuling said all the sewage lift stations will
be radio controlled and water plants will lx*
computerized so that the dispatcher will be
alerted immediately should there be a
malfunction. All radio communications with
utility trucks will go through the dispatchers
and be recorded on tape, he added
Keuling said the city’s computers have
already been installed in the new building and
will be ready for business Monday morning.
—JANE CASSELBERRY

10 Vying For Assistant Superintendent Posts
Three Seminole County school administrators are
among six candidates for a newly-created assistant
superintendent position.
Dr ilortense G. Evans, administrative trainee;
Owen It. McCarron, director of instructional per­
sonnel; and Ann W. Neiswender, assistant director
of personnel,are among six finalists for assistant
superintendent of administration sen-ices.
The three other candidates for the post are Dr.
John G. Bolin, assistant superintendent of
management and personnel services in Orange

County; Dr. Honald
E. Etheridge, executive
secretary Virginia Association of school ad­
ministrators; and Dr. Garth G, Yarnall, director of
special projects, Sarasota County School Board.
The six candidates were sclecled from among 40
applicants. The job includes responsibility for
coordinating administrative activities.
Four finalists have also been selected for the
assistant superintendent of facilities services post.
The finalists, are: Benny A. Arnold, director of
administration, Putnam County Schools; Fred W.

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-

Q

[GENERAL ^

Herald Photo by Tom Vincent

The Sanford Breakfast Rotary Club will hold a Charity Auction Sunday from
1p.m. to 5 p.m. under the big tent at Hob Dance Dodge, 5152 Highway 17-92 in
Ixjngwood. The auctioneer will be Art Grindle. Shown with one of the many
treasures to be auctioned is LcRoy llobh, left, and Duane Harrell, auction
committee members.

get blurred and voters don’t get around to taking a
stand."
Streetman predicted a high level of enthusiasm in
the Nov. 2 general election and a turnout as good as
an average off-year general election.
Wack noted that political parties generally put
forth a effort to get out the vote In general elections.
“We will be mounting a very substantial effort to
get out the vote then," he said.
" I ’m in charge of that effort for the Democratic
Party in Seminole County," Wack said.
Wack was especially interested that even though
the genera] turnout in Tuesday’s election was low,

21.6 percent ol the Democrats vuieu while 20.4
(&gt;ercent of the Republicans did. "Generally, the
turnout of Republicans is somewhat higher than
Democrats," he said.
,

With attention among Republicans narrowed to
Poole and BludwncJb, the voters will have an op­
portunity to make a good judgement, Streetman
said.
I Tomorrow library referendum opinions).

They could not rem ain in their homes, because
short-falling bombs and spreading radiation would
kill them. And they could not run either, because,
under the city's current evacuation plan, they would
be directed through the Whiteman missile field.
What to do then?
Well, they might go underground.
That is they might if it can be arranged. Kansas
City is sitting on top of nearly 80 million square feet
of limestone caverns, and some residents here
would like to develop them for civil defense. The
residents say the caverns would make the biggest
and perhaps best fallout shelter in the world.
Certainly there’s no disputing the part about size.

The Bethany Falls limestone deposit has been
mined for rock for nearly 75 years, and the caves
that have been cut are prodigious. They run from
the southern edge of town to as far north as
leavenworth, Kan., 20 miles up the Missouri River.
Some of the caverns are so enormous they are
connected by roads with center lines. Others are
several stories high. The 80 million square feet is
randomly divided into 12 major caves, but CD
specialists say that if it were laid in a 100-foot wide
lane, il would stretch for 150 miles.
That’s plenty of space for the Kansas City
population, apparently. In fact, the specialists say
there would be room to spare

339 0001

1

ELECTRIC]

Join The Hundreds
Soon To Be Thousands
O f Satisfied Patients
A t The NEW

SA N FO R D
D EN T A L C E N T E R

Streetman said the turnout in the second primaryon Oct.5 may be worse than last Tuesday. "I cer­
tainly don’t anticipate it being better," he said.

Underground Movement Afoot In K.C.
ByTOMTIEDE
KANSAS CITY (NEA) - Let’s be frank about it.
f the United States and the Soviet Union were to
&gt;egin shooting their weapons a t one another today,
hings would not look good for Kansas City. It is too
Jose to too many places that would become thernonuclear targets in a time of war.
There is a Titan Intercontinental Missile base to
he near southwest. And the headquarters for the
itrategic Air Command is located in Omaha, fewer
han 200 miles lo the north. There are also 150
dinuteman missile silos at Whiteman Air Force
iase; some of them are barely 30 miles away.
So the city's 1 million people could be stymied.

G U S T A F S O N LoFA T
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Heats in Winter.. .Cools in Summer...
Saves energy all year ’round.

... Election Forecasts Not Good
Continued From Page 1A
County, says there was not as much visibility of
electioneering by the candidates.
“ I don’t think a very large number of people were
even aware that there was an election. If they knew,
I’m not sure they were particularly aware of what
races were involved," Wack said.
Fred Streetman, GOP state committeeman from
Seminole County, said most of the races were very
low-key.
"We had no candidate anyone who felt par­
ticularly endeared to, even though they may have
had favorties," said Streetm an. "Where (here are
multiple candidate prim aries, competition tends to

HAPPY HOUR : r .

H « ||

Hay, educational facilities specialist, Florida
Department of Education; Andrew J. Knight,
superintendent, Okeechobee County School Board;
and J. Hunter I'age, director of business services,
Franklin County School Board.
The |x*rson chosen for the post will he responsible
for school facilities in the county.
Superintendent Robert Hughes will interview the
candidates this month and expects to make
recommendations for the selections to the School
Board in early October
— MICHKAI. BEHA

Grindle On
SBA Council
The Jacksonville District
Office of the U.S. Small
Business Administration has
announced the appointment of
A rthur E. G rindle
of
Altam onte Springs to the
J a c k s o n v ille
D is tric t
Advisory Council.
Grindle is a small business '' *A
consultant, the founder of the
Small Business Institute of
America, is active in several
family-owned businesses ,
including Art Grindle, Inc. i v
Auto Sides, 4-Wheel Ranches,
Arthur E. Grindle Real Estate
P roperties
and
Dixie
Advertising, as well as manycivic activities in the Central
Florida area.
The council is comprised of
b u s in e s s ,
fin a n c ia l,
professional and academic
leaders who serve as a link
between the small business
community and the Small
Business Administration. The
council provides the agency ROTARIANS
with data and information on
the problems and needs of
small business and makes
recom m endations for im ­
proving the delivery of SBA
services to small business.
-... »

&amp;

James P. Costello, D.D.S.
OUR FEES ARE LOW

C A LL

T O D A Y

321-4800

WE QUOTE ALL FEES ON THE PHONE
FEES QUOTED ARE FEES CHARGED
1806 S. French Avenue (17-92, Next To Sanford Middle School) * Sanford
Open 8:00 A.M. • 5:00 P.M. Monday-Friday

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FU LL X - R A Y S i
C L E A N IN G !
&amp; EXAM i
Plttl . . .
Written E ilim it*

I

L - —

i

�SPORTS

B A - E v e n in g H erald , Sanford, FI,

Su n d ay, Scp l. I I , l?B]

L a s t-D riv e B lu n d e r D o o m s
Friday’s games
Titusville
Astronaut
1G,
Seminole 10
Rockledge 23, Lake Mary 0
Lyman 2H, Boone G
Oviedo 0, Umatilla o
Lake Howell 211, Itishop 0
Coloigal 20. Lake Itrantley 0
Trinity Prep l'.l, Tampa Temple
Heights 12 OT
Oak llitlge 11. Spruce Creek 0
New Smyrna Itearh 12,
Mainland 2
Seahrer/e 11, I) e La ml 7
Winter Hark 21. Lakeland 7
St. Cloud ;i:t. Clermont
1'vans is, Apopka 11
Kissimmee 11, Haines City 0
Fust is 10, Wildwood IK OT
Kathleen 11, Plant City o
Florida I’rep Football Results
Hy United Press International
S. Miami 20 Miami 0
Southridge 21 Homestead 7
Jackson 19 Central 18
Columbus 35 Sunset 0
Norland 20 Edison 0
Miami Beach 27 N. Miami Beach 6
Ransom 21 t a Salle 0
Cocoa 14 West Orange 10
Hernando 37 Citrus 0
Satellite Beach 27 OH-Edgewater B
OR-Oak Ridge 14 Tott Orange 0
Palalka 24 Gainesville 7
Brantley, Ga. 14 Callahan W Nassau 12
Interlnchen 15 Dunnellon 13
Lake City Columbia 24 Jackson 7
Paxon 13 Fcrnandina Beach 0
Jefferson Cty 33 Ocala Vanguard 0
TA-Ijncoln 6 Wilson 2
Crescent City 18 Keystone lights 7
TA Fla High 33 TA FAMU 0
Orange Park 19 l&gt;ee 14
TP Berkeley Prep 14 Uty Christian 6
Holies 30 Episcopal 0
Green Cove-Clay 29 Bunnell Flagler 14
lave Oak 20 Hamilton County fi
Williston 51 St. Augustine 0
Bradenton 28 TP-Hillsborough 21
TP-Planl 19 TP-Jefferson 7
TP-Roblnson 35 TB Bay Tech o
Winter Haven 13 L ike Wales 7

lly CHRIS FISTER
Herald Sports Writer
TITUSVII.I.E—Seminole High turned
in a gutsy performance here Friday
night, but, at the game's most crucial
moment, the Tribe committed its most
costly mistake.
The 'Noles sloshed through an early
downpour to take a 102) lead but
Titusville A stronaut's War Eagles
buckled down and came back for a 15-10
victory.
“We did an excellent job in handling a
crisis situation," Astronaut coach Jay
Donnelly said. “This team showed an
awful lot of heart tonight.”
With just 35 seconds showing on the
Draa Field clock. Seminole faced a
fourth down and three at the Titusville
Astronaut 21. Quarterback Mike Futrell
tried a keeper up the middle but was
stopped well short of the first down.
Futrell, though, did not receive a play
from the sidelines and was forced to
audible.
“The quarterback sneak was not a
called play," Tribe coach Jerry Posey
said. "We had a play called but didn't get
it in, we should have called a timeout."
Astronaut took possession with less
than 30 seconds remaining and ran out
the clock without running a play to
preserve the win.
“We’re disappointed because we felt
we had them,” Posey said. "Inex­
perience hurt us in the long run."
Seminole shocked the War Eagle faith­
ful by scoring on its fifth play from
scrimmage after taking the opening
kickoff. The Astronaut defense was
expecting a pass but Futrell handed off to
senior running back Rendell Manley who
scam pered55 yards for the TT) with 9:54
remaining in the first quarter. After two
penalties, Paul Griffin kicked a 30-yard
extra point to put the Tribe up, 7-0.
On A stronaut’s th ird play from
scrimmage quarterback Ethan Waldron
coughed up the Kill and Tun Herring
recovered for Seminole at the Titusville
42-yard line.
Futrell then engineered an impressive
drive, completing three passes and
running for six yards on a fourth and two.
The 'Noles were haulted on Astronaut's
17 and Griffin split the uprights for a 27yard field g M and a 10-0 Seminole lead

S e m in o le

Prep Football
with 2:14 remaining in the first quarter.
“ I got a little worried when we were
down 10-0 in the first quarter," Donnelly
said. "But the key thing is the way we
cam e back, we showed that we have the
intangibles of a championship team ."
Titusville began its comeback after the
ensuing kickoff after Seminole’s second
score. The War Eagles marched 65 yards
on seven plays and were led by swift
tailback Scoltlc McConico and bruising
fullback Wendell Marshall. Marshall
lunged in from one yard out (or the TD
just three seconds into the second
quarter. Kurt Aken badly missed the
extra point attempt as Seminole's lead
was cut to 1CMJ.
Seminole didn't seem to be fazed
though as Manley returned the kickoff 30
yards. Three plays later, however,
Futrell was intercepted by Astronaut
linebacker Jim Spangler.
Titusville's next score came late in the
first half and was set up by two 15-yard
l&gt;enalties against the 'Noles. One came
on a pass interference play when
Astronaut was faced with a third and 14.
the other was a facemask penalty that
was tacked on after a 15-yard gain by
Marshall.
With 1:22 left in the half, Titusville
faced a fourth and one at the Seminole
three-yard line, Donnelly elected to go
for the field goal and Aken’s 13-yard kick
was good us the Tribe’s lead dwindled to
10-9 and that was the way it stood at the
half.
The War Eagle defense controlled
things in the second half while its offense
squandered numerous opportunities.
Astronaut’s tenacious defenders allowed
Seminole only one second-half fir at down
until less than four minutes remained in
the contest.
When McConico returned the second
half kickoff 38 yards it seemed to fire up
the War Eagles. Titusville drove to the
Seminole 19 hut came up short when
Marshall fumbled and Brian Brooks
pounced on the loose ball for Seminole.
The Tribe ran only three plays on its
first possession of the second half, put­
ting the defense back on the field with

4

Photo B y Andy .W ill

Hemlell Manley. Seminole halfback, takes off on a
fEVyard TI) romp in the first quarter against
little rest.
When Titusville look over, Marshall
romped for runs of 15 and 16 yards to set
up his own three-yard touckdown burst

Astronaut. Manley rambled for 123 yards, but the
Tribe lost. lfi-10.

with 5:38 left in the third quarter. Aken’s
PAT pul Astronaut in the lead, 16-10.
Seminole did not threaten again until
its final surge late in the game. But the

'Noles defense played tough and one
dazzling defensive play turned a War
BLUNDER, page9A

Rockledge Buries

Robey, Hawks

Lake Mary, 23-0

For Hornets

Too Intense

By SAM COOK
Herald Sports Kdltor
Most season-opening football games
are reserved for schools like Wymore
Tech or Boone or Daytona Beach eight yards and Simmons rambled for
Seabreeze.
eight more to the 19.
They are tre a te d much like
A clipping penalty set the Raiders back
homecoming games. The theory is, to the 33, but Misch hit Leonard Lee out of
■•Dot's bring in somebody we can whip up the backfield for 25 yards down to the 8.
on and make everybody happy and get Simmons muscled over on the next play
the season off on the right foot."
for the TD. John Alligood's bool made it
Rockledge High School, as the take
152) with 2:19 to go in the first quarter.
Mary Hams found out Friday night in
The Hams best scoring opportunity
their initial varsity football game, is not
came three minutes into the second
one of those whipping boys.
quarter when Hopkins broke through on a
Coach Hill McKnight's Red Raiders
Hockledge punt and nailed the kicker
dominated the Rams offensively and
before he could get off the boot.
defensively at ta k e Mary en route to an
easy 23-0 victory in the first football
ta k e Mary had the ball on the Haider
game of the season for both 3A teams.
49. Shatlo broke loose for four yards and
"They controlled the line of scrim­ followed up with one more. Frakes,
mage," said ta k e Mary coach Roger though, was caught for an eight-yard loss
Beathard. "1 knew they had a good and Hopkins had to punt.
.quarterback (Leo Misch), but I didn't
He got off a 48 yarder but Fleming
know the receivers would be that good."
returned
the ball 81 yards for a touch­
Misch, a poised four-year starter,
down.
It
was
negated, however, by a clip.
completed 7 of 14 passes for 160 yards. He
Rockledge
lost
another TD in the fourth
had several others dropped because of
quarter
on
an
Intercepted
pass because
the slippery field conditions.
of a clip.
Just as devastating was senior tailback
The Raiders were penalized 10 times
Billy Simmons who shredded the Rams'
for
130 yards. Lake Mary just two times
i defense for three touchdowns and 95
for eight yards.
yurds on 16 carries before bowing oul in
The Haiders final two points came on a
the fourth quarter.
While Misch and Simmons carried the safety when the ball was snapped over
Haiders' offense. ta k e Mary's was Hopkins’ head while he was trying to
nonexistent, The Hams did not have a punt. The ball rolled to the one-yard line
first down. They carried the ball 16 times where Hopkins batted it out of the end
for a minus 23 yards. Greg Shalto, who zone. The referee threw a flag for
shuttled between tailback and fullback, Illegally batting the ball, but Rockledge
was the leading rusher with five yards in declined the penalty and took the points.
In addition to losing the ballgame, the
; five carries. All cam e in the first half.
McKnight, though, was worried about Rams lost Junior quarterback Frakes
the ballgame, enough to send him to the with a torn ligament In his left knee. “He
bathroom twice before his morning meal. may miss as much as six to eight weeks,"
"Yeah, I puked twice before breakfast. said Beathard.
That doesn't usually happen," he said. "I
Defensively, Don Meyer collected 11
thought they’d be a little better, but I tackles while Greg Shatto added eight.
know what he’s going through. I helped Hopkins also had eight.
The Rams travel to Bartow Friday.
. start a program at Palm Bay.”

ta s s than two minutes into its opening
game Friday night, Lake Howell was
already in trouble. The Silver Hawks
fumbled on the third play from scrim­
mage and Bishop Moore took over at the
ta k e Howell 25.
It was kind of reminiscent of the way
the Hawks opened last season, early
mistakes led to six straight defeats for
Mike Btseglia’s 1981 squad. However, not
long after the fumble, the Silver Hawks
defense stopped the Hornets with a
tremendous goal line stand.
That was all it took to get Like Howell
fired up and they played with intensity
the rest of the way en route to a 26-9
victory at take Brantley Stadium.
“ We had a case of the opening game
jitters," Bisceglla said. "We only had one
or two first down the entire first half, but
our defense kept us In the ballgame."
Bishop Moore had numerous scoring
opportunities in the opening half but
came away with Just three points on a 37yard field goal by Eric Etze with 2:12
remaining in the second quarter And the
score stayed Bishop Moore 3, take
Howell 0 at halftime.

Prep Football

The Rams handed Rockledge its first
scoring opportunity three plays Into the
game when quarterback Kyle Frakes
lost the handle on a snap from center.
Robert Ctrone recovered on the take
Mary 38
Smunons ripped off 15 yards around
' the left side, then cam e back with a 23yard scamper around the right end for a
' touchdown. A two-point conversion run
made it M with 10:31 left in the quarter.
|
Five plays later, a short, 21-yard punl
by Jeff Hopkins set up Rockledge al the
50. Five running plays moved the ball to
: the 35. Misch found Stephon Fleming for

Rockledge
15 0 8 0 - 23
ta k e Mary
0 0 0 0 — 0
Rockledge — Simmons 23 run (Sim­
mons run). Rockledge — Simmons 8 run
( Alligood kick). Rockledge — Simmons 1
run (run failed). Rockledge — Safety ball
rolled out of endzone.
ta k e Mary
Rock.
0
n
First downs
35-135 16-minus 23
Hushes-yards
160
0
Passing yards
7-16-1 0-2-1
Passes
5252
1-32
Punts
' 3-2
5-2
Fumbles-lost
Penalties-yards
10-130 2-8

A fter Howell's Kendall Wherry
recovered a Bishop Moore fumble on the
Hornet's first play of the second half,
ta k e Howell scored on its first play after
the fumble. Jay Robey busted up the
middle for 17-yards and the touchdown.
The extra point failed and the Hawks
took a 6-3 lead.
“The first time we touched the ball in
the second half we scored," Bisceglia
said. “That gave the team a tremendous
lift and we just wore them down the rest
of the way."
The Hornets came back to take the lead
in the third quarter on a 56-yard touch­
down pass from Tim Schieffelin to Pete
Stapp. The PAT was blocked as Bishop
Moore took the lead, 92&gt;.
Quarterback Troy Quackenbush and
Robey were instrumental in the Hawks'
final two scoring drives, one of 69 and the
final of 59 yards. Quackenbush’s screen
passes were effective as were Robey’3
runs (Robey ended up with 164 yards on
14 carries.
Lake Howell look the lead for good
when Mike Palowitch plunged into the
end zone from one-yard out. Tito Martorel’s point pul Rowell up, 13.9,

Some Tumbles can be blamed on slippery field
conditions, but not this one. l.ake Mary tailback
Charlie l ucarelli watches Hock ledge’s Scott
Camden creep for the loose ball (above) after a
quick pitch by quarterback Scott Frakes caromed

And with 3:19 left in the game, the
off his shoulder pad. In the bottom photo,
Silver Hawks added an insurance TD
Lucarelli (no. 31), teammate Billy Vickers (no. when Robey darted 16 yards on a counter
55) atul the Raiders’ Charlie Moore join the sweep.
-C H R IS FISTER
monkey pile. Lucarelli retrieved the football, but ta k e Howell
0 0 6 14 — 20
the Rams lost the game, 23-0,
Bishop Moore
0 3 6 0 — 9

�Sunday, Sept 12, 1982—9A

Evening Herald, Sanlord, FI.

Axley, Greyhounds Steamroll Boone
By GEOFFREY GIORDANO
Herald Sports Writer
In front of a large home crowd, the
Lyman Greyhounds totally outclassed
the Boone Braves, steamrolling to a 28-6
victory Friday night in the season-opener
for both teams.
The Braves were unlucky from the
start, almost Tumbling away their firsi
drive. They eventually punted, and the
Hounds immediately besieged them.
After an extremely short, 20 yard bout
by Greg Burden, the Greyhounds started
their first scoring drive from Boone’s 45
Alter Willis Perry sprinted for nine yards
to the 36, quarterback Jerry Axley
floated a 27 yard jiass to receiver Todd
Marriott, putting Lyman in perfect
scoring position at the nine-yard line of
the Braves.
Two plays later, Gene Allen ran un­
touched through the middle and into the
end zone from eight yards out to register
the first of four Lyman touchdowns.
Axley then threw to Allen for the con­
version, and they had an 8-0 lead which
they held throughout the rest of the first
quarter.
Boone, however, had two of its dhves
stall as soon as they passed midfield
M ore the period's end. In each case, the
tenacious and alert Greyhound defensive
squad prevented any further penetration
Lyman began the second period by
driving from their 17 to Boone's 37. aided
greatly by an Axley to Perry pass which

Prep Football
was tipped into Perry's hands by a
Brave, and netted 41 yards.
After B'xme was caught offsides, David
Jacobs dashed through a tremendous
hole in the middle of the line for 18 yards
Four plays later, he put the final touch on
the drive by plunging in for the score
from the one-yard line. This time, from a
run formation. Axlev was forced to throw
a wobbly, incomplete pass, which left
Lyman with a 14-0 lead in the middle of
period two.
Boone was quickly forced lo punt after
four short downs, and the Hounds once
again took advantage of the situation.
Beginning from the Boone 34, and
hindered by a 15-yard holding infraction,
Axley still managed to sail a 34 yard pass
to a wide open Marriot for a third TD.
Robert A bernathy booted the ball
through the ujirights, padding Lyman's
lead, 21-6.
Boone and Lvman exchanged one fourdown drive apiece, then the Braves
switched quarterbacks. Up until that
time. David Hepburn had been calling
Boone's plays, hut now, coach Bill
Whittington w as going with Jim
Buckridge.
Buckridgt- did complete one eight-yard
jiass to David Simpson, but the drive
fizzled after three straight incomplete

passes. Once again, Burden was called
upon to punt the ball. For the night.
Burden kicked eight times In get the
Braves out of trouble.
Lyman finished the first half with a
short, inconsequential drive, but a 21-0
lead. Quarterback Axley, displaying an
excellent arm. hit five out of eight times
for 118 vards and a touchdown. Though
he threw two interceptions during (he
second half, his coach, Bill Scott, said
that. He's got to make our offense go.
He's our leader.”
Early in the third quarter. Boone again
pressed into Lyman te rrito ry , but
Buckridge was pressured into throw ing a
weak pass into the waiting arm s of
Greyhound Mike Hill, which promptly
stifled yet another Brave drive
Lyman, now on Boone's 30. looked to
put the game further out of reach. Two
running plays netted nine yards,
although Lyman was caught for 20 of its
120 penalty yards. Axley came through
again with another throw to Marriott,
who made a sujierb catch in the middle of
three Boone defenders, which netted 21
yards.
Axley hit Marriott a second time for 16
yards to the 8, and finally confused Boone
with a short, one-yard touchdown jiass to
Theo Jones. It was John Poor who added
the one-jviint conversion, and Lyman
stood with a comfortable 28-0 lead
Boone never threatened until the last 18
seconds of the game. Hepburn, back in

, 28-6
ihe name, threw a desperation [kiss to
David Woods, which ended up as a 42
yard toss to the Lyman one. From there,
it only took one more Hepburn-Woods
connection, and Boone averted a shut-out
with only eight seconds to play. A Boone
penalty cost them their successful twopointer, and shortly thereafter, the name
was finished.
“Although we didn't play in the jam ­
boree, I was impressed with our
agressiveness," said Scott. "Overall, we
made some mistakes, but it was their
first time out. Our next name, anainst
Mainland, may be our toughest this year
They are tremendously talented, and
they have a lot of running and receiving
speed."
Lyman will meet Mainland Friday at
Lyman at 8 p in
Boone
0 0 0 6 6
Lyman
8 12 7 0 2fl
Lyman — Allen 8 run &gt;Axley pass to
Alien). Lyman — Jaeobs 1 run (pass
failed!. Lyman — Axley 34 pass lo
Marriott (Abernathy kick). Lyman
Axley l pass to Jones ( poor kick i. Boone
— Hepburn 1 pass lo Woods i pass failed),
Boone Lyman
6
5
First Downs
28-116 25-79
Bushes-yards 28-116
69
166
Passing yards
9-19-2-2
5-15-1-1
Passes
8-253
4-151
Punts
3-1
1-1
Fumblcs-bist
Penalties-Yards
---* •'

Trinity Prep Trips Temple Heights In Overtime

(T H U S T S r i l l K D K K s ig n a ls a l.y tn a n to u c h d o w n .

TAMPA — Trinity Prep and Tampa
Temple Heights engaged in a grueling
battle here Friday nighl that did not end
until Bobby Miller’s extra point sailed
through the uprights in overtime to earn
Trinity’s Saints a hard-fought 14-13
victory.
Deadlocked at 7 after the fourth
quarter, Temple Heights scored on its
second play hi overtime. But the extra
point failed giving Trinity a chance al
victory.

Tlie Saints gained just six yards on its
first three plays in overtime. But, on
fourth and four. Brian Butler bulled in for
the TD to tie the game and Miller's PAT
won it for Trinity.
"\Vhen we went Into overtime and they
scored in two plays, 1 looked to see if the
kids' heads were down, bul they
weren’t," Saints’ coach Bon Vieriing
said. "After Temple Heights missed the
PAT our kids told me, 'we're going to
score coach.' It boiled down to that our

kids decided that they weren’t going to bo
denied "
Trinity Prep look an early 7-6 lead
after intercepting a Temple Heights
pass. Butler carried the final yard for Hie
TD and Miller kicked the point.
Temple Heights came back to tie it in
tlie second quarter on a one yard run by
Steve Green and Harold Smith’s extra
point. Neither team scored again in
regulation after that point.
"Temple Heights is a good football

team and man for man they are bigger
than we are." Vierling said. "We just
wouldn't Rive them the big play when
they needed it."
Temple Heights won the battle of the
statistics bul in the end, it was deter­
mination that won it for the Saints.
Temple Heights trained 130 yards rush me
and 113 passing while Trinity Rained 86
yards rushing and did not complete a
(Kiss in two attempts.
—CHHLS F1STEK

Black Friday A liv e A n d Deadly,
O viedo, Johnson Shutout Umatilla
By SAM COOK
Heralil Sports F-dltor
With all the hoopla over the wealth of
running backs in the Oviedo Lion backfield, it's easy to forget what makes this
3A football juggernaut of the past few
years click.
When Friday rolled around al Oviedo,
there might have been some dark and
sinister clouds in the sky, but the most
intimidating were those enshrouding the
Lions’ "Black Friday" defense.
Yes, prep football fans, the Black
Friday defense is alive and deadly. It
claimed its first victim for new head
coach Jack Blanton Friday with a 6-0
execution of visiting Umatilla in the
opening game for both clubs.
, "Defensively we were very good," said

Prep Football
an ecstatic Blanton. "They had a minus 5
yards rushing on 33 carries."
The obituary read thus;
1. Minus 22 yards rushing
2. Minus 5 yards total offense
3. Two intercepted passes
L inebackers
Tommy
"The
Executioner" Johnson and Clark Her­
man kept the Bulldogs in check. Johnson,
a 6-24, 195-pounder, collected 11 tackle
while his partner in execution, Herman,
had eight stops.
Johnson also picked off a Umatilla pass
as did senior defensive back Jerry
Chickowski.

While the defense was awesome,
Oviedo's offense was jus! as devastating
— until it moved inside Hie 10-yard line.
"We didn’t do well at all inside the 10,"
moaned Blanton. “ We didn't have any
trouble getting there but when we did
we’d fumble the ball or jwnaltics would
burl us."
Oviedo had three touchdowns called
back before junior tailback J.W. Yar­
borough muscled across from 2 yards out
with 10 minutes to go in the second
quarter.
Yarborough led Hie Lion rushers with
80 yards in 18 carries. Sophomore
fullback Larry Grayson rambled for 49
yards in eight carries but fumbled twice.
Junior Barry Williams added 37 on 10
carries.

"We just didn’t execute inside the 10,"
confirmed offensive coordinator Ken
Kruog. "But our defense was awesome.
They (Umatilla) might have gotten a
couple first downs on the last drive but
not much before that.
Oviedo rolled up 185 yards rushing.
Quarterback Dwayne "D .J." Johnson
completed 4 of 7 passes for 82 yards but
had two interceptions.
The Lions put the game on ice 48
seconds into the fourth quarter when Bob
Moody booled a 30-yard field goal.
Oviedo hosts St. Cloud, a 33-0 winner
over Clermont, next Friday.
Umatilla
0 (i 0 0 - 0
Oviedo
0 0 6 3 - 9
Oviedo — Yarborough 2 run (kick
failed). Oviedo — Moody 30 field goal.

Colonial s Tenacious Defense Bottles Up Patriots, 20-0
Colonial’s David Slockett powered for
three touchdowns Friday nighl as the
Grenadiers blanked Lake Brantley, 200, in the first football game for both
team s in Orlando.
"It wasn’t as lopsided as it sounds,"
said Patriot coach Dave Tullis. “They
were real good on defense and good

enough on offense."
After a scoreless first quarter, Colonial
jumped on the board on a five-yard burst
across the goal line by Slockett, a hardrunning senior.
The Patriots had a chance to get on the
board earlier in the auarter, but a 37yard field goal try by Andy Reardin was

wide to the left.
Colonial added to its lead in the third
quarter when Slockett put together backto-back TD runs of 5 yards and 4 yards to
make the lead, 204)
fake Brantley had its best scoring
opportunity in the fourth quarter. Taking
over on its 40, Brantley tailbacks Allen

-

Pro Tennis

menial ex ercise."
"II was a lot tougher than the score,”
Ever! said. "There were a lot of games
that could have gone either way. After I
won the third game of the second set on a
break, I felt pretty confident about win­
ning."
Mandlikova, who appears to have fully
recovered from the chronic back
problem s that have curtailed her
schedule and performance the past 18
months, recorded a 6-4, 2-6, 6-4 semifinal
triumph over Pam Shriver.
Aside from a sloppy second set,
Mandlikova demonstrated Hie strong,
accu rate backhand that was her
trademark before her injury. Shriver,
who upset doubles partner and top-seed

■“

«' - *'

'

•

*.

,-

•? ,

■; i ..

Sophomore q u arterb ack Dennis
Grosclose found Phil l»gas for 15 yards
to the 32. On fourth down, Waresack
faked a punt attempt and sped for 17

yards to the 15 for a first down.
Two running plays pushed Hie ball to
the eight, but a counter play lost three to
the 11. Groseclose then threw an in­

terception to end the Hireat.
W aresack, a sophomore, led the
Brantley rushers with 52 yards in 17
carries.

Hall Of Fame Nomination

Martina Navratilova in the quarterfinals, managed a brief moment of
success in the second set, but the
Czechoslovakian controlled Hie match
after that.
“I can concentrate a lot better than I
could two years ago," said Mandlikova,
who has won two Grand Slam titles (1980
Australian Open and 1981 French Ojien).
“ I play much better from the baseline
and I have recovered much of my
mobility."
Tlie top-seeded women's doubles team
of Navratilova-Shriver were eliminated
in the semifinals Friday by the fifthseeded duo of B arbara Potter and Sharon
Walsh, 7-5,2-6,6-4. Walsh-Poller will play
llosie Casals and Wendy Turnbull of
Australia, the third-seeded contingent, in
.today’s finals.

You know someone famous in Seminole County sports, don't
you? If you think this someone is worthy of the Seminole
County Sport Hall of Fame, don't delay, send him-her today.
Tlie deadline is Wednesday for nominations. Fill out the
below form am! send in immediately.

...Blunder Dooms Tribe Against Astronaut, 76-70!
continued from page8A
Eagle scoring threat away.
With less than five minutes left in the
game Astronaut’s Ben Burke picked off
a Futrell pass and returned it to the
Seminole 26. A personal foul penalty
after the play pushed Titusville back 15
yards.
Two plays later, Titusville had a firsi
down at the Seminole 23 and Marshall
took a handoff and broke into the
secondary. M arshall had only one
Seminole defender between him and the
goal line—Tim Lawrence. lawrence

lunged at Marshall, stripped the ball rusher with 146 yards on 18 carries and
loose and recovered Ihe fumble in a two touchdowns (he also fumbled twice),
Manley led Ihe Tribe with 123 yards on 12
sparkling defensive effort.
With 4:10 remaining in the game, carries and a touchdown.
Futrell turned in a solid performance,
Seminole had one more chance to pull off
the win. The Tribe, behind Futrell's the junior QB connected on 13 of 27 passes
passing, marched 57 yards before being for 121 yards.
turned away in the waning seconds.
"We saw a lot of things we can improve Titusville Astronaut
on and several players who showed Seminole
prom ise," Posey said. "We proved we
Sem inole—Manley 65 run (G riffin
can play both offense and defense, now
kick)
all we need is a little consistency."
M arshall was ihe gam e's leading Seminole—Field goal Griffin, 27

■* „* „„ .

Armstrong and Joe Waresack ran for six
yards each to move the ball into
Grenadier territory.

Evert, M andlikova In Tennis Deja Vu A t U.S. Open
NEW YORK lU PI) — Few who follow
women's tennis will be able to watch
today's finals of the U.S, Open Tennis
Championships without experiencing a
strong feeling of deja vu.
record against liana can only help me."
The two finalists are second-seeded
The Evert-Mandlikova final will be
Chris Evert Lloyd and No. 5 Hana
sandw iched between the m en’s
Mandlikova of Czechoslovakia. The odds
semifinals. Tlie match between No. 2
are in Evert's favor: site defeated
Jim m y Connors and No. 4 Guillermo
Mandlikova In the finals of the 1980 Open
Vilas of Argentina will open the schedule.
lo win the last of her five Open singles
Top-seeded John McEnroe and Ivan
crowns and has an 11-2 career mark
Lendl of Czechoslovakia clash in the
against Mandlikova.
other semifinal.
Bul Evert still believes in the bottom
Evert appeared to hardly extend
line.
herself
Friday in a 75-minute, 6-1,6-2 rout
And, "the bottom line is that I want to
win very badly," she said. “ If I do win — of erratic, fburlbseedtd Andrea Jaeger.
Or perhaps it just looked that way.
and Pm saying ‘i f and not ‘when' — 1
would consider th at a real ac­ According to the victor, the match in­
complishment. I want that sixth title. Mv volved “a great deal of physical and

...

Ken Kroog, Oviedo offensive coordinator, has u word with quar­
terback Dwayne "D.J.” Johnson, left. Johnson completed I of 7
passes tor K2 yards. He had two scoring tosses called hack, hut (he
Lions won, 9-0.

Astronaut—M arshall 1 run (kick
failed)
Astronaut—Field goal Aken, 13
Astronaut—Marshall 3 run I Aken kick)

First Downs
Bushes-yards
Passing yards
Passes
Punts
Fumbles-lust
Pti^lties-yards

Seminole
11
27-162
121
13-27-2
7-30
0-0
11-87

Astronaut
14
44-250
56
3-6-0
2-34
3-3
6-60

j

Send To;
Hall of Fame Nomination
Greater Sanford Chamber of Com­
merce
P.O. Drawer CC
Sanford, FL 32771

Signed

�10A— Evening Herald. S.mlord P I

Sunday, Sepl. IJ, 1981

NFL — To Play O r Not To Play, That's The Question
1
Herald Football Writer
To play, or not to play. Tliat is the
question." This paraphrase of William
Shakespeare's immortal words neatly
sum s the dilem m a facing both
management and players in the NFL as
they ponder the consequences of their
lock-out-walk-out options.
However, there a re no noble sen­
timents in the minds of either side
during this search for negotiating
weapons. Rather, the entire bargaining
process is so shrouded in clouds of
avarice, greed, and covetous double
dealing that both sides tend to forget
the first nine commandments, all of
which will probably also be broken
before the new contract is signed.
The prediction of game winners has
become,secondary to guessing whether
or not there will be any games to
predict. At least part of this problem
was solved on Sept. 1 when the NFL
announced it will not use the lock-out as
a weapon this season. In addition to
currying the goodwill of many players,
the entire b ro ad cast media, and
millions of fans, this clever tactic
initially keeps all NFI. sources of
revenue intact, p laces the total
responsibility for any interruption of
the season schedule on the union, and
pressures them to accept the sendees
of a federal mediator at the bargaining
table.
This placating NFL gesture was
promptly spit upon by a truculent Ed
G arvey, Director of the Players
Association, who threatened a walk-out
at any time, even prior to Game 1, but
this threat has been carefully weighed
and found to tie without logic. A strike
prior to Game 3 appears to be an un­
popular, irresponsible, and suicidal act
since this would enable the owners to
lock-out in self defense, remove all NFI,
income from the striking players,
prevent many veterans from qualifying
for a permanent retirem ent income,
and demolish the unity of the players.
Hut this does not necessarily mean it
will not be done.
Sooner or later the union must realize
the futility of its insistence on con­
trolling a major share of all future NFL
gross revenue and voluntarily sit down
l to sensible negotiations. With skill it
1 can negotiate the already considerable

NFI, concessions upward and quickly
achieve income parity with other
professional athletes, which is the goal
of most players. Then we can
congratulate both sides, heave a sigh of
relief, and get on with the game.
Predicting the winners of the first
NFL game of the season is the toughest
and most inaccurate job of the year
because the only guide to team per­
formance is the statistics of last year.
Fortunately, only five or six teams
change drastically in ability from one
year to the next, which keeps the
overall prediction win average of the
first game resonably accurate. Over
the y ears, the CLIFFHANGERS
prediction accuracy for Game 1 has
averaged 54 percent, and prediction
success increases rapidly in subsequent
games as statistics for the current
season accumulate.
The CLIFFHANGERS weekly
prediction sheet of all 14 games will
show a Win Probability figure next to
each predicted winner. This figure is
always greater than 50 but less than 100
and simply Indicates the past per­

centage accuracy of predictions when
team match-up statistics have been
similar to the present game.
For example, a 77 percent win
probability simply means that all past
winner predictions under these par­
ticular statistical circumstances have
been accurate 77 times out of 100. This
gives the reader the distinct advantage
of knowing the exact degree of ac­
curacy of each prediction, since no
team ever has a 100 percent chance of
winning any given contest.
GAMES OF THE DIVISION
LEADERS W ST SEASON
MIAMI DOLPHINS AT NEW YORK
JETS
The Jets have won or tied the last
eight games of this series, the single tie
being at Miami last season. IX-spite this
record, the Dolphins have ended up in
the playoffs with greater consistency
than the Jets. I.ast year Miami won the
AFC East title, and the Jets were a Wild
Card contender.
The Jets ended up last season with an
average four point better at-home
defense, but the Dolphins had a one

point better overall defense. The Jet
offense is three points better at home,
but both teams are tied in overall of­
fense with a 22 point average. This
game looks like a real C1JFFHANGEK
all the way, as most of their last few
matches have been. As a loyal Dolphin
fan, I hate to predict a loss for them, but
it looks like the Jet home field ad­
vantage of four points is too much.
Predicted F inal Score: Jets 20.
Dolphins 19
TAMPA HAY BUCCANEERS
AT MINNESOTA VIKINGS
Seems like the Rues have come up
with a surprising find in back-up
quarterback Jerry Golsteyn, and have
improved the team in nearly every
area. In fact, the entire NFC Central
Division looks improved and should
provide better competition than they
have for years.
In this contest, the Bucs have a two
point better defense at home, and a six
point better overall defense. The two
teams are tied in overall offense, each
averaging 20 points all last season, and
the Vikings have a slim one point home

Die Chargers’ record setting offense
field advantage. Die Hues are a better
took them far into the playoffs last
team defensively, and should prevail.
Predicted Final Score: Buccaneers 26. year, where the sub-zero cold in Cin­
cinnati froze them out. They seemed to
Vikings 16
have improved their defense this year,
LOS ANGELES RAIDERS
and should once again be in the
AT SAN'FRANCISCO Mers
playoffs. D enver’s defense alm ost
The champion 49ers, still riding with
brought them into the playoffs last
last year’s amazing performance, have
year, and if they can just get their new
been enthusiastically rebuilding toward
an encore appearance in the Super offense rolling they will be tough to
beat. My personal opinion is that
Bowl again this year. D ie Raiders had
Denver has the highest team morale in
an inexplicable offensive slump last
the league.
year in mid-season that kept them out
The Broncos have a 10 point better
of the playoffs, but now seem to have
defense at home and overall, but the
their q u a r t e r b a c k . well under
control. Die) are suffering from the Chargers have an 11 point better of­
fense on the road, a 10 point better
traum atic move from Oakland, and
morale in bound to be adversely af­ overall offense, and a two point better
field advantage, having scored an
fected.
A comparison of last y ear’s statistics average eight points more away from
indicate that Oakland is simply no home last year than at home. This
match for the champs. Die 49ers have a should be one of the best games of the
six point better home defense, a four week, and is a classic example of a fine
point lietter overall defense, a seven defense meeting an outstanding of­
fense. Predicted Final Score: Chargers
point better home offense, a five point
31, Rroncos 18
better overall offense, and a three
PITTSBURGH
STKELERS
AT
point home field adv an tag e. The
DALLAS COWBOYS
Raiders need time to adjust. Predicted
Die Cowboys lost out to San Fran­
Final Score: 19m 21. Raiders 13
HOUSTON OILERS AT CINCINNATI cisco in the final seconds of the NFC
Championship game last year. Diey
I4ENGALS
The Bengals are intent on the playoffs have a fine team again this year, just as
again this year, despite their disap­ they always have, and should be strong
contenders for the playoffs again in this
pointing record during the preseason.
They shape up as a strong contender to first Monday night game. The Steel
win their division again. The Oilers are Curtain crumbled early in the season
last year, and the Steelers have spent
still getting adjusted to being without
their lovable Bum Phillips, and seem to considerable effort at rebuilding with
be doing better with Gifford Nielsen as younger players this season. If this
quarterback. Coach Ed Biles is winning rebuilding effort has been successful,
this could be quite a game.
them over with patience.
The Bengals seem to have the Oilers
Although Dallas holds a considerable
outclassed in this season opener, and 8 point edge in at-home defense, the
lead in every statistic by a good other statistics are within two points. Of
m argin. Predicted F in al Score:
course, the most staggering Dallas
Bengali 23, Oilers 14
statistic is the fact that they have not
SAN DIEGO CHARGERS AT DEN­ lost before a home field crowd since
VER niio.N cos
November 22, 1979. Predicted Final
Score: Cowboys 19, Steelers 17
C L IF F H A N G E R S
G A M E ONE

Week Ol September II. 1912
Percent Win
Probability

61
SS
AS
90
At
NSD
AS

M
16
It

16
It
SS

SI

Predicted

Winning

losing Tram

TeA m tcort

NY JE T S
BU FFA LO

20

n ew en g la n d

n
u

II

CINCINNA T I
SEA TT LE
SAN D IE G O
SAN F R A N C IS C O
ATLANTA
P H IL A D E L P H IA
ST LO U IS
TAMPA
O ETRO IT
LOS A N G E L E S
DALLAS

zt
31
24
20
31

11
16
33
IS

19

.M IA M I
K A N SA S CIT Y
B A L T IM O R E
HOUSTON
C LEVELA N D
D EN VER
O A KLA N D
NY G IA N T S
W A SH IN G T O N
N EW O RLEAN S
M IN N E S O T A
CH ICA G O
G R E E N DAY
P IT T S B U R G H

Predicted
Score
19
16
13
14
13

18
13
13
14

n
16
14
14

17

NSD — Not Sufficient Data

Significant
First Game
Pits Bucs,

Blind M an's Bluff
On Tap For UCF,
/a

Minnesota

By SAM COOK
Herald Sports Editor
JACKSONVILLE- While making the
2*i hour trek here Saturday, you might
come across a man wandering aimlessly,
masked in sun glasses and fashioning a
white cane.
Before swerving to the left hand lane
though, slow down and take another look.
You may know him. It might be Central
Florida football coach Sam Weir.
No, Weir hasn't lost his sight in the past
few days. It's just that he is kind of in the
dark concerning Georgia Southem-the
season-opening football opponent for his
Knights.
’’We refer to it as a blind ballgame,"
said Weir about coach Erk Bussell's
Stateboro boys, who will be playing their
first game ever Saturday at 7:30 p.m. in
the Gator Bowl against UCF.
While the blindness had infected the
Knights, it is also prevalent with Georgia
Southern. "They don’t know anything
about us either," said Weir. "But they’ve
prepared for two years for this game and
they liad spring practice this year too."
Bussell built his reputation as defen­
sive coordinator for the Georgia
Bulldogs. He spent 17 years with the
’Dogs, capped by the national cham­
pionship season in 1980. Then he headed
for Statesboro.
"I know Erk Russell will have a very
sound fundamental team ," continued
Weir. "Particularly defensively, that’s
what his.specialty Is. They'll have some
exciting players especially their quar­
terback. He runs the option real well."

The biggest question mark appears to
be the offensive backfield where size
problems and poor execution kepi the
defense on the field 75 percent of the time
last year.

Georgia Southern runs an I-formation
offense. GSU doesn’t hesitate to throw
the ball, although Its receivers' corps is
not outstanding, according to Weir.
Southern also likes to run the option wide.

Jam ie Lugo, who led the Winter Park
Wildcats to a second place state finish
two years ago, takes over as quar­
terback. Former Delmnd gunner Dana
Thysen is the backup.

The Knighls, meanwhile, will bank on
iheir usual solid defense. Billy
Giovanetti, a four-year starter from
I ^k e Howell-Lyman, leads the way from
his inside linebacking spot.

A nother ex-Howell ru n n er, Carl
Carlson, has moved into the fullback slot,
backed up by Eric Simpson. Jerome
Thompson will start at tailback with
speedy Wince 'Lewis in reserve.

United Press International
Opening a new season in a new stadium
Sunday, Minnesota Coach Bud Grant
took time out to look at the past.

College Football
Upfront, W , 240-pound Mike Sommerfield, another four-year man, an­
chors the defensive line at left tackle.
Du* right tackle is Darrell ftudd while
Jeff Sacco and Jay Shapiro are the
guards.

"To appreciate the significance of this
game," Grant said of the Vikings' season
opener against the Buccaneers at the
Metrodome, "all you have to do is look at
the final standings the last four years and
you'll find we won the Central Division in
1978 and 1980 and Tampa Bay won it in
1979 and 1981."

While Weir expects the the usual
defensive excellence from "Gio" and his
'm ates, the key to the season riuiy be (lie
improvement of coach Tom Murphy’s
offensive line.

G rant's counterpart, Tampa Bay’s
John McKay, expects an aerial attack
from the Vikings, who finished the pre­
season with a 3-2 record.

“ We have a good nucleus at center and
guard," pointed out Weir. "(Guard)
Charlie Miller is quick, strong and fast
with a lot of savvy. He’s a leader too.
He’s very quiet as far as speaking goes,
but he makes a lot of noise on the football
field."
Miller is joined oy junior center Jim
Bray, a former Lake Howell High
gridder under Weir, and guard Jorge
Magluta. Dan Burke, a starter at center
last year, has moved to right tackle while
Mike Sakai fills the left side. The tight
end’ is Michael Collier while the wide
receivers are returnees Jim m y Taylor
and Jeff Froehlich.

Scott Ryerson, an All-America kicker
He gets help Inside from David King
and outside from Glenn Whelpley and last fall, returns to handle the field goals.
" T h is first gome is im portant,
Doug Gatewood. In the defensive backfield arc corner backs Gregg Atterberry maintains Weir. "We’re a young team
and Bruce Gordon. The safety is Jeff and we need the confidence a win can
Bolle. Sanford freshman Vince Edwards bring. If we Jell early, we could make
some waves this sear."
is a reserve.

Htrald Photo by Mlkt B tk i

Gordon Jones (middle) takes a hit from Atlanta's
Karl Jones as Joel Williams comes to assist
during the Buccaneers' final exhibition game.

Sunday, Tampa Bay opens the season at Min­
nesota.

In other games Sunday, it’s the I x js
Angeles Raiders at San Francisco,
Miami at the New York Jets, Houston at
Cincinnati, Cleveland at Seattle, Kansas
City at Buffalo, San Diego at Denver,
Atlanta at the New York Giants, Chicago
at Detroit, the I jos Angeles Rams vs.
Green Bay (at Milwaukee), St. I»uis at
New O rleans, New E ngland at
B altim ore,
and
W ashington
at
Philadelphia.
On Monday night, Pittsburgh is at
Dallas.

McKay—Faster Vikings For Metrodome Opener
The Tampa Bay-Minnesota regular
season opener will be the christening of
NFL football at the Hubert H, Humphrey
Metrodome in Minneapolis, ljist season
the Buccaneers were 2^ In games played
indoors.
"Minnesota has always been a tough
learn,” said Buc coach John McKay of
Tampa Bay’s Central Division foe. "I
don't see any change in them, except
they are faster."
Sunday's gam e will be an important
one for the Bucs to get off to a good
division start. McKay said the Central
Division is stronger this year, while must
critics call it the weakest in pro football.
If that is the case, why was the weakest
team in the division, tic Oiicago Bears,
4-0 in the AFC’s West Division a year ago
(including a victory over the powerful

Pro Football
San Diego Chargers)?
"I really think it will take an 11-5
record to win things this year," McKay
said. "When the division was down a few
years ago a great number of the better
players in college came to our division
because of the team 's early draft
choices. Now those players are mature
professionals."
The Metrodome air is expected to be
filled with footballs as the Vikes and Bucs
usually put the ball up a lot when they get
together. In last year’s first meeting
between (he two, Minnesota q u ar­
terbacks completed 37 of 63 passes for 361
yards. The Bucs won the game, however,

on Neal Uolzie's 82 yard Interception
return with Just 21 seconds left in the
game.
And in 1980, Doug Williams and
Tommy Kramer engaged in one of the
most productive passing games in NFL
history. Williams was 30 of 55 for 486
y a rd s and four touchdowns while
K ram er was 24-37 for 324 yards and two
TD's. Williams’ yardage was the fourth
best passing game in NFL history but the
Vikings won, 38-30.
"You know Minnesota will complete a
good number of passes," McKay said.
"They might have Tommy Kramer
throw 50 times. He's as good a quar­
terback as there is at moving a team and
lie has excellent receivers."
McKay believes his defense can con­
tain the explosive Vikings. "1 don't think

we’ll be gambling more. Wi
vary the use of our bas
package. 1 believe you cai
pass rush from three defen
and one linebacker while pi
integrity of your zone defei
While rookies played the b
Tampa Bay’s 1-1 preseas
McKay plans to start only oi
give a few others some pla
First round draft choice,
out of Penn Stale will st
guard. Rookies Jeff Davis i
Jerry Bell (tight end) and M
(running back) should see a
Sunday.
“ We seem to have more d
sides of the line and our
responded well to what we
do," McKay said. — CURL

�Evening H erald , Sanford, FI.

Lynn Cracks
Stan d ing s
M j|o r League Standings
B y United Press International
r»aTion,ii Lejque

Phila
5t Louis
Montreal
Plttsbrqh
Chicago
New York

East
w
79
74
75
74
61
55

Atlanta
Los Ang
San D'ego
$an Fran
Houston
Cinci

L Pci
GB
61 544 —
61 541
Vy
65 534 4
46 529 5
80 433 18V,
83 399 23

West
79
71
74
73
65
52

62
44
48
48
76
89

540 —
549 ) ‘ r
521 5V?
518 6
461 14
369 27

F rid a y '* Results
Montreal 7, Chicago 2
Ptlila 7. Pittsburgh 5
Atlanta 8. Cincinnati 3
freer York 3. SI Louis I
Los Angeles 3, Houston 3
San F ra n 5. San Diego I
Today's Games
(A ll Times EO T )
Montreal (Sanderson 9 111 at
Chicago (M a rt? 9 1), 3 20 p m
Los Angeles iReuss la 10) at
Houston (R u h le 7 12). 2 20 p m
Philadelphia IKrukow 12 9) at
Pittsburgh
(M cW illiam s
7 7),
7 05 P m
Cincinnati
( Soto
I) I I I
at
Atlanta (Boggs 2 0). 7 40 p m
New York (Lynch 34) at S»
Louis (Andujar II 10). I OS p m
San Francisco (Laskey 12 10)
at San Diego (Welsh 8 S). 10 OS
p m
Sunday's Games
Cincinnati at Atlanta
Montreal at Chicago
Philadelphia at Pittsburgh
New York at St Louis
Los Ang at Houston, tw&lt;

American League
E a it
W L FCt
GB
Milwauke
14 57 594 _
Dan
79 40 548 4
Boston
77 «1 554 4
Detroit
71 47 514 n «?
New York
71 44 .511 12
Clevelnd
67 71 484 IS’ i
Toronto
45 74 461 19
West
Kan Cily
7V 61 544 _
Calif
71 42 .557 1
Chicago
. 75 44 540 31*2
Seallle
46 73 475 12’ »
Oakland
59 82: 418 20',
Te*as *•
*
54 84 400 23
Minn
SO 90 357 29
Frid ay's Resulls
Delroll 4. Boston 4
Milwaukee 5, New York 3
Seattle 5. Teias 2
Minnesota 5, Kansas City 0
B a ll 3. Cleve 2, 13 inns
California 4. Toronto 2
Chicago 9, Oakland 3
Today's Games
(A ll Times E O T )
Baltimore (Flanagan 13 10) al
Cleveland (Sorensen 10 12). 2 05
pm
Detroit
(Wilco* 10 7)
at
Boston (Torrei 18), 7 20 p m
Chicago
IKoosman
7 4)
al
Oakland
(Codiroll
0 0).
4 05
p m.
Milwaukee IMedich 10 171 al
New York IRighetti 18). 8 p m
Seattle
(Bannister 12 13)
at
Te*as IHough 13 11), 8 05 p m
Minnesota
(Viola
4 5)
at
Kansas City (Leonard 9 4). 8 35

pm

Toronto
California

pm

(Sheb
14 13)
(Forsch 11 10).

al
10

Sunday's Games
Baltimore at Cleveland
Detroit at Boston
Chicago al Oakland
Milwaukee at New York
Minnesota at Kansas City
Toronto at California
Seattle at T tia s . twi

L in e sc o re s
M a jo r League Results
United Press Inter national
National League
M il
010210 201— 7 It 0
Chi
010 000 010- 3 10 1
Rogers,
Reardon
(8)
and
Carter.
Jenkins.
Proly
(SI.
Stein (81 and Davis. W - R o g e rs
(17 7) L Jenkins (1015) H Rs
- M o n trea l,
Cromartie
(13).
W allach (2)1
Phila
220 210 000- 7 15 0
Ptsbrgh
022 100 OOO— 5 10 2
Rdthven,
Monge
(7) and
D ia l. Candelaria. Guante (5),
Tekulve (8)
and Pena W —
Ruthveh (11 10). L- C a n d ela rla
(13 41 H R s Pittsburgh. Ea sie r
(14), Madlock (It )
Clnci
001 000 010- 2 9 2
Atlanta
230 000 21*- 8 9 0
Shirley, Hayes (3). Lesley (7)
and Trevino. Perei. Garber (81
and Benedict
W —Perei (1-41.
L Shirley (4 17)
H Rs—Allan
ta. M urphy (35). R am lrei (4)
NY
OOO 100 010— 2 9 1
St L
000 000 001- 1 3 0
Swan,
O ro sco
(7)
and
Hodges. Stuper, Bair (8), Kaat
(9), Lahti (9) and Porter W —
Swan
(9 4)
L - Stuper
(4 4)
H Rs — New York, Kingman
(35). SI Louis, Hernandez (7)
Los Ang
110 100 000- 3 4 2
Hous
100 010 OOO- 2 8 2
Hoot on. Forslrr (SI, Stewart
(4). Howe (7), Niedenluer (9)
and Scioscla, Yeager (81; Ryan
and Ashby. W —Howe (7 41. L —
Ryan (14 11) HR —Los Angeles.
Hooton ( I )

rlsh. Eckersley, Aponle (7) and
Allenson, Gednman (9).
W—
Morris
(18 141
L - E c k e rs le y
&lt;13-117. H Rs—Detroit, W hitaker
114). Wockentuss 15), Lemon
(13). Boston. Yastrtem ski (15).
M llw
100 10) 020- 5 10 2
NY
200 010000-3 9 2
Caldwell and Yost; Guidry,
Kaufman ( I ) and Cerone W —
Caldwell (15 11): L — G u id ry (14
4) H R —Milwaukee. Moore (4).
Seattle
000 301 100- 5 9 0
Te«as
100 000 010— 2 6 0
P erry. VandeBerg
(8)
and
Esslan. Tanana, Henke (8) and
B Johnson W —P e rry (9 12) L
— Tanana (6 17)
H R s— Seattle,
Henderson (13);
W right
(9).
O'Brien ( I )
Minn
000 000 500- 5 6 0
Kan City
000 000 000- 0 4 1
Castillo and Laudner; Gura,
Armstrong (7), Hood (8) and
Walhan W —Castillo (9 11) L Gura
(17 10).
H R —Minnesota,
Ward (251
(13 innings)
Baltimore
000 000 200 000 1 - 3 8 1
Cleveland

001 001 000 000 O- 2 5 1
McGregor. Davis (4), T M ar
lin e;
(8). Stewart
(11)
and
Demspey; Barker, Glynn (81.
Spi liner
(11)
and
Bando.
Hassey (13) W —Stewart (8 71
L —Splllner
(12 9).
H R —Bal
timore. M urray (78).

Toronto
010 001 OOO- 2 8 0
Calif
010 000 05k — 6 9 2
Leal. M urray (8) and M ar
W—
San F ra n
000 201 020- 5 11 1 lln e i; Zahn and Boone
San Dgo
000 100 OOO— I 4 I Zahn (16 71 L - L e a l (10 13).
Breining and Brenly.
Dra
303 000 M l - 9 II 2
vccky. Lucas (SI. G ridin (8). Chi
000 010 0 2 0 - ^ 5 1
C hiller (91 and Kennedy W — Oaklnd
Lamp. Kern ( I I , Lyle (9) and
Breining (9 4). L — Dravecky (4
3) H R - S a n Francisco. Morgan Fisk. H ill (9); Norris. Hanna
(3). O'Acquilto ( I I and Kear
(121
ney. W —Lamp &lt;9-71 L — Norris
American League
Detroit
110 101 200- 4 )30 (7 10). H Rs—Chicago. Kemp 2
Boston
000 001 030- 4 70 ( i l l . Baines (21). Fish (131,
Oakland. Davis (1)
M orn s. Lopel (9) and P a r

L e a d e rs
M a io r League Leaders
B y United Press International
Batting
(B ased on 3.) plate appear­
ances * number of games each
team has played)

National League
Oliver, M il
Madlock, Pit
L. Smith. StL
Guerero. LA
Durham, Chi
Buckner, Chi
Schmidt. Phi
Baker. LA
D ial. Ph il
H rnnd l, StL

g ab h pet.
138 527 177 334
137 513 144 320
134 519 144 314
134 5)2 159 311
131 483 149 308
140 549 175 308
124 434 131 303
128 497 150 307
133 484 144 302

138 514 155 .302
American League

Wilson. KC
Yount. M il
G a rcia . Tor
H arrah. Cle
RlCf. BOS
Cooper. M il
M u rra y, B al
Lanstord. Bs
Carew. Cal
M cR ae. KC

g ab h pet.
115 500 148 334
135 548 180 .328
130 537 171.318
139 527 147 .317
122 484 152 .314
134 544 177 .314
128 443 145.313
111418 130 .311
117 444 ) 38 .311
140 534 144 .307

Horn* Runt
National League — Kingman,
NY. and Murphy, All, 35;
Schmidt, Phil. 31; Mornar. All.
and Thompson. Pitt, 30
American League — Re.Jackson. Cal. and Thomas. Mil. 34;
Winlieid,
NY.
31, Thornton,
Clev. X ; Cooper, Mil, 29.
Runt Batted In
National League - Murphy,
All. 105. Clark. SF. 95; Oliver,
M il, 94; Buckner. Chi, Horner,
All. and Thompson. Pitt. 93.
American League — McRae,
KC. 118, Thornton. Clev, 107,
Cooper. Mil, 104. Thomas. Mil.
100. Winlieid. NY. 94.
Stolen Bates
National League — Raines.

M il, 65. L
Smith. S IL . 67;
Moreno. Pitt. 55; Wilson. NY.
53; 4 .Sax, LA , 44.
American League — Hender
son. Oak. 124; Garcia. Tor, 48;
J C rui. Sea. 37; Molltor, M il.
35. Wathan. KC. 34

Pitching
Vidor let
National League — Carlton,
Phil, 19 9, Rogers. M il, 17 7;
Valeniuela, LA. 17-12; Robin
son. Pitt. 159. Welch. LA. 15

10.

American League — Guri,
KC. 17 10. Vuckoulch. Mil. 164;
Zahn. Cal. 167, Morris. Oct. 14la; Caldwell. Mil. 15 31; Hoyt,
Chi, 1513.
Earned Run Average
(Based an I Inning i number ol
games tad i team hat played)
National League — Rogers.
Mil,
115; Niekro. Hou, 143;
Laskey. SF. M S.Anduiar. StL.
2 72;Candelaria.
Pitt,
and
Krukow. Phil, 710
Amtrican League —
Petry,
Det,
JOS; Beattie. Sea.
1.11;
Vuchovich, Mil. 170; Sutcliffe.
Cle. l i t ; Stanley, Bos. 1.39.
Strikeouts
National League — Soto, cm,
234. Carlton. Phil, 777; Ryan,
Hou. 717; Valeniuela, LA , 1M;
Rogers, Mil,- and W elch,' LA.

til

.

American League — Bafinis
ter. Sea. !*♦; Barker, Clev. 1SS;
Guidryi NY. 141; Beattie, Sea.
US. Rignettl, NY. 111.
Saves
• National Laagwt — Sutler.
StL. M i
Gerber. Att,
and
Minton. SF. 77; Reardon, Mtl.
74; Allen. NY, It.
American League — Quisen
berry. KC, 77; Fingers, Mil, 79;
Gotsege. NY. 71; Caudill. Sea.
14. Qevit. Mm. I I

Blue Jays
With Double

K in g m a n
P e re z,
W

I-’IIK I) I .Y W

...liv cracks

United Press International
California's outfielder Fred I.ynn with
cracked ribs is still a better hitter than most
players in perfect health and he proved it
Friday night.
I.ynn, who has been out since breaking two
ribs in Detroit Sept. 1, was called on as a pinchhitler in the eighth inning and delivered' a
three-run double to highlight a five-run rally
that gave the Angels a f&gt;-2 triumph over the
Toronto Blue Jays.
"When 1 came on deck and heard all the
people yelling, the pain just evaporated," said
I.ynn. "Coming up in that situation and getting
the hit felt good. Everybody dreams about
coming up in a situation like that ... "
The victory enabled the Angels to move to
within one game of first-place Kansas City in
the American League West.
Trailing, 2-1, after collecting only five hits
off loser Luis I-eal, 10-13, through seven in­
nings, Hod Carew walked with one mil in the
eighth. One out later, Reggie Jackson kept the
inning alive by heating out a roller to second.
Don Baylor then greeted reliever Dale Murray
with his second double of the game to drive in
Carew with the tying run
Doug DeCinces was walked intentionally to
load the bases and I.ynn was sent up as a pinch
hitter for Juan Beniquez, who had singled in a
second inning run. Lynn swung at Murray’s
first pitch and dubbed a double into right
center to clear the bases. Bobby Clark then
ran for I.ynn and scored on Tim Foil's single lo
left.
lefthander Geoff Zalin benefitted from the
five-run inning to notch his lfitli victory
against seven losses.
Elsewhere in the AL, Minnesota blanked
Kansas City, 5-0, Chicago heal Oakland, 9-3,
Milwaukee defeated New York, 5-3, Baltimore
edged Cleveland, 3-2, in 13 innings, Detroit
whipped Boston, 6-4, and Seattle defeated
Texas, 5-2.

A m erican League
In National league action, Philadelphia
downed Pittsburgh, 7-5, New York edged St
I-outs. 2-1. Montreal defeated Chicago, 7-2,
Atlanta clobbered Cincinnati, 8-2, b is Angeles
nipped Houston, 3-2, and San Francisco topped
San Diego, 5-1
Twins 5, Itoyals 0
At Kansas City, Mo., Bobby Castillo tossed a
four-hitter in his first career shutout and Gary
Ward hit a three-run, inside-the-park homer to
spark the Tw ins
White Sox 9. A's 3
At Oakland, Calif., Steve Kemp drove m four
runs with two homers and Harold Baines and
Carlton Fisk each added two-run homers to
power the White Sox, who moved to within 3 ‘.
games of first place m the Al. West
Brewers 5, Yankees 3
At New York. Charlie Moore drove in thrm
runs with a home run, sacrifice fly and an
eighth-inning single to lift the Brewers
Orioles 3, Indians 2
At Cleveland. Eddie Murray homered with
t wo out in the 13th to spark Baltimore, which
remains four games behind Milwaukee in the
Al. East.
Tigers 6, Bed Sox t
At Boston, b m Whitaker, John Wm kenfuss
and Chet Lemon hit solo homers and Jack
Morris won for the first time at Fenway Park
Carl YastrzeiiLski drove in all of the Bed S&lt;&gt;\'
runs with a single and homer to become the
eighth player in major-league history to reach
3,300 hits.
Mariners 5. Hangers 2
At Arlington, Texas, Dave Henderson
knocked in four runs with a three-run homer
and sacrifice fly to pace the Mariners

Bucks Send Buckner
To Celts For Cowens
MILWAUKEE (UPIl - Dave Cowens'
retirement from basketball two years ago was
marked by a banged-up body and a burned-out
mental attitude.
But he ended his self-imposed exile Friday
by signing a two-year contract with the Mil­
waukee Bucks and saying he is once again
ready for the NBA wars.
"I think I was somewhat tired of the grind
and the lifestyle ... playing with all those
nagging injuries," he said, in explaining his
retirement. "1 was pretty much worn out. 1
didn’t enjoy it."
The Bucks will send playmaking guard
Quinn Buckner lo the Boston Celtics for
Cowens, but Milwaukee Coach Don Nelson
thinks the deal for his former Boston teammale is worthwhile. He feels the 6-foot-D, 230pounder can help the Bucks to an NBA title.
The 33-year-old Cowens, who last played
Sept. 30, 1980, said he feels he can still play.
"I'm a little bit loo old lo be cocky about it,
but I feel I have the ability to contend again ...
perhaps help them go the one step further and
win a championship,” he said.
Nelson admitted it was a gamble to trade
Buckner away to gain Cowens.
"I'm taking a risk, a calculated risk,"
Nelson said, "because no one has ever laid out
two years and come back. But 1 know what
makes him tick and what kind of a person he is

Pro B asketball
and because of that I went ahead with it."
The Bucks have won the Central Division
title in the last two years hut faltered in the
playoffs against bigger teams Nelson said
Cowens, who m the past played center, will
give the club the power forward it needs.
"Nobody’s going to kick sand in our faces
anymore," he said. “ We feel very strongly our
team is ready to make a legitimate run at the
title. We feci our time is now ... before Bob
(I-m ieri retires."
The 6-foot-ll Lanier may retire after this
season and Nelson said getting Cowens was
part of his commitment to "w in a title before
Bob goes."
Cowens, a seven-time AllStar, played 10
years for the Celtics, averaging 18.2 points and
14 rebounds a game. One of the game’s
dominant players, he stunned the Celtics when
he retired.
Mickey Johnson is the starter al power
forward although not really big enough
Nelson said that for now Johnson will keep the
starting spot hut Cowens may win it in training
camp.

B la s ts

B ra v e s

liiited Press International
Tht^ St bmts Cardinals have scored only 13
runs in six of their last seven games and have
won only two - both by 1-0 scores
W e're not just not hitting." said St buns'
Manager Whitey Herzog after the New York
Mets nipped the Cardinals, 2-1, behind Dave
Kingman's inside-the-park home run and a
combined six-hitter by Craig Swan and Jesse
Orosco.
The loss, combined with Philadelphia's win
over Pittsburgh, left the Cardinals a half­
game behind the Phillies in the National
league East.
Swan, 9-f&gt;, limited St. btuis to singles by Ken
Oberkfell in the first inning and Dane Iorg in
he fifth before leaving with two out in the
seventh. Orosco relieved and pitched out of a
seventh-inning jam by retiring pinch-hitter
Lonnie Smith with runners on first and second
He allowed a leadoff home run to Keith Her­
nandez tn the ninth hut earned his third save
The Mets scored a run in the fourth off loser
John Stuper. 64. With one out, Bun Hodges
doubled, advanced to third on a wild pitch and
scored on Swan’s two-out single
New York added a run in the eighth when
Kingman hit a shot down the right field line
that got (gist George Hendrick, who was
shifted toward left field for the right-handed
pull hitter It was Kingman’s 35th homer of the
season.
Dodgers 3, \stros 2
M Houston, pitcher Burt Hooton homered
iff Nolan By an to help the Dodgers remain l b
games behind (irstplace Atlanta in the Nl.
West.
Phillies 7. Pirates 5
At Pittsburgh, Bill Robinson drove in three
runs with a single and a two-run double and
Mike Schmidt added two KH1 for the Phillies
Pete Hose became the all-time leader in
games played, in Ins 3,077th major-league
contest.
Expos 7. Culls 2
M Chicago, Al Oliver went t-for-5 and
Warren Cromartie belted a two-run homer to
help Steve Rogers to his 17th victory.
Giants 3, Padres I
Ai San Diego, Joe Morgan hit his 12th home
run of the year and Fred Breining hurled a sixlatter to lead the ( hunts to their seventh
triumph m the last eight games

Ja i Alai
A tO rljnd o Seminole
Friday mqhl result*
First game
S Simon E lOf M
1/60 8 00
1 OiiJoOtit /arrsiqa
4 70
7R*ca Oyari
Q ( M l 78 60. T ( S 1 7) 747
Second qame
J Dur arum kid
Go t *
.17 40 3 80
7 B lhau 7ar r.rtj.g
« 80

4 40

100
3 80
40

8 WTiUdo Area

7 80

100
.&gt;80

O (2 1/ 7/ 40 P (17) I I 40. T &lt;J
7 8) J22 40 DD ( S J) 11? 10
Tbird qame
l u*i.w /arr aiM ,14 40 S 60 4 60
/ Ricardo'Oyari
10 40 9 00
1Mogul Far ah
5 70
Q (1 / n o 10 H i l l ) 148 70 T (1
M ) 370 80
Fourth qame
2 Bilbao Farah
17 00 S 60 140
SM ik rl Aqu.rr*
S 70 160
4 R * c a E lo r ia
S 80
Q (2 SI 14 00, P (2 S) 161 M i T U
5 4) 1085 00
Filth qame
8Chtiroia Jav*er
1500 6 60 4 00
lU r u a r / u b l
S.40/1160
5 Said C arta
4 40
Q ( I •) 45 80. P (8 1) 111 *0 T (8
I S) 408 70
Suth qame
IB iJb a o G o iri
14 00 V 00 4 70
6 Durango kid OyarT
4 70 4 20
I Simon Y/a
4 60
O ( 3 6) 78 60 P ( 1 6) 115 80. T (3
4 1) 737 70

Sunday, Sept. (2, 1982—11A

C a rd s;

T r iu m p h ,

8 -2

National League
liras es 8. Beds 2
ATlANfA T l 'l
Pascual Perez, famed
for getting lost trying to find Atlanta Stadium
was now searching for some runs and hi'teammates finally delivered for him Fridiiy
night.
,
" It's about time," Perez jokingly called mil
lii Dale Murphy when the Atlanta slugger
belted Iris 35th homer id the season to start the
Braves to an 8-2 romp over Cincinnati
"I've been pitching pretty g o o d hut the
ballelub just hasn't been giving me any runs,'
explained Perez, who won his first game and
only the third.of his major league career by.
scattering eight hits over 7 1-3 innings
"We haven't been getting hint many runs,
admitted Murphy, who belted iris ■two-rm
homer in the first inning
Rafael Ramirez added a three-run shot in
the second to stake Perez to a 5-0 lead and tha'
was all he needed
"Getting the lead relaxed him ," said Atlanta
manager Joe Torre
Before, eyerytutu* ht
threw a pitch he was pitching for Ills life I
think he’s been down a little hit because he
hasn't won a hallgame Hopefully. this will
bUoy him up and help us the rest of the way
Torre already credits Perez's driving ad­
venture with snapping Atlanta out of a 19-for21 losing streak last month The young
Dominican pitcher got lost try ing o find the
park and missed his turn, hut veteran Phil
Niekro look his place and the Braves' won,
Torre say s the team had so much fun with
Perez’s driving 'problems that they relaxed
and were able to snap out of the slump
Atlanta's victory maintained a lb-game
over l/&gt;s Angeles in the National I/'ague West
as the Dodger-, defeated Houston t-2 Friday
night
The Braves' hats have suddenly come alive
with 30 runs anil eight homers in the last three
games, and Torre said the offensive splurge is
easily explained
"i Bobi Horner, Murphy . C hris; Chambliss
and iClaudelli Washington
guys who have
been hitting on arid off all year
it looks like
they have picked a good time to start hitting
again," he said - Hopefully, the streak will
last another three weeks "

ATTENTION
HUNTERS and
0UTD00RSMEN
Purchase Your Own 2Vi
Acre Campsite For Just
$2,995.00
A lim ited n u m b er of 212 a c r e lots 111 Hie Lake
H arney a n d T urnbull H am m ock a r e a s a re now
av ailab le for 52,995.00 all cash . These beautiful
wooded tr a c ts a r e perfect for a h u n te r's c a m p
ground — secluded, yet less th a n an hour's
driving d ista n c e from home. But, a t th ese prices,
they w o n 't Iasi long. For m o re inform ation on
this in cred ib le opportunity, ca ll John Trella a t
Mondex R eally, Inc., R eg istered R eal E state
Broker, collect a t (904) 672 9330.
B roker P articipation Invited.

Jackson Nabs 2 Crooks
With Intimidating Look
COSTA MESA, Calif. (UPI) - California
Angels’ slugger Keggie Jackson lias kept his
muscles in shape this season by hitting home
runs — he is lied with Gorman Thomas of the
Milwaukee Brewers for the American league
home-run lead.
Police said Jackson used those muscles
Friday morning on two robbery suspects, who
apparently were quite impressed.
The slugger was driving through Costa
Mesa, an Orange County conununity a few
miles from his condominium, when he heard a
burglar alarm sounding and saw two men
coming out of the house. He stopped his car in
the middle of the street, got out and ap­
proached the two.
"He figured something was wrong," Lt.
Tom Durham said, "and he had a neighbor
call police. He just told them, ‘Stand here, let’s
wait for the cops.’
"An officer at the scene said the suspects
recognized him and that was the reason they
didn't run. They figured Jackson could outrun
them."
"They Just waited there," the 6-foot, 216pound Jackson said Friday night al Anaheim
Stadium prior to an Angels' game against
Toronto.
Arresting officer Burt Santee said the
suspects — both about 5-6 and 160 pounds —
probably made a good choice.
"Reggie more or less intimidated the

suspects by his size," Santee said. “He’s
muscular and big and pretty fast; They both
knew escape would be futile. I think they made
a very wise choice in not trying to run away."
One of the suspects had a buckknife in his
pocket, but Santee said there was no indication
he had considered using it as a weapon against
Jackson. Jackson said the thought the two
might be armed never occurred to him.
"I didn’t even think about that," he said.
"Somebody was doing something wrong and I
wanted to help out. God has a master plan. I
just acted on instinct. Hopefully, if someone
saw someone break into my house, they’d do
the same thing."
Durham said officers found some jewelry,
apparently from the burglarized house, in the
suspects’ pockets.
The two men, Atnadis Ahmed Zabala, 23, of
Honolulu, and Franklin Packard Kirlein, 31, of
Chester, Pa., were booked for burglary and
held in lieu of 525,000 bail.
After police arrived, Durham said Jackson
(old the suspects, "It doesn't make me feel
good to do this to you, hut what you did was
wrong."
Santee said Jackson's performance was
very unusual.
"I was real impressed," Santee said. “He
did an outstanding job. That's something most
people wouldn't do. Most people would just
drive right by a scene like that.”

THE INTERNATIONAL KARATE ACADEMY
Southeastern representative for the
GOSHIN JUTSU K A R A T E ASSOCIATION
YUDAN SHAKAI
Under the direction of
_________________________ GRA N D M A STER DURANT

INVITES YOU
TO ENROLL IN ONE OF OUR
KARATE PROGRAMS FOR
MEN • WOMEN • TEENS • CHILDREN
AGES 6-60 YEARS
ENROLL BEFORE SEPT. 31st
AND RECEIVE A

FR EE U N IF O R M
Member of: Sanford Chamber of Commerce

THE IN TERN ATIO N AL KARATE A C A D E M Y
501 E. 1st St. SANFORD
OPEN

MON.-THUR. 3-9
SATURDAY

11

p.m.

o.m.-2 p.m.

*

’*

PHONE

323-2932

■&gt;

�13A — Evening Herald, Sanford. F I

Legal Notice

Legal Notice

'N

the
ci rcui t court
eighteenth
juoicial
. C IR C U IT .
IN
AND
FO R
I E M lN O LE C O U N T Y .F L O R ID A
CASE NO 128)1 CA 09
D IV ISIO N G
'T V C O N S U M E R S E R V I f E S O F
f LOR IDA INC
a F lorida Cor
I nrgl on.

y\

Plam tiff,

-

JA M E S E E l TOC H E L L I and
L O R R A IN E P I TOC H E L L I. h.s

. tiift.

Dc*endan*i
NO TICE OF S A L E
N o iitr H h rreBr given mat,
pursuant to an order of a Final
Judgment of Foreclosure entered
n me aoove entitled cause. I *111
".ell tt-e property s itu a te d in
Seirnmoie
County.
F lo rid a ,
described as lotions
Lots l and ?. B lo r k
c.
SANLANDO s p r i n g s
tract
JJ. according to the plat thereof as
recorded ,n Plat Book J, Page 46
■t tee Public Records ot Sem hole
County. Ftor.da
a ' Public sale, to the highest and
tiesl O dder tor cash at I I 00 A M
on tne tjm day ot October. H j j at
me West Front door. Sim-nole
County Courthouse, Santoro
F 10' da
I Seal I ' Arthur m Brtkw.th, Jr
C LERe
OF tM E C IR C U IT
COURT
BY Patricia Robinson
Deputy Clerk
t’ubi sn September |J. iv t» jj

oe ;

si

N O TICE OF P U B L IC
H E A R IN G

Re SR 4J6 Irom 14 to
US If •]
The SR 4)6 Corridor Sludr
C'T'/en AdvAor* Committee null
hold a public hearingon Thursday
September w He? at 8 00 P M or
*s soon therealter as possible n
tnr Sem.nole Count* Agricultural
Center A uditorium .
4J?0 S
Orlando Dr
Sanford, F l )?JM
liust nest ot i
'7 9? one m.le
north ot the " F iv e Points
n
tersect'On * itn CR 4?7 and SR 4191
the public hearing is being held to
ntorm the public ot the results ot
me transportation stu d* and
receive public comments before
nnal recommendations are made
t * the Citden Adv isory Com mil tee
to me Board ot County Com
imssioners ot Semmole County.
Florida
Your attendance and
participation is encouraged
Semmole County has secured the
orolrssional services ot the traffic
Ijngm eering
tirm
Fo aw orth
AS»oiMies Inc to prepare design
concepts
to help
a lle v ia te
ritngesfeon and increase capacity
n addition to auto and truck
traffic . provision * il l also be made
n the design concepts lor transit
b c *cle and pedestrian users The
Committer s
recommendations
nilt also include *h a t actions must
be taken Iby *hom l and h o * the
plan * ill be funded Iby whom).
Once the recommended plan is
Idopted by the ap prop riate
governmental agencies .1 * d i t*retleded ntransportationbudgets
and management decisions ano
new proposals lor land develop
men) in the corridor w ill be
review ed and a u th o rn e d In
keep rvg with the objectives ot the
clan fh e p ra ct cai Significance of
'he study
recom m endations
therefore should not be un
ter est imated
For additional inform ation'
about the study and or Ihe public
hearing contact Woody Pf'Ce
A IC P Semmole County Pianmnq
D recfor at J J J 4)JO eit 181
Woody Puce. A IC P
Piann.ng Director
Persons are a d vsrd that, if
the* decide to appeal any
decisions made at these meetings
hearings, they will need a record
ot Ihe proceedings and tor such
purpose, they may need to insure
that a verbatim record ot the
proceedings is made, which in
eludes the testimony and evidence
upon which the appeal &gt;s to be
based, per section 786 0101
Florida Statues "
Publish Sept. I?. 73. 1987
DE7 4)
---- C O U P O N ----------- 1
|
|
j
I
I

W ESTER N AU T O
HAS M O V EO T O
1707 F R E N C H A V E

|
,

"W E D U P L IC A T E K E Y S "
O N LY 79c
W ITH T H ISX O U P O N

Sunday, Sept. 12. 1982

I
I

F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
Notice 'S hereby given that l am
engaged In business at 650 Douglas
Rd Altamonte Springs. Florida
Seminole County, Florid a under
the fictitious name ot MOUNT
L A B 'S INC and thal I ntend to
register said name with Clerk ot
the C ircu it Court. Sem m ole
County Florida in accordance
with the provisions ot the Fic
t'tious Name Statutes. To Wit
Section 164 09 Florida Statures
1957
Maurice E Mount
Publish August 79 A September 5.
17.19,198?
D E Y 160
IN
4E
C IR C U IT
C C JR T .
E IG H T E E N T H
JU D IC IA L
C IR C U IT .
IN
ANO
FO R
S E M IN O L E C O UN TY. F L O R ID A
CA SE NO I? ISIS CA 09 L
D IV ISIO N L
C IT Y C O N S U M E R S E R V IC E S O F
F L O R ID A . IN C . a Florida Cor
poration,
Plam M f
VS

B E A T R IC E N JA C K SO N a s ngie
woman.
Defendants
N O TIC E OF S A L E
Notice is hereby given that,
pursuant to an order ot a Final
judgment ol foreclosure entered
*h Ihe above entitled cause. I will
sell Ihe p ro p erty situ ated n
Sem m ole
County.
F lo rid a ,
described as follows
P a rt m arked
RESERVED
FO R GOLF C O U R SE1 m Tract 59
SA N LA N D O
S P R IN G S
SUB
D IV ISIO N as per plat thrreol as
recorded m Plat Book 6. Page 17
pi tne Pubi c Records ol Semmole
County, Florida
at pubi c sale to the highest and
best Odder lor cash at II. 00 A M
on the 12th day ot October 1987 at
the .Vest I font door Semmole
Coun'y Courthouse
Santord
F lor'da
i Seal'

Changes Made For New School Year At SHS
The 1982-83 school year has
started with quite a few
changes The major change
involves the teachers. Mr.
Minott is the new assistant
principal, Mrs. Freddie is the
registrar, and Mrs. Pierson is
the dean of students, to name
a few.
Other teachers have gone to
different schools or retired
and new ones have come to
take their places. Still others
have changed the subjects
that they are teaching.
A change affecting some of
the students concerns the
•smoking area" of the school
This y e a r, no tobacco
•! products will be allowed

SHS
By
Jiii

.lannk

anywhere on campus. A new
code of conduct of all
Seminole County high schools
has made a rule that no high
school student will be allowed
to wear shorts while attending
school.
The various clubs have been
recruiting new members and
are
startin g
initiation

proceedings. Those interested
in getting involved should
contact club sponsors or
members as soon as possible.
This week , most of the fall
sports are opening their
seasons with many sure-to-be
exciting games. The people of
Sanford are encouraged to
come out and support the
school and its teams.
A list of the'coming week's
activities:
Monday- J.V. and varsity
volleyball game at Oviedo, 6
p.m.
Tuesday- varsity volleyball
tri-mutch with Lyman and
l-ake Brantley at Lyman. 6
p.m.

CALENDAR

Thursday- J.V. and varsity
volleyball gam e at New
Smyrna, 4 p.m.; swim meet,
home i Sanford Bath and
Tennis Club) against Spruce
Creek. 4 p.m.
Friday- First home football
game against I^ake Howell,
home, B p.m Back-lo-school
dance in Seminole’s cafeteria
right after game.

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 12
C entral Florida Music T e a c h e rs’ Assoriation
Membership Reception for present and prospective
members, 3-5 p.m. For information call 855-0255 or 862­
8664.
MONDAY. SK ITEM B ER 13
Sanlord-Seminolc Art Association. 7 p in . covered
dish supper at Sanford Civic Center

Ms. Janak, Hi, is a
junior at Seminole
High School and is the
daughter of .Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Janak of
113 W. Crystal I)r„
Sanford.

scminole County League of Women Voters unr "t
election-issues. 7:45 p.m., 114 Live Oak lane. Spring
Valley.
Free dating service lor m ature adults, 1 p ni
Deltona Public Library, 1691 Providence Blvd
Seminole AA,8 p.m., open discussion. 591 liik c
Minnie Drive, (Crossroads), Sanford.

AREA DEATHS

w il l ia m McDa n ie l
William Davis McDaniel,
85. of 1641 N.W. Avenue F.
Belle Glade, died Friday in
that city. Born Jan. 7, 1897 in
Bartow, Ga., he moved to
Belle Glade in 1967 from
Macon, Ga. He was retired
from the prinluce trucking
business.
He is survived by his wife,
Janet; one daughter, Mrs.
Helen Phillips McGuire.
Sanford; a son, Jam es F
McDaniel, Baltimore, Md.; a
brother. Dr Sam McDaniel.
Minnesota; and a sister. Mrs.
Arthur M Heck* th Jr
Ollie Mulhollnnd. Wadley, Ga.
CL£R» Of tttE CIRCUIT
Brisson Funeral ilome-PA
COURT
.
is in charge of arrangements.
flv Patricia Robmson
Debut* Clerk
jcniNC. m u m s
Publish September I? IV 198?
______
D E Z SI
Survivors of John Calvin
CITY OF C A S S E L B E R R Y
Brown, 70, of 2634 Elm Avc.,
F L O R ID A
Sanford,
who died Wednesday
N O TICE OF P U B L IC H E A R IN G
TO C O N SID ER A D O PT IO N OF
P R O P O S E O O R D IN A N C E
TO WHOM IT M A Y C O N C ER N
N O TIC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N by
Ihe C'ty ot Casselberry Florida
that Ihe City Council wilt hold a
public.hearing to consider enact
ment ol Ord nance 470 entitled
AN O R D IN A N C E OF tM E CIT Y
OF C A S S E L B E R R Y
F L O R ID A
A D O PTIN G A B U D G E T
FOR
TME C ITY OF C A S S E L B E R R Y
F L O R ID A , t o w
THE F ISC A L
Y E A R B E G IN N IN G O C T O B ER I
198? AND E N D IN G S E P T E M
B E R )0 198) AND "A P P H O P R IA
TIN G AND A L L O C A T IN G R E
V E N U E O l Th e C i t y TO Th e
g e n e r a l F U N D O P E R A T IO N S
B U D G E T F O R T H E t ISC A L
YEA R
P R O V ID IN G
CON
F U C T S . S E V E R A B IL I T Y
ANO
E F F E C T I V E D A TE
This notice is given pursuant lo
the provisions ot Chapter 166
F lo r da Statutes, and the Charter
and Ordinances ot the City of
Casselberry, Florida, as amended
and supplemented,
S a d Ordinance will or coo
Sidered on lirst reading on Mom
day. September 20 1987 and the
City Council will consider same lor
Im al passage, m accordance wth
Chapter 166 and adoption after the
public hearihq which will be held
in the C'ty Hall ol Casselberry
Florida on Monday. September
77, 1987 at 7 30 P M or as soon
therealter as possible
At the
meeting interested parlies may
appear and be heard with respect
to Ihe proposed ordinance This
hearing may be continued Irom
time to time until final action is
taken by the City Council
Copies of the proposed ordinance
are available at tne City Hall with
the Clerk ot the City and the same
may be nspected by the public
Dated mis Tih day ol September.
A O 1987
M ARY W H AW TH O RN E.
City Clerk
A D V IC E TO T H E P U B L IC It a
person decides toappeal a decision
made with respect to any m ailer
considered at the above hearing he
wilt need a verbatim record ol all
proceedings.
In clu d in g
Ihe
testimony and evidence, which
record is not provided by the City
of Casselberry. (Chapter 80 140.
Laws of Florida. .1980)
Publish September 12. 1982
DE Z 45

A round

at
F lorida
HospitalAltamonte, include his wife,
Mary L ; his mother, Mrs.
Beulah Brown, of Cuthbert,
Ga.; four sisters, Mrs. Marie
Fendley and Mrs. Rebecca
Hamrick, both of Fort Gaines,
Ga., Mrs. Dewie Bethea, of
Altamonte Springs, and Mrs.
Elizabeth Taylor, of Cuthbert.
Ga.; two brothers, James D.,
of Douglas, Ga., and Wesley
C., of Cairo, Ga.
Brisson Funeral Home is in
charge of local arrangements..
CATHERINES. (iKECO
Miss Catherines. Greco, 14.
of 1685. M arkham Woods
Road,
I.ongwnod,
died
Thursday
at
Orlando
Regional Medical Center
Horn Oct. 2. 1967 in
Philadelphia, she moved to
IjingwtKHl from Pittsburgh

Legal Notice
N O TICE OF P U B L IC H E A R IN G
N O TICE IS H E R E HY G IV E N
BY I ME Cl T v O F LONGW OOD
F L O R ID A
that the c ,9y Com
mission will Hold .t public tearing
on September 27 198? lo consider a
CO N D ITIO N A L U SE R E Q U E S T
.submitfrd by Steven *T Dem.nqer
ol 269 w Citrus Street. Altamonte
Springs F l 12701. tor a Retail
Boat Sales Business Operation, to
tie located on tne following legally
described property
All ot Lot 2) and S 100 It ot Lot 28
less road P B I. PG 16. Rands
Addition to long wood
vacant land on Ihe Northeast
comer ot SR 4J4 and .Vilma Street!
The Public Hearmq will be field
on Monday September 27 1982 at
7 )0 P V in the C a y Hall. 175 West
W arren
Avenue.
Longwood,
Florida, or as soon therealter as
possible At this meeting all in
lerested parties may appear and
t* heard with respect to Con
d t onal Use R truest This hearing
may be continued trom tim e'to
time until final action is taken by
the C a* Commission A copy of the
Conditional Use Reauest it on tile
with the City Clerk, and may be
inspected by the public
A laced record ot this meeting is
made by Ihe City ot Longwood for
ts convenience This record may
not constitute an adequate record
lor purposes ol appeal from a
decision made by me Commission
w th respect to the foregoing
matter Any person wishing to
ensureThal an adequate record ot
the proceedings is maintained tor
appellate purposes •! advised to
make the necessary arrangements
at their own e.pense
Dated this *|h day ot September.
1982 C IT Y OF LONGW OOD . FLO
RIDA
D L Terry
City Clerk
Publish September I?. 72. 1982
DEZ 4?

last May. She was a student at
la k e Mary High School and a
m em ber
of
Longwood
Kingdom Hall Je h o v a h 's
Witnesses.
Survivors include her
p arents, Mr
and Mrs.
Richard J. Greco, I/mgwood;
a brother, R ichard D.,
bingwood;
grandmothers,
Mrs
Helen
Greco,
Phoenixville, Pa., and Mrs.
G race Mann, South Y ar­
mouth, Mass.
Semoran Funeral Home.
A ltam onte Springs, is in
charge of arrangements
SIHEHTE ( RAW FORD
Sibert Everett Crawford
B8, of 148 Hacienda Village,
Winter Springs, died Friday
at Winter Park Memorial
Hospital. Rom June 10, 194 in
Portageville, Mo,, he moved

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER II
Central Florida Sierra Club, 7:30 p.m . Maitland
Civic Center. District 5 Naturalist Jon Dodrill Jr will
speak on Ihe Wekiva River Basin. Open to the public.
to Winter Springs from
Evansville, 1ml. in 1979. He
was a retired salesman, a
Methodist and a Mason.
Survivors include his wife,
Helen; a daughter. Sharon K.
Berridge, Longwood; a son,
Thomas Duff. Indianapolis;
and two grandchildren.
Baldwin-Fuirchild Funeral
Home, Altamonte Springs, is
in eliarge of arrangements.

IN TME C IR C U IT COURT OF
THE E IG H T E E N T H JU O IC IA L
C IR C U IT S E M IN O L E COUNTY
F L O R ID A
Civil Action No 81 197 CA 09 L
M A R U K A M A C H IN E R Y COR
PO R A T IO N Of A M ER IC A , etc .
Plaintiff
vS

JOHN W W IL L IA M S O N et u&gt;. el
al.
' ‘
Defendants
N O T IC E OF SAM E
Nonce *s hereby given that
pursuant lo Ihe F mal Judgment ol
Foreclosure and Sale entered in
•he cause pending in Ihe Circuit
Court ot Ihe Eighteenth Judicial
C ircu it, in and tor Sem inole
County Florida. Civil Action No
81 192 CA 09 L. Ihe undersigned
C lerk w ill se ll the property
situated in said County, described
as
1 ■
Lot 41. M ID D EN E S T A T E S .
UN IT T H R E E , according to the
Plat thereof as recorded in Plat
Book IS. Page ?S. Public Records
ot Semmole County. Florida
at public sale, to Ihe highest and
best bidder lor cash at II 00
o clock A M on Ihe 4lh day of
October, 1982. al ihe West From
door ot Ihe Seminole County
Courthouse. Sanford. Florida
(Court Seal I
A R T H U R M B E C K W IT H . JR
C L E R K OF TM E C IR C U IT
COURT
By C arrie E Buettper
Deputy Clerk
SWANN ANO HADDOCK. P A
600 Courtland Street
Orlando. Florida 72804
Attorneys lor Plaintiff
Publish September 12. 19. 1982
OE Z S4

H IG H 7 5

P.O . Box 482, M a g g ie , N .C. 28751
704-926-0951

To lily Semite

M cDa n i e l , m r
w il l ia m
DAVIS — G raveside funeral
services tor M r W illiam Davis
McDaniel, 85. ol 1641 N W
Avenue F Belle Glade wtiodifd
Friday will be at 2 p m Monday
n Evergreen Cem etery, San
tordi w th Ihe R e v Pau l Murphy
ofticiafm g B ris s o n F u n e ra l
Home PA in charge

County hiewh!
Tkanko fot Sujjfwifiwi
JACKSON for JUDGE
Let's Get The Job Done November 2nd

F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
Not'Ce 'Thereby given that I am
engaged m business at MS Morton
Lane, Winter Spr n g v Semmole
County Flor da under the tic
titlous name ol P R IN T E D C IR
CUIT S E R V IC E S , and th a t.I in
lend to register said nam e with the
Clerk ot the C im u it Court,
Semmole County. Florida g ac
cordance with ihe provisions ot the
Fictitious Name Statutes. To Wit
Section 165 09 Florid a Statutes
I9S7
Sig Gabnelle Knapp
Publish September ii, '.9 26.
October 3. 1987
D EZ 40

P o lA d Pd For By Bill Jackson C PA

( im p Tr9»*urt»

MANUFACTURER
AND OISTRIBUIOR

SERVING
CENTRAL FLORIDA

OVER 23 YRS

FACTORY
PRICES

£

CERTIFIED
CONTRACTORS

EASY TERMS
0P(N
'JON FBI 10 5

COMET SAMUt Vr.N
AWNINGS

F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
Notice 'S hereby given that I am
enqaged mbusmess al 1019 S. East
Lake St.. Longwood, Seminole
County, Florida under Ihe tic
Ijlious name ot J E R R Y ' S AUTO
R E P A IR , and thal I Intend to
register said name with Ihe Clerk
ot the Circuit Court. Seminole
County. Florida In accordance
with the provisions ol the Fic
titious Name S ta tu le v To Wit
Section 86S09 Flo rid a Statutes
1957
Jerald L Bushor
Publish August 29 &amp; September S.
12, 19. 1982
DEY l »

SCREEN ROOMS

22%ncc 45%
WITH

PURCHASE
OF 3 o n MORE

FLORIOAROOMS
’ AROOMORENCLOSE
TOUREXISDN6 SCREENROOM
H*

Hunt Monument Co.
Display Y a rd
Hwy. l i n - Farn Park
Ph. 339-4988
Gen* Hunt, Owner
Bronze, (Aarble 4 Granite.

M a u s o le u m

52

BILL AND FAYE CLAUSE

Lega[ Notice

IN
THE
C IR C U IT
COURT,
E IG H T E E N T H
JU O IC IA L
C IR C U IT .
IN
ANO
FO R
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y .F L O R IO A
CA SE NO 87 1788 CA 09 p
D IV IS IO N P
C IT Y C O N SU M ER S E R V IC E S O F
F L O R ID A INC
a Florida Cor
poration
Plam titt,
'vs
R IC H A R D OONA l O C A IN and
SA N D RA C CAIN his wile
Defendants
NOTICE OF S A L E
Notice .s hereby given that
pursuant to an order ol a Final
lodgment ol Foreclosure entered
■n the above entitled cause. I will
sell the property situ a ted in
Sem m ole
County,
F lo rid a ,
described as follows
The SOUTH 3)0 leet of the E A S T
MS tret ol the W E S T 660 left
(L E S S the SOUTH 30 leet and the
W EST
15 leet tor
R o a d s)
G O VER N M EN T
LOT 4. Section
17. Townsh.p 19 South. Range 37
East ol the Public Records ol
Sem m ole
County.
F lo r id a .
Together with right to use the
C anal
adlolning
the
above
property and launching ram p, in
conjunction with the others
at public sale, lo the highest and
best bidder lor cash, at 11 00 A M
on the 12th day ol October, 1982, at
the West Front door Semmole
County Courthouse, Santord.
Florida
(Seal)
Arthur H Beckw.th, Jr
C L E R K OF T H E C IR C U IT
COURT
B Y Patricia Robmson
Deputy Clerk
Publish September 12. 19,1982
D E Z 42

LOW

N ew 2 B R . V illas, fu lly furnished for
six. Come spend a fe w fa ll days w ith us.

Funeral Notice

Legal Notice

Legal Notice

FROST W ARNING

3
■
!.

HOME IMPROVEMENT
CENTER

• PATIO COVERS

• UTILITY ROOM S
• M O O 'iE h o m e S k ir t \ ,
• a l l a l u m i n u m c o t iS t R i

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FOR FREE
HOME SU R V EY1
CALL

293-6981

4180 N. ORANGE B L O S SO M TRAIL

OUT QF-TQlVN TOLL FREE DIAL 1 ana men 800-432 5303

E n to m b m e n t

Now Under Construction

NEW OFFICE POLICY . . .
MOST INSURANCE ASSIGNMENTS
ACCEPTED WITH NO EXTRA
OUT-OF-POCKET EXPENSES
BEYOND POLICY REQUIREMENTS

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We are happy to announce a
//I

'NEW OFFICE POLICY - MOST
INSURANCE ASSIGNMENTS ACCEPTED
WITH NO EXTRA OUT-OF-POCKET
EXPENSES BEYOND
POLICY REQUIREMENTS."
What does this mean lo you? You pay absolutely nolhing, we accept whatever your In­
surance company pays, you pay no deductible whatsoever. II your policy calls lor $50 00
deductible per year, you pay us nothing. II your policy pays 10 percanl altar the deduc­
tible you still pay nothing. The reason we are doing this is because we understand that
many people and many families have members who need Treatment for some health
problems and find it difficult to pay the deductible to acquire health care. This way, it
costs you and «our family absolutely nothing out of-your pocket (or health care in our
office.

SANFORD PAIN CONTROL CLINIC
D r. T h o m a s Y a n d e ll
C h ir o p r a c t ic P h y s ic ia n

2017

Fren ch Ave., Sanford

P L E A S E C A L L F O R AN A P P O IN T M E N T

323-5763

A D V A N TA G ES OF M AUSO LEUM
A s w e begin o u r c o n s tr u c t io n ,
program , there are choice crypts
a v a ila b le in our Chapel ol Serenity
M ausoleum . By acting now. you
have the prestige of above ground
entom bm ent al about the cost of
ground burial Contact us today.
W e 'll answ er any questions you m ay
have concerning this special money
saving otter.

* Cost no g re ate r than ground b u ria l — often less.
* P ro vid e s the most
perpetual care.

secure

protection

with

* C ryp ts a r e clean, dry and ven tilated .

ENTOM BM ENT:

a re constructed of tim e d efyin g m aterials to
endure through Ihe ages.
• En to m b m en t elim inates future expense and
responsibility.
» Y o u r fa m ily name w ill be perpetuated

* T here is no contact with Ihe earth.
* All c ry p ts a re perm anent because the buildings

• En tom b m en t gives you and yours enduring
peace ol. mind

SEND COUPON TODAY OR CALL 3224263
IT*
O A K L A W N M E M O R IA L P A R K

S A V E
*500 W R C f f

ROUTE 4, BOX 244
SANFORD, FL. 32771
Name------------------------------------------------- Phone____________
Address__________________________ ________________________________________

"Something ot beauty is a comfort lorever. Its loveliness
increases. It will never pass into nothingness.** — K EA TS

City

State

♦9

Zip.

%1

te tLe

�PEOPLE
'The only things that keep the
structure standing are cobwebs like
ropes and two inches of termite
wings.' — KIT CARSON

Wanted:
A Home For
Christian
Sharing
Center
H fraia Phofm by Tom Vincent

Tin*

C u sto m er

Christian Sharing C e n te r w e lc o m e s d o n a tio n s of all k in d s .

Hyl.KIGHTLCKF.lt
Special To The Herald
A derelict old house stands at the corner of Magnolia
and Fourth Street in Sanford. The paint is peeling in large
flakes, tiie windows are cracked and broken, the tin ro o f is
pitted The fust floor alone is usable, the upstairs has been
sealed off as unsafe.
■•The only thing that keeps lluit structure standing are
cobwebs like ropes and two inches of termite wings." says
Kit Carson with feeling.
For all that, it's probably the most crowded building in
town, with people, clothes and food. It’s the Sanford
Christian Sharing Center. Over 100 volunteers from 17
churches work there each week and hundreds go there for
help w ith needs that grow more desperate as government
agencies cut down on relief and benefit prograias.
Is the Center performing a worthwhile service for the
community? Ask the Health and Rehabilitation Services,
ask the sheriff or the police departments, ask the
Salvation Army.
Kach of these organizations has limitations as to the
kind and quantity of help they can give. The Sanford
Christian Sharing Center fills in the gaps.
A poor family stands beside the charred remains of the
small wooden house which had been their home. The
mother is holding a crying baby, the father tries to
comfort a 2-year-old child with frightened eyes. They
escaped from the flames in the greying light of dawn with
what they had on, nothing more.
What do they do1 Where do they go?
The fire department phones the Center. In a little while
the family has clothes, food to tide them over a few days,
and maybe a little money to find a room to stay in until
they can get another place to live. The father of this
family has a job so they can get by with emergency help.
An aged crippled woman comes to the Center. Her purse
has been snatched containing her welfare money and all
her food stamps for the month. Tlie food stamp agency
may be able to help, but it will take time to investigate.
Hunger doesn't wait—the Center sees she lias food in the
interim. One of the volunteers who is herself on pension
slips a little cash into her hand.
The police department calls the Center. A family of five
(m other, father and three small children) have been
found sleeping in their old car near the park. They have
come from another state, so probably can’t get relief, but
a friend of theirs in Fort Lauderdale has promised to help
the father find a job, once they get that far. Money has
given out and the gas tank is do '. All the police could do
would be book them into the local Jail as vagrants. The
Center pays a nearby gas station to give them gas.
These are the kinds of crises the Center meets daily.
"We try to catch the people who fall through the
cracks," says Father Leroy Soper, rector of Holy Cross
Episcopal Church.

Il was his church which loaned the house to Ihe Center
five years ago with the understanding that a more suitable
place in better repair would be found as soon as prac­
ticable The house would then be torn down to provide
more space for church activities. To date, another plan*
for the Center has not been found.
How did the Sharing Center sta rt'1
Father Soper says it was due to Florence Gilmartin, a
member of All Souls Catholic Church.
"Well, not really," says Florence. "One of the members
of the church, Elmer Wontenay, kept after me to do
something about clothes for poor children and babies. So 1
started a clothes closet in my own home, with things
sorted as to sizes in chicken boxes piled up there.
One day a week I handed them out. A friend of mine,
Rose Carrier, mended, washed and ironed the things as
they came in, so they’d look nice and be ready to wear."
"Then, in 1971, I asked Father Ennis about using an
empty store on Sanford Avenue, which could be rented for
$35 a month Ile said he would have to get permission from

l.rllia Man l\ b r o w s e s t h r o u g h m e r c h a n d is e a t th e O u t e r .

the bishop and it would take time. Well, I just went ahead
anyway, and by the time permission came, it was a going
concern. Some school kids [tainted it and helped fix it and
put up shelves."
It started out just for clothes for children, but one thing
led to another, and it grew . So did the need
Father Soper talked with Father Knnis in 1976 about the
possibility of a center in which all churches could join The
project was brought before the Sanford Ministerial
Association, and on April 1, 1977, the Christian Sharing
Center was opened at Fourth and Magnolia. Fifteen
churches covenanted to contribute and keep it Koine, with
money, labor and time. Florence Gilmnrtin trained the
first batch of volunteers.
"Mind you. I had been to the center in Orlando for ad­
vice and training, so 1 was only handing on what I had
been taught," said Florence, ignoring her own five years
of experience, effort and dedication.
It's quite an experience being given a tour through the
Center by Dottie Sullivan, the vice president of the

Jeanne Holch,
director of the
Christian Sharing
Center, is among
the community
volunteers
manning the
facility. Is the
Center performing
a worthwhile
service? Ask the
Health and
Rehabilitation
Services, ask the
sheriff or police
departments, ask
the Salvation
Army.

organization. You squeeze past peopfe between racks of
clothes of all sizes. In the comers are shelves of canned
goods and boxes of milk powder, refrigerators filled with
day old bread and cartons of milk past the sale date but
still good.
In them also are odd-shaped eggs which can’t be sold in
the m arket but are just as nutritious as those which can.
Cribs and odd bits of furniture fill the space under the
stairwell everywhere there is a traffic jam of people, the
helpers and the helped
• It's fiendishly hot in summer, frigid in winter, but
we're happy to be here as volunteers," remarks Dottie.
"Each church has charge of the check out desk one day
per month, so the responsibility is shared and everyone
gets to know how worthwhile it is. No one gets paid, even
the ones who are here daily. In fact, we frequently dig into
our own pockets for things the Center can't supply."
A card file is kept of the people who come for help, so
there is little freeloadmg by the unscrupulous. Most of
clientele is referred by one of the churches or by one of the
government agencies which constitutes a double check.
Money and supplies come in driblets — from the
churches, from anonymous donors, from bake sales and
an annual barbeque. People who hold garage sales
frequently donate their unsold items. Many of those who
have been helped by the Center in the past come in to give
what they can. It's never enough.
• We’re here to help the have-nots," said one volunteer.
And there are a lot more have-nots than haves in Sanford,
believe me!'*
Women who have been beaten and abandoned by their
husbands come into the Center with children and often
they're pregnant again Some have been beaten so many
times they simply leave home in despair and pain.
Government agencies, free legaf services and other
organizations may be able to help, but not at once —
maybe not for weeks.
’ One such abandoned woman, very young, very
frightened, came with a newborn baby wrapped in a
pillow case lent to her by the hospital where she was
delivered. She had nothing but the clothes she wore.
"That really made me see red!" exclaimed Kit Carson
a member of Grace United Methodist Church. "A baby
wrapped in nothing but a pillow case, and it was a cold
day. So I got my church to hold a "Gifts for the Baby
Jesus" Sunday before Christmas. People gave layettes,
cribs, baby formula, diapers, a whole pile of stuff. It was
gone in two months."
Who Is Kit Carson?
"I'm a gopher," he answered with a smile. "I run a
lawn service, so I have a truck and can pick up anything
too heavy for people to tote in their car — furniture, boxes
of food, refrigerators, beds, that sort of thing. Just sauy

•_

f

Jj
*J

See CIIKIST1AN, Page 3B

S a n fo rd P ro fe sso r A p p o in te d A ssista n t D ean A t N A U
Special to The Herald
Theodore "Ted” Johnson has been more
than a professor to Northern Arizona
University students throughout his tenure at
the institution. He has been a person many
minority students could turn to for advice and
guidance.
His role as an advisor to these students
becomes more formalized with his ap­
pointment by NAU President Eugene M.
Hughes as assistant to the dean of the College
of Arts and Science in July.
In his new capacity, Johnson will teach on a
half-time basis in the Department of English
and devote the rest of his time to advising for
minority students.
"I have recognized Tor the 12 years I have
been at NAU that Ted Johnson lias played a
significant role advising students, particularly
minority students, and serving as an im­
portant liaison between the university and
minority community," said Hughes.
"I believe il is time to recognize this im­

portant service formally and to provide time
for Ted to carry on this vital service role. I
know it will mean a great deal to our students
and to Ted's faculty and administrative
colleagues to have him in this role," Hughes
said.
Since joining the NAU faculty in 1969,
Johnson, an assistant professor of English,
said he has always tried to make himself
accessible to students seeking assistance and
counseling.
The increased emphasis on counseling,
Johnson said, will permit him to help students
succeed once they arrive at the university. His
new position will service as a vehicle to not
only retain minority students, but to motivate
the students to achieve, he said.
Johnson noted that many minority students
may drop out of school because they are not
able to adapt to university life, or because they
lack the motivation.
"I hope the students will have a greater
sense of belonging and more motivation to

stay and succeed,” he said.
Jo h n so n ’s record of involvem ent in
university activities and organizations attests
to his commitment to NAU and its students.
On campus, Johnson lias sponsored Brothers
United, Ebony Women, the Black Student
Union and Kappa Alpha Psl, a social fraternity
organization which he founded.
He serves on the Minority Programs,
Athletic, Scholarship, Affirmative Action,
Curriculum and Code of Ethics committees at
the university. He also is a lifetime member of
Blue Key.
In the past, Johnson also has been in­
strumental in attracting students to the NAU
campus.
His numerous contributions were recognized
in 1978 with the presentation of the NAU
Alumni Association Service Award ai
Homecoming. The NAACP, of which he has
been a m ember since 19G6, honored him with
the Image Award for Outstanding Service to
Ihe Community.

Johnson’s community involvement includes
membership on the Flagstaff City-Coconino
County Public libraries board, of which he
now serves as vice president, the Buffalo
Soldiers Museum and the Coconino Com­
munity Guidance Center board.
A state committeeman for the Democratic
Party, Johnson has been active in the political
campaigns of Arizona Gov. Bruce Babbitt and
U.S. Sen. Dennis DeConcini. He was vice
president of the Central Democratic Com­
mittee from 1976-78.
Johnson was born and reared in Sanford
where his mother, Mrs. Carrie W. Irvin, lives.
After receiving his bachelor’s degree from
NAU in 1956, lie taught at Grooms High School
in Sanford for 10 years. He also taught at Cope
Junior High School in Redlands, Calif., before
returning to NAU, earning his m aster's degree
in 1969.
Johnson and his wife Gewendolyn of Winter
Park, have a son Jawando and daughter
Angela, both students at NAU.

T I IK O D O K E " T E D •*
JOHNSON

�I B — Evening Herald, Sanlord, FI.

In And Around Lake Mary

Harvey Pughs Honored
L&gt;is and Harvey Pugh were honored
Sept. 3 at the Like Mary United
P re sb y te ria n Church on their 65th
wedding anniversary by their daughter,
Mrs. Bill (Huthi Wieboldt of Sanford.
L ik e M ary
Lake Mary Mayor Walter Sorenson
Correspondent
was there to present the couple with a
321-5366
proclamation, declaring Sept. 3 as l/iis
and Harvey Pugh Day.
Tables were set with daisies, plants,
Tickets can he purchased at the
ferns and candelabra. Anna Jardinc Boulevard H a ir Designs on L ik e M ary
decorated the cake which was also Boulevard, through Beverly William s at
trim m ed with daisies and made the Club at the Crossings or at the door.
homemade mints.
Among their close friends attending
Wayne, Carol, Sherry and Curtis
were: Wally and Millie Hill, Zip and Hoffman returned Tuesday from a WayAnnie Sehweickert, Millie and George vacation at Port Orange. Wide there
M urray, Arolyn True, Homer and Iona they stayed at the East Winds Con­
Gleason, Etta Jane Keogh, Kyle and dominiums.
Paige Keogh, Florence Zimmerman,
Carol says they relaxed and enjoyed
Oladel Cochran, Geneva Cochran, Isable the sun and the beach The Hoffmans also
Thompson, Evelyn and Millard Rice and enjoyed Busch Gardens on Friday.
Thelma Brewer.
Jim and D eLores Lash recentlyA Fall and Hair Fashion Show, spon­ returned from a 10-day vacation in
sored by Boulevard Hair Designs, the Pennsylvania. While there they visited
Village Shop i Driftwood Plaza) and Club with Jim ’s brother Ed and sister-in-law
at the Crossings will be held Tuesday at Barbara I .ash. They also visited the
the Greenhouse at 6:30 p.m. The show Amish community and attended a Lash
includes dinner and live entertainment family reunion in Harrisburg.
by the Johnson Brothers Trio.
Jim and DeLores also celebrated their

30th wedding anniversary on Sept. 8
They joined Allan and Marily n Hughs of
Orlando for dinner at Valles.

Bonnie
Olvera

Herald Photo by Tom Vincent

Harvey and Lois i'ugli a proclamation declaring
Sept. :t as Harvey and Lois Pugh Day when the

their fi.'ith wedding anniversary
at the Lake Mary United Presbyterian Church.

Deadline Nears For
Tall For Art' Show
The Sanford-Seminole Art Association annual “Fall
For Art Show" is scheduled Oct. 9 and 10. Applications
will be accepted until Oct. 1.
Those wishing to apply may write Jeanette
Policastro, 1190 Adams St., Longwood, 32750. Over 150
exhibitors are expected for this year’s show.
Outstanding arts and crafts, entertainment and good
food are in store for the visitor and many prizes and
purchase awards are available to be won by exhibitors,
according to Vicky Ulavois.

Chorus Needs Singers
Seminole Community College announces that the
Community Chorus of the college will he performing
George Frederick Handel's "Messiah, Part 1" in
celebration of the 10th season of the chorus. The dates
of the two choral performances are Nov. 19 and Nov.
21.
Membership in the Seminole Community Chorus is
open to all singers in the area; no audition is
necessary. Singers interested in membership should
attend the opening rehearsal on Sept. 13 at which time
the registration may he completed.
For information on the Seminole Community Chorus
call Dr. Burt II. Perinchief, Director of Choral
Activities, at I305l 323-1450. Ext. 283.

Two non-credit short courses in Housing and Home
Decoration i Interior Decorating) will begin at Seminole
Community College. These classes will meet in the fullyequipped interior design facilities for eight weeks. The cost of
each class is $10

CONTROL
INFECTION

The day class will meet Tuesday mornings, beginning Sept.
28 from 9 to 12.
The evening class will meet Thursdays beginning Sept. 23
from 7 to 10.
Register at the admissions office in the administration
building. For information call 323-1450; from Orlando, 843-7001,
ext. 423 or 227.

Sanford Mayor Lee I*.
Moore signs the pro­
clamation
making
Sept. 13-17 Infection
Control Week in San­
ford, as Ruth Wade,
left. Central Florida
Regional
Hospital's
Infection Control di­
rector, and Rernice
Duncan, director of the
Sem inole
County
Health
Department
look on. ready to put
their plan of action into
effect for the local
communities. Exhibits
will he held at three of
the area's shopping
plazas during the
Iweek.

Ear Piercing

$T50
Reg. M 0 00
JO A N N N E G R O N

Shorter Freshman
Stephanie Rogers, daughter of Bobby Rogers and
Mrs. Martha Rogers, is enrolled ns a freshman at
Shorter College, Rome, Ga., for the fall semester.
Miss Rogers is a 1982 graduate of lik e BrantleyHigh School.
Shorter College is a 4-year, coeducational liberal
arts institution. The Georgia Baptist college is fully
accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges and
Schools.

Ballet Auxiliary Meeting
Suzie Dickey, president of Ballet Guild of SanfordSeminole Auxiliary, announces the auxiliary will meet
Thursday night, at 8 p.m., at the School of Dance Arts,
2560 Elm Ave.
Mrs. Dickey invites anyone in the community who is
interested in the guild to attend the auxiliary meeting.
•

••

Artists To Meet
Sanford-Seminole Art Association will meet Monday,
at 7 p.m., at the Greater Sanford Chamber of Com­
m erce building, First Street and Sanford Avenue.
Members are asked to bring covered dishes for dinner.
Guests are welcome.
Local artists interested in the association pre asked
to call 869-7898 for information.

Clubwomen Start Season
The liongwood Woman’s Club will start its 1982-’83
season Tuesday with a covered dish luncheon at 12:30
p.m. in the club building on Church Avenue.
The program will be, “What did you do this sum­
mer?"

NEW ARRIVAL____________
Mr. and Mrs. David C. Barkley (Mindy) of Sanford, an­
nounce the birth of a son, Ryan David, who weighed in at 8 lbs.,
4 4 ozs. on Sept. 3, at Central Florida Regional Hospital,
Sanford.
Ryan is welcomedjiome by a brother, Adam, 28 months old.
Maternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Donald M. Fann,
Sr., of Sanford. Paternal grandparents are Ann .Barkley of
Sanford, and David Barkley, Sr., of Tuscaloosa, Ala.
Paternal great-grandmother is loirille Haeflinger of San­
ford.

322-7684

livings nf
S T Y L Y IN G S A L O N
l» H French Ave.
Sanlord

W

Herald Photo by Lo ri Drew

W M a &amp; ftem

Scholarship Winner
Elizabeth Wittels, a 1982 graduate of Like BrantleyHigh, was recently awarded a $300 scholarship by Beta
Chi Chapter of Delta Kappa Gamma Society Inter­
national, an honorary organization of women
educators. She is currently enrolled in the elementary
education program at the University of Central
Florida.
This award was bused on scholarship, a demon­
strated interest in children and acceptance in a
program of teacher education.
Elizabeth is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Mitchell
Wittels of Forest City.

The Cystic Fibrosis Bike-a-Thon will be
held Sept. 25 from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. at cityhall.
There will be prizes given in two
categories, ages 12 and under and also
for ages 12-18. Those getting 125 in
sponsors will receive a T-shirt.
Chairman is Terry Cooper and cochairman is Diane Hunt. Those in­
terested in participating in the bike-athon should contact Terry at 322-0836.

Interior Decorating
Course Scheduled

PEOPLE
IN BRIEF

The city of Io k e Mary, by unanimous
vote, adopted a resolution declaring the
week of Sept. 12-18 as Youth Week
Rotary chairman for the month of
September. Marty Bacon, arranged with
Don Reynolds, principal of I-ake Mary
High School, to invite three outstanding
students of l.-&gt;ke Mary High School to
speak at the Sept. 15 Rotary Club
meeting.
Those chosen by Reynolds are: Will
Livelle, president of Student Govern­
ment; Lisa Bolthouser, advanced team;
and Christy Reynolds, Fellowship
Christian Athlete.

by...

Be A Pal; Pick Up A Pen
DEAR HEADERS: A few years ago a
soldier stationed in Korea wrote to tell
me what a heartbreaking sight it was to
see so many servicemen hurry to mail
tall day alter day and walk away emptyhanded with tears in their eyes.
I urged readers who wanted pen pals to
write to: Operation Dear Abby, c-o
Commander: U.S. Forces, Korea, APO
San Francisco 96301.
It was a huge success. I learned that
within two months, 20,000 letters had
arrived, and the morale of the men had
never been higher!
Well, friends, the olfer still goes. I’ve
cleared it with Public Affairs Officer Col.
Richard G. Hyde, who assures me that
servlcem em bers In K o n a would
welcome pen pals. So, make someone
happy, and write a letter to a lonely
. soldier today. And remember, there are
lonely women In our armed forces, too.
Use the above address, and let me know
il anything rewarding develops.
ABBY
DEAR ABBY: I am a woman in my
early 30s with two children, ages 4 and 8.
I am recently divorced and am now living
with my ex-husband’s father. (I'll call

D eO T

w

&lt; k*

, ,
A b b y

-------------------------- -------------------——
him Ralph.) When I say I am "living with
him ," I don't mean just sharing expeases
either. To put it bluntly, we are sleeping
together.
My question: Should my children call
him Grandpa, Dad or Ralph? And how
much should I explain to them about this
situation?
Ralph thinks we should be open and
honest with them, but 1 feel we should
shelter them since they just went through
the traum a of divorce.
IN DISTRESS IN INDIANA
DEAR IN: If your children have
always called Kalph "G randpa," they
would probably be more comfortable
calling him Grandpa for now.
Your children are undoubtedly much
more nware of the situation than you

think, so any attempts to "shelter" them
would be useless. I vote with Ralph,
DEAR ABBY: Our 29-year-old son (I'll
call him Johnny) recently called and
asked us for $2,000 for a new pickup
truck. He said he was borrowing $5,000
elsewhere to make a total of $7,000. He
told us that he and his wife (they both
work full time) are buying a home and
have no money in the bank.
When my husband began to question
the advisability-of taking on such a large
debt, Johnny said he "didn’t need a
lecture, and to take the money and shove
it." Then he hung up.
The next day, Johnny’s wife called and
said most of their friends are being
subsidized by their parents, and they
think we should do more to help them,
Today we received a letter from
Johnny saying that because of our
negative attitude he is cutting us out of
his life. We are in shock and heartbroken,
What should we do?
THE PARSON’S DAUGHTER
DEAR DAUGHTER: What should you
do? Nothing. What should you not do?
Give him the $2,000 to get back into "his
life.”

Chapter Starts Season
With Beginning Day
The "beginning day" meeting of the Xi
Civic Center. Committee reports and other
Theta Epsilon Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
communications pertaining to this year’s
marked the start of the chapters social and
upcoming activities were reviewed,
sen-ice year.
Social committee chairman Donna Frank
Unda Dunn hosted the event, a luncheon and
discussed plans for a girls social to be held
swim party at her Brierwood Drive home.
Sept. 12, with members meeting at the
Members expressed the 1982-83 theme, "The
Interstate Mall to go to a movie and then to go
Golden Key to Friendship," by preparing and
to lunch after the movie,
sharing their favorite dishes. The chapter
At the close of the business meeting, Mrs.
goals were discussed and yearbooks were
Bojanowski arranged for an unusual lingeree
distributed.
demonstration to be presented. Members wen*
Xi Theta Epsilon conducted its first regular
picked randomly to model and give cornmeeting of the year at the Myrtle Avenue • mentary on the various items,
home of Tina Bojanowski.
Refreshments were served. Those attending
During the business meeting plans for the
were: Tina Bojanowski, Iinda Dunn, Donna
annual Valentine Ball were discussed. Past
Frank, Ruth Gaines, Diane Gazil, Vickie Hall,
president Ginny Hagan was selected as ,Mary Johnson, A! Kurtz, Faye lord, Linda
Valentine Girl to represent the chapter at the
Morris, Ijure! Rodgers, Iois Smith and
ball to be held Feb. 12, 1983 at the Sanford
Tracey Wight.

.

T V W lL W rtS i

&lt; a t:

Good-looking pants
with pockets, pleats,
slim
legs,
in
g a b a r d in e
and
denim.
In Black, Khaki and
Denim Blue.
Sites 3 to 15 and I to
18.

At£ Vlmantfy Puudl
218-220 E. First St.
Sanford
PH. 322-3524

�Evening Herald. Sanford. FI

Sunday, Sept. 12, I9S2-3B

Herald Photo by Doric Dietrich

WE HOPE
SHE GETS IT

Sanford Junior Woman's Club will never forget Ihe .Miss Sanford Scholarship
Pageant the club sponsored in April—the first official pageant for Sanford in
ill years. And how could they forget—their Miss Sanford, Deanna Pitman,
representing Florida in the Miss America Pageant this week? Sending their
"inner off to the Atlantic City extravaganza last Saturday are: from left,
Carole Pogrom and Meg Newman, Miss Sanford pageant co-chairmen: Miss
Florida, Deanna Pitman: club member Ann Roberta; and club president
Ronnie Albers. Miss Florida performed the same dance Friday night to the
music, "I Hope I Get It,” that she danced in the Sanford Pageant.

MUSUEM
EXHIBIT

i

Mildred M. Caskey,
curator of the Henry
Shelton Sanford Mus­
eum Library, shows
glass items in an
exhibit that opens
Sunday, Sept. 12, with
open house, scheduled
from 2 to 5 p.m. Ihe
exhibit, sponsored by
the Central Florida
Depression Fra Glass
(Tub. is entitled "For
The Love of Glass." On
display will lie a
variety of glass dating
from 1K00 through IIKIO
including cut glass,
pattern glass, lleisey.
Cambridge, Fostoria,
Fenton
and
dinnerware and kitchen
item s
from
the
Depression Era. The
museum, 520 K. First
St., is open, free to the
p u b Ii c ,
S und a y ,
Wednesday, Thursday
and Friday, from 2 to 5
p.m.

*

Herald Photo by Tom Vincent

• • •

Christian

Continued From Page lit
I’m one of the volunteers.”
Kit Carson was the one who contacted the manager of
I’ublix about day old bread and milk past the sale date and
other items. He regularly goes to the farm s on the out­
skirts of the city for odd-shaped, unsold eggs. He claims to
have been "sandbagged" into helping manage the chicken
barbeque the Center put on to get extra funds. The barbeque was such a success that the Civic Center has been
reserved for the event next year,
“It was worth the effort," he grinned. "I hear we
grossed about $2,500. 1 guess I'll let myself be "sand­
bagged" again for it."
The public schools know the value of the Center.
Children who have no shoes or proper clothes to wear are
sent there. No child goes away unhelped.
The day of reckoning for the Center is coming,
nonetheless. The old building is not large enough and it's
beyond repair.
"The hail storm in March threw us a curve," says Kit.
"Since then rain comes in anywhere and anyhow it likes,

Scouts N ee d
Citrus Council of Girl Scouts, Central Florida, has joined six
&gt;ther Florida Girl Scout Councils in a statewide multi-media
rampaign to recruit adult volunteers.
Men and women, 18 years of age and older, are invited to
ihare their experience and skills with Girl Scouts 6-17, A
rariety of exciting volunteer jobs are available now in many
lifferent programs, including: sports, career training, the
irts, handicapped and environmental projects, community
iervice, travel and other areas.
Interested persons obtain complete information by calling
oil-free, 1-800-282-3564.
The television, radio and newspaper campaign is designed to
ocus attention on the many opportunities that exist in Girl
Jcoutlng for adult volunteers. As the largest voluntary
rganizalion for girls !h the world. Girl Scouts depends heavily
m men and women volunteers from all walks of life.
Citrus Council of Girl Scouts, which includes six Florida
•ounties, numbers business executives, professional people,
lomemakers, teachers, retired persons, college students,
irtists and politicians among its corps of volunteer workers.

Center
and by the bucket. Now we need amangel straight from
heaven — or an earthly "angel" wHo will come up with a
place large and airy and safe In exchange for a tax loss!"
It's obvious the Sanford Christian Sharing Center is
much needed and worthwhile. But the Center will close
unless a new facility is found.
Does anyone around here know any angels?

SPECIAL
All Perms
$ 2 5 00
W EN D Y W ILLIAM S

LONG HAIR EX TR A

Hoik

SOI French Ave PH

'T

Sanford
(formerly June'* Beauty Salon)

‘ MENTION TH E S E C R E T
WORD AND R E C E IV E
1 A R T IC LE D RY C L E A N E D

WITH YOUR O R D E R

System 2 - not 1, but 2,
Kodak-quality prints of
your photos... at Eckerd.

O P E N D A I L Y 9 t o 9,
S U N D A Y 10 t o 7 .
S a le Prices g o o d thru
W e d . S e p t . 15 t h .

We reserve the right
to limit quantities.

B E A U T IF U L Is th« Se c t e ! Word In our Dry
Cloaning Service. We clean your clothes and
make them look their Best.

PHILIPS
DECORATING D EN A C LEA N ER S
372-3315 OR 322-7442
319 W. I3TH ST.
SANFORD

AMERICAS FAMILY DFfcUG STORE

�I B — fcveninq Herald. Sanford. FI.

Sunday, Sept. 1 7 , 1983

Methodist

Adventist

C H R IS T U N IT E D
M E T M O D IS T C H U R C H
Tu&lt;k*' O rlvt. lunlsnd E i l s t r i
A«|lo r
A t* R o b e r t* M illtr
* At &gt; m
Sunday School
11 04 • m
Morning W Afili'B
M •m
M V P InA A Aik tun :
T 1C p m
E v t W orlAlp l i t 6
Sun
W o d n tid tr M ornlnj P r c y t r O r c j f

T H Isev en t h day
A D V E N T IS T C H URCH

Cornerol tin i Eim

»►* Krnnvtn B r * | n 1
Saturday S H v l t f t
Sabbsth School
* 0 , Ship S o w n *
W vdnrsaav n » m

P rs y s r S e w ic t

t

V )$ a m
II D llm

fc cp m
F IR S T U N I T E O

Assembly Of God
F I R S T A S S E M B L Y O r GOO
C o rntr )7th &amp; Elm
Div'dl Bohannon
S v n d ty S c B M l
1« M a
N iir iff Y jhifu itb qrtdv
Wbfi'Wp. S f r v ic t
10 M i
Sffv.Ic^b fn E ip an o l
10 004
E vfnm q W orthip
4 top
F a m ily Ni^ht
7 top
W rd L tfh ih o u tt Youth
7 Mp
9 «va l R a n ^ f fi &amp;
M n iiO h tM a t
7 top

m e t m o d is t c h u r c h

l i t Po rk A ut
L m F King
Potior
Rictiord t. Vilolo
Potior
Jim tlA T h o m tl
O iro d o r ot M u lit
Morning W orikip
I 10* H o r n
Sunder School
I A1 • m
UM YF
IC C p m
Wrn i P r o r t f B r o i l l o i l
In d * * tn Tnvridoy
I Mo m

m
m
n
m
m
m

C O M M U N IT Y U N IT E D
M E T M O D IS T C H U R C H
Hwy IT t l ol Pinoy R dgo Sd
C ilM lk o r r y
R *v H W,gM R trify
P * « '« '
Rt&lt; Ocrtd H Hodgoi
A IIC P o i'o r
Morning W o n li'P
* IS 110 m
Church Scnool
T IC H i m
S rru ic ti » 'lh clo tto t «or i n 0 | t i
F tllo a lh ip CoHM M « w ttn 11,1,(11
UM YF
« )0p m
Eronm g W crih ip
IM p m
W td R'bic S'vdy
T CC p m

RR

Baptist
C E N T R A L S A R T lS T CHURCH
i ) i i C»* A r t . Sa*f«rd
I I ) IT U
F ftd d i* Sm ith
Pattor
Sunday School
•'•-‘ t 4 Ja .r o
Morning w o n h ip
llto a r o
Church Training
i OCp m
€ vtmng A o rih ip
7.30pm
Wed P r a y t r Serv
7 30pm

C O U N T R Y S ID E B A P T IS T CHURCH
Country Club Read . L i l t M iry
err y m Long
P iit o r
Sunday School
f *1 1 m :
Preaching l w on h ip tn ?
IM Ja r o
Bible Study
A )0 p ro
Sharing A Proclaim ing
1 3? p m
Wed P r a y t r t A a t l
7 )9 p m
N u n t r y Preyidtd
a

F IR S T B A P T IS T CHURCH
S it P a ra Auanutr Sanford
i R tv . Paul E Murphy, J r .
Pa tlo r .
Sunday School
fiJa m
Morning W o n h ip
11 M a m
Church Training
A 90 pm
E vening W o n h ip
7 to p m
Wed Pjraytr Service
4 15pm
F I R S T B A P T IS T CHURCH
OF O ELT O N A
'' . itoo Providence Bird ,
174 I t n a r l M W I
•- |Independent!
Myy Donald M trchenrtdtf
Pa llo r
R ay Barnard Peck
A u t. B ailor
Dr W C Co limy
A»»t Patfor
M r i Je ffre y K e rlty
Youth Dir.
M tn i P rayar
Fellowship
1 Ma m
Morning W o nhip
• M A 11 H i m
Sunday School
t i| a m
Chitdran’i Church
11 M a m,
Church T rain in g '
4; M p m
C raning W orth ip
7 Mp m
W ranciday Prayar- A'
B ib lt Slud r
.1 M p m
N u rttfy and But Service
JO R D A N B A P T IS T CHURCH
*79 Uptaia Rd
S E Stanton
Pattor
Sunday School
iq M a m
Morning Service
U M am
E ttn in g Service
7 )Q p m
Wednesday Service
7 39 p m

'• ■Old Trut hi for a h t * Pay

L A K E M A R Y B A P T IS T M ISSIO N
1)1 La k a y ifw , L a la Mary
Sunday School
141am
W o n h ip Service
11 M a m
evening W o n h ip
7 )0 p m
Wad P ra ya r Sara
? oq p m
N u r itr y Provtdfd
F IR S T B A P T IS T CHURCH
O F L O N G WOOD
. I .BI fc W t t l o i l 7 f t on Nw 1 4 )i:
f So u th e rn !Mav Ja m a t W Hammock
Pa llo r
I 30a m
Sunday School
I I I A 10 4la m
Morning W o n h ip
19 4la m
C hildren '! Churth
1 41 p m
Church Training
t fin in g Worship
7 Mp m
Wad C fin in g
P ra ya r Sarvica
N E W M O UN T C A LV A R Y
S IO N A R Y B A P T IS T CHURCH
IM S W r it 12th St
Rav. Gaorga W Warran
y School
1 M a m,
ng Sarvica
II 00 a m
ng Sarvica
tJO p .m .
P A L M E T T O A V EN U E
B A P T IS T CHURCH
: 2424 Palm etto Ayt, ,
R tv Raym ond Crocker
Pattor
Sunday School
M S am
Moaning W orthip
11:00 a m
E vang allltic Sarvicat
A 90 p nr ^
Wad P ra ya r A Bitola Study
7:30 p rn. ■
Indapandani MflHonary
R EVEN N A PA RK
B A P T IS T C H U R C M
174) Country Club Road
Pattor
y G a ry O tB u tk
1 IS a m
iday School
• it A ll a m
rping W orthip
4 Mp m
arch Training
1 00 p m
thing Worship
7 00 p m
d P ra y a r Sarvica

Episcopal

Baptist
S E M IN O L E H EIO H T S
B A P T IS T CHURCH
Dr ja y T Cotmato
Pastor
Sunday Sarficat in tha
Lak * M ary High School
Auditorium
''B ib lt Study
IH am
Worship
1100a m '
' Youth Choir
.
00 p m ’
Church Training
400 p m
Worship
7 00p m

M O LYCEO SS
M l P ir k A r t
The » • * LffOY D Sff»«r
H air Communion
HolrCommunion
CTuirdi ScM ol
H olr Communion

P act or
I M om
10 M o m
TOM om
ID M A m

E P IS C O P A L C H U R C H OF
THE N IW CO VEN AN T
iis T » t i* « m iP o * p .
Wimor Sp rin fi
IIT16TTI
ro w tr
VICAf
• l l« o m
Tom

W td n ttd ir Service* at
Covenant PratbyttfianC hurch
P ra ya r A tib ia Study
700 p m
Adult Choir
7 41pm

Cafhof/c

Evange/Jcaf

A L L SO U LS CATHOLIC C H URCH
T llO t k A i l . Isnlord
F r W illiam E m i t
e» » t«i
ill VnHM Ui
!Am
Sun M i l l
I. I t 19,11 SO
Conttttians, Sot
AS p m

W IN TER SPO t COMMUNITY
EVA N O ELIC A L
CONOREOATIONAL
t i t wtdo tlroot
p i t RoAort Rvrm
P illa r
lundov School
lC M » m
W triM p
1C M o m

F IR S T C H RISTIA N
14071 Sanford Avt
M iM ifa r
S Edw ard Jshnw n
Sunday School
f 4Sa m
Morning Wprihfp
11: to 1 m
C v tn in f W onhip
7
pm
7 :M p m
W td Sa rylc t

- V --•
1 ■ ■’

T IE S TH A T » IH D
E V A N O E L IS T IC C I N T E R

"ft 1

I t w t t l l Ckipol

r&gt;

to

(oorRoll A v* Sa v ITi
lotorponomlncllonot
R t * . M « M M orrllon, P i l l a r
R#Y. R. Cortor, Coardlnom r
0*4 Aioocloto T u to r

*

S A N F O R D CH RIST IAN C H U R C H
1)7 Airport Bird
Phony )1) 0HC
Jo * Johnson .
Minis tar
...Sunday School t M am
'. W orthip S tf n e t
10:10 A. n t,',
E van!ng Sarvica
7L00pm
P ra ya r Matting Wad
7 00 p m

iii * H r "

Lutheran
LUTHERAN CHURCH OF
THE R E O E E M IR
"Tho Lvlhoron Hour" a no
T V T h llliT h o L U f
ISIS Oak Aut

Christian Science

R t* Ilm o r A R tv ichor
P o tio r
Sundoy School
t.lta m
w o n h ip Servlet
It IS a m
Klndorgrrtrn and N v rttry

C H R IS T IA N SC IEN C E S O C IE T Y
c o fw tttw a tir Academy
E atf Laka Brantley D r if t =
' Long wood
Sunday Str y let
Sunday School
Wyd Tttfim ony
M atting

COOD S H E P H E R D
LU T H ER A N CHURCH
ITITO rlm do Dr l i f t
(Lvlhoron Chvrch in Am oncol
ph I L u k i n
P o tio r
Ichool
I no m
It H i m

Church Of Christ

Pro*Idod
CH URCH OF CH RIST
t i l l Park Avenue
F r td B ik e r
E f in g t lilt
d ibit Study
10.00am.
'MorningWorship...
n 00a .m,
Ewaning Sarvica
* Mp m
L id ia s B«bia Clast
Wednesday
10:00 a m
Wednesday Bib's Clast
7 Mp m

sr. LUKE'S L u t h e r a n

church

SR 111 A Rod Rug Rd.
Ovlodo ( Slovlol
Edwin j. Rot too
Pattor
Svitdoy School
tiCSa.m
Worship loCYlcat
l:M 1 11.00 am
Wo moiMtlo a Chrltntn School
KindergtrtoH Ihrovgh Eighth Orodo

Church Of God
C H U R C H O F GOO
IC IW lln d Strati
Pastor
R«v dill Thompson
. 1 41a m
Sunday School
11.00 a m
Morning Worship
4 00 p m
Evangelistic Safe
F a m ily Enrichment
7 Mp m
Sarvica

Congregational
C O N G R EG A T IO N A L
C H R IST IA N CH URCH
340) S Park Ava
111 4114
R tv F r td Neal
Pastor
Raw Edmond L : Weber
Asso Pastor
4 )0 a m
Sunday School
10 &gt;01i « m
Fellowship
11 00 a m
Morning Worship
Wad P ra ya r Meeting
A Bible Study

How I had dreaded cleaning ihe attic! But it was all
worth it alter t found Ihe picture ol Nip and Tuck when
they were puppies I sat down.there and then in the cold,
dusty room and recalled Ihe day when Bob brought them
home to Carol How she laughed and loved them and
Hung her arms around both our necks in excited grati­
tude: How much fun we three had. watching Ihe cunning
antics of;lhe canine infants

StT’pJuS'M

by.The

Sunday
Psalms

Nip is gone now. duly mourned and buried under our
applet, tree. and Tuck, gray and crotchety, limps if he
moves too fast Carol lives in Cincinnati in a happy home
of her own, and I carry roses to the cemetery on the hill.
What a wonderful gift is memory My days are rich
with remembrances of the good life Bob and I had. How
glad I am that wo shared, not only a home, but also a love
for God and His Church so that though now I am lonely,
yet t am not a :one

73.14-28

O R A C I U N IT ED
METHODIST CHURCH
Airport Bird. * Woodland Or.
William J l o r t r
potior
Chvrch School
t : » a m.
Wonhip Strvict
IT M tm
Youth Ftllowthip
I.M p m
Tutvdor lib it Study
II M om
Nunorg prondrd lor oil lOf *n*c

SANLANDO U N IT ED
METHODIST CHURCH

64 8-12

32:36-44

Wednesday
Malachi

Thursday
Mark

4:1-6

15 42-47

Copy'll 1962 KifSter Advtrhfing Seduce

Friday
Luke
21:25-28

Saturday
I Thessalorvans
5:1-11

4 M p m.

E v tn g o litl Sorvlco
mu a
m S o n ,c t ( t*
n. ■
AAJd
orook
Wod
I

rigRp.m.
Nurtory PrtutOod tor oil Sorvlcot

(Amoricphl
STS P E T E R A PA U L
I I I ! Magnolia Art
Sontord. Flo
Rt*. Fr Anthony Oram
Postor
CMtino Liturgy
t» o m Sundoy
Conftsiloni
By Appolntmonl
.Roctorv
1UTT”

Penfecosfal
FIR ST PEN T EC O ST A L
CHURCH OF LONOWOOD
t il Ormgo Strcol. Longwood
Rtv E RulhOronl
Pallor
SundoySchooi
1C M o m
Morning Wonhip
11 M o m
Sunder Evening
T ICp m
Wod I,bio study
TIC pm
Congutrori Mooting Sunder I 14 p m

IO LESIA DE DIOS
PEN TEC O STAL, M l
Colic iCThlsg. Cello
Mognolio. tsnlord, Plo.
Phono 111 SMT
R o y . Loots Etlonno
P iit o r
E m a i l Rihllco lopts Ms Pommgot o
lot t do 10 lordo
•

Presbyterian
F IR S T P R E S B Y T E R IA N C H URCH
O ik Av« A )rd SI
R tv V tffil L Bryan t, Paslor
Phona )7) 2442
M orniet Worship
ChvrcB Scboal
Morninv Worthip
N vrw y

I )9 a m
tiia m
11 0 9 am

T H E L A K E M A R Y U N IT E O
P R E S B Y T E R IA N C H URCH
Wilbur Ava .L a k a M a r y
R t v A F S fff»n s
Minislar
Sunday Church School
? 41 a m
Morning Worship
I I to a m.
Youth Group
7 )0 pm
Wad Choir Practice
I to p m

M e fh o d / s f

B t'd SocHMy

Monday Tuesday
Isaiah
Jeremiah

F IR S T CHURCH
OP THE N A I A H I N I
MCI Sontord Avo.
John J . Hintoo
P iito r
tonday School
t:4S(,m .
Morning Wonhip
ll H o rn .
---C Mp.m.
Youth
|— -

American
Orthodox

Congregational

Chr/sf/on

Nazarene

I I . RR. CM A 14

Long wood. Flo
Jim o t i . Ulmor tr.
Sun School
I M A T A!
Worship
C SC.t AI 4 11. w
UM YP

U P S ALA P l t E S B Y T E R I A N CH URCH
Car Country Club 4 U p taia Rd
D lrw iiiS h a a
P ttfe r
Sunday School
tto e m
Worship Saryice
10 00 a m
N v r t t f r Providad

YO U C A N FEA TU RE
YOUR CHURCH
IN THIS SPACE FOR
I I 71 P E R W C E K
CALL &gt;12 2411

|,jg

P O S c i 6074 Chsroddinnn V irg in 27906

‘The Following Sponsors Make This Church Notice And Directory Page Possible1
A T L A N T IC N A T IO N A L B A N K
Sanford, F la .
Howard H. Hodges and Staff

C E L E R Y C IT Y
P R IN T IN G CO ., INC.
C O LO N IA L ROOM
RESTAU RAN T
Downtown Sanford
)15 East F irs t St.
Bill &amp; Dot Painter
D A IR Y Q U E E N
M ark and Esth er P e rry
2$23 Park D rive

F L A G S H IP BA N K
O F S E M IN O L E and Staff
200 W. First St.
3000 S. Orlando Dr.
G R EG O R Y LU M BER
T R U E V A LU E HARDW ARE
500 M aple Ave., Sanford

O SBO RN 'S BO O K
and B IB L E S T O R E
2599 Sanford Ave.

K N IG H T 'S S H O E S T O R E
Downtown Sanford
Don Knight &amp; Staff

PA N TRY P R ID E
D ISC O U N T FO O D S
and Em ployees

L. D. P L A N T E , INC.
Oviedo, Florida

H A R RELLA B EV ER LY
TR A N SM ISSIO N
D avid Beverly and Staff

T H E M c K IB B IN A G E N C Y
Insurance

P U B L IX M A R K E T S
and Em ployees

JCPenney
Sanford Plaza
E d Hemann and Staff

M E L 'S
G U L F S E R V IC E
Mel D ekleand Em ployees

S E N K A R IK G L A S S
&amp; P A IN T CO., IN C .
J e rry &amp; E d S e n k a rlk
and Em ployees

STEN STRO M R E A L T Y
Herb Stenstrom and Staff

W IL S O N .E IC H E L B E R G E R
M O RTUARY
Eu n ice Wilson and Staff

W ILSO N M A IE R F U R N I T U R E CO.
Mr, and M rs. Fred Wilson

W IN N -D IX IE S T O R E S
and Em ployees

'SEMINOLE COUNTY AREA CHURCH DIRECTORY1
A U E M B L Y OR COO
Fir** A tltm b l* ol Cod. 11th * Ilm
Hhiom Attombly ol Ood. Corner *1 Country Club Rood ond
Wilbur Avo . L tk t Msry
B A P T II T

Andoth RAptltt Churth. O*,odo
Col.cry Rppliil Church. C rytlil Liko A Ird. l ik e Mary
C iito lM rry l i p l i l l Church, i n lommoiA llv d
Control Roptltt Church. I t l l Oik Ats
ChuiiMt* First R iptltt
c it t r w t lt r M ittiontry Bcpllit Church, tw lh w c it Rd
Counlryttd* Asplul Church. Csuntry Club Rood. L» k t M iry
Victory to pfu t Church. Old Orlcnd* Rd *• Hotlor Aug.
First RApllst Church. I l l Ftrk A*#
First Rpplisl Churth t l Altsmoni* tpnngs. R l 4)1. AltimgMc
tprlngs
F tril Boptitt Church ol Oono*s
First B sp liil Church t l Loko Msry
First B sp liil Church t l Loko Monroa
Fly SI B s p liil Churth t l Ltngmod, 1 »lk Wssl ol l » » l •* H*y
CM
Firsl B s p liil ol O*iodo
F u n B sp liil Church si Isnlsndo Iprlngs
F u ll B s p liil Church si Winlor Ip rliifl, It* Bshtrns Rd
F u ll thiloh Musionsry Bsp'iltChurch, M il W iHh 11.
F S 'S il Bhpllsl Church ol Ostosd
Fountain Hood Ropim Church. Ovltd*
Oh i o Bibio Church. IS4C 1 Ssntard A»o
Jordph Missionary BspOsl Church. MS UpSAlA Rd.
Northsldd B s p liil Church. BhidimiP
Munonsry B sp liil Church. North Rd . Inforprlss
MsctOoms M i l l i o n Bsptltl Church. Osh Hill Rd.. Osloon
Morning Olpry Bsp liil Church. 0*n*rh Hury
M l Mprlsh Prlm llik* Bspliil. 1111 Locust A u t . tc u h rc
M l OHM M ille n a ry Bsp liil Church. Isn ltn d t fprlngi Rd.
Ml Im si M nnonsry Bsp liil Church. liM Js rry A vs
Ml lion M iisigiitry Bspliil. Iip t l A»*
N s* Bsthsl M inions,y Church. Ith I t A Hlchtry A*o
inSsponosnct Bspllst hAHi Civic L lS t u t Bldg . Longaood
Hops Bsp in i Church. Fhrssl City Community Csflttr. Fsrssl
City
N s* hAt CAIvsry hAisiionsry Bsptitl. HOC W. IMh I I
N S* tsiom Frim itiv* Bsp liil Church. iM f w . Ilth l l.
N s* Tsslsmsdt Bsptltl CPurch. Ousllly Inn. North L*»g***d
N s* Nit 2ion B sp liil Church. ITM Fssr Ay*

Ns* Lit* Fsllswlhlp, 4411 I L i l t Dn»s. Csiiolboiry. FI &gt;1141
Rsvsnns Fork B sp liil Church. 1141 w 1cm It
Fropls s B s p liil Chspol. t i ll W First ilrs *l. Isnlord
Pm scrsil B s p liil Church. I I I W Airport Bl*d
Prs irn LPhs Bspliil. Rldgs R d . Fsrn Fork
Frpgrsst Misnsnsry Bhpllsl Church. Mid*sy
Stcsnd thllph M illio n s'* Bspliil Chvrch W il l Isnlord
IsmHwN N il F ill B dpHsC Church, lor vie os Id Lo ss M sry H *0
Ich*ol AuWIprlun)
tm yrn j Baptist Churth. I l l OvirArpah Or., CSiM lbsrry
lunlsnd B s p liil Church, t i l l Pslmstla
II. Js m tt Misilansry Bspllst Church. It Rd oil, Otltan
II. Luks Mitllonsry B sp liil Churth slCsmsrsn City, Inc
It F iu l B s p liil Church. I l l Pint Aut.
It MAtlhows Bspllst Church. Csnssn Hgts.
Iprinflldld M.monsry Bspllst. Ilth B Codar
It John’s Missionary Bspllst Church. CM Cyproti It.
Tempi# Baptist Church. Ptlm Springs R d . Aitomonto Springs
William Chaptl Mntlansry Bsplilt Church, Msrk A William ll
Altamonte Springs
Iisn Hcpa Baptist Church. M l Orsngs A*» .
CATHOLIC
Church t l Hi* Nativity, Los* Msry
All tauli Cs tho lit Church. M l Oca A*#.. Isnlord
Our Lsdy Outtn *1 Ftsc * Cslholic Chspol, &gt;11 S Msgnalid *»■ .
Isnlord
It, Ann’s Cslholic Church, Dognood Trail. DsBary
t l Augustins Cslholic Church, tunial Dr., nsar Butlsn Rd .
C tsttl harry
tl
Mary Magadsl*na Cslholic Church. Msillsnd A * c .
AMtmanlt Spring*
Our Lady *1 ins L s l H Cslholic Church. I ll * Mssimllisn. Onions
CHRISTIAN
Christian Seisms Sao rtr, C O Isrttlw sttf Acadomy. E a tl L th i
■rsntlsy O r , Longwood
First Christian Church, ISA! I Isnlord A**
Sontord Christian Church. I » W Airport Bl*4
Nsrthsldt Christian Church. Florida Ha**n Or . Msillsnd
LaAdvIt* Christian Church. Bssr Laks Rd . t l Jamison
CHURCH O F CHRIST
Church ol Christ, I I I ) S Fork A*t
Church t l Christ si Lak* Elian. U S l l *1. N C stisibtrr y
South SomInals Church »t Christ. MIS Lsks Howell Rd
Church si Christ. CM Palm Springs Or , Allomsntt Spgs

Church ol Chriit. Oonova
Church ol Christ. Longwood
Church ol Christ. W Ilth SI
s
Northlid* Church ol Chnsl. FIs H so h Dr . Msillsnd
CHURCH OF OOO
Church ol Ood. S*&gt; Hickory
Church ol Ood. M l w Mnd SI
Church ol Ood. O*iodo
Church ol God Holiness. L ik t Monroe
Church ol God Million. En ltrp ntt
Churth ol Ood. ISC1 W 14th 11
Church al God in Christ. O»iodo
Church ol Ood ol Prophecy. ISC* S l i m Avo
Church al Ood ol PropMcy. IMS S Persimmon A**
Roscuo Church ol Cod H M W ilth II.. Ssnlord
True Church Ol Gad. » M h i agowood Aug.. Ssnlord
E A ST E R N ORTHODOX
Esilsrn Orllwdoi Church. Sis Ptirr 1 Psul. 111i Magnolia A r t .
Isnlord. Fla
ia iit r n Orlhodos Church. SI Ororgt. SSI Shtrwood C l . 1
Altsmonlt Sprmgi
Esitsrn Orlhodos Church St lis is n 'i hi O C A , SIS Ssuth SI .
Porn Park
'
Esilsrn Orttndos Church. St John Chrytoilom Chspsl. U I
Hay. IT-Il, Fsrn Park
CONOREOATIONAL
Congregational Chrutisn Church, tell S Park A * t . Ssnlord
EPIS C O PA L
Episcopal Church ol the Ntw Covinsnt. IIS TuMawilla Rood.
Winlor Springs
The Church ol tho Good Shepherd. Msillsnd. 1)1 L t k t Avt.
All la ln ti Episcopal Church. E OoBtry Avs . Enlorpriso
Christ Episcopal Church. Longwoad
Htly Cross Episcopal, Park A»a , si 4in I I . Isnlord
II. Richard’s Church. SIS) L is t Hcwtll Rd , Winter Park
JE W IS H
Stih Am Synsgogus m itling si Inlsrslslt Mail. AJlansonta
Springs
LU T H ER A N
Alconsion Luthtrsn Church Oisrbraak Or . Csssslborry
Oood Shtphsrd Unlttd Luthtrsn. I l l ) S Orlsnda Dr
Luthtrsn Church ol Praaidonco. Doltors
Lulhtron Churchtllho Rtdotmor. ICIW JSth Pises
hhoisith Lulhorsn Church Ooldon Days Dr A Nwy I I Tl.
CstsalBorry
11 Luh tt Lulhorsn Church. Rl ala. S livi*

St Slsphtn Lulhorsn Church. CM lull Wosl si 14 .Lengwaad
METHODIST
Rarnstl Uniltd Memorial Church. I OoBtry Ay s , In ls rp rlit
Bssr L tk t Uhltoa Molhadisl Church
B tlh tl A M E Church. Ctnain Hgls
Cattsiborry Community Uniltd Mslhedill Church. Hwy. If-tS.
Pinoy Ridgs Rd . Cdittlbtrry
Christ Undid Methodist Chvrch, Tucker Or., lunlsnd l it h lt i
D t lt r y Ct mm unity Msthadisl Church, W . High tanks R d ,
O tBtry
First Uml*d Mslhaditl Church, l i t Park Avg.
First Msthadisl Church ol Oyltda
First louihsm Methodist Church. 14*0 Ssnlord Rut.
Fra# Mslhaditl Church. 1M W. Sth SI.
„
First Uniltd Methodist Church ol Genovs. O d M *t
G*ns*s Moihodiit Church, Oonovs
O nes Uniltd MUhodlsI Church. Airport Blvd.
Orsnl Chspsl A M C. Church. Oulsdi
Otsgrovo Msthadisl Church. Oultdn
Otltsn Mtlhodill Church
p s s is Wosltysn Msthadisl. Rl 4* W. al Faala
SI Jamas A M I *th it Cypr*»
Si Luke M B Church el Csmirsn City. Inc.. R iarSall all I.R . 44
E

SI Mary's A M I Church, tl. Rl. I I I . Oslasn
Si Paul's Mtihodiit Church. Otltsn R d . Rnlorprlta
Sisllord Memorial Church, S. DoBsry
Isnlsndo United Molhadisl Church. SR 4M sad Id , Lang wood
Oslton Uniltd M tlhodill Church. Car. gl Clrponlpr A Murray S t.
Oslstn
N A1AREN E
First Church al Iht Naiarsn*. IBS* laniard Avo
Ocnsva Church el tho Nsisrtnt, S.R. AC. Oonouc
Like Msry Church al tha Nsisrom. I l l I . Crystal Lsks Aut.,
Lsks Mary
Markham Woods Church al Ik# N sisrtnt. S i -44. I l l Mila* W. al
Id si the Wshivs Ilv * r
Long wood Church al the Nsttrana, W lym sh B Js tlv p Aug..
Long woo*
P R E S B Y T E R IA N
Dillons Prisb yttrttn Church. Holland Blvd. A Austin Avg.,
Dsllons
Lsks Msry Uniltd Frsskylsrlsn Church
First Prsibylor isn Church Osh Aug A SrB SI.
First Pro tb rlirian Church M DoBsry. I . Highland
Csnvtnsnl Prslkylorisn Church. 1TII S. OHAnds Or.

SI. Andrews Prssbytorun Church. **l) Bear Lsko Bd.
St. Marks PrtsRyttftan Church. l| )l Palm Springs R d .
Allgihgdlt Springs
upgalp Cammirnlty PrtsRyltrlsn Church. Upsalp Rd.
WsstmldlMar P ra U y ln ia n Church. Rsd Rug Rd., Cassaitarry
WiMar Spring* Frushyrtrisn Chspsl. rihdsy Advsnllil Church.
Moss Rd., w in ltr Iprlngs
S IV IN T H c u r A D V IN T IST
F *r*tl L tk s Skvtnm Day Adutntisl Church. Hwy. 4)4, F i r t l ’
City
* * * * * * 0*y A d v*m il Church, Msitlind Au*.. Aliamonto Spgs.
ShnlBrd Sdrw ih n g Advtniiu Church, r t i a Ilm
•im gr SprugiSpygm iO dy AdvsmiH Church, ig S. Mat* Rd.
t o r d W II Id W m R D ry Advtmm Church. M l B. Ind SI.. laniard
O tM B B C H l l l t M W
AHta’i A M I . Church. OHvo A Ilth
Alt Fallh ChapM, Camp Stmlnsi*. w ikivs Park Rd.
BaarBaM Augaua MaUiwss Chspol. Bsardail Avo
Cbuluda Community Church
CRUrcBat J » s m C h n tlo l L tttr Day Samis, t i l l Park Aug.
Ik t a Menu os Chspol. Oring* tlud., L ik a Monroo
Kingdom Hail t l Johovsh’s Wltnisi. Lak* Monroe Unit. 1S41 w
Third Strati
First Barn Church al tha Lvtng Gad. Midway
P in t Church tC Chrtsl. Scmmisi, B fs rn Blvd. and Vtnus SIDotlone
Ponltcostal Open BIMo Tahornsclo, Ridgswood Avs.. Oil » lh
sppsitt* Sammals High School
First Pgm gm lal Church si Lang wood
First FgMgcPttgi Ctarch it Ssnlord
Fall Oospol Cktrch H Odd Id Chnsl, t i l l Je rry A v* . Ssnlord
Full Ooipol Tabernacle. 1714 Country Cluk
Ml. oilua Hail a m i Church. Oak Hill Rd., Ostaan
Ssnlord Alltanca Church, IH l S Park Aut.
Ssnlord RIMS Church, &gt;441 laniard Ava.
Swilmd Csngrtgaiiaoal al JHSovik's Wiinotsot. I1M ft. bin tl.
Tha lAIvatlBd Army, lit W. sen It
Ra.1lag M ils Margvltn Church, SR i m . Ltngwoad
Rsdasmur Movsvisn Church, m Tuscswiila Rd.. Winlor Sprints
United Churth al Chriit. AltamaMg Cammunlly Chspol.
Altpmtms Spring*
HMy Trinity ChurcB H Gad In Christ, III* M«igauitlha Avd.
T ta Full Ooipol Church t l Our Lard Jt iu s Christ, Washington
S t . Canaan e n y

�RELIGION
E ve n in g H erald, Sanford, FI.

Briefly
'Pilgrim's Progress' Seminar
At Casselberry Baptist Church
There will be a weekend seminar on “The Pilgrim ’s
Progress” Sept. 17-19 at Casselberry Baptist Church at
770 Seminola Boulevard, Casselberry. The spiritual
journey through John Bunyan’s classic portrayal of
biblical Christianity will be led by Pastor Barry
Homer, who has ministered in Australia, England, and
the United States. The meetings will begin at 7:30 p.m.
Friday and continue Saturday with a 4:30 p.m. meeting
and a potluck supper at 6 p.m. and a meeting at 7:30
p.m. On Sunday the series will conclude with Pastor
Horner speaking at 11 a.m. and 7 p.m.
Church pastor, the Rev. Samuel Elliott, suggests
those attending bring an original text edition of the
Pilgrims Progress and their Bible. Copies will be
available.

Fall Helpshop For Women
The Fall Helpshop for women from all districts of the St.
Johns Presbytery will be held Sept. 19 at 2 p.m. at St. Marks
Presbyterian Church, 1021 Palm Springs Drive, Altamonte
Springs. There will be Helpshop classes for Women of the
Church officers, program chairmen, circle chairmen, Bible
moderators, general meeting programs and interested
members.

Against Conservative Take-Over

Baptist Moderates Fighting Back
By DAVID E. ANDERSON
UPI Religion Writer
Moderates in the Southern Baptist
Convention, the nation’s largest
P ro testan t denom ination, in­
creasingly fru strated by the
relentless drive of biblical con­
servatives to take control of the
church, are beginning to fight back.
In a series of apparently un­
coordinated but related speeches,
top officials of the denomination are
warning church members that the
fierce battle over the authority of the
Bible is diverting the church from its
real purpose — mission.
R. Keith Parks, president of the
Convention's Foreign Mission
Board, put it most bluntly:
"There is confusion among us
because some would have us believe

that our identity, our characterizing
principles, our unifying force is not,
in fact, missions, but something
else.”
That something else has become
the battle of the Bible — the effort by
conservatives to attach a narrowed
definition of biblical authority, in­
cluding the dogmas that Scripture is
completely without error in all
matters and that the Bible is wordfor-word divinely inspired.
In addition, the conservatives
have begun an effort to gain
denom ination support for the
political agenda of the religious
right and scored a spectacular
success at the Baptists’ most recent
national meeting when the con­
vention reversed its long-held
position and endorsed prayer in the

First Presbyterian Church of Sanford will have a church
night supper coupled with a slide and sound movie
production of the Centennial Week activities held last May.
The supper begins at 6:30 p.m. in the fellowship hail.
Members are asked to bring non-perishable foods to the
supper for the Sanford Christian Sharing Center.

State Missions Emphasis
Seminole Heights Baptist Church will begin its an­
nual emphasis on State Missions this Sunday at Lake
Mary High School. A goal of (600 has been set.
A filmstrip entitled “Florida Sonshine" will be
presented during the midweek service, 7 p.m. on
Wednesday, at the Covenant Presbyterian Church on
the ministries carried on by the Missions Division of
the Florida Baptist Convention.
Women of the church will have special prayer for
this emphasis Monday, 10 a.m., in the home of Mrs.
W.A. Kratzert, 2400 Park Ave., Sanford.

Allen Chapel African Methodist Episcopal Church will
observe its annual Women’s Day services, this Sunday at 11
a.m. The speaker will be Mrs. Lossle Howard, a member of
Carter Tabernacle CME Church, Orlando. The theme will
be "Christian Women Put Your Soul in God’s Control."
The L.P. Richardson Ensemble of I&gt;eesburg will sing at
the 5 p.m. service. The Shiloh Baptist Church Gospel Choir
of Orlando, will be presented in concert. Rev. John H.
Woodard is pastor and Ms. Lindie B. Stewart is chair­
woman.

Committees To Meet
Ned Julian Jr., campaign director, has announced
three meetings for members of the Seminole Heights
Baptist Church Steering Committee for Fund Raising
scheduled for this Sunday. The promotion committee
will meet at 4 p.m. at the church office; the full com­
mittee will meet for check-up at 5 p.m. at the Ijike
Mary High School, and the banquet committee will
meet at 6 p.m. in Room 157, also at the school. The
steering committee and six subcommittees will plan
activities to extend through November as the church
looks toward construction of a multipurpose building
on its Markham Woods Road site.

public schools.
The result of the conservative
drive has. been twofold: It has
c reated
b itter
factionalism ,
diverting effort from the church's
major mission project, the Bold
Mission T hrust as well as
manipulated giving to the church's
Cooperative Program to gain a
maximum number of messengers
i delegates t to the national Southern
Baptist Convention meeting.
Moderates in the denomination
see the effort of the conservatives as
an attem pt to impose a creedalism
on a church that historically has
affirmed the autonomy and spiritual
experience of the individual
“ T here a re those within the
convention who are trying to sub­
stitute a creed for the lordship of

WILLIAM THOMPSON

Church Has N ew Pastor
William Thompson is the
new pastor at Sanford Church
of God. He came here from
the Tallahassee Church of
God to replace Pastor D.K.
Gunter, who was appointed
state overseer in Hawaii by
his denom ination. Pastor
Thompson’s first Sunday here
was August 29.
Originally from Cedartown,
Ga., he has pastored churches

for 20 years in New Jersey,
M issouri, M innesota, and
Florida. He had been at his
last church for eight years. He
received his bachelor’s
degree from le e College,
Cleveland, Tenn., and studied
in special areas at Mid­
western University in Texas
and Bethel Seminary, St.
Paul, Minn. He and his wife,
Nellie Sue, have a son, David,
18, and Beth, 14.

My feminist readers frequently lose patience with me for
referring to women as girls.
I am not sure what they consider the cutoff point between
girls and women but obviously it comes before the age of 30.
I referred in a recent article to "a girl pushing 30."
“ I have had to restrain myself for getting on your back over
your sexist rem arks," wrote a woman reader in Albuquerque,
N.M., "but I can't let you go this time, Surely a female
•pushing 30’ should be considered a woman."
1 usually tell these critics that, as a newspaperman, I follow
Webster’s New International Dictionary and that this august
volume gives as a definition for girl, “a single or married
woman of any age."
This of course does not satisfy them. They say 1 should be
influenced less by the dictionary than by the fact that women
find it offensive to be called girls.
Perhaps they are right. But when I go to tell them that people
like me, whose strongest expletive is, "Oh, my goodness," are
offended by swearing l which women indulge in today as much
as men), they use the argument that they are free to use
whatever language they want
But don't we defenders of clean speech have freedoms too
like the freedom not to have to be subjected to language that
offends us"* Could we possibly teach the uncouth to ask, before
they let loose, "Do you mind if I swear?"
There was a point several years ago when I had hopes the
Dirty Word Movement that started in the 1960s was on the way
out. After a battery company started referring to its product as
“a darn good battery" in its commercials, people who had
never used the word darn before — and who possibly had never
even heard It used — added It to their vocabulary.
Instead of (bleep) or (bleep) of (bleep), they said darn It
was refreshing. They found it got attention — as swearing used
to do. Stores and other places of business figured it was a
(bleep) good idea and began using the word darn in their own
advertising.
But that revival of acceptable speech was short-lived. Soon
we were back to (bleep) and (bleep).
It is hard to believe in this day that darn was once considered

Htrtld Photo by Tom Vlnctnf

TAKING NOTE

Choirs 'Go Fishing1

"Jehovah’s Witnesses and the Trinity" will b e &gt; e
subject of the second film in the Ron Carlson study on
cults, "The Counterfeits”, Wednesday at Community
United Methodist Church of Casselberry at 7 p.m.

"Just as tlic

was catching us up as Southern
Baptists there began t" in we atm &gt;
us distractions alxnit.-dm trinal m
tegrily," he said We re ! • rnnmv
to try to focus on other truth-- : the
neglect of our basic purpose and w
will lose the blessing • ■ &lt;. •&lt;I i: w&gt;
continue to do so ",

Saints
And
Sinners
George

a swear word. There is a comedy skit on an Id Vn tr &lt;r« ■:
called, “ Uncle Josh and Aunt Nancy Put Up tlo K ilrli--r
Stove."
He wants to go fishing, she wants him to put up it • tav"
Finally Uncle Josh says, "All right, if somcUdv will l &lt;Ip
I'll put up the darned old stove."
Aunt Nancy replies, "I’ll help you hut you needii't wi -.i
about it,"
The Dirty Word Movement may have beet) effective ;r 1
start. It got attention, but profanity today has Iasi its mi; i
through over use. Now that everybody swears
uu UM .
women and ministers — swearing is no longer ffectlvp tool of speech. It lingers on merely as a bad tiabit.
Those people may be right who say they "see ii ling
awfully wrong" with swearing. But can't the decline if
&gt; Stan
iet\ t«
dards end the virtual disappearance of taste in "Ur
traced to this habit of ours to accept anything a&gt; 1 ng s the!,is "nothing awfully wrong" with it?
The fact that there is "nothing awfully wrong with a tbirn
doesn’t mean it is elevating and until we are more ■•••n&lt; cno-d
Ilian we are with elevating1our speech and manners, our
civilization will continue to decline.
Darn has this advantage over swearing in that it lias a t m l
of class and breeding. One can imagine a boy on tlx- pin . i
fields of Eton or Harrow remarking. "1 say, old cluip darn
good shot."
Whether darn is sufficiently expressive hi gue m u &lt;\
satisfaction when you hit your thumb with a hanUm i
something else.

encounter and question.
Nicodemus quickly revealed to the Son of
God and to any bystanders that there was a
basic deficiency in his knowledge of m atters at
hand. Nicodemus undoubtedly thought as he
approached Jesus that this verbal exchange
would be an occasion to find out about the
“ signs or m iracles" which were attracting an
ever increasing number to the ministry of
Jesus which probably was of upmost concern
to Nicodemus.

Choral Art Society

Film Series On Cults

Parks, in a speech to,'a recei.’
Foreign Missions iVnferctu :&gt;■ a'
Glorietta. N M . said dip biblical
debate threatens tin Hold Mi-iion
Thrust — a plan to share the.Compel
message with every person in the
world by the year 2000

The Bible teaches us that there was a
religious ruler who came to Jesus one night in
order to question Him. The discourse which
followed was recorded by the evangelist John
and in it revealed the teaching of the new By REV. PAULK. MURPHY JR.
First Baptist Church
birth. (John, Chapter 3)
Sanford
We must remember that this Pharisee who
came to Jesus was a ruler of his religious
order and was very orthodox. He worshipped
regularly and had much influence, power,
One's reply might be that keeping those who
prestige and authority. There were doubtless
have not been born again out of His kingdom
countless of thousands who thought that this
ruler vvas at the zenith of spiritual un­ would be a harsh thing for a loving God to do
derstanding. However, Nicodemus lacked a The third chapter of the gospel of John rev eal
very basic perception of who he had chosen to to us God’s answer to our dreadful dilemma

Community United Methodist Church of Casselberry
Family Ministries will sponsor a family hobby night
program Sunday at 6 p.m. in fellowship hall and
recognition of grandparents In celebration of Grand­
parents Day. An Ice cream social will be held in the
church courtyard to benefit the church's Christian
Preschool in conjunction with the hobby show.
The preschool has five classes and total of 50 children
enrolled.
The JYF’ers (Jesus’ Young Followers) will have a
parents' day and installation at 5 p.m. at the church.

Seminole Heights Baptist Church will be "Fishing
for Choir Members” when It begins children’s choir
area of Lake Mary High School this Sunday, prior to
the Bible Study hour, and continues this activity ^
Wednesday, between 8 and 7 p.m., at the Covenant
Presbyterian Church.
The church will have children's music group* for
aged four and five; Music Makers, for boys and girls in
school grades one through three, and Young
Musicians, for those In school grades four through six.
All will meet on Wednesday evenings from 6 to 6:49 at
the Covenant Presbyerlan Church. Enrollment Is not
limited to members of the local congregation.

and priority, have .&lt;ail«tijuf« •!. •)■..
destruction of 'h&gt; f '• p o ratiye
Program so they &lt;an • -&gt;ve ttie
freedom to go with their monies a*
they wish.”

'You Must Be Born Again'

Hobby Night Scheduled

The Choral Art Society will begin rehearsal for its
12th season at Asbury United Methodist Church in
Maitland on Sept. 20, at 7:30 p.m.
A December performance Is planned which will
feature music of Brahms and Handel. In addition,
music by Franz Josef Haydn will mark the 250th an­
niversary of that composer’s birth.
Singers who have had some experience In school,
college, community or church choirs are Invited to
join. Further Information can be obtained by calling
Adult Education at 422-3200, extension 465.

Jesus Christ," the Rev. William Self
of Wieuca Road Baptist Church
recently told a Women’s Missionary
Union leadership conference.
“ You're not going to learn whui a
church is from a parachurch (in­
dependent group) organization that
is trying to fleece the sheep," Self
added. "Christ died for the church —■
not for a para-church organization."
Grady Cotlien, president of the
Southern Baptist Sunday School
Board, told the women leaders some
within the denomination are trying
to sabotage the Cooperative Pro­
gram, the church’s basic national
benevolence and adm inistration
program.
He said some are “saying ‘give
just enough to elect the maximum
number of m essgengers"' and Self
said others "in the name of freedom

Swearing — A Darned Bad Habit

Centennial Relived On Film

Women's Day Observed

Sunday. Sept. 17, 1987— $B

“Tizzip the Gown” (left) and Minister of Music
David Haines prepare for the children's choirs’
registration day at First Baptist Church of San­
ford this Sunday. Registration will take place
between 6 and 6:30 p.m. for the Preschool Music
Activity (4 and 5-year-olds), Music Makers
(grades 1-3), and Young Musicians (grades 4-6).
Tizzie is also known as Trish Colbert.

Prayer Day Set
WASHINGTON, D.C., Edwin Hawkins, whose
million-selling hit "Oh Happy
Day” launched a career that
has garnered three coveted
Grammy
Awards,
has
volunteered to entertain at the
"School Prayer Day" rally
set for Sept. 25 In the Nation's
CapitaL
Already scheduled to ap­
pear with Hawkins are the
Grammy-wlnning Howard
and Vestal Goodman and the
popular North Carolina gospel
group, Hopper Brothers and

Connie. All are contributing
their time free of charge.
"By putting the public good
above
personal
gain,"
commented Sam Walker,
chairman of the "School
Prayer Day" Committee,
"these top religious en­
tertainers are displaying the
spirit of commitment and
concern that typlifies the
drive for voluntary prayer."
T h e a f t e r n o o n - lo n g
“Singspiration" will be im­
mediately followed by the
keynote address and the

symbolic lighting of candles
and ringing of bells. Similar
ceremonies
will
occur
simultaneously In towns and
cities nationwide.
“Over 20 years ago," said
Walker, "America’s children
were robbed of the right to
voluntarily pray In public
schools. We've already lost
two generations. Now the
issue has come to the fore. In
the 97th Congress alone,
thirteen bills and nine
proposed c o n stitu tio n a l
amendments favor school
prayer."

"For God so loved the world, that He gave
His only begotten Son, that whosoever
believeth in Him, should not perjsh but hav&gt;
everlasting life". Resultant of divine love, we
see a suffering, crucified and risen Christ Tin
belief and faith in that Christ and the personal
acceptance of this unparalleled act of mercy is
wliat Jesus was trying to convey to this
religious person.

Jesus quickly siezed upon the opportunity to
be a witness to this religious leader and to
introduce to Nicodemus a term which has
come to be popular during the past few years.

The necessity of a personal identification to
Jesus is impressed upon us by Apostle Paul
who told us, “That if you shall confess with
your mouth Jesus as l-ord and believe in vour
heart that God raised Him i Jesus) from the
dead, you would be saved."

Jesus answered the question of Nicodemus
by telling him that he must be "born again". If
one was unwilling to be bom again he would
not see the kingdom of God. This word "see"
implies that apart from being born again, we
would not enter Into, or have any part in His
kingdom.

Being "born again" was of upmost concern
in the heart of Jesus to Nicodemus and He is
concerned about you in Sanford. God’s
message is still the sam e! He still loves you If
you are searching like Nicodemus, come to
Jesus now, and believe.

THOUGHTS
Mark Antony in his
speech about the dead
Julius Caesar says, "Lend
me your ears." Isaiah,
warning about the Lord's
judgment, says, "Givo
ear."
“ Associate yourself, O ye
people, and ye shall be
broken In pieces; and give
ear, all ye of far countries:
gird yourselves, and ye
shall
be
broken In
pieces..." — Isa. 8:9

Community Chorus To Begin
The Community Chorus program sponsored by the
West Volusia Center of Daytona Beach Community
College will consist of weekly choral rehearsals on
Tuesdays from Sept. 14 through Nov. 30 at Deltona
United Methodist Church, comer of Normandy and
Troy from 1:30 to 3:30 p.m. In preparation for
presentations to the community. Singing is done in
four-part harmony: soprano, alto, tenor and bass.
The repertoire will consist of music from well-known
musical shows, religious songs, spirituals, novelty
songs, patriotic songs, old-time familiar song, and
popular song. Bill Harden is instructor. Those in­
terested may register at the class. Members will be
asked to donate a small fee to help defray cost of an
accompanist and music.

�t B —Evening Herald. Sanford, FI,

B L O N D IE

BEETLE

_

Sunday, Sepl. n , 198J

b y C h ic Y o u n g

B A IL E Y

by Mort W alker

a cro ss

1 One* left
7 M ilt infusion
1 1 S n plant
12 Muckier
14 Canadian
capital
15 Peraoni
16 Small deer
17 City in lin e !
16 W ant
20 The belt
withm record
(com p w d )
22 Clothing
fabric
25 Alto
26 Food fish
29 Coincide
31 College
lubject
33 Extreme
35 Jew ish month
36 Long fuh
37 Exclamation
of disgust
38 Journey
39 Alegar
42 Spun
45 The same
(Let)
46 On same tide
49 Turkish
mountain
51 Thick skulled
53 Fever type
54 Grow more
intense
55 Search
56 Effaced

F
A u
s £
T V

10 Far (prefix)
12 Alternative
13 Oklahoma
river
18 Addicted
20 Beers
21 Bewail
22 Move with
difficulty
23 Evil giant
24 By mouth
26 Warm
27 Persian poet
28 Force unit
30 Vanity box
32 Row
34 Light
39 Brink
40 Stone with
crystals
i

2

3

4

By BERNICE BEDE OSOL

For Sunday, September 12, 1982
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7 Heavy
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8 Pure air
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16

IS

II

by Larry Wright

YOUR BIRTHDAY
September 12.1982
Your social world should be
an extremely active one in the
year ahead. However, you
must not let it take
precedence over
your
business afairs, nor should
you bring pals into your
commercial field.
VlllGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Friends will find you a
charming companion today,
with one exception: You
might not be too willing to
share what you have with
them. Predictions of what's in
store for you in the seasons
following your birthday and
where to look for your luck
and opportunities are in your
Astro-Graph. Mail $1 for each
to Astro-Graph, Box 489,
Radio City Station, N.Y.
10019. Be sure lo specify birth
date.
LIBRA iSept. 23-Oct. 23)
Good things could happen for
you today in spite of yourself.
Situations which you view
negatively may actually turn
out to be the opposite.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
In involvements with friends
today, focus on the nice
aspects of their personalities
rather than on their flaws
which, unfortunately, you’ll
be able to accurately spot.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) You’d be wise today
not to discuss career matters
with persons who are in no
position to assist you. Talk
only to those who can further
your aims.
CAPRICORN &lt;Dec. 22-Jan.
19) You’re a very good ar­
bitrator today and your skills

as on adjuster may be called
for when two companions are
unable to find a middle
ground.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) Tasks or chores which
confront you today won't
prove as difficult as you en­
vision them to be. Do less
thinking and more per­
forming.
PISCES l Feb. 20-March 20)
Things
could
develop
favorably today, and enable
you to rectify a situation
which thus far has not proven
to be to your advantage.
ARIES i March 21-April 19)
One of your greatest assets
today is your ability to see
m a tte rs in their proper
perspective. You'll hot lei
small annoyances get blown
out of proportion.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Friends will find you a very
charming and fun companion
today. Not only do you know
how to enjoy yourself, you can
help lift their spirits as well.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
Because you are able lo make
the most of what you have
today, your possibilities for
personal gain look good even
when the pickings are slim.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
Although you may be
reluctant to interfere, you
may find it necessary today to
step in and offer advice to
someone who is having
trouble finding the answers.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) If
you’re involved in a situation
today where you feel you are
not getting a fair share of the
re tu rn s, renegotiate the
m atter so that it balances out.

For Monday, September 13, 1982
yo u r b ir t h d a y

September 13,1982

SO WJHaJ L SAUU THAT 5F£
W ASFAW U6 A5LEET? I
QUICK!V CHAUGED THE
SUBJECT TO LOCALGD55IR..

Be flexible regarding the
ways in which you hope to
fulfill your ambitions this
coming year. Many changes
are likely. If you are able to
flow with events, all will work
out.

GUESS U O 1 S M J
FIELO SO JE TALfclkJG
TO MESTERDAV'7

WIN AT BRIDGE
era the contract will be four
hearts by South
West will start by leading
outNORTH

an

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P R IS C IL L A 'S PO P

by E d Sullivan

[ VE BEEN LOOKING
TOR S C U . P E A R W H E R E P IP ‘tCAJ
P tSA P P E A R T O ?

r WENT X r THOUGHT
TO S E E
\ VOU P lP N T
THE
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to

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42

W E L L , r W A G C H E C K IN G
C U T THE C R A F T S M A N •
S t r ip F E E L I N G T H E
IN S fP E S F O R F L A W S TH AT S O R T O F T H IN G

♦ 107 5
4 A Q9

4 1 0 (7 1

SOUTH
4 9764
4 Q 9 66 3
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Vulnerable; Neither
Dealer: West
Weat
14
24
Pau

North
Dbl.
14
Pau

East South
P u i 24
Pau 44
Pau

Opening lead: 4K

BUGS BUNNY

by Stoffel &amp; Heimdahl

Pc’. BUG5,&gt;OU GUAfcWTEED X U5FPA WHCX-H WHO SAID ANYTHING ABOlTTMVSN¥$OtL ELIXIR
Y O U ? SHAKE O /LEUm
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H A IR -

0CffllJE,&amp;UTNOTHING GPONIN S H A IR O J PEOPLE ? '
HAPPEM EP.
HAPggMEP.

—

h r

By Oswald Jacoby
tod Alao Sootag
In the normal bridge
game North and South will
lay some number of hearts,
f they are good active bidd-

f

z

-king,
B-

ace

and

"10o f

iades South
will ruff with
&gt;uth 4
[umm\
my’s ace of trumps,
cash the king and lead the
jack to his queen. Then South
will ruff his last spade with
dummy's last trump and
cash tne three top diamonds
to discard two of his three
clubs. He will wind up losing
two spades and a club ana
scoring his game.
There may be some com­
ment about nice play, but no
one is going to see that East
could have defeated the
contract.
Actually, East's play Is
simple once you notice it. He
follows to the king of spades
and Ihen ruffs his partner’s
ace at trick two.
After that fine play It Is no
trouble for East to lead a
club. West takes his ace and
ueen and South is one trick
hort.
North may suggest that
South bid too much when he
went to four hearts. Or if
North Is one of those rare
souls who takes defeat with
a smile he may congratulate
E ast on his excellent
defense.

2

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN )

T h e first Am erican saw m ill was constructed
M aine in 1634.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Commitments m ade to loved
ones must be put above all
other considerations today.
Should you default, you’ll
leave great disappointment in
your wake. Find out more of
what lies ahead for you in the
seasons following your bir­
thday by sending for your
copy of Astro-Graph. Muil $1
for each to Astro-Graph, Box
489, Radio City Station, N.Y.
10019. Be sure to specify birth
date.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) Be
optimistic in all your en­
deavors today, but keep your
expectations within realistic
limits. Being overly en­
thusiastic could lead to a
costly mistake.
SCORPIO I Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Even though your Judgment
may not be up lo par today in
career and financial matters,
events are still likely to work
out in ways which will put you
in the profit column.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) Give vent to your
cha r i t a bl e
i nc l i na t i ons
without worrying about what
you might get in return.
Today you may give more.
Tomorrow, conditions could
be reversed
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) Things will run smoothly
today if you deal only with
those directly connected to

your affairs. Bringing in
outsiders will create com­
plications.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) Friends can be relied upon
to assist you today, but you’d
be wise not to count too much
on those you know only on a
business basis.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
When pressed today you will
be extremely resourceful in
overcoming work or career
problem s. However, don't
lord your success over others.
ARIES (M arch 21-April 19)
If you allow your innate
sen sitiv ities lo guide you
today a s to how to deal with
people, you’re not as apt to
expect more from them than
you should and thus won't be
disappointed.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Chance weighs in your favor
today, but there will also be
other elem en ts involved
which could make opportune
situations "iffy." Be alert.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
Your ability to make quick
and accurate decisions Is very
keen
today.
However,
knowing what to do is only
half the battle. Carrying out
the Idea Is the other half.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
Shoot from the hip when
you're given a chance today
at som ething opportune.
Things that you ponder will
give others the time to hit the
target first.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You
may not be personally lucky
today, but If you associate
with those who generally are,
some of their good fortune
could easily rub off on you.

G A R F IE L D
F R A N K AND E R N E S T

HEY,

by Jim Davis

by Bob Thaves

gOWRPWAlfc |

L°og A T
T H IS !- . X
A G IA N T
THIM BLE!
„T
D 1MJ U W W H I U I Srftfcu l*. Ire

TU M BLEW EED S

by T . K . Ryan

A N N IE
-HAVEN’T SEEN BILLY TOY
AROUND LATELY-BOY* HE
SURE SPOOKED WHEN I
TOLD HIM TH’ name a
STELLA HAN’S UNCLE-

iffiE St.
/k C P &amp; F tlN fc

T -//

by Leonard
-THAT’S A PRETTY
000 NAME FOR
SOMEONE TO
HAVE, ISN’T IT,
FATHER?

YES. PERHAf
IT WOULD Bf
WISE TO/IK*
ANNIE FOR
THE PKESEN-

�Evening Herald Sar.ford, FI

Sunday, Sept. 12. I982-7B

TONIGHT'S TV
SATURDAY
AFTERNOON
200
0 9
BASEBALL Regional ccivtrig t of L0» Angelas Dodgeri at
HOutl^n Astros 01 Detroit Tigers at
i M f t n Red Soi
(35) MOVIE
Dangerous
E l lie 1958l Louis Jourdan Belin­
da lee During the French Revolu­
tion.* a young girl and a danng
yourv rascal rescue a king from
decs; ration at the guillotine
CD { 10) IT S EVERYBODY'S BU SI­
NESS

2:05
3X (17) BASEBALL Cincinnati
Lftadlai Atlanta Braves

2:30
( D P O ) IT'S EVERYBODY'S BU SI­
NESS

3:00
8 ) 0 0 ) PRESENTS!

3:30
O NCAA FOOTBALL
£110) TONY BROWN S JO U R ­
NAL The Struggle Within The
Strug ;'** Tony Bromm e i amines
ttt#(ciie ot women in Ihe traditional­
ly Iti nie dominated black leaderlNp IR)

S

3:45
S J( 3 5 | YESTERDAY S N EW REEL

4:00
J ( 3 5 ) INCREDIBLE HULK
_ ( 10) ARTUR RUBINSTEIN
"Parts" Rubinstein discusses
mu» c «nth ertbe Benaid Oaroty
attar ds a private concert by cellist
Rasa Tortelier and otters advice to a
yourg colleague/

5:00
t&lt;A EMERGENCY
1(35) DANIEL BOONE
_ J 110) WASHINGTON W EEK IN
r e v ie w

5:10
IQM 17| NEWS

5:30
f f l (10) WALL STREET WEEK
"The International Scene Guest
Martntf G Wade, senior portfolio
imrager. T Rcr*e Price internation­
al Fund

woman who was persuaded by
Hooker and Romano to testily m a
murder case becomes the killer s
new laiget |R|
I) &lt;35| CHILDREN ON THE RUN
Johnny Mann hosts a documentsty about the millions of child refu­
gees iff the Vkorid
(D 110) PLIMPTONI Adventuras
in Africa George Plimpton cap­
f u l* on film the world's largest ele­
phant for a covef of LIFE magaiine

ILLUS­

1 O MOVIE
Blood And Sand
(I9 4 'l Tyrone Power Rita Hayworth

MORNING

6:00
J O LAW AND YOU
7 O AGRICULTURE U S A
11 (17) NEW S

7:0 0
0 A i OPPORTUNITY LINE
5 O ROBERT SCHULLER
(7 O TODAY'S BLACK WOMAN
11(35) BEN HADEN

7:05
4 3 (17) JA M E S ROBISON

7:30
Q 4, AMERICAN FORUM
t l) O
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH OF ORLANDO
U) (35) E .J DANIELS

8:05
u (17) CARTOONS
8:30

7:00
0 (4

O (D FLORIDA'S WATCHINO

9:00
O l THE WORLD TOMORROW
5 O SUNDAY MORNING
(X O KIDS ARE PEOPLE TOO
G u eili Jon Bowjei" Bauman,
comedian Pat Huiley. Lmdi Gray
(R)
a i (3 5 ) BU G S BUNNY AND
FRIENDS
ED MO) MATINEE AT THE BIJOU
Gene Autry and Smiley Bumetta
aie featured in The Man From
Music Mountain 119381, the shorts
include Weekend In Hollywood
t1932) and a cartoon,and the serial
is Chapter 1#of 'Zorro's Fighting
Legion (R|

11:30

9:30
O
4 MONTAGE: THE BLACK
PRESS
ill |35)N A SL SOCCER KICKS

10:00
B A MOVIE
Strategic Air Com- mand 11955) James Stewart, June
Alijson An untended shoulder m|ury results in the downfall ot both a
serviceman s Air Force and basaball careen
X O CENTRAL FIORIOA FOOT­
BALL HIGHLIGHTS
,rp (3 5 ) MOVIE
The Time Ol
Their Lives |1946| Bud Abbott.
Lou Costello Ghosts trom the Re&lt;■
olulionary War seek to prove their
innocence to release them from an
ea'thbound curse

12:05

7:55
PRE-OAME

8:00
O
(i
DIFF'RENT STRO K ES
Arnold gels me chance to perform
with a famous ballerina &lt;R|
I E O WALT DISNEY Gu«. The
Pigskin Mule A Yugoslavian mule
hired by a losing loo (bail coach,
the team begin a remarkable
winning Streak iPad t|

T.J. HOOKER A young

31 (17) MOVIE
Lady Sings The
Blues' 11972) Diana Ross Billy Dee
-Williams

12:30
O . l i ) SATURDAY NIOHT LIVE
Host Daniel J Travanti Guest
JohnnyCougar (R)
(S) O
MOVIE
Strange New
World ' (1975) John Sason. Kath­
leen Miller
tU) (35) MOVIE
"Werewott Ot
London" 11935) Hanry Hull. Warner

10:05 '
,

02 (17) LIGHTER SIDE OF THE
NEW8

10:30
(l! Q BLACK AWARENESS
( D O FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
(D (10) MOVIE A Study In Scat­

SCHOOL MENU
■

MONDAY, SEPT. 13
ENTKEE
Fiestado
Hroccoll
i’ean in lJght
Syrup
Haked Dessert
Milk
EXPRESS
Firatado
Cheeseburger
•
TaterTots
Fresh Fruit or
•
Fruit Cup
Milk or
Orange Juice
* TUESDAY, SEPT. H
ENTREE
Fish Filet
■ Macaroni ’n Cheese
Steamed Cabbage or
Cole Slaw
Juice Bar
Combread
Milk
EXPRESS
i
Flshwich
Deli Sub
French Fries
Fresh Fruit or
• . Frull Cup
Milk or
Orange Juice
We d n e s d a y , s e p t , 15
ENTREE
Frank on Run
Taler Tots
!
Green Beans
Fruit Cocktail
Milk

ED 110) AT THE ROSE BUD Lou
Conte s Hubbard Street Dance
Company performs the comical At
The Rose Bud and me sopnisticaled Eicerpts From Getshwtn Danc­
es

EXPRESS
Frank on Run
Tuna Sandwich
TaterTots
Fresh Frull or
Fruit Cup
Milk or
Orange Juice
THURSDAY, SEPT.
ENTREE
Oven Fried Chicker
Whipped Potatoes
with Gravy
Peas &amp; Carrots
Sliced Peaches
Rolled Oat Rolls
Milk
EXPRESS
Mini Steak Sub
French Fries
Fresh Fruit or
Fruit Cup
Milk or
Orange Juice
FRIDAY, SEPT. 17
ENTREE
Reel and Rice
Chop Suey Vegetables
Pineapple Chunks
Oven Baked Bolls
Ice Cream
Milk
EXPRESS
Hamburger on Bun
TaterTots
Fresh Fruit or
Fruit Cup
MUk or
Orange Juice

t e r (1933) Reginald Owen, Alan
Mowbray Based on the story by
Arthur Conan Doyle Sherlock
Holmes investigates a bizarre mur­
der involving a foreign word written
in blood at the scene ol the crime

10:35
3 J (1 7 ) MOVIE
Paint your Wag­
on" (1969) Lee Marvin, CBM Eastwood During the Gold Rush days in
California, a pair ot prospectois
share a wile bought trom a Mormon
at an auction

11:00
(J) Q THIRTY MINUTES
11:30
0 ) 0 FACE THE NATION
lD Q

AFTERNOON

12:00
B 9 ) MEET THE PRESS
fm h t back

31 (35) MOVIE

.

4:00

5:00
M (35) DANIEL BOONE
ED ) 101 FIRING LINE The Economy And The Blacks' Guest Rever­
end Jesse Jackson {Part 1»

Return To Para­

11:00

11:05
11:30
O
4 ENTERTAINMENT THIS
WEEK
7 o MOVIE
Darby s Rangers
11956) James Gamer. Etchika
Chouteau the heroic Amerlcart
Rangers go into combat under Ihe
leadership ol Colonel Oaiby in lhe-i
invasion ct Italy and North Atnca
tt (351 ITS YOUR B U SIN ESS

11:35

5:30

13 | 17) OPEN UP

12:05

7 Q SP O R T SB E A T

12:30

13 (17) UNDERSEA WORLD OF
JA C Q U ES COUSTEAU
EVENING

6:00
n ew s

I J (35) KUNG FU
ED (10 ) NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC
SPECIAL National Parks Play­
ground ;Or PaiadseT' Efforts by
the Nabonsl Park Service to restrict
the public:* access to America s
paiks m hopes ot putting a halt to
environmental damage pollution
and crime are eiammed (R)

6:30
L&gt; O ABC NEWS

0
4 MOVIE
Footsteps In Ttie
Dark (15411 Errol Flynn Brenda
Marshall
V 0 1 MOVIE
Devil Dog The
Mound Of Hell &lt;19781 Richard
Crenni Yvette Mmieu*

1:05

FALL &amp; WINTER
FESTIVAL
AT

10:30

4 W H EEL OF FORTUNE
7 O ALICE (R)
li )35l DORIS DAY
(D M 0 ) 3-2-1 CONTACT
0 I TEXAS
1 O THE PRICE IS RIGHT
7 0 LOVE BOAT IR)
H (35)35 LIVE
(D&lt; 10) MOVIE

11:30
M la v - 2 N tB hl
(firm

4 SOAP WORLD
J O &gt; O n ew s
II (35) BIG VALLEY
(T \ 10) M ASTERPIECE THEATRE
ITUE)
0 MO) ODYSSEY (WED)
0 1 ’ 0) NOVA (THU)
0 M 0) EVENING AT POPS (FRI)

$48.00

0

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• WekomeC ruklaiK

4 NEWS
5 O THE YOUNG AND THE
RESTLESS
7 O RYAN S HOPE

SitcHinK' " I-**.’ l.,li 1-i.Jr, 11 I- '1

'%,*) a

"'Ilk*

3125 Smith Atlanlu Avenue

1:00

0

3 Great Locations*

Double Ouup.mi v

12:30

4 OAYS OF OUR LIVES
7 O ALL MY CHILDREN
tt (35) MOVIE
0 1 1 0 ) MOVIE (MON)
0 1 10I AMERICAN SHORT STO­
RY (TUE)
0 I 101 MATINEE AT THE BIJOU
(WED)
0 I 10t GREAT PERFORMANCES
(THU)
,
0 i lOl FLORIDA HOME GROWN
(FRI)

1:05
1:30
"5 O AS THE WORLD TURNS
0 1 101 THIS OLD HOUSE (FRI|

2:00

4 ANOTHER WORLD
7 O ONE LIFE TO LIVE
0 I TO) MAGIC OF OIL PAINTING

/(P L A Z A T V ^ j V -1

4 n ew s

7:05
t ) i ( 17) WRESTLING

7:30
ED &lt;10) SUNSHINE MUSIC HALL
Banew. Stoweil And Bradford

13 (17) MOVIE
Beachhead
(1954) Tony Curtis. Frank Lovnjdy

&amp; J O MODESTY BLAISE A wom­
an is totned by her slieet-wise best
tnend in high-level government
undercover work
(II (35) MAUDE
ED (10) EVENING AT POPS
Pianist Earl Wild performs Ger­
shwins tyncal Rhapsody in Blue
m this special encore performance

/

MONDAY

400 N. HWY. 17-92
(opprox. 2 Uks. N. of 434, Next to Sobiks)

m

m

( PLA ZA

10 0&lt;f

vh

'

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t M

MORNING

600
O 4 ea r l y TODAY
5 O 13 (17) NEWS
r O SUNRISE
ll (35) JIM BANKER

6:30
4 today in F l o r id a

4 m ovielaTO I

6:45

H ., 17 *2*

t O N EW S
D MO) A M WEATHER
(D

D2 1)1*

SUNDAY

7:00
4 TODAY
J a MORNING N EW S
7 a GOOD MORNING AMERICA
II (351 WOODY WOODPECKER
ffl (10) TO LIFEI YOOA WITH
PRISCILLA

7:15
7:30

1 «1

MS

v 5o i

BEASTMASTER
CAVEMAN

THE WAY WE MAKE IT
IS MAKING US FAMOUS.

pg
PG

FR IE D C H IC K E N

(11 (35) TOM AND JE R R Y

09

k

10:2}

ffl (10) AM WEATHER

1 11

lo

ONLY

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PETSOS TR AV EL
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OUR PRICES ARE RIGHT FOR SCHOOL LUNCHES
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10 to a Box
assorted
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flavors
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Tuesday is 2 for 1 Day!
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P L A IA I

4:25

1 o ABC NEWS THIS MORNING

B
(37 CHIPS Ponch loses his
neive following a terrifying motor­
cycle accident (R|
(1) O ARCHIE BUNKER'S PLACE
Gloria refuses to tell Archie why ’
she and Mae have sepaiated when
she returns home with Joey (R)

[

f O CELEBRITY REVUE

0

8:00

w ,w

ALL SH O W S

3:05

BREAD • OUR BREAD IS FRESH BREAD!

L0NGW00D, FU

13 M M BEVERLY HILLBILLIES

B T Ir t o y r i T h e a tre s B i

1:20
l? Q MOVIE
The Kid From
Brooklyn (19461 Danny Kaye Vir
gmia Mayo
0

Q
4 CATALINA C-LAB A stray
Navy mine is discovered boating
near an oceanic research laborato­
ry oil me California coast (R)
( J O 60 MINUTES
CD O CODE RED Danny's photo
essay assignment proves instru­
mental in the apprehension ol a fitc
bomb arsonist |RI
ll: (35) WILD. WILD WEST
ED (10) NASHVILLE MUSIC

FOR

5:35

4 LITTLE HOUSE ON THE
PRAIRIE

4 DIFF'RENT STROKES (R)
1 O MARY TYLER MOORE
tl (35IANDY GRIFFITH
fDM Ol ELECTRIC COMPANY |fl)

0

O &lt;17) MOVIE
Marine Raiders
{ 1944| Pat O Bfien Robert Ryan

7:00

2

4:00

0

1:45

i ; (1 7 ) n i c e p s o p l e

$ |3 5

4 PEOPLE'S COURT
J O M - A ’ S-H
7 0 NEWS
ffl I 101POSTSCRIPTS

3:35

10:00

12:50
j O n ew s

Winn f u Savi up to 50%on Top Quality Braid i Ciko

FOR 8 9

5:30

0

11 (17) MOVIE

12:35

6:35

t l I 1 ') THE BRADY BUNCH

11 (17r THEFUNTSTONES

11 1 *7) P EO PLEN O W

f B a k e f f sIh r if t § h o p )

5

0 4 SO YOU THINK YOUVE
GOT TROUBLES
tl (351 FAMILY AFFAIR

12:05

13 117) JERRY FALWELL

13 ( 17)NEWS

O

9:30

0

0 4 J O 7 O NEW S
ED 110) SNEAK P REV IEW S Roger
Ebert and Gene Siskel host an
informative look at what's new at
the movies

J O SOLID GOLD

5:05

3:30
II
(35) BUGS BUNNY AND
FRIENDS
ffl M 0) ELECTRIC COMPANY (R)

12:00

H I351JIU BANKER
ED M 0 )BUTTERFLIES

5:20

I t (351 CASPER

13 1 17) MOVIE

0

5 00
0
4 LAVERNE 6 SHIRLEY A
COMPANY (MON-WEO FRI)
O HOGAN S HEROES
1 O ALL IN THE FAMILY
I I M 1 EIGHT IS ENOUGH
tD 1101 MISTER ROGERS(R)

ffl I 10&gt; FRENCH CHEF |MONl
ffl 110ICOOKIN CAJUN|TUE)
f f l 110l THE LAWMAKERS(FR ii

9.05

10:30

D O LLY MADISON

Ravenous Black Hole
WASHINGTON (UPIl — A mysterious powerhouse al the
cenler of our Milky Way galaxy may be the result of a black
hole gobbling up Interstellar gas and dust, astronomers report.
They told a meeting of the American Physical Society an
immense whirlpool of matter drawn into an dense object could
be the source of intense radiation observed from the heart of
the galaxy 30,000 light years from Earth.
Dr. Ian Galley of the United Kingdom Infrared Telescope
Unit at Hilo, Hawaii, said heat measurements from clouds of
dust belween Earth and the galaxy's center indicate the
energy source there 1j several tens of mlllioas times brighter
than the sun.
A black hole m theory is an object su dense even light cannol
escape its gravitational pull. Such an object would be Invisible,
but astronomers believe ihey have seen the radiation
signatures of several black-hole candidates in the centers of
distant galaxies

THIS W EEK WITH DAVID

BRINKLEY

Op a

10:05

B
A NFL FOOTBALL Miami Dol­
phins at New York Jets
5 O TENNIS U S Open Live
coverage ot Ihe men s final round
trom the United Stales Tennis
Association National Tennis Center,
Flushing Meadows-Corona Park.
NY
II, (35). INCREDIBLE HULK

t

9:00
4 RICHARD SIMMONS
ODONAHUE
0 MOVIE
i35! LEAVE IT TO BEAVER
1 101 SESA M E STREET | R | g

0

4 35
T2 I 171LEAVE IT TO BEAVER

3 00
0 4 fa n ta sy
J O GUIDING LIGHT
* O g e n e r a l h o s p it a l

0:35

)l (35) INDEPENDENT n e t w o r k
NEWS
AFTERNOON

13 M 7) NEWS

ED M 0 ) AMERICAN SHORT STO­
RY Beinice Bobs Hei Hair by F
Scott Frtigerau I'm A Fool by
Sherwood Anderson. |R|

11 |35l EPCOT BEHIND THE
SC EN ES (WED)

tl r 17) THAT G ir l

S
’
It
(D

4.30
11 &gt;35 SCOOBY DOO

2:45

II (35) GREAT SPACE COASTER
ffl MOl MISTER ROGERS |RI

0

4 05
12 1! ’ THE MUNSTERS

11:00

10:00
5. O TRAPPER JOHN. MO A
mentally retarded young man and a
sarcastic old hermit find that they
have something of value to offer
each other (Rj
ED M 0I TO THE MANOR BORN

5:35

11 (17) LOST IN SPACE

8:30

9:30
i O ONE DAY AT A TIME The
men get stuck in a snowstorm and
the women are left waiting at home
ini
IV|35)JIM M YSW AQ GA RT

2:05

9:05

f ] ( f NEWS

” 9.05

3:30

O A SUNDAY MASS
&gt; O OAY OF DISCOVERY
7 | Q ORAL ROBERTS
II (35) JO SIE AND THE PUSSYCATS

13 117r MY THREE SONS

13 117} WEEK IN REVIEW

3:00

8:00
6 1 VOICE OF VICTORY
5 O REXH UM BAR0
&gt; O BO B JO N ES
It )35) JONNY QUEST
(D 110) S ESA M E STREET |R |g

11 (17) n e w s

■J O MOVIE
Whatever Hap­
pened, To Baby Jane1 (19621 Bette
Davis. Joan Crawford Two sisters,
both lormer Mm stais tne a bnarre
enstence in a terror-ridden house
-DC (35) MOVIE
Im AM Right.
Ja ck " (I960) Ian Carm.chae! Peter
Sellers In trying to do a good |Ob
tor his uncle in a lactory, a wellmeaning bumble' actually upsets
the crooked scheme his uncle has
so carefully planned
12 (17) BASEBALL Cincinnati
Reds at Atlanta B ’aves

7:35
U ( 17) IT IS WRITTEN

11:05

12:00

NBC NEWS

2:00

i,X) O VIEWPOINT ON NUTRITION

II (35) SPORTS AFIELD
(D 110) DAVE ALLEN AT LAROE

7:30

6:30

’ O MORAL ISSUES

• 3 O SPECTRUM

8:00
8:05

9:00

1:30

6:30

J O CAPITOL
(D 1'O l TO BE ANNOUNCED
IMONI
( I ) 1101SLIM CUISINE (TUE)
f f l M p l JU ST FRIENDS ROB
MCCONNELL AND THE BOSS
BR A SS (WED)
ffl I 101- PORTRAITS IN PASTEL
(FRII

II (35) FRED FLINTSTONE AND
FRIENDS

0
4 MOVIE
Skyward 119801
Bette Drives Howard Messeman A
former stutil pilot and an airport
watchman bfip a 14-year-old para­
plegic g«n learn bow to by a plane
!«»
* O the JE F FE R SO N S Tom
shows he hat a p ilous streak when
an old beau of Helen a invite* her
out to lunch i.Ri
t O MOVIE
The Fog &lt;19fl0i
Adnenne Bar beau Hal Holbrook
Tefror comes to a coastal town in
ihe form ol ah ominous misl fur
founding the ghosts of lepers killed
m a shipwreck a century earlier n
ED MOl MASTERPIECE THEATRE
Testament Of Youth
Vera
inspired to become a wsrfime
nurse survives the drudgery of her
framing and looks forward to a
Christmas reunion wdh Roland
(Pari 2)(Ri(g

O
A NFL FOOTBALL Houston
Oilers al Cincinnati Bengali
5 O NFL FOOTBALL Tampa Bay
Buccaneers at Minnesota Vikings
ED (10) GLOBAL REPORT A
report on what happened to the
human family in 1981 is presented
by five individuals who Offer them
accounts of the events they lived
through

SUNDAY

ALIVEI

830

12:30

2:30

7:35

It (35) JERRY FALWELL

1:00

31, (1 7 ) RAT PA T R O L

V i 135) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
NEWS
(D M O lNO .H O NESTLYI

13 (17) NASHVILLE
Guest Bobby B a 'f

5 O HOUR MAGAZINE (MON.
TUE THU. FRI)
*. 0 CBS AFTERNOON PLAY­
HOUSE |WED)
-7 O M E R V GRIFFIN
U t i l TOM ANO JERRY
f f l 1TO) SESAME STREET iR ig j

(FRII

(D M O tSE SA M E STREET ( R i g
11 1 1711DREAM OF JEANNIE

8:05

O A N fL 82
5 O NFL TODAY
f - 0 CHARLIE PELL

4:45

10:00

honoring Arthur Fiedler s Mlreffi
anniversary wdh the Boston Pops

dise (1953] Gaiy Coopei Roberta
Haynes Atler spending time on a
South Seas island a man tails in
love with one ol the island girls
ED (1 0 )1 REMEMBER HARLEM
The Ejifiy Years 1600*1930
Harlem s eatfydlyS as a fiShmg vil­
lage a Dutch farming community, a
eealtfvy New York City suburb and
it burgeoning black neighborhood
are reviewed fR|

3:10
S3 (17) MOVIE
Dinner Al The
Rifj
(1937) AnnabeHa. David
Niven

O 4 MISS AMERICA PAGEANT
Gary Collins hosts this year s fes­
tivities with co-host Susan Poweii
and special guest star Maillyn
McCoo live from the Convention
Hall In Atlantic City. N J
7 a FANTASY ISLAND A seeretaiy tries to wm a fortune by staying
inside &gt; haunted house tor ten
hours and a bounty hunter staiSI
the only man ever to elude him (R)

IN SEARCH OF..
f t ) Q HEEHAW
( D O LAWRENCE WE LK
M ( 3 5 j JEFFERSONS
ED (10) UNDERSEA WORLD OF
JACQUES COUSTEAU

w r es t l in g

O N EW S

3:00

5. O MOVIE
CH O M PS
|I979i Wesley Eure. Valerie Bertifieiii A clever young man Invents a
Computerized robot dog pro­
grammed to stop criminals and
solve enmes
X O LOVE BOAT The crew
suspects that a beautiful woman is
trying to kilt her millionaire hus­
band and a glamorous divorcee
lues to get leacquamted with her
son (R ) g
1 It (35) GUNSMOKE
CD 110) NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC
SPECIAL National Parks Play­
ground Or Paradise*! Ettorts by
the National Park Service to restrict
the public's access to America s
parks in hopes ol putting a halt to
environmental damage pollution
and crime are eaammed iR)

7 O BARRY FARBER
I o MOVIE
The Alamo { 1960)
John Wayn« Richard W'dmafk The
Bathe of the Alamo is *aged by
herpes *ho fight to free Texas from
Mtuco
II (35) STREETS OF SAN FRAN­
CISCO
(D MO) HORSE RAC INO 1982
Kentucky Pacing Derby Ltve cov­
erage trom Louisville Downs ol the
third iewr&lt; in Ihe Triple Ciown ol
harness racing for 2-year-old
pacers

6:05

I

9:00

6:00
ffl (10) LUCY IN DISGUISE The
iMcovery ot Ihe oldest and most
complete human skeleton found in
Eth lopii by Donald Johanton and
the Afar international Research
Expedition, ti documented

CD O

2:30

0 4 TEXACO STAR THEATRE
OPENING NIOHT An array of top
stars from television Broedeay and
the motion pictures perform some
of l*e greatest shoei-stoppmg
musjcal numbers ot ail time

11:00

REDMAN

i

8:30

5 O ) O n ew s
■
tl (35) BENNY HILL
(D U O ) FALL AND RISE OF REGI­
NALD PERRIN

I j 5 )kunq fu

©
(17)
SHOW

0

11 117] COLLEGE FOOTBALL

EVENIN3

S

B (A

A A M ER IC A S TOP TEN

10:30

MOTORWEEK

t ir NEWS

(ED H 7 l

2:00
B

8:05

5:35
32 (17)
TRATED

Oland

5
PIES

1

Assorted Chips
69* Bag!
OPEN
MON • SAT 9-4
339-6995

HAS
M O V ED !

�I •'

I B — Evening Herald. Sanford. FI.

Sunday, Sept. 1 2 , 1983

Legal Notice
, N O T IC E OF P U B L IC H E A R IN G
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
nY T H E C IT Y O F LONGW OOD,
F L O R ID A . That the Cifv Com
mission will hold a public hearing
on September 22, 1982 to consider a
C O N D IT IO N A L u s e r e q u e s t
Submitted by Pamela F. Sutll Pre
'dent ot V IO E O D IM EN SIO N S.
iNC tor a Video Entertainment
C enter
with
electro n ic. or
mechanical qamesto be located on
lo llo w n o
le g a lly
d escrib ed
property
S E C T IO N I T O W N SH IP It S
R A N G E 29E. E JOO FT ol N SOO FT
( L E S S B E G IN 70 FT S AND 93 4
FT W O F N E COR R U N W 7 I 5 FT
S 70 FT E 71 S FT N 70 FT to
BEG
(To be located in the proposed
Township Pla ta
Soulh Side of SR
114 opposite Ranoelme Hoad)
The Public Hearing wilt be held
on Monday. September 27. 1912 at
7 30 PM In the City Halt,,17s'Went
W a rre n
Avenue,
Lpngwood,
Florida, or as soon thereafter as
possible At this meeting alt in
terested parties may appear and
be heard with respett to Con
dittonal Use Request This hearinq
may be continued Irom time to
time unlit Imal action Is taken by
the C'ty Commission A copy of the
Conditional Use Request is on File
* T h the City Clerk and may be
inspected by the public.
A taped record of this meeting Is
made by the O t y o t Longwood tor
its convenience This record may
not constitute an adequate record
tor purposes ol appeal from a
decision made by the Commission
with respect to the foregoing
matter Any person wishing to
ensure that an adequate record ol
the proceedings is maintained lor
appellate purposes is advised to
make the necessary arrangements
ai their own eipense
Dated this 9th dayot September,
1982 C IT Y O F LONGWOOD. F L O
R ID A
D L Terry
C'ty Clerk
Publish September 12, 22. I9S2
D E Z 41

Legal Notice

IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T FO R
S E M IN O L E COUNTY, F L O R ID A
P R O B A T E D IV ISIO N
File Number 12 432 C P
Division Probale
IN R E E S T A T E OF
C O R IN N E EV A N S R Y E
Deceased
N O T IC E OF A D M IN IS T R A T IO N
The administration ol the estate
Ot C O R IN N E E V A N S
RYE.
deceased, File Number 82 432, CP
is pending in Ibe Circuit Court tor
Serp.noleCounty, Florida. Probate
Division, the address ol which IS
Sem inole County Courthouse.
Sanford. F lo rid a . 32771 T h e
names and addresses of the per
sonal rep rese n ta tive and the
personal represent at Iv e s attorney
are set forth below
A ll interested persons a r e
required to I He with this court.
W IT H IN T H R E E M O N TH S OF
TH E F IR S T P U B L IC A T IO N OF
T H IS NO TICE
(t ) all claim s
against the estate and (21 any
obiection by an interested person
to whom notice was m ailed ihat
challenges the validity of the will,
the quantitations ol the personal
re p resen tative,
venue,
or
lurisdiction 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 IL L
BE FO REVER BA R RED
Publication ot this Notice has
begun on September 12. 1982
Co Personal
Representatives
Valerie Rye Weld
600 East 20th Street
Sanlord. F L 32771
M iftam Rye Wright
307 Larkwood Drive
Sanlord. F L 32771
A ttorney
lor
P e rs o n a l
Representative
S K irby Moncnel. ot
S H IN H O L S E R . L O G A N . M ON
C R IE F 6 B A R K S
Post O lfite Bov 2279
Sar)tord, FL 12771 0029
Telephone (3051 323 3660
Publish September 12. 19. 19(2
D EZ 48
IN T H f “ C IR C U IT C O U R T . IN
AND FO R S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y.
F L O R ID A .
C A SE NO E(2 912 C J-A 1B
IN TH E IN T E R E S T O F :
A N DR EW
M A X W E L L
GARRETT,
Born 12 2( 73,
C IT Y OF C A S S E L B E R R Y .
and
F LO R ID A
M IC H A E L S T E P H E N G A R R E T T .
N O T IC E OF P U B L IC H E A R IN G
Born 9 21 71
TO C O N S ID E R A D O PTIO N O F
N O TICE OF ACTION
P R O P O S E D O RO IN A N C E
THE STA TE OF F L O R ID A TO
TO W H O M IT M A Y C O N C ERN
S H IR L E Y
D
TRANTHAM
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
GARRETT.
whose
present
by the C ity of C a sse lb e rry.
whereabouts are unknown but last
Florida, that the City Council W'll
hold a public hearing to consider
known residence and m ailin g
enactment of Ordinance 471 on
address is M abtelon, G eo rg ia
300S9
titled
A N O R D IN A N C E O F T H E C IT Y
YOU
ARE
H EREBY
OF C A S S E L B E R R Y ) F L O R ID A .
N O T IF IE D that a proceeding lor
A D O P T IN G A B U D G E T FO R
Dependency with Minor Children,
THE C IT Y O F C A S S E L B E R R Y .
lo wit
AND REW M A X W E L L
F L O R ID A . FO R THE F IS C A L
GARRETT,
and
M IC H A E L
Y E A R B E G IN N IN G O C T O B ER 1.
S T E P H E N G A R R E T T , pursuant
1982, AND E N D IN G S E P T E M
to Florida Statute 19,401. has been
B E R 30. 1993. AND A P P R O
tiled by Petitioners, W IL L IA M R
P FH A T IN G AND A LLO C A TIN G
K L E T T E R and S H I R L E Y G
R E V E N U E O F T H E C IT Y TO
KLETTER
THE
U T I L IT Y
FUN D
YOU A R E R E Q U IR E D lo ap
O P E R A T IO N S B U O G E T F O R
pear and tile your Answer or other
THE F IS C A L Y E A R , P R O V ID
defense or pleading with the Clerk
ING C O N F L IC T S . S E V E R A B IL
ol the Circuit Court, in and tor
IT Y . AND E F F E C T I V E D A TE
Seminole County, Florida, and
This notice is qivcn pursuant to
se rve
a
copy
Ih e re o l
on
the provisions ol Chapter 166
petitioners attorney. R O G E R L
Florida Statutes, and the Charter
B E R R Y . E S Q U IR E , Post Oltice
and Ordinances Ol the City of
Drawer O, Sanlord, Florida 12771,
Casselberry, Florida, as amended
on or before the J(lh day ol Sep
and supplemented
(ember, 1983, otherwise a default
Said Ordinance win be con
will be entered against you
sidered on first readmq on Mon
W IT N E S S my hand and official
day, September 20. 1912. and the
seal ol the Clerk ol Ihe Circuit
City Councilwillconsider same tor
Coon on the 2Sth day ot August,
final passage, in accordance with
19(2
Chapter 166. and adoption alter the
(C O URT S E A L I
public bearing which will be held
A R T H U R H B E C K W IT H , JR
in the City Hal) ol Casselberry,
C L E R K OF THE C IR C U IT
Florida on Mohday, September
COURT
27, 1912, a* 7 30 P M or as soon
B Y Jean E Wilke
thereafter as possible At the
O EPU TYC LERK
meeting interested parties may
Roger L Berry. Esquire
appear and be heard with respect
Attorney lor Petitioners
to the proposed ordinance This
P O Drawer Q
hearing may be continued Irom
Sanlord. Florida 12771
time to time until Fnal action Is
X S 121 4171
taken by the C ity Council
Publish August 29 IS September S.
Copies ol the proposed ordinance
(2, 19, 198!
are available at the City Hall with
OE Y 162
the C lerk of the City and the same
may be Inspected by the public
N O T IC E OF P U B L IC H E A R IN G
D atrd th is ?lh dayot September.
He Lake M ary Boulevard from
A D 19(2
Markham Woods Road past US 17
M A R Y W HAW THO RNE.
97 to CR 427 425
City Clerk
The Lake M a ry B o u le v a rd
A D V IC E TO T H E P U B L IC : It a
Corridor Study Ciliren Advisory
person dec ides to appeal a decision
Committee w ill hold a public
made with respect to any matter
hearing on Thursday, September
considered at the above hearing he
X , 19(7 ai 4 to PM. o r as soon
will need a verbatim record ot all
thereafter as possible, in the
proceedings,
Including
the
Sem inole County A g ric u ltu ra l
testimony and evidence, which
C enter Auditorium ,
4120 S.
record is not provided by the City
C lando D r . Sanlord. F L 32771
ol Casselberry (Chapter (0 (50.
(|ust west ol US 17 97 one mile
Laws ol Florida. 19(C)
north ol Ihe " F iv e Points' In
Publish September 12, 19B2
(resection with CR 427 and SR 419)
D E I 46
The public hearing is being held to
mlorm Ihe public ol the re lu lls ol
the transportation study and
IN T H E C IR C U IT COURT IN AND
receive public comments before
FOR S E M IN O L E COUNTY. F L O
imal recommendations a re made
R ID A .
by the Clllien Advisory Committee
C A SE NO (2 1599 C A M G
to ihe Board ol County Com
C R E D IC O F IN A N C IA L , INC .
missioners ol Seminole County,
Plaint itt.
Florida
Your attendance and
v.
'
•
participation is rncouraged
F R A N C IS LIM JO O N , et al
Seminole County has secured Ihe
Defendants
professional services ol Ihe traffic
N O T IC E O F SA LE
engineering
firm ,
F o x w o rth
Notice Is given Ihatpursuant lo a
Associates. Inc lo prepare design
final judgment dated Sept 1st,
concepts lor road w id en in g ,
19(2. in Case No (2 1S»» CA 09 G ot
ilgnalljation and an access plan
the Circuit Court ol the Eighteenth
which
anticip ates
fu tu re
Ju d ic ia l C ircu it In and lo r
development In adddion to auto
Sem in o le County, F lo rid a , in
and truck traffic, provision will
which C R E D IC O F IN A N C IA L .
also be made in the design con
INC is the Plaintltt and F R A N C IS
cepts lor transit, bicycle and
L IM JO O N . ANNA H LIM JO O N ,
p ed eslrla n users. The Com
h&gt;s W i l e and JO H N F L IM JO O N
m ltte e 's recom m endations w ill
are Ihe Dcfrndanls, I will sell lo
also Include what actions must be
the highest and best bidder tor
taken (by whom) and how the plan
cash m the lobby at the West door
will be funded (by whom) Once
of the Seminole County Courthouse
Ihe recommended plan Is adopted
in Sanford. Florida a l l t 00 a m
by the appropriate governmental
on October IS. 19(2. the following
agencies It will be re lieclrd in
described property set forth in the
transpo rtatio n
budgets
and
final judgment
management decisions and new
Begin on the W e il line ot N 11 ol
proposals tor land development in
SW &gt;4. Section IS. Township 21
the corridor will be reviewed and
aulhorlied in keeping w ilh Ihe
South. Range 37 East, 6*4 77 feel
Northerly of the SW corner ot said
objectives ol the plan The p ra c­
tical significance ot the study
N ' i run N 00 degrees I f 73" W.
recom m endations,
th e re fo re ,
along said W line 664 X It. to the
should not be underestimated
North line of said North t i; thence
F o r additional In fo rm a tio n
South 89degrees X ' U " East along
about Ihe study and or the public
said North line 360 IS It . thence
hearing contaci Woody Price,
Soulh 0 degrees 17‘ 09" East a
A IC P , Seminole County Planning
distance of 664 40 tt .thence North
Director at 113 41)0 exl t il .
(9 degrees 40' I * " West parallel to
Woody Price, A IC P
said North line M l 00 tt. to Ihe
Planning Diractor
point o l beginning. L E S S Ihe West
"Persons are advised that, it
33 II thereof lor public road right
they decide lo appeal any
of way and reserving unto grantor,
decisions made at thesa meetings
g ra n to r's h eirs, assigns and
successors in interest Ihe South 3S hearings, they will need a record
ot the proceedings and (or such
It Ihereol lor road and utility
easemenl (A L S O known as Lot 9 purpose, they may need lo insure
that a verbal im record of the
ol unrecorded plat ol V IST A !
proceedings is made, which In­
(S E A L )
cludes Ihe testimony and evidence
Arthur H Beckwith
upon which the appeal Is to be
Clerk ot Ihe Circuit Court
based, per section 38* 010S.
By Cynthia Proctor
Florida Statutes “
Deputy Clerk
Publish September 17. 73, 1917
Publish Sept S. 17, 19(2
D E Z 44
D E Z 79

CLASSIFIED ADS
Seminole

LO ST Siberian Husky, 6 mos
old,biack&amp; white
Reward 32) 5685

Orlando-Winter Park

322-2611_______________831-9993
CLASSIFIED DEPT.
HOURS
8 00 A M. — S 30 P.M
MONDAY thru F R I D A Y
S A T U R D A Y 9 Noon

RATES

IF you want a mature babysitter
who loves children, bring them
to my home 373 (359

*7.00 Minimum
3 Lines Minimum

E X P M O TH ER Lots ot TLC.
will babysit in my home
Winter Springs Area 177 0452

Noon The Day Before Publication
W IL L B A B Y SIT
IN MY HOME
171 0318

Sunday-Noon Friday

ABORTION

18— H e lp W anted

•

1st Trimester aborlion 7 17 wks .
S ix
Medicaid S120. 1114
wk* . S16S — M edicaid SUS.
Gyn Clinic S7S. Pregnancy
test, male sterlijatioh. tree
counseling Professional care
supportive atmosphere, con
hdential
C E N T R A L F L O R ID A
WOMAN S M E A L T H
O R G A N IZ A T IO N
609 Colonial Dr , Orlando
F ull lim e or p ari time
Call 1 800 718 9770
LO N ELY?
New
singles
magajine tree into Stamped
addressed envelope Bo* (80
I9X), Boynton, F la 11415

Legal Notice
NOTICE OF
IN T E N T IO N
TO
R E G IS T E R F IC T IT IO U S NAME
NOTICE IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
that Ihe u nd ersig ned person
desires lo engage in business as a
general partnership under the
Fictitious
N am e
bt
C J
P R O P E R T IE S ,
a
C a lifo rnia
general partnership, d h a L A K E
K A T H R Y N E S T A T E S at 999
Mango D rive , C a s se lb e rry in
Seminole County, Florida Notice
is further given Ihat the un
dersigned intends to register such
lictitlous names with the Clerk ot
Circuit Court ol such county
DATED Aug 16, 198?
L A R R Y E M A R T IN O A L E
Publish August 27, 79 A September
5. 12. 1982
D E Y t?8
IN T H E
C IR C U IT
C O U RT,
E IG H T E E N T H
JU D IC IA L
C IR C U IT .
IN
AND
FO R
SE M IN O LE C O U N T Y . F L O R ID A
CASE NO (0 229] CA O', l
N EO N JU L IA N . JR and NANCY
F JU L IA N , his wile, and k EN
N E T H W M clN T O SH and M A RY
M M clNTOSH his wile,
Pialnlllts.
VS

i i — Instructions

A A A

E M

P L O

C O VER G IR L M O D E L
Types
(over 1(1 for lull A part time
work Free travel tn Indiana
Call 719 345 MX) W rite. Lover
Girls, Diana Hansen. Bo* 2000.
floselawn, In 46)72

C L E R K - with some sales
no e * per umce necessary
B it 7577

E X P E R I E N C E D craftsman lor
all lyp e s
ot home Im
provement work Aluminum
type construction 373 46)5

w an ted ,m
rned arely Earqing from J 200
tO 1400 weekly part tim e or lull
time M F For complete -n
'orm alton w rite
P re m ie re
Merchandise Company, P o
Bo. 11(2-Dept E H 6 Sanford
Fia 37171

d is t r ib u t o r s

DEADLINES

•

18— Help Wanted

5^—Child Caro

l time
SOc ■ lint
3 co n stc u fiv t flm ts 50c t lint
7 consecutive tim es
41c
10 consecutive tim tt 37c • line

4— Personals

18—Help Wanted

18—Help Wanted

5—Lost &amp; Found

Y ^ iE IM T ^ .

T R U S T YOUR C A R EER
W ITH T H E BEST
C A L L E A R L Y MONDAY
R E P R E S E N T A T IV E
S3 IS Hr
Good phone voice, no hard sites,
raise and benefits

E L E M E N T A R Y Planci Lessons
ottered tor beginners ages 4
and up Debbie 321 5921

12—Special Notices
W E S T E R N Auto has moved to
2702 French Aye Watch our
sign lor hot specials

M IX IN G technician knowledge
ol c h e m ic a l1 handling and
laboratory procedure helplui
Q u ality consciousness, and
some lilting necessary Will
tram the right person Must
relo cate
Contact
Jungle
Laboratories Corp P O Bo*
7018 Sanlord. Fla 12271 or call
X5 322 (111__________________

P E R S O N to p ro g ra m
and
operate an Apple II 48K. 2 disk
drive computer with T I Omni
800 printer Must also sell your
work to businesses You can
write your own ticket Reply in
detail to Data Service, Inc
P O Bo. 2138. Sanford, FL
37771

CASA M IA P ilia r ia (K-Mart
P la ta ) waitress wanted Apply
in person 373 3006

F R IE N O L Y home parties nas
toys A gilts lor all ages ■*
need ng dealers in your area
No investment needed Also
booking p arties
C a ll lor
details 13051 371 0718

LOCAL
M EN S
Clothing
Establishment is looking lor
AN ambitious career minded
individual tor a lull time
position
Diversified duties,
sales experience preferred
Send resumes Bo* 138 c 0
Evening Herald. P O Bo*
1657. Sanlord. Fla 32771

M AN AG ER
T R A I N E E p art
time Salary plus commission
and bonuses
Potential ad
vancement
Hospitatiiation
and retirement, must work
some evenings Apply al ABC
Liquors. Sanlord

G E N E R A L O F F I C E duties.
gOOdtypiSt. likes detail work 5
day week 323 5283

PR O D U C E M AN AG ER
It
Super M a rk e t produce e*
p e rie n c e needed E ic e lte n l
co m p an y
Top salary and
benefits

ART D E C O R A T IN G Hair part
lime, lull time, ndependent
HeKible hours, will tram, call 9
a m tq noon 349 5M3
LA ST CHANCE
Our last week to hire House ot
L lo y d
toy g ilt
p a rty
demonstrators for 1982 season
E*cclle n t Income F R E E S300
kit 139 3120
N E E D maintenance toreman tor
m an u fa ctu rin g plant
£*
perienced in all phases ot
packaging machinery Set up.
tro ub le
shooting
and
preventive maintenance is a
must
Must Be willing lo
re lo c a te Ip r this c areer
oriented position Send resume
or c a ll tor appointment
jungle Laboratories Corp Bo*
2018. Sanlo rd , F la 3277 1
Phone 377 8313
P E R S O N N E L U N L IM IT E D has
an innovative, new low cost
way to provide quality em
ploymen* services Interviews
by appointment Call 337 5649

21— Situ atio n s WAntod
H O U SEKEEPER.
companion
and or nurses aide Live m or
out Local Rel Reply to Bo*
137, c o Evening Herald. P 0
Bo* 1657, Sanlord. Fla 37771

CO N SU LT OUR

S E R V IC E STATIO N
ATTEN D AN T
9160
Ligh t m e ch a n ic al knowledge
helpful
W ill train, strong,
mature Needs now

A N D LET AN E X P ER T DO T H E JO B

G E N E R A L O F F IC E
It
Accurate typing, light office
b a ck g ro u n d ,
e » c e lle n t
benefits, quick raises

To List Your Business-

PH O N E S A L ES
t3.lt hr
No quotas. |us* appointments
1200 wk potential

Dial 322-2611 or 831-9993

SA LES
1250 wk
W ill train, must be dependable
Commission, local
A U O IT O R
tt
Good with ligures, some audit
eip erien ce helplui Full or
p art tim e opening
Per
manent
C A S H IE R
IM S h r
Could work Into full lime W ill
(rain, some stocking, some
light cleaning

Aloe Products
T IM E TO D IE T ?
Fo rever Lite w Aloe Lose weight
N o M ie a ll^ ^ n e r g ^ n W T f ^ ^

2 W E E K S SA LA R Y
D ISC O U N T F E E
t l 00 R E G IS T R A T IO N F E E
F R A N C H IS E S A V A IL A B L E .

1917 FR EN C H AVE.
323-5176

b e v e » ly
p At
JA M E S T M E L V IN , individually
and d b a JA M E S T M E L V IN
S A F E T Y O F F I C E R Starting
A S S O C IA T E S , P A
U N IT E D
salary 1)59.60 weekly College
S T A T E S OF A M E R I C A , and
graduate with 5 yrs work
F L O R ID A
E N G IN E E R E D
c ip r r le n c e
in
a salety
CO NCEPTS C O R P O R A T IO N ,
program, related held, 2 yrs
Defendants
o* which must have been in
A M EN D ED
responsible stall or super
N O T IC E O F A CTIO N
v ls o ry c a p a c ity involving
THE STA TE O F F L O R ID A TO
d evelop m en t
and
Im
F G LE N K E R N , d b a
plementation ot program ot
O RANGE P L A C E P L A N T
Safety Valid Florida Driver
S E R V IC E S
license required
lAddress unknown)
YOU
ARE
H EREBY
PRO G RA M M ER
A N ALYST
NOT IF I E D Ihat N E D N. JU L IA N ,
Starting salary 11)6 X weekly
JR and NANCY F. JU L IA N , his
College graduate in computer
wile, and K E N N E T H W M d N
science, math or related area
TOSH, and M A R Y M M clNTO SH .
and 1 yrs experience in data
his wde, have tiled a Complain! in
p ro cessin g operations In
the Circuit Court ol Seminole
eluding. I yr e*perience in
County. Florida to foreclose a
program analyst work Apply
mortgage on an Agreement lor
before noon Sept 74. 19*!
Deed on the fo llo w in g real
properly In Se m in o le County,
C O M P L A IN T T A K E R Starting
Florida
salary 1164 weekly, high school
Soulh 100 leel ol the North 1050
g ra d u a te w ilh 6 months
leel ol Ihe West J i ol Ihe NW 1. -ot
communications experience ir&gt;
Ihe N E
Section 6. Township 70
P u b lic
S a le ty ,
Law en
South. Range 32 East, less the East
lorcement or as a high volume
31 leet lor road right ol way. and
t e le p h o n e
s w it c h b o a r d
subject lo an easemenl ot 15 leet on
o p era to r
A b ility to type
Ihe West side for B rid le Path.
Apply before noon Sept 22,
Seminole County. Florida
1987
and you are required to serve a
copy ol your written defenses. II
BUYER
II S ta rlin g salary
any, on N ED N JU L IA N , JR , ot
1244 00 weekly, high school
STEN STRO M .
M c lN T O S H .
graduate with 1 years e*
JU L IA N ,
CO LBERT
&amp;
perience in large scale pur
W H IGHAM . P A , attorneys for
chasing to include 1 year in
Piaintitls, whose address Is Post
G o ve rn m e n ta l purchasing
Olhce Bo* 13X. Sanlord. Florida.
Apply belore noon Sept 24,
33771. and tile the original with the
1982 Apply Seminole County
Clerk ot Ihe above styled court on
Personnel. Courthouse North
or belore Sept 73, 198? otherwise a
Park A ve , Sanford by noon on
default and ultim ate judgment will
above referenced date Ap
be rnlered against you lor Ihe
plications accepted Monday
relief demanded In Ihe Petition
thru F rid a y (:3 0 a m to noon
W IT N E S S m y hand and olliclat
An eq u a l opportunity em
vealol said Court on the 1(1h day ot
ployer. M F M V .
August. 198?
A RTH UR H B E C K W IT H , JR
Clerk ol Ihe Circuit
Court
Seminole County, Florida
BY Carrie E Bueltner
Deputy Clerk
STEN STRO M .
M c lN T O S H .
JU L IA N .
C O LB ER T 8 W H IG H A M . P A
Post Office Bo* 13)0
Sanlord. Florida 3277)
Attorneys tor Pia in titls
(COURT S E A L )
Publish August 22, 79 A September
i. 12. 19(2
D E Y 1)1

B E A L Loncfrte i man quality
operation patios, d rivew a y!
D a y ! 331 73)3 E v e ! 377 1371
CONCRETE: work all types
Footers d riv e w a y s , pads,
floors, pool!, c o m p le te or
refiftiSh Free est 327 7103

Additions fi
Remodeling

TOO MANY
TO LIST

B A T H S, kitchens, roofing block,
con crete, windows add a
room, tree estimale* 323 8463
N EW , REM O D EL, R E P A IR
All types and phases ol con
Slrucliotl, S G flalinl 373 4832.
32? 8665 State Licensed

Beauty Cirp

Blinds
IN T E R IO R S B Y E L L E N
Complete window dressings
m Home Service 112 0^53

MOW, E D G E . W E E D E A T IN G
Cleanup* 8 light hauling
Free estimates, call 331 0150
C L A S S IF IE D
AOS
MOVE
M O U N T A IN S of merchandise
every day

Electrician
Lawn Mowers
FOR SA LE or trade carpentry,
electrician plumber, rooter,
all in one B a m to 11 p m 644
3259
.

Handyman

T O W E R S B E A U T Y SA LO N
F O R M E R L Y H a rr.e lti Beauty
Nook 519 E l H I St, 373 5242

P A IN T IN G , C u lle r s , M eta l
Root* Repaired &amp; Coaled.
Most Minor Home Repair*,
_ y i - ' l lt«r 3 p m
322 2355
G m ,4AG6 sa'es are m season
Tell the people about .t with a
Classified Ad »n the Herald
327 7411 SJKW 9)

C A R L 'S L a w n m o w e r, small
engine and automotive repair
C ertifie d A C. P ic k up 8
delivery 173 3864
M IS T E R F i« It Jo# McAdams
will repair your mower* at
your home Call 322 7055

A N IM A L Haven Boarding and
Grooming Kennel* Shady, In
sulated. screened, fly proof &gt;h
Side, outside run* Fan* AI*o
AC cage* We cater to your
pets Ph 333 5253

Masonry

F IR E P L A C E S , bricks, block
concrete, stucco and repair*
Quality Fred 321 5284

Want Ads Gel Prgple Together
Those Buying And Those
Selling 377 2611 -or 111 999) ,

Nur si ng Centt'f
H A U LIN G and Clean Up.
tree trimming and removal
349 9230
W H Y have lunk lying arouno
when you can have it hauled
away today Free estim alev
call Mr Lucky between 9 9
323 3894

LIG H T H A U L IN G , yard
work and odd jobs
323 9064

Bookkeeping
DeGarmeau Bookkeeping
Service
Quality service tor the sm all
business 337 2202

Brick &amp; Block
Stonework

Home Im provem ent

CA RPEN TRY,
c o n c re te
8
plumbing Minor repairs lo
adding a room Don 321 3924
P A IN T IN G and repair paho and
screen porch
C all
anytime 372 9f It

Bar B Ques patios fireplaces
No |ob loo sm all
Fre e
Estim ates 134 0923

Career Opportunity

1-425-7105
SKMI SCHOOL
• DOT Camficaiion

• Financial Assistance
• Placement Assistance
UNITED TRUCK MASTERS

W INDOW repa.r and mstalla
lion,
screen
re p a ir
8
re p la c e m e n t.
w in d o w
cleaning 321 5994
C O L L IE R 'S H om e R e p a irs
carpentry, rooting, painting,
window repair 321 6477
H OM E Remodeling, Room
Additions Complete
Garage Door Service
Dick Gross 331 5618
W INDOW S, carpentry, doors,
minimum repairs Floor tile,
cabinets I do it all 377 S171
Licensed 8 bonded

200 E Washington St
Orlando

Home Repairs

A

&amp;

B

R O O F IN

11 yrs. raperience, Licenied 6
Intured
Free E*tim ate*on Roofing.
Re Rooting and Repair*
Shingles. Buill Upend Tile

JA M ES ANDERSON
G. F. BOHANNON

R8 L RO O FIN G
Insured I* Bonded References
S40 per square *»th free c‘s!
Calf J23 7183

L IT T IK E N CONTRACTORS
R O O F IN G
L icensed bonded, lo w prices
Qualify workmanship
F ree Est-mates 788 1219

Hauling
Boarding «, Grooming

U n it e d W h y

Roofing

Lawn Service

O U RRA TESA RELO W ER
L akeview Nor*mg Center
219 E Second St . Sanlord
122 6702

P.i i nt i ix] &amp; or
Pressure Cleaning
NO JO B too large or sm all Pro
quality w o rk m an sh ip and
materials R e t 377 0021

Paintin g

H E IL M A N rooting, painting 8
re p a irs.
Q u a lity
work,
reasonaole
rates
Free
estimates A nytim e (14(490
LET US beautify your home with
paml Interior or e*tertor
134 6100 or 321 6217
E O W E I M E R P A IN T IN G
Quality work guaranteed
Licensed
373 6243
Insured
P A IN T IN G 8 R O O F IN G
no job loo large or
sm all 321 5949
B IL L 'S P A IN T IN G
V ER Y REASO N A BLE
F R E E E S T 321 44)7
P R O F E S S IO N A L
p ain tin g,pressure cleaning 8 plastering
repair (69 6081 323 3260 alt 6
*11 you a re having dilflculiy
finding a place, lo live, car lo
drive, a job. or some service
you have need ot. read all our
want ads every day.

ST O P A N D THINK A M IN U T E
ii
C la s sifie d
Ads didn t
work
there wouidn t be any
ROOTS permanently fijjerqtass
ed at a Ir jttio n ol the cost .ill
type* re* 8 comm 429 4613
'
— i---- J E A N 'S Rooting, licensed, in
sureo. tree estimates, ask tor
jea n Noe, 133 1844
Let a Classified Ad help you tind
m ore
room lor storage
Classified Ads find buyer*
Fast
R O O F IN G of all kinds commer
cial 6 residential Bonded 6
insured 123 2592 if ho answer
834 8512
B U IL T up and Shingle root,
licensed and insured F ree
estimates 322 1914
V Jam es E Lee Inc

R ER O O F IN G , carpentry, rc
repair 8 painting IS ,ea
e*p 111 1976

EXPERT ROOFING
No B ig Wailing Li*)
Rooting Special 10 *, diS
with this ad when pres
to Expert Roofing R
s p e c ia l.* !*
W e honoi
suranceclaim * Fo rth eb
rooting and remodeling
E* p e rl Hooting 8 Remoc
A**o T he One *top *fio
center Built up. shmgleand tin rooting Deal d.i
with a local contractor
has a reputable business
Licensed Bonded 8 Insur
24 Hour Service

323-7473
Secretarial Services

Carpentry

H O LID A Y HOUSE
Orlando

F O R S A L E or trad* carpentry,
electrician, plumber, rooter,
all in one l a m to 11 p m

644 3759

Palm Beach

New Smyrna Beach Palatka
St. Augustine

Sanford

Mt. Dora

DeLand

THusville

Ocala

C A R P E N T E R 35 yrs t i p Sm all
remodeling jobs, reasonable
rales Chuck 373 9445
B 8 M R E P A IR S , electrical,
plum bing, c a rp e n try , p ain
ting Free estimates 74 HR.
Em erg. Service 111 3710.

Ceiling Fan Installation
C E IL IN G FAN INSTALLATION
Quality Work
We Do Most Anything
»«•
877 4711

Ceramic Tile

Need Qualified people who can cook and
manage. Tell us about yourself in your
own handwriting. Reply to Holiday
House, 1130 Old Daytona Rd. DeLand,
F L 32720

Complete Ceramic tit* le r v ,
walls. Poors, countertops, re
model, repair Fr etl 339 0 711

Lie

4'

L A N D C L E A R IN G fill dirt,
tppso.t shale,diSkmq.
mowing 372 3433

Lawn Service

M E IN T Z E R T IL E E i p since
19S3 New 8 oMwerk comm 8
resid Free estimate 849 1 567

C O O D Y6 CO N S
Tile Contractors
371 0157

Landscaping

ins

M r. Lucky's Lawn
Care Service
Q u a lity
work
g u a ra n te e d ,
b e a u tilic a iiim w ith o u t in
Nation Free Estim ates Call
between 9 9 32) 3(94
M O W . Edge. T rim . R e n e w
Landscaping
C lea n
ups.
Mauling, Thatching. Weeding.
Mulch Lindsey's 323 OMl

Plastering
ALL
Phases ol Plastering
Plastering repair, stucco, hard
rote.simulated brick 121 5991

Plumbing
Fredd.e Robinson Plumbing
Repairs, laucets. w C
Sprinklers 32) 8510. 133 0206
R E P A IR S 8 leaks
pendabie service
rales No job too
Plu m b er, fre e
Plumbing 349 SSS7

Fast 8 de
Reasonable
sm all. Lie
set
S8 M

Psychic Readings
&amp; Counselling
FOR Counselling 8
Psychic
Re*dings call M3 ( X 9(94 By
appointment only

W*en you place a ClassK *3 Ad
n The Evening Herald Slay
close to your pnone because
someth.ng wonderful S about
to happen

M AKE
ROOM
Y O U R W IN T E R
SELL
"O O N '1
F A ST W IT H A
Phone 177 3411 or
a friendly Ad Vi
you

Tree Service
TRI County Tree Service Trim
remove, trash, hauling and
clean up F r. Est 372 9410
T R E E Stump removal
SI 00 men diameter
Rem Tree Service 3)9 4791
F R E E es tim a te s. D cG roats
P a lm
tree
trim m ing 8
rem oval Hauling, lawn care 8
odd lobs 373 0(6)

�w ith

OUR BOARDING H O U SE
34 -Business Opportunities 30-Apartments Unfurnished

550,000-580,000 per year.
| B A r e (Oo bored with your job?
Tired o* working lor the ether
m an? N a tio n al
Com pany
based in Lexington. lookmq lor
qualified pari lim e and lull
Time distributor. «n 4 courtly
area Investment covered by
inventory Call t 800 154 9594
[O A R A G E sales are in season
Tell the people aboul it with a
Classified Ad in the Herald
333 3411 13* 9993

35— Lo a n s

HOME E Q U IT Y LO A N S
No points or brok er lees loans to
875.000 to Homeowners GFC
Credit Corp Sant F i j j i x u O

SA N FO R D
Reas
wkly. s
norrthly ra le s U til me ell soe

Oas Aauits t an raaj.

WHY REN T’
I I 650 down p aym ent with
payments starting below USD
mo buys a new 2 Bdrm home
in Deltona 20 minutes North ot
Orlando on I 4 Call 428 5656
weekdays 9 s or I 524 1408 on
weekends 129,900 buys a home
on lot
G E N E V A GA RD EN S
3 A Ib d rm apartments
Adult and fam ily section
Fro m S390per mo
1505 W 25th St
172 I f ? )

28—Apts. &amp; Houses
To Share
ROOM and privileges in
new 1 Bdrm Townhouse 850
332 7336. 333 7226

NIC E I Bdrm W W
carpel. AC 8210 mo
123 9040

M E L L O N V IL L E
TRACE
APARTM EN TS
Spacious,
modern 2 bdrm, I bath a p t.
carpeted, kitchen equipped
Cent HA W alk to town &amp; lake
Adults, no pels 5295 323 6030
LU XU RY
A PARTM EN TS
F a m ily A A d u lts section
Poolside. 2 Bdrm s. Master
Cove Apts 323 7900 Open on
weekend!
E N jO Y country liv in g f 2 bdrm.
Duplrk Apts . Olympic St
pool Shehandoah V illa g e
Open 9 lo 6 321 2920
&gt;. 2 AND 3 B D R M From 5760
fi.dw wood Arm s Apr 2S80
Ridgewood A ye 171 6470
S E V IL L E Gardens, large. I
bdrm, adults, no pets 5235
with lease Phone 33? 6425. 9 )
SANFO RD, lo v e ly ? Bdrm.
air. lurm ture availab le
5360 mo 841 2883
Mariner's Village on Lake Ada. I
bdrm Irom 8350, 7 bdrm Irom
52*0 Located 12 92 ,u*t south
ol Airport Blvd in Sanlord All
Adults 373 8620
SANFO RD Furnished rooms by
the week. Reasonable rales,
maid s e rv ic e
C a te rin g to
working people
A lso un
lumished apt 373 4507
477 Palm etto Ave
SANFORD, G arage apt. 3 bdrm,
kids. air. 5185 339 7700
Sav On Rentals. Inc. Realtor
When you place a Classified Ad
in The Evening Herald Stay
dose to your phone because
something wonderful &lt;S about
to haooen
ROOMS F O R R E N T
P R IV A T E E N T R A N C E
372 3151

GREAT C A ES A R !
?Q R60l T 0 5 E N P

M ARTHA

1 ftDRfiH
2 Bath completely
lu m ish e d In clu d es washer
dryer and all ulilities 5500 mo
373 4262
FurrMshed apartments lot Senior
C w e n s 118 Palmetto Ave l
Cowan No phone calls

W IN T E R Springs. 3 bdrm, kids,
carport, lence. 5300 139 720Q
Sav On Rentals, Inc Realtor

3

S A N F O R D 3 bdrm, kids, pet, air
no lease 533S 339 2200
Sav On Rentals. Inc. Realtor

ROBBIE'S
REALTY
R E A L T O R M LS
7761 S French
Suite 4
laniard Fi.i

i

'V W-

A P a r IM E N T
nice, clean
Fu rn ish ed or unfurnished
References required 327 08*1,

2 U N IT S at 2426 Lake Aye 5140
and 5335 mo
R ID G E W O O D la n e
porch 5380 mo

F

37A-Storaqe Rental
S P A C E lor storage or small
business lo sub let at airport
500 sq It and up 122 4401

37 B

Rental O ffices

screened

2420 l AK E a v e 5150 mo
JU N E P O R 2 IG R E A L T Y ,
REALTO R
322 8628

SANf O R D 2 bdrm ) ' i bath.
5370 mo
372 25)4
A V A IL A B L E Sept 2th, 3 Bdrm I
Hath, La rg e utility room, cent
air, heal, 5135 mo Security
deposit required For Appl
Call 337 4737__________________
7 B D R M . carport k utility room,
air. drapes, carpet, close in
Children welcome
8)0 0585

32- Houses Unfurnished
SU N LA N D EST
3 Bdrm. )&gt;/]
Bath AC, fenced 5390 mo 1st,
Iasi and deposit Call 3*5 S740

O F F lC E S P A C E
FO R L E A S E
830 7733
C O M M E R C IA L 803 French A ye
1300 sq It . carpet. Cent HA
373 9S58, 123 5789
B O B M B A L L JR , PA
REALTO R
13) 4111
O F F IC E o rS T O R E
2107 French Aye
327 1501

4 B A Y S available. Rent
or lease Lake M ary
A 17 93 area' 322 7)00

40— C o n d o m in iu m s

7 BD R M , I Bath; Liv rm +
tarn rm Quiet area 5)25 mo
Or wilt sell Owner linancinq
with IS ,000 down 177 0316

R E N T TO OWN 2 Bdrm. 2 Bath
Condo lutly equipped, part
o w n ersh ip
lor rent
and
maintenance For lull details
• c a ll B e rm c Wang 323 3200
E v e s 869 5131

LOCH A R B O R 3 Bdrm. I Bath,
Central Heat A Air, fenced
yard, screened porch 5375.
151. last A security 323 8308

C L A S S IF IE D
ADS
M OVE
M O U N T A IN S ot merchandise
everv day

SANF O RD 3 Bedrooms 8325 mo
Sec
D eposit
8)00
R el
Required No Pets 323 1477
SA N F O R D 3 bdrm, 3 bath, e»c
condition 5 385 mo 1st last,
security dep 327 4494
F O R R E N T SA N FO R D
1 Bdrm. 1’ i Bath, formal dming
room
and
den
W ell
established exclusive neigh
borhood, no pets, contact 121
0513 or 373 4070,
S U N L A N D 3bdrm. pool,
lenccd, lake Iron!
5450plus 321 0946
3 bdrm, lenced yard, kid* OK.
option to buy 5375 mo call
owner 111 1611
3 BD R 2 Hath with Double car
garage, and executive type
home m Deltona Call 574 14)7
days.
736 369) eves
and
weekends

41—Houses
O W N E R linancing with 55,000
down 3 Bdrm, t Bath. Liv
rm , t lam rm Quiet area
Or will rent 8)25 mo 322 0216

OPEN HOUSE
3)14 Sanlord A ye
S u n d ay . Sepl 13,1 5 p m.

CallBart
U t AL t o n

,
LH Real Estate Broker
7640 Sanlord Ave

AGENCY

F IS H E R M A N S D E L IG H T
Beautiful 2bdrm, V j bath, home
with guest collage on Lake
H arney
C en tral a ir heat
fireplace, wall to w a ll- c a r
pefing plus m uch
more
1165 000

COUNT Y 1 acre a th t J IS9 900
A C R E A G E H *qh \
I r evs 14.000

A SSO C IA TES N E E D E D
R E A L T O R 322 4991 Day or Night

a

th

C O UN I Y I lfits 1 C tons dec
lease op’ on S2' sno

B R IN G YOUR H O R S E S 3 bdrm
2 bath home in La k e M a ry on 5
acres Partially cleared and
lenced Central air
Meat
country living yet close in
1149.900
5 A C R E P A R C E L S and Building
lots Call lor inlorm ati'in

D r,

1

7 SSD V k riLO N V H .Lt .11. nfrrd*
rcpii-r Aisufriitiate mortgage
170 471 78 « *. S764 1 I mo
P I P I S?8 900

FOR A LL Y O U R
R EA L ESTATE N EED S

323-3200
D E S P E R A T E O W N E R M ust
Sell 2 Bdrm, 7 Bath home in
"T h e F o re s t" I2«S4 home has
new Cent HA, huqe screened
porch plus u tility
room
Community Club house, pool,
whirlpool, hidden among large
pine trees, Bernard Wang
Broker Salesman
Eves 149-5121
549 W. Lake M a ry B lvd
Suite B
LakeM ary, F la 37746
32) 3200

U S E D A P P L IA N C E S
•R e tr «q i*r a t or \ was her s dir y er s
ranges
10 day guarantee
Reba rs 5 P aris
BAHNE I TS 331 5/54
N E W A P P L IA N C E S
F yll tme G E and Taooan
Apartmenr sties a v a l
N e*
E le c tric A Gas ranges

Al TOR

Ml S

n e a rly

„

i

ac re

SET 5 K iL f N C 5 N E W E S T
P a t r r S p rin g * A P a lm M a n o r

W E N E E D L IS T IN G S

323-5774
MW r I M J

Garaqe sates are in s'eason T efr
the people about &gt;1 won a
Classified A a ini ihe Herald
322 2611, 831 m i

G R E G O R Y M O B IL E H O M E S

JI0 ) O r'ando Dr
111 5200
V A &amp; F HA F.nanc ihq
* A«i\ Gr» People Toqelhef
fit we BdV'hO An&lt;1 1
Srllmg 322 2611 or 8)1 99V)

1981 S K Y L IN E Mobile Home
7 Ji5 7 H screen enctosure
(Xjr th utility shed, Central
heat and air 3 Bdrm, 2 Bath
Lot sue »s 50«100 Sa'e price
141,900 financing available at
80 \ of sales price 'merest rate
15
• ? Potnl5 Can Be seen
at 126 Leisure Dr
Norlh
D e B ary
f la
*n
Ihe
M eadow lea on the R iv e r
M obile Hom e com m unity
Please contact Tom Lyon or
G«U Edmond* f irst f ederal ot
Semmole JOS 327 174?

43

R E P O S H S S E D COLOR TV'S
We sell repossessed televisions
all name brands consoles and
portables
EXA M PLES
1 RCA 75
color console
VI?? 00
I Zen.th U
color por t able
5166 00
1 Blacks A While
75 . console.
.1100 00
These sets are sold w t* NO
M O N E Y DO W N and r-nly
118 00 per month AM set* ar e
»n warranty f r e e home trial,
no dbbgatmn Call 71st Cen
fury Sales
867 5)94 day or
mqht

STENSTROM
REALTY -

REALTORS

A P A R T M E N T *ale color TV.
...stereo, furniture, etc . 2439 S
Lake Ave Cash, no checks
AV t
M ON £Y
Household
1terns, and cleaning products
Discounted
Jam ce 122 3075
Karen 177 ?9?6

Lois A creage

O N E A C R E LO T S
Orange
Ave . Sanlord. near Wilson
Elem entary School lnc»l lo
Davidson's Tree F a rm ! One
mile Horn I 4 and Route 46
Zpned A I Call 398 0000

Sanford’s Sal es Leader

L A K E M A R Y Enioy peace and
quint pluv fish, iwirn and ski in
B y iu M u l Crystal Lake Nice
la m ily hom e
Btg I re el,
.

W E L IS T AND S E L L
M O R E H O M E S THAN
A N YO N E IN N O R T H
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y I

M OVING TO T H E
SA N FO RD A R E A ?
A ik ut tor our com plete
R ELO C A TIO N K IT containing
information on hornet, schools,
shopping and other interesting
la c ti about our City!
FA N T A ST IC 1 Bdrm , 2 Bath
home with lots ot e itra s. game
room, great room, eat in
kitchen
Den,
e le c tric
lireplace. Bar B Q . patio, and
above ground pool! 114,750
JU S T FOR YOU 3 Bdrm I bath
home in
Su nland ,
w ith
panelled Florida Room and
brick lireplace. Cent H A, wall
wall carpel, patio, paddle Ians
and more. *54.900,

i 879,900,

M A IT L A N D
E X E C U T IV E
A R E A , 4 B d rm 7 Bath, Fam
rm. plus qame room, beaulilul
18«36 screen pool, nice lor
large fam ily, 199,500
CRO SSINGS. 4 2, lireplace. eal
in kitchen tern patio. C air.
Ht, corner lot. like nrw, U SE.
L M schll VA
13 4 mtg
Assumable, super, must see
L A R G E H O M E on ; lots, on
scenic Mctlonville. Larqe gr,
rm .
w lir e p la c e
Large
spacious rooms. ) bdrms, 1
bath Drive by then call.
A T T R A C T IV E 3 Bdrm . 2 Bath
home, lots of paneling, large
F lo rid a room , m any Iruit
trees. Only 131.9001
LOTS — Nice home sile in gulet
area, large leces Choose 1 or 2
lots lor your new home M .000
eaclti Good term s!

S U P E R 3 Bdrm. IW bath, brick
home in Academy Manor on a
large lenced lot. New root,
pantry, utility, and excellent
condition. 1)7,560.

L A K E M A R Y — The Crossings
Lovely ) Bdrm , 2 Bath. For­
m al livin g A dining rm
F ire p la c e
See
it
now!
Spotless!! 173,900

JU S T L IS T E D 3 Bdrm ., 1 bath
home, in e a c lu s iv e R a m
blewood on a corner loll Split
Bdrm. plan, equipped eat in
Kitchen, Sunken living rm .
Cent. HA wall wall carpet,
patio, and more. S47.SOO.

SA N FO R D — Nice
near downtown
hospital G r e a t
business or home.

M A Y F A IR V IL L A S I 2 k 3 Bdrm.
3 Bath Condo Villas, neat te
M aylair Country Club Select
your lot, lloor plan B interior
decorl Quality constructed by
Shoemaker lor 8 47,200 A up!
R E A L T O R A 5 5 0 C IA T ES
N EED ED !
One Residential — Two Com
merclal Investment! if you
honestly want a Successful
C a ree r, |oln the
No.
I
Professional Sales Teanr.l All
In te rv ie w i
S t r ic t ly
Con
lidentlall
R E A L ESTATE C A R E E R I
Call to tee il you quality lor our
Free Tuition P ro g ra m l E iciting t Rewarding!

C A L L A N Y T IM E
714)
Pgrk

322-2420

older home
and new
lor oil ice
Zoned GC2.

HANDYM AN
S P E C IA L
Needs TLC. Cute cottage with
garage Large oaks Fenced
Can be purchased less than
15,006 down. 136.000

.U R R E N T L Y scekirg new ar
experienced Sales A .sH iales,
tuition tree school, new profit
sharing plan
C a ll n **!,)
Courson, M gr lor confidential
^mterview
^
D R IF T W O O D V IL L A G E
549 W L a k e M a r y Blvd
Lake M a ry , Florida 37744

Office: (305 ) 321-5005

HAL C O L B E R T R E A L T Y
307 E 35th St
133 78)2
•,ir-sut-sales ire-os,-., on T,,i
, Th4&lt;- p io t'e anout ' w th , i
ass l , it A J n " i* in r.i-d
T3J 261' ill! 'HV1

FO R s a l e . Osteen Area
l 7 acres, wooded, paved road,
11,350 down 1170 mo pmt 5
w a rs, 123 3787

Boots &amp; Accessories

ST JO H N S R,ver frontage 2'.
acre ' Parcels
alsd interior
parcels r,yer access 11)900
PuDhc water 20 min 10 Alta
monte M a ll
1?
70 yr
lin a h c irig , no q u alifyin g
Broker *28 W3J.

74 ft A LLM O N D , twin engine,
d r i v e on t r a i l e r , d e p th
recorder, radio, full cabm
Priced nqht 377 3IOB

BOAT motor and frd'ler 16ft
AMF
Bow Rider. 100 H P
Evinrude motor. Gator break
down trailer, ail 1979, a i
Cond 54.000 firm 321 0077

G U N AUCTIO N, Sunday Oc­
tober 10 I p m Sanford Auc
tion, 1211 S French. 37) 7340

59—Musical Merchandise
O R G A N Hammond, model T
574C, rhythm section, partial
draw bars, built m. casselle
8I.7S0 3J9 1266 weekdays v 1

■17 A —Mortgages Bought
&amp; Sold

61—Building Materials
W E P A Y cash lor 1st i )nd
mortgages R ay Legg L&gt;c
Mortgage Broker 788 2599

49B—Water Front
Property

C L E A R S P A N Sleet Buildings
M aior brands Surplus 1.300 lo
30.000 sq ft from 52 65 sq It
331 4445 9 a m to 9 p m

F IL L D IR T &amp; T O P S O IL
Y E L L O W SA N D
Call Clark k HiM 32) 7580

50 - Miscellaneous lor Safe \ 62-A -Farm
W E S T lN G M O U S E Window A ir
Cond , heavy duly. 24,000 B T U ,
used I yr 1175 323 7305
C O K E Machine, upright,

Equipment

EQ U IPM EN T AUCTION
S A T U R D A Y ,S E P T 18, 10a m
F a r m tra c to rs , tru c k s, and
equipm ent
C o nsig n m en t’
accepted daily

runs good. H7S
_

B IG Screen TV, 4 Ft Quasar,
perfect picture, was 12699 now
11188, I yr warranty ))» 8855
H O M E C O V P U IE R
F re e
d em pnstratign
w ith
education, home llnances, and
Video games Less than 1500
l i t 7501 Eves
FACTO RY
Singer
Sew ing
Machine straight needle SI3S
King site couch 830
A lt 5. 321 1568
Converse, Pro Keds. Kangaroos
A R M Y NAVY S U R P L U S
310 Sanlord Ave
327 5791
luiiy padded
wilhhood S2S
327 0544

b a s s in e t t e

12155 F r e n c h
323 7140

SA N f O R D B re a k fa s t Rotary
Club
'C h a n ty
A uction
Sunday Sept 17, l p m to 5
p m at Bob Dance Dodge
Highway 17 97, &gt;n the parking
lot Auctioneer will be Ar*
Gnmile Ladies Plant Sale and
Entertainment j ; j c n n
TOR t 5 TA Tl Comm ere «al of
Restdenh if Auctions It Ap
tv a isa Is Call O eirs Auction
)7) 5670

77

Junk C irs Rem oved

TOP Dollar Pa»d for Junk L
Used cars trucks A heavy
equipment )2? 59^0
*VE P A Y top dollar Itir
junk Cars and Trucks
CHS Auto Parts 79) 4505

79—Trucks T railers
GMC I9?0 1' ion V8 4 ypeed, new
pamt. good lire*, 11.200

80 -Autos for Sale
We buy Car* and Truck*.•
Martin Motor Sale*
701 S French
331 7814
1976 C O R V E T T , P W . PS, P B . T
lop. new slainless steel brakes,
new tires 88795 or best Otter,
33) 5540
■i

D AYTO NA A U TO A UCTIO N
Hwy 92 I mile west ol Speed
way Daytona Beach w ill hold
a public AUTO A UCTIO N
every Wednesday al 7 30 p m
It's Ihe only one in Florida.
you sel ih* reserved price
Call 904 255 131! for further
details.
F O R D 77 Mustang Coupe, Auto,
air, sun root.-dean, Austam
Wholesale Outlet, 371 1660
1978 C O B R A Mustanq, very good
condition, 11,000 firm 37)1104
alt S p m
1978 DOD GE Aspen, air. auto.
Cl), looks k runs good 12500
lirm 574 4097

67 Lawn Garden

L A X E F R O n T *. Ihs Acre Its.
Lake
M a rk h am
E s ta te s
576.700
W
M allC JO w ski
Realtor, 333 7983

_____________ 339 4391 _

SANFORD AUCTION

57A-Guns &amp; Ammo

R e a l Estate W anted

VVE B U Y equity in Houles,
apartments, vacant land and
a cre a g e
LU C K Y
in
V E S T M E N T S P O B o . 2S00,
Sanford, F la . 33771 322 47D_

Monday, September 13, ? p m
Lots of d ean used furniture for
every room in the house, alio
some antiques, collectib les
arid T V s

3)9 4791

la n d

47

PUBLIC AUCTION

M —G arag e Sales

55

R E A L T O R S 1

TV Radio Steroo

Good U s k ) Tv s 1 3 'i up
M IL L E R S
.
7619 Of Utndo Dr
Ph 322 0 352

Completely

42 M obile Homes

MINT CO N D ITIO N 3 Bdrm, 111
Bath. Cent HA new carpet,
new root, easy term* SW.S00

u l t f t W H rT E Refrigerator
f rcc/ff, w th icemaKer. I yr
old, Good r ond 37? M il

53

fenced large 10#* assumable
mortgaoe Owner molivaled
154.900

F H A OR VA F IN A N C IN G 2
Bdrm. neat a s * p»n low down
paym ent,
low
monthly
payment* S37.SOO

[II i ' l I •,iON i,l A t,5
SH O W AN D SA LE
SANI O R D C IV IC C E N T E R
SA TU RO A Y S E P T 18th 10 6
SUN D AY S E P T I9th 10 5
A D M ISSIO N 12 00

l

323 8421

A

A N T IQ U E S E C R E T A R Y
47 m s'lS-n Good Cond
333 363T

11 Auction

NE A L IS T IN G P»cL youf option,
w»«l trade, sell or lease option
ttm 2 B drm , new hom e cm

CUSTOM Bm lt t rierqy itficirnt,
I Bdrm
1 Rath
cathedral
ceiling*, largo corner lol, with
privacy fence Huge famity
room jinti Acre piled porch All
athifnitiev. club house, poof,
and much m ore
Sanora
ITl.fQid Terms

SN T IQ U ES i C O L L E C T IB L E S
Oldo
Tym et
Connect,Oh
Brow se" s B o rn .
ISO W
Jessup Longwood

B A R N E T T $ 3? 1 5751

juni

32? 7643

Keues
Be LUwe
CM Keyed

WET R IGF- R A T O R S
m any
s res guaranteed Sanford
Auc» on I2»5 S French A y e .
) ? ) T340

t

POffZIG RfAlTY

^

y V iin lv d to Cu"\

* l U M iN U M , cans cooper lead
titass silver, gold Weekdays
1 4 30, Sat 9 t K KoVo Toot
Co 918 W 'St St 313 DOO

/

V

n

'/

A p p lia n ces

yi

71— Antiques

F R E E R EN T
Ron! applies toward purchase
price N e * 3 bdrm. 2 bath, in
Sanford S552 mo 323 9509

%

o . 'o t A t
B erm u d a
W&lt;-.-a
.
52 SO per bale Call K)S
172 ties day 171 6404 e»es

Ken more par Is, ser v&lt;ce usect
washers 37) 0697
V O O N FV A P P L IA N C E S

Ait* rr*f Pe^pf T
f&gt;(7 t rsovi
T
B\jy&gt;hq
Leh-nq )7? I t M c 811 9#vj

Nf A l l
Rfk TO vPflr 17
Ta U’ SJV vt. j

Eve

52

L A K E M A R Y by owner
2
txjrm home on
dtre Zoned
A 1 End of Humphrey Road,
Of f l onq wood L a kc M ar y B Ivd
-N rar
hfQh ich'OtH 51ft,500
For iyppf J2I 4987'or 828 0?3?

Ow n e r
im a m mi
oH-ns
repair 11'
ack.nq Stance

321 0759

. M t|

W EAL t o p
J?1 0041
After Hr* J23 ?4AB &amp; 373 7154

BATEM A N R EA LT Y

Feed

W IL C O S A L E S N UTREN A F E E D S
Hwy 4t W. 317 6870
JU S T A R R IV E D —
W E S T E R N A L F A L F A HAY
14 Vitality horse pellets
15 10
Layer pellel
15 30
Bert Kwik
14 10
Hog Finisher
*3 19

H I 115 E F IP ST ST
f i l V472

KISH REAL ESTATE

?S44 S Fr**nr»i
377 02)1
After Hours 3J9 3910 377 0719

67A

HAY

»r AL F 5T A Tt
A L L F L O R ID A R E A L T Y
OF S A N F O R D R E A L T O R

Poultry

Furniture

f&gt;F A t Y Mumaichecl matfress
salt’ T w n *(‘V S119 95 FuM
5159 95 They dOh' 1 have to
tp Lui aoocJ 331 S3®8
F L O R ID A S L E E P SHOPS

24 HOUR IB 322-9283
STEMPER

51 A

W 11L SON MA 11 B t VHNi f UWt

J B S T E E L M A N .IN C .
REALTOR
5*9-7746

H O U S E FO R Sale, Longwood,
255 Wddm ere Ave . 3 Bdrm. 3
bath, on 100x150 11, lot Large
fam ily room with lireplace
Central heal, air, new carpets,
walking distance to shops and
school! 7 \ VA Price 177.500
339 408)

'*D .Vi I WA L. r 1 11r q I fo
f f ft*
P*»mfv'5 w-iTitifr C»fr drypf
cenfl tsor S?-4 4045'Alt A

O l n r w H O M E 91)I TH C MA R M
O hi, 5)6 000 2008 ny melta Are
3 Bdrm tam ,
• mn,rsg
fQOm
(p m 1 i, w
ffnnodP n*d
C 'om * to
*■&gt;pf fri nq

Assumable mortgage, 3 Bdrm.
eat id kitchen, lireplace. new
roof, large yard

ON YOUR LOT

t

BDRM
Pool home
no
qualifying 115 000 down l a i r
over payments 1210718

n o e i K * IN C m f&amp; A L T V R S

37C-For Lease

1 tM!
«p«ll

U N D E W 12 000 DOWN
J bdrm dob house Alforqab'e
m onthly
paym ents
Cab
Owne, Broker 111 toll

M o b ile Homes

SH O P arealor rent,
W » 27It Lowrent
321 5060

’-(■nq rm ll«
f , *,i. &gt;• V ’fJ
f eft Ad, *• t&gt;,,.
i;,
v of 4)1
•r
J il

H A V I N G TOWN
J BDR'.*.
Home 179 900
Assumable
F m A M ori 522 000 327 1471

37—Business Property
PARK. A V E 2 bdrm, appl , no
lease 5200 339 7200
Say On Rentals. Inc Realtor

VEST IN G M O U SE
17 cu
it
retria Gold 1100 ash Call
37) 8257 att 6

IN ’

F IN P A M A IL-B O X !

N E W 3 Bdrm, 2 Bath Mobile
Hom e in Meadowtea on the
R iver with family rm and
screen room included, use ol
pool, tennis court and boat
ra m p
1400 and s e c u rity
deposit and I yr
lease
required
Eves 305 628 4728

«n

W A R N IN G F a r m e r s
When
selling cattle, be sure la have *
btll ot sale and buyer should
have copy tigned belore Ihe
check in lull is paid, and belore
livestock is loaded out

I H O S P IT A L bed complete
with rads I wheel
chair 327 3353

A CKK0!

2 B D R M . t ' j bath, partly lur
nished with air. 1 ml east ol
Sanford 372 5659

3t A — D up lexes

T b DRM downtown partially
lumished. 5150 mo
322 0216

I

B6UN PI

N E W 2 Bdrm , 2 Bath 7 ra r
garage 5350 1st. last and
security. Evenings 371 0502

34

30 Apartments Unfurnished

BAM BO O C O V E A P T S
300 E Airport Blvd
115 2 Bdrms
From 5230 mo
Phone 3211140

N E A R L Y N EW
3 B d rm 7 Bath with all kitchen
a p p lia n c e s and a ir con
ditiooing Only 5)25 mo
H O R E A L T Y INC
*30 8 800
REALTO R

HOME FO R SA LE
D e B ary 1
bedroom 7 bath, family room
fireplace, in ground pool, large
wooded lot on canal I ’ S.SOO
Call 305 660 8098

31—A p a rtm e n ts Furnished

25A-Financial Services
B A N K R U P T C Y 15125) Cancels
Debts C h ap ter I ) (8 340!
Reduces your debt Cali tor
Intormation 10 7 A tto rn ey
Michael Price Orlando
433 3997

W ARP

6 7 — Livestock

50—Miscellaneous for Sale

\WfflP TRAVELER TttfUSH
1 AM MY HEART ALWAYS
SINcSS WHEN I'M H 0 /'"

13, W S J

4t— Houses

32— houses Unfurnished
N E W L Y painted, 3 bdrm, 3 bath,
sern patio, large yard Nice
a re a 896 0)92 or 644 2181

,i

S u n Je

Evening Herald, Sanford, FI

Majoi Hoople

DAYTONA AUTO
AUCTION
Hwy. 93 Daytona Beach
904 2151)11

65—Pets-Supplies
AKC Beagle puppies. I I F ) , 5
(M l, now accepting deposit
Available 10 17 82 575ea Both
parents on premises 322 7S10
or 372 3179 a ll 4
AKC R E G IS T E R E D Liaso Apso
puppies, adorable. 5200 each
321 3910

FO R D 87 Granada 4 dr . 6 cyl,
luxury H im pkg 15 hundred
miles Fac w arranty, 17995
Austam W h ile
Outlet, 331
1660
Whatever me occasion, there s a
classified ad to solve It Try
one soon
Ford 70. 4 dr , sm V8, 307 eng
air, auto P S good cond 8495
327 2296
DeBary Auto k

M ann*

Salt*

across the hyer lop of hill 174
Hwy 17 93 D e B a ry 641 6444

L IN C O L N 71 Town Coup*,
beaulilul new trad 55995 Aus
lam White Outlet 32M66Q
1973 J E E P W A G O N E E R ,
good condition51900
37112600023 6159.
61 F O R D P ick Up, Code 260.
390 aulo 65.000 mi ,5750
365 5387
A U STA M Buys cars
P a y olt anywhere
you!!! 321 1660

k

trucks
Cash to

C O C K E R S P A N IE L pupp.es.
A K L . beaulilul bull
color. SISO 321 4744

77 B U IC K R eg*l7ooor. like new.
loaded 5500 down Cash or
. trade J3VVIOU. 834 4605

7 F R E E K IT T E N S
and Mother Cal
321 0976

loaded, no money down

75 MONTE CARLO
331 9100.134 4605

�ji

r f*|

Sunday. Sept 12. 1982

u&gt; Sanford. F I

A

WIN UP TO '200“ in

WINNER

IN
EVERY
STORE!

FREE GROCERIES!
IN OUR 3-MINUTtS (iviAXimuiVi *200°°)

S H O P P IN G S P R E E !!
D IP O SIT IN

PRICES GOOD
SEPT. 12-15,1982

WINNER POSTED
IN STORE AND
WILL BE NOTIFIED

DRAWING
WILL BE HELD
SEPTEMBER 16, 1982

ONE WEEK ONLY
TO QUALIFY
SEPTEM BER 9-15, 1982

DRAWING

BO*

Winn-Dixie BIG FREE Drowmg
&gt; „ D 'llC

A ,ir,

c l,

.

...

..

•

S E R IE S H o . 61
W H EN

* 1*

P L A Y IN G

i COMPLETE &amp; DROP IN BOX AT YOUR LOCAL WINN-DIXIE

1

BEEN DISTRIBUTED.
PLEASE
d o u ble

reo eem

UP

A O O m O N U IWTRT I L W I I S AT A IQ IIT IA A l l W t l *
YOU MUST M I t T IA tft o r A04
fO SI 11108 t i I
YOU N I IO NOT U P l l t I N l T O W IN
NO PUtC N M I N lC IllA tY

a ll

b ' noo no. e
22. 1982 _ _

day . s e p t .

JOY LIQUID

MAXWELL HOUSE

POST TOASTIES

SUPERBRAND

DETERGENT

COFFEE

CORN FLAKES
. ..

$ 1 6 9

2 2 -o x .
BTL.

CAN

DOZ.

GOOD SEPT. 12-15, 1982

WITH ONE SUPER BONUS CERTIFICATE
OOOO SEPT. 12-15, 1982

HAWAIIAN

WESSON

w it h o n e s u p e r bonus c e r t if ic a t e

WITH ONE SUPER BONUS CERTIFICATE
BOOD SEPT. 12-15, 1982

WITH ONE SUPER BONUS CERTIFICATE
0000 SEPT. 12-16, 1982

B IS B B B X B B H H M W B ai

p ip p e r id o e

C L A U S S IN NIFRIGERATED (WHOLE OR HALVES)

farm s

PICKLES

PUNCH

’(■VVliti-1m -u -

3 2 -o x .

46-ox.

JA R

CAN
w

/O )
'O ’

WITH ONE SUPER BONUS CERTIFICATE
0000 SEPT, 12-15, IM2
/

WITH ONE SUPER BONUS CERTIFICATE
QOOD SEPT. 12-16, 1982

WITH ONE SUPER BONUS CERTIFICATE
BOOD SEPT. 12-16, 1982

F R O M Y O U R D ELI

, . , S H (NEVE. E«OEE«&gt;

8 -o x . P K G . * 1 3 9

-ox.

WISE
TW IN PACK

7 0 -o x .

LO A F

99

PKG.

SESAME SEED
OR ITALIAN
POPPY SEED

PEPPERO N I

BREAD

m ien Id THB AD A M 8000 IN
TNI F0LL0WII8 FLORIDA COUNT!!* ONLY!
OliNGE SEMINOLE OSCEOLA UEVAIt
VOLUSIA. UL1E CUIUS SUAATE8.
NAIIOFL INDIAN I I V I I A ST LUOI

FOR ALL OTHER COUNTIES
PLEASE SEE TOUR LOCAL NEWSPAPER.

PLUS MANY MORE THROUGHOUT THE STORE!
v t\ p m t ie j

SAVE 60

SAVE 20

$100
SAVE M

1 r* A W E

W -D 88AND
12 PA TTIIS

W H O U U N I RIM M ID
t O N IL IIS
20/28 18. AVO.

BOTTOM
ROUND

SAVE 59

UNTRIM MID
WHOU BONILISS
(14/16-18. AVO.)

IU P 8 R 8 R A N O
A S R O R T ID FLA V O R !

N .Y .
STRIP

FRYER
PARTS

BEEF
PATTIES

r USDA CMOICI

SWISS STYLE
YOGURT

$ 1 7 9
CUP*

■

8 !!F ROUND BONELESS BOTTOM ROUNO

SAVE 52‘

Fab
.M

MM I C l » A «

W-D BRAND IOON PURE - 1018 MANDI
PACK CROUNO

Beef............ M”

FRESH COUNTRY STYLE PAN READY AND

Fryers.............. 6 9 * /

SAVE 19C

SAVE 98 cv©^ (

A ITO R

FAB
DETERGENT
limit 1 «ttfc I I M t v m w
call. elf*.

m am

reg ular cut up

WHOLE UN TRIMMED M (YES/
DELM ONCOS HEART OF THE R«
FOB DELM O NCO ROAST AND

limit
M«ft

16-ei.

Harvest Fresh

1 w / f I 00 t*
MK#&gt;8 U ll. Il|8

CANTALOUPES

1 2 *t.

LILAC IIQ U O (LIME. LEMON 0 « PINA)

^ Detergent . . 2 m M1’

Pineapple .. 2 ^ M”

FISCHERS ALE OR (6 PAK)

Beer

SAVE 20*

Ice Cream or
SHERBET

FO 8

CAN!
THRIFTY MAIO (SLCEO. CRUSHED OR
TC8ITS)

cur

HALF

12 PAX

CAN!

CM

IU P IR 8 IA N D
A J8 0 8 T ID FLA VO R*

PABST
BEER

FRUIT
COCKTAIL

20* • PALMETTO FARMS PIMENTO
'A . . } j ] |

HARVEST FRESH WHITE SEEDLESS

11 oi
N ltS

M”

Gropes

ASSORTED VARIETIES
MORTON

Diniwn.........'i£ 69*

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                    <text>751h Y ear, No. 62—M onday, N ovem ber 1, 1982— S anford, Florida 32771

E vening Herald—(U SPS 481-2801—Price 20 Cenfs

C o m m is s io n e rs R e v ie w A m b u la n c e S e rv ic e C o n tr a c t
By MICHEAL BEIIA
Herald Stall Writer
Seminole County Commissioners today will consider who
will be providing emergency ambulance service in the county
next year.
The m atter will come up for review at a work session at 3
p m. in the county agricultural center at the Five Points
complex on U.S. Highway 17-92.
Herndon Ambulance Service, Inc. and Aero Products, Inc.
have submitted proposals for a franchise and a county subsidy
for fiscal 1982-63.
In late September, commissioners extended a contract with

Herndon for three months to give Public Safety Director Gary
Kaiser time to analyze the proposals.
Herndon had submitted a proposal which sought a $120,000
subsidy but two days before its contract was to expire, entered
a new proposal, dropping the subsidy request to $100,000 and
raising the cost for emergency calls from $60 to $70.
Aero Products, a Longwood firm operated by Scott Barnes, a
form er Herndon employee, submitted a detailed proposal for
service and asked for a $257,340 subsidy to cover projected
losses. The request equals more than 25 percent of the com­
pany's projected Income.
Herndon’s operations in Seminole County have been plagued
with difficulties. County officials said the firm has had poor

management practices which have led to 30 percent of the
people transported for emergency service not paying their
bills.
Herndon officials said the reduced subsidy request is a result
of changes in the company's management policies.
Seminole County has a non-exclusive franchise, meaning
both companies could legally be granted permission to provide
ambulance service in the county.
But Kaiser said allowing a subsldired firm to operate
alongside an unsubsidized one would be unwise.
Commissioners are anxious to take over dispatching duties
for the ambulance service. They claim county control over
dispatching would allow for response time.

But Herndon officials have claimed that they need to control
dispatching because ambulances in Orange County are
sometimes used in southern Seminole County.
Also today, commissioners are scheduled to discuss the
filling of the safety officer's post.
Some changes may be considered to broaden the safetyofficer's duties or spread them among other jobs and eliminate
the position.
Commissioners have discussed expanding the job to Include
responsibilities beyond coordinating safety programs. The
safety officer is also responsible for investigating accidents
involving county employees or equipment.

V oters: T a k e IDs
To Polls; 4 0 -5 3 %
To V o te Tuesday
By DONNA ESTES
Herald SUff Writer
Seminole S u p erv iso r of
Elections C am illa Bruce
warned voters In Tuesday’s
general election to take
positive identification — their
voter registration card or
driver’s license — with them
to the polls or they may be
turned away.
"It would be a shame If
someone went to the polls only
to be turned away to go home
for identification before being
allowed to vote," Mrs. Bruce
said.
Mrs. Bruce, still smarting
from the County's record of
the poorest voter turnout in
the state at 10.9 percent In the
Oct. 5 second prim ary elec­
tion, was sticking today with
her prediction that 40 percent
- 10,190 — to U percent 40,ITS— o f *
Herald Phot* by * 00111# W leboMI

D r u m M a jo r P h ilip H a ile p u ts th e L a k e M a r y b a n d
t h r o u g h its p a c e s S a tu r d a y n ig h t d u rin g th e Kth a n n u a l
S e m in o le C o u n ty H an d F e s t i v a l a t th e L y m a n H ig h S chool

s ta d iu m in L o n g w o o d . S e v e n b a n d s p e r fo rm e d f o r a n
e s t i m a t e d 3,000 m u sic lo v e rs .

3,000 Enjoy Band Festival
By JANE CASSELBERRY
Herald SUff Writer
Approximately 3,000 persons thrilled to the
weekend spectacular fireworks display and
musical extravaganza presented by seven area
bands at the eighth annual Seminole County High
School Band Festival at the Lyman High School
stadium in Longwood.
The band festival Saturday night is co­
sponsored each year by the Optimist Club of
Sanford and the Evening Herald. All ticket
proceeds will go to the bands for uniforms, music
and instruments.
Optimist John Blair, festival chairman and
Seminole County schools fine a rts coordinator,
said If all the tickets were sold, each band would
receive $850. But he said he does not yet have a
complete report on the total proceeds.
.
"The weather was excellent and the stands
were nearly full,” said Blair. “The bands all
gave an outstanding performance as always."
The host band was the Lake Mary High School

Band and its leader, Miss Terry Pattlshall, was
musical director for the festival. Other bands
and their directors Included Seminole High
School, Bob Maguire; Bishop Moore of Orlando,
Joe Derrtco; Oviedo High School, Dick Feinberg; Lake Howell High School, Greg Martin;
Lake Brantley High School of Forest City, Jack
Herron; and Lyman High School, Don Schmaus.
The festival opened with the massed bands
composed of some 800 musicians playing the
Sousa m arch, Semper Fidelia and the StarSpangled Banner. Each band together with their
drum m ajors, majorettes and m em bers of the
various flag, rifle and dance corps auxiliaries,
was featured individually.
For the most part they presented their contest
show that they will perform in the Nov. 20
F lorida B andm asters D istrict M arching
Festival at 5:30 p m . at the Tangerine Bowl In
Orlando, Blair explained. They will be com­
peting there with Orange and Seminole county
bands.

The climax of Saturday nlght’i event was the
“Salute to America", a medley of patriotic
numbers by the massed bands, accompanied by
a fireworks presented by Vic Vickers. The
fireworks Included a Statue of Liberty and large
American Flag with a spectacular display of
aerial bursts for the finale.
Each band was presented a large trophy in
appreciation for their participation in the
festival by the Evening Herald.
The proceeds from the sale of advertisements
in the festival program went to the Optimist Club
to support the club's youth work In the com­
munity. Dale Copplck was program chairman.
The club's other big project for youth work is the
Christmas tree sale scheduled to begin Dec. 1,
Blair said.
“I want to express my appreciation for the
outstanding work and support by members of the
Optimist club, the community and the Evening
Herald, which went into malting the festival a
success," Blair said.

Halloween
1Halloween' Film Is Switched
A lthough the movie "H allow een” was
originally scheduled to air over the weekend,
WESH-TV Channel 2 officials say they decided to
run another movie instead but th at the switch
had nothing to do with the doud of concern and
fear which enveloped the year’s festivities
across the pat km
According to Ken Smith, program manager,

his office has received several Inquiries con­
cerning the airing of "Chinatown" a t 9 p jn .
Sunday, instead of Halloween.
“I can assure you the switch hsd nothing to do
with the halloween scare or with the content of
the movie," be said. "The movie HaOoween.has
already been aired once on Channel 2. We deckh
ed to run Chinatown."

... Reporter Finds Some True Trick-0r-Treaters

By BRITf SMITH
Herald Staff Writer
EDITOR’S NOTE: Oa Saturday lig h t, aot one
trick or treater showed ep at (he deer of Herald
reporter B ritt Smith. Aid by I pun. Sunday, aaly
m e had shown op. So, Smith took la the streets Is
search of Halloween.
Halloween, that most sacred night for all the
world's ghouls and goblins, is filled with a virtual
kaleidoscope of emotions — bright-eyed en­
thusiast), greed and fear born of over-active
lfn»gln»ilnr»Hefty doses of all three were embodied in the
arm yot small-fry monsters who m ade their annual

2 — moved from Wilson School in Paola to
Paola Wesleyan Church Annex; Precinct 8
moved from Slovak Gardens Community
House to Westminister United Presbyterian
Church Fellowship Hall, 2641 Red Bug Road;
Precinct 20, moved from Seminole High School
to the Seminole Agricultural Center, 4320
South Orlando Drive; Precinct 29 moved from
Sanford Middle School portable to the
Salvation Army, 700 W. 24th St„ Sanford; and
Precinct 51 from Donnalu’s School of Dance to
St. Stephen’s Luthem Church, State Road 434,
west of Interstate 4.
Mrs. Bruce said the polling places had to be
moved because facilities at those locations
were not adequate. She noted that at Wilson
School in particular, classes and a library
were held on the October election day in the
polling place used for years in that area.
"We had to move the polling place from
there," she u ld .
One of the 75,799 Seminole countians
eligible to cast ballots in the election, 38,357
are Democrats, 31,i73 are Republicans, 3,379
are independents, 2,667 are listed as no party
and 123 others.
See ELECTION, Page 2A

TODAY

Few Bad Trick-Or-Treat Incidents Reported Here
ByTENIYARBOROUGH
Herald Staff Writer
Although two motorists told Seminole County
sheriffs deputies they were attacked and robbed
after a costume-clad man Jumped In front of their
car Sunday night and a Casselberry boy told police
he received a bottle of Extra-Strength Tylenol
capsules in his treat bag while trick or treating,
authorities here say this Halloween has been one of
the safest and most uneventful of alL
See HALLOWEEN Page 8A

jo u n t y 'i 74,79*

qualified voters will vote in
Tuesday's election.
"I'm concerned that only 40
percent will turn out to vote,"
she u ld , adding she hopes the
turnout will go as high as 53
percent, the average turnout
in past non-presldential
years.
"I thought averaging was as good a way as
any to predict the election turnout," she said.
"And this year la a lulu."
About 20 percent of the voters turned out in
the county for the Sept. 7 primary.
Meanwhile, Secretary of State George
Firestone is predicting a statewide turnout of
45 percent.
Mrs. Bruce's office was continuing to accept
absentee ballots at both the offices in the
courthouse annex at Sanford and the Inter­
state Mall in Altamonte Springs.
So far, 1,358 absentees have been issued and
1,022 have been returned. Some 1,275 absentee
ballots were turned in four years ago.
Persons who are ill may vote absentee until
7 pm . Tuesday and those votes will be counted
at the courthouse annex office in Sanford.
Absentees for those in the south end of the
county will be accepted at the Interstate Mali
office until 5 p.m., she said.
Voters in five county precincts were polling
places have been changed were notified by
mail of the new polling places by Mrs. Bruce’s
office. The new places were not correctly
reported.
The changes include the following: Precinct

rounds Sunday night in search of tricks or treats.
For the few children who participated, the oc­
casion waa m ore than Just the one night a year they
can beg sweets from total Grangers. It was an
adventure, the stuff of which Uf»4ong msmorles are
But eometimee, adults put a dam per on the fun.
The case of lS yeanold Tracy Goodwin of Longwood
is a good eiam pio. Radiant in her fairy princess
costume, she confidently claimed that she can
handle witches and vampires, but her parents ere
something else.
The aerious-minded grownupa had given her
strict orders not to sat any of the goodies she hsd

collected until they inspected it for rssor-blsdebearing apples or spiked candy.
"What's the fun of having to wait until you get
borne to sta rt stuffing your face?" she giggled,
dipping into her half-full big, pulling out a malted
milk bill and popping it into her mouth in open
defiance.
•
A lot of ndukfl simply don’t know what Halloween
is all about, according to ll-yearold Craig Murphy
of Sanford. To him, "fruit given are the pits.
"We can get apples and orangaa a t homa
anytime,” he complained. "Halloween Is for gum,
cookies, candy bars ... all that stuff my parent!
See IN SEARCH OF, Page ZA

Actka R eporta......... .........2A
Art tmd The Clock ... .........4A
Bridge............ *.........
Calendar.................... .........2B
Classified A d s ........... ...2-JB
C a s k s .....................

Dear A b b y .......... ............. IB
Death*.................. ............. 2A
Dr. L a m b ............. ............. 4B
Editorial.............. ............. 4A
F lo rid a ................ ............. 3A
Horoscope .......... ............. 4B

Bob Hattaway For State Senate

N ation ................
P eo p le................
Sport*.................. ........... MA
Television .........
W e a th e r............
W orld.................. • v .......“ A

... Page 4A

Seminole M ails Out
Tax Bills To 87,000
Tax bills for M 2 have been sent out to
owners of approximately 17,000 pieces of
property In Seminole County, a spokesman in
the tax collector's office said today.
The spokesman said property owneri who
pay their taxes in November will receive a 4
percent discount. In December, the discount
will drop to 2 p e rc e n t In January, the discount
will be 1 percent. After January there is no
discount.
The spokesman said the department's
phones have been busy todsy with property
owners calling with questions about their tax
bills.
She said the bills, which were mailed out last

week, are higher than last year for moat
property owners because of an increase In
property valuations, even though the tax rate
is lower than last year.
Residents of incorporated areas are paying
14.44 per 11,000 value In county taxes while
residents of unincorporated areas are paying
98-lS per 91,000 valuation.
Last year, the tax rate waa 95.23 per 91,000 in
incorporated areas and 98.14 per 91,000 in
unincorporated areas.
County residents also pay 96.99 per 91,000
valuation for school district taxes. Last year,
that rate was 98-28. - M1CHEAL BEHA.

l
* » a a w w •

�3A

Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Monday, Nov. l, l?ai

M urder Suspect Jailed In Mississippi

NATION
IN BRIEF
Suspected Extortionist
To Be Arraigned Today
CHICAGO (U P l) - A man charged In a copycat
extortion attem pt to get 1100,000 from the m akers of
Tylenol was In custody today, but authorities said his
arrest puts them no closer to solving the cyanide
poisoning deaths of seven people.
Vernon A. Williams Jr., 35, was to be arraigned
before a U.S. m agistrate in Newark, N.J., today on
extortion charges. Williams of Newmark was arrested
Saturday by FBI agents after a car chase in East
Orange, N.J.
James Cagnassola Jr., the FBI agent In charge of the
case, said Williams was charged with mailing a
threatening communication. Williams Is not con­
sidered a suspect In the poisoning deaths of seven
Chicago area residents.

Haig N o t 'Deep Throat'
WASHINGTON (U P I)-A le ia n d e r Haig calls
"absurd" form er White House counsel John Dean’s
theory that he was "Deep Throat”—the clandestine
source who helped the Washington Post expose
Watergate.
“It’s probably commercially motivated,” Haig, who
was chief of staff in the final months of Richard
Nixon's presidency, told reporters outside his ho n e
Sunday in nearby Bethesda, Md.
Dean, In his forthcoming book "Lost Honor," unveils
a circumstantial case that points to Haig as Deep
Throat, the shadowy figure whose Identity has been
carefully shielded by Post reporters Bob Woodward
and Carl Bernstein and has been the subject of a
popular guessing game in Washington since Nixon's
1974 resignation.

GM Offers Low Financing
DETROIT (U PI) — In an effort to d e a r inventories
of 1982 models, General Motors Corp. today dropped its
car loan Interest rates to 10.9 percent — the lowest
since 1968.
GM officials m ade the announcemtnt Sunday. The
program, adm inistered by General Motors Assistance
Corp., will last until the end of the year.
It covers 1982 Chevrolet, Pontiac, Oldsmobile, Bulck
and Cadillac autos and GMC light-duty trucks and
vans. GM officials refuse to disclose how m any 1982
vehicles remain on hand.
GMAC spokesman John Andrews said the 10.9
percent rate is the lowest offered nationally since July
1966.

WEATHER

HOSPITAL NOTES

★

Courts
★

Police

The bodies of John Stinson and Edward Wise, co-owners of
the Sanford Quick Print shop at 110 E. Commercial St., were
found In their home at 1231 Henry Back Drive In Orange
County. Both men had been stabbed and shot numerous times,
their car had been stolen, abandoned and burned and their
home burglarized, according to Orange County sheriff’s Capt.
Uohn Guemple.
Investigators said they believe Dufour, working with Robert
Taylor, 23, of Orlando, Jam es Elliott, 21, of Orlando, and Carl
Williams, 22, of 107 Penelope Drive, Longwood, may have been

Investigators say Dufour Is also believed to be a member of a
gang which may be responsible for the death of two Sanford
businessmen.

Elliott was arrested by Orlando police and charged by
Seminole County sheriff’s deputies in connection with the
armed robbery of a Longwood businessman’s home July 12,
deputies said. Deputies said that four men entered the home of
John Subik Jr., 43, of Fem Drive; bound Sobik's two sons,
burglarized the home, then stole the Sobiks’ truck. Sobik is the
owner of the Sobik’s Subs and Sandwich food restaurant
Later, deputies received information from Camden County,
Gb. authorities who said they discovered the body of a man,
identified as Williams, lying along Interstate 95 near Wood­
bine, Ga. Williams had been shot five times with a small
caliber weapon and police say he may have been killed by
fellow gang members after one of the Sobik youths reportedly
recognized him during the armed robbery.

. . . In S e a rc h O f H a llo w e e n
Continued From Page 1A
won’t let m e eat.
"If people have to give apples, at least dunk them In caramel
first," he advises.
As Murphy left one house, a trio of youngsters approached,
stopping momentarily and huddling together, apparently
mapping strategy.
Barely able to contain their laughter, they mounted the steps
and rang the doorbell. When an elderly gentleman answered,
they chimed together, "Trick or treat, smell my feet, give me
something good to eat." They doubled over, laughing
hysterically.
Their creativity wasn’t appreciated, however. The man
mumbled something about "foul-mouthed kids" and slammed
the door without giving them so much as a gum drop.
The three didn't use their somewhat off-beat opening line the
rest of the night. They had apparently learned their lesson.
Next to arrive was Brenda Crawford, 4, of Lake Mary. She
stood terrified outside this her first Halloween house, clutching
a hand-decorated grocery sack in one tiny hand and her
mother's dress In the other.
The child was confused. Strange thoughts assailed her mind
as her big brown eyes traveled from the gruesome Jack-©lantem by the door to her mother and back again.
Her father came quietly up behind and laid his hand gently,
but firmly on her shoulder. "Go on,” he said softly, bending
down to whisper In her ear. "I’m right behind you.”
And they went together to the door, the youngster walking
unsteadily, occasionally sneaking a glance over her shoulder
to make sure dad was still there.
Suddenly, about 100 yards down the street, a gang of un­
masked youths bolted out of a clump of trees and headed for a
small group of candy-laden youngsters half their size.
The young toughs Intended to steal the fruits of their victims'
labors, but one small boy pretested.
"This Is mine. You can't have It,” he stammered with
strained bravery.

tossing a sarcastic "thanks” behind them as they fled into the
darkness.
A short stroll further down the street stood what could only
be described as the Simon Legree of the Halloween set. He was
obviously not on the Great Pumpkin’s gift list.
He was perched at the top of a slight rise, a street lamp
shining down behind him, silhouetting him against a stand of
pine trees blowing gently In the wind.
He was a small man, very pale with coal-black eyes. But he
rode herd on a group of 10 subdued children like a cattle
drover. He Issued orders like a soldier, became enraged at the
least discussion or delay and commented rudely on the ser­
vility with which he was obeyed.
But he was only a minor Irritation compared to what lay
ahead. A group of four blcyde-ridlng boys, all full of (Ire and
spirit, was striking off on a bold midnight adventure. With an
unexplainable attraction, the graveyard beckoned.
Perhaps because this was Halloween, the 25th Street Boot
Hill appeared somehow strangely different. Hushed and alone,
we Imagined it out of sight, buried fathoms deep In the thick
foliage of ancient oaks, nothing to disturb the eerie silence but
our own footsteps.
Our path was dark and deserted with only the misty light of
the moon to light our way. Almost groping amidst the markers,
we picked our way through the resonant darkness to our
solemn destination.
Moments earlier, I had talked bravely of the adventure.
"The main thing is not to be afraid. I was bom to laugh at
fear," I had said, my dissertation lifted from a Robert Louis
Stevenson story I remembered from my school dsyi.
"God, devil; right, wrong; sin, crim e and all the old gallery
of curiosities may frighten others, but men of the world like
ourselves despise them."
Brave words, but surrounded by huge and dancing shadows,
we balked.
All around us, dogs accompanied our passage with tragic
ululatlons. It grew and grew in our minds that some unnatural
m iracle had occurred. The countless dead bodies that lay
’rotting under our feet were no longer dead. It was in fear of this
unholy transformation that the dogs howled.
One lad 's teeth chattered. And the cool night air had nothing
to do with it. Finally, ha blurted, "For Ood’a take, tot’s havw a
light!"
A wom book of matches tumbled out of someone’s pants
pocket, but it was no easy m atter striking one in this swirling

But the oldest lad looked the child darkly in the eyes and
demanded the goodies on the spot. I t m i imporndble to
misunderstand the threat or exaggerate the danger.
The spunky kid’s heart failed him. His lip quivered and he
watched on the brink of tears as his hateful visitors departed,

AREA DEATHS
JESSE MARSHALL HAINES F lorida H ospital, Orlando.
Jesse M arshall Haines, 64, Born F eb. 28, 1933, in
of 124 E. Lauren Court, Fem Mlllersburg, Iowa, he moved
Park, died Sunday at Florida to Casselberry from St. Oisf,
H ospltal-A ltam onte. Born Iowa, In 1980. He was a chef
Feb. 2, 1918, In Peabody, and a Lutheran.
Mass., he moved to Fem Park
Survivors Include his wile,
from Norfolk, Va., in 1968. He Doris E .; a son, Jeffery W., of
w u retired from the U.S. C asselb erry ; a daughter,
Navy and a member of St. Kathryn A., of Casselberry;
Mary M agdalene Catholic his mother, Mrs. Lela Shaull,
Church.
of Cedar Raplda, Iowa; and a
Survivors Include his wife, sister, Shirley A. Casselberry,
Lois; a daughter, Christine of Casselberry.
Nunn, of Garland Texas; a
All F aiths Memorial Park
son, John, of Norfolk; six Funeral Home, Casselberry,
grandchildren; one nephew; is In charge of arrangements.
three nieces.
MRS. JULIA B. ADAMS
Baldwln-Fairchild Funeral
Mrs. Julia B. Adams, U, of
Home, Altamonte Springs, is 287 E. Bay Ave., Longwood,
in charge of arrangenents. died Friday at the Life Care
MAURICE SCHULTZ
Center, Altamonte Springs.
Maurice Schultz, 49, of 1060 Born M arch 17, 1199, In
L andm ark
L a n e , ’ Townville, S.C., she moved to
Casselberry, died Friday at Longwood (rom Gastonia,

Sanlord
Wanda A. W illiam s and baby
girl, Sanlord

N.C., in 1962. She was a for­
m er restaurant operator and
a Prostestant.
Survivors Include a son,
Jam es E ., of Longwood; three
g ran d ch ild ren ; and four
great-grandchildren.
Cox-Parker Funeral Home,
Winter Park, Is In charge of
arrangem ents.
MRS. RENEE LOUISE
HUGHES
Mrs. Renee Louise Hughes,
33, of 215 Melissa Court,
Sanford, died Saturday af­
ternoon a t the Wuesthoff
Memorial Hospital, Rocklege.
B orn May 28, 1949, In
Frem ont, Ohio, she had lived
in Sanford since I960, moving
here from Inglewood, Calif.
She w u formerly associated
with the Sanford City Parka
and Recreation Department

prior to retiring because of ill
health.
Survivors Include her son,
Edward J. Hughes Jr., of
Sanford; her mother, Mrs.
Rosemary Laubert, of Cocoa;
a b ro th er, Michael R.
Laubert, of Orange City; and
one nephew.
Gramkow Funeral Home,
Sanford, Is In charge 'of
arrangements.

Funerol N otke
HUGHES.
MRS.
U N C I
LOUISE — F u n tr il Service* (or
M rs. R e n t*L o u is* Hughes. U , of
11S Melissa Court, Sanlord, who
died Saturday in Rockltdge, w ill
be at I I a.m. Tuesday at
G ram kow Funeral Hom t chapel
w ith D r. V irg il L. Bryant Jr.
officia tin g. Burial In E vtrgraen
Cemetery. Friends may call 3 4
and 7 * p.m. today. Gramkow
F u n a ra l Horn* Sanlord, In
charg*.

world of wind and night.
At last, a flickering yellow flame danced forth, shedding a
wide circle of misty brightness around the cemetery.
Abruptly, a nameless dread was swathed like a wet sheet upon
our faces.
A fear that was unthinkable, a horror of what could not be
mounted in our brains.
Someone yelled. We all ran. The match fell and went out,
extinguishing the sight of a bald and dirty store mannequin
dressed tn natty rags and covered with ketchup.

NOTICE OF PUBLICATION
CHAPTER 197, LAWS OF FLORIDA
NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS OF SEM INO LE
COUNTY, FLORIDA: THE 1982 TAX ROLLS
HAVE B E E N
D E L IV E R E D
BY
THE
PROPERTY A P P R A IS E R TO T H E T A X
COLLECTOR FOR THE COLLECTION OF
SEMINOLE COUNTY TAXES FOR THE Y EA R
1982. THESE TAXES ARE FOR REAL
ESTATE,
T A N G IB L E
PE R S O N A L
PROPERTY, M U N IC IP A L IT IE S , S P E C IA L
TAX DISTRICTS, (SUCH AS: LIG H TIN G ,
DRAINAGE, COUNTY F IR E UNIT, ST. JOHNS
WATER MGMT., OR ROAD IM PR O VEM EN T
DISTRICT).
THE 4 PCT. DISCOUNT WILL BE APPLICABLE
FROM
NO VEM B ER
1ST
THROUGH N O V E M B E R 30TH.
FRO M
DECEMBER 1ST THROUGH D ECEM BER
3IST THE 3 PCT. DISCOUNT WILL A P P LY .
THERE WILL BE A 2 PCT. DISCOUNT FOR
JANUARY PAYMENTS; A 1 PCT. DISCOUNT
FOR F E B R U A R Y
PAYM ENTS.
(N E T
AMOUNT IN M ARCH).
TAXES MAY BE P A ID IN PERSON AT ROOM
100, COURTHOUSE, SANFORD OR AT TH E
BRANCH A N N E X , S E M IN O L E PLA ZA ,
CASSELBERRY OR AT THE BRANCH AN­
NEX, INTERSTATE MALL, ALTAMONTE
SPRINGS, B EG IN N IN G MONDAY NO VEM ­
BER 1, AND CAN BE M AILED UPON
RECEIPT OF T A X NOTICE TO P.O. DRAW ER
B, SANFORD, FLORIDA, 32771.
OFFICE HOURS A R E 9:00 A.M. TO 5:00 P.M.
MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY. TELEPHO NE
NUMBER COURTHOUSE, SANFORD 323-4330;
(ORLANDO
EXCHANGE
830-8919);
fi SEMINOLE PLAZA BRANCH ANNEX 830-5343;
1 INTERSTATE M A LL BRANCH AN N EX 339l
5343.

Unusually Qualified To Uphold Our Laws

Sunday
ADMISSIONS
Sanlord:
Allred E. E a rl
Leanner Law
Allred F. M urphy
Lee Parrish
Beverly G. Scercy
Antoine D. T illm on
CMiord E Cole, Dellona
Kathleen L. Thurau, Fern Park
Grover C. Todd, Lake M ary
DISCHAROCS
Sanlord:
Catyln T. Bryant
Fordyce Golden
Frank A. Perkowskl, Deltona
Jennie G. McKenna, Deltona

Stale Senator
JOHN

Taylor is also being held in a Jackson jail following his arrest
there on two charges of m urder in connection with the deaths
of two men who left a gay bar in that city with Dufour and
Taylor, police said.

Jr Fires

In addition to the charges filed against him in Jackson,
Dufour is being held In a Jackson Jail on a first-degree murder
warrant which was Issued by Orange County investigators in
connection with the Sept. 6 murder of Zack D. Miller, of
Boston, Ga., In south Orange County. Miller had been stabbed
repeatedly and robbed, deputies said.

• Editorially Endorsed by both TO DAY
and The O rlan do Sentinel
e J.D. law d e g re e from University of
Florida, 1965

• Form er President, Brevard County Legal
Aid, Inc.
• Vice Chairman (1978-79) of 18th Judicial
Circuit Grievance C om m ittee

e Chairman (1979-80) of 18th Judicial
Circuit Fee Arbitration C om m ittee

• C hairm an (1976-78) of 18»h Judicial Circuit
Judicial Nominating C om m ittee

e Former President, Brevard County Bar
Association

e Honorable Discharge from United States
A rm y Reserves in 1966

Jere Lober has been Involved In a general trial practice for 16 years. He
lives In Merritt Island w ith his wife Sandra and children, Landy and Jere.

Pol Ade p a id lo t byCampaiqn Treasurer Won Bray

T Z t -S U c t ...

responsible (or numerous other murders and armed robberies
in central Florida and Mississippi.

Action Reports

“You've got us all wrong," the youngest bandit stuttered,
apparently taken aback hy this unexpected resistance.

NATIONAL REPORT; Cold temperatures moved Into the
Northern Plains today on the trail of unusually mild autumn
weather that tied record high temperatures In Texas and
North Carolina and triggered thunderstorms along the East
Coast and Great 1i k e s region.
AREA READINGS (9 a.m .): temperature: 77; overnight
low: 70; Sunday highs: 78; barometric pressure: 30.09;
relative humidity: 78 percent; winds: northeast at 8 mph;
rain: .30; sunrise 6:37 a.m., sunset 5:40 p.m.
TUESDAY TIDES: DAYTONA BEACH: highs, 8:15 a.m.,
8:38 p.m.; lows, 1:32 a.m., 2:13 p.m.; PORT CANAVERAL:
highs, 8:06 a.m., 8:29 p.m.; lows, 1:24 a.m ., 2:05 p.m.;
HAYPORT: highs, 12:53 a.m., 2:09 p.m.; lows, 7:50 a jn ., 7:40
p.m.
BOATING FORECAST: SL Augustine to Jupiter Inlet, Out
50 Miles: Wind easterly 10 to 15 knots becoming southeasterly
10 knots tonight and Tuesday. Seas mostly 2 to 4 feet. Scattered
showers.
AREA FORECAST: Variable cloudiness today with a 30
percent chance of showers or a thunderstorm. Highs low to
mid 80s. Wind east to southeast 10 mph. Tonight partly cloudy
with a 20 percent chance of showers. Lows mid to upper 60s.
Wind easterly 10 mph or less. Tuesday partly cloudy with only
isolated showers. Highs mostly mid 60s. Rain chance less than
20 percent.
EXTENDED FORECAST Partly cloudy Wednesday
when variable cloudiness with scattered showers Thursday
and Friday. Lows In the 60s north to the mid 70s southeast
coast and keys except dropping off to the 50s extrem e north
Friday. Highs In the 70s extreme north Thursday and Friday.
Otherwise highs in low to mid 80s.

C»ntr«l Fleride R e g lo n il
H otplU I
Saturday
ADMISSIONS
Sanford
John A. Calhoun
John C. Cocw
Lorrafn* A Yoder. Orange City
DISCHARGES
Sanlord:
Linda M. Hendrix
Robert M M ille r
r’ h ro n it M Parrish
Andrae L. Ransom
Joseph j . Bauman. Deltona
Angela OtJesus, Deltona
Richard L. S lutt, Deltona
Ruth Ann Weiss, Deltona
Mere Ford. Orlando
Eileen M Brooks and baby g irl,
Sanlord
Gayle D. Schiuler and baby boy.

By TENl YARBOROUGH
Herald Stall Writer
Investigators today said they have located another suspect
In connection with the brutal subbing deaths of two Sanford
businessmen in July, adding that the man may also be
responsible for several other murders and numerous armed
robberies.
Donald DuFour, 26, of Orlando, was arrested in Jackson,
Miss. Saturday after employees of a gay bar there told
authorities DuFour left the bar Oct. 13 with three other men,
two of whom were found stabbed to death in a west Jackson
apartment Oct. 15.

Elect

NoivPartlsan

Circuit Judge

1 8 th J U D IC IA L CIRCUIT
GROUP 3

/VOGT
Democrat District 17
BIGSd i

Ev e n in g H r r a ld

•«*« «•&gt;»&gt;

Monday, Novam bar L i m - V o l . 75, No. *3

One good judge o f people

PvMIsfeed Dally and Sunday, a ica p i Saturday by T M Saaierd
Herald, lac., SM H. F ra n c* Aye., taaiurd, Ola. I W t .
Second Clast P a tia la Paid at Saatord. Flarida 1X731

,

Haase Delivery: W a rt, l l - r t i M eet*. M I L • Meatfcs. U a M l
Year, MS.M. by M a ll: Weed SI.Si; Mentis, S i. I I ; « M artha.
U M l i Yaar. SI7J&gt;
__

V, y

fceMkel My. MM ter By C*m»«ga treaty,tr M I l k , ku(k,l«a ill. CPA

J

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�Evening Herald, Sanford. FI

FLORIDA
IN BRIEF
Racy Pulitzer Divorce
Trial Resumes Today
WEST PALM BEACH (UPI) - Attorneys (or whitehaired putli teng jdon Herbert "P eter" Pulitzer and
his young wife Roianne say they will prove the charges
and counter-charges of kinky sex and drug abuse that
have this Jet-set town on its ear,
The Judge who has to hear it all vows he will finish
the sensational divorce trial by Thanksgiving.
After a three-week hiatus, one of the bitterest—and
certainly the raciest-divorce proceeding ever to hit
Palm Beach resumes today.
It is for the custody of the couple’s twin sons and for a
fortune estimated at between 12.5 and $25 million by
opposing lawyers, that the proceedings are taking
place. So far Mrs. Pulitzer, 31, has been accused of
excessive cocaine use, affairs with a variety of lovers,
menage-a-trols sex, occultism and lesbianism.
Counter charges of drug use, drug smuggling and
incest have been hurled at Pulitzer, the 52-year-old
grandson of tum-of-the-century publishing king Joseph
Pulitzer.

Fishing To Begin Slowly
CLEWISTON (U P I)—Lake Okeechobee’s once
booming commerical fishing Industry, shut down in
May 19S1 because of drought, will start making a
limited comeback today.
Officials suspended commercial fishing on the lake
when the water level dropped below 10 feet, and in so
doing put hundreds of fishermen and fish-processing
plant employees out of work. The lake-front economy
lost $5.3 million a year.
Now Just 10 commercial perm its have been Issued,
down from a total of 130 perm its in 1981. But officials of
the Florida Game and Fresh Water Fish Commission
say the lake must be reopened slowly.

Amendment Stays On Ballot
TALLAHASSEE (UPI) — The Florida Supreme
Court today unanimously rejected an appeal
challenging a proposed constitutional amendment
appearing on Tuesday’s general election ballot.
In their 6-0 ruling, the Justices decided that the ballot
summary of the proposal clearly stales Its purpose and
voters should have a chance to approve or reject It.
The proposed amendment would change Florida’s
standards on the admission of improperly obtained
evidence to match those of the federal government.
Gov. Bob Graham and other proponents claim the
change would prevent criminals from beating criminal
charges on technicalities. Opponents assert It would
erode Florida's standards on civil liberties.

ELECT
*

Resident of Seminole County since 1958

* School of Nursing, Umv, of Tennessee, 1952
*

Bachelor of Aits, Umv. of Central Fla., 1973

*

Master of Arts — Teaching, University of
Florida. 1977

*

Florida Police Standards College, Seminole
Community College, 1977

Monday, Nov, 1,1982—3A

Qualification, Registration Deadlines Looming In Seminole
Candidate qualifying for two Sanford City
Commission seats in the Dec. 7 municipal
election will end at noon Tuesday, according to
city clerk Henry Tamm.
Commissioner Milton Smith is being op­
posed by Patricia " P a t" Baxley, coowner of a
Sanford restaurant and an account executive
at the Southern Bell Telephone Co. And
Commissioner David F arr is unopposed.
Meanwhile, in Casselberry- where an elec­
tion is also scheduled for Dec. 7, candidate
qualification will remain open until 5 p.m.
Friday.
Three City Council seats and the one year
remaining in the term of Mayor Owen Shep­
pard are up for election. Sheppard has
resigned effective Jan. 10.

Qualifying in Casselberry so far are in­
cumbent Councilman Frank Schutte and Bill
Grier. The council seat held by Jim Lavigne is
also up for grabs. So far, Richard Russo and
Bertha Rines have qualified for that post.
U vigne's resignation from his council seat
becomes effective today. He resigned to run
unsuccessfully against Republican House
candidate earlier this year.
Casselberry City Clerk Mary Hawthorne
said that Charles Glascock, a former coun­
cilman, has qualified to ru.. . r the mayor's
office.
Sanford has 8,783 voters while Casselberry
has 6,031. The final day for potential voters in
Sanford, Casselberry, Longwood and lak e
Mary to register to vote Is Friday.
In addition to Seminole County Supervisor of

Elections Camilla Bruce's courthouse annex
office in Sanford and the branch office at the
Interstate Mall in Altamonte Springs, wouldbe voters may also register at the I^ake Mary.

. . . Election
Continued From Page 1A)

A lengthy ballot awaits the voters Tuesday.
They will choose between 1awton Chiles, Dlakeland, the incumbent, and Van B. Poole,
Republican, for the US. Senate; state Rep.
Dick Batchelor, D-Orlando, and U.S. Rep. Bill
McCollum, R-Altamonte Springs, the In­
cumbent, for the U.S. House of Represen­
tatives; Gov. Bob Graham andU .G ov. Wayne
Mixson, Democrats and Incumbents, and U.S.
Rep. L.A. "Skip” Bafalis and Leo Callahan,
Republicans, for governor and lieutenant
governor; Commissioner of Agriculture Doyle
couple reports of suspected tainted candy but Conner, D em ocrat and Incum bent, and
that, upon Investigation, "nothing appears out B arb ara Lindsey, Republican, for com­
of the ordinary and there is no apparent in­ missioner of agriculture.
dication of foul p lay ," said Sheriff’s
Candidates in six legislative races will be
spokesman John Spolski.
considered by various county voters, in­
"We had one woman who said she became ill cluding: John Vogt Democrat incumbent and
after eating a candy bar which a co-worker state Rep. Jason Steele, state Senate, District
had given her,” Spolski said. “ But the 17; Florence Hunter, Democrat, and state Sen.
woman's family had eaten the candy with no Richard Langley, Incumbent, state Senate,
ill effects and a doctor said the woman may District 11; State Rep. Robert Hattaway,
have Just had the flu.
D em ocrat, and Sen. Toni Jennings,
"Another report was that a suspected piece Republican incumbent, state Senate, District
of metal was found in a piece of gum, but upon ‘ 15; Betty D. Smith, Democrat, and Art
inspection, It turned out to be a splinter of G rlndle, R epublican, state House of
wood apparently from the barrel which the
Representatives, District 35; Winter Springs
gum had been stored in," he said. “ No one was Mayor Troy Piland, Democrat, and Carl
injured in either case. Overall, things were Selph, R epublican, state House of
pretty quiet."
Representatives, District 34; Glenn Turner,
"This was probably one of the quietest
Democrat and state Rep. Tom Drage,
Saturday nights we've had In a long time,"
Republican incum bent, state House of
said Sanford police spokesman Herb Shea.
Representatives, District 36.
Shea's department Issued a stiff warning Just
All voters in the county will choose between
prior to the weekend festivities saying his Edward M. Jackson and Jere E. Ixtber for
dep artm en t would "not to lerate any
circuit iudge of the 18th Judicial Circuit,
foolishness and arrests will be made.”
Group 3, non-partisan; Jean Bryant and
"W e're very happy with the results and feel Kenneth Patrick, the Board of Education,
the warning in the paper greatly helped
District 5, non-partisan; and Bob Sturm,
m atters," he said.
Republican Incumbent, and Bob French,
Altamonte Springs, Longwood and Winter
Democrat, County Commission, District 2.
Springs also reported few problems in con­
In addition, the voters will decide whether
nection with the Halloween weekend.
Appeal Court Judges Joe A. Cowart Jr. and
Kay Bartholomew, spokeswoman for the
James C. Dauksch, should be retained in of­
C entral Florida Regional H ospital, said
fice.
although hospital workers were met with a
Two proposed state constitutional amend­
"steady stream of kids showing up to have
ments are also on the ballot; one to construe
their candy X-rayed," there were no incidents
the state search and seizure law in conformity
of razor blades, needles or any other metal
with decisions of the U.S. Supreme Court and
objects in the candy.
the second to permit Judges to deny bond to
At Kmart in the Sanford Plaza, sales of persons charged with crimes If the Judge
Halloween costumes and candy were not af­ believes the person will commit another crime
fected by the scare, a store spokesman said.
while on bond or not show up (or trial if he is
The store planned for about a 20 percent
allowed to post bond.
Increase In sales this year and bought more
In Winter Springs, the d ty election for three
candy and costumes.
commission seats and the mayor's office will
"We sold what we bought," the spokesman be held at four polling places In conjunction
said.
with the general election.

• • H a llo w e e n Q u ie t
Continued From Page 1A
Robert T. Hatton, 17, of 723 Eagle Ave.,
Longwood and Bryan Curtis Ogle, 17, of 1313 E.
Tulane Drive, A ltam onte Springs, told
deputies they were driving along State Road
427 when a man dressed In a black costume
and wearing a mask Jumped in front of their
vehicle at about 10:45 p.m.
Deputies said Hatton brought his car to a
quick halt and the two youths were descended
upon by numerous youths, ranging In ages
from 10 to 17, who dim bed atop the car’s hood
and roof, breaking the vehicle’s sunroof and
attacking and robbing Hatton and Ogle.
Hatton said they attempted to fight off the
attackers who stole $10 from him and a watch
and $15 cash from Ogle, deputies said.
Deputies added that Hatton managed to drive
away from the area but that both youths
received scratches and bruises In the assault.
Meanwhile, Casselberry police received a
call from one Casselberry resident who said
his son had been given a bottle of ExtraStrength Tylenol pain killer capsules while
trick or treating near Winter Park Drive.
Seven people in the Chicago area died last
month after ingesting the capsules which had
been laced with poison.
Police said they confiscated the capsules
and sent them to the police laboratory for
testing but no results have been released.
Casselberry police added that no one to their
knowledge, was injured or became ill as a
result of eating Halloween candy over the
weekend.
"We had our usual amount of criminal
mischief but you can have that on any given
weekend or week night," said Casselberry
Police Chief F red McGowan. "O verall,
though, we had a quiet weekend."
Lake Mary police reported they had a
"pretty quiet weekend" except for incidents
where youths were throwing eggs, oranges
and rocks at passing motorists. However,
police said no one was injured by the culprits.
Sheriffs deputies said they received •

EXPERIENCED

Ijongwood and Casselberry City Halls.
* Candidate qualification periods in
Iiongwood and la k e Mary have already
closed.

Day Tuesday
Some 4,957 voters are eligible to vote in the
city contest.
City Commissioners John V. Torcaso and
Martin Trencher are vying for the m ayor’s
office being vacated at midnight today by 114year city official Troy Piland, who resigned to
seek a seat in the Florida house of
Representatives.
Torcaso as deputy mayor is scheduled to be
sworn in as mayor at a 9 a.m. Tuesday
ceremony at city hall, 400 N. Edgemon Ave.,
by Piland. Piland served three years as a city
commissioner and 84 years as mayor. He was
re-elected m ayor a year ago to a three-year
term,
Torcaso's elevation to the mayor’s office
will be Dec. 6 when cither he or Trencher will
take office to complete the remaining two
years in Piland’s term.
Winter Springs voters a year ago approved a
charter amendment changing terms of office
of the mayor and commissioners from two
years to three years.
Running for three city commission seats for
three-year term s are: Jim Hartman, com­
pleting his first two-year term on the board,
and George Kaplan, chairman of the city's
planning and zoning commission, for the group
1 seat; Inez Unvllle, Harry G. Reid, who is
currently on the city’s board of adjustment,
and Ellen Weiss, currently chairman of the
board of adjustment, for the group
Running for three city commission scats for
three-year term s are: Jim Hartman, com­
pleting his first two-year term on the board,
and George Kaplan, chairman of the city's
planning and zoning commission, for the group
1 scat; Inez Linville, Harry G. Reid, who is
currently on the city’s board of adjustment,
and Ellen Weiss, currently chairman of the
board of adjustment, for the group 3 seal
currently held by Trencher; I-eanne Grove of
the planning and zoning board and Gary Hunt,
of the city's code enforcement board, for the
group 5 seat currently held by Torcaso. Hunt
has run unsuccessfully twice before.
The four city polling places are: Prencinet
67, Winter Springs Elementary School; 13,
police and fire station on North Moss Road; 24,
Seventh-day Adventist Church, South Moss
Road and 50 at the Tuscawilln f,re station, on
Northern Way.
In Altamonte Springs, Commissioners l&gt;ee
Constantine and Bob Reis are unopposed, but
their names will be on the city election ballot
anyway in Altamonte Springs precincts for
additional two year terms.
Some 9,160 voters are eligible to cast ballots
In the Altamonte city election.

Candidate

F O U N D E R - THE S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y T A SK
F O R C E ON S E X U A L A B U S E OF
C H IL D R E N
C O F O IJ N O E R - S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y T A SK
F O R C E ON D O M E S T IC V IO L E N C E
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y S H E R IF F ’S D E P A R T M E N T
V IC T IM S E R V IC E S U N IT
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y
PROGRAM

SC H O O L

VO LU NTEER

1976 P R E S ID E N T - S E M IN O L E M U T U A L
C O N C E R T A S S O C IA T IO N

THE ISSUE IS

OUR QUALITY OF LIFE

19B0 P R E S ID E N T - S E M IN O L E Y O U TH
P L A N N IN G C O U N C IL
1979 80

YOUR FAMILY AND MINE, NOW . . .

C H A IR M A N - S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y
M E N T A L H E A L T H C IT IZ E N S ’
A D V IS O R Y C O M M IT T E E

AND FOR THE FUTURE
1980 P R E S ID E N T - P A N K H U R S T
S A L V A T IO N A R M Y OF S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y
A D V IS O R Y B O A R D

LET ME HEAR FROM YOU.
YOU'LL
GET A&gt; RESPONSE.
t

C E R T IF IE D F L O R ID A
O F F IC E R

LAW

ENFORCEM ENT

S T A T E O F F L O R ID A T E A C H E R 'S C E R T IF IC A T E
RANK #2
A D JU N C T IN ST R U C T O R , S E M IN O L E
C O M M U N IT Y C O L L E G E A N D
U N IV E R S IT Y OF C E N T R A L FLA.

REAL EXPERIENCE . . .
THAT COUNTS

S m ith
. ...

HOUSE OF 1IEPRESENTATIVES, DIISTRICT 3S
^

DEM OCRAT

�E ve n in g Herald
(DSPS « 1 3B0 1

300 N. FRENCH AVE., SANFORD, F U . 32771
Area Coiie 3OS-322-2611 or 631-9993
Monday, N o vem ber 1, 1982—-4A
Wayne D Doyle, Publisher
Thomas Giordano. Managing Editor
Robert Lovenbury, Advertising and Circulation Director

Home Delivery: Week, 11.00; Month. $4.25; 6 Months, $24.00;
Y ear, $45.00. By Mail. Week, $1.25; Month, $5.25; 6 Months,
$30.00; Year, $57.00.

Bob Hattaway
For State Senate
Seminole County has had a good friend in
Tallahassee these past eight years. Bob Hat­
taway.
He has always fought hard to bring dollars to his
district for highway improvements, agriculture,
law enforcement, education and a variety of other
important services.
That's a big plus for a growing county and we
don't think Hattaway will be any less concerned
about fighting for what he believes is best for his
district if he’s elected to the state senate Tuesday.
Hattaway is not only a seasoned legislator, but
an able businessman who works diligently at both
tasks.
Hattaway has shown over the past eight years
that he is, indeed, a worthy legislator and should
be permitted to follow that course as a state
senator.

Restoring Lebanon
It is difficult to imagine any form of in­
ternational assistance — relief supplies, recon­
struction aid, and military help — that battered
Lebanon does not urgently require.
But at least the Lebanese can be thankful that
they have a forceful and articulate spokesman in
Amin Gemayel, newly selected as his country’s
president following the assassination of his
younger brother.
Recently, Gemayel has been in Washington and
in Paris pressing his case for economic assistance
and a larger American-French-ltalian
peacekeeping force. Both President Reagan and
French President Francois Mitterrand promised
sympathetic consideration of these requests, but
without offering any specific pledges.
Gemayel and his countrymen also need con­
tinuing diplomatic help, especially from the
United States, in arranging a withdrawal of
Syrian and Israeli troops in addition to the
remnants ot PLO forces stlU In Lebanon. For­
tunately, this help is assured and prospects for a
pullout of all foreign combatants are considered
reasonably gootl, although the actual negotiations
are likely to be difficult.
’Hie Lebanese should also be encouraged by the
growing realization in Washington and other
Western capitals that restoring peace and
security in Lebanon is a key to chances for at­
taining a larger settlement of the Middle East
dispute.

Nobel Awarded
The Nobel Prize for literature has been
awarded to Gabriel Garcia Marquez, 54, a
iixotic novelist from Colombia's jungles, whose
erne is nothing less than the story of Latin
America’s discovery, conquest and rebirth.
••One Hundred Years of Solitude," Garcia
Marquez's masterpiece, parades matriarchs and
colonels through a tropical rain forest. He
unearths villagers’ magical picture of Gypsies
and cuts through political warfare to reveal the
forces that make Latin America culture sprout in
ripeness and rot in corruption beneath the
equatorial sun.
Beneath the cymbals’ clash of joy in Garcia
Marquez’s writing, there runs an underlying
sadness and doom, as reflected by the last words
of his masterpiece; “ Before reaching the final
line, however, he had already understood that he
would never leave that room, for it was foreseen
that the city of mirrors (or mirages) would be
wiped out by the wind—because races condemned
to one hundred years of solitude did not have a
second opportunity on earth.”
Garcia Marquez is the best-selling author now
writing in Spanish. His achievement is in telling
the story or a continent to the world, and all of
Latin America basks in his glory.

S

BERRY'S

...

-Today, I'm going to tell you all you'll need to
know about 'decision analysis.

By DONNA ESTES

Casselberry m ay o ral candidate C harles
Glascock and his daughter. Rose, were Involved
in some excitement last week Involving an a r­
med bandit.
It seems that Glascock went to the Keller
Music Store in Fern Park to pick up Rose, who
works there. Before they could leave, a masked
bandit armed with a .45-caliber automatic pistol
appeared on the scene, sent Glascock and others
in the store to the back room, keeping Rose in the
showroom with him.
Glascock said Rose kept her wits about her,
offered the bandit the money she had In her
purse—$2-and the $20 in mad money she had
secreted away.
Glascock said he was very proud of his
daw^ntcr and was more concerned for her than
himself. A major concern was that someone
"trying to be a hero" would do something out of
line to get the soft-spoken bandit upset. The
bandit left without harming anyone. He wanted
only money.
In quick order, after the excitement was all
over, Glascock made up his mind that he would
run for mayor.
Glascock said he Is concerned that so many
people not only don’t want to run for public of­

working with the police:
—The club has reached 400 homes with 800 to
1,200 people affected.
—More calls have come into the police
department which has meant less crime and
problems in the neighborhood watch program
areas.
—In the past year the crime rate has dropped
by more than half. The most drastic decrease
has been in aggravated assault, breaking and
entering and larceny.
—The club coordinated many fund-raising
projects with other clubs and organizations to
buy a K-9 dog named Magnum. Funds are
currently being raised to send On deg »nd Police
Sgt. Sam Belfiore to training sejiool m
Philadelphia to their K-9 unit.
—They developed a new program where
stickers were made to help police identify cars
which belong to the residents of their area.
The Lake Mary club has sponsored county wide
program s on neighborhood w atch, crim e
prevention and rape awareness.
Miss Hughes noted this is the kind of In­
novative approach without the use of any
government funding that can be instituted on a
local level and have a profound affect.

fice, but also are shying away from even voting.
Barbara A. Hughes, Seminole County ex­
tension agent, home economist and 4-H coor­
dinator, has writter a letter to Gov. Bob Graham
commending the Lake Mary Homemakers Club.
"How does a community of 5,000 people in­
crease public awareness of crime, enlist com­
munity cooperation and cut the crime rate by
more than 50 percent?" she began her letter.
She noted In the letter that by Instituting a
neighborhood watch program, the group of
homemakers used creative thinking and In­
dividual initiative and transformed them into
viable tools to combat Florida's growing crime
problem.
Saying ii,i'farpose of extension homemakers
Is to team the latest information regarding
home, family and community and to extend that
knowledge within the individual dubs and into
the community, Miss Hughes wrote that Andrea
Wise, president of the Lake Mary group, found
out the police In her community wanted to get a
neighborhood watch started.
Mrs. Wise contacted the police to say that her
club wanted to help.
Miss Hughes said as a direct result of the club

JEFFREY HART

EDWARD

Reagan,
Social
Issues
Like the report of Mark Twain’s death,
liberal rejoicing over the failure of assorted
social-issue measures to pass during the
current session of Congress may be distinctly
premature.
The proponents of abortion and racial
busing and opponents of school prayer did
manage to stall action all along the front but
they prevailed only very narrowly, and It is
unlikely that they will enjoy similarly
favorable circumstances In the next session.
In the recent session, the Republican
leadership prevailed upon social con­
servatives to delay introducing the legislation
until very late in the session, on the argument
that budgetary m atters had to come first.
When the social legislation finally was
Introduced, It ran Into pressure for Congress
to adjourn and thus was vulnerable to
filibuster by spokesmen for the opposition,
like Sen. Lowell Welcker of Connecticut.
The disposition of the school prayer issue in
the Senate is worth looking at for what it
foreshadows.
Sen. Jesse Helms, R-N.C., introduced a
measure that would have removed school
prayer from the Jurisdiction of the Supreme
Court. The opponents of Helm's measure,
lacking the votes to defeat It, filibustered.
Supporters fell Just short of the necessary
votes to end debate. In the end, with ad­
journment pressure mounting, the Senate
voted 51 to 48 to Mil the measure tor this
session.
Obviously the school-prayer issue will come
roaring back in the next session and it will
this time be Introduced early-because,
among other reasons, President Reagan
strongly supports it.
Several prominent conservatives voted
against the Helms measure-prlnclpally
Barry Goldwater, John Tower and Gordon
Humphrey—because they were reluctant to
remove the Issue from the Jurisdiction of the
Court.
This Is a defensible position, but, under our
present circumstances, I do not believe it Is
finally correct.
Though the Constitution explicitly gives
Congress the power to remove Issues from the
Court's Jurisdiction, it has In fact done so
relatively rarely. But the point Is that
Congress' reluctance to exercise this power
derives from the earlier historical restraint
used by the Court In exercising Its Jurisdic­
tion.
Today, though the balance of the Court is
shifting, we have for a generation lived under
the sway of an Imperial Court that has greatly
extended its Jurisdiction and discovered
meanings in the Constitution that entirely
escaped the attention of Supreme Court
Justices for the first 150 years of this nation's
existence.

J.WALS

M a rk e t
Bulls A re
Mystery

ROBERT WAGMAN

Races Become Vicious'
There is a fine line between a tough cam­
paign and a vicious one—and several cam­
paigns this year have leaped over that line,
becoming less-than-edllying spectacles.
The tough campaign!, ol which there are
m any, usually are nip-and-tuck battles
featuring candidates who dislike each other
p ersonally. But political professionals
recognize the limits of acceptable campaign
tactics, whose violation results In what they
call a “ vicious campaign."
For example, one of the most-watched
races Is the Senate contest In California
between Gov. Jerry Brown and San Diego
Mayor Pete Wilson. Neither man much likes
the other, and the polls show the contest as
almost dead-even. Recently, both candidates
have stepped up their rhetoric: Wilson
charges that Brown has ruined California as
governor and would do the same to the
country os senator, while Brown calls Wilson
a Reagan clone who would worsen the
economic situation and cost voters their Jobs.
Both sets of claims—regardless of their ac­
c u ra c y -fall within acceptable limits for
campaign rherotlc, and while the race can be
term ed "tough," It is still fair.
In contrast is the free-for-all taking place In
M assachusetts' 4th Congressional District.
R ed istrictin g has p itted eight-term
R epublican congresswoman M argaret
H eckler against a popular first-term
Democratic liberal, Barney Frank. On paper,
the new 4th District should be weighted
toward Mrs. Heckler, since it is heavily
Republican and about 70 percent of its voters
come from her old 10th district. But she hps
not been able to shake Frank, and the polls
show the race as a toss up.

So, in recent days, Mrs. HecMer's cam­
paign has been built around a television spot
that depicts Frank as being soft on violent
rapists and In favor of the spread of por­
nography.
In fact, the charges are a gross distortion of
Frank's positions as a state senator and his
first year on Capitol Hill. As a state legislator,
he sponsored a bill that would allow
Massachusetts communities to restrldively
zone adult-entertainment enterprises, movies
and bookstores Into one small controlled
area—the so-called "combat zone." The
purpose of the bill was not to allow pom to
spread, but to let communities control it, and
the bill was supported by the state’s police
chiefs.
As for the rape issue: Congress voted on a
new criminal code for the District of
Columbia, which contained a provision
reducing the maximum penalty for rape from
life to 20 years. This reduction was Included
because Juries were reluctant to convict on
first-degree rape, and prosecutors were loath
to prosecute, instead accepting pleas of guilty
to leaser crimes. The change had the approval
of women’s organizations In the district.
Then there is the edifying campaign being
waged for Delaware’s lone House scat. The
incumbent is Republican Thomas Evans, and
his Democratic challenger la Thomas Carper,
the state’s treasurer.
Evans was linked to beautiful blonde lob­
byist Paula Parkinson and was charged with
trading his vote on an Insurance bill for
Parkinson's considerable sexual charms. An
FBI investigation cleared him of any
wrongdoing, but the Carper campaign has
kept the topic in the forefront.

The central focus of national attention in
the third quarter of 1982 has been on the
timepiece of American economy — the New
York Stock Exchange. Since mid-August, the
bulls have run the bears out of town.
In the week that ended Aug. 14, the Dow
Jones Industrial Average stood at 780.37. On
Oct. 11, It cracked the psychological 1,000
barrier, and on Oct. 20 reached 1034.12, Ihe
highest close since 1973.
But the irony of the m arket’s boom is nearly
overwhelming. Even as the Dow soared to its
nine-year high, the Commerce Department
announced that the nation's gross national
product grew at an almost Imperceptible rate
of 0.8 percent in the third quarter — after
expanding an adjusted 2.1 percent in the
second. Commerce had confidently predicted
real growth of 1.5 percent for the quarter.
Meanwhile, the unemployment rate stands at
a 42-year high.
The index of leading economic Indicators
declined 0.9 percent in August, after four
consecutive months of gains. Overall cor­
porate earnings were flat in the third quarter,
and will be flat in the fourth.
It Is In the reality of economic decline that
one finds the reason for the stock market
boom. Interest rates have collapsed, with the
prime rate down to 12 percent from 21 percent
In September 1961. At the same time, the
Federal Reserve has loosened the screws on
the money supply, and reduced the discount
rate from 10 percent to 9 4 . Fed Chairman
Paul Volcker says the nation is being
"rewarded" for bringing down inflation.
Yet the good news on Interest rates, and on
inflation, which has been cut in half — Is
announced over the headlines of business
bankruptcies, which continue at a
Depression-level pace. Thus far in 1982,19,724
companies have gone broke, more than any
full year since 1933. Bankrupt companies do
not borrow money, thus demand for credit
declines, and rates go down. So they have.
The good news Is built on the bad.
That leads us, asT.S. Eliot wrote in another
context, to the overwhelming question: What
Is coming? History tells us that the stock
market usually predicts recoveries and
recessions, with an average lead time of four
months from market upturn to recovery. But,
although the m arket began Jumping in
August, there will be no recovery this
December.
Instead, we are forced to recall that the
market failed to predict one significant
economic event — the Crash of October 1929.
Then too, the m arket was built on euphoria,
and stock prices were soaring, even as the
Federal Reserve refused, In February 1929, to
raise the discount rate from 5 to 6 percent to
curb wild speculation. That •‘downturn”
arrived before anyone saw It.

JACK ANDERSON

M o b Is V id e o -G a m e F a k e ry S uspect
WASHINGTON — Counterfeit versions of
the popular video gam es Pac Man, Donkey
Kong and Centipede are popping up in ar*
cades across the nation faster than federal
agents esn gobble them up.
Though no definite link to the Mob has been
established, officials of the Justice Depart­
m ent's Organised Crime Division suspect
th at underworld bosses— long involved in the
vending-machine and jukebox business - are
up to their shoulder holsters In the illicit
business of cloning the ubiquitous quartereaters. Wherever th ere's a fast buck to be
made, the Mob muscles In sooner or later —
and the market in videogam e machines and
cartridges appears to be limitless.
Significantly, It was FBI agents sod at­
torneys from an Organised Crime Task Force
who raided a large New Jersey-baaed
manufacturer and distributor of video games
last July. The G-men lugged off doseos of
marhlnee that bore ^«4M«g resemblances to
the popular Pac Man, Donkey Kong and
Centipede garnet.
No one suggested that Use New Jersey
company, U.S. Amusement, has underworld
tiee. The federal raiders were operating
under a revised federal law that makes
unauthorised copying of video g am ete crime.
The big boys of the videogam e Indutry Atari, Midway and William* Electronics complain that their copyright! have been
infringed.
According to a sworn statement, an FBI

iinilAWmii&amp;P nriant u ie lliu l I f C
undercover
agent visited U.S. Amusements
last January and spoke with a salesman
named David Gorfman.
"P rio r to giving Gorfman $1,200 as a down
payment on six games, Gorfman gave me a
tour of the entire facilities of U.S.
Amusements, Where Illegal video games were
manufactured and stored," the agent’s af­
fidavit stated.
"Gorfman stated that the president of the
Philippines had recently 'expelled' all video
gam es from that country and that U.S.
Amusement wss in possession of a large
num ber of Illegal video games that had been
shipped Into this county from the Philippines
through JFK International (Airport)," the
statem ent continues.
The day after his first visit, the FBI agent
returned end paid Gorfman $4,150 more,
according to the affidavit; he “received two
illegal 'Puck Man' video garnet Infringing on
the 'P a c Man* Copyright, one Illegal
‘Galaxlan1 game end ooe Illegal ^Caterpillar*
video gam e which infringes on the copyright
of the ‘Centipede’ video gam s."
The four machines were examined by the
m akers of Pac Man and Centipede, and they
"determ ined that the gam es unquestionably
infringed on their copyrights."
In February, U J . customs agents opened
two large cartons at JFK Airport. Consigned
to U.S. Amusement from the Philippines, the
cartons contained 44 illegal P ac Man and
Galaxlan circuit boards. As p a rt of the un-

1

I

1

!1

i

»

dercover investigation, the shipment was
turned over to a driver sent by the company.
In March, the FBI agent returned to U.S,
Amusements and bought 10 additional illegal
video gsmes, according to the affidavit; in
July, be bought 30 more counterfeit
machines: six Miss Pac Mans, six King
Gorillas, five Dig Dugs, six Kangaroos, two
Bull Frogs and five h m w
Footnote: U.S. Amusements' attorney,
Barry Siotnlk, told my associate Tony
Capacdo that the FBI man’s affidavit was
"very misleading.” Ha said, "We aQ know
what hype Is." Slotnik also said the com­
pany's games were "absolutely not coun­
terfeit." He added that an engineer checked
out UJL Amusements’ Puck Man game and
pronounced it " a little better play than Pac
M an,"
MUTUAL ADMIRATION SOCIETY: The
bigsbots a t the Nuclear Ragulatory Com­
m ission h av e elevated b u reau cratic
bark acratchlng to a fine art. They ghre each
other cash bonuses for outstanding per­
formance.
Topping the list of 37 senior executive* who
got a total of $311,000 in carii bonuses last
month was William J . Dircks, the agency's
executive director for operations. Dircks,
who, with the NRC chairman, make* the final
decision on bonus babies, approved an $11,081
cash aw ard to himself.
The initial atlection of bonus recipients Is
made by a "Performance Review Board" of

*•

.

®

.

.

14 members. Seven of the panelists were
■warded cash payments: two got $9,500, one
got $8,500 and four got $7,000 apiece.
An agency spokesman insisted that the
awards were all made at arm ’s length.
Dircks’ bonus was recommended by NRC
Chairman Nunzlo J. Pailadino, (or example,
and when individual m em bers'of the per­
formance panel were being considered for the
cash awards, they excused themselves from
passing Judgment.
WATCH ON WASTE: A ‘tem porary fix"
for the Air National Guard will cost the
taxpayers $60 million, while doing little for
the Guard. It Involves the purchases of some
JT-3D Jet engines for Installation on a fleet of
aging KC-133 cargo planes.
There are a number of problems. For one,
to get the used engines, the Pentagon is
buying an entire fleet of used 707 Jets. The
planes’ engines ere 30 y e a n old end only
■lightly more efficient than the ones they’ll be
replacing. They’ll also need major overhauls
to make them safe enough to operate.
Thera’i also a mystery to the $60 million
deal. The Pentagon d k bit went the venerable
engines; It would prefer newer, quieter, safer
end more efficient engines. Members of the
House didn't want them, either.
Sources tell me the reason for the p^ hHt
purchase was to please several senators who
want the Guard to be ready to Qy, and the
House didn't think it wss worth putting up a
fight

�Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Monday, Nov. 1, 1987—SA

Tomorrow, you have the opportunity to
Re-elect a Responsible and Effective
Seminole County Commissioner.
J ,Uf
I- » -H fcV***°»

. *ii
-

4WH

“**-■-*• &gt;**

" 1
- •&lt; /•

*

'll 't't M' ?! »
- II *v» Ml
* l *:

*

'
- : - . •&gt;- " ■ •

Dear Friends,
Four years ago I promised, if elected, that
I would do the following:

• To provide com prehensive m anage­
ment in a business-like manner.

• Bring financial responsibility back to
our County government.

I believe that I have carried out my promises,
and I am asking again for your vote to con­
tinue to give you responsible, decisive and
common sense government.

• Institute budget priorities based on
public safety, public health and necessary
or essential service needs.

Respectfully yours,

• Establish a realistic millage and help
run the County on a business-like basis.
• Initiate an active aggressive program
to assist in bringing new light industry and
business.

.

Bob Sturm

R e -E le c t B o b

SEMINOLE COUNTY COMMISSION • DIST. 2 • REPUBUCAN

HUO FOUTICAL AOWITMCMCWT M IO K N I V CAMFMON T M A M M U

|

�*A— Evening Herald, Sanlord, FI

Voters In Six Counties Will Vote
Tuesday On Penny Tax Issue
MIAMI (UPIl — Voters in six Florida counties decide
Tuesday whether to add an extra penny to the sales tax for
one year to finance more than 8370 million worth of sports
stadiums and arenas, theaters and cultural centers. Few of
the initiatives are expected to pass.
The legislature, acting mostly on the behest of the Dade
County delegation, voted last spring to allow certain
counties to tack an extra cent to the 5 percent sales tax
during 1983 only to finance capital improvements.
Commissions in Dade, Orange, Hillsborough, Broward,
Palm Beach and DeSoto Counties bit on the opportunity to
collect the extra money. Although Gov. Bob Graham says
he supports the initiatives, observers in most of the counties
say it has been an uphill struggle to win favor for the
proposals.
Arguments in favor of the proposals are that they repre­
sent a once-in-a-llfetime opportunity to improve the com­
munity, boost tourism and produce long-range revenue.
Arguments against the initiatives are that in a slumping
economy when people are suffering, priorities are being
badly misplaced by people trying to spend all that money on
sports and other entertainment.
The biggest proposal by far is one for 1134 million in Dade
County to finance a 75,000-seat sports stadium on the
Orange Bowl site, a 16,000-seat sports arena, a performing
arts center and improvements at the Miami Beach
Convention Center.

Supporters hid a news conference featuring local sports
coaches last week, but denied they were worried.
"We are not on our knees making a last gasp effort to
sports fans," said Rick Horrow, executive director of the
Dade County Sports Authority. "But this has been a
political issue for too long because it has been covered in a
political way.
"It's about time people realize it’s a sports issue too,"
Horrow said.
There have been no public polls Issued on the proposal’s
chances, but informs! call-in surveys in the Miami area
have Indicated strong opposition.
The issue also is sports oriented in Orange County, but in
the remainder of the counties, it 1b mostly cultural centers
that are at stake.
Voters in the Orlando area are being asked for an extra
penny sales tax to finance a 830 million downtown Orlando
arena and 11 other sports, cultural and recreational pro­
jects. Two of the projects are expansion of the Tangerine
Bowl and the Orange County Convention and Civic Center.
The tax is projected to raise 855J million. It has been
dubbed the "Penny for Progress."
"It is important that people decide for the Penny for
Progress," said Graham during a campaign stop in
Orlando this week. “ I'm going to vote for it in Dade County
because we need in this state to be looking for our op­
portunities."

45%

Monday, Nov, 1.

F lo rid a T u rn o u t E x p e c te d

TALLAHASSEE fU PI) - With most
major elections considered runaways,
another low turnout is expected in
Tuesday's general election.
Secretary of State George Firestone,
who oversees the state Division of
Elections, predicted a 45 percent turnout
of registered voters, which would be the
lowest for a general election in two
decades.
Turnouts during this year’s primaries
set 20-year records for apathy. There was
a 30.2 percent turnout for the Sept. 7
election and an 18.5 percent turnout for
the Oct. 5 runoff.
Tuesday’s balloting will elect a U.S.
senator, 19 congressmen, a governor, a
new state cabinet and an entire

legislature.
Polls showed incumbent Democrat
Lawton Chiles comfortably ahead of
challenger Van Poole In the US. Senate
race.
Gov. Bob Graham also appeared
headed for an easy victory over Skip
Bafalis.
B afalis. a Fort M yers Beach
Republican, had been talked into leaving
his safe congressional seat by top
Republican leaders, Including President
Reagan, for the challenge to Graham.
However, when Bafalis' campaign failed
to catch fire quickly, many of these same
GOP leaders abandoned him.
Graham, nevertheless, campaigned
h ard and expensively, apparently

seeking an overwhelming victory to
wave as a m andate before the
legislature and possibly to use as a base
for further political ambitions.
Only two of the six state Cabinet
members drew general election op­
position with both challengers little
known and considered longshots.
Firestone faces Rep. Jim Smith, RClearwater, and Agriculture Com­
missioner Doyle Conner is being chal­
lenged by B arbara Lindsey, a Stuart
resident.
Smith fared better than expected in
some pre-election polls, possibly because
of citizen confusion over him and his
namesake, Attorney General Jim Smith.

Elected Officials' Salaries Are Listed
Seminole County voters will go to the polls Tuesday to help
elect a governor, lieutenant governor, two Cabinet members, a
US. Senator, a congressman, three members of the state
House of Representatives, three state senators and a circuit
judge.
Seminole Countians will elect a county commissioner and a
school board member.
But what are the annual salaries of these offices?
U.S. senators and congressmen are paid 860,662.50 annually.
The governor of Florida receives 869,550 while the lieutenant

governor is paid 860,445.
Members of the Florida Cabinet are paid 859,385.
Florida Senate and House members are paid 812,000 an­
nually.
The salary' of circuit judges is 856,710 a year.
Salaries of county commissioners and Board of Education
members are set by state law according to population.
Seminole County commissioners' salaries were raised from
823,059 to 825,203 on Oct. 1. Seminole school board salaries went
from (12,077 to 813,016, also on Oct. 1.

WORLD
IN BRIEF
Gemayel Wants Arab Help
In The Search For Peace
United Press International
I^bancse President Amin Gemayel turned to Arab
states for aid in bringing peace to his war-devastated
nation on a trip today to Morocco, amid fears of new
violence between Syrian and Israeli forces in the
eastern Bekaa Valley.
In Jerusalem, the Israeli commission investigating
the Sept. 16-18 massacre of Palestinian civilians in two
Beirut refugee camps today called the first nonIsraelis to testify — two doctors and a nurse who
witnessed the slaughter.
Syria fired two Soviet-built SAM missiles at Israeli
reconnaissance jets Sunday over the Bekaa, the Israeli
arm y said. The attack failed but Israel called it a
"serious" violation of the Icbanese cease-fire.
The incident raised fears of an Israeli retaliatory
strike before U.S. envoy Morris Draper could arrange
a withdrawal of some 70,000 Israeli, 30,000 Syrian and
10,000 Palestinian fighters squared off In the volatile
eastern Bekaa.

ST A T E R E P R E SE N T A T IV E
D IST R IC T 3 4
D EM O C R A T
Troy has been tested by
10 years of public service.

P o p e V is itin g S p o ln

L o c a l a n d s t a t e le a d e r s h a v e

AVII.A, Spain (UP1) - Thousands of cheering
Spaniards greeted Pope John Paul II today at the
ancient wHlled city of Avila where the pontiff came to
honor the two best known saints of the overwhelmingly
Roman Catholic nation.
John Paul, 62, set the tone of his visit Sunday by
telling King Juan Carlos in an arrival ceremony at
Madrid airport that his tour was “ strictly religious"
and "above any political motives."
But he could not help mentioning the tense climate in
a nut Ion where rightist officers staged an unsuccessful
coup 20 months ago and were caught plotting another
before last week's balloting that elected Socialist
Felipe Gonzalez.

praised Troy for the fairness
of his leadership. He has
proven that he will represent
M t h e people of District 34 —
not just the chosen few.

W o r ld 's
O n

F a ir

E n d s

C h a m p a g n e

T o a s t

KNOXVIUJU (U P I)-T he 1982 World’s Fair ended its sixmonth run with 1,127,786 visitors and its organizers celebrated
with a sparkle of fireworks and a champagne toast to the
"scruffy little city" that hosted It.
The fair ended Sunday in the black, causing officials to
declare it a financial success.
‘ These mountain folks should be proud because we have
been able to do what most people said we couldn't do — to have
a successful World's F air," Jake Butcher, the millionaire
Knoxville banker who helped arrange federal financing, said
at a final ceremony Sunday night.
" I ’d like to take a couple of (champagne) bottles and pour
them over the heads of the people who said we couldn't do It,"
Butcher said.
Fair officials had hoped to attract 11 million people and were
127,766 over that figure, exceeding the totals of the 1975 fair in
Spokane, Wash., and the 1962 exposition in Seattle.
Promoters made the last payment on loans for the 811.5
million extravaganza three weeks ago and fair president S.H.
"Bo” Roberts said the event will end up with a profit, although
he declined to say how big. It may be several weeks before a
final figure is available.
The fair opened May 1 with a visit from President Reagan
and for the closing day some 65,670 tourists turned out for a last
pe:k at exhibits from 22 nations and many of them flocked to
souvenir shops for special closeout sales of Items that would be
obsolete today.
"The scruffy little city did it," said Ed Keen, a fair vice
president, referring to early criticism about the prospects of a
small college town in the Great Smokey Mountains Maging a
successful World's Fair.
Butcher used his ties with Tennessee Sens. Howard Baker
and Jim Sasser, President Jim m y C arter and his former
budget director, Bert Lance, to obtain 844 million in federal
grants and loans to erect several structures.
The going was rough for the fair In the beginning. Citizens
were refused a referendum and were upset. Loans were hard
to come by, corporations were hard to attract and the fair
nearly went broke.
As m any as several hundred residents of Knoxville were
evicted from their apartments so the dwellings could be rented
out to tourists by greedy landlords. U nes were sometimes long
to energy-themed exhibits that were called boring by some.
Thousands of tourlstJ lost money through the fair's lodging
system, which has sparked numerous lawsuits that will take
months to settle.
Left hanging as the World's Fair ends is the fate of the 00.1
million UJi. Pavilion, a six-story permanent structure that the
government has no use for. City officials say it may have to be
torn down.

-***Swm m

A £ead&amp;i Elected By Leadrn

A Man of integrity with a
proven Record of conservative
Leadership.. .Best Qualified
to serve District 34

�Evening H erald, Sanlord, FI,

M onday, Nov. I, 1982—7A

J O H N

A -18

The Orlando Sentinel. Friday, October 29. 1982

TODAY, M onday, October 18,1982

10A

The Orlando Sentinel

Editorials

(USPS 411 1 K I

FOUNDED 1878

"Congn'ss shall make no Ian respecting an establishment of religion, or prohib­
iting the tree exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the
press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the govern­
ment lorn redress of grievances."
—First Amendment to the L 5. Constitution

Vince Spezzano
Ptibhifitf

Buddy Baker

GJ3 N ORANGE AVENUE, UHLAN DO, FI.A 32801
.105 420 5000
HAROLD H UFVENDAHL.
f’rmdrnt and Publisher

Nick White

iMCvlivi l*t«r

JOSEPH D CANTRELL.
Z iK U livr Vic. Pr,-iid.nl and tirm-ral Manager

CtfiUnot i

C DAVID BUHGIN. Edilor

J o h n V o g t d e serves
a n o th e r te rm in S e n a te
Two years ago, state Sen. John
Vogt of Cocoa Beach was re-elect­
ed to a new four-year term. But
he is back seeking re-election
already because of legislative redistricting and a state Supreme
Court ruling which ltook away
half the terms of half the senators.
The shorter term was neces­
sitated by the fact that the territo­
ry represented by the members of
the Senate had been changed con­
siderably. Senate District 17, rep­
resented by Vogt, no longer
includes all of Brevard, only the
northern half.
We believe Vogt’s record over
the past 10 years makes him the
clear choice for Senate District 17
over Republican Jason Steele, a
freshman member of the House of
Representatives,
Steele, a Rockledge resident
and real estate broker, decided to
challenge his fellow Brevard dele­
gation member for the Senate
seat after his own House district
was drastically changed in the
redistricting plan. (That district's
nopulation base is now in Semi­
nole.)
Steele’s performance as a
member of the House has been no
better than average for a fresh­
man. By contrast, Vogt has shown
himself to be effective in getting
significant bills passed. Not only
has he been recognized for his
service by awards from outside
groups, he is in a position to play a

E ve n in g H erald

STEPHEN R. VAUGHN, E w u iiv . Edilor
L JOHN HAtLE JH , Auocial. Editor
W IL L IA M H D U N N . Manaam 0 Editor
J. R A N D O L P H M U R R AY. N t w t Editor

Drpuly Managing Editor%
JAMES P TONER
CECILY VANDERVOORT
W RICHARD VICTORY
JULIA C. WILSON

F o r th e F lo r id a S e n a te

D is t r ic t

17

(Parts of Seminole, Brevard, Orange and Osceola)
ohn Vogt has served 10 years in the
Florida Senate, and he haB served
his constituents well.

John Vogt
leadership role in the Senate in
the next two years. He is all but
assured a key committee slot in
the appropriations process.
Vogt’s expertise as an engi­
neer is an important plus to have
in the Legislature.
As a newcomer and member
of the minority party, Steele
would have little, if any, clout in
the Senate.
P h ilo so p h ica lly , Steel*? is.
somewhat more conservative than
Vogt, but the incumbent's more
moderate position seems to fit the
Space Coast well.
We strongly support the reelection of state Sen. John Vogt.

II

Roberl Lovenbury, Advertising and Circulation Director

Home Delivery: Week, *1.00, Month, M 25, 6 Months, |2 t 00;
Year, W5.Q0. By Mall: Week, 11.25; Month, |5 25; 8 Months,
130.00; Year. 157.00.

V o g t To T a lla h a s s e e
Seminole County has been fortunate in having
State Sen. John Vogt represent us in Tallahassee
since 1972.
Iliat's because Sen. Vogt is a highly-motivated
human being who worked his way through college
and applies the same energies to a responsible
performance in the best interests of Florida
residents.
Sen. Vogt has demonstrated his leadership in
Tallahassee in such key issues as environment,
die reorganization of government and health
care.
He is a strong traditionalist, emphasizing the
strength of family and moral values and appears
committed to representing his District 17 con­
stituency diligently.
Sen Vogt is a peoplwjricnted legislator who has
been recognized by a large number of civic
organizations for having applied himself to their
causes.
He also supports strong legislation to deal ef­
fectively with the growing problem of crime in our
state and is working toward even stiffer penalties
for drug trafficking.
Sen. Vogt was first elected in 1972 to a four-year
term as state senator, re-elected in 1976 and again
in 1980.
Redistricting and a Supreme Court mandate that
all state senators seek re-election in 1982 has
brought John Vogt before the voters again. We
recoi .nend the voters send him right back to
Tallahassee for another four years on Nov. 2.

.

We recommend Sen. John Vogt for a
fourth term in the Florida senate.

Wayne D Doyle, Publisher
Thomas Giordano, Managing Editor

' '

DEMOCRAT

Mr. Vogt's record Is one of steady con­
servatism. By contrast, we believe Mr.
Steele's proposals are uneven and, in
some cases, unwise.

T uesday, October 28, 1982—4A

‘*
, ";
V -* - j

Pol. Adv. paid for by C am paign Treasurer Bon Bray

DISTRICT T7

The Cocoa Beach Democrat has been a
low-key legislator in a district that mean­
ders into four Central Florida counties.
During those 10 years he has won awards
from business groups, educators and envi­
ronmentalists. For the last five years, he
has served as chairman of the Senate Nat­
ural Resources Committee.
In the last legislative session, Mr. Vogt
voted for a sales tax increase to help Flor­
ida meet its critical needs In transporta­
tion, education and law enforcement. In
the wake of the Harbour Cay condomin­
ium collapse, he pushed legislation to
clean up statewide building practices. It Is
a solid record of recognizing Florida’s
needs and doing something about them.
His opponent, Rep. Jason Steele of
Indialantlc, is an articulate first-term leg­
islator. He has campaigned as a hard-core
conservative who wants an elected state
Public Service Commission, more Ameri­
canism In public schools and, perhaps, s
state textbook revlsw board to protect
students from profanity. He has suggested
a atate lottery as a woy to meet Florida's
revenue neede.

300 N. FRENCH AVE„ SANFORD, FI A J2771
Area Code 305-322-2611 or 831-9993

�SPORTS

I A— Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Monday, Nov. I, lts i

L a m e D u c k K u h n D e p a rtu re S et In C o n c re te

Will Rats Flee
Sinking Ship?
Rumors were flying ill week that If
Seminole High lost to Lake Brantley
Friday In football, there would be six
or seven players turning in their
Jerseys.
Well, the ‘Notes dropped a tough 1S&gt;
H decision to the Patriots, now it
remains to be seen how many rats flee
the sinking ship. Seminole, 0-7 for the
season, has three games to play. After
last year’s championship (district and
Five Star Conference) year, a season
of this nature would be the last thing
expected despite the loss of IB star­
ters.
But an 0-7 season it has been. The
Tribe lost two close ones (Titusville
Astronaut and Lake Howell) to open
the season and then were blown out a
couple of tim es before turning in good
performances against Apopka and
Brantley.
Leadership has been a problem all
year. The quarterbacks are Juniors
and inexperienced. You can't really
expect them to assume control of a
team in th eir first varsity season.
Defensively, Just about everybody
with any le a d e rsh ip capabilities
graduated.
As the losses began to pile up, there
had to be certain morale problems.
Some people felt the Lake Brantley
game was Seminole’s last chance to
win a football ganva this year.
This week, the Tribe travels to
Lyman, 3-1 and eyeing a Five Star
Conference championship. The week
after, Seminole hosts Mainland, 4-2
with a shot at the title. The week after,
Sanford goes to Daytona Beach to
dose the season against Spruce
Creek.
All three team s are probably better
than Seminole. But is that any reason
to quit? Of course not. Sometimes as
much satisfaction can be derived
from being the spoiler in a conference
race than finishing near the top.
If any player walks away from this
Seminole team , he is Just confirming
what people think about him anyway.
He's a loser. And a quitter. This Is one
time in these young players lives
where it tak es more courage to lose
than to win.
The decision, as usual, remains with
the individual. Are you a ra t escaping
a sinking ship? Or, are you a member
of a losing team that must learn to
handle adversity and someone with
th ree o p p o rtu n ities to salvage
something of a painful season.
Opportunity number one knocks
Friday a t Lyman.
As if there hasn’t been enough rain
this year, Lake Brantley's sprinkler
system let go with a shower during the
second q u a r te r of the Patriot*
Seminoles gam e, causing a 15-minute
delay.
After th e deluge, the Patriots ran a
play Into the water-logged area and
tailback Allen Armstrong slipped on
the wet turf.

CHICAGO (UPI) - Bowie Kuhn is ail
done as baseball commissioner.
He’s out, finished, term inated.
That's “set In concrete," in the words
of one of the men who Is voting notto re­
elect him here today. There are at least
five others. More than enough to make up
an effective firing squad.
But hold on a second. Bowie Kuhn
lives!
They shoot him, yet miraculously he
survives. He's dismissed, but declines to
leave. He’s heartened and encouraged
that so many of his supporters have
discovered a way he can stay.
For at least another nine months until
his contract runs out in August. True, he
may be only a "lam e duck" commis­
sioner all that time, but th at's better than
going back to private law practice, Isn't
It?
The fact Is that even when his op­
ponents officially discharge Kuhn on
Monday, there is no way they can force

him out of office. Not bodily, anyway.
in essence, he can re-elect himself —
temporarily anyway — by choosing to
stay in office despite any vote against
him. The only way he can possibly be
forced out is by a vote of baseball’s
executive*vouncif and members of that
group have said they have no intention of
ousting him.
Nor does Kuhn show any sign of
leaving.
"How ironic," remarked one baseball
man whom I've always found to be ob­
jective. "H ere's Bowie Kuhn, a devout
believer th at baseball is more important
than any one individual now about to put
himself ahead of the game. He can
rationalize this situation as much as he
wishes, but he’s perfectly aware of the
ground rules and agreed to uphold them
when he became commissioner — as a
compromise candidate, mind you — It
years ago.
"He will be voted out according to all

Burgess Claims
100-Back Title
By CHRIS FISTER
Herald Sports W riter
While Seminole High sophomore Chuck
Burgess was leaving his m ark on the
Five Star Conference for the years to
come, the Lake Howell girls were
establishing themselves as the con­
ference's perennial powerhouse in the
F ive S tar Conference Swimming
Championships this past weekend at
Lyman High.
Burgess, who was Seminole's brightest
spot of the day, churned to a first place in
the 100 backstroke with a time of 1:00.03
and he took a third place in the 100 fly
with a 59.36. Burgess' tim e in the 100 back
breaks the old school record of 1:01.
The Tribe's boys team finished in
seventh place out of nine team s with
Daytona Beach Mainland (289) edging
Lyman (267) for the conference title.
The Seminole girls team finished In
sixth place with 8) points. The top
finishers for the Lady Seminoles were
liaa Polgir, a senior swimming in her
t u t conference meet, who finished sixth
in both the 100 and 200 free out of 25
competitors. The Tribe’s Dana Ray was
seventh In the 50 free. The 200 medley
relay team of Susan Mann, Bridget
Deere, Polgar and Ray finished fourth.
The Seminole boys and girls team
made up a match against Daytona Beach
Seabreeze that was postponed earlier in
the season. The Tribe cam e out on top In
boys t.i'i girls by comparing overall
score:, in the conference meet.
The Lake Howell girls, behind a
dynamic team performance of Karen
Acre breezed to the conference crowd
with 302 points and the followers were
Mainland (208), Lyman (204) and Spruce
Creek (101).
Karen Acre recorded a first place
finish in the 200 free with a time of
1:57.06, nearly 10 seconds ahead of rival
swimmer Jennifer Gage of Lyman who
finished at 2:06.25. A 55.01 In the 100 free
gave Acre here second first place finish
of the day. Diana O'Brien finished third
in the 100 free at 1:00.42.
In the diving championships, which
were held on Friday and the swimming
events on Saturday, Lake Howell’s Linda
Murdrick posted a first place finish and
Shannon Tschleder of Lyman was third.
The la d y Silver Hawks also got first
place finishes from Suzanne Wolfram
(1:11.11 in the 100 backstroke) and
Debbie McDyer (1:15.80 in the 100
breastroke).
McDyer w u second in third in the 50
free st 29.88 snd team m ate O’Brien was

generally has been maintained and how
the basic integrity of the game has been
preserved.
On the other side, there are owners who
strongly feel Kuhn has been delinquent in
his responsibility for the business aspects
of the game.
UPI Sports Editor
"W e'v e been called ‘tr a ito r s ,’
‘terrorists’ and God knows what else
the rules. More than likely, he will choose simply because we have an opposite
to stay on even though he'll be unable to viewpoint from his supporters," says one
function without any real effectiveness. member of the anti-Kuhn group. "1
With that kind o! situation, baseball thought we're in a democratic society. Is
would be in such sad shape that Bowie there suddenly no place for dissident
Kuhn could become the force to rip the voiced?"
Thole voices will be heard today when
game apart."
Naturally, Kuhn supporters don’t see it the National League and American
League hold their separate meetings
that way.
They talk about how much the game before going into Joint session.
has flourished under his stewardship,
Four National League votes against
how attendance has skyrocketed from 23 Kuhn are all it will take to keep his
to 43 million, how franchises are more contract from being renewed and as of
stab le despite b a se b a ll's manifold this moment, there are six known votes
problem s, how com petitive balance against him.

Milton

Richman

&gt; 1/,

Sw im m ing
second, 28.70. Clndl Friedman was
second in the 100 back behind Wolfram
with a tim e of 1:13.27. Nine Asplnwall
recorded a third place finish In the 100 fly
at 1:01.82 and Lyman’s Gage was second
with a tim e of 1:01.19.
The Hawks won both of the relays, the
200 medley relay with a time of 2:03.19
and the 400 free relay to close out the
meet with a time of 3:49.48.
Individually In the boys meet, Lyman’s
Randy Hebert, had two first places (200
and 500 free) as did the Greyhounds'
Greg Thayer (100 fly and 200 in­
termediate).

AT LYM AN HIGH
GIRLS
Team — 1 Lake Howell 307, I Daytona
Beach M ainland 70S. 1. Longwood Lym an 104.
4 Port O range Sprue* Creek 101, S. D r Land
H i * Seminole I t ; I . Altam ont* Spring* Leke
Brantley 77. 0 Daytona Beach 5eabreele SS; 9
Apopka
4)
Individual — 100 medley relay: t Lake
Howell 1 0 ) 1 9 , 1 Lyman 1 04 70. 3 Lake
Brantley 7 IS I I ; IM free: 1 Acre (L H I
I 57 00. 1 Gage IL y m l 2:04 15; 3 S tiltner
(M ain) 1 1)21. 100 IM :
I Klayer (M a m l
1 16 91. 2 Cook IL y m l 2 16 84. ) Knoaon ( L B I
7 37 7V. so I r t t : I Roland (Main) 16 14: 7
O'Brien (L H ) 14 70, ). McDyer (LH ) 76 11.
Diving: I M ud rick (L td , 1 Wyatt (M a in ); 3
Tschiedcr (L y m ). 100 fly: I. Klayer (M a in )
I 00 07. 1 Gaqe (L y m l I 01 19. 3 Aspinwall
(LHI I 01 67 too tree: 1 Acre (LH I SS 01; 7
Roland (M a in ) 57 41. 1 O’ Brien (LH I I 00 42,
100 tree: 1. Cascioli (Sea) 5 57.80. 2. L a rk
(LH) 5 59 44, 3 W ngtil (LH) 6 04 97, 100 back:
I W olfram (L H I I I I II; 2 Friedman (L H )
I 1)77. 3
Brusnatian (SC) 1:17.38; 100
breaststroke: I McDyer (LH I I IS 80. 7. Cook
(Lym ) I 16 SS. 1 McLeod (Lym ) 1:16 33 , 400
free re la y: I Lake How*U3:4» 48; 7 M ainland
3 55 37, 3 Lym an 4 27 II
BOVS
Team — I Daytona Beach Mainland 789 , 2
Lyman 247; 3 DeLand 158. 4 Pori Orange
Spruce Creek 138; S Lake Howell 125. 6
Apopka 47. 7. Seminole 38. 8 Lake Brantley
and Seabreete 31
in d ivid u a l — I N medley relay: I. D e l and
1 49 06. 2 M ainland I 49 25. ) Lyman 1 49 13;
700 tree: I Hebert (L y m l 1:54 10. 2. Niklasson
(Lym ) I 5611; 3 N eutil 10) I S«04. TOO IM : I
Thayer (L y m ) 2 06 05 , 2. Hammond (Sea)
2 11 97. 3 M N eutil (D1 2 15 71. SO Irea : I
Maher (M am ) 72 64, 2 McClelland (L y m )
7)32. 3. F ields IL y m l 23 05. D (vin |: 1 Daley
(L H ) 2 C lark (M a in ); 3 Sweeney (M a in ). 100
lly : 1. T hayer (L ym ) 54 45; 2 Anderson (A)
59 11 ) Burgess (Semi 59 39. 100 Irea :
I.
Maher (M a in l 50 24. 2. Fields (Lym ) 52 90 . 3.
Niklasson (L y m ) 53 31. 500 free: I. Hebert
(Lym ) 5 00 62. 2 M ettdorl (Lym ) 5:20.67 ; 3
Porter (M ain) 5 43 76. 100 k ic k : 1 Burgess
(Sem) 1 00 03 . 2 Haslrider (O l 1.0178; 3
Walter (SCI 1 03 59. 100 breastroke:
1.
Whiting (M a m ); 1:07.50 ; 2 McClellan (L y m )
1 00 01.3 E llis (L h ) 1:09 37 , 400 Iree re la y ; 1
L ym a n ] 34 44 ; 2 DeL.jnd 3 35 09. 2. M ainland
3:43 79

Herald Photos by Tom Vincent

Uxa Polgar. Seminole senior, is all smlgs after
helping the Tribe girls to a fourth place finish in
the 200 medley relay al ilie Five Slar Cotference

Swim championships Saturday at Lyman. Lake
Howell’s girls and Mainland’s boys were (he team
titlists.

Trinity Prep Boys Win Ow n Invitational
Trinity Prep’s boys' cross country
team made the first Saints Invitational
one to remember Saturday, upsetting
pre-meet favorite Lake Mary, 35-60.
"We hadn't beaten them all year," said
veteran Trinity coach George Austin.
"So it came as quite a surprise."
The individual winner — Lake Mary’s
Derek Tangeman —was no surprise. The
talented junior cruised the three-mile
course In 15:35 , 35 seconds better than
la k e Highland P rep 's Scott Olvey.
Tommy Matthews led the Saints' en­
tourage with a tim e of 16:18 for third
place. Scott Urrichio (fifth, 16:49),
Brandon Peten (seventh, 17:17), David
Green (ninth, 17:33), Jam ie Vlerllng
(19th, 17:38) and eighth-grader Mike
Golwyn (18th, 18:07) followed sophomore
Matthew's trail.
Green, incidentally, did double duty in
Trinity Prep's Homecoming weekend.
He kicked a 42-yard field goal Saturday
afternoon as the Saints walloped St.
Edwards of Vero Beach, 44-0, In football.
In the girls’ two mile, Trinity freshman
Adrienne Polltowicz equalled her
season's best — 12:06 — to win the race
by 33 seconds, but Daytona Beach Father
Lopez took the championship, 34-53, over
runnenip lake Mary.

C ro ss Country
U k e Mary's Kim Averili ran fifth with
a tim e o! 12:43 while eighth-grader Katie
Sames or Trinity turned In her best effort
of the year (12:48) for seventh place.
In th» Orange Belt C onference
champlcnshlps at Oviedo, Bishop Moore
claimed both titles as Matt Pasha won
the boys individual crown and liz Lewis
took the girls for the Hornets.
M arty P h illips' sixth-place finish
helped Ue Lions' boys to a third-place
finish. Hi ran the three miles in 16:26. —
- 8 AM COOK
T rin ity P rtp Invitational
Bay*
Team ; I. T rin ity Prep 35, Lake M ary 60. 3.
Orlando Lvther 16. 4 Orlando Lake Highland
10], 5 M onlverdo 104, 6 7Aelbourne Central
Catholic 175; 7. Mount Dora Bible NTS
In d iv id u a l: 1 Derek Tangeman (L M ) 15 35,
7 O lvey (LH I 16 10. 3 Strong (L H I 16:17; 4
M athew* (1P I 16. IS. 5 Urrichio (TP) 14 49; 6
Blythe (LM ) 17 06, 7. Peter* (TP) 17.17; I
Schell (L M ) 11.28) 9. Orem (TP) 17 33; 10
Verling (TP) 17 38
Girls
Team : I Daytona Beach Father Lopct 34. 7
Lake M a ry 53. 3 T rinity Prep 91. 4 Mount
Dora B ible I I I . 5 Lakeland Christian 112. 4.
Orlando Luther 167; 7. Monlverde 221. I
Clearwater Central Catholic NTS

Individual' t, P o tilo w in I t PI 12.05; 7
Began (FL) 12 38. 1 Eardley ( FL I 17 33. 4
ScruggSlMOBI 17 36. 5 A v e rill(L M ) 12 43 6
Sam* I TPI 12 48 7 Mustek ILC t 17 55 8
Stat'd I F LI 1 )00. 9 Stone (LM ) 13 Ot. 10
Bouchard (F L ) 13,15.
Orange Belt
Conlertnce Championships
A t Oviedo
G irl*
Team: I Bishop Moore 23. 7 St. Cloud 48 3
Osceola 75, 4 Oviedo 100
Individuals: I L i i Lewis IB M ) U 24, 7
Cmdy GoethalS IB M ) 1 )0 4 .3 OlanaSwancgll
lOsc) 13 09. 4 Joycelyn Woods (SCI 13 18. 5
Laura Schmidt IB M ) 13 73. 6 Jamie L ittre ll
IBM ! 13 24. 7 Audrey Boykin ISC) 13 39
Boys
Team: I Bishop Moore 22. 7 Osceola 49. 1
Oviedo 70, 4 SI Cloud 80
Individuals: I M a lt Pasha IBM ) 15: 19. j
Rick Shreve IB M ! IS 43. 3 R.chard McKenna
IBM ) IS 44; 4 John Charlton (Osc) IS 59, 5
DanCashinlBM ) 16 OS; 6 M a rly Pmilips IOv&gt;
14 26, 7 James Lay (SC) 16 29
Lake M a ry Finish#*:
IV a rn ty girls) 12 Shannon Weger, 1) 26.13
Andrea Beardslee, 13 42. 14 Maureen Friel,
I) 43, 20 Serah Karen, 13:55
I Junior varsity g irls ) Team score. 64. second
place, t M ichelle M a rtin ,
14: ) 6, t. Fran
Gordon. 14:47, 14. C h r iu y M arshall, 15 IS, 15
Cheryl Canday. IS 34, 72 K im Waqer, 16 0)
(Varsity boys) 22 Jim Lavigne. 18 13, 22
M atl Palumbo. 11:19, 24. Kit Johnson. 18 72
(Junior varsity boys) Team score, 78, first
place. I. John A m rheln, 1B.1 t, 2 . Ivan Carbla,
18 21, 3. Tim K o rn e ckl, 11:33. 6 Pat Murphy,
11:27. 16. Tony Basquets, 21 01

Sutton Withstands Heat,

Lake B rantley, 14, hosts Lake Mary
Friday in w hat should be an In­
te re stin g m a tc h u p . The R am s’
defense h a s been tough despite
spending m oat of the game on the field
due to a non-productive offense.

Cops Disney Golf Crown

Andy Raardln, Incidentally, has aD
four of U k e Brantley's touchdowns
this year. The M , Utpound senior
started the aaaaon aa a Unebecker hot
moved over to offenee when the
Patriots’ naming game was floun­
dering.
Some of U ko Mary's Juniors played
at Lake Brantley aa frashmsn. This
will be the first dunce for extiammatea to go at It on the playing
field. Which, always makas it InCoach Jack Blanton's Oviedo Lions
taka a big Map toward doafag the
aaaon w th sii straight victoria with
n comwfom-behind 14-7 win orw
Oeceaie Friday on two touchdowne by
Berry Wflilama.
The lions, 44, take on Groveland
Friday befora finishing ap with
Bishop Mono and (hoes Beach.
— 1AMCOO*

Baseball Is in a restructuring process.
Part of that process calls for a
businessman coming in, possibly as chief
operating officer. Such an addition now is
referred to as COOBA - chief operating
officer of business affairs.
One of the compromises offered in an
effort to settle the problem over Kuhn
was establishing a chain of command
whereby Kuhn would work with, and he
answerable to, such a businessman. But
Kuhn feels this would amount to his
surrendering authority.
Last Monday, efforts were made all
day long to get him to agree to such a
proposal but he turned down all the
compromises that were suggested.
Ultimately, tfiough, 1 think Kuhn will
for two reasons. First, because 1 believe
he has the well-being of the game
primarily at heart, and second, because
it can get rather uncomfortable con­
stantly fighting some people you know
don’t really want you around.

DOG
MESSENGER

There w u m ore than one b e m u ie d look from the R ock Lake Raiders
when this four-legged m essen ger brought the next play into the
huddle. After his arrival, the dog w as returned to the sid elines. See
W ednesday’s Evening Herald on how the play turned out and catch
all of the Sem inole Youth Sports A ssociation football resu lts.

LAKE BUENA VISTA (UPI) - Most
rookie golfers spend their freshmen year
on the PGA Tour trying to make the cut
every week, but not Hal Sutton.
The 34-year-old Sutton, who looks Uke
the perfect golfer, set his sights on
winning — not surviving.
Watting until the lari tournament on
the Tour, he accomplished th a t goal
Sunday by capturing tin &gt;400,000 Walt
Diwiey World GoU Clastic In a suddendeath playoff with Bill Britton.
" I c an 't tell you how I feel — it’s a
dream come true," said the boyishlooking Sutton, who clinched the victory
by sinking a 15-foot birdie on the par-5
fourth bole of the 7,lMkyard Mogmsijy
c o u n t. " I ’m Just hippy to say I was sble
to accomplish tt.
"T his is the biggest thrill of m y life. It
has been a long time coming."
Sutton, who entered the final day of
play five strokes beck, cardsd a fourthround, 4-under 67 to end regulation play.
Britton, whose best finish in bis three
y e a n on the Tour was a tie for
finished his final rotsid at fe n d e r 6 i

ProJOoJf
Sutton, the son of a wealthy ol) tycoon
took home &gt;73,000 for first prise, makini
him the No. 11 money winner on the Ton
(or IM at H37.4M. Britton won RL 300 m
nmnerup, nearly &gt;4,000 more than hi
made all lari y ear playing professiona
golf.
Sutton, a three-tim e runnerup on lh
Tour this year, said he was determine
"to shoot a good score today nc matte
what anyone did.
" I w u tired of finishing second,” b
■aid. "I put my best foot forward. I hai
made up my m ind to play as aggreaslv
u possible all day long, and I played the
way sU 32 boles."
For Jay H aas, leader of the Dime;
Classic for the first three rounds, 8inda
was a Halloween nightm are. He entero
the final roimd w ith a
qV(
stroke lead, but be finished the day on
shot off the pace after shooting a fins
round of 1-over-par 73, which include
four bogeys.

�Evening Hsrsld. Sanford, FI.

Archer, West
Georgia Rip
Knights, 41-7

SPORTS
IN BRIEF
Trinity Prep Runs Wild,
Gallops To 44-0 Victory
The Trinity Prep Saints ran wild Saturday en route to
a 44-0 trouncing of Vero Beach St. Edwards in the
Saints' homecoming at Trinity Prep.
Trinity opened and closed with a bang, scoring 13
points in the first quarter and closing with 21 fourth
quarter points.
Max McGellan started the onslaught by rambling 13
yards for the Saints' first touchdown In the first
quarter. Brian Butler’s 15 yard touchdown run and
Bobby Miller's conversion kick gave Trinity a 13-0 lead
as the first quarter ended.
Trinity Prep's lead ballooned to 23-0 by the tim e the
first half ended. The Saints' 10 second quarter points
came on a 42 yard field goal by David Grean and a 1*
yard run by Tom Horton.
After a scoreless third quarter, Mike Beemer hauled
In a pass from Chris Gattis for 42 yards and touchdown
and Miller's kick made it 30-0. Both McClelland and
Butler scored again in the fourth quarter, McClellan
from six yards out and Butler on a 29 yard ru n and
Miller's two extra points made the final 44-0.
Trinity Prep evened its record at 44 and will travel
to Melbourne this Friday for a meeting with Melbourne
Central Catholic.
"They (St. Edwards) only had 28 yards rushing and
that's what stymied them," Trinity Prep coach Ron
Vlerllng said. "We felt they weren't going to be able to
score on us so we gambled on defense at times, and
they never got close to scoring range.
"The victory was a combination of it being
homecoming and the players getting up for that,"
Vlerling said, "And we were frustrated from our
inability to move the ball against St. John Lutheran in
a game that we should have won.”

Is NFL Settlement N ear ?
NEW YORK (U PI) - Striking NFL players and
owners punted proposals to each other Sunday with the
union encouraged over its new field position in the 42day walkout.
Both sides exchanged contract proposals on the
second day of resumed negotiations and the acrimony
which characterized recent sessions was con­
spicuously absent.
The talks a t a midtown hotel were recessed at 1:30
a.m. EST with the NFL Management Council studying
the NFL Players Association's counter-offer, which
was tendered a t midnight. Negotiations were
scheduled to resum e this morning after the
Management Council confers with private mediator
Sam Kagel.

1Marvelous* Floors Another
United Pres* International
For Marvin Hagler, it was Just a way of keeping
busy.
The world middleweight champion had little trouble
in San Remo, Italy, on Saturday night, scoring a fifthround knockout over Venezuelan challenger Fulgendo
Obelmejias to retain his title.
Hagler, 1584, floored Obelmejias with a powerhouse
left 2:33 Into the fifth round. It was his ninth straight
victory, a string begun in 1979 after he drew Vito
Antuofermo in a title fight In Las Vegas, Nev. He
floored William "Caveman" Lee in Atlantic City, N. J.,
in his previous bout last year.
The knockout was the 28-year-old American's fifth
successful defense of the title he won in 1910 against
Alan Min ter of Britain. Hagler and Obelmejias first
met in January 1981 in Boston and the American scored
an eighth-round knockout.

Trlpuka's 37 Ignites Pistons
Usited Press late f iattoaal
Nothing will be easy for the Detroit Pistons this
season — coach Scotty Robertson says so.
"This gam e shows how tough our conference will
be," Robertson said Sunday night after Kelly Tripucka
scored 37 points and the Pistons survived two lastminute shots by Indiana in posting a 118-115 victory
over the Pacers. "Our conference will be a great one,
particularly with the addition of players like Moses
(Malone), Truck Robinson, Domlnque Wilkins, (Clark)
Kellogg others."
The P acers cut the deficit to 118-115 on a basket by
rookie Kellogg and regained the ball with 10 seconds
remaining after a Detroit miss. But George Johnson,
who led the P acers with 0 points, was short on a turn­
around Jumper and the Pistons rebotmded.
BUI Laim beer m ade two free throws and Johnson
missed a Siwint attem pt to end the geme. John Long
had 27 points (or the Pistons. For Indians, Kellogg
scored 23 points and Herb Williams II.
In other gam es, Milwaukee beet Cleveland UM6,
Seettle downed San Diego 127-108 and Denver stopped
P to ttix 114-110.

Where I* Defense. Goals?
Edmonton Oilers coach Glen Bather has a couple of
Hm Oilers grt UttMhelp on either sod Sunday night,
dropping a M decision at home to the Va
gather said. "We cant s e n to put things together la
one gams. Our defansa lets m down in one game and
then the defense plays well in the next, but we don't gst
the goals."
The Oilers have allowed more goals than any team In
the league this season. And the one they allowed to
Darcy RoU with 88 seconds remaining cort them the
Rota took a pass from Ivan Botdtrsv and lifted a
dtort backhander past isaltender Aady Haag as the
Canucks broke a (he game read being rtreak.
a good nocaaaaaer oanas pma m d to j
Moog Md into the net," Rota aadd."» waa one e( those
goals you wonder how It want b, brt you're glad K
dkLM
In other games. Buffalo defeated Montreal 8-1, the
New York Rangers clobbered Pittsburgh 84 and
Philadelphia beat Winnipeg 84.

Monday, Nov. 1.1VS2—»A

Herald Phots by S ill Murphy

UCF tight end Ed Schenk (no. 85) bolts for a short gain
against West Georgia Saturday night. The Knights lost

their eighth straight game,

11-7,

to the unbeaten Braves.

W a lk e r Has D aw g s W ag g in g Tails
United P re n International
These are the times that try Vince Dooley’s
soul.
His Bulldogs are unbeaten and expected to
be ranked No. 2 behind Pitt this week, but the
always-worrying Georgia coach isn't con­
vinced they can sustain a run at their second
national championship in three years.
Georgia, with Herschel Walker moving into
sixth place on the NCAA career list while
rushing for 219 yards and two touchdowns,
trounced winless Memphis State 34-3 Satur­
day, but to hear Dooley talk you’d have
wondered who won.
" I stood on the sidelines thinking of next
Saturday (when Georgia meets Florida in
Jackionvllle) and the one after that (when
Georgia visits Auburn) and I don't think right
now we're good enough for the task ahead,”
said Dooley. " I’m not happy with the way we
" I don't know what we have to do to get

College Football
going," said Dooley, a refrain heard often this
season even though the Bulldogs keep winning.
"What worries me is that maybe this is as
good as we can play."
Georgia, gunning for its third straight
Southeastern Conference championship, and
Florida, which has never won the SEC grid
title, staged real donnybrooks the past two
years in Jacksonville.
The 19th-ranked Florida came from behind
in the closing second Saturday to nip 18thranked Auburn; 19-17, on Jim Gainey's fourth
field goal of the game.
"No m atter who won the Florida-Aubum
game, it's going to be a great game next week,
• especially after Georgia snuck in and stole the
last two," said Georgia defensive lineman Tim
Crowe. "We’ve got a great opportunity."

In other Southeast action Saturday, 12thranked Florida State established itself as the
top independent in the region by beating 14th.-anked Miami (Fla.), 24-7; Kentucky lost to
Virginia Tech, 29-3; Southern Mississippi beat
Southwestern Louisiana, 36-0; and Tulane beat
Baylor, 30-15.
Florida severely damaged Auburn's hopes
of winning it for the first time in 25 years. “ I
knew I was going to make it," Gainey said
elatedly after his 42-yarder was true. “ I was so
pumped up, I would have made it from the 50.1
thought 1 would collapse after I made it. I
thought 1 was going to h&gt;perventllate."
With Greg Allen scoring a couple of touch­
downs, Florida State ended Miami’s 11-game
Orange Bowl winning streak. The Seminoles
allowed only 91 rushing yards and twice
stopped the Hurricanes on fourth-and-one —
the first time at the Florida State one yard
line.
.

By SAM COOK
Herald Sport* Editor
Central Florida's Knights have been playing
"up" to Division I-AA competition most of this
year with disastrous results.
Saturday night at the Tangerine Bowl in
Orlando, the Division II Knights played down a
level against Division III West Georgia.
The results, however, were just as
disastrous. The second-ranked Braves rolled
up 585 total yards while hammering UCF, 41-7,
before 9,257 homecoming fans.
Coach Sam Weir’s ballclub is 0-8 for the year
with Carson-Newman (1:30 p.m. Saturday at
theT-Bowl) and Eastern Kentucky (Nov. 13 at
home) remaining on the schedule.
Quarterback David Archer ran for one
touchdown and passed for two more as he
compiled 181 yards while hitting just 7 of 19
passes. As Weir was quick to point, though, he
made the big play.
"He was good last year," said Weir about
the University of Georgia transfer. "He's big
and strong and very Intelligent. And he's a bigplay maker."
Archer made his first big play when he found
running back Todd Clifton for an eight-yard
TD with 2:15 left In the first quarter. After
Trevon Daniels zipped seven yards on a sweep
for the second score, Archer tossed a 29-yard
pass for another score and a 20-0 first half
lead.
Two more touchdowns increased the bulge
to 34-0 before UCF finally got on the board
when quarterback Dana Thyshen hit Mike
Collier on a 38-yard post pattern for a touch­
down with 10:17 left In the game.
Greg Frasier scooted around right end for 22
yards and a TD to close the scoring with a little
over four minutes to play.
"Our defense did not play well again,” said
Weir Monday. "Raymond Agee looked better
at quarterback. He's making some progress
there. The whole team is bruised and beat up.
"Our defense is not as aggressive as it used
to be. Their speed hurt us on some of the pass
plays," he added.
West Georgia, M , has lost Just one game in
its two years of existence. When one of UCF's
coaches pressed West Georgia defensive
coordinator Jack Brinkley for the magic
form ula,
Brinkley
replied,
"S m art
scheduling."
Something that's been missing for the
Knights.
» ii m r — «t
West Georgia
o o o i - i
UCF
WG — COIIon 9 p a w Iro m Archer (Rice kick I WO
— Daniel* Vrun (R ic e k ic k ); W GI— Sheppard 79 pass
Irom Archer (kick (a ile d ). WO — Lonq 7 run (Rice
k ick). UCF — Collier }A p a !! Irom Thyhsen IMyi-rson
k ick). WO — F lakier 77 run (Rice kick) A — 9.751

\\

Sco re ca rd
Basketball
■y United Press International
E a tle rn Conference
A tla n tic D lvitlon
W L Pel. OB
Boston
1 0 1 000 —
Phlladetph
1 0 1 000 —
1 1 500 1
New Jersey
I 1 500 1
Weshlngtn
0 1 000 1
New York
Central Division
1 0 1 000 —
Detroit
1 0 1000 —
M llwauke
t t 500 1
Indiana
0 1 000 1
Atlanta
0 1 000 1
Chicago
0 1 000 1
Cleveland
w estern Conferonco
M idwest Division
W L P d. OB
San Antonio
1 0 1 000 —
v»
1 0 1 000
Kansas City
1 I 500 1
Dallas
1 1 .500 1
Denver
t 1 500 t
Utah
0 1 .000 2
Houston
Pacific Division
Golden Slat
1 0 1 000 —
Seattle
1 01000 —
1 t .500 1
Phoenl*
0 1 000 IV|
Los Angeles
0 1 000 1
San Diego
0 1 000 2
Portland
S a tu rda y'! Results
Philadelphia 110. New Jersey

99
Boston I I ] , Atlanta 17
San Antonio 111. Portland 107
Washington U3, Chicago I2S
Utah US. Dallas 173
M ilw aukee SOI. New York U
Golden State 117. Houston llu
Sunday's Results
M ilw aukee t i t . Cleveland 95
D etroit 111. Indiana IIS
Denver 114, Phoenla 110
Seattle 117. San Diego lo t
M onday's Oamts
(No Games Scheduled)
T utsd a y's Oamas
(AH Timas 1ST)
San Diego at New Jersey.
1:JJ p.m.
Washington at Atlanta, 7:1S
p.m.
D atrolt at Claveland. I p.m.
M ilw aukee at Kansas City,
1:15 p.m.
Dallas at Houston, t:0S p.m.
S M tlla at Utah. f:30 p.m.
P ortland
at
P h o tn li, t;3S
pun.

Vancouver
10
Calgary
10
(Top lour In each division
q u a lity
lor
Stanley
Cup
p la y o ll! I
Saturday'! Results
Quebec 5, N Y. Rangers 4
D etroit 4, Hartford 2
Buffalo 3. Toronto 3 (tie)
Calgary 4, Pittsburgh 1
Boston 4, Montreal 4 (tie)
N Y Islanders S. New Jersey
5
Minnesota 3. Philadelphia 2
Washington 4. St Louis 5
Chicago 5. Los Angeles 5 (tie)
Sunday's Results
Vancouver 3. Edmonton 2
Bultalo 3. Montreal 1
^ Y. Rangers A. Pittsburgh 2
Philadelphia 3. Winnipeg 2
Monday's Came
(A ll Times EST)
Calgary at New Jersey, 7 35
pm
Tuesday's Games
Minnesota at Hartford. 7:35
pm
Vancouver at Quebec, 7 35
pm
New Jersey at Montreal, t 05
pm
Pittsburgh at N Y Islanders.
1 05 p m
D etroit at St Louis. 9 05 p m

MY ANTI-HOMEOWNER OPPONENT HAS NOW COLLECTED OVER
$11,000.00 FROM DEVELOPERS AND BUILDERS. HIS ANTI-HOME­
OWNERS ATTITUDE IS EVIDENT BY HIS ACTIONS IN FAVOR OF
DEVELOPERS AND BUILDERS.

ON ANOTHER IMPORTANT ISSUE MY OPPONENT HAS MADE IT
KNOWN PUBLICLY THAT HE HAS NO INTEREST IN SUPPORTING
SERVICES FOR YOUTH (CHILDREN) SINCE HIS CHILDREN ARE
GROWN. FOLKS, THIS IS THE KIND OF SPECIAL INTEREST GROUPS
BOB FRENCH WILL SUPPORT.

IF THE RESIDENTS OF SEMINOLE COUNTY WANT SOMEONE TO
REPRESENT THEM FOR A CHANGE -

VOTE FOR

Baseball
Zinn Beck League
R ollins 4. Florida Red I
F lorid a Blue 5. Seminole Navy I
TODAY'S OAMES
F lo rid a Blue va Sem inole
Columbia. 5:45 p m
F lo rid a Red vs. Sem inole
Columbia. I p.m.

Softball

BOB

Friday
Red Bug Park Softball
Alps 10. Nautilus Red Bug 1
Ryland Homes 14, L. T.'s Devils

I*
T. G. and
E le c lrlc H

Y

11.

Emerson
..

Hookey
By United Pm* iatemaNtnal
Wales Centerince
Patrick Division
W L T Pla.
NY Islanders
11 2 0 22
Philadelphia
1 5 0 14
S 7 0 12
NY Rngers
New Jersey
1 1 3 *
1 t 1 1
Washington
3 » 1 7
Pittsburgh
Adams Olvtslaa
2 1 3 17
Montreal
4 4 1 12
Quebec
s 4 3 13
Boston
4 S 3 11
Buffalo
2 4 2 4
Hartford
Camgietl ClNlfCI8(t
Hants Otvlsteo
w L T rts.
t » 1 i*
Minnesota
4 7 4 14
Chicago
5 7 • 10
St. Louts
Toronto '
J S 4 ■
) 1 I 7
Detroit
SayfM Division
Winnipeg
S ) 1 13
Loa Angeles
5 4 2 13
Edmonton
4 4 3 11

I

DEMOCRAT,
DISTRICT 2,

:
&gt;1
.1

•:l

3

SEMINOLE COUNTY COMMISSION
PAID POLITICAL ADVERTISEMENT

ii
•44

~

P

�10A— Evening Herald, Sanford. FI.

Monday, Nov. 1,1982

Congressional Races Viewed

* 0*

Batchelor, McCollum Contest Close
MIAMI (UP1) - Republicans think they
could take as many as 10 seats on Florida's
congressional delegation, Democrats think it
could drop to three and voters Tuesday are
expected to settle (or something in between.
"We’re figuring six districts are ours, and
we figure we have a chance to win in three or
four other districts that could go either wav
says sta te Republican C h airm an Henry
Sayler.
Democratic Chairman Charlie Whitehead
says If things go the way he figures, the voters
will "m ake it 16-3 In our favor and we'll take
that."
Sixteen seats on the 19-member delegation
are up for grabs in the general election. Three
congressmen return to Washington unop­
posed. Five contested seats have no incum­
bents.
The 1960 census awarded the Sunshine State
four additional seats and Republican UJ&gt;. Rep.
LA . "Skip" Bafalis decided to forgo a
reelection bid in order to campaign for
governor. The breakdown now stands at 11
Democrats and four Republicans.
Both parties think they have a shot against
at least one opposition incumbent. Sayler says
form er Miami television news anchorman

Glenn Rinker has a good chance against Rep.
Dante Fascell, a ranking Democratic member
of the House Foreign Relations Committee
seeking his 15th term.
"I think the closest race in the state is No. 19
between Rinker and Fascell," Sayler says.
To a degree, Whitehead agrees: "D ante will
win. It's a close race, but Dante will win."
Conversely, Whitehead thinks Democrat
Dick Batchelor of Orlando has a chance
ag a in st first-te rm House m em ber Bill
McCollum of Altamonte Springs in the 5th
District.
“ Batchelor absolutely has a chance. It’s a
very heated campaign and it’s very close. The
5 percent undecided could decide that race,"
Whitehead said.
He also said another two-year GOP in­
cumbent, E. Clay Shaw of Fort Lauderdale, is
getting a fight in the 15th from former
Broward County Sheriff Ed Stack, 72, who lost
his seat in the Democratic prim ary in 1980
after one term on Capitol Hill.
'i 'l l tell you what - that's going to be a
surprise," says Whitehead. "That race is
very, very close. It could be the surprise of the
election."
Sayler cautions that the 5th and 15th are two

1 Vote M akes A Difference
“ My vote doesn’t mean anything."
Thla tired refrain from voters who faU to
show up at the polls Tuesday doesn't hold
water, according to available statistics on the
value of a single vote.
Just consider the following Instances.
— In 1649, England’s King Charles I literally
lost his head when the vote to behead him was
67 against and 68 for — the ax feU, thanks to
one vote. One vote also placed George I on the
throne In 1714.
— In the 1100 U.S. Presidential election,
Thomas Jefferson and Aaron Burr tied In
electoral coUege votes, throwing the election
to the U.S. House of Representative. After 36
separate baUots, Jefferson flnaUy won the
election — by one vote
— In the 1824 presidential race, none of the
four candidates running received an electoral
m ajority. The election was again thrown Into
the House of Representatives where John
Quincy Adams defeated front-runner Andrew
Jackson by one vote.
— By a margin of Just one vote, Texas,
CaUfomla, Oregon, Washington and Idaho
became states In 1845,1850,1B59,1889, and 1890
respectively.
— President James K. Polk’s request for a
Declaration of War against Mexico in 1846 was
approved by the U.S. Senate by a margin ol
t o * C M YOU.

— The Alaska Purchase of 1867 was ratified
by Just one vote, paving the way for the
eventual annexation of America's largest
state.
— Military’ conscription was enacted In 1941
when Congress approved the war-time draft
by one vote.
— If Thomas E. Dewey had gotten one more
vote per precinct In Ohio and California, the
presidential election of 1948 would have been
thrown Into the House of Representatives
where Dewey enjoyed more support than his
rival, Incumbent Hany Truman. As it was,
Dewey was expected to win the general
election by a landslide so most Republicans
stayed home. Only 51.5 percent of the elec­
torate voted. Truman defeated Dewey.
— In local elections in Huron, Ohio, in 1955
and in Rose Creek and Odin, Minnesota in 1959,
mayors were elected to office by one vote.
— In the presidential election of 1960, one
additional vote per precinct in Illinois,
Missouri, New Jersey and Texas may have
altered the course of America's modem
history by denying John F. Kennedy the
presidency and placing Richard Nixon In the
White House eight years sooner.
It was Just one year ago that Ray Ambrose
In a first tim e bid for public office won In a
race for m ayor of Altamonte Springs by three
votes.

of the six districts the GOP "owns" and ex­
pects no trouble.
In the five districts with no incumbents, the
hottest race is expected to develop between
state Rep. George Sheldon, DTampa, and
Tarpon Springs businessman Mike Bilirakis in
the 9th district, which covers Pasco County
and parts of Pinellas and Hillsborough. The
Democrats and Republicans are both marking
that one in their win column.
Both parties also have hopes in the 16th
District where Democratic state Rep. Larry
Smith of Hollywood is a mild favorite over
Port E v erg lad es Commissioner Mike
Berkowitz.
GOP state Sen. Tom I,ewia of North Palm
Beach is favored over Brad Culverhouse of
Fort Pierce in the 12th District, vacated by
Bafalis.
In the 6th District, former U.S. Senate
candidate Buddy Mackay is given the nod over
I^ake County property assessor and
proposition 13 advocate Ed Havlll. But Sayler
isn't ready to give up on that one yet.
Connie Mack, a Republican banker from
Cape Coral, Is given a big edge over Dana
Stevens in the west coast's 13th District, which

FREE

Sayler calls "one of the most Republican
districts in the entire U.S."
Favored incumbent Democrats with op­
position Tuesday are Earl Hutto of Panama
City in the 1st, Don Fuqua of Tallahassee in the
2nd. Charles Bennett of Jacksonville in the
3rd. Bill Chappell of Daytona Beach Shores in
the 4th, Sam Gibbons of Tampa in the 7th, Bill
Nelson of Melbourne in the 11th, Dan Mica of
West Palm Beach in the 14th, and Claude
Pepper of Miami in the 18th.
The 82-year-old Pepper, the Hill's most
senior congressman, is heavily favored over
Ricardo Nunez, a 49-year-old real estate
broker and former national director of the
Cuban Refugee Program.
In fact, Pepper has spent most of his time
out of the state this fall campaigning for
Democratic colleagues instead of working to
return himself to Capitol Hill where he has
represented south Florida since 1936.
Democratic Reps. William Lehman of North
Miami Beach in the 17th District and Andy
Ireland of Winter Haven in Hie 10th are being
returned to Washington without opposition.
District 8 Republican R tp. C.W. "BUI" Young
of Treasure Island also faces no opposition.

Consultation &amp; Evaluation
O .to p x c t c V j , flo ra e «&lt;•' &lt;•' I " * "

I 1 HvtMcO*
I IKIHMCI
J

* ■«•«!&gt;•

O f-

t Nm om m i

Vo*e P^»ogt*r*'i
cAt*Sp-r i*MtA•
A»NjMjU'e
A" *

No Extra Out Of Pocket
Expense. We Accept
Insurance Assignmentr
Croup .A u to -Health -Medicare .Union
Workman's Comp

SANFORD PAIN
CONTROL CLINIC
d r . THOMAS

Y A N D E LL -C hiropractic R h y lltH "

J0I7 S. FRENCH AVE. (Across Irom P t l l i Hut) SANFORO

»

323-5763
— ----

Bring Total
To Your
Home With ...

C o m fo rt

GENERAL
e l e c t r ic
entral h e a t in g

CALL 322-45*7
p l u m b in g

lu

.
1

a

H E A T IN G

' S Sanford Ave

VIDEOGAM ES ISO A UP
JUKE BOXES }JO A UP
(C o m p lilt W ith Records)
PINBALLS ISO A UP
FOOTBALL U S A UP
BOWLING M A C H IN E S -4
PLAYERS JOO A UP
OTHER ARCADE EQ UIPM ENT
FREE O EL.ZSM I RADIUS
SLT. CHARGE OVER IS M l.
REPAIRS AND PARTS

P A T R IC K

School Board

RAM DIST.
322-6530
JI10ORLANDO OR.
SANFORO. FL.
COR. l i t ] A L A K E MARY
BLVD.
O P lN ie T O ie - ID A Y S

CM

f r ~ c»n%ut'«’&gt;on and evaluation dot% not Include * ray* or treatment .1
■ rati or treatment art indicated
,rsurarce include* chiropractic
coverage Moi* .nwance ast-gnmenti accepted as payment in full *.th
no extra our of pocket expense beyond policy limit*

Lynda Mays • Chm.
Pd. Pol. Adv. Ray Bersch • Treas.

�PEOPLE
TONIGHTS TV
MONDAY

table Ch

CD O
(D O
® 0

EVENING

0

6.00

i i

O l7 O NEWS
ii (3510
I CHARLIE S ANGELS
OCEANUS
CD 10I 0

6:05
11 117) CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
4 NBC NEWS
1 Q CBS NEWS
L&gt;'@ ABC NEWSn
CD(10) OCEANUS^

(71Q JOKER'S WILD
(H (35) THE JEFFERSONS
CD (10) MACNEIL / LEHRER
REPORT

10TH YEAR

Hull. Officers for I9H2-83 are, from left, Marian Wilson, vice president: Lou

Haker, recording secretary and first president of the club: Wilma Itasey,
president: Lucille Gunter, outgoing president: Margaret Bower, treasurer;
and Eva Hunt, corresponding secretary.

In And Around Winter Springs

The S ugar Creek Homeowners
Association is in the process of painting
house numbers on the curbs m front of
the homes of residents of Sugar Creek.
The service is free to the residents. The
paint has been donated by the city and
the fire department, who feel it will help
the fire department find houses easier in
an emergency case.
The association will be placing a swing
set at the playground at Panama and
Fruitwood streets
Nov. 4 is the date set for the
Association meeting. The meeting will be
held at the Winter Springs Community
Church at 7:30 p.m.

Gatrell

Jr. Scout Troop 351 had Halloween in
the woods. The troop went camping at
Kelly Park in Apopka, where they had a
costume party. Leader Edna Abell and
co-leader Sharon Ellerbe camped with
the girls.
Red Bug Elementary PTA will hold a
skating party on Nov. 6, at Semoran
Skating Rink, from 6:30-8:30 p.m. Cost
will be $2.50.
There is a canned-goods drive on for

Candidates for treasurer are Cheryl
Anderson, Erik Dahlberg, Jason Huish
and Matt Miller.

Winter Springs
Correspondent
327-0378

needy tanuiies, which will be given to the
families at Thanksgiving.
Red Bug is looking for donation to buy
a piano for the school. If by some chance
someone would donate a piano any
monies collected will be used toward
music programs.
The P.E. department is asking for
parts of crochet sets, any size paddles for
paddle ball, racquets of any type, (tennis
etc.) and jokari games. Anyone wishing
to donate may do so by sending the items
to the school office.
Twenty-six Red Bug students were
entered in the Maitland Art Festival.
While no one individual student won an
aw ard, the school was given a merit
award for participation.

Brownie Troop 823 will hold its
Investiture Ceremony tonight at 7 p.m. at
the Longwood R ecreation Center.
Families and friends are invited to a t­
tend. Snacks will be served.
Brownie Troop 569 held a Halloween
party where they played games and had
relay races.
Co-leader Renee Porter dressed as a
ghost while co-leader Ann Ellis dressed
as a hobo.

The secretarial candidates are Debbie
Gerber, Evanne Pierce, Darin Patton
and Kimberly Adams.

D ee

On Nov. 2, the student council of
Sterling Park Elementary will hold
election of officers, which will coincide
with the state elections. .The candidates
are from the 4 and 5 grades. Each can­
didate will speak during a candidates
forum, which will begin at 10:30 a m. The
children will vote by computer.
Those running for president are Chay
Galloher, Cole Ragland, Doug Schicker
and Nikki Shelton.
Candidates for vice-president are
Becky Swanson, Bccki Raynor, Allen
Correlro and Joseph Snith.

The W inter Springs E xtention
Homemakers Club is having a mem­
bership drive this month. They will meet
the second Thursday of each month at the
Winter Springs Community Church on
Wade Street. The next meeting will be on
Nov. 11, at 9:30 a.m.
Newly elected president Pam Cullen
says she would like to encourage women
of all ages to Join the club for a day out of
the house to enjoy friendship and also
have a learning experience. Mothers
with young children are welcome to come
and enjoy themselves as a baby sitter
will be provided.

The Winter Springs Fire Department,
along with chairman Kay Stripling, from
the Ice Cream Castle, put together a
Halloween festivity for the children of
Winter Springs. Thanks to these people,
the children had an alternative to trick or
treating.
There was a haunted house on display
Friday, Saturday and Sunday evenings
along with a nightly costume Judging.
Some of those who served as Judges were
Charles Holzman, Jim Hartman, Stan
Shevltz, Leaane Grove, John Torcaso
and Marty Trencher.
The parking lot at the Fairway plaza
was roped off Sunday evening and a mini
carnival was presented with prizes
given.

DEAR ABBY: I read your
column for chuckles every
m orning in the Chicago

Tribune and can’t believe that
there are so many people out
there leading such dull,

NEXT TO"BADCOCK
HOME FURNISHINGS"

SPICY or MILD

CHICKEN

FAMOUS FRIED CHICKEN
_ |4 jO^S French Ave

Sanlord

FOR CHICKEN AT ITS BEST^FOR LESS*
PUTNEWGUY'STOTHE TESTI

TACOS - ONION RINGS - SEAFOOD
FEWGUY'S
DELICIOUS

TACO
AND
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99c

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NEW GUY'S
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ONLY

It PC CHICNIN
WITH I ROLLS
M ID ONION
PT. §A» « C U I
• IANS AND
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99'

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2-PC.

ALL DAY

i^ ^ m tc o u jo j^ i

JU i

MON - T H U R S -11 A.M. - f P.M. - FRI - SAT I I A.M . I ] P.M.
SUN 1 P.M. f P.M.

SOMETHING FOR EVERYONE.INAHURRYf
PHONE AHEAD 121 5751

unrewarding lives.^ So, I’m
writing to tell you about
myself Just to brighten your
day with the knowledge that
we are not all such miserable
wretches.
At the age of 17,1 enlisted in
the U.S. Army’3 Special
F o rces and received an
awesome collection of combat
decorations for my work
against the Viet Cong and
North Vietnamese army.
A week after my discharge,
Just before my 21st birthday, I
founded my own company. It
became hugely successful and
allows m e to spend my
summers in Europe, while my
hirelings look a fter my
growing Interests.
Most people who meet me
find me ruggedly handsome
and incredibly manly. I have
more girlfriends than I can
handle, and I’ve slept with the
wives of m ost of my
acquaintances. They all tell

\
A LOUNOI
l i t l M l i D ia l* i a t l u Raait

S anford Ave. A 27th, S anford, F la . 305-321-57*1

LUNCHEON BUFFET
Mon - Frl 11:50- 1:10

AIL YOU CAM U T
SANDWICH M INU AV AILAILI

P O T ROAST
teavao w it h

2

$ «

l a i o i s alad

DINNER SPECIALS
BAKEO Z IT I
MANICOTTI
LASAGNA

4

$ «

SERVED W LAROC TOSSED SALAD
A BREAD A BUTTER

Dear
Abby

*

CD O ABC NEWS NIGHTLINE

8:00

THAT’S INCREDIBLE!

Featured • policeman who talked
a mother through C P R over the
phone and saved her baby s life,
the Atlanta Spider-Man rappels
down Ihe lace ol a 65-story build­
ing a new surgical technique to
relieve crippling arthritis
il T (35) THE ROCKFORD FILES
CD (10) NATURE Amate The
Great Fig Tree The majestic tig
tree which rises above the lush ram
lores! ol Betiie in Central America
ts viewed

' A fa t

A I

l

U &gt;M J 4

OMNCUUICf
B

H l A K

12:30
0
4 LATE NIGHT WITH DAVID
L£HERMAN Guest Sid Caesar

O

12:45
CD 0 MOVIE
Brigham Young
( 1940) Tyrone Power. Linda Darnell
1:10
C5) O COLUMBO When a world
chess champion is found injured
lust before an important match
suspicion tails on his opponent |R|

1:30
Q ® NBC N E W S O VERN IG H T

31

(17)

"Station S n
Sahara" (1964) Carroll Baker Peiei
Van Eyck

2:30
4 ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
SI O CBS NEWS NtGHTW ATCH

0

TUESDAY,
5:30
(1 NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT
(TUE-FRl)
(11 (17) IT S YOUR BUSINESS
(MON)

8:30

5:45

O

PRIVATE

BENJAMIN

9:00

til MOVIE Born Beautiful
(Premimet Ertn Gray. Lori Singe, A
top tethwn model thee to me. • a
O

career change and help a troubled
high school student make it In the
highly competitive world o l New
York modeling
(® O
M 'A 'S 'H The 4077th»
plans lot a Halloween night c o s­
tume party are interrupted by
incoming wounded from the tiont
and Irom Rosie I Bar
CD O MOVIE Brubaker ’ (19801
Robert nedlord Yaphel Kollo A
reform-minded warden uncovers
widespread corruption when he
enters his newly assigned prison
posing as an inmate

(if) (3b) GUNSMOKE
CD (10) GREAT PERFORMANCES
"The Charterhouse Ol Parma *
With the aid ol her new lover. Count
M osca the Duchess Gina Sansevm ini uses her influence to bring her
beloved nephew Fabn/io back to
Parma (Part 2)

0

£D( 10) ELECTRIC COMPANY (R)
10:30
* WHEEL OF FORTUNE
) Q CHILD S PLAY
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CD( 10) J.2.1 CONTACT lR )g

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(WED)
CD (10 ) PORTRAITS IN PASTELS
(FRI)

CBS EARLY MORNINO

NEWS

11:30

(ft) (35) JIM bAKKIR

6 :30
I (J) EARLY TOOAY
) O CBS EARLY MORNING
NEWS
(D O ABC NEWS THIS MORNINO

S

3:30

.10) NATURE (WED)
(10 NOVA (THU)
CD (10) EVENING AT POPS (FRJJ
12:05
31 (17) PEOPLE NOW
12:30
o a r new s
(T) O THE YOUNG AND THE
RESTLESS
( D O RYAN’S HOPE

6:45
(7) 0 NEWS

(D (TO) A M WEATHER
7:00
I (J) TODAY
I MORNING NEWS
I GOOD MORNINO AMERICA
35 WOOOY WOODPECKER
CD (10) TO LIFEI

7:05
0 ( 1 7 ) FUNTIME

7:15
CD110) A M. WEATHER

a t (3 5 )
FRIENDS

&lt;D (1 0 1 tU tC T W C COM P AMY IK|

3:35
1t(17)THEFLINTSTONES

4:00

0 ( I ) LITTLE HOUSE ON THE
PRAIRIE (MON, WED-FRI)
0 (4) SPECIAL TREAT (TUE)
(4) O HOUR MAGAZINE
,’V
( 1 ) 0 UERVGRJFFIN
«7
ill (35) TOM ANO JERRY
CD( 10) SESAME STREET(R)g
3 1 (1 7 ) THEMUNSTERS

4 ’3 0
d t (35) SCOOBY OOO

4:35
IX (17) LEAVE IT TO BEAVER

MB fj Floyd Then

31 (17) MOVIE
1:30
i i l p AS THE WORLD TURNS
CD(10) THIS OLD HOUSE (FRI)

7:35
0 ( 1 7 ) 1 DREAM OF JEANNIE

H«&gt; If ft

8:00

"The Ebb And Flow " Rudoil
Nureyev snd Mikhail Baryshnikov
are featured as Dsme Margot Fon­
teyn traces the development ol bal­
let over the course ot 300 years

10:30
(U (35) IN SEARCH OF...

11:00
Q ( $ C 1 ) D news
a t (3 5) SOAP
CD (10) alfhed
PRESENTS

h iic h c o c k

m

7401

A IL SEATS

I t (35) FRED FLINTSTONE AND

(£ o
CAGNEY a LACEY The
slaying ol a young cop plunges
Chris. Mary Beth and the entire
department into a feverish search
tor his killer
I t 135) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
NEWS
CD (10) THE MAOIC OF OANCE

BUGS BUNNY AND

4:05

1:00
0 4 , DAYS OF OUR LIVES
1 7 1q ALL MY CHILDREN
M (35) MOVIE
CD(10) MOVIE (MON. TUE. THU)
CD (10) MATINEE AT THE BUOU
(WED)
CD (10) FLORIDA HOME GROWN
(FRI)
1:05

7:30
lit) (35) TOM AND JERRY

4 i FANTASY
V O GUIDING LIGHT
7 0 GENERAL HOSPITAL
It ( 3 5 / CASPER
CDi 10) FRENCH CHEF (MON)
CD 10) COOKIN' CAJUN (TUE)
CDI 10) WORLO OF BOOKS (WED|
CDI 10) WILD AMERICA (THU)
CD 10) TI..C LAWMAKERS (FRI)

3:05
31 (17) FUNTIME

0 (4) SOAP WORLD
■T10 7 0 NEWS
BIO VALLEY
MYSTERY (MON)
10) M AS TER PIECE THEATRE

m a iu M M s c

3 00

0

12:00

6:00

EVEROAY COOKINO

CD(10|MENOFLSU(TUE)

AFTERNOON

&lt;11 ( 17) WORLD AT LARGE (TUE)

(1 0 )

CD 110) INSIDE BUSINESS TOOAY

(35| INDEPENDENT NETWORK

(D( 10) POSTSCRIPTS
5:50

(!)

CD

11:05
U (17) P E R R Y MASON

NEW S

4 ANOTHER WORLO
7' q ONE LIFE TO LIVE
CD (10 ) MAGIC OF OIL PAINTINQ
(FRI)

WITH JACQUES PEPIN (MON)

4) TEXAS
5 O THE PRICE IS RIGHT
’ O LOVE BOAT (R)
.11 (35) 35 LIVE
CD110) OVER EASY

FRI)

2:00

0

} O C A P IT O L

11:00

31 (17) WORLD AT LARGE (WED,

£ 1&lt;W
i*»M4 tr*

2:30

0

It

CD(10) SESAME STREET (R )g

9:30
d ) O NEWHART Dick and Joan­
na discover that there s a very old
human body buried in the in n s
basement

10:00
O 41 DtFF’RENT S T R O K E S (R)

0

MORNING

m
km

o

(35)

MOVIE

(19431 Ingrid Bergman. Humphrey
Bogart A gambling casino owner
holds the hey to Ihe escape of a
French Resistance leader and his
wife who are fleeing from the N a m

Fielding and Lewis try to make
points with Genera) Norris by entermg Judy in a race against tiw gen­
eral s daughter in an upcoming
trick meet

o

l

} Q MARY TYLER MOORE
H
ANDY GRIFFITH

1:35

Casablanca

FRJENOS

PLAZA I

99&lt;

1 7 MOHLY

ANNE BONNIE'S 41

8:05
0 ( 1 7 ) MY THREE SONS

TAVERN

8:30
3 1 (35) GREAT SPACE COASTER
CD (10) MISTER ROGERS (R)
035
0 ( 1 7 ) THAT GIRL

9:00
) RICHARD SIMMONS
I J) O DONAHUE
JMCVTE
.35) LEAVE (T TO BEAVER
(10) SESAME STREET | R )g

AND
CRAH BAR
Craly Hour 5:10 - s.JO
G a rlic Crab U c Each
N a m e d Oysters 10c Each
Free Hors D ’O a u v rti

'OUR ItAPPY HOURS

9:05
O (17) MOVIE
930
O (3) 80 YOU THINK YOU GOT
TROUBLES
O (35) FAMILY AFFAIR

IliM A.M. Ta«:M P M
II P.M. ‘Til Ctsuni
1for | All Hlfflballt
ana M s,l Cecktalli
Locat«4 IntlSs

( H W Y lltl)
laniard

7:41 ONLY

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B^ama eJSd
IMS French A v .

ifpLAz/nn

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Mb , I) • ] } 1» I j -«
M O N TY PYTHON
IN HOLLYWOOD
•4 H E A V Y M ETAL ■

NOW OPEN
UNOER NEWOWNERSHIP
RESTAURANT OPEN MON. THRU SAT. 7 a . m . } : M p.m.
LOUNGE OPEN MON THRU SAT. 11 a m ..Itp .m .

BREAKFAST SPECIAL
INCLUDES:
2 EGGS
2 PANCAKES

BONN* FITZGERALD

Headliners
BONNA'S GET ACQUAINTED SPECIAL

*5.00 O F F A N Y PERM
With This Coupon

■Headliners
&amp;*

PHONE

S&amp; tC sSS

2303 FRENCH AVE.
SANFORD

994

DAILY LUNCHEON SPECIALS

w« Proudly Atmounco That Borina Fltzgorald Is Now A
Mombor ol Our Award Winning Stall

■ AM ID STUFFED FOT.. BREAD SUTTEA

HAPPY HOURJT07 REDUCED PRICES AND FREE HORS O'OEUVRES
LIVE ENTERTAINMENT EVERY FRI - SAT
BANQUET * XMAS PARTIES UP T 0 100

12:15

8:05
&gt;12 {17) MOVIE

31 (17) NEWS

me I am the best lover they’ve
ever had.
1 have more money than 1
will ever need, and I enjoy the
un iv ersal respect of my
colleagues in a highly com­
petitive industry.
In short, I am what
everybody would like to be:
successful, wealthy, In­
fluential and admired. And
most im portant...
ADORED IN CHICAGO
DEAR
ADORED:
1
congratulate you on your
outstanding servlet record on
behalf of your country. And If
the rest of your letter la to be
believed, yon alao rale high
m arks for your performance
In both business and bedroom.
You m ay be "ru g g ed ly
handsome,” but manly? No
way! One who boasts that he
haa slept with the wives of
most of his acquaintances Is
not a man. Ha's a boy. And at
your age, that Is not what
every man would Uko to be!
P roblem s? Y en'll feel
better if you get them off your
c h e st Write le Abby, P.O.
Box Uta, Hollywood, Cell!.
M R . For a personal reply,
please enclose a stamped,
•ell-addressed eavelope.

11:45

7:35

10:00

But Incredibly Manly? No Way!

Sara Dane (Part

12:00

nut Grove try to rescue a deal boy
who is being mistreated as a Ireak
in a carnival act (Part 1 ) Q
( D O SQUARE PEOS Patty and
Lauren brave a Halloween party
with the popular kids "

(5)

by Larry Wright

IM uliH Jordan Harold Hopkins

Li. O TRAPPER JOHN, MO A
U year oid boy s revelation that he
is an alcoholic complicates his
mothers potentially serious ill­
ness (Rl

H (17) AMERICAN PROFESSION­
ALS

O

M

11:35
11 (17) MOVIE

7:30

0 3 ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
i l l O TIC TAC DOUGH
i l l O FAMILY FEUD
ill (351 BARNEY MILLER
CD(1 0 )BALLOT 82

(2)

N ‘ CARLYLE

111 t h e B E S T OF C A R SO N
Host Johnny C a iso n Guests
Richard Ber,|amm, Red Buttons
Dick Enbmg (Rl
5 0 M O RE R E A L PEO PLE
iir (35) S T R E E T S OF S A N FRANC ISC O

1l(17)GOMER PYLE

3 ) LITTLE HOUSE A NEW
BEGINNING The residents ot W al­

Service To Residents

F re e

KIT

ffl O NEW S

7:05

0

Orlando Public
Broadcasting System

11:30

the-scenes lock at A B C s Monday
Night Football coverage child mov­
ie slats Heather and Tammy
O Rourke

Sanford Senior Citizens Club celebrated its loth anniversary Oct. -0. Ineluded in the evening's festivities was installation of officers bv the Itev. Ken

I

Independent
Atlanta Ga

0

7:00

THEMUPPETS
} O P U MAGAZINE A behind.

SENIORS IN

(NBC) Daytona Beach
Oi iando

11:05

11 117) BOB NEWHART

H erald Photo by Tom V incent

fC0Sl Orlando

independent
Orlando

11 (1?) A U IN THE FAM'LY

6:35

0 '4

(ID(35)
® (17)
(10) ©

tABC i Orlando

in addition lo the channel* luted cableviiion tubtenbert may tune in ta independent channel 44.
St Peter,burg, by tuning to channel 1, tuning to channel t) *hich carriei ip o rfj and the Chriltian
Broadcasting Network (CBN)

6:30

0

Cable Ch

I

MENU CHANGES D A IL Y
FAST SERVICE — TAKE OUT SERVICE
AVAILABLE
W t Will B« Adding D lnntr
To Our Mgnu In Tho N t * r

A

�IB —Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Monday, Nov, I, 1983

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER I
Sanford Senior Citizens, noon, Sanford Chamber of
Commerce, 400 E. First St. Bag lunch and bingo.
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 3
Golden Age Games Executive Committee, 8 a.m.,
Greater Sanford Chamber of Commerce.
Casselberry AA, closed, 8 p.m., Ascension Lutheran
Church Overbrook Drive.
Wednesday Step, 8 p.m. (closed) Penguin Building,
Cental Health Center, Crane’s Roost, Altamonte
Springs.
____
Starlight Promenaders, 8 p.m., DeBary Community
Center, Shell Road.
Sanford Klwanls Dub, noon, Sanford Civic Center.
Sanford Optimist Dub, noon, Holiday Inn.
Sanford-Breakfast Rotary Dub, 7 a.m., Airport
Restaurant.
Seminole Sunrise Klwanls, 7 a .m ., Airport
Restaurant.
Casselberry Rotary, 7 a.m., Casselberry Senior
Center, Secret I^ake Park, North Triplet Drive.
Senior Citizen Dance, 2:3&lt;M:30 p.m., Sanford Civic
Center.
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 4
Holiday Showcase sponsored by Seminole Counly
Extension Homemakers 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., Sanford
Civic Center. Refreshments, door prizes. Homemade
gifts and foods for sale.
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 8
Golden Age Games Fading Arches Stampede
parade, 8:15 a.m . Park Avenue, Fifth to Seminole
Boulevard, Sanford. Opening ceremonies 9:15, city
hall.
Free dating service for m ature adults, 1 p.m.,
Deltona Public lib rary , 1691 Providence Blvd.
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 15
Fashion show sponsored by Seminole Court 59 Order
of the Amaranth, 8 p.m., Greater Sanford Chamber of
Commerce, 400 E. First St. Refreshments, prizes and
entertainment. Tickets at Ro-Jays or at the door.
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 1
Free blood pressure clinic, 2-4 p.m., 7th-Day
Adventist Church, 7th and Elm, Sanford.

NOTICE UNDER FICTITIOUS
NAM E STATUTE
10 WHOM IT M AY CONCERN
Notice iv hereby given Ihel the
undersigned p u rs u a n t lo the
" F ic titio u s
N am e
S ta tu te ,"
Chapter 065 09, F lorid a Statutes,
w ill register w ith the Clerk of the
Circuit Court, in and to r Seminole
County, Florida upon receipt ol
proof ol the publication ol this
notice, the fictitio u s Name, to w it:
PR N IN V E S T M E N T S
under
which we are engaged in business
at (address) l i t East Altamonte
Drive, Altam onte Springs, Florida
32701
That the persons Interested In
said business enterprise are as
lot lows:
Norman A Rossman
Marlene Rossman
P. M Rossman
R J. Rossman
N. A Rossman
O a lrd at S em inole Counly,
Florida. October If , l f l !
Publish Oct. IS, Nov. 1 .1. IS, 19*7
DEA f t

NOTICE OF INTENT
TO REGISTER
FICTITIOUS NAME
NOTICE IS H ER EBY GIVEN
that the undersigned, desiring to
engage in business under the
fic titio u s
nam e
ol
FOTO
GRAFICS, SANFORD at 110 S.
Park Avenue, Sanford, Florida,
17771 Intends lo register Ihe said
name w ith the Clerk o l Ihe Circuit
Court ol Seminole County, Florida
DATED this Sth day ol October.
A.D. t m .
MELCA, INC.
By: A L L E N C GUTBERLET
Publish: Oct. II. IS. Nov t, I, I f l l
DEA M
NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC
Notice is hereby given that Ihe
Board ol Adlustm enl ot the City ol
Sanlord w ill h o ld a Special
Meeting on Wednesday. Nov. IT,
I f l l In the City H a ll at 1 I:M A.M.
in order lo consider a request lo re
variance In the Zoning Ordinance
as It pertains to side ya rd setback
requirements If* GC J
Zoned
D istrict In: The S. 400 ft. ol the old
abandoned S C L Railroad R W
lying N of I I I h S t . being InSec. IS.
Twp. IfS. Roe M E
Being
m ore
s p e c ific a lly
described as located at 270S W
j i i n st.
Planned use ot Ihe property:
Monument company.
B L Perkins
Chairman
Board ot Adlustm enl
Publish: Nov, I, 10. I f t l

OEB II
NOTICE
The Florida Department pf Law
Enforcement wishes to rent or
lease space on a communication
tower in the greater Orlando arte,
lo r l i t tw o w a y ra d io com
munlcatlon system, The antenna
used Is a DB 111 3. mounted In an
om nidirectional a rra y . The base
station it a two channel G.E., 100
watt low band, rem ote control
(tataphone
lin t s
re q u ire d ),
transceiver, which transm its 45 44
and 4 5 I I M HZ. and receives 45 54
and 45.1t M H Z . C overage I t
required fro m New Smyrna Beach
south lo Kissimmee. Electrical
power Is required, emergency
Banaralor service is preferred.
Locations on the near northeast
side o t Orlando a re preferred.
Replies a re to bo subm itted to
jM D Brick, Technical Services
Supervisor, F lorid a Department ot
Law Enforcem ent, Post Office Boa
tret, Tallahassee. F L 11301. Phone
Inquiries w ill be accepted e l (1041

set Mi i
Publish: Oat. I t . 17. It. I t . 31. Nov.
I, I N I
DEAN

WORKING

HAPPEN!

Legal Notice

Legal Notice

25—Loam

CLASSIFIED A D S

CALENDAR

Legal Notice

Legal Notice

Legal Notice
CITYOFLONOWOOD.
F LO R ID A
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
TO CONSIDER ADOPTION OF
PROPOSED ORDINANCE
TO WHOM IT M AY CONCERN:
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
by the City g l longwood. Florida,
that Ihe Cify Commission w ill hold
a p u b lic h e a rin g lo consider
enactment ot Ordinance No 544,
entitled:
ANORDINANCE OF THE CITY
OF LONGW OOD, F L O R ID A .
AM ENDING ORDINANCE NO
Sit AND ORDINANCE NO. 535 OF
THE CTY OF LONGWOOD BY
CORRECTING AND AMENDING
THE LEG AL DESCRIPTION OF
THAT PORTION OF LOT J.
LONGWOOD HILLS. RECORD
ED IN PLAT BOOK 4. PAGES 15
AND 14. PUBLIC RECOROS OF
SEMINOLE COUNTY, FLORIDA
WHICH WAS ANNEXED INTO
THE C IT Y OF LONGWOOD,
FLORIDA BY ORDINANCES NO
511 AND S35 TO READ AS
FOLLOWS THAT PART OF LOT
]
LONGWOOD
H IL L S .
RECORDED IN PLAT BOOK 4.
PAGES IS AND 16 P U B LIC
RECOROS,
S E M IN O L E
C O UNTY. F L O R ID A . BE IN G
MORE PARTICULARLY OES
CRIBED AS FOLLOWS: BEGIN
AT N W CORNER OF LOT 3 OF
SAID
LONGWOOD
H IL L S ,
THENCE S 00 DEGREES D4' NT
E. 941 SI F EET ALONG THE
WEST LIN E OF SAID LOT 3 TO
THE SO U TH E R LY LIN E OF
SAID LOT 3; THENCE N 44 DE
GREES 43' 16" E. 901 &lt;5 FEET A
LONG THE SOUTHERLY LIN E
OF SAID LOT 3 TO THE S.E.
CORNER OF SAID LOT 3:
THENCE N 00 DEGREES 31* 57"
E. 11.10 F E E T ALONG THE EAST
LIN E OF SAID LOT 3: THENCE
N t f DEGREES 41* 03" W, 6t 05
FEET: THENCE N 00 DEGREES
11* 57" E. 14f I I FEET TO A
POINT ON THE NORTH LINE OF
SAID LOT 3. SAID NORTH LIN E
ALSO BE IN G THE SOUTHERLY
RIGHT OF WAY OF LONGWOOD
HILLS ROAD RECORDED IN
PLAT BOOK I , PAGE 94 PUBLIC
RECOROS
OF
SE M IN O LE
CO UNTY.
F L O R ID A .
SAID
POINT LYING ON A CURVE
CONCAVE NORTHERLY. WAV
INC A RADIUS OF 15509 FEET,
THENCE FROM A TANGENT
BEARING OF S 69 OEGREES 4 f
14" W, RUN WESTERLY 55.30
FEET ALONG THE ARC OF
SAIDCURVE AND ALSO ALONG
THE NO RTHERLY LINE OF
SAID LOT 3 TO THE POINT OF
TANGENCY; THENCE N I f DE
GREES44' OS" W, S ti l t FEET A
LONG THE NORTH LINE OF
SAID LOT 3 TO THE POINT OF
BEG INNING .
AUTHORIZING
AM END M ENT TO CITY M AP,
SE V E R A B ILITY AND E F FE C ­
TIVE DATE
Said Ordinance w a t placed on
l i n t reading on October It, I t t l .
and the City Com m in io n w ill
consider same tor final passage
and adoption a lte r Ihe public
hearing, which w ill be held in tho
City Hell, I7S West Warren Ave..
Longwood, F lorida, on Monday.
Ihe t lh day el November, A.D.,
I t t l . at 7:10 p .m „ or at soon
iherealter as possible. At the
meeting interested parties may
appear and be heard w ith respect
lo Ihe proposed Ordinance. This
hearing may be continued from
lim e to lim a u n til fin a l action It
taken by Ihe C ity Commission.
A copy of the proposed O r­
dinance I t posted at the City Hall,
Longwood, Florida, and copies are
on III* w ith Ihe Clerk ol the City
end same may be inspected by Ihe
public.
A taped record ot this mealing I t
made by the C ity tar its con­
venience. This record may not
constitute an adequate record tor
purposes o l eppoel from a decision
made by ihe Commission w ith
respect t o the foregoing m atter.
Any person wishing lo ensure that
an adequate re c o rd of tho
proceedings i t maintained tar
appellate purposes is advised lo
make the necessary arrangements
at h it or her own expense
Dele th is H s i day ol October.
A.D I f t l
CITY OF LONGWOOD
Donald L. Terry
City Clerk
Publish November 1, i f t l
DEB 1

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT IN AND
FOR
S E M IN O L E
CO UNTY.
FLORIDA.
CASE NO IM lO f CA Ot G
LEWIS GLASS and
CHARLOTTE I. GLASS,
his w ile.
Plaint ills.

v
CROCKETT R SMITH and
CHARLOTTE E SMITH,
his w ile , and
POOLS BY M AX. INC ,
Defendants.
NOTICE OF ACTION
TO
CROCKETT R SMITH
AND A LL OTHERS WHOM
IT M A Y CONCERN:
YOU ARE NOTIFICO that an
action for mortgage foreclosure
has been tiled against you and you
are required to serve a copy of
your w ritte n defenses, It any, to it
on CHARLENE D K E LLE Y .
P la in tiffs’ attorney, whose ad
dress IS 500 Highway t i l l . Fern
Park, FL 317)0. on or before Nov.
Ilth , I f t l . and tile the original with
the Clerk ol this Court either
before service on Ihe P laintiffs'
a tto rn e y
or
im m e d ia te ly
iherealter, otherwise a default
w ill be entered against you lo r Ihe
rebel demanded in the Plaintiffs*
complaint.
WITNESS m y hand and seal ol
this Court on Oct. 1th, I f t l .
ARTHUR H BECKWITH JR.
CLERK
OF THE CIRCUIT COURT
BY: Cynthia Proctor
As deputy Clerk
(SEALI
Publish
Oct
I t , It . 15 4
November 1. I f t l
DEA 35
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT, IN
AND FOR SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLO RIDA
CASE NO. IM S ll-C A tS -E
IN R E: THE M ARRIAGE OF
ARTHUR L MERSON,
Husband,
and
IRENE B. MERSON,
Wile.
NOTICE OF ACTION
THE STATE OF FLORIDA TO:
ARTHUR L. MERSON
Lakewood Park, No. IS
Route I
Ringgold, VA 145SS
YOU
ARE
HEREBY
N O T IF IE D
th a t IR E N E B.
MERSON has Hied a Petition in
the C ircuit Court ol Seminole
County, Florida, lo r Dissolution ol
M arriage, and you are required lo
serve a copy ot your w ritten
defenses, II any, on NED N.
JULIAN, JR., ol STENSTROM.
M dNTOSH, JU LIAN , COLBERT
&amp; WHIGHAM, P.A., Attorney lor
Petitioner, whose address is Post
Office 801 1330. Sanlord, Florida,
37771, and tile the original with the
Clerk ot the above styled Court on
or before November If, I f t l . A.D
I f t l , otherwise a default and
ultim ate iudgment w ill be entered
against you to r the ro lle r
demanded In the Petition.
WITNESS my hand end official
seal ot said Court on this I at rt day
ot October, A.D. 19*1.
(Court S ta ll
ARTHUR H. BECKWITH. JR.
Clerk of Circuit Court
Seminote County, Florida
By: Carrie B. Buchner
Deputy Clerk
This Notice shall be posted by
Hie Clerk o l the Circuit Court,
pursuant lo the provisions ol
Florida Statutes 5*9 10 ( I f t l ) and
S 49.11.
Publish Ocl I I , 15. Nov 1 .1. 1911
DEA 74
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY, FLORIDA
PROBATE DIVISION
File Number IM13-CP
Division
IN RE: ESTATE OF
EDSON WORRALL BEATTY
Deceased
NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION
TO A LL PERSONS HAVING
C LA IM S
OR
DEM ANDS
AGAINST THE ABOVE ESTATE
AND A L L OTHER PERSONS
INTERESTED IN THE ESTATE:
YOU
ARE
HEREBY
N O T IF IE D
Dial
Ihe ad
m in is tra tio n o l Ihe estate of
EDSON W O R R A LL B E A T T Y ,
deceased, F ile Number I I 113 CP,
is pending in Ihe Circuit Court lor
Seminole County. Florida. Probate
Division, Ihe address ot which Is
Sem inole County Courthouse,
Sanlord. Florida 31771.
The personal representaliva ol
Ihe estate Is THOMAS EDSON
BEATTY, whose address Is c o
Daniel J LeFevre, Lawyer The
name and address o l Ihe personal
representative's attorney are set
forth below.
A il persons having claims or
demands against Ihe estate are
re q u ire d .
W IT H IN
TH R EE
MONTHS FROM THE DATE OF
THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF
THIS NOTICE, to l i l t with Ihe
clerk ol Ihe above court a w ritten
statement of any claim or demand
they may hava. Each claim must
be in w ritin g and must indicate the
basis tar Ihe claim , the name and
address o llh e creditor or h li agent
jr attorney, and the amount
claimed. If th« claim Is no! yet
due, the date when It w ill become
due shall be stated. II the claim It
contingent or unliquidated, the
nature of the uncertainty shall be
staled, if ihe claim is secured, lha
security shall ba described. The
claim ant shall deliver suttlctan!
c o p in of lha cla im fo lha Clark te
enable the clerk lo m all ana copy
fo each personal representative.
A ll parsons inlarastad In lha
astata to whom a copy lo this
Notice of A dm inistration has bean
mailed
are required. W ITHIN
THREE MONTHS FROM THE
DATE
OF
TH E
FIR ST
P U B L IC A T IO N
OF
THIS
NOTICE, to file any obi eel tans
they may hava that challenges lha
va lid ity of the decadent's w ill, the
q u a lific a tio n s o l the personal
representaliva, o r lha venue or
lu ritd fctta n of the court.
A LL CLAIMS. OCMANDS. AND
OBJECTIONS NOT SO F IL E D
W ILL BE FOREVER BARRED
Dale of the firs t publication of
this Notice o l Adm inistration:
October IS, t m .
e- Thomas Edeon Beatty .
As Personal Rapratanfativo
of the E t f a lt ot
EDSON WORRALL EEATTY
ATTORNEY FOR PERSONAL
REPRESEN TATIVE:
D A N IE L J. LoFE VR E. Lawyer
U t l W. Fairbanks Avenue
P.O. Box IE
W ilder P ark, F lorid a n m
Telephone: (MS) 441-3113
Publish: Ocl. 3S. Nov. t, tm
DRAM

NOTICE
NOT ICE *shereby given that Ihe
Board ol Counly Commissioners ot
Seminole Counly, Florida, Intends
to hold a public hearing to consider
the enactment ot an ordinance
entitled
AN ORDINANCE CREATING
ARTICLE XXXVI TOTHE LAND
D E V E L O P M E N T CODE OF
SEMINOLE COUNTY, FLORIDA.
P E R T A IN IN G TO AIR P O R T
ZONING. PROVIDING D EFIN I
TIO N S ;
P R O V ID IN G
FOR
REGULATING AND RESTRICT
ING HEIGHT OF STRUCTURES
AND OBJECTS OF NATURAL
G RO W TH, P R O V ID IN G FOR
REGULATING THE USE OF
l AND IN V IC IN ITY OF THE
SA NFO RD AN D
F L Y IN G
SEMINOLE RANCH AIRPORTS
BY CREATING APPROPRIATE
ZONES AND E S TA B LIS H IN G
B O U N D A R IE S ,
P R O V ID IN G
FOR CHANGES IN
RESTRIC
TIONS ANO BOUNDARIES OF
SUCH ZONES: PROVIDING FOR
S E V E R A B ILIT Y :
PROVIDING
FOR INCLUSION IN THE LANO
D E V E L O P M E N T CODE AND
P R O V ID IN G AN E F F E C T IV E
DATE.
at 7 00 p m., or as soon Iherealter
as possible, el Its regular meeting
on the 13rd day ot November, IN I,
el Ihe Seminole County Cour
mouse. Room 100, North Park
Avenue, Sanford. Florida Persons
are advised that, if they decide to
appeal any decision made al this
hearing, they w ill need a record ot
the proceedings, and, lo r such
purpose, they m ay need fo insure
that a verbatim record of Ihe
proceedings Is made, which record
Includes the te s tim o n y end
evidence upon which Ihe appeal It
to be based.
ARTHUR H. BECKWITH. JR.,
Clerk to the Board of
County Commissioners
ot Seminole Counly, Floride.
By: A. G. Jones
Deputy Clerk
Publish. November 1, 1911
___________________
DEB 4

NOTICE UNDER FICTITIOUS
NAME STATUTE
TO W H O M ITM A Y CONCERN
Notice Is hereby given that the
undersigned pursuant to Ihe
" F ic titio u s
Nam e S ta tu te .’ *
Chapter l&amp;SOf, Florida Statutes,
w ill register with the Clerk o l Ihe
Circuit Court, in and lo r Seminole
County, Florida upon receipt ot
proof of Ihe publication ol this
notice. Ihe fictitious Name, to w it.
BM L
IN V E S T M E N T S u n d e r
which we are engaged in business
at (address) 111 East Altam onte
Drive. Altamonte Springs, F lorida
31701
That Ihe persons interested in
said business enterprise are as
follows:
WU'lam J Goodman
Gloria Goodman
Barry S. Goodman
Michael A. Goodman
Lauren Beth Goodman
Dated a l Seminole C ounly,
Florida, October If, I f l l
Publish Oct. 15. Nov. 1.1, 15, 1911
DEA f l

Seminole

O rlando-W inter Park

322-2611

831-9993

HOME EQ UITYLO ANS
Nopo.ntsor broker tees loans to
575.000 to Homeowners. GFC
Credit Corp . Sant. Fl 37)6110
Classified ads serve the buying 4
selling com m unity every d a y ..
Read 4 use them often

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
RATES
H im *
......................... 50c a lin t
HOURS
3 co n s s c u tiv c tim e s
50c a lin e
8 00 A M , - 5:30 P .M
M O N D A Y thru F R I D A Y
S A T U R D A Y 9 Noon

7 c o n it c u t iv e t lm e s ............ 42c
10 co n se cutive tim e s . l i e a line

28—Apts. &amp; Houses
ToShare_

S3.00 M in im u m
3 L in e s M in im u m

SPACIOUS7 Bedrm. 7 Bath
apartm ent Halt rent 4
electric. 321 592f

DEADLINES
Noon The Day Before Publication

29—Rooms

Sunday - Noon Friday

5—Lost &amp; Found
FOUND GOLDEN Cocker
Spaniel, m ale, no c o lla r.
M ayfair section. 311 2*29

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
THE S E M IN O LE CO U N TY
6—Child G trc
BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS
w ill hold a public hearing In Room
700 o l Ihe Sem inole C ounly
W ILL do baby s illin g in
Courthouse. Sanlord, F lorida on
my home day or night
NOVEMBER 13, 1911 AT 7:00
311 6361 Julie Tabor
P.M., or ,as soon thereafter as
possible to consider Ihe tallowing:
PU BLICHEARING FO R
LOVING Child Care In m y home
CHANOE OF ZONING
Experienced with references
REGULATIONS
135 wk Also drop ins Fenced
J C. GLASGOW - REZONE
yard 3110S45
FRO M R 1 ONE A N D TWO
F A M ILY DW E LLIf.G DISTRICT
TO R )A M U LTIPLE F A M IL Y
9—Good Things to Eat
DW ELLING DISTRICT - PZ (10 4
111 41 - Lot 6. Block 5. Townsile
ol North Chuluola Replal, Piet
MAHNKEN PRODUCE
Book II , Page 44, in Section I I 11
Fresh eggs, fru its , A veg 3500
37. (F u rth e r described as Easl of
Bik. w. 1st. St. Food Stamps
SR 419, at the SE corner ol SR 13
end 41h Street, Wesl o l Avenue C.)
12—Special Notices
(DISTRICT No II
Further, a public hearing w ill M
held by Ihe SEMINOLE COUNTY
P L A N N IN G
AND
ZO N IN G
CAN FLEA — Now accepting
PUBLIC NOTICE
COMMISSION ON OCTOBER A.
tood stamps I I I W. 27th 51.,
ORDINANCE NO. 54)
I
f
l
l
AT
7:00
P.M.,
or
as
soon
Sanford. 16 dally except Sun
A N O R D IN AN C E O F TH EC ITY
thereafter as possible, in Room KM
OF LONGWOOD. F LO R ID A ,
o l Ihe Seminole Counly Cour
A N N E X IN G
TO
AN D
IN
EARN F R E E J e w e lry to r
Ihouse, Sanlord, Florida, in order
CLUDING W ITHIN THE COR
Christmas giving. Value up to
lo review, hear comments and
PORATE AREA OF THE CITY
1100 Inviting lust 4 lo 10 people
make recommendations lo tha
OF LONGWOOD, FLORIDA, AN
lo eltend the body and skin
Board ol County Commissioners ol
AREA OF LANO SITUATE AND
care class In your horn* Call
Seminole
County
on
the
above
BEING IN SEMINOLE COUNTY,
Debbie or C h e ryl 323 *797
application (s).
AND M O RE P A R T IC U L A R L Y
deadline Nov. X lh .
Those
in
attendance
w
ill
be
D E S C R IB E D AS FOLLOW S:
heard and w ritten comments m ay
THAT PART OF THE SEVi OF
be
H ied
w ith
the
Land
WESTERN Aula has moved to
SWta OF SECT 30 TSP 70S RGE
Management Manager Hearings
1101 French Ave Welch our
M E L Y IN G SOUTH OF LONG
may be continued Ir o n tim e to
sign io r hot specials.
WOOO HILLS ROAD, SEMINOLE
tim e a t found necessary. Further
COUNTY, R ED EFINING THE
details available by celling 313
CORPORATE L IM IT S OF THE
43M. E xl. 140
CITY OF LONGWOOD, FLORIDA
P e rio n t a r t advised lhal II they
TO IN C L U D E
SAID LA N D
decide to appeal any decision
W ITHIN M UNICIPAL
LIM ITS
made at these meetings, they w ill
OF THE C IT Y ; AUTHORIZING
IN THE C IR C U IT COURT,
need lo record ol Ihe proceedings,
AM ENDMENT T O C IT Y M A P TO
E IG H T E E N T H
J U D IC IA L
and for such purpose, they may
IN C L U D E SAID LAN O AN
C IR C U IT
IN
AND
FOR
need lo ensure that a verbatim
N E X E D ; PROVIDING FOR THE
SEMINOLE COUNTY, FLORIOA
record o l Ihe proceedings is made,
RIGHTS ANO PRIVILEG ES OF
CASE NO. II-H I7-C A 49-L 10)
w hich re c o rd
includes Ihe
CITIZENSHIP IN THE C ITY:
JAC K S O N V ILLE
N A T IO N A L
te s tim o n y and evidence upon
S E V E R A B IL IT Y AN D
EF
BANK, a n a tio na l
banking
which the appeal is lo be made.
FECTIVE DATE
Board of County Commissioners association.
WHEREAS, there has M en tiled
Plaint Iff.
Seminole Counly, Florida
with the City Clerk ot Ihe City ol
BY: Robert Sturm. Chairman v.
Longwood. Florida, a petition
DEVELO PM ENT
Attest: A rth u r M. Beckwith, Jr. W E K IV A
conteinlng the names ol property
CORPORATION, a F lorida car.
Publish: Sept M. Nov. I, I f l l
owners in Ihe area ol Seminola
par at ion, el al.,
DEZ 110
County. F lorid a , described as
Defendants.
follows ■
NOTICE OP SALE
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR
Thai part o llh e SEta o l SW'« OF
Notice
is
hereby
given
that,
SEMINOLE COUNTY, FLORIOA
SECT
30 TSP »S RGE ME
pursuant lo an order selling
PROBATE DIVISION
LYING SOUTH OF LONGWOOD
judicial sale entered In Ihe above
File Number *1509 CP
captioned action, I w ill sell the
H IL L S
ROAD,
SE M IN O LE
Division Prebate
properly situated in Seminole
COUNTY
IN RE: ESTATE OF
Counly, Florida, described as:
WHEREAS, said petition was W IL L IE M AE MARSHALL, a k a
L o ll I through 4 ol Wekiva Cove
duly c e rlille d lo the Seminole
W illie Mae M arlin, a k a
Phase II, according to the plat
C ounly
P ro p e rty
A p p ra ise r
W illie Mae Thomas,
thereof as recorded In Plat Book
pursuant lo Ihe Charier ol the City
Deceased
15. Page 21 ol the public records of
ot Longwood, Florida, Chapter 49
NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION
Semihole County, F lorida (the
1144. Laws ol Florida, l f 6f , and
TO A LL PERSONS HAVING
" L a n d "l, together w ith
•
Chapter 75 297, Laws ol Florida.
CLAIM S
OR
DEM ANDS
A ll
im p ro v e m e n ts
and
1915. and the cerlllicafton ot Ihe AGAINST THE ABOVE ESTATE
replacements lhereof now con
Seminole Counly Property Ap­ AND A L L OTHER PERSONS
siru cttd or hereaIter to be con
INTERESTED IN THE ESTATE:
praiser as lo Ihe sufficiency ol
strutted under, on o r above the
YOU
ARE
HEREBY
su ch p ellllo n pw rsu e n tio lh elerm s
Land:
N O T IF IE D
th a t
Ihe
adol said Charier received: and
A ll fixtures now or hereafter
m i n i s t r a t i o n of the estate ol
W H E R E A S , the C ity Com
located under, on or above the
mission ol Ihe City of Longwood, W IL L IE M AE MARSHALL, a k a
Land;
Florida has deemed it In the best W illie Mae M artin, a k &lt; W illie
A ll
m a c h in e ry ,
b u ild in g
Mae Thom as, deceased. F ile
Interest ol Ihe City ol Longwood lo
materials, appliances, equipment
Number *1 509CP. Is pending in
accept said petition and lo annex
and personal property o l every
Ihe Circuit Court to r Seminole
said area.
na ture w hatsoever now or
Counly, Floride, Probate Division,
NOW, THEREFORE. BE IT
her caller owned by Oelendanl,
the address of which is Seminole
O R D A IN E D BY THE C IT Y
Wekiva Development Corporation
COMMISSION OF THE CITY OF Counly Courthouse, Sanlord. F L
("W tk lv e '*). and located In, on or
LONGWOOD, F L O R ID A . AS 31771.
used or Intended lo be used In
The personal representaliva ol
FOLLOWS:
connection w ith o r w ith the
Ihe estate is K E N N E T H W.
S IC T IO N 11 Thai the following
operation ol the Land and the
MclNTOSH. whose address I t P.
described properly lo w it: THAT
improvements thereon. Including
PART OF THE SEW OF SWW OF O. Box 1330, Sanlord. FL 31771.
a ll extensions, a d d itio n s , Im
Tha name and address o l the
SECTION 3a TOWNSHIP 10S.
p ro v e m e a ts , b e t t e r m e n t s ,
RANGE 30 EAST LYING SOUTH personal representative's attorney
renewals and replacements lo any
are set fo rth below.
OF LONG WOOO HILLS ROAD.
ot Ihe foregoing;
A ll persons having claims or
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
The lots proceeds o l a ll hatard
t» and Ihe seme Is hereby annexed demands against the estate ere
W IT H IN
THREE
Insurance policies payable with
lo and made a pa rt of Ihe G ly ol re q u ire d ,
respect lo damage to Ihe fixtures
Longwood, Florida, pursuant to MONTHS FROM THE DATE OF
THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF
and personal p ro p a rly above
Ihe term s o l Ihe Charter of Ihe City
THIS NOTICE, to l i l t w ith Ihe described
and or
th e
Imot Longwood Florida, Chapter 49
clerk o l Ihe above court a w ritte n
provem enls now o r h e re a fte r
1144, Laws ol Florida, lf4 f.
ttatm ent ot any claim or demand
located on Ihe Land;
SECTION 1: Thai the corporate
they may hava. Each claim must
A ll
rig h ts ,
p riv ile g e s ,
lim its o l lha City ot Longwood.
be in w ritin g and m utt indicate the tenements, hereditaments, rights
Florida, ba and It is herewith and
hereby redelined lo as to include: basis ta r Ihe claim, the neme and of way, easements, appendages,
address of Ihe creditor or h it agent appurtenances, rip aria n or litto ra l
said land herein described and
or attorney, and the amount rights belonging or In anywise
annexed.
claimed. If the claim It not yet appertaining to lha Land and or
SECTION 1: Thai the City Clark due,
the data when it w ilt become Ihe improvements; a ll rig h t, t ill*
Is hereby author lied to amend,
due shall be stated. If Ihe claim Is and interest of Wekiva In and to
alter, and supplamwit the O fficial
contingent or unliquidated, tha any streets, ways, allays, strips or
City M a p o t lha City of Longwood.
nature of the uncertainty shall ba gores of land adjoining the Land;
Florida, lo Includa Ihe annexation
staled if the claim Is secured. Ihe
A ll of Weklva's rig h t, t i l l t end
contained in Section 1 hereof.
security shall be described. The W e re it In and to any award or
S IC T IO N 4i
That upon this
claim ant shall deliver sufficient aw ards h e re to lo ra m ad e or
ordinance becoming effective, the
copies of the claim to the clerk fo heroalter to be mode by any
residents and property owners In
enable Ihe clerk to m ail one copy M u n ic ip a l, County, S la te or
Ihb above described annexed
to each personal representative.
Federal authority or Board to tho
areas shall ba entitled lo a ll lha
A ll persons In teres led in the present and a ll subsequent owners
rights and privileges and Imestate lo whom a copy o f this Of the Land and o r tha Immuntttos a t are, from lim a to
Notice o f Adm inistration has boon provem enls, Ihe fix tu re s and
lim a, determ ined by lha governing
mailed era required, W IT H IN personal property, including any
authority of Ifw C Ity of Longwood,
THREE MONTHS FROM THE award or awards tar any change or
and lha provisions of said Charter
DATE
OF
THE
F IR S T
changes of grade of any street or
of lha City o t Longwood, Florida,
P U B L IC A T IO N
OF
T H IS streets affecting the Land and or
Chapter af 1144. Laws of Florida.
NOTICE, to Ilia any ob( act tons tha Improvements, Ihe fixtures
1949, and Chapter 742*1, Laws of
they m ay hava lh a l challenge ihe and personal p roperly;
Florida, ins.
va lid ity of Ihe decadent's w ill, lh a
A ll the estate, rig h t, title , in
SECTION I : I I any taction or
q u a lific a tio n s o f tha p e rso n a l tarest, claim or demand what
portion of a taction of this o r­ representative, or Ihe venue or soever of W ik lv a . either a f law or
dinance proves to ba invalid,
jurisdiction o t lha court.
inequity. In and to the Land and or
unlawful o r unconstitutional. It
ALL CLAIMS. DEMANDS, AND tho Improvements, Ihe fixtu re s
Shall not ba held to Invalidate or
OBJECTIONS NOT SO F IL E D and personal properly: and
Im pair lha va lid ity, tore*, or effect
W IL L BE FOREVER BARREO
A ll right, t il la and talarast of
of any other section o r pa rt of this
Data o f tho firm* publication of W ekiva under any purchase
ordinance.
this Notice of Adm inistration: contract or contract fo r ta le of lha
SECTION 4i A ll ordinances or
November I, I N I
Land or Im provemanft.
parts o f ordinances in conflict
Kenneth W. McIntosh
al public tala, lo the highest and
herewith ba and (he same are
As Personal Representaliva
best bidder tar cash, a l the front
hereby repealed.
of lha Estats of
witrance of the Sam (note county
SECTION 7:
This ordinance
W IL L IE MAE MARSHALL, a h
Courthouse, Sanford, F lorida al
shall taka affect pursuant to tho
a
11:04 A.M . on November I I , H U .
p ro v is io n o f F lo rid a S ta tu te
W illie Mae M artin, a k a
.
(SEAL)
H it M *.
W illie Mae Thames
A rthur H. Beckwith J r.
PASSED
AN D ADO PTED
Ctor * of Ihe Circuit Court
THIS
DAY OP
A.D. t m
ATTORNEY FOR PERSONAL
Seminole County, F lo rid a
FIR ST REAOINO: October t t .
REPRESENTATIVE:
By CytuMa Proctor
tm
DO UG LAS
STENSTROM .
Deputy Clerk
SECOND BE AD IN G :
ESQUIRE
H arry M. Wilson, II I , Esq.
of STENSTRO M , M c lN T O S H . Smith 4 Huisay
J U L IA N ,
CO LBERT
M ayor
S t) Bem en Bank Building
WHIGHAM. F A .
C ity o f Longwood, Florida
Jacksonville, Florida 12142
P. O. Box 1334
ATTEST:
(M f) 35* 7704
Sanford, FL 13111
Attorneys tor P la in tiff
TtfephO M i IBS-122-1111
City C lark
Publish October IS 4 November 1,
Publish: Nov. 1, A 1H2
Publish: Oct. II. as, Nov. 1 , 1 1N3
1*01
DEB-4
OCA-44
DEA *7

Legal Notice

SANFORD Furnished rooms by
me week. Reasonable rales,
m aid s e rv ic e C atering to
w o rk in g people A lio un
furnished apt 713 4507
411 Palmetto Ave.

is—Help wanted
CUSTOMER service. Earn from
54 hr or more Work from
home on established lelephone
program. Ile x hrs. 331 0183.’

HIDDEN Lake Area. Room ard
bath In quiet lovely home.
Student or working person
322 5471.

STEADY Reliable man tar part
tim e maintenance. Ex Service
man preferred. Call 323 7)53.

DRIVER

.............. $4 hr.

SANFORD, Reas, weekly 4
monthly rates U til Inc ell 500
Oak Adults I *41 7813

30-Aparimerits Unfurnished

Will be tested, tra c to r trailer
experience needed Help load
and unload products, w ill be
tested, p e rm a n e n t, q u ick
raises
AAA EM PLO Y M E N T
I f l l French Ave.
31) 5174
OPEN
A von
T e rrito rie s
Christmas Selling now For
more into call H a rrie t Mixon
111 0459___________________

DRAFTPERSON ....... $$
Excellent entry opportunity with
good d ra ftin g background
Must be good w ith math.
Raises, benefits.
AAA EM PLO Y M E N T
1117 French Ave.
315 5174

I. 1 AND 1 BDRM From 1340
Ridgewood A rm s Apt. 35*0
Ridgewood Ave. 123 4470
7417 MOHAWK DR., Sanlord 2
bdrm, I bath, ret., stove AC.
5290 m onthly, sec. deposit,
lease I 793 4904 ask lor Ed
M ariner's V illa g ro n Lake Ada, I
bdrm Irom S750, 2 bdrm from
1790 Located 17 *1 just south
of A irp o rt Blvd in Sanlord All
Adults 37)0470
G ENEVAGARDENS
7 Bdrm apartments
W O Hook up
F rom $300 per mo
1503 W 2Slh SI.
377 7090

Ita vr some ram pinq equipmerf
you no longer use1 Sell it alt
* ith a Classified a u .n The
Herald Call 377 7411 or 1)1
W fi and a friendly ad visor
m il help you

WANTED carpenters 5 yrs. exp
must have own tools 8&gt; Iransp.
Apply al job site Ridgewood
Ave by Seminole H S

sales ”

2 Bdrm apt.
S254
2 Bdrm apt.
S173
7 Bdrm apt.
S27S
CEN TURY I I
JUNE PORZIG REALTY.
REALTOR
312*471
BAMBOO COVE APTS.
300 E A irport Blvd
I 4 7 Bdrms.
From SIM mo
Phone 31) 1340

....................S15K

Strong clo se r, m ust read
b lu e p r in ts ,
fin a n c e
background helpful. Excellent
grow ing
business.
S15
minimum lo be made.
FEE P A ID
AAA EM PLO Y M E N T
I f IT French Ave.
373 )171
COOK ta r lin e d in in g , ex­
perienced only, reg u la r break
last sh ill, plus lunch A dinner
knowledge Apply f 5
Deltona Inn.

WAREHOUSE
S5
MANAGER ............... hr.
7 years lu rn ilu re background
necessary. S u p e rv is o ry ex
p rrience, d riv in g s tra ig h t
truck or van w ith good driving
record. E x c e lle n t company
raises, benefits.
AAA EM PLO Y M E N T
i f t ; French Ave.
313-5174
ASSISTANT Manager Trainee —
Responsible person looking tar
excellent future, re ta il 4 mar
chandlslng exp. a plus, good
b e n rlits , a p p ly In person.
Walgreens 1947 Orlando Dr.,
Sanlord

SHIPPING AND
«
RECEIVING .............hr.
Shipping, re c e iv in g and Inv e n to ry
b a c k g ro u n d
necessary. T ra c to r tr a ile r
d riv in g a p lu s . E x c tlle n i
growing company, raises.
AAA EM PLO Y M E N T
I f l l French Ave.
313-1174
AC MECHANICS Duct 4
trim out men needed.
444*752
m VON

products needs ladies 4
men. sell or buy. On |ob
training, advancement.
131 5910

ENJOY country living? 1 Bdrm,
Duplex Apts., O lym pic St.
pool Shenandoah V illa g e .
Open 9 lo 4 323 7970
SANFORD, lovely 1 Bdrm. air,
lu m itu re available. 1740 mo.
141 7**3.
LUXURY
APARTM ENTS.
F a m ily 4 A d u lts section
Poolside. 1 Bdrm s. Master
Cove Apts 323 7900 Open on
weekends
SANDLEW O O O villas. 7 Bdrm.
7 Bath. A ir. Pool,
1393-5-293-7744.
SANFORD 1 bdrm , kids, appl.,
air, carpel. 1130 . 339 7100.
Sav-On R e n ta il, Inc. Realtar
M E L L O N V IL L E
TRACE
APARTM ENTS
S p a .ta u t,
modern 2 bdrm , I bath apt.,
carpeted, kltctlen equipped
Cent HA W alk lo town 4 lake
no pets S29S. 311 3904

31—Apartments Furnished
PARTLY furnished 1135 mo
q u ie t
dead
end
street,
screened patio. Call 3110121.
M O B ILE Homo private lot
ve ry clean. No pets,
adults only. 1030 Magnolia.
SANFORD
I b d rm , kids,
com .kil.. carpel. S19S 319 7100
Sav-On Rentals. Inc. Baaltor
l OVELY

Furnished efficiency
in town. llf S mo. Also 1 Bdrm
unfurn. SIM. *14*4171.

Furnished apartm ents tor Senior
CHIitns 111 Palmetto Ave., j .
Cowan No phone calls

21—Situations Wanted
31A—Duplexes
W IL L o o
HOUSECLEANINO.
CALL 111-1955.

24-Business Opportunities
Plumbing, Hardware, O IY, Bui.
w wo Real E sta te , w m .
M allciowskl Realtor. I l l 71*3,

Legal Notice
FICTITIOUS NAM B
Notice is hereby given that I am
engaged In business at 1513 South
French Ave., Sanford, Fl. 31771
SamIrvole County, Florida under
Ihe Itclillous name of KISH REAL
ESTATE, and lh a l I Intend to
register said name w ith tha Clerk
of Ihe Circuit Court, Seminole
County, Florida in accordance
with tha provisions of the Fic­
titious Name S lafufet. To W it:
Section 1450* F lorid a Statutes

1 ON

R ID G E W O O D Lane,
screened porch. I M mo.

JUNE PORZIG REALTY,
REALTOR
1228471
1 BDRM, 1 Bath, w a ll wall
carpel. Cent h a , fenced yard,
kitchen appl. 831 4788.
LARGE 1 bdrm . a ir, heat,
carpeted, appliances. No pets.
S31S mo . 1150 dep. 112 1500 or
321 233*.

37=WOses Unfurnished
SANFORD 3 b d rm , kids, appl.,
pets, fence. *300. D 9 7J00
Sav-0« Rentals, I n c Realtor
LAKE M A R Y 1 bdrm , 1 bath,
plush c a rp a l, co m p le te ly
remodeled, doll house, Slot
mo. Call &lt;71-3554 ask fo r Slava.

)957,
Signature Lewana F. Kish
Publish: Oct. 14 IS, Nov. 1, 4 l t d
DEA 70

warn Ads G *t P e p ie Together
- Theta Buying And Theta
Selling. 123 2*11 q r B U f f O

N G T IC IT O T H I PUBLIC
Nolle* is hereby given I h t f Ihe
Board of Adjustm ent of the City of
Sanlord w ill h o ld a ip t c ia l.
M atting on Wednesday, Nov. 17,
19*1, in the City H a ll a l H ilB J L M .
in order to consider a raquesi to r a
variance in lha Zoning Ordinance
as II
p t r la ln *
to
Height
ra q u irtm e n ls In RC-1 Zoned
District in Lots 14, I I A 30 ( le u Rd
Right o l way) F ra n k L. WoocXuff
Subd, PB 1, Pg af.
Being
m ore
s p e c ific a lly
described as located a l 2*10, 3SJ3
and 1514 Sanlord Ave.
Planned use o f lh * proparty:
Duplexes or Com m ercial.
B.L. Perkins
Chairman
Board of Adjustm ent
Publish: Nov. I. 10, 18B1
D E B IT

NEW 3 bdrm. 2 bath, garage,
CHA, available November IS.
11)31*7 aft. S Mon. thru Frl.
All day weekends.
1 BDRM apt. in Sanford, ms
mo. Senior cltlien preferred.
Mail 3 ref. lo P.O. Box 701
Otntva. Fig. 32714
3 BOR 2 Bath with Double car
garage, and executive type
home in Deltona. Call 9&lt;|«n
days. 73* 1491 eves and
weekends.
DELTONA - 1 Bedroom must
uatoappr. Degult.tooaellSO
m o 1*047*1*531.____________

)1 CHA. WW Carpet, fenced
yard, nice area, *375 mo, *
dap. 323-Bit*

�/ r &gt;'

U — Houses Furnished
D ELTO N A. 1 Bdrm , M IA .
screened porch, A m o*
m inimum No pel* JJ70 F ir* t,
1**1. security 571 I HO

41—Houses
ftOUSE WITH 4 ACRES, stalls,
fenced p a sture , woods, 3
bdrm. 7 bath, stone^ircplaci-.
horse lovers paradise,. MUST
SEE' I l f * , 000 NW Sem.hole
County By owner 327 8UJ

with Major Hoople

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

41— Houses

Y0 U CAN'T \l
JAKE REALLY ISN'T
A B A P &lt;5UV; [60 3 Y F R $T 'i
MAYBE SCfAE ROiSH
PAlu
EP6 &amp;$! BUT AFTER
FCR YEA.RS BUSTER
C rr, i
PEO PLE
ALL, HE C ATC H ES
THOJCHT
KNENs
A U?T Or E L B A 'S
HE
IN THE LEAG UE
TCM AT0E6
\vAS&gt;
HE REBCUNP 5
NVERE
IN! .
O K!
W 150N O U S !

61ZH

KI SH R E A L E S T A T E
17 1 0041
REALTOR
Alter Mr*. 313 7441 A 321 7154

3)—Mobile Homes

CASSELBERRY 7 bdrm. kids,
air appl S7S5 23* 7700
1*» On Rcntali, Inc. R ealtor
M A K E ROOM TO STO RE
YOUR
W INTER
IT E M
S SELL "DON'T N E E D S '
FAST WITH A WANT AD
Phone 377 7411 or 831 ***3 and
a friendly Ad V iio r w ill help
you
1481 AIR condition Mobile home
30 H. attached Fla room and
large tlorage shed. 1195 mo.
Option to buy under *15,000
321 0*74.

37-B—Rental Offices
P R IM E
O FFIC E
SP A C E .
P rovidence Blvd , D e lto n a .
1144 Sq Ft. Can Be Divided.
W ith Parking. D ayi 305 57*
1431
Evening* l Weekend*
*04 734 34*3.
1400 Sq ft. olllce, US M aple
A ve , Sanford Avail. Im m ed
Broker Owner 377 770*.

4 COMMERCIAL Ottlce*
Newly Remodeled t*Sper mo.
373*0*0
OFFICE SPACE
FOR LEASE
830 7773

37C-FJT Lease
SPACE lor lea** at Sanford
A irport. For itorage o r email
but In***. 377 A*03.

38—Wanted to Rent
THE Florida Department o l Law
Enforcement w ithe* to ren t o r
le a ** tpace on a cam .
m u n ic a llo n lo w e r In th e
greater Orlando area, fo r It*
two way radio communication
*y*tem. The anltnna used I* a
OB 717 7. mounted In an omnidirectional array. The b a te
ttatlon It a two channel C.E.,
100 watt low band, rem ote
control (telephone lin e * re
qulredl, Iran tce lvtr. which
tra n tm ll* 43 14 and 45 82 M HZ.
and receive* 45.38 and 45.11
MHZ. Coverage I* required
tro m New Sm yrna Beach
louth to K litlm m te . Elect r lc a i power I t re q u ire d ,
emergency genera tor eery Ice
I* preferred. Location* on I ha
near nerthaatl ltd# o* O rlando
are preferred
Replies are to be submitted to
M.D. Brick, Technical Ser­
vice * Supervisor, F lo r id a
D epartm ent ol L a w E n ­
forcement, Pott Office Box
H I*. Tallahassee, FL. 37702.
Phone Inquiries w ill be ac­
cepted at 1*04) 4*8 8071.
S L IM
BUDGETS
ARE
BOLSTERED WITH VALUES
FROM THE WANT A D
COLUMNS.

41—Houses
P R E T T Y Home lo r s m a ll
le m lly , excellent cond., new
paint, new root, move rig h t in.
Lge shade tree*, near shop­
ping. *37.000.
The Wall t t . Company
Realtar
231-MS

CaU Keya

WE LIST AND SELL
MORE H O M ESTH AN
ANYONE IN NORTH
SEMINOLE COUNTY I

FOR ALL YOUR
REALESTATE NEEDS

323*32 00
si* W Lake M ary Blvd.
Suite B
Lake Mary, Fla 17744
__________ 371 1700
1 Bedroom, I bath home lo r sale,
by owner. Assumable 8’ i %
Mortgage 147.S00 177 1178

A L L F L O R ID A R E A L T Y
OF SA N FO R D R E A L T O R
3 BDRM, 1 bath, sp lit plan,
corner lol. able garage w
electric opener. Im m aculate in
A out, with many extra s Call
us lor details. 149,900
OLOER 7 story, 1 bdrm 7 bath,
firep la ce , screened fro m t
porch, great financing 147.500
2544 5, French 377 0231
Alter hours 372 7112 139 3*10
HOME 1 Bdrm. 1* i bath, well
maintained, citrus trees, lo r
sale at I I I . 500
CONDO 7 Bdrm, 2 bath, washer
A dryer, rent w ith option to
buy at 1190 mo
HOME 4 Bdrm, 4 bath, pool. 4
lol* enclosed by * It wall,
M ayfair section For sale
PENT — 2 bdrm, 2 bath. Condo
w Ocean View 1270 w k. New
Smyrna.
L EASE — Fenced properly w
building light m anufacturing
1450 per mo
INLANO REA LTY INC.
REALTORS
170 N Park Ave , Sanlord, Fla.
REALTY WORLO I30SI 377 3145

R O B B IE ’S
REALTY
REALTOR. MLS
T ltl 5 French
Suite e
Sanlord. F I*.

2 4 H°U R p

3 2 2 *9 2 8 3

STEMPER

AGENCY

COZY OLD BR IC K F IR EPLA C E
With attached nice 3 Bdrm , H i
Beth home. Oood area. This is
a groat buy tar *41,500. FHA or
Ownor may help.
WANT AQARDKMT
T b it new listing a ] B drm , I Bath
homo in Lake M onro* could be
what you’re looking fo r. F or a
well kepi home, In Ih t country,
call us soon. Only SIS.000.

SUPER 1 Bdrm . 1 Bath home
with targe eat In kitchen,
dining room, spacious yard
w ith p riva cy lence re a r,
m other-inlaw quarters and
more) 5*7,500.
BEAUTIFUL 3 B drm , 1 Bath
home in la n o ra w ilh spill
bedroom plan, great room
tile d , large screened porch,
cent HA, eq kitchen, fenced
yard, and iust l yr. old. 551,504.
JUST L U T E D 1 Bdrm , I Bath
home on a double lo ti Neat a*
a pint Eat in kitchen, b u ilt Ins.
greenhouse,
and
m o re l
Country atm osphere! 547,500.
BELIEVE THIS! 1 Bdrm . I Bath
home, newly paln le d t Sold " A t
I t " c o n d itio n ! G re a t Invettmentt Note: C-1 Zoningl
511.000

CALL A N Y T IM E
1545
P a ik

322-2420

SANFORD S anora South. 3
bdf(n, 7 bath, double garage,
CMA, 555.000 123 4850

•II -Mobile Home?
S E E 5K y L IN E S N E W E S T
Palm Sp rm q i A P a lm M a n o r
G REG O RY M O B IL E H O M E S
JI0) Orlando D r
1115100
VA 1 F H A F in a n c in g
1*81 G U E R D O N 14'*4' complete
w shed and aw n in g . 51.000 A
assume o r refin an ce
M u st
sell A ll 5:30 321 *388

1*81 SKYLINE M obile Home
24*52 it scree n e n closure
porch, u tility shed. Central
heal and a ir 3 B drm . 2 Bath
Lol site I t 50x100 Sale price
*41.900. financing available at
80 1 ol sales p rice interesl rate
14 ' . | ♦ 2 Points Can be seen
at 17* Leisure O r
North
DeBary.
F la
In
the
M radow lea o n th e R iv e r
Mobile H om e co m m u n ity .
Please contact Tom Lyon or
G'b Edmonds F irs t Federal ol
Seminole 305 127 1742

ASSOCIATES N E E D E D
REALTOR 377 m i Day or Night
NICE House on largo landscaped
lot, trees. Gourmet kitchen, 7
bdrm, liy bath, extras 147,000.
C in e to Swallows Golt. 305
*48 4344 DeBary._____________

ST

j

acre parcels, also interior
parcel*, riv e r access 511.900
Public water. 70 m.n to Alla
monte M a ll
12 % jg yr
financing
no q u a lify in g
Broker 411 *"H

27
M ID TOWN location. Neal 3 1,
FHA approved Fence, u lil.
r m , fireplace. WW carpel.
New draperies th ro u g h o u t.
CHy bus el door. 137.750 total.
Moderate down end seller hold
at FHA rale. Owner Associate
8100107

JOHNS R iv e r fro n fa g if,

R cr

F.Jate Wanted

WE BUY eq u ity in Hovcei,
apartments, vacant land and
acreage
LUCKY
IN
VESTMENTS P O Box 7500.
Sanford, F|« 37771, 177 4 741
NEED t* t a ll your hem e
q u ic k ly !
We
can
a lte r
guaranteed t a la w ith in 18
days. Call 331-1*18.

27 A—Mortgages Bought
&amp; Sold

9Sb.
JUNE PORZIG R E A LTY
REALTOR
712 1471

BANANA L A K I RD. Cove try
living. 1 Bdrm gergeeu*. 1.4S
• acre* Huge * * k tree*, h e r***
O K. fe e the ha n dym a n .
117.M*.
SPARKLING POOL HO M B 1
Bdrm w it* fam ily r * * m , oatInkltchen. Screened perch,
mnnicered fenced yard. M any
• it r a * . Only M U N . Owner
linanchia.
IN VB STO R l SPBCIAL 1
I H Bath, atto rn * lew h_____
■engage,
law
m a n th ly
M Vm anfs&lt; g ra a l la c a tla n .
tm rM k aetaatui. Oafy 134,ma
ataa FHA and VA Beyers, call
no mriefe an IM * O n tl

ASSUM E

fa m ily

nlcaty
yard w ttb wetL
1

Only U U N .
IM MACULATB I Sdrm, IW
B alk, Cmrirat boat - a ir, axWa
la rv a prhtala .yard. Saddle

WB N iB O LIITINO S

323-5774
148* HWY. t l - t l
*
__
__
STOP AND THINK A M IN U T E .
I I C la o llia d A d t d id n ’ t
w o r t . . there wouldn't he any.

BATEMAN REALTY
UC. Bed! EHafd f c l M f
7040 Santard Avi.

321-0799

171 1478

MORENEW LISTIN G S!
1411 S. LAKE AVE. Your dream
house comp let el Modern and
tastefully decorated 2 Bdrm , 1
Beth with sunken liv in g room ,
7 sided llreplec* end a ll the
(rim m ing* A reel buy at
181.500
l i t ROSALIA DR. Just p a rte d
lor a couple or sm all fa m ily .
Immaculala and ch a rm in g 2
Bdrm, 1 Bath w ith cent a ir and
htat. Assumable F H A m or
Igag* too. 143,500.
701 1. MAPLE AV E . Zoned
commercial this large 4 Bdrm,
TVj Bath older home he* been
m odernlted th ro u g h o u t but
*8111 needs your touch I Have
your bushiest w h tr * you liv a l
855.000.

NO O U A U F V IN O

t

Eve

322-7643

WE PAY cash fo r 1st 1 2nd
mortgages Ray Legg. Lie
Mortgage Broker !M 25**

MLS

M il.F r e n c h Ay*.

SUN LAN DO W N E R
FINANCING
Larva fam ily home on cut d » sa c
and extra big lot. Convertiwtt
to IC C . F e a tu re s : I ca r
gsrav*. fam ily room, paddle
fan*, excellent condition, and
owner w ill a c c ip f su p e r
financing. Call new te see.

Cal IBart
REAL ESTATE
REALTOR. 117 1*18
HAL C O L U i't R E A L T Y
REALTOR
M l R. 75*11
M -W t
SANFORD R E A L T Y
REALTOR
nun*
A lt. N n - H l 4**4.713-4181
UNDER 82.000 OO WN
] bdrm, doll house. A ffordable
m on th ly p a y m e n t*.
C a ll
OwnerBroker u i ta n

FOR E ST ATE C om m erca l or
R e s id e n tia l Auction* A Ap
p ra sais C all Dell'S Auction

49-B-Wte ter Front

75— R ecreational Vehicles

COMMENT =

VJH«BA ew 'uaejtlFe l»e-P

FIREWOOO
3718118
WEIGHT BENCH w squat rack
8 1 sets o l 110 lbs weight on
ea set 5150. 111 4)45.
77 CHEV i . Ton Pickup. 11000.
completes** meeh. tool* 1*00
717 4481
M INK STOLE Tourmaler.e.
beautiful. Sacrifice. 1300 Firm .
Eve*. 172 ITS*.

L IK E NEW 17’ i tl Prowler
Completely sell contained with
root a ir conditioning Call
a lte r 4 p m 371 5764

bo W.n»t«l ID HiT,

Sfr—Miscellaneous for Sale

A L U M I N U M , cans, cooper, trad
brass, s ilv e r, gold W eekdays
8 4 10. Sat 9 1 ¥ K o M o Tool
Co 911 W 1*1 St 133 1100
Lookinq to r qa rden equipm ent’
R ead to d a y 's c la s id ie d a d t tor
good b u y *

NICE CLEAN baby ttems lor
resale M ust be cheap Toys,
dolls. Clothes 322 *504

BUNK B E D A Chest
of Orawers. Good Condition.
Call 372 *268

STARCKAFT 1*7* Travel
T ra ile r, 18 ll sell contained,
lu ll bath, 6 II. Retrig w
Irc e ie r. 4 burner sloye w ovm,
root a ir 8 antenna, exc cond.
32 2 344*

i

*s i

lx {

V
'v ,

IF YOU AEN leaking ter lb *
perfect tpol to gat away from
It all consider th is fisherm an's
heaven 1 bdrm , 2 bth, elegant
A fully lurnisned double wide
mobile home. W- large lot on
canal on SI. Johns R iver. Evan
has covered Gazebo &amp; Ifshlng
docks. 144,500 w ith owner
willing to help finance.

jq—Miscellaneous

DEER HOUNDS end
Fox Hound* fo r tele.
121-4787
When vou pace e o e s u tie d * 0
in t i. f Evening Herald- V8v
dose to vour phone because
vorm-th.ng w onderful i* about
. to nopoen
Snake Proof Beefs U f . f i
ARMY NAVY SURPLUS
310 Sanford Ave.
1215711
LOVE SEAT lig h t ' beige. New
1340 w ill te ll 8IO. Exc. cond.
37131*1

1*79 SUZUKI 750 L 8.900 m ile s
Adult ridden, new tires. 12500
327 3178
1974 HONDA 750
11000 or best oiler
371 11*5

79—T rucks-T railers

TOP Dollar Paid tor Junk 8
Used cars trucks 8 heavy
equipment 122 5*90

1*76 TOYOTA L0NGBED As is
it runs, make otter
127 0044all 6p m

Make your Budget go fu rth e r
shop the D a i s i e d Ads eve ry
day

78 PONTIAC Sunbird
Power
Steering. Auto T ra n s , A ir
Match Back 1450 Down Cash
or Trade 33* *100 . 834 4405

v
PAYtO NA AUTO AUCTION
Hwy *7 I m&gt;l* west of Spved
way Dayton* Beach w ill hold
a pubic AUTO AUCTION
every Wednesday at 7 30 p m
(l j the only one &gt;n F loridaYou set the reserved price
Call *04 755 13H tor fu rth e r
d e t a i l s __________________ _
Denary Auto 8 M arine Sales
across the river too ol h ill 174
Hwy 17 97 DeBary 66A XSM
1*76 LINCOLN Town Car. new
pamt, new vinyl lop. tow
mileage, S7500 127 4610,
173 1994
a i m AM Buys cars 8 trucks
Pay o il anywhere Cash to
y o u li! J21 IMO
1971 FORD Muslanq 307 engine
Auto . AM FM stereo 116*5
Call 371 6165
77 DODGE Monoco 2 Dr Hard
lop Like new cond. Silver
gray. Loaded 1*9 Down 13*
9100. 114 4405

CONSULT OUR
fe ifa y

r

..- J

YOU NEED to know who you are
in Christ. F ind out at The
Deeper L if e C lass. Every
Thursday 7:30 p.m
111 S.
Maple, Sanlord 321 4267.

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB

V» SHEPHERD ' i Huskey I yr
old. Great w ilh children tree to
someone w ith a good home 8
fenced yard.
MAYTAG Gas O ryer 1100
691 0710

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

LEARN TO PR A Y accurately
and effectively al Tuesday
Night School of Prayer. I l l S
M aple, S a n lo rd . 1714167.
FREE

*v12 O R IEN TAL Style rug Dark
red Ekcellent condition, used
4 mos. 1185 111 5770

5EALY M ism atched mattress
sale Twin set, 1119.95 Full set
1159 95. They don't have to
match to be good. 331 578,1.
FLO RIDA S L E E *'H O P S

52—Appliances
R E F R IG E R A T O R S
good
selection guaranteed. Sanford
Auction m s S. French
373 7340.
Krnmore parts, service, used
washer* 313 04*7
MOONEY APPLIANCES

53—TV-Radio-Stereo

HAVf£ YOUR tlnancial dreams
become a re a lity w ilh Aloe
PT, no Investment 371 7718

Additions &amp;
RpmodHinq

R.C ELECTRIC
ELE C TR IC A L work done cheap
Remodels and addilIons Flood
lig h tin g , paddle Ians, burglar
a larm s, etc No job too large or
sm a ll Free estimates. 74 hr.
service 377 1917

55—Boats a Accessories
1810 7Vi
E V IN R U O E
13’
liberglest Goal 8450 33 1 5140.
3040 Celery Ave.
1 *7 4 - 11FT. TOM SAWYER 1 0
US Merc, dual asHe trailer.
17500 o r best o ffe r. 331 1381

BATHS, kitchens, rooting, block,
co n c re te , w in d o w s, add a
room, tre e e stim ate s 371 1441

NEW . R E M O D E L. REPAIR
All type* and phases o! con
Struction, $ G Balint 171 4137.
377 1445 Slate Licensed

Bt’.lutV GlfC’
TOWER'S BEAUTY SALON
FO RM ERLY H a rrie tts Brautv
Nook 519 E 1st St . 177 5747

Boarding ft Grooming
A N IM A L

H aven

HOUSECLEANING?
SELL THOSE NO LONGER
N E E D E D ITE M S W ITH A
CLAS SIFIE D AD

S P R IN G

B o a rd in g and

Groom ing Kennels Shad,, in
suiated. screened, tty proof m
Side, outside runs Fans Also
AC cages We cater to your
( F*l»- **h. 377 5757

Hauling

Home Improvement
C A R P E N T R Y , concrete 8
plum bing M inor repairs to
adding a room Don 373 3*74
PA IN TING and n u a ir, pa’ ,o and
scree n p o rc h p g ilt
Call
a n y tim e 377 9481
WINDOW repair and mstalla
tlo n .
screen
rep a ir
8
r e p la c e m e n t ,
w in d o w
d ro n in g . I l l 59*4

Bookkeeping
C O L L IE R ’ S Home Repairs
carpentry, rooting, painting,
DeOarmeau Bookkeeping ser.
Bookkeeping, consulting, Taies
___________1711707

Brick &amp; Bkxk
Stonework
P IA Z Z A MASONRY
Quality W ork A t Reasonable
P ric e i. Free Estimates
Ph. 149 5500
A T LA 5 M A S O N R Y
B ric k ,
chimneys, stone a rt, toon
nation watts, steps, patios,
stab* » 1 15*2

Carpentry

Ceiling Fan Installation

w indow re p a ir

171 4421

WINDOWS, doors, carpentry,
Concrete »&gt;*&gt;»*• ceramic 8 lloor
tile . M inor repairs, fireplaces,
insulation. Ele. Bond i l l l i l t .

C AR PENTER 75 yrs exp Small
rem oddlm g iobs, reasonable
rates Chuck 371 *445
M aintenance ot a ll types
C arpentry, painting, plumbing
8 electric 121 4011

07A—fe e d
HAY n a per bale.
33 o r m ore tre e da!.
I a va il. 349 51*4.

A &amp; B R O O FIN
7) y n . experience. Licensed 8
Insured
Free Estim ate*on Rooting,
Re Rooting end Repairs.
Shingles. Built Up and Tile

JAMES ANDERSON
G. F. BOHANNON
LITTIKENCONTHACTORS
ROOFING
Licensed, bonded, tow p r ic e s
Q u a lity w o rk m a n s h ip

O IL Heater cleaning
and servicing.
Call Ralph 373 711]

Painting
H E IL M A N rooting, painting A
re p a irs
Q uality
w o rk,
r ra s o n a o l*
rates
F re e
estimates Anytime 1141490
HOUSE Painting. FreeEsl.
Beat your lowest bid
_______ 10 y rs exp 377 7003
E D W E IM E R PAINTING
Q uality work guaranteed
Licensed
373 4743
Insured
PAINTING 8 ROOFING
Licensed, gueranteed work
371 5*49
LONGWOOD Services In te rio r A
E x te rio r Painting. Dona a t
reasonable rates, l i t *002.

Painting &amp; or
Pressure Cleaning
NO JOB too large or small. P ro
q u a lity w orkm anship and
m aterials. Ref 377 0071.

Free Estimates 748 111 *

R E R O O F I N G carp e ntry, roof
repair 8 pam ling
15 y e a rs

exp 327 1*1*
JEAN'S ROOFINO
Licensed, insured, low est p ric e s
in town 177 1844

M oderntling your Horn*-' - r ’ i no
longer needed but useful items
wilh a Classified Ad.

Built up and Shingle root,
licensed and Insured.
Free estimates. 322-1936.
JAMES E. LEE IN C
Secretarial Services
PERSONNEL U N LIM IT E D has
te m p o ra ry s e c re ta ria l se r
vices available on short n o lle *
372 544*

Sewing Machines
Sewing Machlnos A
Vacuums
C lixn -O ii8 Adjust

★ Christmas Special*
SM I

Piano Lessons

LA N D C LE AR 1N G M ld .rt,
lo o s o il. shale d sk ng.
mowing 1223411

Lawn Service
SHAMROCK LANDSCAPE
M AINTENANCE
" A Cut Above TIM B » it"
Complete la w n ca r* A fertilizing
s e rv ic e . S e rvin g in d u s tria l,
co m m e rcia l and residential
customers. Free soil sam pliiq
and estim ate*. I l l 057*

M EIM TZER T IL E E ip since
1*81 New 8 old work comm 8
res id Free estim ate 14(1581

MOW. ED G E . WEEO EATING
Cleanups A light hauling
Fraa estimates, call H I Oils.

COODY A SONS
T ile C g n lrtcto rs
371 0157
•

M OW . E dge, T rim , ™Ren*w’
L a n d s c a p in g , Clean ups.
Hauling. Thatching, Weeding,
M ulch Lindsay's M l MAI

Lie.

OUR R ATESA RELO W ER
L akeview N ursing Center
71* E Second SI . Sanford
111 4 M I

Home Repain

STOP AN D THINK A MINUTE.
It C la s iilie d Ads didn't work
there wouldn't be in y.

Ceramic Tilt

H ^ L a w n Garden

G IN E B A T O E Se*»
re d u ctla a able. 4880 w a tt
1843.10.1300 w a tt 88*3 50.
!*G i

Roofing

E L E M E N T A R Y Plano Lesions
ottered to r beginners age* 4
and up Debbie 321 5*21

In our stars *r your houst.
Phon* 1)11188
A.t.M . MACHINES
700 Savage Ct.
Lang wood. Fla.

Landscaping

All type* o l carpentry. Custom
Built additions. Patios, screen
rooms, carport. Door locks,
panalllng, shingles, reroollng
Discount to senior citizens
Foe last service, call Big R
145 7371. 321 4917.

GUN AUCTIO N
SUNDAY. NOV. 18,1P.M.
SANFORD AUCTION
I31IS. PrwscR
m-1188

U —Machinery-Toots

Nursing Center

Oil Heaters Cleaned

H AU LIN G and Clean Up,
tree trim m in g and removal,
_________ J49 971Q________

C E ILIN G FAN INSTALLATION
Q u a lity Work
We Do Most Anything
1*8*17 1
877 4781

FILL DIRT 1 TOPSOIL
YELLO W SAND
Call Clark A Hiri3337lB0

Johnnies A o p lia n crs
We
service al! major appliances
Reas rales, 37 yr, experience
371 8314

Firewood

Good Used T V * 125 4 op
M ILL E R S
2419 Orlando D r
Ph 3210352
RE POSSESSED COLOR TVS
We t e ll repossessed color
televisions, e ll name brand*,
console* and portable* EX
AM PLE: Zenith 35" color In
walnut console. O riginal price
over 1750, balance due 11*4
cash or paym ents 117 month.
NO M O NEY DOWN. Still In
warranty. Call 3 t t l Century
Sale* 843 51*4 day or n il* . Free
home tria l, no obligation.

Major Appliance
Repair________

ODESSY Cam e w ilh 7 car
iridges. Value 1350 Asking
1770’ » mos. old Puch Moped
Asking 1775. 33* 7911.

51-A— Furniture

Electrical

Aloe Products

GENERATOR sets inventory
red u ctio n Sale 2500 w att
1417 50 2*9 4 841

fo r Sale

DO YOU L IK E PA R TIE S?
Name brand toys and g ift Items?
Just call me, I dem onstrali
toy* and g ift*. A ll are low
priced. Shop In the com lort of
your home. SAVE M O NEY
and get your shopping done
FREE H ive a House o l Lloyd
party. Vicky P h llllp i, XTfllTO.

19*0 Y l 125 YAMAHA
Very good cond 1700
371 5575

HUNTING international Scout
pick up 11000
A l! $ 10172 1341

JUNE PORZIG REALTY
MLS
177 8878

STORING IT MAKES WASTE
SELLING IT MAKES CASH
PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD
NOW Call 372 2611 or 811 99*3

77—Junk C irs Removed

l\ ^ J |$

THREE suits s lie 48 L Reason
lor s e llin g
lo st w eight.
Telephone 371 0291

M AKE RO O M TO STORE
YOUR W IN TER ITEMS . . .
SELL " D O N 'T
NEEDS"
FAST W ITH A WANT AD
Phone 373 3811 or 131 ***3 and'
a friendly A d V isor w ill help

REALTOR
8915 French A v t.

1977 HAR LEY Sportster 10000
Also 1*80 Kawasaki 450 Phone
B4? 7785

123 5620
A C T IV E L Y

WILSON M A IE R FURNITURE
711 U S E FIRST ST
31? 1827

43- -Lots-Acreage

78- -Motorcycles

NO LONGER USED CAMPING
GEAR IS IN DEMAND SELL
IT
NOW
WITH
A
C LAS SIFIE D AD

r

MAYFAIR V IL L A S ! 1 A 1 Barm.
1 Bath Condo V illa *, next to
Maylair Country Club. Select
your lol. Hoar plan A interior
decor! Q uality constructed by
Shoemaker fa r 547,100 A upl

3UY JUNk CARS 8 TRUCKS
F rom 5lO tu(50 or more
Cali 327 1674

11111 FRENCH
323 7340

Sanford's Sa le s Leader

FORD 47 Granada. I d r * . 6 cyl.
iu iu fy tr im pkg 15 hundred
mdes Far warr 57995 Aus
tarn While Outlet. 32T 1660

WE PAY fop dollar tor
ju n k cars and Trucks
C B 5 A uio P jr t t ^ 3 c « 5

SANFORD AUCTION

STENSTROM
REALTY - REALTORS

30 Autos lo r Sofr

77-Ju n k Girl Removed

M onday.Nov l . l p m
Large selection at furniture lor
every room in the house Some
antiques and collectibles plus
T V s and misc
SSCA5H.VI1A. MCS5

,

Monday. Nov. t, 1* 83—3 B

Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

77- Auction

PUBLIC AUCTION

b^Vb

f-r-f f l
M O B IL E H o m i 7 ic r e * In
Geneva. lenced in ya rd . J
lx irm .li u r L B n o 8 kitchen
CMA.JJJSmo F Ir ilS la** mo
rent + security deposit 227
3*72, 321 AH I

vr

ins

Concrete Work
BEAL Loner**# I man quality
operation pat&gt;M. driveway*
Day* 111 T i l l Evqs 117 m i.
CONCRETE w ork a ll types.
F o o ttr s , d riv e w a y s , pads,
flo o r* , p o o l*, co m p le te or
refinish. F re e est. 177 7103.

A t LAW N SERVICE
M c &gt; , weed, tr im , haul. 1 tim e
clean uo. 24 hr*, best rates.
828 8411

Plastering
ALL
Phases of Plastering
Plastering repair, stucco, hard
ente,sim ulated brick. 771 59*!

Plumbing
Freddie Roomson Plumbing
Repairs, faucets.W C
Sprinklers 12)1510, 222 0708

REPAIRS A leaks. Fast A d#
pendable service. Reasonable
rates No lob loo small. L ie .
P lu m b e r, free set. SAM
Plum bing 14* 5557

TimeClocks
NEW , Usad, S alts, S e rv ic e .
II*.*S Service special — oil,
ad|usl, replace ribbon, parts
extra. Budget Time Recorder
3214*i7.
S L IM
BUDGETS
ARE
BOLSTERED WITH VALUES
FRO M THE W ANT
AD
COLUMNS.

Tree Service
TRt County Tree Service. T r im , '
remove, trash, hauling, lir e
¥&lt;oo6 * r Est 112*410

SI 00 mch diam eter
Rem Tree Service 11* 42*1

Roofing

M l lOOflNG
160 A SquareShingle

Law) Mowers

THIS AD WORTH
$50OFF TOTALJOB
(385)327-7183

M IS T E R . F Is If. Jaa McAdams
w ill re p a ir your mowers al
your horn*. Call 122 7055

ROOFINO of all kmo* c o m m tf
cial A residential Bonded A
insured. 221 25*7 If no answer
K24IS17

JOHN ALLE N YARD A TR EE .
SERVICE W ill tr im p ilm
t r t t v R m r 'i c t a j i- u io .

F R E E e s tim a te i. D e G ro a t*
P a lm , tre e tr im m in g
A
rem oval Hauling, law n care A
Odd jo b l 222 0182

TVpmHer Repair
T Y P E W R IT E R R a p 8 l*B p o r
ta b lt* to IBM S tle d r ic . Guar.
Low Rates. Bin 22) 4*17.

�Monday, Nov. 1,1982

4B -Evcning Herald, Sanford, FI.

DLONDIE
ALEXANDER NOu QE NOT
OOLITE TO VOuQ S S T E 3

I DONT THINK NOUQE
POLITE TO V\E

I ' M V E R V P O L iT c J

r TD COOKIE ^

3 U T T OU T OC THIS, IM
TALKING TO DAD
-

n s ri

fh n k

ACRO SS

by Chic Young

by M ort W alker

B E E T L E B A IL E Y

1 Ensign Hbbr I
4 Solemn
pledge
8 Horse lood
12 Dme
13 H aw aiian

island
14 Once more

15

Falsify

16 Self righteous
person
17 Trigonometric
function
18 Serb
20 Small bills
22 Bushy clump
(Brit)
23 Mend
25 Frighten
27 Sparkle
29 Takes option
31 Go to coun
32 Fathers
34 Aardvark s
diet
38 Is human
40 Scandinavian
god
42 Mrs Peron
43 Acorn end
products
45 Bears (Lat I

by Art Sansom
n

THE B O R N LOSER

2

s|
P S f UJ

A N D

4

1 1 Northern
European
19 Front
2 1 Fast aircraft
(abbr |
24 Cense
26 Confederate
States Army
(abbr)
27 Compass
point
28 Ben
29 Racetrack
term
30 Greek letter
33 Astronauts
" III right
(comp wd)
35 Young bird
7

6

5

Called Very Foolish
tV'

Electric fish
Metal fastener
More secure
Alley
Brother of
Moses
6 Slender
7 B.g
8 Western hemi
sphere orgamration (abbr)
9 Actress
Louise
10 Singing voice

3

8

12

13

14

15

16

17

"
23
27

■

21 ■

24

25

26

■

34

■

"

■
43
47

48

10

11

36

*

41

40

44

45

46

so

49
53

51

54

56

55

57

■
A R C H IE

by Bob Montana

THE c o p y i n g M A C H I N E
C O V F A N V SA tP O U P M O P E l
IS O B S O L E T E
A N P TH EY C A N T K M A Y B E
F IX IT . '
&gt;/ 5 V E N S O N

58

61

60

59

62

63

64

65

66

67

68

DEAR DR. iJVMB - I have
a friend who is on a diet. He
eats no food at all and just
drinks water for two weeks.
After 10 days he is still OK. As
you don’t recommend un­
supervised diets, could you
please comment on what the
effects could be?
DEAR READER - That is
very foolish. Anyone who has
listened to the news about the
fasts in Irland should know
that you can die from such a
practice if it is continued long
enough.
At the beginning of a fast, as
you are describing, the body
will lose a lot of normal body
water and wash out needed
body salts. That causes
weakness and a tendency to
faint. It also causes severe
fatigue.
The person may not have an
excessive appetite as you
would imagine. The hunger
center seems to be shut off
because of the chem ical
derangement of the body. The
loss of water and salt makes a
person think he has lost a lot
of weight — and he has, but It
is water, not body fat. He Is
like a wilted plant that has
dried up from lack of water.

37

f g l* :

39

38

9

35

33

31

36 New Deal
protect (abbr)
37 Oil grading
number
39 The sun (Lat |
41 Knob
44 Forever
46 City in Branl
47 Plant part
48 Aardwolf
49 Irish poet
50 Seeps out
53 Chicken pen
54 Desire
56 Within (pref I
57 Safety agency
(abbr)
59 Set
6t Noun suffn

30

29

28

RlftS
tjW+T

22

20

18

Strict Fasting Diet

1 V

s

N.0

DOWN

47 Coyly

1

Answer to Previous Puffte

50 Newspaper
not ce (abb' |
51 Observe
52 Reverberate
55 Vegetable
spread
58 Rush hour
60 Sot! mud
62 Those in
office
63 Against
64 Unwrap
65 Indefinite in
order
66 Omega
67 Nuisance
68 Tibetan
garelle

1

During the fast a person will
lose about a half pound of
muscle and a half pound of fat
a day, plus water. We know
that because the protein that
comes from the muscle and Is
used for energy releases
nitrogen in the urine. By
measuring the nitrogen we
can calculate how m uch
protein was used for energy.
The Health Letter number
16-2, D angerous D ieting,
which I am sending you,
explains this.

HOROSCOPE
By BERNICE BEDE OSOL

Others who want this issue
can send 75 cents with a long,
stam ped,
self-addressed
they say literally. They could envelope for it to me, in care
YOUR BIRTHDAY
November!, 1982
be stretching facts a bit.
of this newspaper, P.O. Box
ARIES (March 21-AprU 191 1551, Radio City Station, New
Your m aterial prospeqts
look very encouraging (or
Pay attention to small details York. NY 10019.
in your commercial dealings
the year ahead. However,
Eventually the fat is gone
today. Count your change
there will be times when you
carefully and be sure to ask and the person starving will
m ight need business or
have used a lot of muscle. He
for receipts or guarantees.
financial advice. You must be
sure to deal only with experts. .
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) will begin to look like the
Well-Intentioned
associates skeletons from the conSCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
may feel free to advise you
Don’t m ake prom ises or
th eir
agreements today merely to today, but tak e
suggestions with a grain of
get another off your back. You
salt. Make major decisions
might later regret not coming
yourself.
out with a “ no." Order now:
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
the NEW AstroGraph Match­
Small details assume more
m aker wheel and booklet
importance than usual today
which reveals ro m an tic
NORTH
11-111
combinations, compatibilities
work-or careerwise. Don’t do
♦ K g to
for all signs, tells how to get
things hastily or you may
♦ 73
forget to dot the t’s and cross
along with others, finds rising
♦ AJ y 7 s
♦ K 32
signs, hidden qualities, plus the t ’s.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
more. Mall (2 to Astro-Graph,
WEST
EAST
♦ 65
♦ .1 .i - .
Box 489, Radio City Station,
Try not to comment today if
♦ gios:
v$
N.Y. 10019.
one friend Is criticizin g
♦ K6
♦ g 10 8 3
another who is not present.
♦ AQ J I 7
49 6 54
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23You might be blamed later for
Dec. 21) Don’t give away
SOUTH
comments you didn't make.
♦ A7 4 3
secrets to outsiders today
♦ AKJ954
which are supposed to be kept
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Your
♦ 42
within the confines of your actions and behavior will be
♦ 10
company. It could hurt your closely observed by others
Vulnerable: Neither
Job.
today, even though you might
Dealer: West
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. not be aware of It. Don’t give
Wnl North Eoit
South
19) If you are Involved In a fun them anything to talk about.

For Tuesday, N ovem ber 2, 1982

_____________ by Howie Schneider

EEK &amp; M E E K

EVER NOTICE THE WAV THESEO R G A N I Z E D CRILAE

GLHS

SPEWD M O S V m ) '?

r

a s CAR5...EXPENSIVE
5UrTS...R&amp;STAJURAt»JrS..
KJIGHTCLUBS.. RE50e rS .

WITHOUT THEM .THE K 0 OOMV
M U D REALLV BE lU BAPSWAPt

“VI---------------- / '" V

Mi

Dr.
Lamb

centration camps. Because of
the low protein in the body,
water will start to accumulate
causing the swollen limbs and
belly.
Fat can deposit in large
amounts In the liver causing
liver damage as well. The
total picture is pretty grim.
Now, two weeks will not do all
of this but it is dangerous and
particularly so if a person has
any underlying m edical
problem. It Is far better to
decrease your calories a little,
increase your exercise and
lose weight slowly. You are
more likely to keep the body
fat off that way, too.
DEAR DR. LAMB - On the
topic of caffeine, I am sur­
prised that you have not
recommended Postum as a
substitute for coffee or tea.
Mr. Post of cereal fame In­
vented It because he felt
people who worked for him
drank far too much coffee and
there should be a healthy
substitute. 1 enjoy a pint
thermos of Postum at my
desk Job, made with a spoon of
sugar and some milk. It
bridges the gap from break­
fast to lunch quite nicely.
DEAR READER - I used
to drink it as a child. It cer­
tainly docs not cause the
problem posed by consuming
too much caffein e. Some
people might not like the idea
of a sweet drink — coffee, tea
or Postum. The milk is good
as a source of protein and
calcium.
I would suggest that many
people might prefer to make
their Postum drink with far
less than the amount included
on the label, but that is a
m atter of ta s te . It is
som etim es h ard to find
Postum but many stores still
carry It.

W IN AT BRIDGE

by Ed Sullivan

P R IS C IL L A 'S POP
W HAT 9

PAP KAP
NUPGELL ,
EPPVW AV'

WRONG.
S IR * ”

4

:Y

sT

NUPGELL S A IP IF I
N
RDLLOWEP H I6 A£7VICE.
AW COPE' WDULP GEP
0E P P E R .

/

ip 's s
PEPPER.
ALL
R IG H T"

/

IP STARPEP \
o u p a s a “2 :
yl
A M P NOW
IP 'S A 'lO 'd ll/H /

K

V

---------, ----------

—'Hu
X ' f1

'^V uVi.

by Stoffcl A Htimdahl

BUGS B U N N Y
WM02E
ALU &gt;CUZ)
STUDENTS, B J &amp; S ?
—v -

3dG$?LWiNe&gt;

&amp;CHOOC. , /
iN raapua&amp;ct S o *
c o u tze e

compkltlve sport today, be a
gracious loser if another plays
better than you. And If you
win, do so with grace.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) Avoid comparing relatives
or family members today
with outsiders who m ay be
more successlul. You could
trigger a domestic nimble.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
If you are dealing today with
persona you do not know too
well, don’t take everything

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Double-check today anything
which you put In writing or
affix your signature to. Legal
problems might later arise
from an avoidable error.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) It
w on't be the la rg e ex­
penditures which will bend
your budget out of shape
today, but it could be a
number of small, nonessential
purchases you feel compelled
to make.

!♦
Pom
Pom

!♦
P om : ♦
l NT P om • 4*
Pom
Post

Opening lead: +A

By Oiwild Jaeoby
and James Jacoby
Jim: “I'm ready to put in a
lot of work now that I'm
back with the column again.
How about using these Mon­
day talks to discuss a princi­
ple of bidding or play ?r"

INEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN |

by Jim Davis

G A R F IE L D

FRANK A N D ER N EST

Oswald 'Seems fine I
suppose you have one for
today." '
Jim "Here is a hand that
illustrates the need to play
safe for your contract in
rubber bridge ”
Oswald: "I can see what
happened at the table West
opened the ace of clubs and
must have continued with
the queen. South took
dummy's king, discarding a
diamond and proceeded to
lay down his ace and king of
trumps. Then the bad trump,
spade and diamond breaks
left him one trick short.”
Jim: "There was an unu­
sual safety play available,
but this declarer missed it.
He should cash just one high
trump and then start on
spades. West would ruff the
third spade, but would not be
able to lead a trum p without
sacrificing a trick. South
would get to ruff his last
spade and be home with the
bacon"
Oswald: “Your first hand
for (he rolumn is a very
tough one. Our readers can,
if they wish, study the whole
hand carefully and see why
this safety play is sure to
work once both defenders
follow to the first trump
lead”

by Bob T h avts

X THOUGHT YOUR
5&amp;RMON w ou u p BE
fHOprEfl NOtA/ TtiKT
P*A W S
^

V

&amp; &amp;

/ p

-

* * *

C H &amp; W I*

HA*
TT«

K l I l B.

TVsW M

’

-

by Leonard Starr

A N N IE
TUM BLEW EEDS

MAN*/ M f t * » f t S ARB POlLVIUe
A RA1LROAP ACROSS OUR LANPj

by T. K. Ryan

-M . EAZEE MM JNA5NT IT M- EAZEE
MASHT KBLl HO 0KAYEP THE CREDIT
*NF(* f IfiTKKj FOR "WOf $££Ut/77£5
17R*?~WICH TURNEDOUT
k mmxM.$pnoNi

YES/ I LENT THEM100 \ m
HILLION DOLLARS, M)\ T ittle
•SKYE SECURITIES' ( ^ 1 ENT­
WINED OUT TOSE and nom
Ur M Y • y

/V
t l * u l « « &gt; Ml M IM)

SE3

'

^

WKHfl5

-Y'POCTORED THECOWTHi
WHILE YOUHERE NORKH'

■

i

I without t k py e

IN*Y HAIR AH'
HE FINDOUT?/ 1 SEARP-THEREAWT
NOMOREHREAZEE/

V ­

* V .-‘

r

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                    <text>75th Y e a r. No 79-Sunday, November 21.1982— Sanford, Florida 32771

Evening H erald— (USPS 481 280) — Price 35 Cents

Stay Warm This Winter, But Do It Safely— Here's How
B y T E N IY A R B O R O lT .il
Herald Stall Writer
Cool nights and chilly days are reasons enough to fire up a
few logs in the fireplace, plug in the heater or turn on the
electric blankets. And the safety of yourself, your family and
all your worldly possessions are reason enough to make sure
each of those heating devices are working properly.
Seven people died in Seminole County during the past four
years because of carelessness in heating their homes when
Jack Frost struck the usually-wann Central Florida area,
according to county fire officials.
A year ago, a Sanford woman died in her home because she
placed a portable heater too close to her bed, catching the
linens on lire, firefighters said.
About two weeks ago, a Sanford man narrowly escaped
death after his electric blanket short circuited, sparking a fire

which destroyed his bed, firefighters added.
"It all boils down to the fact that people Just don't think when
it comes to healing their homes," said County F ire Marshal
Joe MeCluan. "We don't use heat down here very' often but
when we do, we neglect to read the instructions carefully, we
bum the wrong materials and we just aren't careful.
"O ld kerosene heaters give us the biggest headaches
because people set them anywhere and they often get knocked
over, spill fuel on the floor and burst into flames," said Sanford
fire I i. Ron Neel. “ Before you know it, it's out of control. Oh,
the new ones have safety valves so they won't spill, but people
also tend to place the heaters too close to combustible items
such as drapes, bed clothing and even carpeting and you still
have fires.
"Those seven deaths I mentioned earlier that occurred in the
county during the last four years were all started by kerosene

healers," M cGuan said. And they started for one of four
reasons: the heater was improperly fueled, or kicked over in
an exit way leading from a dwelling, the wrong fuel was used
or the heater was placed too close to combustibles.
"We also have problems when people don't keep their
fireplaces and chimneys cleaned out nr when they forget to
open the damper and smoke fills the room," MeCluan said.
"There's also a problem with sparks popping from fireplaces
onto carpeting or wood floors because the fireplace doesn't
have a protective grating to keep he sparks in.
"Sometimes people cause fires because they use their ovens
to heat their homes," he said. "Ovens were meant for cooking
not for heating a home over a long period of time. They just
don’t work that way."
McGuan says the greatest number of heating-related fires
See CARELESSNESS, Page 12A

Embattled
Dispatcher
Quits Job
A 32-year-old Sanford woman, charged
with two counts of obtaining federal aid
and food stamps by fraud, has resigned
her position as a dispatcher with the
Seminole County Sheriff’s Department.
Colleen Foster, of 61 Kent Court quit as
of 5 p.m. Friday.
Mrs. Foster, who was employed by the
sheriff's department March 16,1981, was
arrested at 4:05 p in. Thursday on two
counts of obtaining benefits from public
assistance programs by fraud. She has
been released from jail under the pretrial
release program, officials said.
The state has charged that Mrs. Foster
failed to disclose required information
needed in determining her qualification
for federal aid and food stamps and that
she received money to which she was not
legally entitled between Nov. 1,1980 and
Nov. 28. 1982
The state further charges that Mrs.
Foster failed to notify the state Depart­
m ent of Health and Rehabilitative
Services (1IRS) that She was employed
by the Seminole County School Board
from Oct. 15,1980 through June 30,1981
and that she was employed by the
Seminole County Sheriff’s Department
since March 16, 1981
According to ta rry Travis, senior
investigator of the Auditor General's
office in Orlando, Mrs. Foster failed to
disclose her employment with either
county agency during three interviews
with HRS on July 31, 1980; Jan. 9, 1981,
and July 13,1981. Travis also said that
Mrs. Foster received or attempted to
receive $2,853 in aid from February 1981
until February 1982 and that she obtained
$2,443 worth of food stamps from
November 1980 through February 1982,
for a total of $5,296 in state funds to which
she was not legally entitled.
Investigator taroy J. Rodgers, of the
Auditor General's office in Orlando, said
Mrs. Foster acknowledged her em­
ployment with the school board and
sheriff's department during an Aug. 23,
1982 interview, adding that she did not
report her employment to the HRS
earlier because she needed money to pay
her daughter's hospital bills for openheart surgery, court records show.
Mrs. Foster, the divorced mother of
four children, worked as a bus aide for
the school board making a daily wage of
$33.75, school board officials said.
Mrs. Foster received an annual salary'
of $10,656 while employed as a radio
dispatcher for the sheriff's department.

P o lit ic s
Sorenson Seeking 5th Term
In Lake Mary Mayor's Post
By DONNA FISTF-S
Herald.Stall Writer
take Mary Mayor Walter A. Sorenson
has double trouble.
Two men are challenging the four-term
incumbent.
The challengers are Victor Olvera, who
served three years on the City Council
before resigning to seek the mayor's
office, and Dick Fess, who is completing
his first term on the council.
Sorenson, 40, is a native of lo rry . Pa
He and his wife, Verna, and son,
Christopher. 12. have been city residents
for 10 years.
Olvera, 48, is a native of Detroit, Mich.,
and has lived in the city fur four years.
He has a son. Toby, 7, who attends L ik e
Mary Elementary' School.
F’ess, 37, his wife, londa, daughter.
Usa, 10, and son. Brad. 3, live at 142 W.
Wagon Wheel Way. A resident of L ik e
Mary for five years, Fess is a native of
* Indiana.
All three candidates have served in the
Army.
Sorenson, who lives at 250 Broadmoor.
Isa real estate associate with an Orlando
firm. He attended Penn State University.
Olvera of 257 S. Fourth St. attended the
University of Michigan, lie us a super-t
visor of plastics at Wintel in tangwood
Fess is a vice president of ComBankSeminole County. He has a bachelor of
science degree from Indiana University.
Sorenson once was defeated in an at­
tempt for a council seat before winning
election to the mayor's office in 1974.
He's been re-elected three limes since.
He previously served on the city’s board
of adjustment for one year. Sorenson
currently represents take Mary on the
Council of Loca l Governm ents in
Seminole County and the Tri-County
taague of Cities. He is a member of the
lake Mary, Greater Sanford and Florida

O p en d itc h e s ( r i g h t ) a r e th e o n ly s o u r c e of
d r a in a g e in tl e p re d o m in a n tly b la c k M idw ay
c o m m u n ity e a s t of S a n fo rd and s e v e r a l o th e r
a r e a s of S en t m o le C o u n ty . U n p a v e d r o a d s
( a b o v e ) p re s e n t a n o t h e r p ro b le m in M id w a y .
W ith o u t p r o p e r d r a i n a g e th e r o a d s b e c o m e
im p a s s a b le in t h e ra in y s e a s o n . R e s i d e n t s w an t
a c tio n to c o r r e c t th e p ro b le m s , b u t c o u n ty of­
f ic ia ls say th ey d o i 't h a v e th e m illio n s o f d o lla rs
n e c e s s a r y to fu n d th e p ro je c ts .

:

‘

There’s No Money
To Fix Run-Down
Roads And Sewers

By MICHEAL BF.IIA
Herald Staff Writer
The solution to drainage, sewage and road problems
which have inhibited growth and development in some
sections of Seminole County is one word — money.
That is the opinion of Seminole County officials who have
to grapple with a shrinking supply of federal and state
dollars to spend on large scale public works projects.
But for residents of Midway and l.ockhart near Sanford
and Winwood Bark near Altamonte Springs, the ex­
planation that no money is available is hard to swallow.
They live in areas that have many unpaved roads, little, if
any, sewage collection und poor drainage. The areas also
have an abundance of substandard housing.
The Rev. Emory Blake, who has served as a spokesman
for Midway residents, said sewers are the biggest need for
v Midway.
“ In order for our area to be made better, we need
sewers." he said. "If we get sewers we can get housing.".
"We realize we have a lot of problems. ITw roads are so
• bad that the postal service will not deliver mail to some
houses," he said. "If we had the manpower and machines,
! we would do it ourselves. But we don't."
t Countv Planning Director Woodv Price agreed that
sewers arc the top need in Midway. "We need sewers to be
3 Installed before we can pave the streets. We need streets to
let the drainage system work."
But the big problem in getting a sewage system for
Midway is that no existing sewage treatm ent plant In

chambers of commerce and is president
of the la k e Mary Volunteer F ire
Department. Sorenson is serving on the
lake Mary Boulevard Citizens Advisory
Committee
Olvera was first elected unopposed to a
two-year term on the council in 1979. He
ran for re-election in 1981 and won a
second term, defeating his opponent by a
two-lo-one margin
F’ ess served one year on the city’s
board uf adjustment. He ran once for the
council unsuccessfully, winning a twoyear term ui 1980. He is serving on the
State Road 436 and Lake Mary Boulevard
Citizens Advisory Committee and is past
president of the L ik e Mary Chamber of
Commerce.
He was 1981 and 1982 president of the
L ik e Mary Community Improvement
Association; 1981 campaign chairman
and 1982 president of the United Way of
Seminole County; 1981 and 1982 president
of the Altam onte M all M erchants
Association: 1982 vice president of
finances for the Central F lo rid a
leukemia Society; vice president of
membership of the Greater Seminole
County Chamber of Commerce and a
member of the advisory board of Combank-Setmnole County.
Sorenson said he would like to serve
another term to see that L ik e M ary’s
citizens are not "lost in the bureaucratic
shuffle"
Sorenson said major priorities for the
city include a comprehensive road and
drainage
im provem ent program ,
revamping and replacing inadequate
lutes in the city's original water system
and continued control of new develop­
ment within the city with emphasis on
safeguarding property rights w hile
preserving
and
protecting
the
See THRF1F7, Page 12A

TODAY
Herald Photet by Tom Vincent

Seminole County has the capacity to handle the area's
sewage.
Price said the costs of a sewage collection system in
Midway would exceed $10 million. Beyond that, Sanford’s
treatm ent plant, the closest to Midway, has been ordered
not to increase capacity until it can find another waterway
See REPAIR, Page 12A

— TEN! YARBOROUGH

Action Reports
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Bridge
Business........................
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Calendar
12A
Classified Ads
10-1111
Comics .........
C ro ssw o rd
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D e a r Abby
3B
Deaths ........................
12A

Editorial
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Horoscope
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People .....................
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4A
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12A

Cruising Along The St. Johns River

by T o * Vincent

The Hay Queen will offer cruises up the St.

New Smyrna
Lake Mary 0

beginning Dec. I.

Lyman 0
Lake Brantley 0

The Bay Queen of Sanford, the 114-foot,
99-ton cruise ship anchored in Monroe
Harbour is being fine tuned for a VIP
cruise next weekend and thrice daily
cruises for the public, beginning Dec. 1.
Some 1,200 guests — Seminole County
public officials and other area per­
sonalities have been invited by Freedom
Cruises Inc. for the Nov. 27 VIP cruises.
At that time, Sanford City Manager
W.E. " P e te " Knowles is scheduled to
christen the new cruise service by
breaking a bottle of champagne over the
ship's bow.
The Bay Queen arrived in Sanford last
weekend a fte r a 26-day, 3,900-mile
voyage from Charlevoix, Mich, where it
operates daily cruises on the G reat tak es
during the Memorial Day through tab o r
Day season.

I

Oviedo 21

Cocoa Beach 13

The flat-bottomed boat was designed
and built as a dinner cruise ship at the
Blount Ship Yards in Rhode Island in
1978. Bill Doelle of Traverse City. Mich,
is the captain. He became a sailor on the
ForJ ships on the Great takes in 1941.
The ship is manned by a 15-member
crew.
Bill Sternberg, co-owner with Capt.
Doelle of Freedom Cruises Inc., said he
chose to bring the ship to Sanford for the
winter season — December through April
— at the suggestion of his mother, Mrs.
Gertrude Sternberg of Orlando.
The ship has a dining capacity of 250
and a passenger capacity of 450.
Reservations are now being accepted
for the regular cruises to begin Dec. 1.
Cruises will be offered three times daily

Lake Howell 34
Boone 30

- 11 a.m., 5 p.m. and 11 p.m., Monday
through Sunday.

i

Prices for the cruises are — Iaincheon
cruise — board ship at 10:30 a.m., depart
at 11 a.m. for 2‘vhour cruise, $15.
— Dinner cruise — board ship at 4:30
p.m., depart at 5 p.m. for three-hour
cruise, $30.
— Moonlight cruise — board ship at
10:30 p.m., depart at 11 p.m., cash bar
and dancing to live band, (or two-hour
cruise. $8 cover charge.
All cruises depart from the main dock
at Monroe Harbour, downtown Sanford.
Luncheon and dinner cruise prices in­
clude passage and meal.
Reservations may be made by calling
321-BOAT. - DONNA ESTES

s,
i

�^ E v e n i n g H nra |d. S anford, FI

Sunday, Now. J l, 19KJ

NATION
IN BRIEF
Gunman Frees Girlfriend

i*

Hostage; Shoots Himself
BUFFALO, N .Y .iU P I i — A Buffalo man with a long
criminal record told police he “ didn't want to go back
to jail” then shot and killed himself early today after
releasing his girlfriend he had held hostage for six
hours.
Police Capt. John O'Keefe said David Zielinski, 35,
walked down the front steps of the home of his
girlfriend's sister-in-law holding a shotgun, which he
placed under his chin and then pulled the trigger.
Detectives said Zielinski, who had been arrested at
least 14 times and had reportedly served time at Attica
Prison, held his girlfriend, Irene Luce, 28, hostage. She
was released unharmed about 11:30 p.m. Friday.
The siege began about 7 p.m. Friday when Zielinski
entered the home of Ms. laice's sister-in-law, held a
double-barreled shotgun to her throat and demanded
she let him into his girlfriend's apartment, officials
said.

Pallmony Suit Dropped
IDS ANGEI.ES i U P I ) — The palimony suit against
Billie Jean King by her former lesbian lover, who
claimed the tennis star promised to support her for life,
has been thrown out of court.
Superior Court Judge Sara Itadin ruled Friday the
suit had been decided when Marilyn Barnett lost her
attempt lo remain in a beach house owned by King and
her husband, I.arry, and she no longer had a case.
Miss Barnett, 34, claimed in her suit filed in April
1981, Mrs. King had promised lo give her the beach
house and lifetime support in return for her services as
secretary, cook and confidante.

Pepper Changes Jobs
WASHINGTON (U P II - Hep Claude Pepper, DFla., the leading spokesman for the elderly und poor on
Capitol Hill, w ill lake the chairmanship of the in­
fluential House Rules Committee.
Pepper, 82, now chairman of the House Aging
Conunittee, will replace Hep. Itichard Bolling, D-Mo.,
who retired this year.
A spokesman for Pepper said Friday, the
congressman, now No. 2 on the Rules panel and
chairman of the Aging Conunittee, decided to switch
chairmanships because he felt he could do more for
Social Security, Medicare and other programs for the
elderly and poor on a panel that has tremendous power
over what legislation may reach the floor and under
what conditions.

WEATHER
NATIONAL R E P O R T : A new storm churning east toward
the Rockies triggered small avalanches in the snow-shrouded
Sierra Nevada of California and threatened Colorado with as
much as 15 inches of new snow. Summcrlike temperatures up
lo the 70s wanned the nation's midsection Frid ay and down­
pours soaked southeastern Texas with up to 5‘ =Inches of rain,
causing minor street flooding. Snow dusted Oregon's Cascade
Mountains and the Sawtooth range in Idaho.
A R E A READINGS (9 a.m.|: temperature: 71; overnight
low: 65; Friday high: 81; barometric pressure: 30.14; relative
humidity: 90 percent; winds: east at 8 mph; rain: trace;
sunrise 6:52 a m., sunset 5:30 p.m.
SUNDAY TIDES: DAYTO NA BEACH: highs. 11:40 a.m., 2
p.m.; lows, 4:53 a.m., 5:52 p.m.; PORT C A N A V E R A L: highs,
11:32 a m., - p.m.; lows, 4:44 a.m., 5:13 p.m.; BAYPURT:
highs, 3:15 B in., 5:42 p.m.; lows, 10:52 a.in., 10:41 p.m.
BOATING FO RECAST: St. Augustine to Jupiter Inlet, Out
50 Miles: North part, wind northeast to cast near 15 knots
today und easterly 10 to 15 knots tonight and Sunday. Seas 4 to 5
feet today and 2 to 4 feet tonight. South part, wind easterly 10
to 15 knots through Sunday. Seas mostly 3 to 4 feet. Areas of fog
and u chance of ruin north part with visibility locully less than
one mile. Elsewhere a few showers.
A R E A FORECAST: P artly cloudy and m ild today. Chance
of a shower is less than 20 percent. Highs near 80 or low 80s
Wind easterly around 10 mph. Tonight and Sunday partly
cloudy with a slight chance of showers. la w s near GO or low
60s. Highs mostly low 80s. Wind tonight light easterly. Rain
chance 20 percent both tonight and Sunday.
EXTENDED FO R ECAST: Partly cloudy and m ild Sunday
through Tuesday. 1-ows mostly 60s north to low and mid 70s
south. Highs in the 70s and low 80s.

HOSPITAL NOTES
C t n l u l F lorida R e g io n a l
Hospital
Fndae

John P

H eed. O ran g e City

BIRTHS
Donnel C a n d R o b in J A lim , a
baby g irl, A lta m o n te Springs

ADMISSIONS

DISCHARGES

R obert H A rm strong
Ka th erine L Poland
R u sse ll L Corley
V irg in ia Eland
Joseph C Hutchison
M a ry M Can son
Thelm a L M u rra y
Fan n ie Robinson
E d d ie C Sm ilh
L e e lia M Chandler, O ra n g e C ity
M a rs h a ll O H olcom b. O ran ge
C ity

Santord
Maggie M B ra d le y
Barbara B D eese
L an re n ce E F in n e lro O r
W illiam J F le tc h e r
Caroline C W telgos
Clyde R C o o s , D eltona
Jay B C ro u se . D e llo n a
Beulah E P a y n e , Deltona
Thomas H. O ace y, Enterprise
Joseph R e h a li. Lon g wood
Jennie L M c N u lt y , Melbourne.
FI

Sanford

CORRECTION
The Ad For G R E G O R Y L U M B E R That
Appeared In The Evening Herald And
The H erald A d vertiser T h u rs d a y ,
November 18 Should Have Read —
"Offer Expires November 30, 1962 • We
Regret Any Inconvenience T h is May
Have Causkl

Sawczuk Is Christmas
Parade Queen Candidate
By JANK C A S S E LB E R R Y
Herald Staff Writer
Marsha Sawczuk, 17, a Seminole High
School senior, has replaced Connie Faucher,
who w ithdrew as a candidate in the Christmas
Parade King and Queen Contest.
M iss Faucher's partner in the contest,
Jeffrey "Je ff” Dickey, w ill remain in
M iss Sawczuk is the daughter of George and
Sally Sawczuk of 129 Garrison Drive in San­
ford. She is vice president of the Diversified
Cooperative Training DCT Club, and a
member of Keyettes, Future Business leaders
of Am erica at Seminole High and a member of
First Presbyterian Church of Sanford. She has
studied dance for nine years at SanfordSeminole School of Dance Arts. She also en­
joys swimming and bicycle riding.
Je ff is the 16-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs.
John D. Dickey, of I&gt;och l/&gt;w in Sanford and is
in the 10th grade at la k e M ary High School.
His hobbies are sports, gardening, animals

and horseback riding.
They are sponsored by the Veterans of
Foreign War Post 10108 and Auxiliary and co­
sponsored by McKoberts Tire, Inc.
Contestants are competing for the most
votes at a penny per vote. Other candidates
include Susana and Kevin Huaman, sponsored
by the Sanford Kiwanes Club; Cathy Brandvoid and Tim Winkle, sponsored by the
Dixieland Cloggers of Central Florida; Chris
TUlis and Dale Sims, sponsored by the Sanford
Garden Club; and Bridget Deere and Tim
Dycus, sponsored by the Stanford llotary Club.
The winners will L: crowned king and queen
on Nov. 30 at the Greater Sanford Chamber of
Commerce. They will receive J50 in cash and
other gifts and will ride in the Christmas
Parade on Dec. 11 at 10 a m. in downtown
Sanford.
Proceeds from the contest will help un­
derwrite the expense of the parade and
Christmas lights and decorations.

M a r s h a S a w c z u k a n d J e f f r e y D ic k e y a r e c a n d id a te s in C h r is tm a s F’a r a d e
K in g a n d Q ueen C o n te s t.

Lake Mary Will, Or Will Not Get More M oney?
lly DONNA ESTES
Herald Staff Writer
The city of lake Mary may or may not
receive the $68,355 it has budgeted for the 1983
fiscal year as revenues from the state in sales
tax receipts.
It has received conflicting signals from the
state on the issue, City Manager Phil Kulbes
reported to the Dike M ary City Council
Thursday night.
But since the council during budget time was

somewhat leery about stale estimates it in­
cluded $20,000 additional money in the
budget's contingency fund just in case a
shortfall developed,
Kulbes reported he was notified in writing
by the state that forecasts show an expected
9.1 percent shortfall statewide in sales tax
receipts — down from the $370.9 million
previously expected to $337 million now an­
ticipated.
Kulbes said, however, the same letter said

fak e Mary will not be receiving the $68,355
budgeted, but rather $70,050, some $1,700 more
than expected.
The manager said he called Tallahassee and
both figures were confirmed.
"I can’t figure out how the state’s math
works,” Kulbes said.
At budget time during the summer, Kulbes
told the council the city had to include the
$68,000-plus in its budget as anticipated
revenues from the sales tax as ordered by the

state. The city had no leeway in this specific
item, he said.
The council, however, agreed that rather
than have a shortfall that could cause the cityreal trouble, it would follow state instructions
and at the same time create a cushion in the
contingency fund of $20,000 just in case the
worst came to pass.
Thursday night, council members shook
their heads in astonishment at the latest
report.

High-Speed Chase Lands 2 Men In Jail
Two Sanford men were in the Seminole County jail today
following a high-speed chase which began in Sanford and
ended near the county's Five Points complex on U.S. Highway
17-92.
Seminole County narcotics officers arrested Randolph
W illiam s, 21. of 240 Oxford Road, Fern Park, and Jam es A.
H ill, 20,109 Azalea lane, Sanford, at about 9:30 p.m. Friday.
W illiam s was charged with reckless driving and H ill was
charged with disorderly intoxication and resisting arrest.
Rond was set at $500 for each.
According to the officers’ report, they attempted to pass the
car driven by Williams on South Sanford Avenue near 16th
Street. When their unmarked pullet- car was abreast uf
W illiam s’ vehicle, Williams allegedly tried to run them off the
road.
When Williams stopped at a traffic signal at 25th Street, the
officers pulled alongside and told Williams he should lean) how­
to drive. Williams shouted an obscenity and turned west on
25th St., the report said.
The officers pursues! W illiam s along 25th Street, then onto
Magnolia Avenue and subsequently lo Airport Boulevard
where one officer held his badge out the window as iden­
tification and ordered W illiams to pull over, the report said.
At iliat point. Williams accelerated to more than flu miles per
hour on County Hoad 427 and then passed a car on u double line
before turning onto Tucker Road the report said. Williams then
drove onto Brown and Bay wood roads before turning the lights
off on his car. Police said he drove a short distance to Suniund
Hoad before turning his lights back on. From Sunland, he went
toS.R. 427 and then to County Home Road before turning north
on U.S. 17-92 where a marked ear stopped him.
After being stopped, H ill allegedly refused to leave the
vehicle. Tlie officers said they had to forcibly remove him and
transport him to the jail.
M OTORCYCLESTOLEN
A Iaingwood man told |K)lice that someone stole his 1973
Harley Davidson motorcycle from the parking lot of Seminole
Community College between 6 and 8:50 p.m Thursday.
Rudolph J. Wilkins, of 774 E. Magnolia Ave., told police the
stolen motorcycle is valued at about $1,500.

INMATE SOUGHT
Seminole County sheriff’s deputies are continuing their
search for a jail inmate who wandered away from a county
work detail at Five Points between 3:30 and 11:10 p.m. Wed­
nesday.
Deputies said Marshall Eugene Berry, 23, of Daytona Beach,
who is serving a 360-day sentence for failure lo appear for
sentencing in a burglary charge, walked away from the work
detail and may be headed for Daytona Beach.
According to sheriff’s spokesman John Spolski, Berry, a
trusty, is serving the jail term along with a 15-ycar probation
sentence and was scheduled to be released Sept. 11, 1983.
MAN CHARGED WITH HOT DOG TH EFT
A 20-year-old Sanford man was being held in the county Jail
under $100 bond today following his arrest Wednesday on
charges that he stole a package of hot dogs from u local
grocery store.
Walter Eugene Cain, of 2102 Southwest Road, has been
charged with retail theft after Sunford police arrested him at
2:58 p.m. Wednesday. Police said a man was observed stealing
the $1.79 package of hot dogs from the Winn-Dixie grocerystore along First Street.

— 7:36 a.m., 704B Geneva Gardens, woman down

Action Reports
★

Fires
★

C ourts
★

Police

Store personnel chased and apprehended the man whom
they said tossed the stolen food un the ground as he ran.
DUIARRESTS
The following people were arrested in Seminole County on a
charge of driving under the influence (DUI) of alcoholic
beverages:
— Clarence Eugene Woodruff, 61, of 394 Orange Lane,
Casselberry, arrested 5:30 p.m. Wednesday. Woodruff was
arrested by Florida Highway Patrol troopers who said he was
traveling northbound in a southbound lane along U.S. Highway
17-92.
— Todd Allen Davis, 20, of 270 S. Wymore Road, Apt. 103,
Altamonte Springs, arrested 3:05 a.m. Friday. Davis wns
arrested by Ixmgwood police along State Road 434.
— Thomas H. Williams, 23, of 130 Gem lake Drive,
Maitland, arrested 3 a.m. Friday, charged with DUI and
driving with u suspended driver's license. Williams was
arrested by deputies along State Road 436 near lake Howell
Road.
GEORGETOWN MAN CHARGED
A 19-year-old Georgetown, Fla. man was being held in the
Seminole County jail today under $5,000 bond following his
arrest at 11:50 p.m, Thursday on charges of speeding and
possession of more than 20 grams of marijuana.
Wade Oliver Gabions was arrested by lake Mary police
along la k e Mary Boulevard near High Street after police said
they observed a speeding vehicle.
After stopping the speeding vehicle, police said they ob­
served an envelope containing m arijuana in plain view on the
car’s dashboard and charged Gainons with possession of the
illegal drug.
CLERK CHARGED WITH THEFT
A 19-year-old sales clerk is free from the county Jail on bond
today following her arrest at 10:08 p.m. Thursday on a charge
that she stole clothing from the store where she works.
Karen Ann Opper, of 590 Heatherton Village, Altamonte
Sprbigs, was charged with grand theft after security personnel
at Robinson's in the Altamonte Mall said they saw a woman
remove the theft-sensor devices from clothing and attempted
lo leave the store without paying for it.
SANFORD FIRE CALLS
The Sanford Fire Department responded to the following
calls.
Thursday
— 4:01 p.m., 718 Osceola Ave. and El Capitan. woman down.
— 5:09 p.m., 2734 Orlando Ave., accident, car vs. motor­
cycle, possible minor Injuries reported.
— 8:03 p.m., 156 Pinecrest Ave., man down.
Friday
— 3:36 a.m., 104 Castle Brewer Court, woman down.
4:59 a.m ., 115 Bethune Circle, woman down.
— 6:01 a.m., 911 Cypress Ave., woman down.
— 7:25 a.m ., 2656 Grandview Ave., false alarm.

TWO FACE PRISON
A Sanford man and a Winter Park man could be facing
prison terms following their convictions in separate robbery
trials in Seminole Circuit Court.
In one case, Harold l&gt;ee Tanner, 21, of Southwest Road.
Sanford, was found guilty of attempted armed robbery ami
aggravated battery by a Circuit Court Jury which began
deliberating Tuesday and presented its verdict after an hour of
deliberation Wednesday.
Tanner was charged with shooting Willie Voyles, 50, of 1314
E. Celery St,, Sanford, in the abdomen after Voyles told him
there was no work available for him, prosecutors said. The
state argued that Tanner knew Voyles paid his workers in cash
and that he intended to rob Voyles, who owns five acres of
orange groves.
Voyles told the jury that Tanner and another man ap­
proached him June 18 and Tanner asked him for a Job. Voyles
said he told Tanner that he didn’t have any work for him that
day and to try back agatn the next day.
Voyles said he turned to walk away from the man when he
realized he had been shot by Tanner, who.he said was holding a
gun and yelling for him to hand over his money.
Tanner could face up to 15 years in the stale prison on each
conviction, prosecutors said. No date for sentencing has been
set.
In another robbery case, a Seminole Circuit Court jury found
William R. Love II, 28, of Winter Park, guilty of robbing the
Central Food Store at Slate Road 434 and Pressview Avenue in
langwood on Sept. 13.
The Jury deliberated for less than 45 minutes before ren­
dering its decision, agreeing with the prosecutor who charged
that lave robbed and threatened the store clerk during Ihe
incident.
lave had argued that he was high on cocaine at the lime of
the incident and that he had no intention of hurting or
threatening the clerk. He maintained that the incident was
only a theft of money and not robbery.
However, prosecutors said that while la v e was not armed
and did not hurt the clerk, he threatened her and that the
definition of robbery is a theft by force, violence, assault or
putting one in fear.

I-°ve could face up to 15 years In the state prison for the
robbery conviction.
SLEEPER ARR ESTED

Lake Mary police arrested Charles E. Shaw, 41, of Orlando,
at 2:10 a.m. Saturday on charges of possession of marijuana
and driving with a suspended license.
Shaw was seen sleeping in his car on Lake Street in la k e
Mary when police arrived. After waking the man, he was
ordered out of the car and officers arrested him after seeing a
bag of marijuana on the floor of the vehicle.
Shaw is being held on $1,000 bond.
B E E R BUST
Andrew Skultety, 22, 831 Suttersloop St., Dongwood, has
been Jailed on a charge of retail theft for allegedly stealing a
six-pack of beer.
Police accused Skultety of taking a six-pack, valued at $3.09,
from a Tenneco convenience store on State Road 434 in
Ungwood. They arrested him while he was sitting at a bus
stop on S.R. 434 drinking a beer.
He Is being held in the Seminole County jail on $100 bond.

County Commissioners To Decide Monday

Sewage Treatment Plant Expansion Eyed
By M1CHEAL REHA
Herald Staff Writer
Proposed alterations to the Iron Bridge
Regional Sewage Treatment Plant, which
would expand the facility’s capacity by 4
million gallons per day, will be examined
by Seminole County commissioners
Monday.
Environmental Services Manager Ken
Hooper said Orlando officials want to make
the changes at the plant, Ihstalllng new
tanks and pipes, to increase the capacity to
28 million gallons from the present 24
million gallons.
The Orlando officials will explain their
plans to commissioners at the Monday
work session, Hooper said.
The increase in capacity would give
Seminole County an additional 1 million
gallons of capacity and could prove a boon
to development in the Oviedo area.
Development In Seminole County Is tied to
the availability of sewage service. Without

available service, developers must con­
struct septic tanks or other alternative
systems.

But she said the 4-million-gallon increase
Is not the answer to Seminole County’s
sewage problems.

The expansion also would give Seminole,
Orange and Orlando officials longer to
develop plans for future sewage facilities.
An addition o( 20 milion gallons has been
proposed for Ihe plant near Oviedo but
Orlando and Orange officials have been
considering alternative projects. Many
people now believe the expansion will never
be built.

“ Sewer limitations will always be a
problem,” she said.
Sandra Glenn said the alterations would
give county officials tim e to explore other
alternatives.

“ We've spent a lot of money on that
plant,” Barbara Christensen, the Seminole
Commission’s representative to the county
sewage transmission authority said. “On a
practical basis, we’re going to have to look
at the proposal.’’
Mrs. Christensen said she supports
making the alterations If they are
relatively inexpensive. “ We would be
rem iss if we didn’t if it can be done at a low
cost.”

“ It appears lo be a solution to Increasing
capacity without buying additional Und for
sewage purposes and without more water
flowing Into the Little Econlockhatchee
River,” she said.
And because the county has designated
the Oviedo area to use the plant, she said it
would Increase development In the south­
west portion of the county.
Robert G. “Bud” Feather Is rteadfartly
opposed to the plan. F eather’s opposition
carries over from his stance against con­
struction of the plant itself.
” lt's asinine (or taxpayers to pay such
high prices for sewage treatm ent and then

pour the water out Into the ocean,” Feather
said.
The plant pipes the w ater into the ocean
rather than returning it.
“ It depletes Ihe underground reservoir,”
he said. “We’re going to have more
sinkholes.”
Feather's biggest complaint Is the price
of treatm ent at the plant. Construction and
treatm ent costs are about $4 per gallon of
sewage.
The county recently raised water and
sewage rates and also increased connection
fees. Sewer connection fees are now $1,400.
Feather has supported the use of septic
tanks, where they can be used as a way of
meeting the need for increased sewage
capacity.
" It just seems stipid to roe when an
average person can put in a septic tank for
$750 and pay another $50 every couple of
years (lo clean it out)," he said. “We
charge twice that and then charge an
exorbitant monthly fee.”

�Evening Herald, sanfora. M.

Sunday. Nov. 21. I982-1A

REALTY
TRANSFERS

iT V i.t wtwwwrj1
X m irf AOVERTlSIO
MERCHANDISE POUCT
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(F|I9 M
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__

,
j
E d w a rd J lrw.no &amp; wt V a r.o n to
E d w ard A
A Vt». s g l , to* J.
Oakland H ills addn J38.000
Barnett B anks T ru st Co etc to
Douglas P B u rd e tte &amp; wt Sandra
C . L o t ) unrec plat M cC u llo ch s d
SSI acres. 1)0 SOO
U S Hom e C o rp to C Spencer
Goldsborough. Jr , &amp; wt A lic e P .
Lot 40, Sutter s M ill un J 1*6 000
U S Hom e Corp to Nelson R
R od rig ue!, s g l . L o t 59. To«wood
Ph II. 1st addn. 166,900
U S Hom e Corp to R obert R
G rasso 8. wt O iane M . Lot 31.
F o iw o o d . P H III. 171,900
The R yla n d G rou p Inc to E a r l
L M ille r 6 w t C athy p , Lot 7.
Deer Run. un S. 171.300
Sylvan Lake Dew Co to Vincent
G M u rra y 4 wt E t lie M . Lot S,
Sylvan G lad e. 111.900
P alisades C o rp
to John L
A rig h t. Lot 3. B lk F , North
Orlando Ranches, sec 3A, S 13.300
Deve&gt;. Inc to D on C N olt 4 wt
Nancy M , Lot 10A. replat ol
Springdale. SSt.300
Thomas M K is lin g to W ayne F
Lukens 4 * t Sa rah E . L ot 99.
T uscaw illa un 9B. $137,900
G reater C o n slr Corp to H ilton
J G eartner. sg l 4 M a ry T . s g l ,
Lot 117. R iv e r R un. sec tour,
1*8.100
The B ab cock Co to H al Kaplan ,
s g l . Lot 41. C ra n e 's Roost V illa s .
170.SOO
M a rv in P ris k e 4 wt W ilm a to
W illiam E C la r k 4 Lou ise C ,
trustees, Lot 8. B lk 3, Rest Haven,
17 S.000
FI
Land Co
to L a Petite
Academ y. Inc . p a rt ot sec 117010
desc 0 9S6 a c re s m i l i t . SOO
U S H om e C o rp to John H
W ichelns 4 wt L a r a in e B . Lot 75.
Sutter’ s M ill, un two. 1106.100
Hoyette W Cross 4 wt Anna F
to B ra ito n G reen 4 wt Brenda Jo.
Lot I0S. L a k e H a r r ie t E s ts . 14S.S00
Shadow bay, L td
to Ja m e s
F e r d in a n d 4 R o b e r t Int
4
Leonard N G la ss. ' i int. portion ot
S E 'r o l sec 11 30 79 etc 115 000
Lew is G la ss 4 w t C h arlo tte to
Robert W Cook 4 w t Sandra J . lot
67. F o iw o o d ph I. 190.100
O rla n d o L a n d Co , Inc
lo
L le w e lly n M M u llin g s 4 wt P earl
E . Lot 4. B e a r L a k e Forest.
118.000
F l L an d C o to N ew lando. Inc ,
com m ence N W c o r Lot 1, B lk 1.
North O rla n d o Sth addn 10 acres
m I 1180.100
B ruce E W h ite 4 wt G retchen to
R ich ard C Honsa 4 wt N an cy. Lot
31. Blk F , S a n lan d o Spgs rep l tr
159.000
Hugh H H ug tiston 4 wt Ruth G
to Robert J S te w a rt 4 wt Suianne
S . Lot 4. B lk I. M in e r a l Spgs Pk.
1100
IQCDI M a ry A
Cam pbell* 4
E lle n C John son to M a ry A.
Cam pbell. L o t 5. Blk 7). North
Orlando 1st addn. 1100
IQCDI Stephanie M Reufcert to
Jay F Reubert. J r ., L ot 19 4 E 7S‘
ot 70. B lk I, Longw ood P a rk . 1100
M ich a el T Ja m e s 4 wt D ale A
to Stephen J A d a m ls s io n 4 wt
B a r b a r a J . L o t 794 W in te r
Springs, un 4. I t 56.SOO
IQ C D I Jo h n M
M o o re to
Charlotte A n n M o ore , W ' i o l Lot
71. F l Crowes C o addn. B lack
H am m ock etc 1100
D e c c a te iin e C o n slr to Andrew
A M c P h e e A w t c Ann. Lot 4S. blk
C. Sw eetw ater O aks, sec
tl.
1147.800
H o riio n B ld rs . Inc. to R u lu s F.
Causey 4 w t F a y e F ., Lot 14,
Spring V a lle y V illa g e . 174.000
Robert O A nd e rsoh n 4 wt Room
R t o L u ilM M a r r e ro 4 wt M e rid a
M . Lo ts 1. 7 4 3. B lk G. Sanlando
Springs Tr 71. 7nd repl . 175.000
Roy C S a m p le y Jr. 4 E lo is e T
to Steven F O eLo ach 4 wt Judy
R . Lots i 14. blk 71. K a th ry n P ark
add no I. 1177.500
RCA to M a r s h a ll L o p e i 4 wt
E lsa Lot 7. B lk E. H idden L a k e Un.
I B. 157.600
M ild re d F re n c h . repr est A rth u r
H Bond. Jr. to A n d re a Dennison
Im a rr.l 4 B erna de tte H llly e r,
w id . L t 5. Q u a il P ond H it r e p l,
141.000
Algem ene B ank N ederland. N.V.
to Kenneth L D o b m eier. trustee.
Lot 157 W inter S p ring s. Un 1.

1105.000
Elois P Ledingham 4 hb
George D to Helen L Becker, sgl.,
Lots 14 15 4 14, Blk 14. Crystal
Lake Winter Homes s d. 15.100
Greater Constr. Corp to Thomas
R Kolslad 4 wt Cynthia M . Lot
171 Sausallto sec. tour. 169.900
IQCDI Edward J Kastl 1
Dorene B to Edward J Kastl 4
Dorene B . Lot 4], Windward sq
sec. 1, 1100
Am erillrtt Fed to Coral Gable*
Fed. portion ot SE'&lt; ot sec 7 21 79
Me . et al 1111 900
Tina D M iller, sgl to Lee C.
Miller, s g l. Lots 1 4 1 Crystal
Heights. 17.800
Alton B Du»bury 4 wt Doris J.
to Alton B. Ou.bury 4 wt Doris.
Lots II 4 19, Amended plat
Magnolia Heights. 1100
same at above. S 79' ot Lt I 4 N
16' ol 9. Blk 10. Tier 7. Sanford. E.
R Traftord't map. 1104
Sharon K Henry et al.. benet.
est Wilhe B Ken non to George
Kennon. E 11' ol Lot 16 4 all ol 17,
blk I. D ili* Terr . 1st addn. 1100
IQCDI Norman K Mims to
Norman K. M im s 4 wt Gayle Lot 7.
lets W 10‘. blk 2. Sanford Farms,

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Our Reg. 2.87
G ala Christmas w rap­
ping paper in 4-roll
package of assorted
designs Roll measures
3 0 ” wide. 4 0 sq ft.
per package Save.

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Our Reg. 4.77
V»-quart saucepan
or 6Vi-inch griddle
Polished aluminum
with no-stick SilverS to n e J su rfa c e
•Du*«**8*g IM

3 - lb .’ B o x O f C
Sale Price
Jumbo assortment of
melf-in-y our-mouth
.milk and dark ch o c­
olates Boxed for giv­
ing At savings

2 4 8

Shop Orlando and Sanford d aily t:)0 • ?: JO Sun U • 4
Shop M l. Dora, Ckrm ont d a ily t - 1, Sun 12 •4

T h e

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h o c o l a t e s

S U N D A Y -T U E S D A Y
SALE

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Shop Leesburg. DeLand. K issim m ee daily 9 • 9, Sun 1 1 6

S20I-4Q 1

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Wide top-band tor com­
fort Nylon/spandex in
basic shades Reinforc­
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Misses', queen size 9-11.

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Polyester/cotton
Pocket
tails C hoice of colors
O ur R e g 6.96

Comfort-top Knee Highs

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M e n ’s D ress Shirt

K mart’ Sale Price

'C o m p ac t .
elecironi-

cally advanced design Test
[button, loud
I horn. 9-volt
battery .

5.50

O u r Reg. 7.96, M e n Polya*ta r/c o tto n Shltl, E a
6 .SO
O u r 4 .47, F o ty a s la r T ies, l a . $1

le s s Factory R e b a te

You(Nof
cost Allot!
Foctory
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Retake Bmetecl to m#9 | INptAitsyi

LetJBfh. TakeCareOfYou

Fotyaiter/Cotlon
In Christm as Prints

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IN T R O D U C T O R Y
S P E C IA L
Steel B e lte d R ad lals
Quality by Unlroyal*
Price by K mart’

52 0 0

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40x63" Choice of colors. 40x81" In color choice
•OuPartleg IM

Our Reg. 3.33

Our Reg. 3.97

2 .8 8 ( 2.472.97

r i u / M i i i !•! f l 1.17

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D acron® Polyester P a n e ls

3 p c. Christmas
Towel, Hot-pot Set

F U l / I M t l •• f i i tr
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42*34
29 9 7

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43 0 2
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C re a tive C r a y o la ' Fun For Kids
Caddy, art supplies__

Your
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stoo
IQCDI Elvura C Underhill to
Elvura A. Bridegum 4 Janetle*
Porto. N 40.1’ ol Lot I. blk 1. Tier
10. Sanford, etc. lit* est. 1100
Lillian Saunders to Ralph J.
Johnson et al. E 40' ol N E ’ « ol
NE'« of sec 20 7017 1100
Bruce Eckstein 4 wt Debbie K.
to Jack O Osborn 4 wt Lorn* M.,
N 100* ol W TOO" o l Lot 12 Bradley's
addn. Iw 147.500
Sunniland Corp. to Gordon
Bissen. trustee. E 1&gt;ot Lot 2, Palm
Hammock Allotment. 117,000
Sunniland Corp. to Richard A.
tFrank 4 wt Viola 1 . W”&gt;ol Lot 2,
Palm Mammock allotment. 115.700
IQCDI Georg* J. Rienerth 4
Karen, sgl. to Karen Rienerth,
sgl , un S21. Bl 500 Altamonte
Village ii . noo
Winter Spgs dev. to Klngsberry
bldrs ol Fl. Inc. Lot 9. Tuscawilla
un 11, 110.600
IQCDI L in d a C. C la rk to
Complete Interiors, Inc. Lot 71,
Ramblewood. 1100
! Complete Interiors, inc. lo
■Samuel A Reichert 4 wt Libia M.,
Iiae 71. Ramblewood. 169.600
• Amerillrst Fed. to James R.
Curl 4 wt France* C., Lot 69.
! Tuscawilla. un. 9. 195.000
• IQCDI James R Hodge 4 wt
•Susan to James R Hodge 4 wt
;Susan, un I D Sautalito. cond.
phi.. 1100

Mini Saucepan or Griddle

P a p e r

Deluxe Art Kit Save1

Frog B o g '
C h a lle n g in g a n d lu n

Eerie
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A regular reader i let’s call her Katei phoned
regarding a "shutup” eolum 1 wrote several
weeks ago,
Kate said, "I wish you would write something
on 'leave me alone.!"
Explaining her dilemma of being "only a
homemaker” which Kate says she loves, women
have put her down in her chosen work.
"I majored in special ed,” Kate says, "and
now I have a retarded child of my own that I care
for. If more women would take care of their own
children. I wouldn't have to assume that
responsibility while they are running wild after
school. Furthermore, if women who don't ac­
tually have to work would mind their own
business at home, the unemployment rate
wouldn’t be so high," she added.
"I just wish women would leave me alone and
let me mind my own business which is my
husband, my children, my home and our

1USPS « l 3#0)

:W0 N. FRENCH AVE.,SANFORD. F! A 32771
Area Code 30M22-2611 or 831-9993

Sunday, N o vem ber 21, 1982—4A
Wayne D Doyle, Publisher
Thomas Giordano, Managing Editor
Robert Lovenbury, Advertising and Circulation Director

Home D elivery: Ween. *1.00; Month, W.2S; 6 Months, *2f 00;
Year, *45.00. By Mail; Week, *1.25; Month. *5 25; 6 Months,
*&gt;30.00; Year. *57.00.

Brazil's Voters
Going To The Polls
This y e ar’s news from I-itin America has not
been g o o d : tragic war in the Falkland Islands,
turm oil in Central America, economic crisis in
Mexico.
Hut something qualifiedly good is happening in
the biggest country in this troubled region —
Brazil is holding its first free, nation-wide election
in 18 years of military rule. Don't stand up and
cheer. The returns aren ’t in yet, and the winners
will not have more than symbolic power: This
election is no simple victory of democracy over
dictatorship. 'Die colonels, who overthrew the
floundering government of leftist President Joao
Goulart in 1964, have become civilian presidents
and a re still in power.
But in villages and cities across Brazil, a nation
nearly as big as A m erica’s lower 48 states but
with about half the population, people are lining
up at the polls to cast their ballots for mayors,
governors and members of the national Congress.
Tliis last office is crucial, because congressmen
will form part of the electoral college which will
elect Brazil’s next president in 1985.
Not all the candidates are pro-military. F ar
from it. The front runner for governor of
prestigious Rio de Janeiro state is Lconel Brizola.
He is a brother-in-law of deposed President
Goulart and a former firebrand who, as the
m ilitary seized power, called for a civilian
uprising in the south of Brazil Brizola was
stripped of his political rights in 1964, exiled for 15
years and received amnesty in 1979 from
President Joao Baptist a Figuciredo, whose plan
for "abortura," or political opening, led to today’s
elections.
Brizola has matured, softening his critical
comments about the military and America and,
according to The New York Times, campaigning
on a practical platform that stresses economic
management: free transportation for students, a
24-hour bureau to receive complaints alxml public
services and integrating Rio’s favela slums into
the city ’s utility system. But his populist appeal
has not diminished and he proposes a real
alternative to the military.
Tit at President Figueiredo has allowed can­
didates like Brizola to run for office is a sign of at
least three things: hope that Brazil can become
democratic without going communist; confidence
that ultimate power still lies with the militaryindustrial complex; and fear that Brazil's wor­
sening economic situation can become politically
explosive if the people aren't given m ore of a
voice in government.
Brazil carries the second largest foreign debt in
the world, after Mexico. But unlike Mexico, Brazil
has no massive reserves of oil. Brazil exports
traditional crops such as coffee and sugar, but it
has moved into exports of manufactured goods:
m ilitary hardware and automobiles. The world
recession has hit Brazil hard, Tight currency
controls have not successfully halted the plunge of
the cruzeiro, and government economic program s
have, if anything, widened the gulf between rich
and poor.
But Brazil is fortunate in its equidistance from
America and Europe and its proximity to the
m arkets of Spanish-speaking Latin America and
developing Africa. Its history has made
Brazilians both more cosmopolitan and more
independent than other South Americans. In its
heart lies the Amazon, rich in minerals but nearly
impossible to farm — a frontier that has yet to lie
developed. And the coast is studded with some of
the oldest and most beautiful cities in the
hemisphere. Sao Paulo is a megalopolis that
rivals Mexico City, New York and Tokyo in its
com m ercial and industrial might, but has little of
those cities’ charm,
TTie consensus of economists is that if Brazil
becam e self-sufficient in petroleum, it would soon
leave Mexico and other Third World nations
behind. But Brazil has not, despite heroic efforts,
found enough oil. It has, however, another un­
tapped resource that is being sublimated on the
nation’s great pastimes: carnival and soccer.
That is the incredible energy and creativity of the
Brazilian people.
Democracy can tap that resource m ore than
any other system,

BERRY S WORLD

"SO — you're the one who's responsible for
high food prices'".

By DORIS DIETRICH

church.”
So Dlease leave Kate alone— period.
Virginia i Ginger i Herndon summed it up in a
Herald I&gt;etter to the Editor last week. 1 have
always admired Ginger and her "telling it like it
is." She is a world traveler and has lived in many
countries while her husband, Richard was at­
tached to the U.S. Embassy.
Virginia asks what difference does it make
that a woman or man teaches school, drives a
bus, cooks, desigas, sews, or whatever? Per­
formance is the key. Just leave people alone.
This week, a Spanish-speaking man called to
complain that a Spanish recipe appearing in The
Herald was incorrectly spelled. In his critique of
the media in general, he claims communications
is lacking in this country and in this area in
particular. He suggested that more publications
should be printed in Spanish.
I tried to keep my cool, but 1 was really hot

under the collar at this. He pointed out that we
are a bilingual nation and should have many
languages taught in the schools.
"lo o k ," I interrupted. "This is an Englishspeaking nation and our citizens should leam
English and some of our customs. If I go to Spain
to live. I can assure you, nobody's going to
change the language to accommodate me."
The caller mentioned “ it never hurts to leam
about other cultures." I agreed, but practicing
them may be way out. I informed him people can
keep with their own traditions in their homes.
Even locales in this countrv have different
tradition, different lifestyles, different customs
and even different foods.
"But there's room for everyone and all
cultures." I said.
What I really wanted to say was: "Shut up,
leave me alone, and go home to where you came
from if you don’t like it in America.”

JEFFREY HART

JULIAN BOND •

The
Politics
Of Space

And Who's
Better
Off Now?
Tip O'Neill believes that all politics is local
politics. The House speaker— President
Reagan's favorite target among Democrats—
believes that national contests for the House
and Senate are ultimately decided not by
votes cast on treaties with the Soviet Union or
by great debates in Washington’s marble
halls, but by the local perception of who the
candidates are and their personal relation­
ships with the voters.
The superior candidate, O’Neill believes,
can be defeated by a lackluster performer
who shows up for all the right parades.*,
But most political observers would agree
that self-interest does play a major role in
private political decision making.
It obviously did on Nov. 2.
The individual voter asks himself whether
the candidate has affected him positively or
not, and casts a vote accordingly.
Thai’s why Republicans weren't quite as
worried by sky-rocketing unemployment
figures as they should have been. The jobless
don't vote, and the working population is glad
for not having yet had to stand in an unem­
ployment line.
But some voters did assess their personal
positions over the 20 months since Ronald
Reagan became president and the
Republicans took over actual control of the
Senate and de facto control of the House.
It had been two years since candidate
Reagan last asked voters to make such an
assessment, then as to how they had fared
under his Democratic predecessor. When
they made it again, the Republicans were in
serious trouble.
For many Americans, the answer to
whether nr not they are better off Is a definite
ves.
Those who earn more than *100,000 a year
are going to bring home an extra *2,000 from
the tax cuts.
Industrial polluters who spill poisonous
wastes in a river or a lake have nothing but
smooth sailing ahead. The Environmental
Protection Agency has seriously slashed its
enforcement forces. Only 60 E P A cases were
referred for enforcement in 1981 nguinst a
customary average of 200 cases in past years.
A m anufacturer whose products are
dangerous to the public can rest easy. The
Consumer Products Safety Commission has
dropped investigations into products linked to
60,000 injuries and 500 deaths each year.
Anyone who owns a
dangerous to its workers
Occupational
Safety
Administration inspections
percent in 1982.

factory that's
is better off.
and
Health
are down 17

And i f you’ve got a predilection toward
racial prejudice, you've got to shout y e s - it ’s
easier today to practice bigotry than it was
before Ronald Reagan became the president
of the United States.
But those Americans who number among
the two-thirds of ad families harmed by the
Reagan budget cuts, and those who'vc slipped
through the safety net, and those who’ve seen
their shift laid off or their plant closed, can't
possibly say that the years since 1980 have
been any improvement over t.ie years that
went before.
The central question or the 1982 elections
was how these Americans would respond on
Nov. 2.
They voted their interests, and it’s the
Democrats who are belter off today.

'No more Mr. Nice Guy!'

RUSTY BROWN

This Guy s A Feminist
I ask you:
How many men do you know who pay dues
to NOW and subscribe to Ms. magazine?
How many of your male friends cal!
themselves feminist and red feminist authors,
including Betty Friedan, Susan Brownmiller
and M ary Scotl-Welch?
Do you know any men who write fiery
letters soliciting money for the National
Women's Political Caucus? Or who man a
phone bank several nights in a row to hustle
votes for pro-women candidates?
When is the last lime you heard a man raise
such questions as: "Isn't it funny how some
legislators opposed to battered spouse centers
favor capital punishment and nuclear amis
and call themselves pro-life? Isn’t it funny
how they call their opponents pro-abortion, as
If these people had abortions for the fun of
it?"
Know any men like that’
Well, I do. He’s doing all this — and more.
He's Eddy Collins, 21-year-old mechanical
engineering sludenl at the University of
Oklahoma.
Earlier this year, he marched, shoulder-toshoulder, among 10,000 women to urge
passage of the Equal Rights Amendment.
And, he has picketed and participated in
prayer vigils on the steps of the state capitol.
I think Collins is pretty rare and pretty
neat.
"Shucks," he says, "I haven't done
anything that other men haven’t."
Maybe so, but while I've known men sup­
portive of the women's movement, Collins is
the first male activist I've gotten to know.
We became acquainted'when he wrote to
complain that I was being sexist and antimale in one of my columns. Our correspon­
dence has continued sporadically since.
He’s an active member of the Norman,
Okla., chapter of the National Women's
Political Caucus. Often, he’s the only man at
meetings. He's always the only male when the
caucus steering committee gets together. He
helps poll candidates for their views on
women's issues and monitors legislator's
voting records on bills assistlm* women.
He Is currently lending moral support to a
woman mapmaker who has filed an age
discrimination suit against the University of
Oklahoma.

Sometimes he wonders what he’s doing so
deeply involved in the women’s movement.
He has self-doubts and questions: "Am I a
token, a phenomenon or an average ac­
tivist?"
His college roommate thinks he's crazy. His
colleagues at the caucus, he fears, think of
him as "one of the girls."
His girlfriend, a pre-pharmacy major and
member of NOW, assures him he's won­
derfully masculine.
His mother, busy rearing five younger
brothers, ages 18 to 1, has no time to be an
activist. She encourages him. but does not try
to influence him, he says.
Collins says there was no bolt of lightning
that convinced him of the feminist cause, but
there was one significant event. He went to a
political forum one night and witnessed a
group of highly agitated women working over
one of the candidates.
"They were shouting at the guy, but what
they said made sense. I felt a great sympathy
for them. Afterwards, l went over and talked
to them . . and that was the beginning."
His awakening goes far beyond not calling
women "chicks," and not belittling or
patronizing female engineering students in
his classes. ("Many of them are smarter," he
says.)
He thinks men as well as women have been
repressed and limited by so-called sexual
roles and sexual stereotypes.
In one of his letters to me, he wrote: “ I want
both sexes to feel liberated, to be completely
HUM AN beings, experiencing all the joy,
pain, grief, love, hate and ecstasy which both
sexes are capable of.”
His favorite quote, he says, is from Jane
Addams, pioneer settlement house founder
and first president of the Women’s Inter­
national league for Peace and Freedom.
She said: "I am not one of those who believe
. .. that women are better than men. We have
not wrecked railroads, nor corrupted
legislatures, nor done many things that men
have done; but then, we must remember that
we have not had the chance."
Addam's satire aside, I think Eddy Collins
is one of a new waveof young men who would
like to give women the chance to do things
right.

The very phrase, The Politics of Space, is
bound to offend many to whom the con­
traction of American power is a prime
political goal. "Come Home America!"
George McGovern implored in 1972, and deep
retreat emotions continue to stir in America
today.
But listen.
The Moscow reporters of the Associated
Press bring us news of a huge new Soviet
space project, nothing less than a permanent
space colony, Cosmograd, with serious
m ilitary capabilities. The A P reporters have
been talking, "on background," as we say
here, with people in the Soviet space
program.
The new missile, called " G " —no doubt for
Giant—is scheduled to lift off sometime in
1985. It will stand 300 leet tall, and put into
orbit the cylindrical core of Cosmograd. The
" G " missile dwarfs anything on the drawing
boards for the United States.
The cylindrical core, at the outset, will
house some 12 Soviet scientists. When
multiple components are added, the space
island w ill accommodate a rotating
population of scientists, engineers and
m ilitary astronauts.
Among its non-military uses will be the
production of special substances in a germfree environment. Cosmograd will be a space
platform for further probes of the solar
system.
But it will also have important military
functions.
United States analysts are concerned that
Cosmograd will have the laser capability of
nullifying our nuclear deterrent, by knocking
out our ICBMs as they leave the launching
pad.
It will also be a potential source of strikes
against our "eyes" satellites, which monitor
minutely what is going on in terms of missiles
and bombs in the Soviet Union.
Cosmograd may not, in the event, in fact
possess these capabilities. We do not know
lhat the Soviets have solved the problem of
the "deteriorating orbit" that resulted in the
final destruction of our own Skylab.
So far as we know, Soviet space technology
is inferior to our own. According to NASA's
Robert Jastrow, the Soviets have attempted
two moon landings, but missed the moon’s
orbit, sending a couple of Cosmonauts into
eternal space.
But the meaning of all this seems clear to
me. At the very moment when pessimistic
movements are growing stronger in the West,
and demanding strategic cut-backs, the
Soviets are seeking ways to advance, gain an
advantage, and...win.
The new “ G " giant rocket and its
Cosmograd product are not "conservative"
or " s ta b iliz in g " phenomena. They are
potential "breakthrough" phenomena.
One never really knows about the potential
m ilitary practicability of these things, but
there remains in the niind the sardonic crack
of Soviet Ambassador Andrei Vishinsky, who,
upon coming to the United Nations, began by
saying that he had never been outside the
Soviet Union. Then, he paused for an ex­
ception. He said that he had once visited
la tv ia , and turned in for the night. But, he
said, when I woke up I was in the Soviet
Union.
I myself do not think that I would like to go
to sleep In America and wake up in Poland.
And a wary eye on Soviet capabilities is the
only way to guard against that.

JA C K ANDERSON

Western Tourists Hassled In Russia
WASHINGTON-Americans who plan to
travel to the Soviet Union should expert to be
hassled by Soviet authorities, especially If
they have any ideas of contacting Russian
dissidents. The good old days when Western
tourists were welcomed are apparently gone.
Paranoid as ever, the Kremlin Is ap­
parently afraid that even the most wellmeaning tourist may not be content to visit
museums, czarist palaces, the Bolshoi Ballet
and o th er innocent, state-approved a t­
tractions, but will want to talk with the tiny
number of dissenters with courage enough to
meet foreigners.
Apparently it’s not only Americans who are
suspect in the KGB’s eyes. Government
sources told my reporter Andrea Siegel lhat
the secret police have stepped up surveillance
of Canadians and West Germans as well.
The harassment takes the form of tailing
the supposedly dangerous tourists,
monitoring their telephone conversations,
photographing them on the street, hauling
them in for questioning and subjecting them

..

\

to humiliating body searches. It's a
throwback to the old days of Stalinist
suspicion of anyone or anything foreign.

last September, explaining only that It was
too valuable to be taken out of the Soviet
Union.

The situation got so bad, in fart, that the
State Department was considering issuing «
travel warning lasl summer to American
• citizens contemplating a trip to the Soviet
Union. Instead, Foggy Bottom decided to wait
until the tourist season wound down. But if the
treatment of American tourists continues to
deteriorate next spring, an official warning
remains a possibility.

A female student who visited Russia in
August was embarrassed by a customs of­
ficial who read her diary aloud and asked her
personal questions. A rabbi had his prayerbooks confiscated with the peculiar ex­
planation that they had become the property
of the officially atheist Soviet government.
Sometimes the harassment is more than
just embarrassing. On occasion, the KGB
gets physical. Americans who are picked up
for questioning find that they are not allowed
to contact U.S. consular officials, as the U.S.U S S R . Consular Convention requires.

The number of Americans visiting Russia is
expected to rise from 1980’s total of 20,000 to
more than 40,000 next year. Because of the
Increase in numbers, the incidents of KGB
harassment are also expected to Increase
substantially.
Some of the harassment-obviously of­
ficially Inspired-has been merely pickypicky. For example, customs agents con­
fiscated an amber necklace lhat an American
woman had bought in a state souvenir shop

Some of these unlucky tourists were
detained overnight, and one person was held
for more than a week, according to govern­
ment sources.
Two members of an official Canadian
delegation protesting
tre a tm e n t of
"refuseniks"—Soviet citizens who have been

refused perm ission to em ig ra te —were
physically assaulted in September. One
suffered a black eye and the other had his
face stepped on by anonymous assailants
outside an apartment building they were
about to enter.
Police who were summoned to the scene
showed far more Interest in the identity of the
dissident* the two Canadians were trying to
visit than in their assailants. The delegation,
headed by former Foreign Minister Flora
MacDonald, eventually left Russia under the
unofficial protection of some American
Marines from the U.S. Embassy.
The KGB thugs are unimpressed with a
visitor’s V.I.P. status. The wife of Rep.
John Porter, R-IU., was stripaearched on her
way out of the country. She reported that two
Russian women kicked her legs while they
" s e a rc h e d my body c a v itie s ." Another
woman in the group, an aide to Rep. William
Ford, D-Mlch., was also subjected to a
blatantly unsanitary intim ate examination

�OUR READERS WRITE

Business People
There are over 10 million men and
women in America out of work. Many of
these people are losing their homes,
their lights have been cut off and the
car payments are overdue.'* The only
way they can feed their children is with
food stamps.
1 wonder what they think about the
individual that has a regular job and
wants to strike lor more money.
I n as listening to some jerk on
television tonignt, blowing off steani
about the low pdd teachers in Florida. 1
am sure he was connected with the
teachers union and he had some ladies
with him complaining about the cheap
Florida schoos.
The cheapen paid teacher in Florida
makes close to a thousand dollars a
month. That is not as much as the
governor nukes, but it is a lot better
than being out of work and living on
food stamps.

Foundation
small businessmen In the state of
Florida. These small businessmen and
women are the foundation of our nation.
Month after month their profits are
dropping. Can they strike for higher
profits? Do they have some union boss
to tell the state legislature and
governor to give them a larger profit so
they can save their business? If they
strike, the nation will go under.
The Constitution of the United States
says that our country w ill be run by
duly elected officials. That means to
unionize our tax paid Individuals would
be unconstitutional. That would mean
that union bosses would be setting our
tax base, rather than duly elected of­
ficials.
If you don’t like what the taxpayer is
paying you, resign and work for private
enterprise.
Grover Ashcraft
Pierson

Every power-seeking politician in
America feels sorry for the underpaid
city, county, state and federal em­
ployee, who is underpaid with all the
fringe benefits known to man and a fat
pension waiting for them. But have you
ever heard a politician say, "I am sorry
for the small fry businessman that has
just gone broke?" He has no fringe
benefits, no pay raises, no pensions and
very' few that care.
To listen to our governor and school
superintendents you would think the
world was coming to an end because
our 10 billion dollar state budget is
going to fall short by three or four
million dollars.
The state budget shouldn’t have been
over seven billion In the first place.
Have you noticed that the higher the
state budget goes, the more broke they
get?
There are hundreds of thousands of

Lyman Sports Fan Disappointed
I would like to address this letter to
Sam Cook's boss. I think you should
keep a closer account of the way Mr.
Cook presents his opinion of this
county's high school football teams and
the schools they represent. I make this
suggestion as Mr. Cook shows no selfrestraint in his articles that repeatedly
try to belittle the principal (Nov. 7,
1982) and the coaches (Nov. 8, 1982) of
Lyman High School.

distortion.

Mr. Cook's attacks on Lyman High
School personnel should be stopped. If
these attacks are based on a personal
vendetta as it seems to be, they should
not appear in a featured column in the
newspaper. It would be more ap­
propriate for Mr. Cook to express his
opinions on the Ed itorial pages, as this
is the section reserved for personal
opinions and someone would be able to
edit Mr. Cook's special talent for word

I would like to applaud Lyman High
School’s students, faculty and ad­
m inistrators for the fine school Spirit
and values they exhibit especially
under such adverse pressure. Keep up
the good work 'Hounds.
B arbara J. Scott
SHS Alumni
Sanford

Reader Balks A t Sports Articles
I

I am writing this letter because of the
article of Monday, Nov. 8,1982, by Sain
Cook. I do not want to start or add to
any name calling and accusations
among our schools, and I do think your
allowing of Mr. Cook to take his per­
sonal vendetta of one school, out in your
paper is distasteful. Tills article is one

of spite, as the only school said to do
anything wrong is one In which Mr.
Cook was once a part of.

whole area, and not for one man's
vengeance.
This Is not the hrst tune Mr. Cook has
used this paper in this way, but I hope it
will be the last.

I feel the strong competition among
our schools is good, but I also feel that
the newspaper that serves the whole
area should be for the people of the

I respectfully request that my name
not be printed.

General Funds For SS Opposed
The M a itla n d South Seminole
Chamber of Commerce recently sent
the following letter to President Ronald
Reagan:
Now that the 1982 elections are over,
there are rumblings on how to best

solve the Social Security shortfall. We
are strongly opposed to using the
general revenue to elim inate the
shortfall.
Ways must be found to preserve the
integrity of Social Security as a self­
paying entity without general revenue

support. Social Security entitlement
must pay its own way and stand on its
own. To do otherwise is a cop-out.
Stanley Spencer
President,
Maitland South Seminole
Chamber of Commerce

Emergency CB Channel Explained
Being new to the world of CB, while I
am no expert (I have been in it since
1975 and my husband since 19G8), I w ill
attempt to help explain things to you.
The original idea of Emergency
Channel 9 was a good one although it
hasn't worked well for a while. It could
be that someone heard you, but perhaps
you had your squelch turned too tight,
or your R F gain backed off too far. If
that was the case, you might not have
heard them come back to you. A lot of
people do this to cut out the skip and
ground noise that is so bad these days.

We never use either of these because
sometimes we can hear someone come
in with the noise level.
There have been a lot of good groups
organized on Channel 9, but because of
bickering, etc., they have disbanded.
There are still some that moniter but
they are few and far between. We never
joined a group because we did not want
to be tied down to certain hours every
day. Also, we have found from ex­
perience, that we have better results on
other channels — namely, Channel 19.
We do what we can with our base

station and mobiles to assist people —
be it for emergencies or directions.
God bless the truckers and any other
motorists who help the stranded. My
best friend had a blowout on 1-4 one day
and before she could even get her mike
In her hand a trucker pulled up,
changed her tire, and didn't want
anything for his services.
Don’t give up — hang in there! We
have found some of our greatest and
best friends thru the CB.
Charlene T. Sieg
Sanford

C iv ic T h e a tre A p p r e c ia t e s P re ss
When we count our blessngs, our
friends and supporters in the media are
high on the list.
We appreciate your consideration of
our announcements and mws releases
about our productions aid other ac-

tivlties and calling them to the attention
0f your audience, whenever possible.
Our community is more aware of
what we do and more responaive than
ever. For the Important role you have
played In launching our 56th season so

successfully, thank you.
May you have many blessings to
count this Thanksgiving, and may all
your holidays be happy!
Marilyn Strohbehn
VP-Publlc Relations

Newspaper Thanked
As president of the Friends of the
Library of Seminole County I would like
to express our sincere thanks for the
splendid publicity given by the Sanford
Evening Herald fer our book sale this

year.
I'm certain that you attracted hun­
dreds of poten tial shoppers that
otherwise would have not attended.
Our annual book sale was a success,

and we are truly grateful for your
assistance.
Helen Wolf
President

Divorce Inhibits Pals
Q. I was divorced last year after 32
years of marriage. I can’ t tell you how
Insensitive people can be. Friends my
ex-husband and I shared for all these
years have stopped calling me or In­
viting me to dinner or to join them for
any social activities. Don’t they realize
Tm the same person I was?
A . I have heard from many people men and women - how difficult the
adjustment to single life can be after a
long marriage, whether It ends in
divorce, or the death of a beloved
spouse, as In my own experience.
The struggle is sometime made
worse the problems others have in
coping with your new status. Many of
those old friends probably feel sorry
about your circumstances and don't
know how to express their feelings to
you. Others are a bit more shortsighted
and tend to look at people as “ couples"
instead of as individuals. In either case,
it m ay be more comfortable for you to
Initiate the reunion with your friends by
Inviting them to your home or simplycalling them on the phone. If they have
the chance to see that you are adjusting
well to a different lifestyle, their own
discomfort will probably be lessened.
There are enough strains in coping
with divorce and loneliness that one
ought not be faced with alienation from
friends as well. Offer them a gracious
and open attitude. If that doesn’t help to
renew the relationship, focus on new
friends and the new elements of your
life.
I’m sure your true friends will
recognize that you are indeed the
person whom they have cared for over
many years. And as for those whose
dinner parties require "matched sets,"
your individuality may be a bit too
ch alleng in g . Let them go. Their
m aturity will come later.
Q. My husband agreed last year to
retire early from his company, even
though he was only 60 and would have
liked to continue working. The com­
pany gave him what looked like a nice
cash settlement, as an Incentive to take
his pension and leave. But now we're
finding It's bard to live on that, and Joe
la having trouble finding another Job.
A. This la a serious and growing
problem. Many older workers who
thought they were getting a valuable
"golden handshake" on the way out are
fin d in g that the early-retlrem ent
package Is dross, not gold.
They’re too young to get any Social

Growing
Older
L'.S. Hep.
Claude Pepper

Security benefits to supplement their
pensions, and they frequently can't find
other jobs — in part because the
openings have been filled by younger
workers laid off earlier. So, people
offered early retirement should think
hard about what lies ahead, and not let
themselves be pressured into doing
what may not be best for them.
it's also vitally important for the
government to do more to expand the
older worker's
options: Improve
pension p ortab ility, increase job­
retraining opportunities, and stimulate
more opportunity for part-time work.
We're working to see that this is done.
(j. I am about 15 pounds overweight,
and at 62, that's no good. But Uke
everybody else, I bate diets. What do
you think about those new pills that let
you eat whatever you want and still lose
weight? As I understand It, they block
the digestion ol starches so that they
don't turn Into calories.
A. I am a die-hard skeptic when it
comes to any diet pills or regimens that
promise easy answers to complex
health questions. The "sta rch blockers” you're talking about sound
like every dieter's dream, but be wary'.
They have never been tested for
negative side-effects and long-term
health Implications. In fact, a Chicago
court has recently ordered a halt to the
manufacture and distribution of the
"starch blockers" on the basis that they
are a drug, not food item, as contended
by the manufacturer. The Court held
that as a drug, they should be subjected
to Food and Drug Administration
testing procedures before they arc
approved for human consumption in
this country.
I think your decision to lose excess
weight is a good one, but I highly
recommend you let your physician
prescribe a balanced and healthful diet
and exercise program to achieve your
goal.
Q. My mother had a harrowing ex­
perience last week. She was victimized
by a man who came right to her home
and said he was a plainclothes

policeman. She let him In, and he
convinced her that she had somehow
broken the law. Before It was over, she
had given him $750 In cash. The real
problem Is, I can’ t get her to talk to the
real police about IL
A. Your mother is probably em­
barrassed about being "taken" and
blames herself for letting it happen
What she needs to know is that the kind
of "con gam e" to which she fell victim
is not uncommon. Almost any of us,
unprepared, could be victimized in
exactly the same way.
There has been a rash of police im ­
personations here in Washington, for
example. One point that law en­
forcement officials stress is that older
people may be more vulnerable to such
impostors than others. The reasons
are: first, because of their trusting and
respectful attitude toward the police,
which has resulted in their reluctance
to ask for proof of identity; and second,
their susceptibility to the trumped-up
charges which such impostors use to
terrorize them into turning over their
money.
Older people are sometimes less
trusting of themselves and believe they
may have unwittingly passed the
counterfeit b ill or crossed over the law
in some other way as the impostor
suggests. A con man is one who plays
with the mind Bnd looks for just that
kind of susceptibility to achieve his
criminal goals.
The p olice have made some
suggestions to help people prevent this
kind of crime. First and foremost, if an
individual comes to the door and claim s
he is a policeman, demand iden­
tification. Require him to displny the
identification folder and badge of your
town's officers. This will not be an
insult to a real policeman, It is the
police themselves who are asking
citizens to take such precautions
Secondly, be aware that the police,
except in hot pursuit of criminals, must
have a warrant beiore they can enter
your home to search or confiscate
money. If a person claims to be a
policeman with authority to search
your house, ask for his identification
and warrant. And call the police. Ask
an officer in uniform to come and
identify this plainclothed officer.
And lastly, encourage your mother
again to go to the officials. Her ex­
perience m ay help others to avoid the
same victunizalion.

Americans Paying Price
For Supporting O f Israel
ByM AXM O RR LS
(Guest Editorial)

It is time for plain talk and straight
thought about America's relationship
with Israel. Just as Israel's elected
government must put its perceived
national interests first, so should our
own administration give priority to
America's national interests. It Is
evident that these two sets of Interests
do not necessarily coincide.
History shows examples of previous
divergences. One occurred exactly 15
years ago last week. In June, 1967,
Israeli Jet fighters and torpedo boats
deliberately attacked a U.S. Navy ship.
Thirty-four U.S. sailors were killed and
171 were wounded aboard USS Liberty.
Our president then, the late Lyndon
Johnson, did not order retaliation. In
fact, he and his secretary of defense,
Robert S. McNamara, called back the
6th Fleet Jets that were sent to protect
Liberty within minutes after Its un­
coded radio call for help was received.
I know, I was on the bridge of the USS
Saratoga when the radio call for help
cam e, when Captain Joe Tully, bless
him , ordered the protective Jet launch
and when the White House ordered us to
recall the Jets.
The Israelis continued their attack on
American sailors for almost an hour
m ore. We were forbidden to help and
could only listen to Liberty's calls for
a ir cover, thanks to President Johnson
and McNamara, who was appointed the
next year to head the World Bank.
Israel was following Its national
Interests that day. It did not want U.S.
authorities to know what was hap­
pening In its preemptive Slanai attack.
There la clear evidence Israelis knew
th a t Liberty was a U.S. Navy ship. The
attack was deliberate and there was no
m istake. They lied when they later
claim ed othenriie. Ju st as Prime
Minister Begin lied about going only 25
m iles into Lebanon last week.
President Johnson was never pressed
to say why he felt U was In the U.S.
n a tio n a l Interest not to protect
American sailors. Perhaps he just
wanted to lose no U.S. ethnic support
(or the Democratic P arty by shooting
down Israeli Jets. But It was his

decision and he made It.
Those of us Involved will never forget
what he and his aides did that day. At
worst, it was close to treason. At the
least, it was a gross misconception of
Am erica's true national Interest.
President Reagan could fall Into
sim ilar error In regard to present
Israeli actions. The cost to U.S. citizens
would
be high, lite ra lly
and
figuratively.

The International political costs of
tacitly supporting Israel's attacks are
manifest. We are becoming Isolated not
just from moderate Middle E ast states
but from Western allies, too. This cost
will climb.
Other costs are less obvious but may
prove even more expensive. On the
economic side, U.S. taxpayers again
will have to pay a major portion of
Is ra e l's defense expenditures, In­
cluding those for the attacks that have
killed thousands of Lebanese civilians.
A year or so ago, a local rabbi, In
response to a column, wrote that Israel
had never asked Americans for any
"personal sacrifice." That year the aid,
forgiven loans and other assistance that
Israel extracted from American tax­
payers was over 82 billion. This year It
will reach 83 billion.
A quick calculation show s this
amounts to a subsidy of about 83,500
U.S. tax dollars for every family unit In
Israel. Poorer U.S. families whose
benefits have been cut might consider
these billions going to a developed,
sem l-so ciallst state a "p e rso n a l
sacrifice."
An even more deadly hidden cost Is
the gratuitous exposure of our latest
m ilitary technology to the Russians.
Editorials speak glowingly of the
successes of the F-15 and F-16 jets, plus
other advanced systems th at our ad­
ministrations have given to Israel.
Each Jet, for example, is equipped with
so p h isticated
electronic
coun­
term easures and guidance radar. The
latest air-to-air missiles are being
fired.
Russian "security-group" men in
Syria are monitoring every attack,
every signal, every radar-jam m ing
action. Moscow's military m asters are
learning what we would use if they

attack the West. They can alter
weapons and develop countersystems.
U.S. pilots eventually will "p a y " for
this unneeded use of our newest
systems, perhaps with their lives. No
"personal sacrifice?"
Syrian M iG s and SA-6 missiles, on the
other hand, are obsolescent and poorly
operated. We gain nothing new In
knowledge of Russian systems from the
Israeli successes.

A final hidden cost can still be
avoided. Israel and Its U.S. support bloc
want to gull us Into placing U.S. troops
along the borders with Ubanon and
Syria as a "peacekeeping" or buffer
force. Major U.S. media that are proIsrael quietly are pushing this as a quid
pro quo fo r "p ersu ad in g " P rim e
Minister Begin to withdraw his at­
tacking arm y. Again, no "personal
sacrifice?"
Americans already are along the
Egypt-Israel border as a "tripw ire"
force. Israeli military officers have told
me that this was their strategic dream
for decades. Contrary to news stories,
they could hardly wait to give back the
Sinai once America agreed to guard
their own border for them. Again, is
this no "personal sacrifice?"
If they trick us Into doing the sam e
thing in the north, it will leave them
free to concentrate on their remaining
border and attack Jordan If they wish,
no doubt claim ing retaliatio n for
"provocation and attacks."
It is totally unacceptable for U.S.
troops to be ordered to such duty. We
need to tell our senators this today and
demand a clear response. If we delay,
the pro-Israel lobby and its m edia
friends will pressure Congress and the
president to send a U.S. force to "Insure
peace."
As state, Prim e Minister Begin (now
in Washington) can follow w hat he
perceives as Israel's national Interest.
He is the leader of that state.
We, in turn, should do the sam e. We
have laws about use of UJL-supplied
weapons. We have rules about use of
UJL soldiers. We have reason to cut
foreign aid. What our president and
Congress need to do is think straight
and put U.S. Interests first for a change.

�* A — Evenin g H e r a ld , Sanlord, FI.

Sunday, Nov. 31.1981

Link The Classroom And Workplace

Working To Stay Out Front
In The High Technology Race

&lt;•
\«

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Herald P h o to i b y S im Cook

S e m in o le H it'll P r in c ip a l W a y n e K pps (left)
fills in th e S a n f o r d O p tim is ts o n s o m e of Ids
a w a rd -s v in n in tt s tu d e n ts , i l i e w in n e r s , from

le ft, a r e A lan J a n a k , S h eila H row n. A u h re y
K e n d a ll and M a r th a M c In to sh .

I

Optimists Honor Students
Of 5 Schools For Achievement
The Sanford Optim ists Club
recently honored outstanding students
at five schools in the area.
From Sem inole High School,
Aubrey Kendall was honored for
athletic achievement, Alan Janak was
honored for scholarship, Martha
McIntosh for leadership and Sheila
Brown for music.
At (’rooms High School, Jackie Farr
was honored for leadership, Sandra

Stiffey for music. Chris Jones for
athletics and Iinda Cushing for
scholarship,
Ij k e Mary students honored were
Kim AveriU for athletics, Philip Hale
for academics, Robert Green for
leadership and Margaret Watson for
music.
Students from l^keview Middle
School who were honored were Kelly
Hysell for leadership, Mike Young for

music. Tonja Simpson for academics
and Kevin Brooks for athletics.
At Sanford Middle School. Susan
Harwood was honored for athletics,
Beth Brooks for scholarship, Kenny
Eckstein for leadership and Chrissy
Eckstein for music.
Stacey Webb, also of Sanford
Middle School, was honored for
outstanding achievement.
— M 1CH EA L BEHA

Bj PATRICIA McCORMACK
I P ! F.ducatlon Editor
Keeping engineers up-to-date is one way of making sure
Am erica's bridges don't fall down simultaneously, telephones
don't all go dead at once, satellites won't rig when they should
rag and widgets won't stop doing — well, whatever widgets do
to keep things working.
But keeping engineers up with rapid developments in this
high tech world - lasers, computers, microprocessors,
transistors — turns out to be a problem lhat authorities claim
almost defies solution.
That's why a brain trust of educators and executives has
been studying how America can keep cobwebs from draping
the high tech workforce — including engineers and computer
scientists.
The way to do that, says a brand new landmark report from
four Massachusetts Institute of Technology professors, is this:
—Team up high tech industries with schools where high tech
education is dispensed.
—Then, link up workplace and classroom, using some of the
high tech products such as state-of-the-art computers and
video systems.
Presto: the latest in college courses on major developments
can be beamed to offices of engineers and computer scientists.
Result: the high tech workers are up-to-date!
The report, "Lifetime Cooperative Education," was deliv­
ered at a symposium marking the 100th anniversary of the
MIT Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer
Science in Cambridge, Mass., over the weekend.
Authors include Profs. Robert M. Fano, lows D. Smullin,
James D. Bruce and William M. Siebert.
Fano, head of the department, said the proposal is just that
— at this point. To get it off the drawing board, the MIT

State Cracks Down On Boaters
To Protect Migrating Manatees
United Press International
As m anatees start th eir annual
migration to warm Florida waters from
points as far away as North Carolina and
Inuisiana, stale officials have stepped up
enforcement of boating laws designed to
protect the ocean-going mammals.
At the same time, wildlife experts are
trying to figure out if the number of
manatees is going down or increasing.
In an effort to reduce the number of
manatees injured by boat propellers,
Florida Marine Patrol officers have
started intensively enforcing boating
regulations m 18 areas where manatees
congregate. The heightened enforcement
effort is scheduled to last until March 31.
Signs warning boaters to slow down —

( 'r o o m s H it’ll S ch o o l A s s is ta n t P r in c ip a l Don
J o h n s to n ( le f t ) s a y s a fe u w o rd s a b o u t his
ta le n te d S a n f o r d O p tim ist C lu b a w a r d w in n e rs

d e f t to rig h t) l.in tla C u sh in g , S a m ir a S liffry ,
C h r is J o n e s a n d J a c k i e K a rr,

Germs May Cause Arthritis
.

Hayflick, an expert on the
aging process, said Thursday.
But a link between the
germs mid arthritis may not
be
apparent,
because
mycoplasmas may not attack
a victim until 20 years after
entering the body.
"People could be exposed to
mycoplasmas when they are
young, then develop arthritis
late in life." he said.

G A IN E SV ILLE (UPD Arthritis, a disease af­
flictin g n early
half of
Americans over age 00. may
be caused by germs called
mycoplasmas, a University of
Florida scientist says.
"Research suggests, but
has nut proved, a relationship
between certain forms of
human a rth ritis and the
m ycoplasm as,”
Leonard

m

/

Experiments have shown
that mycoplasmas — the
world’s smallest creatures —
cause arth ritis In sheep,
goats, rabbits, elephants,
mice, rats, chickens, turkeys
and gorillas, said Hayflick,
who becomes president of the
Gerontological Society of
America this week.
Investigations by Hayflick
proved 20 years ago that

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mycoplasmas cause walking
pneumonia in humans. It was
the first proof the microbes
cause the ailment.
Hayflick now is involved In
a three-year project to
determine
whether the
miniscule organisms can give
arthritis to humans.
Arthritis Is widely viewed
as an auto-immune disease —
one in which the body treats
some of its own cells as in­
vaders.
Hayflick, who came from
Stanford University to direct
the University of Florida^
Center for Gerontological Stu­
dies, said mycoplasmas could
cause arthritis In "a sneaky
way that would look like the
body is producing an Immune
response to some of its own
cells."
"A fter
changing
the
chemistry of normal cells, the
provocateur could disappear,
but still the body's Immune
system would respond as if
there were an infection," he
said.
Hayftlck's experiments will
attempt to determine whether
mycoplasmas change the cell
chemistry in human bone
joints, prompting the body's
immune
system
to
"recognize" them as foreign
cells.

DECEMBER 3, 1982
7 :3 0 P.M.

SANFORD CIVIC CENTER

some purchased with money raised by
singer Jim m y Buffet in "save the
manatee" concerts - have been posted
in the affected areas.
Marine Patrol officials undertaken a
public education campaign on manatees,
also known as “ sea cows," and Gov. Bob
Graham declared November “ Manatee
Awareness Month.”
Of about 1,000 manatees in Florida, 111
have died so far this year, three less than
the 1081 total of 1U, wildlife officials
report.
C ollision s with boats and barges
caused 17 deaths, while three manatees
died trapped by flood control, gates. At
least 39 are believed to have been killed
by the mysterious red tide, and the cause

"Homestaying" at Lake M ary High School did not end with
last night's football game. The three days of this week will be a
continuation of last week's "Spirit Week."

IN A D V A N C E BY CALLIN G
(305) 323-4360 831-2023
TA X DEDUCTIBLE CONTRIBUTION
$20 PER PERSON

\

P O Ro» J0l». Bldg I. Sanlord Airport, Sanford. Fla. 1JJJI

J*

In the Fort Myers-Sanibel Island area,
the number of manatees is known to be
decreasing, Peterson said. The 39 deaths
attributed to red tide occurred therein
February and March.
"So many people are involved with the
manatee protection program," Peterson
said. "Yet there is so much we don't
know. We can’t even say whether the
population is decreasing or increasing."

Around
LMHS

Each day of this week will be devoted to one of the three
classes at IAIILS Monday will be Freshman Day, and all
freshmen are supposed to wear as much green as possible,
along with being granted special privileges. Tuesday is
Sophomore Day and their color is blue, and Wednesday is
Junior Day and their color is red.
During these three extra spirit days, there is expected to be a
lot of class rivalry. To top off an exhilarating week, Lake
M ary’s homestaying dance will be held at the school on
Wednesday night at 7 p in., and will last until midnight.
The 1982-83 Homestaying court was recently selected at
LMHS. The junior court for king and queen consists of: Paige
Jones, Kyle Krakes, lis a Uoltauier, Jeff Hopkins. Michelle
l&gt;oudermdk, Will InValle, l i z McKee and Scott Eusepi.
The members of the sophomore court are: Margaret Davis,
Charlie Lucarelli, Mary Kathryn Bragg. Scott Sperrazza,
Bridget Coeb and Billy Caughell.
The candidates for freshman prince and princess are:

By
Jolrne
Bcckler

Kendal Jones, Doug Kilbjomsen, Catherine McKee and Tony
lxiValle. The winners will be announced next week.
Two more reminders: there w ill be no school on Thursday or
Friday due to the Thanksgiving holiday, and don’t forget the
marching band contest being held at the Tangerine Bowl
tonight at 5:30.

(SEE
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tuT.lownimamutics
-SANFORD-

National Honor Society

HWY. 17-92 South City Limits
Liquor Dept. Store &amp; Lounge

Inducts 8 N ew M embers
National Honor Society's induction ceremony was held
Tuesday to tup eight new members. These students are ones
whose grade point averages were not guite high enough at the
end of last year for them to be admitted to the club.
However, in the first nine weeks of this school year, they
were able to pull their average up enough to meet the N.H.S.
standard. These students are laidona Merrifleld, Debra
Franklin, Scott Meek, Melissa Moore, Carol Tardif, Kristi
Hamilton, Susana lluaman, and Kaylyn Witherow.
The present officers of the club are Toai Doan, president;
Aubrey Kendall, vice president; Georgene Hal), secretary;
Christine Kozlowski, treasurer; Penny Morris, chaplain; and
lu r i Cox, social chairman. The senior members are Robert

HAPPY HOUR Kt\

50' MINKS

KILT
CASTU

86* Scotch
Certified Brandy
Canadian Club cmumm
Kahlua Liqvavr
Flnisthmann’i Vodka
Amaretto df Saronno
Harvay’s Scotch
Saagram’s Oin
Clan M acOngarM •0.1
Haavan Mil Ky. M . M.1

7 SO

6.99 era
7.99 »
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Capko, Ramona Caulhen, Michael Davis, Bridget Deere, Phil
Fausnighl, David Goebelbecker, Tracy Gregory, Robyn
Guernsey, Miriam Hamilton, Howard Harrison, Debbie
Harvey, Alan Janak, Martha McIntosh, Lisa Morse, Michael
Perry, Dean Shoemaker, Sandra Sorenson, Vara Wells, and
Mike Wohlgemuth.
The juniors In the club are Lila Baker, Mike Bateman, Mike
Brooks, Bonnie Clark, Jam es Cohen, Sheri Buddies, Debbie
Dudley, Dee Goebelbecker, Debbie Hankey, Jill Janak, Susan
Mann, Genene Stallworth, Tisha Tipton, and Rita Wesley.
The induction proceedings for the sophomores who have
been found to have the qualities to uphold the standards of the
society will be held in the spring.
This week's activities Include:
Monday — Fellowship ol Christian Athletes, huddle
meeting; Senior 3 « s Meeting, 2nd period.
Tuesday — ASVAB test.
Wednesday — boys' varsity basketball Rotary Jamboree,
Lyman.
Thursday and Friday — Thanksgiving holidays.

\

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10.5912

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SAN FORD, FLORIDA

PLEASE M AKE YO U R RESERVATIONS

of most other deaths is undetermined
The sole Florida locale where the
manatee population Ls known to be on the
upswing is the Crystal River on the
central Gulf coast, said David Peterson
of the U.S. F ish and Wildlife Service
Wildlife advocates have proposed a
manatee sanctuary Ihcre.

Spirit Week Continues At LMHS

SEMINOLE BOULEVARD

KEYN O TE SPEAKER
U.S. CONGRESSMAN JOHN CONYERS

professors suggest that a council be formed and charged with
devising a modus operandi for the plan.
They recommend that the council be composed of chief
executive officers of high lech companies and heads of engi­
neering schools, plus leaders of professional groups
engineering societies, for example.
The M IT professors said "lifetim e" learning must come on
line for electrical engineers and computer scientists, espe­
cially if the United States is to maintain its technological
health and its ability to compete in the world marketplace
Without it, they warned, many engineers and computer
scientists w ill be left far behind as new inventions pop up in
multiples.
“ Every four or five years there are deve opments that make
a great difference," Fano said.
"Transistors, computers, microprocessors, the laser are in
that category.
"Every four or five years, as a result, life is different in
silicone and computer valley.
"Unless an electrical engineer or computer scientist keeps
up, by the tim e he or she is W, he or she is ntf. so hot — maybe
just second best."
Smullin said second best is no way to survive.
"The need is for 'first best,"’ he said.
How swift is the flow of new information? Fano said it is
so fast that by the time an electrical engineering student
graduates, he or she already is somewhat out ol date with the
latest developments — compared with students behind them,
learning the newest as a matter of revised basic courses.
The M IT professors said the off-campus instruction needed
for the lifelong learning programs could be carried out by
making use of tutored video instruction — TVI - [ioneered b\
Stanford University in California.

Smirnoff Vodka
'K 1I VA . AT AT in .
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�Sunday. Nov. 21, 1532— 7A

Evening Hera ld, Sanford. Ft.

■

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'I

TU R K EY DAY SA LE

20% off

Suit Sale

Boys’ Sweaters

Large Selection Of 3 And
Piece Suits. Polyester And
Poly Blends With Wool.

4

School Age
Crew Neck

3 pc. Suits

Sale 800

Reg. $10

Orig. To $110

Fo x* V Neck

Sale 10"°
Pre-School

Sale

Reg.. $13

4 pc. Quads

A thletic Sweater

Reg. M

,. ic

Sale 640

r

Orig. To $130

Fox* V Neck

Sale 880

Reg. $11

2 5 % o ff a ll

Prep Sizes

3 pc. Lightweight
Polyester Wool Blends

la tc h 'h o o k a n d
s t ifc h e r y kits.

Shetland

Reg. $i6 Sale 1280

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20% Off Boys’
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2 Slice Toaster

T w ill

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Orig. »0
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School Age
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: Hushpuppie Sweaters
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c , Q Q 99

S a le

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LI

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wO
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Orig. $80

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Ow

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50% Off
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Reg ”7

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•

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Of Pictures
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Box Of 3

Tote
Reg. tu Sale *24
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r*« uo Sale *25
Carry On
Reg. uo Sale *39
26” Pullman

Special

Wallet ■ Key Case

g Q Q

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19"

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30% Off USA Olympic
For The Entire Family

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JC F en n ey
SANFORD PLAZA ONLY

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4"

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17"

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Slacks

5"

1 Q 99

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Orig. To $29

° a ie

I 9

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Sale 1 2 60

F

a-ig. 8.5o

M en ’s

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^

880

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With Wheels
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1 7 59

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R*. iioo Sale s57
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Entire Line Of
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-,(3 5

40% To 50% O ff

Assorted Fashion Styles

Men’s Velour Robe

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*

�SPORTS
BA—Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Sunday, N o v .II, 19B2

New Smyrna Beach

Buries Lake Mary
In Season Final, 39-0
HyCHKLS F IS T K R
Herald Sports Writer
One of the I.ake M ary High.School
marching band’s best numbers is "We
got the beat ” Friday night in the Hams’
“ HomesUying" it was more like "We got
beat,"
Beat, pummelled, hammered, pounded
and a lot more adjectives serve to
describe lake M ary’s 39-0 loss to the
powerful
New
Sm yrna
Beach
Barracudas.
“ Frustration,” that’s how lake Mary
coach Hoger Beathard summed up the
loss. “ New Smyrna Beach is an excellent
team, they’ve bent some good teams and
lost to Palataka &lt;the state’s top ranked
3A teami by only one point."
A youthful squad, key injuries and a
touch schedule helped Iaike Mary to
finish with a 1-9 record in its first season
of varsity football. New Smyrna Beach
finished at 6-4.
"It doesn't get any easier for us,"
Beathard said discussing the Rams’ step
up tot A competition next season. "We're
just going to have to work hard in the off
season and hope we're ready when the
time comes."
The time came early for the T’udas,
who scored their first touchdown at 8:11
in the first quarter as quarterback
Jimmy lewis darted 31 yards into the
end zone. Barry McMullen’s kick made it
7-0 and it stayed that was as the first
quarter ended.
la k e Mary s best play of the first
quarter was a 29-yard pass from Greg
Shalto to Jeff Reynolds on a faked punt.
The Rams scoring drive ended at the
New Smyrna Beach 35 when a Scott
Sperrazzo pass was tipped and In­
tercepted by New Smyrna Beach's Brad
Humphrey.
On its first possession of the second
quarter, New Smyrna Beach mounted a
scoring threat as they drove to the Rams’
25-yard line. The drive slopped there

i t

Florida Prep Football Score*
By United Press International
Manatee 36 Hillsborough 21
Plant 19 Rrundon 16
Plant City 14 U “to 0
Iaind O' I,akes 21 Zephyrhills 14
Jesuit 31 Springstead 7
Jefferson 32 Tampa Bay Tech 6
Wildwood 51 S Sumpter 0
Dunnellun 35 Pierson-Taylor fi
N. Florida Christian 32 Temple
Heights 7
Buyshore 13 East Bay 12
Hudson 7 Gulf 6
Frostproof 20 I-ake Placid 0
Hardee 14 Desoto 0
Kissimmee Osceola 28 St. (loud 7
Clearwater 41 I-argo 21
Crystal River 41 Citrus 7
Aubumdale 19 Winter Haven 14
l^ake Gibson 27 Haines City 6
Avon Park 20 Sebring 18
Santa Fe 26 Ft. Meade 22
St. Petersburg 14 Boca Cicga 12
Dixie Hollins 37 Pinellas Park 6
Tarpon Springs 43 Pasco 21
Dunedin 21 Countryside 14
Ukewood 8 St Petersburg Osceola 0
St Petersburg Northeast 10
Seminiole 0
U k e City Columbia 24 Jacksonville
Sandalwood 13
Gainesville Bucholz 28 Sanle Fe 0
Palatka 35 St. Augustine 14
Jacksonville Bolles 16 Jacksonville
Kenney 7
Mayo 7 Branford 0
Jacksonville Jackson 13 Jackson­
ville White 7
Crescent City 42 Nease 7
Hastings 27 St. Augustine Joseph 12
Callahan W. Nassau 45 Hilliard 0
Jacksonville Ixtc 35 Jacksonville
Paxon 9
Maitland U k e Howell 34 Orlando
Boone 30

V
K

1',
o:

Orlando Evans 99 De Land 7
Apopka 23 Winter Park W Orange IS
Longwood Lyman 6 Altamonte Spgs
U k e Brantely 0
Daytona Bch Seabreeze 14 Daytona
Bch Mainland 0
Merritt Island 10 Satellite 7
New Smyrna Beach 39 U k e Mary 0
Gainesville 29 Gainesville Eastside
11
North Marlon 27 U k e Weir 13
Ocala Forrest 26 Ocala Vanguard 7
Oviedo 21 Cocoa Beach 13
Rockledge 20 Cocoa 19
Titusville 16 Titusville Astronaut 9
Groveland 30 Clermont 20
Mt. Dora 35 Tavares It

Prep Football

New Sm yrna’s Mark Houcher grabbed
the loose ball and rambled all the way to
the L ik e M ary 21 before Reynolds pulled
him down from behind to save the TI).
Three plays after the fumble, Kelvin
Davis scored from four yards out. The
extra point was missed and the 'Cudas
held a 21-0 lead as the first half ended.
During the halftime festivities, Paige

New Smyrna Bearh
7 14 7 12—39
I.a kc Mary
0 0 0 0—0
NSB - Ivewis 31 run iM cCullen kick i
NSB— Williams 8 run (Simmons pass
from Lewis)
NSB — Davis 4 run (kick faile d i
NSB — Lewis 57 run (kick failed!
It doesn't get a n y
NSB — Davis 30 run i kick failed i
NSB — Humphrey 75 pass from lewis
'k ic k failed)
e a s i e r for us.
1-ake Mary
NSB
5
12
First downs
— Roger B e a t h a rd
35-37
40-332
Rushes-yards
59
85
Passing yards
3-8-1
6-17-1
Passes
Johnson was named Hom cstaying
2-2
4-2
F umbles-lost
Queen and Jeff Hopkins was named
6-37
3-34
Punts-average
King.
5-33
9-75
Penallies-yards
la k e M ary took the second half kickoff
Individual Leaders
and ran six plays before having to punt.
RUSHING - NSB, le w is 5-116, Davis
On its first possession of the second
13-93, W illiam s 9-59. Lake Mary,
half, New Smyrna Reach scored on its
Underwood 12-28, Murray 7-23.
third play as lew is scampered 57 yards
PASSIN G - NSB. lew is 1-5-1-75, lake for his second TD of the night. The kick
M ary, Sperrazzo 3-11-1-20
was missed again but the 'Cudas led, 27R E C E IV IN G
NSB, Humphrey 1-75. 0.
la k e Mary, Grayson 3-20
New Smyrna Reach scored two more
times, once on a 30 yard run by Davis and
again on a 75 yard pass play from le w is
llinugh as Donald Grayson intercepted a
to Humphrey.
pass to give lake Mary the ball.
le w is was the game’s leading rusher
The Barracudas came right back after
regainmg the ball and marched 51 yards with 116 yards on just five carries. New
for their second TD. E lv is Williams Smyrna Beach had 407 total yards
hurdled a lake Mary player and went compared to % for the Rams.
eight yards for the score. A two-point
“ Inexperience and injuries really hurt
conversion pass from le w is to Kenny
us this season,” Beathard said. “ Thai
Simmons gave New Smyrna Beach a 15-0
anil the schedule plus we couldn't do
lead.
anything consistently."
After receiving the ensuing kickoff.
Lake M ary drove into Barracuda
I»tke M ary will be in the Five Star
territory then, on a first down play, Conference next season as Apopka is
Sperrazzo passed to Reynolds who was expected to drop out of the conference
hit hard and forced to cough up the ball. and play in the Metro conference.

H f n l d P ho to by Tom V u u o n t

l a k e M a r y ’s D a rrin W a s h in g to n s ta c k s up N ew
S m y rn a
H o a c h q u a r te r b a c k H aro ld N ic h o ls
d u rin g ’’llin n c s ia y in g ” n ig h t a c tio n a t L ak e M a ry

F r id a y . T h e I t a r r a c u d a s c h e w e d u p th e H a m s , :it)u.

Lyman Captures Five Star, 6-0
By B K K N TS M A ltTT
Herald Sports W riter
Rivalries arc never easy games, no
matter what the stakes or previous
records of the'two squads.

U k e Brantley’s Patriots, (2-8), 6-0 in
their annual backyard scuffle.
The Greyhounds open the first round of
the state playoffs next week at Satellite
Beach.

Friday night at U k e Brantley Stadium
held this fact true again as heavilyfavored and now Five-Star and District
4A-9 champion, Lyman i7-3), outlasted

"There never has been and there never
will be an easy l.yman-Uke Brantley
game,” projected a relieved Lyman
coach B ill Scott.

Prep Football
On this lackluster, defense-dominated
brawl, a Lyman fourth quarter 90-yard
drive punctuated by an 18-yard Jerry
Axlcy to Theo Jones screen pass would be
the only m ark on the scoreboard all

mght.
The first half was played entirely
between the 20’s. No real threats upon the
scoreless tie was made.
It wasn’t until the third stanza that a
serious charge was mounted. Brantley
marched the pigskin from its own 20 to
the Lyman 1on 12 straight running plays.
The big blow came on a 42 yard burst by

sophomore Steve Emmons ami a lute hit
call on the aggressive ’Hound defense.
This series placed the ball on the Lyman
7 Senior tailback Andy Bariden rammed
the ball to the Lyman 1 on three carries.
A fourth and goal coach Dave Tullis,
once again sent Raridcn up the middle,
but he was stopped in his own tracks.
After lateraling back to QB Dennis
Groseclose, who rambled in, the referee
informed all that the play had been blown
dead on Hariden’s charge, inches short.
"Tonight we had two different teams,"
exclaimed Scott. “ Our offense didn't
have it but our defense came to play.
After the Lyman defensive uprising,
the ’Hounds’ offense made its only ap­
pearance of the night. Lyman, taking
over at its 10 after a punt, scrambled its
way on tosses to various targets. On the
drive Axley completed 6 of 8 attempts,
most of the screen or dump variety.
With first and 10 at the I-ake Brantley
18, Alley scrambled left, spotted Jones
with several blockers in front of him and
whipped a screen pass to the elusive
senior.
Jones, following his blockers superbly,
broke one tackle and stumbled into the
end zone with 4:14 remaining for what
would be the game’s only score. The kick
for the PAT failed, but the 'Hounds had
all they needed for the school’s first
football championship.
No real threats were made by the in­
spired Patriots as Scott and his ’ Hounds
escaped with the title. "Ya, we’d like to
have won it, 50-0, but when you play a
rivalry you take what you can get," said
Big Bill. "The last two weeks we’ve had
an easy road. We were bound to have a
let down."
Field general Axley gave credit to the
Patriots, "They had the toughest " D "
(defense) we’ve faced all year. We never
knew what they were going to do."
I-ater, Axley summed the whole night
in one sentence. "We just didn’t come
ready to play.”
Lyman
L Brantley

Lake Brantley's Andy Kariden turns the corner us Lym an's Kevin
■■■
Keikes (middle) and d reg Pilot close in for the tackle. Lyman Satellite
slipped past the Patriots, ti-o. to win the first Five Star Conference

0 0 0 4 -1
0 0 0 0 -0
Lyman — Jones 18 pass from Ai Ipv
(kick failed)
Lyman
LB.
First downs
11
5
Rushes • yards
35-100
29-111
Passing yards
120
0
HtroM Photo toy Tom Vincont
Passes
9-19-0
1-3-0
o m iu iii a iiia iu i jr . A H ill ii 88011 DVUII if i l l I’ l IIUUIIll
Punts
6-48
6-29
Beach Friday in the first round of the IA playoffs.
Fumbles - lost
2-0
3-1
Penalties yards
543
5-45

�Evening Herald . Sanford FI

Sunday Nov J l . 1983— »A

R a id e rs Top E d iso n ,
P la y M ia m i Fo r T itle
By SAM COOK
Herald Sports Editor
l.uis Phelps. Keith Whitney and Rudy
Kuiper combined for 59 points Friday to
lead the the Seminole Community
College Raiders past Edison Junior
College. 79-68, in the first round of the
SCC Raider Tournament at SCC.
The R a id e rs ’ victory made B ill
Payne’s first coaching venture a suc­
cessful one and moved SCC into Satur­
day's cham pionship game against
powerful M iam i Dade South, an 87-77
winner over Palm Beach in Friday's first
game.
“ They'll be real tough." said Payne
about Miami, which finished second in
the nation last year and returns five
players from a team which won 33 in a
row. "They just come down and jam it in
the middle."
Tipoff Saturday is 8:30 p.m. The
consolation game is between Palm Beach
and Edison. It starts at 6:30 p in.
SCC. meanwhile, fe ll behind early
Friday, but rallied on some clutch inside
shooting of Phelps and Kuiper. Whitney,
who didn't shoot well during the
preseason, responded with some outside
bombs to keep Edison at bay.
Phelps, a 6-6 sophomore who went to
Springstead, hit 8 of 14 field goals and 5 of
B free throws to lead all scorers with 21
points. K u ip e r. 6-10 center from
Armhem. Holland, connected on 8 of 16
buckets and 3 of 6 charity tosses for 19.
Whitney popped for 19 too, including the
first three-point i beyond 21 feet l in SCC's
history. The rule was instituted in
Division 11 this year along with the 30second clock.
For the game, the Raiders hit 29 of 60
fielders for 48 percent. Edison was 30 of
83 for Just 36 percent. SCC was con­
sistent, hitting 15 of 29 in the opening 20
minutes and 14 of 31 in the last half.
Edison, 0-2, jumped on top early behind
the shooting of James Ashley, who beat
the Raiders outside on short jumpers.
The R aid ers, however, regrouped
behind the scoring of Phelps, Whitney

JC Basketball

Leon ( W r i g h t ) come off
the ben ch a n d did a

and Kuiper to overcome the seven-point
PALM BEACH (77|: C. Andrews 1 04)
2. Sheldon 3 3-4 9. Mounts 4 9-17 17, Gray 7
0-0 14. Guthrie 10 2-2 25, Williams 2 0-0 4,
B. Andrews 3 0-0 6 Totals: 13 14-18 77.
MIAMI D AD E NORTH |87i: B. Davis
4 0-0 8, Fairley 3 0-0 6, Ferandez 5 4-6 14,
Innocent 5 04) 10. Rodriguez 4 0-0 8.
Walker6 5-517, William s 10 4-614. Totals:
37 13-17 87.
Halftime: M iam i Dade 43, Palm Beach
42
Total fouls: )lia m i Dade 10, Palm
Beach 21.
Fouled out. None. Technicals: None.
Records. Miami Dade 14); Palm beach 0-

he ck o f a job.'
— Bill P a y n e

1
EDISON (681; Brown 4 0-2 8, Hall 6 0-1
12, James 4 0-18. Tim s 21-3 5, Woodka 4 22 11. Ashley 6 1-2 16. Bowens 1 04) 2,
Gilmore 1 04) 2, Richardson 2 04) 4.
Totals: 30 4-11 68. SEM IN O LE |79|:
Whitney 9 0-119, Wright 10-12. Sutton 1 446, Everett 15-67, Iayton 0 2-2 2, Merthic
1 1-2 3. Kuiper 8 3-6 19, Phelps 8 5-8 21.
Totals: 29 20-30 79.
Halftime; Seminole 35, Edison 32.
Total fouls: Seminole 14, Edison 24.
Fouled out: Brown, Hall, Records:
Edison 0-2, Seminole 14).
Three-point goals - Ahley 3, Whitney.

Edison lead midway through the first
half.
Whitney turned in several steals and
banged home some of his patented lefthanded jumpers to key the surge. Kuiper
and Phelps hurt Edison inside with the
help of some good feeds from sophomore
Ricky Sutton and Whitney.
SCC built the lead into three points at
halftime, 35-32. During the first few
minutes of the game, though, the Raiders
lost point guard Jimmy Payton on a
rebound play under the basket.
"I’m really worried about Jim m y,"

said Payne. "We're going to take him to
the hospital Saturday morning. There's
pain on both sides of his knees. It might
be ligament damage."
In the second half, the Raiders spurted
to a nine-point advantage and kept it
there despite some long-range gunnery'
by Edison.
"They must h ive tried si* straight
three-point plays," said Payne. "We had
the inside blocked out w ithin two or three
feet of the basket, but the rebound kept
bouncing long."
T ie three-point efforts didn't pay off
for Edison, however, as it hit just 3 of 12
tries and couldn't get any closer than
seven points.
Payiit pointed to a nifty relief job
turned in by sophomore 1-eon Wright for
the reason the Raiders held together
down the stretch.
"(.eon came off the bench and did a
heck of a job," said Payne about his
diminutive i 5-8i guard. “ He came L? for
a seven or eight minute span and made
several key steaLs and led our fastbreak."
Ashley led Edison with 16 points while
Jerry Woodka tossed in 11.
In the night's first game, Miami
knocked Palm Beach, 4-1, from the un­
beaten ranks with a well-muscled inside
attack from 6-9 Bernard Innocent, 6-8
Hector Rodriquez and 6-5 forward Nelson
Fernandez. Kenneth Walker snipped
away outside for 17 points.
“ They just clog the middle," said
Payne about Miam i which held just a 4342 halftime lead but blew open the game
in the closing 20 minutes. "We're going to
have to get on the boards to beat them."

H erald Photo by B o n n ie W irb o ld l

S ( ( " s l.u is P h e lp s d r o p s in tu n of h is g n in c -h ig li
21 p o in ts in th e H a id e r s ' v icto ry o v e r E d iso n
F r id a y n ig h t a t SC C . T h e H a id e rs p la y p o w e rfu l

M ia m i D a d e Sm ith S a tu r d a y n ig h t
c h a m p io n s h ip . T ip o ff is s ; :tu p .m .

fu r

th e

Yarborough's 3 TDs Trip Cocoa Beach
J. W. Yarborough scored three touch­
downs Friday night to lead the Oviedo
t Jons to their sixth straight victory, a 2113 triumph over the Cocoa Beach
Minutcmen in Oviedo's Homecoming.
The victory raised the 1Jons' record to
7-3 after getting off to a slow 1-3 start.
Cocoa Beach finished the season at 6-4.
Cocoa Beach got off to an early 64) lead
as quarterback Mike Allen connected up
with Scott Megregian for 56 yards and a
touchdown.
Oviedo erased Cocoa Beach’s lead as in
the second quarter Yarborough rambled
37 yards for his first touchdown of the
night. Hob Moody's extra point put the
Lions up 7-6 and it stayed that way as the
first half ended.

quarter, as Yarborough ran 15 yards for
his third TD. Yarborough ended up with
98 yards rushing on nine carries i73 of
those on the touchdown runsi giving him
a total of 844 yards for the season.
Cocoa Beach scored one more time on
Yarborough picked up where he left off
in the second half as he put the lions a 21-yard pass from Allen to Megregian.
ahead to stay on a 21-yard touchdown run Allen ended up with 133 yards passing.
early in the third quarter. Moody's point
Oviedo will now go up against Seminole
put Oviedo ahead, 1441.
County foe lake Howell in the post­
Cocoa Beach was halted by the rugged season Rotary Howl. - CH RIS F1STF.II
Oviedo defense for most of the second
Cocoa Beach
6 0 0 7—13
half. Kevin Yentz led the lions on Oviedo
0 7 14 0-21
defense with eight solo tackles and four
Cocoa Beach — Megregian 56 pass
assists. David Butterfield chipped in with
six solos and three assists while Tommy from Allen (kick failed I
Oviedo — Yarborough 37 run i Moody
Johnson added two solos and two assists.
kick i
Oviedo look a 21-6 lead, still in the third
Oviedo — Yarborough 21 run i Moody

Prep Football

kiek i
Oviedo
Yarborough 15 run (Moody
kick i
Cocoa Beach — Megregian 21 pass
from Allen i Johnson kick*
Cocoa Beach
Oviedo
First downs
7
5
Rushes-yards
28-133
24-119
Passing yards
92
35
5-13-1
Passes
3-9-2
Fumbles-lost
1-1
04)
Punts-average
5-32
6-37
Penalties-yards
7-75
3-35
Individual Leaders (Oviedo)
B U S H IN G Yarborough 9-98,
W illiam s 11-21
PASSING - Huggins 3-8-1-35
RECEIVING. - Ashe 1-14. t a ll 1-14,
Yarborough 1-7.

Lake Howell s Rally Stuns Boone

H erald Photo by Tam VI i k

m

I

J.w . Yarborough romped for three touchdowns Friday night as the
Oviedo l.ious won (heir sixth straight game, a 21-13 conquest of
Cocoa Beach. The Lions tangle with Lake Howell, a 34-30 winner
Friday, in the Itolary Howl Saturday at Lyman High School.

The Lake Howell Silver Hawks and the
Boone Braves staged a high-powered
offensive show F rid ay night at Boone
High School in Orlando with I^akc Howell
coming through in the final minute of the
play for a 34-30 victory.
la k e Howell had 486 yards of total
offense (634 yards counting kickoff and
punt returns) compared to 345 total yards
for the Braves.
" I t was d efin itely an offensive
ballgame," la k e Howell coach Mike
Blsceglia said. "Boone was ahead 16-7 at
halftime but we came back and scored all
but one time that we had the ball In the
second half.”
Boone scored three of its four touch­
downs on the night through the air, on
passes of 23, 25 and 47 yards.
“ We knew we had to score a lot of
points to beat Boone," Blsceglia said.
"They usually put up a lot of points and
they hurt us tonight on the gimmick plays
(option passes).”
The victory gives the Silver Hawks a 64 record and they w ill play Oviedo (7-3) in
the Rotary Bowl. Boone finished at 3-7.
Lake Howell, trailing 16-7 at the half,
opened up In the second half with 14
points in the third quarter. The first score
came on a two-yard run by quarterback
Troy Quackenbush and the second was on

Prep Football

first la k e Howell ball carrier to ever
gain over 1,000 yards in a season. —
— CHRIS FLSTER
la k e Howell
0 7 14 13—34
Boone
7 9 6 8-30
Silver Hawks Scoring:
2nd quarter—McKay 55 pass from
Quackenbush (Kerr kick)
3rd quarter — Quackenbush 1 run
(K e rr kick)
3rd quarter - Robey 1 run ikerr kick)
4th quarter — Robey 10 run (kick
failed)
4th quarter — Solomon 15 pass from
Quackenbush &lt;kick failed)

a one yard run by Jay Robey. Robert
K err kicked both extra points and, after
the third quarter. Lake Howell trailed 2221.
la k e Howell carried its momentum
into the fourth quarter as Robey rambled
10 yards for his second touchdown. The
conversion failed but the Silver Hawks
took a 26-22 lead.
The stingy Braves regained the lead in
the fourth quarter on an 11-yard run and
a two-point conversion run.
lake Howell Hooor
F irst downs
With time running out in the game,
10
18
Rushes-yards
la k e Howell mounted its (Inal scoring
38-159
54-305
Passing yards
drive. With 43 seconds left in the contest,
186
181
Passes
Quackenbush found Jeff Solomon in the
11-17-1
14-22-1
Fumbles-lost
open for a 15-yard T D pass and the
2-1
1-4)
Punts-average
clinching score. K err's point made it 342-40
3-34
Penalties-yards
30.
4-50
3-35
"This is the second winningest season
in the history of la k e Howell," Blsceglia
Individual leaders (la k e Howell)
said of the 'Hawks 6-4 record. "And it’s
RUSHING
- Robey 22-197, Solomon 14good to know that most of our players will
55, Palowilch 3-11, Tony Davis 3-30.
be returning next year."
PASSING - Quackenbush 1M7-M81.
Robey was the game's leading rusher
R ECEIVIN G - McKay 4-85, Daniels 2with 197 yards on 22 carries. Robey ended
31.
McNeil 3-30. Evans 1-20.
the season with 1,011 yards rushing, the

Sem inole High School’s
football team has alw a ys
lived and died with the
running game. W hen the
Sem inoles had a chan ce
for their only victory of
the year Thursday,
how ever, they tried to
win with a pass.
It w as intercepted
as w as the N o le s’
w h o le season. S e e page
11A for a look at the
last chance for victory.

Falcons Take On Rams As NFL Returns To Action
ATLANTA (UPI) - It’s anyone’s
guess how Sunday's Atlanta Falcons-Los
Angeles Rams game will turn out when
the two team s return to National Football
League play after a two-months layoff.
The Falcons were 1-1 before the strike,
but were trounced, 38-14, by the la s
Angeles (Oakland) Raiders in their last
appearance and the Rams were 6-2.
"We were not playing well before the
strike," said Falcons Coach Leeman
Bennett. " I don't think anyone really
knows what to expect."
"I suppose," said Falcons quarterback
Steve Bartkowski, "it’s going to boil

down to which team is in the best shape,
to which team is closer to getting its
timing back.”
That worries Bennett. "In some of the
reports we've heard, the Rams were one
of the team s that supposedly were
working out together more than other
teams," said Bennett. "That could be a
factor."
Rams Coach Ray Malavasi said he was
“surprised" by his players conditioning
following the 57-day layoff. "They were
in mudt better shape than I had an­
ticipated they would be."
Defensive end Jack Youngblood said

Pro Football
there should be no problem with the
Rams being in shape for Sunday’s game.
"The only thing we really haven't got is
hitting conditioning," said Youngblood.
“ You've got to rem em ber, w e're
professionals, and that's our job to keep
our bodies in shape."
"While we won't be In great shape, not
exactly up to pax, I don't think the fans
will see that m uch difference,” said
Falcons linebacker A1 Richardson.

"The timing's not going to be there,
there's going to be some sloppy play,"
said Falcon wide receiver Willie Curran.
"But I don't think it will take that long for
us to perform like we should."
"We should look better Sunday than we
did in August," said Bennett. "In
preseason games, the veterans don't play
very much. Also, this is the first time
we'll be playing In November without a
lot of Injuries. With the players all fresh,
it should make a difference."
A year ago, the two Falcons-Rams
games were among the best in the NFL
— the Rams, who have a 24-5-2 series

edge over the Falcons, winning the first,
37-35, in Atlanta when Frank Correll
kicked a field goal with 24 seconds re­
maining; winning the second, 21-16, in
Anaheim when Wendell Tyler brought
them from behind with a fourth-quarter
touchdown.
“ I think we'U have a better game than
some might expect," said Bennett.
"After all, it's the Ram s and Falcons. I
remember two years ago we played them
the final week of the season in a game
that had no playoff significance, and It
may have been the most intense game I
have seen as head coach of » . Falcons.

If you could base a prediction for
Sunday’s game on those two gam es each
played in September, you’d have to call
the contest a tossup. At th at point the
Falcons were one notch ahead of the
Ram s on offense, one behind them on
defense.
"A fter the long layoff, it's really going
to be hard to predict how anyone is going
to play," said Bennett. “ Normally, in a
Situation like this, the defense will be
ahead of the offense, but we'U just have
to wait and see. 1 do know we wiU have to
play with a lot more intensity than we
showed in our first two gam es."

♦ » «

l .

�10A— Evening Herald, Saolord, FI

Sunday, Nov. } | , H i}

SPORTS
IN BRIEF

Crooms Cagers Open Season
At Brantley Frosh Tourney
A round-robin pre-season basketball jamboree will
be held on Tuesday. Nov. 22 through Thursday, Nov. 24
at l.ake Brantley High School for freshman teams.
I-ake Brantley, I.ake Mary. Crooms. Oviedo. Bishop
Moore and St. Cloud will compete in the jamboree and
the pairings arc as follows:
Tuesday, 4:30 p.m., Oviedo vs. St. Cloud. 6:15, lake
Mary vs. Crooms, 8.00, lake Brantley vs. Bishop
Moore.
Wednesday, 4:30, St. Cloud vs. Bishop Moore, 6.15,
Crooms vs. Oviedo, 8:00, lake Brantley vs. lake
Mary.
Thursday, 4:30, Bishop Moore vs. Oviedo, 6:15, St.
Cloud vs. la k e Mary and 8:00,' la k e Brantley vs.
Crooms.
The team or teams with the best record will receive
the first place trophy and there will also be a second
place trophy.
The Croom s Panthers, under coach John
McNamara, are a quick team but size has McNamara
a little worried. "We have a small team, there will be
no six footers in the starting lineup," McNamara said.
"We will rely on quickness and have a lot of good ball
handlers and good ball movement."
Seven players are fighting for starting positions
including llobcrt H ill, Daryl Williams, Alvin Jones,
Mike Wright, Dexter Franklin, Gnm ell Cooper and
Melvin Brinson. The remainder of the Panthers squad
includes Ed Cotton, Alan Mitchell, Tony Harris,
Theron Ijggons, Dennis Lawrence, M arc Klein, James
Jones and Tony Wilson.
"We won’t know much until the first few games but
this may be the smallest team ever at Crooms,"
McNamara said.

Unbeaten Sting' Eyes Tournaments scorecard
Coach l-arry Bettsinger’s F. C. United
460 (under 14 age d ivisioni “ Sting",
sponsored by Scan Design, has com­
pleted another undefeated season. In the
past five seasons the "Sting" has lost
only one league game.
As 12 year olds, the nucleus of this
team captured the prestigious Florida
Cup for the state championship. tost
year, at 13, they came in third in state
cup competition. Over the past five
seasons, they have compiled an im­
pressive record, counting tournaments,
of 127 wins, only 14 losses and 5 ties.
This season F. C. United 460 captured
their division title in the Central Florida
Youth Soccer league by winning all eight
of their games, scoring 65 goals in the
process and giving up only two.
The "Sting" Is comprised of Scott
Betsinger, Shailer Bowers, Bryan Droze,
Chris Graham, James Guggenheim,
Todd Hamilton, Gordon King, Peter
Kinsley, Peter Knudsen, Scott Kowalski.
David Mackey, Sean Mackey, Michael
Moody, Jeff Philips, Je rry Philips, and
Jeff Shirkey.
Future plans for the "Sting" include
playing in the F. C. United Thanksgiving
Invitational Tournament, the Sun Bowl
International in Tampa at Christmas and
Florida Cup play in the Spring.
The F. C. United 060 Hornets, under 10
age division, who last year won the
Florida Cup State Championship in the
under 9 division, is continuing its winning
ways this season. The Hornets have
defeated all seven of its league opponents
and have secured the division title.
F. C. United 060 racked up 48 goals (an

Soccer
average of almost seven per gamel, the
defense, with the help of goalie Marcus
Dewberry, did nol allow a single goal.
The other Hornets are: Matt Bird.
B arry Coleman, E ric Garcia, Steven
Hoffman, Jeff Karson. Paul Klaus.
Sergio topez. Scott Massey, Carl Mit­
chell, Corey McCormick, Steven Soistman and Ryan Thomas. The team has
accepted an invitation to the F. C.
Thanksgiving Tournament and is looking
forward to a strong spring season under
coach Steve McCormick and assistant
coach Reid Thomas.
Two other F. C. United Soccer teams
had undefeated seasons this Fall. They
are Coach Paul Frangoulis’ under 16,661
l/m enbrau made up of Steve Ames, Jeff
Amon, Isaac Bobbe, Paul Bonternpo,
M ik e Case, Mark Chapman, Mike
Hendrix, John Mahoney, Brian O’Casek,
W illiam Penberthy, James Philips, John
Philips, E ric Reesman, Kevin Ryder,
Michael Serino, Robert Sundmaker and
Keith Young; and Coach B ill Kroll's
under 11,160 Tornados with Mark Bines,
Sean Calegan. Jeff Cohen. Marc Cohen,
Sammy Fiorito, Brian Greenspoon, toe
Knudsen, Tommy K ro ll, Ronald
McKechnie, Jon Mendelsohn, Corky Orr,
Biad Saidi and Donovan Tucker.
Two F. C. United teams lost only one
game. Coach Bon Brooks' under 12. 270
" J r. Sting" had an almost perfect
season, winning seven of eight games to

take the league title in their division. The
"Jr. Sting" is made up of Alex Ballaudo,
Brent Barkett, T ravis Betsinger,
Jonathon Brooks, E ric Chase, Kevin
Fowler, Troy Hamilton, Bon E. Jenkins.
Greg Kowalski, Michael Murray, James
Nobile, Chuck Hcinighaus and Danny
Fournier. Coaching duties are shared
with assistant coach Hugo Ballaudo.
Coach Betty Redmond's under 8, 860
Bullets also lost only one of their eight
games. The team includes Boland
Bernard. Greg Carter, Shawn Danjou,
Michael Engelberg, Bryan Fowler, Brian
Ferguson. Marc Greenspoon. Bryan
Heffernan, Jason Karpp, Joshua
Castlem an-K elly, T ravis Robison,
Jimmy Scalise, Danny Schulman, Doug
Swanson, Aubrey Taylor, Frank Thomas
and Jeff Turga.
F\ C. United Soccer Club
Scores for the week of 11-13
Team
Number Coach
460 Betsinger
480 Jenkins
360 Friedman
240 Mills
270 Brooks
160 Kroll
180 Rankin
040 Romano
060 McCormick
080 Noll
760 Guggenheim
830 Ecker
860 Redmond

Oppo.’s
Score
6 1
2 3
4 5
3 4
1 0
5 t
2 3
3 0
7 0
2 2
0 3
0 6
3 0

F.C.U.’s
Score
DOU480
PHI/481
MAI361
F.OS202
DOU280
CPK280
WPK181
WPK001
CPK081
SOE080
PHL781
MAI801
CPK880

Club Totals: Wins 6 tosses 6 Ties 1

IBCA Plans Decem ber Tipoff
The initial organizational meeting of the newly
formed "Inter-County Basketball Association" (ICBA), was held this past week at the Altamonte Civic
Center
Indicating interest in playing with the ICBA this
coming season were the Winter Park Recreation
Department. Altamonte Rec. - both Eastmont and
Westmont branches, the South Seminole Hurricanes,
the Tuskawtlla Warriors, the Jaciscc. Heights Bobcats,
St Mary-Magdalen of M iOlaM , Eatorn I&gt; , the AllAmerican Rebels. Maitland and p»At.t-.y three other
Church teams
The k t f j t teaser.
te-4y . after the Chrjtmas
hoLtays
the m ajtrhj •.i aarren x »*eter&lt;ds
Gyms that
te -ie-i c e .it* la c* Brwefl High
Sctr/.i O ra c ii HS «rz*r r i r i l : H_£h. P-tilni
G :&gt; i» a*-: pnw.tej x * s* *.*; Qtiurtc CTtm In adt h j x v. thus v * !CEA tearui
r urrervus
la tnle-gt gamts £ P.'-Oca. Sutton and
v m r r .e Gtrrhr.
j GtOege
» Ler.tm ier c a » H
feature a j t s ie r t e a: la te
H-.»»_ the s e t m i or tto ri Sat^day of the awoth and a
Chratmas T o urrarrer.*. opts to a l league te a n j piui
any other groups that wtsn to play
The ±vnsKris that are planned are Varsity Boys.
Taraty Girls trXh 8th grade maximum i ; JV toys. JY
girls *toth 7th grade maximum |. Pee wee toys.
Pee*ee girts ‘ toth6th grade maximum), and Peanuts
&lt;rnntd-5th grade maximum i.
Teams w ill play between 9-12 league games
depending on final numbers in each division The post­
season playoffs will begin the end of February and
wind up before the various local youth baseball leagues
begin league play.
For those teams, organizations or groups that wish
further information about the ICBA, or wish to enter a
team, contact Mickey Norton at 831-6786. Also, any
teams that wish to participate in the IC BA ’s Christmas
Invitational Tourney, also contact the same number.

Takedown Tourney Scheduled

O th e r
H ig h lig h t s
N a n cy
B a lla rd of Better Than N olhings
bowled 118 p in s over her averaoe
Moose
Standings
M ooseheadt 29 IS
V m n ie's V in e n s 27 17. N e llie &amp; the
Boys 27 17 Three C h ic k s i a Cock
27 17.
U n to u c h a b le s
25 19.
G am b le rs 24 20. Odd Couples 24
20 M is fits 23 21. Ah Shucks 22 22.
H igh Hopes 20 24
Duds 19 25.
H appy F o u r IS 29. Sp lin ters 13 31
Go G ette rs 13 31
H ig h G a m e s Steve G a lliS 213
J e ll G ro ss 207. L o u is Joens 206
Jim Johnson 204. B R C a rro ll 202
Sandy M a is a k 193. B elin da Joiner
181. T am m y C a rte r 180
H ig h S crie s L o u is Joens 5S3.
Steve G a lliS S37. Buddy Stum p!
S28. Jim
Johnson 575
D avid
R ich a rd e S2I. C h a rle s Seagraves
514
V in c e C a r a 509. Belinda
Joiner 507. Jett G ro ss 507 Dan
L a w re n ce 506. T am m y C a rte r 470
O th e r H ig h lig h t s
T r ip lic a t e
gam e of 134 — W anda H ubbard
Star of Ihe week
Jett G ro ss ♦ 79

HOLT HIT
D a v id Holt s m a c k s a fo re h a n d
( lu rin g ten n is to u r n a m e n t a c tio n
at th e H ay h ead K a e i|iie t Club
la s t S u n d a y . H olt t e a m e d with
J i m m y K d m o n d s to h e a t H an d y
K elly a n d G e o rg e D u r e a !»-7, 6-2,
«-:i fo r th e F lig h t \ d o u b le s
c h a m p io n s h ip fo r t h e d u b . Jo h n
.M organ an d F r a n k W h ig h a m
w on th e F lig h t H w ith a s tr a ig h t
s e t 6-3, 6-2 v ic to ry o v e r T e rry
S m ith a n d Hill K irc h h o ff. In
F lig h t ('. D av e M c N e ill a n d Hill
M a n n to o k c a r e
o f B ru c e
M c K ih h rn and H uh W a lte r s 2-6,

NBA

7-5, 7-5,

H erald Photo by B o n n ie W ieboldt

Right Play, Wrong Result For Jets
W IN N IP EG , M anitoba (U P It Winnipeg goaltender Doug Soetaert
made the right play, but got the wrong
result.
"If the sh(X from the point would have
been on the net I would have made the
save," Soetaert said about the goal that
lifted the Washington Capitals to a 3-3 lie
Frid ay night against the Jets, in the only
N H L game scheduled.
"I was out challenging the shooter but
the puck went wide," he added. "I went

Pro Hockey
after it, but one of their guys beat me to
it."
Dennis Maruk, who picked up two
assists in the game, dug the puck out of
the comer and Mike Gartner notched the
equalizer midway through the third
period.
"This gave us the confidence we

Duxbury Man Wins Sw allow s
r—

Peter Teravalnen, from Duxbury, Mass., shot a
sizzling final round of 65 (seven under par) to claim
first place in the third annual Swallows Open at the
Swallows County Club In DeBary. Teravalnen’a twoday total of 136 was three shots better than second
place finisher Dicky Thompson of Orlando.
Longwood’s Larry Degenhart finished with a tworound total of 140 while Mayfair Country G ub pro Gary
Winlz of Port Orange shot a second-round 66 and wound
up with a 142.
The pro-am, which was held Nov. 10, was won by pro
Kip Byrne from Winter Springs with am aluer partners
Walt Carpenter (Sanford) and Jack Albert and Carl
Westman of Deltona.

needed," Gartner said after extending
Washington's unbeaten string to six
games. "The first period and a half was
just terrible, but we finished it off well
and that should carry us into the next
game."
“I’m not really disappointed, because I
thought it was a hard-fought hockey
game," Jets’ Coach Tom Watt said. "Our
power play is beginning to be a concern
though. We used to be the best in the
league."

N B A Standings
By U n ited P re s s International
E a t te rn Conference
A tla n tic D iv isio n
GB
W L Pet
P h ila
U 1 909
, 2 818 I
Boston
s 7 417 S'J
New Jersey
W ashm gtn
J 8 273 7
1 8 773 7
New Y o rk
C e n tra l D iv isio n
667
Detroit
I
583
M ilw a u k e
Indiana
455 2'j
A tlan ta
400 3
Chicago
455 I* l
Clevelan d
100 6
W estern Conference
M id w e st D iv isio n
w L P c i.
GB
7 5 583
San Antonio
4 1 571
Kansas C ity
D a lla s
s 5 500
Denver
5 t 455
Utah
3 7 300
1 10 091
Houston
P a c ific D iv isio n
Seattle
13 0 1 000
9 3 750 3
Phoenln
6 3 777 3’ &gt;
Los Ang e le s
P o rtla n d
6 6 500 6
4 7 364 7*!
G olden St
San Diego
3 9 111 9 'j
F r id a y 's Results
Boston 119. San Antonio 111
Houston 109. Indiana 98
P h ila 121. M ilw a u k e e 109
D etroit I0A. G olden St 102
C h icag o 177. U ta h 111
Los A n g e le s 122. W ash 97
P o rtla n d I l f . N J 108
Seattle 101. C levelan d 94
S a tu rd a y s's G am es
( A ll T im e s E S T I
Boston at N ew Y ork, 7 30
p m
Golden S tale a l San Antonio.
I 30 p m
D etroit at Chicago. I 31 p m
Kansas C ity at D allas. 8 35
p m
A tla n ta at Pho en ik, 9 35 p m
W ashington
at
San
Diego.
10 30 p m

Thanks to T erry T eag le's rookie
heroics, Houston Coach Del Harris
finally got something to laugh about.
After twoAime MVP Moses Malone
was traded and Robert Reid retired,
H arris came up empty in the club's first
10 times out. But Friday night, Teagle
scorched Indiana for 30 points to spark a
109-96 triumph at Market Square Arena.
Harris watched in gleeful disbelief
when the Rockets ran up a 20-point lead
with 4:38 remaining.
Supplementing the 14-for-22 shooting
and 6-assist performance by Teagle, 37year-old Elvin Hayes added 24 points and
a game-high 12 rebounds. Billy Knight
led the Pacers with 21 points, but Indiana
was plagued by 25 turnovers in falling to
54.
"The key to the success of this team is
how much our older players are willing to
play like younger players," said a
relieved Harris. "We have five players
over 30 years old.
‘'We knew it’d be a difficult start wilh
the new people, free-agent situation, et

Pro Basketball
cetera, but we didn't know it would be
this tough."
Elsewhere, Seattle beat Geveland, 10194, Philadelphia whipped Milwaukee,
121-109, Boston beat San Antonio, 119-111,
Detroit edged Golden- State, 106-102,
Chicago defeated Utah, 127-111, I a s
Angeles trounced Washington, 122-92,
and Portland topped New Jersey, 116-108.
SuperSonlci 111, Cavaliers 94
At Seattle, Jack Sikma and David
Thompson scored 17 points apiece (o pace
six Seattle players in double figures as
the unbeaten SuperSonics earned their
12th straight game.
7lers 121, Bucks 109
At the Spectrum, rookie forward Russ
Schoene scored a career-high 25 points
and Moses Malone added 17 points and 16
rebounds to pace Philadelphia to its 10th
win in 11 games.
Celtics HI, Spurs 111
Robert Parish scored a season-high 33
points and grabbed 15 rebounds and

C harles Bradley sparked a fourthquarter surge at Boston Garden as the
Celtics whipped the Spurs for the eighth
straight time. I

Sunday’ s G am es
M ilw a u k e e ai Indiana
N ew Jersey at Seattle
C le v e la n d at P ortla nd
D e nver at L o s Angeles

Deals
Sports Transactions
By U n ited P ress In te rn ation al
F r id a y
B a sk e tb a ll
K a n sa s C ity
A c tiv a te d centei
L a S a lle T h o m p so n tr o m
fh i
suspended lis t, w aived centei
Leon D ouglas
F o o lb a ll
Boston IU S F L I
Signed tre e
agent punter M itc h Hoopes
H ouston
A ctiv a te d running
b acks A d g er A rm stro n g and Star
E d w a rd s w aived defen sive enc
A l v a P rin c e lineback er E d P ry tt
and tig h t end L e w is G ilb e rt
P h ila d e lp h ia — P la ced o tle n s iv r
g u a rd Dean M ir a ld l on the m jurec
rese rve list activ ated tree safety
John S c ia rra

Hockey
N H L Standings
U n ited P ress In te rn a tio n a l
W ale s Conference
P a tric k D ivisio n
w L 7 PIS
13 7 3 78
N Y isla n d e rs
11 8 1 73
P h ila d e lp h ia
7 7 4 If
W ashington
8 10 1 17
N Y R angers
6 11 3 ts
P ittsb u rg h
3 13 6 17
New Jersey
Adam s O lv ltio n
13 4 3 29
M o n tre a l
11 6 ) 751
Boston
9 8 ; 70
Quebec
0 8 4 70
B uffalo
S 11 2 17
H a rtfo rd
C am p b e ll Conference
N o rris D ivisio n
w L T PIS
13 7 1 77
M inn eso ta
11 7 5 77
C h icag o
1 17
9 11
St L o u is
4 8 S 13
Toronto
3 (3 4 10
D etroit
Sm ythe D ivision
9 8 4 22
E dm onton
9 7 3 71
Los Angeles
9 6 7 20
W m m peg
8 10 J 19
C a lg a ry
7 10 3 17
V ancouver
F r id a y 's Result
W ashington 3. W innipeg 3
S a tu rd a y's G am es
( A ll T im es E S T I
C a lg a ry
at
H artford ,
7 35
p m
V an co u ve r at Edm onton, a 05
p m
at
M o n tre a l
P h ila d e lp h ia
I 05 p m
Boston
at
P ittsb u rg h .
8 05
p m
New Y o rk al Toronto. 8 05
By

p m
C h ica g o at N Y isla n d ers, 8 05
p in
D e tro it al St LouiS. 9 OS p m
N ew
Je rse y
at
M in n eso ta
9 OS p m
flu lta lo at L o s Angeles. 10 35
p m
Sunday's G am es
C a lg a ry a l Boston
N Y Islan d ers at N Y R a n g e rs
St L o u is at P h ila d e lp h ia
D e tro it at Chicago
Quebec at Edm onton
W ashington a l V an co u ve r

WHO AM I?

Once I was the top
athlete in Olympic his­
tory in my sport At age
18. I won four gold
medals in the 1964
Olym pics in Tokyo.
Then I won another in
1968. After that. I
retired wilh a total of
22 world records and 37
U S records
(lipMll
P|ol IMAM pH in mds p in
Ja u n n a i saga ( i l l in M a o ?
egvuAo am a IJJfUlit arauiZio
«iH notduitgj una t S f l * (l
'4ap«f||ogjs boq H3MSNV
(c) 1IM NEA. lac

t a k e

F

a

l o r i d a

OMHIU
B R E A M

ft's Part of

Teagle, Rockets Tear Up Indians, 109-98
United Press International

The first annual Seminole Y M C A Takedowm
Wrestling Tournament will be held Saturday at Lake
Brantley High School. Registration and weigh-ins are
from 8-10 a m. for any junior high school or older boys.
You must have current United States Wrestling
Federation card and medals wrill go to the first three
places in each of the two divisions. F or more in­
formation ca ll the YMCA at, 862-0444.

C oun try C o rn e r Lad ie s
Standings B ill's P lu m b in g 26
Sambos IS' i A rtc o P rin tin g J l i.
B&amp;W M a rk e t 19’ ». D ick s Ap
p lia n c e s &gt;9. N ic e D a y C o in
Laun d ry 19, J o a n s C e ra m ic s 16
P S D B u ll E tte s W &gt;
M.gh G am es S cra tch
C arolyn
Betts 709 224 G .nny G audreau
21J E v e ly n S e rraes A rle n e Colter
204 M a rd e ll G o n te rm an 193. Dot
Saylor 191 M and.cap — C arolyn
Betts 248 E v e ly n Serraes 234
G m n y G a u d r e a u 230
A r le n e
Coalter 22S
M.gh Series S cra tch
C arolyn
Betts 599. G in n y G au dre au 521.
M a rd e ll G o n te rm a n 512 E v e ly n
Serraes 505 H a n d ic a p
Carolyn
Betts 660
E v e ly Serraes 584
M a rd e ll G o n te rm a n 591. G inny
G audreau 522. Irene C araw ay 561
A r le n e
C o a lt e r
561
D e b ra
Sheppard 560
Converted S p lits E v e Rogero 2
5 10 4 5 10. M a rd e ll G on term an S
8 10 &amp; 5 7. P a t H arkness 3 10,
Irene C a ra w a y 4 S. S y lv ia Huhn 3
10. E lle n W e stfa ll S 10 M a rily n
Roth 2 2
Other H ig h lig h ts
T urkeys
C aro lyn B e lls 14) A rle n e Coalter.
G * n y G au dreau Star of the Weed,
Debra Sheppard
M y s te ry L a d ie s
Standings 1 L o c a l 606 31 13. 2
B elte r Than Nothing 30 14. 3
j e ll s G ir ls 24 20 . 4 Rocking
R ollers 27 22. S Bouncing B a lls 20
24. 6 A lle y K a ts 17 22. 7 The
Shipm ates 17 27. 8 Team No 6 15
79
H igh G am e s A m b er Stetanisko
215. M e la n ie D u ncan 196 M a ry Jo
S ill 194 H an d icap
M a ry Jo Sit!
246. A m b e r
S te ta n is k o
241
M e la n ie D u n can 239
H ig h Series A m ber Stetanisko
S38. D o lo res Show ers 492. Debbie
Joens 486 H a n d ica p — M a ry Jo
S i l l 622. A m b e r Stetanisko 616
N ancy B a lla rd 595
C o n v e rte d
S p lits
M a rth a
M athew s 7 9 &amp; 3 5 10. Jane B rie l 4

10

Rose Wins Flagship Seniors
Sanford's Pauline Bose t «&gt;k the Flagship Senior
Handicap Tournament this past week at the Mayfair
Country Club. M iriam Andrews was second in the
Flagship Bank sponsored tourney.
In the weekly point tournament, Grace Sayles and
Mary Anderson shared honors for the flight one
division with six points Zella Fissele and Margaret
Botts tied for second with seven
In flight two, Pauline Bose and Irene Harris logged
top place with four each. Diddie Weber was second
with five and June McKibbin was third with seven.
Mary Ann Buhrman's seven was an easy wmner in
flight three. Alice Potter was second with 11 and
to wanda Sandon was third with 21.
In the fourth flight, Vem Smith won with nine. Ihnky
Mioducky had a 10 as did Connie Fowler. Carolyn
Nelson, Ann Moore and llallie Skura had 13s.

Bowling

. , the Service!
W

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'

/

/.

V
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/
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Pistons 106, Wsrriors 102
Kelly Tripucka scored 26 points, Isiah
Thomas added 22 and the duo combined
for Detroit's last 11 points to help the
Pistons snap a two-game losing streak
wilh a home victory.
Bulla 127, J o ' 111
At Chicago, Reggie The us scored 25 of
his career-high 42 points in the opening
half to help the Bulls to a 65-60 advantage
and Chicago held on despite a 35-point
performance by Utah’s Adrian Dantley.
Lakers 122, Bullets 12
At Inglewood, Calif., Kareem AbdulJabbar scored 23 points in Just three
periods and his rep lacem ent, Bob
MeAdoo, added 20 as the Lakers dealt the
Bullets their fifth straight loss.
Trail Blazers 118, Nets 1M
Calvin Natl matched hla season high of
27 points and five other Portland players
scored in double figures to produce the
home victory.

* •'*• ••» « ^

1

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

Evening Herald
CIRCULATION DEPT.

*3 •* «t- 4

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Evening Herald, Sanlord. FI

Sunday, Nov. II. I987— 11A

Strange Season
S e m in o le s Try To S a lv a g e G r id ir o n Y e a r W ith P a s s

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J e rry Posey lo o k s for a n a n s w e r to 0-10 s e a s o n .

You know it's a strange football season
when Seminole High Schoo. tries to win a
game by throwing the ball instead of
running it.
Y e t. Thursday night at Daytona
B e ach 's Mem orial S tadium , the
Seminoles died for the 10th and last time
this year by that unknown thing in these
whereabouts - the forward pass.
For Seminole to go (MO in football is
beyond comprehension. Especially after
winning the Five Star and district
championships last year. The Noles
were the first team ever to go undefeated
in the Five Star. This year they were the
first team to go winless in the school's
history, according to Principal Wayne
Epps' best recollections.
S till, 0-10? It seems impossible. Next to
Lyman, Seminole usually has the best
talent in Seminole County with Oviedo a
strong third. This year seemed no dif­
ferent. although that talent was a lot
younger.
But they weren't any younger than
l^ake Brantley and the Patriots won two
games, including a 15-14 victory over the
Tribe. Brantley also beat I jk e Mary,
which wouldn't play Seminole, according
to Epps.
One of the most perplexed is coach
Jerry Posey. Posey felt this year's team,
despite losing 20 starters, would win
three or four games and maybe surprise
a few others.
Never in Posey’s wildest dreams did he
ever conceive himself going without a
victory. But as the season wore on it
became apparent the 'Noles only chance
would be against lake Brantley and the
season finale — Spruce Creek.
Spruce Creek pretty much dominated
the Seminoles until the fourth quarter
The score was Just 21-7 at the time but the
Hawks had rushed twice as many times
and had messed up two scoring chances
Suddenly, Rcndell Manley broke away
for a 90-yard TD run with just ovrr five
minutes left in the game and Seminole
had a chance.
Spruce Creek, however, had controlled
the line of scrimmage all night and
getting the ball back might be a problem.
With a little over three minutes to go,
though, the unlikllesl Hawk of all —
tailback B illy Elmore — coughed up the
football and Brian Dcbose recovered on
the Hawk 32. Elmore rushed for 205 yards
in his previous 29 carries.
Seminole's usual supply of talented
backs — Manley, Ron Burke and Jo Jo
M cGoud — moved the ball down the field
until a McGoud 5-yarder gave the Tribe
a second and five at the Spruce Creek 10.
M cGoud, however, couldn’t get out of
bounds and the clock continued to tick,

Sam
Cook
Sports Editor

tumbling from a L09 to 42 seconds when
quarterback Mike Futrell brought the
Seminoles to the line of scrimmage.
Futrell took the snap, faked a haruloff
to a running back and dropped back to
pass. He had plenty of time. The fake was
good and the linebackers froze.
M cGoud delayed and then drifted into
the middle of the end zone. He was open,
wide open. He waved his hand to get
Futrell's attention. He waved again.
Futrell spotted hm and let fly. Hawk
linebacker Kcnry Kovach moved up
quickly in front of McGoud and snatched
the ball...and Seminole’s last chance (or
a victory.
McGoud immediately went to his
knees and put his head to the ground. It
was an emotional moment for the
sophomore back. To be open and not
found is the nightmare of any receiver.
The scene had agony of defeat written all
over it. Herald Photographer Tom
Vincent wasn't there to capture it, but it's
something that I'll never forget.
There was immediate speculation as to
why Seminole threw the ball. Futrell
completed only one pass prior to the fatal
throw and had already been Intercepted.
And the running game was moving the
ball without too much trouble. Time was
not on the Seminoles' side, how-eve, and
Posey felt the Hawks were stacking loo
many people in the line for any running
play to work.
"They put an extra man on the line,"
pointed out Posey. "Our belly series had
been real wide open But the last two
times we hit it, it gained just three yards
each tim e."
Posey didn't feel a run by either Burke
or Manley would get the necessary 10
yards. Two runs would be cutting it awful
close since Just 42 seconds remained
when F ulrell took his last snap, he
reasoned.
But what about the one-remaining time
out1 It was there, ready to be used if
necessary.
"The clock was running down and we
thought Ihe play-action pass would gel it
(Ihij to u c h d o w n s a id Posey. "Mike
(F u tre ll) just walled too long to throw the
ball."
Futrell is in his first year of varsity
football and as he will be Ihe first to
admit, it’s a learning experience. The

pressure was intense at this point of the
game because the whole season, or what
could be salvaged of it, rested on one
play.
Futrell was probably looking to the
sideline. That would be the safest way to
go. If he didn't complete the pass, there
would be less liklihood of an interception.
Plus, an in completion would still put the
Seminoles in good shape for another
attempt.
Still, was it wrong to call the play when
the running game was moving the ball1
Probably not The fact that M cGoud was
open should be justification enough that
it was the correct call. If Futrell throws
the ball a split second earlier it wuld have
been a touchdown. And, if Paul Griffin
kicks the extra point, the Seminoles have

A h e a lth y
S e m in o le ’s
fiv e g a m e s
y a rd s and

some pretty good momentum going into
overtime.
Posey said no one goes with the twopoint conversion any more because your
percentages are better to play the
overtime.
Of course ihe question still remains,
could the Seminoles have scored by
feeding the ball to Manley twice anil
taking their chances1
Maybe. But it should b** remembered
that Futrell is a junior It's important for
a coach to show confidence in his
quarterback Especially if the young
man is going to be around next year
Posey showed that confidence Thur­
sday night. It didn't pay off this time, but
it may in the future.

K cm lcll .M an ley m ight h a v e m a d e a d i f f e r e n c e in
w hiles* s e a s o n . T h e flashy s e n i o r ru n n in g h a c k m is s e d
w ith a b r o k e n h o n e in his a n k le h u l still ru s h e d fo r r»st
a v e ra g e d o v e r It) y a rd s p e r c a r r y .

LSU, Florida State Battle For The Bowls Saturday
BATON ROUGE, La. (UPI) - It will
be the nation’s second-best offense taking
on the number two defense in the country
Saturday night as 7th-ranked Florida
State visits 13th-ranked Louisiana State
in a battle for the bowls.
The winner of the contest Is expected to
gain a berth in the Orange Bowl, while
the loser should receive a bid to the Gator
Bowl.
For (2&gt;U, the game is a chance to
redeem itself after last week's 27-24 loss
at Mississippi State, the Tigers' only
defeat of the season.
The Seminoles have declared it a "sod

game." if it wins, FSU w ill bring home a
clump of turf and plant it in a sod
graveyard near its practice field with a
tombstone marking the date and score.
The importance of the game has placed
extra emphasis on normally mundane
facts such as the starting time. ISU
officials refused to move the game up
from7:30p.m. to 11:30a.m., which would
have assured national television ex­
posure.
The teams would have been given fL I
m illion if !J5U had agreed to the switch, a
move also favored by bowl officials not
eager to wait until late at night to give out

College Football
bids. While the Tigers would have shared
their $550,000 with other Southeastern
Conference teams, the Seminoles would
have kept their entire share since they
are independent.
"Y o u cannot expect to win a national
cham pionship and n ever be on
television," said an infuriated FSU
Coach Bobby Bowden, who said he would

D o lp h in s B yp a ss R oad G a m e s ,

play at 4 a.m. if television officials so
desired.

" I ’m not prostituting anything for lhat
amount of money," Brodhead said.

Bowden claim ed LSU was un­
dercutting its own recruiting by refusing
to switch the game time.
"When you recruit a kid. what are you
going to tell him — Son. come to l J&gt;U and
you'll never be on television, but we’ll fill
the place up every Saturday night?’"

Florida State, which practiced this
week to the strains of piped-in crowd
music as a way of preparing for Tiger
Stadium, brings in an explosive offense.

[JiU Athletic Director Bob Brodhead
said fans — who remember that the
Tigers switched to a day game in 1979
and were beaten 24-19 by Florida Slate opposed the time switch.

WHO AM I?

Defensive end Ken Poole is in a hospital
recovering from a disc operation and rookie
tight end Dan Johnson suffered a cut on his
hand that required 26 stitches to close.

O

What's the old expres­
sion? Those who can,
do. Those who can't,
teach Well, that's me,
I'm showing others
what I used to do. I
became an expert at
P h ila n d e r
Sm ith
College. Then I hit the
big-time. In Wisconsin
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Winner Has Lock On Playoff?
United
With the NFL schedule cut by 44 percent, the
winner of Sunday’s Miami-Buffalo clash In
Rich Stadium will own a virtual lock on a
playoff berth three games into the season,
barring a total collapse.
With only nine weeks planned for the regular
season instead of the standard 16-game
schedule, a &gt;4) record would put the Bills or
Dolphins in prime position for a postseason
spot, with eight of the 13 teams from each
conference qualifying for the playoffs.
The Buffalo-Miami game is the only m a t­
chup of the weekend involving a pair of un­
beaten teams and the Bills got a pleasant
surprise Friday when their offensive catalyst
returned to camp.
" I expect to play on Sunday," said All-Pro
running back Joe Cribbs.

TH I UD BE

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ISAByPas*

M m U FFLER

Pro Football
with the Bills, and praised the warm weather
that has graced their three days of practice.
"I don't know about the the schedule," said
linebacker A. J, Duhe, "but the weather has to
help enormously. I heard (Buffalo Coach
Chuck) Knox say a couple of weeks ago that
his guys would have a hard time breaking a
sw eat."
"Here, we’ve had the good heat, we still
have it," he said. "The first practice, we felt
like we were just like back into it."

Sophomore tailback Greg Allen leads
the FSU attack and the nation with 20
touchdowns, and is expected to be ready
despite a sprained knee. Senior tailback

x B I ^

T a p er D o w n T rain in g P ra ctice
MIAMI (UPI) - The Miami Dolphins,
limbering up for their meeting with the Buf­
falo Bills Sunday, have bypassed some of their
most difficult road games due to the NFL
player's strike.
The Dolphins were back on the field for a
third day of workouts, preparing for
their weekend battle with only one practicerelated injury so far. Rookie wide receiver
Vince Heflin pulled a hamstring muscle during
a Thursday workout.
"WeTe starting to taper down In our
preparations for Sunday's gam e," head coach
Don Shula said. "There are a few players a
little overweight, but everyone appears to be
in pretty good shape."
Shula, however, said the Dolphins will have
a tough assignment In facing Buffalo quar­
terback Joe Ferguson.
"T heir quarterback has really matured in
the last two years and they've got the best
speed at the receiver position that I've ever
seen. Five of their s ii receivers run a 4.5 or
better," he said.
All things considered, though, the Dolphins
could count themselves lucky to have missed
some of their toughest games of the season
during the 57-day player's strike.
First they sidestepped a Sept. 26 game in
Green Bay, against a Packer team that was 2-0
with 64 points racked up against the Rams and
the Giants.
Then they missed a trip to play a Clncinatti
Bengal team as good as the team that made it
to the Super Bowl last year.
Finally, they by-passed a long distance
flight and a tough fight against the 2-0 Raiders
in Los Angeles, a Raider team that had wipped
defending champs San Francisco and the
Atlanta Falcons.
While all of that m ay have been to their
advantage, the players focused on their ioust

The Seminoles have averaged 48C yards a
game, with 262 yards passing and 224
rushing per contest.

Ricky W illiam s has 706 yards rushing,
including three touchdowns.
Junior quarterback Kelly I/jwery, who
has accumulated 1,427 yards and Id
touchdowns passuig while completing 53
percent of his tosses, splits time with
senior thrower Blair Williams.
The Tiger offense features freshman
running backs Dalton B illiard and G a m
James, who have combined for 1,122
yards ami 12 touchdowns, while quar­
terback Alan Risher needs one touch­
down pass to break Bert Jones’ records
for season ( H i and career '28i scoring
aerials.

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Evening H en Id, San lord, F I.

Sunday, Nov. 21,1712

..Three Vying For Top Job

F e d E ases C re d it;
E c o n o m y S ta g n a n t

Continued From Page 1A
environment.

WASHINGTON (U PIl - With the economy at a stand­
still, the Federal Reserve Board focused on the recession
and decided to lower the discount rate, the special interest
rate for bank borrowing.
The long-awaited Fed action came late Friday after the
stock m arkets closed. The Fed’s discount rate was lowered
half a percentage point to 9 percent, reinforcing an casing
in the cost of credit for everyone.
» It was the sixth time the discount rate was lowered since
midsummer. But this time the Fed ’s action assumed center
stage as a symbol to investors and economists of a basic
adjustment in underlying monetary policy, not just in
technical management of bank reserves.
The stock markets had been bouncing up in anticipation
of the move for weeks and occasionally slipping somewhat
in disappointment when a week would go by without any
change.
Stock prices on Wall Street, wrapping up a volatile week
Friday, plunged even though interest rates fell prior to the
Fed’s action.
"The bond market failedto respond to a sharp drop in the
federal funds rates banks charge one another and that
scared the stock market," Newton Zinder, E.F. Hutton vice
president, observed.
The Dow Jones industrial average fell 10 85 points to
1,021.25 in a seesaw session.
The Fed went beyond its usual one-line statement about
adjustments necessary because of the general level of in­
terest rates, to say the action was taken amid "indications
of continued sluggishness in business activity and relatively
strong demands for liquidity."

"I enjoy serving the people of Ijk e Mary in the mayor’s
office," Sorenson said. "I feel I am doing a good job and wish
to continue."
Olvera said, "It’s time for a change." Among changes he is
contemplating are administrative in nature to give city
residents easier access to city officials who can he'p them
solve problems.
Olvera feels that la k e M ary Boulevard, controlling growth
and zoning changes will be the major problems facing the city
in 1983.
He said he is running for office to create stronger and more
positive administration policies. Olvera said he will take a
strong stand on issues. "I will not take a middle of the road
approach to solve the city’s problems," Olvera said. He added
that personnel changes must be made for the betterment of the
city.

H *r»ld P h o to by Tom V m ctn t

HOMESTAYING QUEEN
Paige Jones was crowned llomestaying Queen at
Lake Mary lli^li School Friday night. Her escort,
Jeff Hopkins, a member of I.akc M ary's football
team, was in the locker room at halftime of the
Hams' game with New Smyrna Iteach when Paige
was named queen, so Jeff's father, Tom Hopkins,
stood in.

FLORIDA
IN BRIEF
This Week, FP&amp;L Goes After
$281 Million Rate Increase
T A L U H A S S E E &lt;UPI)—Florida Power anti light
Co. sought a record $476 million rate hike from the
Public Service Commission last fall and got half of it.
FP&amp; L goes after the rest this week, plus $62 million for
good measure.
The PSC will decide probably late Tuesday whether
to approve some or all of a $261 million rate hike which
the Miami-based utility claims is necessary to keep it
on a sound financial footing
Any rale increase would be !• I’&amp; L's second in just
over a year. The company won approval of a $257
million hike In September of 1981.
The PSC staff said a week ago that F P &amp; L should get
only $130 million of the $281 million rate hike it is
seeking.
But Friday, staff members changed their minds,
saying they new believe a $194.2 million increase is
Justified.

Trooper Gives Up Fight
TAIJJU 1ASSEE (U PIi —An officiul fired during the
scandal-prompted shake-up of Florida's highway
safety department will abandon a fight to keep his job,
and instead will be allowed to resign.
Florida Highway Patrol Major A.P. Floyd reached
an agreement with the Department of Highway Safety
and Motor Vehicles whereby he will resign as FIIP
major in charge of south Florida field operations. The
pact also stipulates that Floyd’s lawyer w ill stop trying
to embarrass former highway safety director Jim
York and that Floyd will drop an appeal to the Career
Service Commission.
Floyd, a 29-year patrol veteran, was fired in Sep­
tember by York, then acting director of the depart­
ment. Floyd was charged with failing to report a traffic
accident in a patrol car he was driving and scheduling
F H P business to bring him to Miami and Orlando for
personal business.

W ORLD
IN BRIEF
No Major Change Expected

In Chinese Foreign Policy
PEKING (UPI) - Diplomats said the reshuffling of
China's foreign and defense ministers signaled no
change in Peking's effort to Improve relations with the
Soviet Union.
Foreign Minister Huang Hua, steward of Chinese
foreign policy since the end of the Cultural Revolution
in 1976, was replaced Friday, one day after reluming
from a trip to Moscow for the funeral of Soviet ruler
l*onld Brezhnev. He was succeeded by First Deputy
Foreign Minister Wu Xueqlan, 60, a Communist Party
veteran and Aslan affairs expert.
Defense Minister .Geng Blao, whose removal had
been awaited since he lost Important party Jobs la*
month, was retired in favor of Gen. Suing Aiplng, 72.
£ a n g Is credited with recently bringing about the •
successful testing of China's first submarine-launched
ballistic missile.

Habib Begins New Talks
BEIRUT, Lebanon (UPI) - U.S. envoy Philip Habib
returned to Beirut for new talks with President Amin
Gemayel beginning today on the removal of all foreign
forces from Lebanon.
H abib's a rriv a l F rid ay cam e a s Lebanese
authorities arrested 12 Moslem and Christian men
from south Lebanon suspected of involvement in the
September m assacre of hundreds of Palestinians in
two Beirut refugee camps, a government source said.
Habib, who negotiated the evacuation of Palestinian
guerrillas from the Lebanese capital in September,
arrived on the first leg of a shuttle mission on the with­
drawal of foreign forces from Lebanon and the future
of the Israeli-occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip.
President Reagan has proposed establishing a federal
entity linking the Palestinians on the West bank with
Jordan.

Fess said a proper drainage and paving study must be
conducted and implemented. He said a drainage plan should
be implemented immediately with a paving plan implemented
as residents are ready to help the city pay for the im­
provements.
The major problems that Fess sees In I^ke M ary’s future
years are properly managing anticipated growth and
protecting the environment and natural resources while
developing necessary services to complement the city.
He said he is running for mayor to be involved in the plan­
ning and implementing of the city’s development.
"I believe my business experience in budgetary and fiscal
policy making will be of benefit in managing city matters,"
Fess said.

...Repair Jobs Require Money That's Just Not Available
Continued From Page 1A
besides the St. Johns River to receive effluent,
f»rice said.
County Drainage Engineer Paul Magnant
said Midway's drainage problems alone will
cost almost $5 million to solve.
“ It's flat table land," he said. "It’s good
celery land but not good for homes."
Magnant said 76.35 acres In Midway need to
be acquired for drainage. That property, plus
the installation of lines and other work is
estimated to cost $4,886,800.
Drainage in lockhart is the least expensive
of the county's five trouble spots. For
Ijockhart, more than $1.1 million is needed.
In the Dx.khart-Smith drainage basin
further west of Sanford, more than $5 million
is needed.

But the most expensive drainage
in Rolling Hills near Ixmgwood
Hills, a subdivision of relatively
homes, paving and drainage will
than $11.6 million, Magnant said.

problem is
In Rolling
expensive
cost more

And while the residents said the county is
doing nothing to solve their problems,
Magnant disagreed.
He explained the county allocated funds to
study wiiat needs to be done and how much it
will cost to accomplish those goals
The next step is to appropriate funds to
achieve the goals spelled out in the studies
But that is the stumbling block. Seminole
County commissioners have set a policy of not
using countywide tax money to pay for capital
improvement programs in any area

That limits the funds available to federal
and state grants or special taxing districts,
like those set up to provide street lighting for
many areas of the county.

said. "They can set up the district but it
wouldn't generate much income."
Magnant said the county is working to solve
the drainage problems in those troubled areas.
"We are doing what we can do and that’s
land acquisition," Magnant said.
In Midway one basin has been acquired and
negotiations are underway for acquiring
another. In the I&gt;ockhart-Smith area, one has
been acquired and in Rolling Hills several
have been purchased.
Magnant said the county is acqmruig the
basins slowly, as funding permits. The longer
the process takes, the less implementable the
drainage measures become.
"The real w orrry is that if the acquisition is
delayed the lan d w a y be developed," he said.
"If that happens, I don’t know what we'll do."

Federal funds have all but dried up since
President Reagan took office. This year, the
county has applied for a $500,(100 Community
Development Block Grant. If the proposal is
accepted, W'inwood will receive drainage,
street and sewage improvements.
But that grant won’t begin to cover the
$1,879,786 that Magnant said is needed for
proper drainage in Winwood.
Municipal service taxing districts are im ­
practical in areas like Winwood, I-ockhart and
Midway, Magnant said.
"With the homestead exemption, most of
those people don't pay any property taxes." he

...C a re le s s n e s s C a u s e s M o s t W e a th e r-R e la te d D e a th s
Continued From Page 1A
are sparked in lower income homes "because these are the
people who just can't afford central heating or the best heating
methods. However, they can use caution when using other
methods and that's what we want to get across to them."
To prevent heat-related fires this winter:
— Keep fireplaces and chimneys clean, open the damper and
use protective grating to keep embers in the fireplace. Read
the instructions concerning the burning of artificial logs, and
make sure the chimney is properly insulated in the attic to
prevent a fire from starting there.
— Read instructions on space heaters concerning fuel or
voltage to be used. Don't place heaters in doorways, walkways
or near combustible items, and make sure they are properly
vented to the outside. — Use the kitchen stove for cooking only
and never for heating the home. (McCluan said that a recent
report from Maryland states that victims of sickle cell anemia
should not use space heaters because of limited ventilation

which could cause additional medical complications. Use only
U L( Underwriter’s laboratory! approved heaters. Make sure
the heater is equipped with a protective grill on the heating
element, an emergency shut-off, and never cook on a space
heater. If an extension cord must Ik* used, use a heavy-duty
cord.
Don’t pile blankets and clothing atop electric blankets. The
blanket wiring could short circuit and start a fire.
- Install a smoke detector, or several smoke detectors, in
the home to alert family members of danger should a fire
break out.
“ Believe it or not, but we don’t have as many fires started in
(he home by kids as we do by their parents," M cG uan said.
“ And those fires are purely through carelessness and failure to
follow a few simple, but necessary, rules.”
Neel and McGuan said that although their departments will
not repair malfunctioning heaters or fireplaces, city and
county firefighters will inspect heating units and try to
determine the cause of any possible problem.

King: Florida's Growth Has

"More than likely, we'll refer them to a gas or electric
company or private heating company to fix the device or even
tell them what the problem is exactly," Neel said. "But if they
are concerned that their heater or fireplace could be a
potential fire hazard, we'll be glad to check it out."
For additional information concerning fire prevention in the
home, call the Sanford Fire Department at 322-4952 or the
county fire department at 323-2500.

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C h ristm a s Tree Business.
Come to the people who know
trees with lasting quality.

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NOW TAKING ORDERS
FOR LIV E &amp; CUT
CHRISTMAS T R EE S
A V A IL A B L E A FTER 11-21.

2
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(CAMELLIAS
I

Mined C o lo rs

8 —

Gone About As Far As It Can
GAINESVILIE (UPI) - Florida must “draw the line" on
land development before urban sprawl ruins the natural
beauty that keeps the state's tourism Industry alive, a wildlife
expert warns.
“ Either we say Florida has developed as much as it can, or
we say you can only develop in places where the resources will
support the people," Florida State Museum Director Wayne
King Jr. said Friday. "Otherwise, we’re destroying many of
the things that are attractive to people that make them want to
come down here.
“ lik e large predators worldwide, the Florida panther, black
bear and the eagle may be the first victims of urban sprawl
because they must have a fairly large habiliat area to support
their prey species," said King, deputy chairman of the Species
Survival Commission of the International Union lor Con­
servation of Nature and Natural Resources.
“ We tell people now you can’t put a factory in a residential
area, and there’s no reason we couldn't extend that principle
statewide,” he said.
To control the urban expansion, King called for tax in­
centives and statewide zoning regulations to allow Florida to
grow without ruining the state’s natural beauty.
“ At a time when w e're trying to reduce government spen­
ding, we ought not to allow development where we don't have
the resources to support the people It will bring. With Florida
growing at a rate of 7,000 new residents a week, letting south

Florida continue to grow while it is running out of water is
asking for trouble," he said.
Some south Florida residents already are proposing to divert
water from the Suwannee R iver and possibly Silver Springs
through piplines and aquaducts, King said.
“ It makes more sense to encourage people to develop in the
northern part of the state where the water exists than to use
that energy pumping m illions and millions of gallons of water
to south Florida," King said.
King, who was given Holland's Royal Order of the Golden
Ark this year for his wildlife preservation work, said " it's time
for Floridians to draw the line."

★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★

NOTICE TO ALL VETERANS
Who Have Hoaorobtv fenftd Their Country In Time of War or Peace

Because of the lack of burial-space and the
distance ol the National Cemetery in Florida, we
are assigning grave spaces in Vtftrans Garden
o4 Valor, Oaklawn Memorial Park. As an
honorably discharged veteran bf the United
States Armed Forces, you may be qualified lor
Free Burial Space However, you must register
lor this You must be able to show proof of
Honorable Discharge There are a limited
number of Veterans spaces available Cer
tificates for spaces will be issued on a first come
first served basis To assure reservation, mail
the coupon below to:

AREA DEATHS
ARTHUR D. MAYNARD
Arthur D. Maynard, 60, of
624
Riverview
Ave.,
A ltam onte Springs, died
Thursday at Holmes Regional
Medical Center, Titusville.
Bom in New Haven, Conn.
Jan. 21, 1922, he moved to
Altamonte Springs from there
in 1970. He owned a water­
conditioning business and w u
president of Super Ion, Inc.,
and was a Catholic.
Survivors Include his wife,
Rosemary; two sons, Harry,
A ltam onte Springs, and
A rth u r, Hamilton S q uare,

N.J.; four daughters, Mrs.
Jean Sultan, Berkley, Calif.,
Marion Bello,
Deltona,
Joanne Maynard, New York,
and
Cynthia
Weygant,
Altamonte Springs; a brother,
Frank Donato, Spain; and six
grandchildren.
Cox-Parker Funeral Home
is In charge of arrangements.

nb
---------

OAKLAWN MEM ORIAL P A R K ----------------Rt. 4Box 244, Sanford, FI 22771
130$) 222-4242

Pitas* Sand My Vafaranof Strvic* Eligibility Certificate.
N AM E
AD DRESS
Branch of Service

No. in F a m ily

Service Serial No.

Telephone No.

�P EO P LE^
E v e n in g H erald

Sanford, FI

Sunday, Nov 21. 1987- Ifi
Cl

Wagons Ho!

H appy

Modem,
'Compatible'

Adventurers

11) LO RI DREW
Special To The Herald
Gathering what belongings they could manage in their
covered wagons, the American families of more than a
century ago Joined the adventurous and headed west m
caravans, searching fur a new life.
Gathering the necessities plus some luxuries of their
lives, Sanford's modem-day adventurers head for Central
F lo rid a ’s campgrounds in a caravan, searching for a
weekend of relaxation and fun.
The going is a little slow, according to the wagon
master. "We slow down if someone catches a light " The
lights are red traffic lights over the pavement the nine
vehicles roll. "You just don’t travel that fast with nine
motor homes! And we like to go together as much as
possible," continued "B .K ." Carroll. "We're just that
kind of a group."
Twelve couples now belong to the family of "H appy
Cam pers"—the name chosen after the first camping trip
In M arch 1978 by the four m arried men and women who
"re a lly started the whole thing by accident," according to
Carroll, one of (he charter members.
“ We just started talking about taking a trip one day." he
explained. "Fay this wife) and I camped in a van, another
couple rented a camper, we took a mattress, fan and
icebox and stayed the weekend at High Banks in
DeBary."
Some changes have taken place since that first two days
‘Toughing it." The group has grown and the wagon
master and his wife chuckled at the thought of their
"rough nights in the wild." On the contrary, steaks are the
norm for Saturday night, and the tents on wheels are
equipped with many a modern convenience, including
electricity, water and the so-appreclaled sewage.
The reason Is sunple. This friendly group is not looking
to live in their forefathers’ fashion. They’re lookin for
“ just a happy, good lim e."
As wagon master, Carroll coordinates the Happy
Campers' weekends by making reservations when
necessary and then typing a brief "newsletter” to be
postman-delivered to each member.
“ Huth, bring your favorite pot of vegetables, M ary, six

tiakirik potatoes ami Lucy, one of your favorite (lessens."
Although it may sound like an invitation to the Royal
Order of the Moose pot luch dinner, it's actually an ex­
cerpt from one of Carroll’s many copies of the Happy
Campers' newsletter
However, he just may have incorporated that Moose
experience into the making of the merry travelers.
After all, 11 of the men who belong to the compels have
also made their inleh in the local Moose membership
Vet. in addition to that common interest in the com­
munity organization, these camping couples, age 82 and
below, find that they are most "cam palible." Carroll
stresses. We all get along so good. They 'his friends and
eo-eampers i are mu people who want to run other people’ s
business. We all cooperate.”
Nearly a ll the men have a ls o served in the U.S Armed
Services at o n e time or another; yet, their current
livelihoods vary from mailman to helicopter mechanic,
with furniture store owner, salesman and pipe fitter in
between.
And with these various careers comes a common
problem taking respective vacations at the same lime of
the year. Consequently, the Happy Campers limit their
trips to the weekends, striving for one each month
"We started off kind of slow." remembers Carroll and
his wife During the first three years, from 1978 until 1980.
camping came up approximately four or five times each
year “ Then ui 1981, things really picked up.” said the
wagon master, and Mrs Carroll continued, “ There have
been so many trips I can't even remember (how many i."
Now, the group is working on getting together for
liorsehoes, sliufReheard, volleyball, cards, crocheting and
fishing at least once a month, excluding November and
December. They say no to November, but they 're going
anyway The day after Thanksgiving is their next set
departure dale this time to Crystal Isle, Crystal River
for oyster catching
II will be the group's first weekend at those grounds,
although the Happy Campers have been known to repeat
several Irms. Our favorite place is Sugar Mill Ruins in

The Carrolls relax
at campsite with
their friends,
Carroll Is the
Happy Campers'
wagon master, a
position he says
he 'loves.'

See I'AMI’ K KS, Page 311

Career After 40
Beautician's Flair For Hair Began At Age 7
By LINDA HOLT
Special To The Herald
Huth Winifred Hutchins, a fourth generation
Seminole Counlian, remembers her mother visiting
Madame Harriet's Beauty Salon in downtown
Sanford around 1921 and returning with one of the
first permanents seen in town. She also remembers
the price of 11 per curl and how really lovely her
mother looked.
A couple of years later, her mother and sister
sported the latest short bobbed haircut after having
long hair since little Winnie’s first memory.
Impressed with curls and hairdos. 7-year-old
Winnie use her 10 cents lunch money lo buy a
curling iron that needed to be heated in the kerosene
lamp. She wanted curls of her own.

Winnie Cullum shows a Madame Alexander dull from her cull eel ion id
celebrated dulls.

Growing up, all the females in the family came to
Winnie for help in curling or combing Iheir hair and
she enjoyed assisting them.
She was artistic, delighting in art instruction at
school, and she gained special attention in Ihe class
for her drawings and water colors. Being creative,
she thought being a beautician might be glamorous
work, but her mother encouraged all four sisters In
the fam ily (o work especially hard in school and
prepare for college. Her mother fell nursing or
teaching would be a respectable field for ladies.
Winnie’s great-grandfather, Michael Wallace
Somerville, had migrated to Oviedo in Seminole
County In 1870. He had been a college professor of
Greek in Virginia and taught school in Oviedo for
many years. Winnie's mother was influenced by the
grandfather who lived with her family, and as a
result, she valued higher education.
In 1937, during the m iddle of the Depression,
Winnie, 17, graduated from Seminole High School as
an honor student. College was out of the question

due to the hard economic times
Four months after graduation, Winnie Hutchins
married a former classmate. John Cullum, and
expected never to work outside the home.
Busy as a wife and mother lo three children.
Winnie didn't think about a career for many years.
The days and years passed quickly, and at age 98,
she felt a need to seek employment to help with the
family finances.
John told her of a job opening on the new paper
where he worked. The new paper needed a linotype
operator and allowed John to teach her the craft.
She worked for two years on the night shift while
John was home with the children linotype was
becoming obsolete, and Winnie decided lo quit her
job.
One day she says she took a ride to Orlando in­
tending to inquire about enrolling at the Orlando
Junior College. Nearing the college, she passed
Woody's Halratyling Institute and stopped in. She
relaxed when she observed other women of her age
as students. She was welcomed by Ihe woman In
charge and decided to give it a try. "I paid my
money right then before 1 could change my mind!"
says Winnie. During her training, she attended her
high school class' 25th reunion. She was 42. Winnie
believed Ihen as now, "If you are afraid to try. you
will have already lost Ihe battle."
Even though her mother didn’t approve of her
working and told her that her husband would expect
it from then on, she went to work in a beauty shop
making a guaranteed $25 per week and 55 percent
commission. Most weeks she bruughl home $31
since she did a lot of shampooing, manicures,
cleaning-up the shop, etc.
As time continued, she built a clientele and fell
proud of her accomplishments. She had new

prestige in her family group as she was contributing
to the fam ily income again. Her first major pur­
chase was a set of family room furniture that is still
in use today. Her husband and children were proud
of her, loo, even though daughter Unda admits,
"The house wasn't as spotless and I didn't like
that."
After mure than 20 years of working, Winnie is
semi-retired, spending more time with her husband
of 45 years. She plans to ease out of her career
gradually.
Winnie has an interest in antiques because of the
personal history behind them. "I like the idea that
someone previously owned a piece of furniture and
cared enough to save it." She forms attachments to
old things such as the piano all of her children
played and can't bear to part with them
F ive years ago while shopping for a special gift
fur a baby granddaughter, she bought a Madame
Alexander doll. She liked the doll so much along
with subseouent ones she bought that she soon had a
collection of Madame Alexander dolls.
Among her collection are dolls of different lands,
a set of first-lady dolls, storybook dolls, fairy tale
dolls, and many others. She has promised the dolls
to her granddaughters and her own daughter
someday.
When asked if she's happy with the occupation she
chose, Winnie replies, "I might have gone on down
the road to the junior college and a 4-year degree to
something less physically grueling. Young beauty
students don't realize the amount of energy it takes
to survive in Ihe beauty business, but, yes, 1 like the
choice I made."
Winnie Cullum's family members are happy with
the choice she made, loo. They still depend on her
talent for hairstyling and w ail for periodic visits
home for her special touch.

�JB —Evening Herald. Sanlord, F I

Sunday, Nov. J L 198?

Engagements

PEO PLE

Johnson-Rose
Dr. and Mrs. Edwin A. Johnson, Route 1, longwood,
announce the engagement of their daughter. Rosemary
Anne, to Douglas E liol Rose, son of Mrs. Ijeonard Rose, 81
Oakleigh I-anc, Maitland, and the late Mr. Rose.
Born in F t. I-iuderdaie, the bride-elect is the maternal
granddaughter of Mrs. liiuisa Wimmers, Jensen Beach.
Miss Johnson is a 1978 graduate of l^ake Brantley High
School, Altamonte Springs, where she was varsity
cheerlcading captain and a member of Tri-Hi-Y, N.H.S.
and Student Government. She received a BSBA in 1981
and a M BA in 1982 from the University of Central Florida
where she was on the President's leadership Council, and
a member of T ri Delta sorority. Peer Advisement and
Orientation Team and Student Government.
Her fiance, born at St. Petersburg, is a 1978 graduate of
lake Highland Prep School, Orlando, where he was
president of the Civitan Club and a member of the varsity
basketball and varsity tennis teams. He is a 1980 graduate
of UCF where he was Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity
president, Interfralcmity Council president and a
member of Orientation Team and Peer Advisement. He is
a restaurant manager trainee.
The wedding will be an event of Jan. 8,1983, at 11 a m. at
Catholic church of the Annunciation, Longwood.

IN BRIEF
Fern Park Professor On Team
To Compile Mineral Study
Three doctoral students from the University of North
Carolina at Chapel Hill department of geology recently
took part in an “ International Conference on the
Genesis of l&gt;ead-Zinc Deposits" at the University of
Missouri at Holla.
H arry H. Posey from Chattanooga, Tenn., Holly J.
Stein from Macomb, 111., and Stephen A. Kish from
Fern Park, worked with Dr. Paul D. Fullagar,
professor and department chairman, to compile a
study on the age of mineralization in zinc and lead
deposits in southeast Missouri.
Posey presented the paper, titled “ A Geochronologic
Study of Lead Deposits of Southeast Missouri," at the
conference of approximately 300 university and in­
dustry representatives from the United States,
Canada, England, Ireland, Germany and Poland.
The other doctoral students who worked on the paper
are employed outside the University. Stein is with the
U.S. Geological Survey in Denver, and Kish is an
assistant professor of geology at the University of Ohio
at Akron.

ACTRESS FOR CHILDREN

IJNDA DIANE PETERSON

Jew ish Drama To Open

"A ll F lo r id ia n s h a v e re a so n f o r s p e c ia l p rid e th is
y e a r , " s a id a c t r e s s am i c h ild a d v o c a te J a n e
K u sse ll w h e n s h e v isited F lo r id a r e c e n tly to h e lp
T h e C h ild r e n 's H o m e Society o f F lo r i d a c e le b r a te
its JiltHi b i r th d a y W ed n esd ay 17th. " T h e C h ild re n 's
H om e S o c ie ty o f F lo rid a is a n a tio n a l le a d e r a n d
p o w erfu l v o ic e fo r h o m e le s s a n d n e g le c te d
c h ild re n o n ly b e c a u s e (lie p e o p le o f th is S ta te a r e
u n u su a lly g e n e r o u s w ith t h e i r f in a n c ia l s u p p o rt
a n d tim e c o n t r i b u t e d to h elp th o s e le s s f o r tu n a te .
It ta k e s a g r e a t p e o p le to b u ild a g r e a t c h a rity ,”
s a id M s. K u s s e ll.

Peterson-Easter

The most famous of modem Jewish dramas, "The
Dybbuk," opens (or a limited run at the Annie Kussell
Theatre on Thursday, Dec. 2 and continues through
Dec. 11 at B p.m.
The Dybbuk is a rare piece of theatre. It is seldom
produced and the subject matter remains a mystery to
many people.
Special student rates are available for Thursday
performances. Performances are scheduled Dec. 2
through Saturday, Dec. 4 at 8 p.m. and Thursday, Dec.
9 through Saturday, Dec. 11. There Is one matinee
scheduled for Saturday. Dec. 11 at 2 p.m.
F or tickets and further information, call the Annie
Russell Theatre box office at 646-2145. The box office
opens Monday, Nov. 22 and is open daily from 1 to 5
p.m.

Mr. and Mrs. Walter P. Peterson, 600 Upsala Road,
Sanford, announce the engagement of their daughter,
linda Diane, to Richard David Easter, son of Mrs. Mary
Greathouse, Garksburg, W. Va., and Richard D. Easter
of California.
Bom In Sanford, the bride-elect is the maternal grand­
daughter of Mrs. 1-ena Ward, Pierson, and the late Mr.
W.J. Ward. Her paternal grandparents are the late Mr.
and Mrs. E.D. Peterson, Seville.
Miss Peterson is a 1980 graduate of Seminole High
School where she was a member of the marching and
concert bands. She attends Seminole Community College.
Her fiance, bom at Tampa, is the maternal grandson of
Mr. and Mrs. S.S. Johns, Route 1, Sanford.
He is a 1977 graduate of Doddridge High School, West
Union, W. Va. He attends Seminole Community College
and is employed as assistant fuel handler by Florida
Power Corp.
The wedding will be an event of Dec. 10, at 8 p.m., at
Pinecrcst Baptist Church, Sanford.

Serving In TCU Ministry
K ay McFarland of Sanford, is among Texas
Christian University (trite Divinity School students
serving in the seminary's field education program.
Of the 114 Britc students serving student ministries,
53 are in Christian (Disciples of Christ) churches, with
which TCU and Brite are affiliated. Another 36 are in
Methodist churches, seven in Presbyterian and
Cumberland Presbyterian congregations and five in
Baptist churches. Others are in Ijithcran, Unitarian
and Adventist churches, in the Harris Hospital
chaplain's office, the TCU campus ministry and the
Christian Church of the Southwest.
Mrs. McFarland is serving as Christian education
director at Find United Methodist Church in Burleson,
Texas.

i For M en •Women1
CATHY M O L U C A

In A n d A ro u n d Lake M a r y

Die G K D tests leading to a Florida High School
Diploma will be offered at Seminole Community
College on De. 6,7, and B. E lig ib ility for taking the tests
must be completed by Nov. 24.
G E D Test Orientation w ill be held on Dec. 2 at 4 p.m.
and 5 p.m. Students qualified to take the tests are
encouraged to attend this class on "How to Take and
Pass the G ED Exams".
For more information on G E D 's free study program,
call Seminole Community College and ask for the G E D
Office.

Members of the United Slates Coast Guard Auxiliary Flotilla
No. 41 of l-ake Mary were on duty Nov. 10 and 11 for the space
launch at Cape Kennedy. Tom Hormes, E. A. Carlson and
Charles Burgess, members of the U.S. Coast Guard Space
Shuttle Team, Joined other members to patrol waters of the
inside area of the launch site, protecting boaters from danger
areas. Mr. Carlson says they "had a great view and it was a
gorgeous sight to see the bird go up".

Rob McConnell SCC Concert

Newly-elected officers Cmdr. Russ Megonegal and Vice
Cmdr. E. A. Carlson will take their oath of office, administered
by the 4th District Captain of the Coast Guard Auxiliary, M ark
lewis, at that time.

Those Interested In taking the next boating course can
contact E. A. Carton at 322-9416 or Russ Megonegal at 3225588.

Boys and girls players on seven teams of Sanford
Soccer Club, a non-profit organization, sold tickets for
turkey drawings as a fund-raising benefit for the club.
Winners of the turkeys are: Alice McIntyre, Mary
T lllis , C. F. Jones, Peggy Lattanzio, Diane GiUman,
Carole Klrchhoff and Debra Schrock, all of Sanford,
and Mrs. J. Dosher, Winter Springs.

At the District Meeting of the Garden Gub, l-ake Mary swept
the awards with their landscaping project of city hall. They
received the State Award for city public planning and received
a $25 bonus. The club was runner-up of the Slate Award for
park planning and honored by the state competition for being
Florida’s contestant for the National Award.
The Garden G u b would also Uke to express its appreciation
to all for making their pumpkin sale a tremendous success.

*

&lt;s

Arts &amp; Crafts
Festival
• Best In Art &amp; Crafts

&lt;

• Early A m erican G lass D isp lay

$

• Slide Presentation of Old
Longwood

s

V

SATURDAY &amp; SUNDAY
9 •5
V
*Mile N. of Hwy. 434
on Hwy. 427
Presented By:

The Central Florida
Society For
Historical Preservation

b
s

b
b
b
b
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b

The chamber of commerce had a huge turn out Monday for
"Meet the Candidates" night. The evening began with DeLores
Lash presiding over a short business meeting. The 13 can­
didates were Introduced by Susie Warren of the Seminole
League of Woman Voters. The candidates were allowed time to
express their views. A question and answer period followed
and a summation by the candidates ended the evening.
Door prizes were won by Ethel Carlson, Harry Terry, Susie
Warren, Colin Keogh and Mrs. Colin Keogh. Refreshments,
donated by Com Bank were served.

SANFORD

CU STO M ER

A P P R E C IA T IO N
20% OFF ON DRESSES

The chamber would also like to remind members of the
breakfast to be held Dec. 6 at 8 a m. at the Greenhouse.
Deadline for purchasing the tickets is Nov. 26. The $4 ticket
Includes a menu of ham and cheese omelet, hash browns, grits,
fresh fruit cup, assorted Juices, danish, blueberry muffins and
a choice of tea or coffee. Tickets may be purchased at Uppincotts or l-ake Mary I-awn and Garden.

Because We A re
Thankful F o r You,
Our Custom ers, We
Are O fferin g This
3 Day THANKSGIVING
Special.

New F a ll &amp;
Holiday F a sh io n s
20 Pet. O ff
Man., Tues. &amp;
Wed. O nly.

Congratulations are extended to Donna Estes for becoming a
grandmother for the sixth time. Her daughter Mrs. E. Neil
IDonna) M itchell III, gave birth on Nov. 7 to a 8 lb. 8 oz. boy at
Winter Park Memorial Hospital. Baby Kevin Andrew, mother,
father and proud grandmother Donna are all doing well.
Mr. and Mrs. Dennis i Barbara l Randall will be entertaining
at home for Thanksgiving. Along with their children O ie ryl,
Debbie, Diana and David, Barb's parents Doris and Edgar
Wood will Join them for a turkey feast. The Woods make their
winter home In Forest City and spend their summers In
Springfield, Ohio.

JU-HOE. FIRST ST.
SANFORD
PH.MMJ14

K A D ER

IDENTIFYjEWELEHSMYSTEm MODEL AND WIN!
Faitin a few spar* ttrandi
of yirn onto tha back
of a finished naadlepoint
pfojict. It may coma in
nindy for future repairs.

We are showing her here in the J*£5l of 5 more revealing (weekly)
p o ses displaying our new and exciting Christmas G ift Ideas.
First correct guess w ins a genuine K osenthal 18k Gold Bee —
Every correct g u ess wins.
You must come in to our store and register to participate.

The chamber announced entry forms will be available for
the Christmas Lighting Contest to be held Dec: 20. There w ill

V P I N A i t X A M I N A t l()N

All adds and hints will b« displayed in tin* store.
Full contest d etails a t

FiNChI O W i II

KADEK JEWELERS
322-2363-112 S. Park Ave., Sanford

1
PP*

1 DUJMMU WIMI •*
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THANKSGIVING

H m A P tm m

I Aim mm

Pam

9fft pari «*.*"#»I #*jNN*dk#M*' «0»»nOt

Our tincere wishes fora
vary hippy and healthy
Thanksgiving to you and
y w r fam ily... M |oy ill
■ IT T Y . CA R O L A N D WENDY

or

*€&lt;*09 1

SANFORD PAIN
CONTROL CLINIC
l)W t HI &gt;M A-I » A N 1&gt;t l

nr Pence

( l,ii .p, rt* l&lt;(

.

1I H I M
TAM

M l French Ave P H 3U-RIM tenferd

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H Aw l
o h o

Hint #1:

She’s a b u lld e r’M h elp er in S anford ,
where she’s lieed all her life.

323 5763

v - » - * &gt;■» • .........V -

STYLING SALON

SALE

be a form published in the December Newsletter or they may
be obtained ut Uppincotts Ink Spot and 1ake Mary l-awn and
Garden. Deadline for returning the forms is Dec. 15.

FREE

Hot*

A. Srfe # S'

]

l-ake Mary
Cormpomlenl
321-5366

The Coast Guard Auxiliary meets the fourth Tuesday of the
month at the Hess House. They offer a 6-week safe boating
course to the public In the spring and fall with Russ Megonegal
as the chief instructor. Those assisting are E. A. Carlson, M ary
BarUe, Tom Readdy, Tom Hormes, Myrtle Burgess, Ron
Woxberg and Vincent Holmwood.

Soccer Club Turkey Winners

22-7684

1911 FR EN C H AVE

Bonnie
Olvera

Present Cmdr. Charles Burgess, who did an outstanding Job
of recruiting new working members, will relinquish his duties
at the "Change of Watch" dinner lo be held Dec. 18 at the
Longwood Village Inn.

Seminole Community College will present Hob
McConnell, leader, soloist and arranger of Canada's
Boss Brass in clinic and concert with The Orlando " A ll
Stars" Big Band in SCC’s Fine Arts Concert H all on
Wednesday, Dec. 1.
Under the direction of Dr. B ill Hinkle, the clinic,
including improvisation, arranging and rehearsal
techniques, will be held at 2:30 p.m. with a concert at
7:30 p.m.

i

^ v in g s o f • H a ir

It Was A Gorgeous Sight
To See The Bird Go Up

GED Tests O ffered

□

ROSEMARY ANNE JOHNSON

r. r

* : - . *'

w ■

�Sund.it Nov '

Ev ening Hera ld Sanford FI

IB

Christmas Came Early For
Pair Visiting From Italy
The home of Mr ami Mrs Murray Mike wasdecoratedm
Halloween and Thanksgiving and a large Christmas Tree to
celebrate Christmas in October and November to honor EM2
Joyce O Nathan and i'M J Rrm i \ Williams
Joyce is the daughter of the Mikes While visiting iroin Italy
Joyce was entertained at a party given in her honor by her
sister Mrs Victoria Nathan Kilims, at Benmgans Many
fam ily members and friends joined 111 the celebration
Halloween, Thanksgiving and a Merry Christmas" was
shared with Joyce and Bruce with the traditional holiday joys
of gifts, carols and fun with her family while here visiting with
her many family members and schoolmates and friendJoyce is stationed aboard the USS Puget Sotmd AD 38. home
port Gaeta. Italy, were she t&gt; electrician - mate She is
ossigned as administrative assistant ami is a qualified
Kadiologican Control Monitor lor Nuclear-Support Facilities
EM2 Bruce A. Williams, from Washington. D C . said he
enjoyed the Florida hospitality and visiting lit beautiful San­
ford 1le is an electrician's mate, also stationed aboard the CSS
Puget Sound Bruce is a leading petty officer on outside repair,
electrician Repair Division
After a brief furlough in Sanford and Bruce’s hometown of
Washington. D C the couple left via air for Gaeta,

fm

(r.iit S it a\\n i t , In tv g im im l. jn iiis tilln*r d a n c e rs in a tw is t c m ilc s t

Fall Frolics
Ushers In Fun
Floliday Season

M arva

H a w k in s
•- .ip

porntiun SEKD CO i will host it- eleventh annual Erie: ,!banquet at 7 30 p.m Friday. Dec .1. at the Sanford Cl
Center
Keynote speaker and special guest for this L ’i&gt; pit p. ■ . t
event will be announced later
For a (kill tonal information or advanced ticket rcserva';
please call 32.1-4360.
\nnual Women's Day Observance is set Sunday. Y&gt;\ 28 .it
11 a in at New Mt Calvary Missionary Baptist Church. Wi st
12th Street. Sanford
Guest speaker ts Mrs Della Paul, a memlier of the U t , j , t
God Church. Orlando, and presently an instructor of English, .o
Valencia Community College- East Campus i
Annual Men's Day Service ts at 3 p.m w ith Stephen U right
instructor at Seminole Community College, m charge

The Seminole Fmpl&lt;ot«&lt;.nt t-Yonomic tVn-i-bipment Cor-

CUSTOM DRAPERIES
•Mini Blinds*Vertical Blinds
• Woven woods

In a setting deptettnu tho bounty of aulurnn created by
Hu hard Scott, the Hoard of Directors of Mallei Guild of
Sanford-Seminole presented its First Annual Fall Frolics
on Nov. lit. at the Sanford Civic Center.

Order before Nov ?6 unit you'll cut- $90
yOUf purchase1 PIUS orf II Ijivr you 3 .hI.1,1-, i.’
$50 OFF SAVER S CEBTiF ICATES to ism unto
you* trieiuh1 Whjl a ijip.it yyjy to uy Merry
Christmas'
Cull ul today1 Our (rieoilly decorators ,y O
work .yah you to create a look Put u y i you

It was a perfect evening fur a fall gathering when there
was food, fun and festivity for the large crowd.
Passenger, a five-piece combo, brought party revelers
to their feet dancing to a medley of popular music.
A highlight of the (un filled evening was a twist contest.
Dancers presented unique versions of the dance craze that
swept the nation during the 1950s.

322*
7642

Dint prizes and a buffet of light snacks were added
attractions.
During the festivities. Dora Lee ltussell, a past
president of the MGS board for seven years, was honored
on her birthday Also honored was Dr. Frank Clonlz, thief
of Staff al Central Florida Regional Hospital. The hand
played "Happy Itirthday,** the couple blew out the candles
anil everybody was invited to share the cake.
Fall Frolics chairman Joe Monserrat said he was
pleased with the large turnout and the support uf the
board and community .

l i m a L e e ltiis s e ll a n d D r. F r a n k C lo u t/ c r l e b r t i t e
I d r ttid a y s a t F a ll F r illie s .

3223315

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Philips Decorating Dun
S liir H r o o m 3 1 9 U . I A sh

Mi raid PhotoY by M.mvj Mam Itmi

J i i y c r O. N a th a n a m i H i i u t \ . W illia m s w e re
lio m m il al a rm im l ul H oliday h a p p e n in g s d u r in g
lu ilm ig h (ru m th e l .S. \ a \ y .

Ross Wontenay said he and his wife I-on really "had a
good time. It was such a nice crowd and we are looking
forward to nest year.”

Heaven's Very Special Child'
Can Be A Burden Or Blessing
D EA R A B B Y For almost four years I have been a
surrogate mother to five mentally retarded children, ages
from L! to 19. so I can relate to "li&gt;s .-Angeles Mother" who
described the daily horrors and heartaches of raising a 30year-old retarded son at home
“ M y" kids are also severely retarded, so I know how
draining it can be.
True. I c a n go home after putting in my 40-hour week, and I
don't have to deal with them on my time off, but I often take
one of my kids home on weekends, as well as holidays such as
Christmas. Thanksgiving and Easter.
There are rewards, however. I have taught them how to eat.
dress and bathe themselves. And they all have good manners 1
am very strict, but 1 never abuse them Their table manners
are better than mine. They keep one hand in their laps, wipe
their mouths when necessary and use sign language to say
please and thunk you. They could sit at the president's dinner
table and make me proud!
When 1 walk down the street with them and strangers at­
tempt to shield their "normal'* children from mine. I could
cry. Mental retardation is not contagious.
I'm not an administrator. I’m just a woman who cares. I
earn less than someone who has worked in a supermarket for
the same length of time, so I'm definitely not in it for the
money, i truly love these kids.

normal" murderer, rapist or drug addict. She should thank
God she has someone to care for and love. Retarded children
need love, and they give more in return than most "nonnal"
children are w illing to give. Sign me...
CHILD CAKE W ORKER
W HOLABORSFOR
LOVE. JO Y —AND
PEANUTS
DEAR W ORKER: You qualify for sainthood in my book.
Brail on lor a letter (mm a reader with unother view:
II you hate to write letters because you don't know what to
say, send for Abby's complete booklet on letter-writing. Send
12 and a long, stamped (37 rent*I. self-addressed envelope to
Abb), Letter Booklet. P.O. Box 38923. Hollywood, Calif. 90038.

As soon as 1 can afford it, 1 am going to adopt a lovable little
girl I'm caring for. i It won't be a problem. She was abandoned
ami has no family, i
My heart aches for "lz&gt;s Angeles Mother," who confessed
that the thought of "mercy k illin g " had crossed her mind. She
could have had worse problems. Her son could have been a

jju iin

*

5 HALF PRICE *5
55

Shampoo &amp; Cut
5-7 p.m.

$5

★

-

f J d ll

★

" lif t" for rack "CuHy Penn

F R E E Lash and Brow Tint

S W IM B Y
^ C H R IS T M A S

F R E E Conditioning Treatment i Blow Dry

i « u li any tasialnr m ail up j|iplu anoro

•v*ith h a lt sh a p in g tar h u sh a m l am t

*

it,

jm t

t - » k s n u r a p p x in in H n ls iu K i- ih v ii

★

Continued From Huge IB
New Smyrna (beachI," said Carroll. But they have also
visited Indian Mound, the Orange Blossom Jamboree,
held near lakeland, and others in the Central Florida
area.
But the campers are looking to expand their horizons.
-We have big plans for the future." says the wagon
master who is not planning to give up his "loved" position.
He has collected literature on Ocean Grove. St. Augustine,
and Sebastian Inlet, searching out new adventures for the
trekkers.
It is not that these camping friends do not enjoy each
others* company more than once each month. It is jusl
that when they move their motor homes together for two
day s under the open skies, they talk, tell jokes and have a
good time without worrying about the time or how loudly
they laugh. These couples front Sanford and surrounding
; areas lake friendship and make it mighty neighborly
because, "We love it *’
*

*

LOWWINTER"
PRICES NOW...

...C am pers
1. too *n. ft.
cm

R EBATE
ON EVERY POOL
Hurry-Limited Offer

txfra petto

! d e ck

2. Automatic CtHaar
1. Therapeutic tea Jet*
IN pet. FINANCING

Mpct*— U rn.
iM k jttf to d M ia

-

Quantum Perm
Reg. $50 Now $35
Zotos Perm
Reg. $35 Now $28

M A R II
S T V U iT

Htrm slruludi Snk-1 ul.

I r a m c d ,n N ew York, no* o
.Winter S p rit ns 'ts.d e n t V ie
spec .a id e s in a ll phases ot
to sm i-tolo g y

( ‘,,n ,lii„ .n m y I r t a in u n ia n d H I.* Urs »r V l

11 DAYS FROM DIO TO SWIM
YOU CANT BUY A POOL FO R U M
... UNLEM ITS A LOT LSM FOOU

Hablamos Espanol

C H A M P A G N E FO O LS
Pete Manley
Central Fla’e
Oldest Pool Bulkier

m

Day i fctffufifi

&amp; o i % ib cu n u tu U iiip
o lie n
M r U /u m /

¥

M om en

S/&lt;44 H i(A J A a t

834-0585

.ft.u c A

- .a n fo r il

�— Evening H e r a l d . Sanford, FI,

Sunday, Nov. 21,1982

BUSINESS
IN BRIEF
Barnett Note Exchange
Offer Is Initiated
The registration statement tor an offer by Barnett
Banks of Florida, In c , to exchange new Senior
Investment notes for two earlier Barnett debt issues
has been declared effective by the Securities and
Exchange Commission.
The exchange offer prospectus is being mailed to
some 4,SCO investors in 38 states who have until Dec, Id
to accept. If all the debtholders who qualify were to
exchange, approximately $48 fi m illion in new notes
would tie issued.
The offer is to holders of Barnett's 9 percent
Subordinated Investment Notes, due 198.1, and to
holders of 73»percent Sinking Fund Debentures, due in
1997.
Holders of the 9 percent notes will receive $1 in new
notes for each $1 in old notes, plus accrued interest.
Thef1! percent debenture holders will receive 70 cents
of new notes for each SI of old notes, plus accrued in­
terest.

NEW OFFICES

T his is ;iii n r c h i l c c t 's r e n d e r in g of t h e IOi.(HNFs(|iiarc-fnol
offiee b u ild in g H oyle In v e s tm e n t C o. of .M em phis, T e n ii., is
b u ild in g a l 2100 M a itla n d C e n te r . T h e th re e -sto ry b u ild in g in

M a itla n d w ill be jo in e d by a s e c o n d o ffic e b u ild in g in th e
f u tu r e . T h e b u ild in g w ill b e c o m p le te d by M ay .

Farmers Can Lead U.S.

Rose Jo in s Hospital

jk w e u

.

h o st

:

Jewell Hose was recently
named m aterials manager
at
C e n tra l
Florida
Hegional
Hosp.tal in
Sanford. She will oversee
purchasing,
receiving,
w a re h o u se , in ven to ry
control, print shop, mail
a c tiv itie s and Central
Services. Ms. Rose, who
has been in purchasing for
the past 16 years, was
m a te ria ls manager at
Doctor’s Hospital in Little
Bis k, Ark. She learned of
the local position while
traveling as a member of
the T e ch n ica l Advisory
Board
fo r
.Materials
Management for Hospital
Corporation of America.

Today’s farmer is an ideal candidate to lead the nation's
small and rural communities through many of the same
problems that have plagued America’s cities, an agribusiness
executive believes.
G. Dee Smith, executive vice president of R. J. Reynolds
Tobacco., believes Farmers are well-equipped to "mobilize
and wisely use our resources for rural America to grow in a
planned and productive way.
“ Today's economic and political climate demands that we as
private citizens do more in our communities lo make them the
kinds of places where we want to spend our lives," Smith said.
"The future well-being of rural America Is being severely
challenged by changing population patterns, social changes
and our tight economic times. No area of our country, perhaps,
is in greater need of a commitment to effectively meet those

challenges.

E v e n hod) jo in e d in th e a d w h en D ix ie S e c u rity , :iuo E a s t
fo rd . belli ils o ffic ia l o p en in g c e r e m o n y . S n ip p in g th e rib b o n
In Hie Iriuil ro w . fro m left, a r e M a r th a V aneev, O /w a ld
Me A lee, B e r g e r . E d w a rd S tile s , o w n e r of th e c o m p a n y ,
I lobby D o u g la s .

SECURITY

Pistole Names M anager
Carroll Pistole has been
appointed C e n tra l and
South Florida District sales
manager for R1S Irrigation
Systems and w ill be based
in Sanford according to
Tom
K im m e ll,
vice
president of marketing.
Pistole assumes his new
position following a year as
sales represen tative for
HIS' Perma Kakn Division
in Lindsay. C a lif. As
district sales manager, he
will oversee sales activity
for BIS' Central ami South
Florida region.
C A K K O M . P IS T O L E
His 25 years experience
in the irrigation business * representative. He has also
includes 15 years with BIS
held sales positions with
as an a ssista n t sales
other irrigation equipment
manager
and
sales
firms.

F ir s t S t. in S a n ­
is llr u c e B e r g e r .
A d a m s, I to b r r t
M rs. S tile s a n d

"The lifeblood of these communities continues to be
agriculture," he said. "Agriculture isn't only a job or an in­
dustry. Agriculture is the foundation of many small and rural
communities that cover virtually all regions of the United
States.
“ Today's fanner is more educated than the average
American. A full 45 percent attend college, compared with only
30 percent of the general population," he said, "and as a group,
farmers hold a strong voting record."

Prepaid Legal Fees G row
Pre-Paid legal Services, Inc., of Florida has
expanded its services into Seminole County.
Kay Carson is the new sales represenative in
Seminole County for Pre-Paid leg a l Services,
according to Anne Cunningham, regional
manager.
Ms. Carson said the popularity of the service
is increasing as legal costs spiral and as more
and more people find a need for legal advice.
The nationwide firm offers almost unlimited
legal services for $7 50 a month. The firm is
able to afford lo pay lawyers their fees while
only charging customers the set policy rate
because of volume business, Ms. Carson ex­
plained.

She reported several recent inquiries from
businesses and labor groups in the county who
recognize the value of the service.
Policy holders have Ihe freedom to pick
their own attorney whose customary fee is
paid in full by Pre-Paid. And Pre-Pald's legal
service coverage extends to all members of
the family.
Ms. Carson said Ihe service is designed for
the average person who increasingly Is
realizing a need or legal services to assist with
divorce, will preparation, civ il action, real
estate selling or buying, consumer problems
with retailers and manufacturers, traffic
court cases ami tax matters.

Bank Promotes Chester
Becky Chester has been promoted from instalment
loan officer at ComBank-Pine Castle to branch
manager of Com Bank-Pine Castle's Conway Office as
announced by Robert M. Klingler. chief executive
officer of CoinBanks Corporation.
Ms. Chester began her ComBank career with
CumBank-Wlnter Park in 1972 by serving in the in­
stalment loan department. She then worked as a loan
teller and loan processor, followed by serving as a
dealer discount clerk and later was assistant to the
assistant vice president of CoinBitnk-Pine Lastle.

—

Graphics Office Opens
Robert N. Khrenberg, president of Humfurd
National Graphics, Inc., the parent organization of
International Graphics of Hollywood recently an­
nounced the opening of a new sales office in Altamonte
Springs.
C. Douglas Hardin, Central Florida sales manager,
is in charge of the new facility which is at 395 Douglas
Ave.
International Graphics prints 40 publications in
addition to industrial, commercial and travel catalogs
and brochures.

f

r

1

ARTS A N D CR AFTS
A m i ( t r a c e ) ( r i g h t ) . o w n e r of C o u n try A ttic a r ts a n d c r a f t s s h o p a t iih k
F re n c h A ve, I t ’.S.
in S a n fo rd , s h o w s h e r d a u g h te r - in - la w , C in d y
( t r a c e ) , tier a s s o r t m e n t of h a n d -m a d e q u ilts am t tied s p r e a d s d u r in g th e
s h o p ’s re c e n t g r a n d o p e n in g . An op en h o u s e is p la n n e d fo r N o v . 2H b y M rs.
(tra c e s .

SANTA S HELPER

G rohom Manages Bank

I a iiii Sejf o f F la g s h ip B ank of S e m in o le glow s a s
sh e p r e p a r e s to m a il out C h r i s t m a s (T u b C h eck s
to ta lin g SI 1)2. t l t l .

Depressed Business
To Continue Into 83

John H. Graham Jr. has been appointed manager of
Southeast Bank's newest Seminole County location —
the Casselton Baking Center which opened Nov. 15 at
1099 Semoran Blvd. In Casselberry - according lo an
announcement by Michael W, Sheffey, senior vice
president of Southeast Bank.
Southeast's newest Central Florida banking location
features Southeast Bank's Quick &amp; Easy 24-hour
banking service and is staffed by four full-time
banking professionals.
"With the opening of our Casselton Banking Center,
Southeast now has 10 banking centers In the OrangeSeminole County area to meet the banking needs of
consumers and businesses in the area,” said Sheffey.
Graham Joined Southeast in August 1978 following a
five-year association with First National Bank of
Sebring.

Keyes Moves Offices
Keyes F lorida, Inc., recently announced a location
change of their Ixmgwood branch office, according lo
Andrew M . Spatafora, president.
Due to the growth in sales associates, the office's
new location Is 1175 Spring Centre South Blvd.,
Longwood.

Flagship Promotes Brown
Irene K . Brown has been elected vice president and
manager of Flagship Bank of Seminole’s Tuscawilla
Office. Brown, who has been Flagship’s county
marketing officer for the past four years, began her
banking career in 1961 with the Florida Stale Bank of
Sanford.

/

For Latins Too

WINNER
Pam ela B. Trace of 2732 Kidgewood Ave. in Sanford accepts her priie from
Boh Dunce, owner of Hoh Dance Dodge in Ixmgwuid. A librarian at Hopper
Elementary School ami Sanford G ram m ar School, Ms. Trace was a local
winner In the Hex-Ha inpage Bally Sweepstakes and went on to compete with
II other winners from throughout the state in a Rampage Hally auto-class
race in Orlando. As ihe local winner, she received $51) in cash, a $1,000 rebate
on a Rampage truck and a year's supply of Flex-Balsam shampoo and rinse
As a fourth place winner overall al the state level, she received $50 in cash
and a :15mm I'entax cam era.

*■ J

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•

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*

U.S. businesses engaged In Latin American
activities are being adversely affected by a
very difficult international economic en­
vironment which could last through the first
half of 1983, according to J. Antonio ViUainil,
vice president and international economist for
Southeast Bank.
Villam il says that adverse world economic
conditions, mostly beyond the control of the
region's policymakers, are the leading cause
of Latin America's serious economic situation.
In a current issue of Latin American
Briefing, a quarterly publication of Southeast
Bank, Villam il explains the "economic dif­
ficulties in a number of major Latin American
nations, as well as in most o[ the small
Caribbean and Centra) American countries,
are likely to continue next year — at least
through the first half of 1983. Latin America's
econom ic perform anace is significantly
dependent on the behavior of industrial
economies, particularly the United States,"
according to Villam il.
The U.S. economy, with high, real, Inflationadjusted interest rates, has remained
stagnant since the end of 1979. This, together
with stagnation in other major industrial
countries, "has caused a noticeable con­
traction in the economic growth rale of the
region, a reduction in export earnings, and a

sharp increase in Interest payments to service
external obligations," says Villam il.
Although the Southeast economist sees as
unlikely a marked improvement in in­
ternational economic conditions through the
first half of 1983, "U.S. corporations should not
discount the possibility that industrial coun­
tries' economic performance could be better
than expected during the second half of next
year — especially given significant progress in
lowering world inflationary pressures and
growing sentiment towards the need lo reflate
world economic activity."
I-atin American countries well-positioned to
take advantage of improved conditions in the
international economy include B ra zil,
Colombia, and Chile, says Villam il. Mexico
and Argentina, he notes, "w ill still be laboring
under a difficult external payments position,
strong inflationary pressures, and increased
political uncertainties."
Growth in U.S, exports to the Region is
expected to remain sluggish in 1983 with some
sharp reductions predicted for Argentina,
Ecuador, Mexico and Peru.
Villam il also sees the exchange rates o(
most I.atm American countries continuing to
face downward pressure through '.he first half
of 1983.

�Sunday, Nov 21. 1983— SB

Evening H e ra ld . Sanford, FI.

Pies
Eye-Appealing, Palate-Pleasing Desserts
Pie is probably the most American of desserts. Generations
of good bakers have vied with each other to create pies which
are a feast for the eyes, and delicious to eat.
When, as here, fillings feature those favorite flavors,
chocolate and peanut butter, pies are indeed wonderful food.
These recipes also offer convenience in the form of cocoa and
peanut butter chips — and delectable crumb crusts, already
prepared. Preformed, ready*to-use crumb crusts are found in
a variety of flavors and sizes. Their versatility and con­
venience allow you to exercise all of your cooking creativity
and they'll stay fresh in your pantry, too.
Each of these three ingredients is found on your grocer’s
shelves, near the rest of your baking needs. They combine
deliciously in a variety of easy-to-put-together pies that rank
among the best so, w hether or not you win a ribbon, you’re sure
to win praises from the people who really count.
Take, for example, this super simple Fudgy Coconut-Nut
Pie, an Ideal hurry-up dessert to help you cope with unex­
pected company. Just combine ingredients in a single bowl,
pour into a pre-formed crumb crust and bake. Since cocoa is a
very highly concentrated kind of chocolate, taste will be extra
luscious, color extra rich and deep. That crispy graham
cracker pie crust provides complementary flavor — it comes
ready to fill and pop in the oven.
CHOCOLATE-PEANUT B U TTE R
CHIP TARTS
l « cup butter or margarine, melted
4 cup cocoa
4 cup sugar
1 envelope unflavored gelatine
4 cup sugar
3 egg yolks, slightly beaten
14 cups m ilk
1 teaspoon vanilla
4 cup peanut butter chips
3 egg whites
1 tablespoon sugar
2 packages ready-crust graham cracker tart crusts 112
crusts i
Blend butter or margarine, cocoa and *4 cup sugar until
smooth in small bowl; set aside. Combine gelatine and 4 cup
sugar in medium saucepan; blend in egg yolks and milk. Let
stand 1 minute. Cook, stirring constantly, over low heat until
gelatine is dissolved and mixture lightly coats a spoon. Do not
boil. Remove from heat; add vanUla. Immediately pour 1 cup
hot mixture into cocoa mixture; whisk until smooth. Add
peanut butter chips to remaining mixture; in saucepan; whisk
until smooth. Chill until mixtures mound slightly when
dropped from spoon. Heal egg whites with 1 tablespoon sugar
until stiff. Fold 4 beaten whites into chocolate; remaining
whites into peanut butter mixture. Chill 15 minutes. F ill the 12
tart crusts 4 fidl with chocolate; top with peanut butter
mixture. Or reverse procedure, placing peanut butter chip
mixture on the bottom, chocolate layer on top. Chill completely
— about 2 hours. Garnish with whipped cream and additional
peanut butter chips, if desired.

COCO A-PEANUT BUTTER
CH IP BROW NIE PIE

2 eggs
1 teaspoon vanilla
1 cup sugar
4 cup butter or margarine, melted
4 cup unsifted all-purpose flour
l-3rd cup cocoa
*i teaspoon salt
4 cup peanut butter chips
Ready-Crust butter-flavored pie crust
Vanilla ice cream
Peanut Butter Sauce (ingredients and recipe below)
Lightly beat eggs and vanilla in small mixer bowl; blend in
sugar and melted butter or margarine. Combine flour, cocoa
and salt; add to egg mixture. Stir in peanut butter chips. Pour
Into crust. Place on baking sheet and bake at 350 degrees for 50
minutes; cool. Serve wedges with scoops of vanilla ice cream
and Peanut Butter Sauce. 8 servings.
Peanut Butter Sauce: Combine 14 cups peanut butter chips,
l-3rd cup evaporated m ilk, 2 tablespoons light corn syrup and 1
tablespoon butter in small, heavy saucepan. Stir constantly
over low heal until chips and butter are melted and thoroughly
combined with remaining ingredients. Remove from heat; add
1 teaspoon vanilla. Serve warm. (For thinner sauce, add small
amount of evaporated m ilk.) 1 cup sauce. Sauce may be
reheated in top of double boiler over hot water, or in the
microwave.

F E S T IV E FRO ZEN P EAN U T BU TTER
P E C A N P IE
1 cup broken pecans
1*3 tablespoons butter or margarine
2 cups (12-ounce package) peanut butter chips
4 cup m ilk
Two 3-ounce packages cream cheese, softened
2-3rd cup confectioners' sugar
1 envelope whipped topping mix (to yield 2 cup topping)
ready-crust graham cracker pie crust
Place pecans and butter or margarine In an B- or 9-lnch pan;
toast In a 325 degree oven for about 7 minutes, stirring oc­
casionally, until butter or margarine Is melted and nuts are
coated. Set aside to cool. Meanwhile, place peanut butter
chips and 4 cup m ilk In top of double boiler. Stir constantly
over hot, not boiling, water until chips are melted and blended
with milk; cool 10 minutes. Beal cream cheese and con­
fectioners' sugar until fluffy; blend in peanut butter mixture.
Prepare whipped topping mix according to package direc­
tions; fold in peanut butter mixture and 4 cup of the toasted
pecans. Pour into crust; sprinkle with remaining pecans.
Freeze overnight. 6 to 8 servings.

Tart amt [lies art* favorite American desserts.

SERVING THIS COMMUNITY FOR OVER

30 YEARS of TRADITIONAL THANKSGIVINGS
' Y

F U D G Y COCONUT-NUT P IE
6 tablespoons butter or margarine, melted
1 cup sugar
l-3rd cup cocoa
3 eggs, slightly beaten
1 teaspoon vanilla
*4 cup flaked coconut
4 cup coarsely chopped nuts
ready-crust graham cracker pie crust
Combine melted butter or margarine, sugar and cocoa until
smooth. Add eggs and vanilla; blend well. Stir in coconut and
nuts. Pour into crust. Place on baking sheet and bake at 350
degrees for 35 to 40 minutes or until filling is set. Cool. Garnish
with sweetened whipped cream and toasted coconut or
chopped nuts, if desired.

ME A C C E P T U % D A

CAKE
M IX E S
D U N C A N MINIS
tl'tOZ.
FLAVORS

M A R B LE D CHOCOLATE
CH EE SE C A KE
1 envelope unfavored gelatine
1 cup m ilk
1 package (8 ounces) cream cheese, softened
2 packages (3 ounces) cream cheese softened
l-3rd cup sugar

1 teaspoon vanilla
l-3rd cup cocoa
1-3 cup sugar

ready-crust graham cracker pie crust
Sprinkle gelatine over 4 cup milk in blender container; let
stand 3 to 4 minutes. Heat remaining milk to boiling; Im­
mediately add to blender. Process at low speed until gelatine Is
completely dissolved, about 2 minutes. Add cream cheese, 13rd cup sugar and vanilla ; process at high speed until smooth.
Pour 14 cups mixture Into large bowl. Add cocoa and l-3rd cup
sugar to mixture remaining In blender container; process at
low speed until blended. Carefully spoon chocolate over
mixture in bowl; swirl gently with spatula. Pour Into crust;
chill until set — about 3 hours. Decorate with chocolate curls, If
desired.
EASY CREAMY
PEANUT BUTTER PIE DELUXE
1 cup peanut butter chips
2-3rd cup sweetened condensed milk
One 3-ounce package cream cheese, softened
1 teaspoon lemon Juice
4 cup heavy cream
ready-crust graham cracker pie crust
Whipped Cream Topping (ingredients and recipe below)
Peanut'butter chips for garnish
R ace peanut butter chips and condensed milk In a small,
heavy saucepan. Stir constantly over low heat until chips are
melted and mixture is blended; remove from heat. Beat cream
cheese and lemon juice In small mixer bowl until fluffy. Add
warm peanut butter mixture; beat on medium speed 1 minute.
Pour into crust. Chill overnight. Spread Whipped Cream
Topping over filling and garnish with peanut butter chips just
before serving. I servings.
Whipped Cream Topping: Combine 4 cup heavy cream, 1
tablespoon confectioners’ sugar and 4 teaspoon vanilla In
smrJl mixer bowl; whip until stiff.

FROSTINGS

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Evorvnq Mnr.tld S.(nford FI

Sunday. Nov }l, 1982

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FIRST B A P T IS T C H U R C H
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174 t i l l o r S74 1171
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R e v D o n a l d 'l e r c h e n r o d e r
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e v a n g e l i c a l

A LL SOU LSCATHO LICCH UR CH
7I| O ak A ve S an to rd
F r W illiam F n n it
Pottor
Sat V ig i l M a t !
)p m
Su n M a t t
I. 10 )9. I) oc
C o n f e s s i o n s Sat
4) p m

c o n g r e g a t io n a l

}l« W a d e S tr e et
R ev Roberf B u r n s
Past or
Sunday School
10 00 4 m

Worship

10 00am

TIES TH AT BIN D
EV AN G ELIST IC C EN T ER
B e a r d a n A v e So ot S R 14 E
F u ll G o s p e l in ferfaifh
Sun W o r s h i p 4
Christian G r o w t h
to )0 a m
Prayer 4 B ible

Christian
FIR ST C H RISTIAN
1407 S S a n to r d A r e
S E d w a r d J oh ns on
Minister
S u n d a y S ch oo l
e 4) a m
M o r n in g W orship
n Ma m
F v e n m g W orship
7 Mp m
W ed S ervice
7 K p m

Study W e d n e s d a y
S at ur d ay

7pm
4 JO p m

Lutheran

S A N F O R D CH RIST IA N C H U R C H
1)7 A i r p o r t B ' . d
P h o n o )) ) 0 t | )
Joe J o h n s o n
M .nitfer
S u n d a y S ch oo l
• 10 a m
W orsh ip Service
&gt;0 )C a m
F ven m g S ervice
7LMp m
P r a y e r M e e t i n g Wed
7 M p m

L U T H E R A N C H U R C H OF
THE R E D E E M E R
The L u t h e r a n H o u r and
TV
T h i s 1 1 Th e L i t e
JSISOoh Ave
Rev E lm e r A R e u s c h e r
Pa st er
Sunday S c h o o l
t IS a m
W o r sh ip S e r v i c e
11 H a m
K m de igarten and N ursery

D a l L cy
BROOD

o u r

Christian Science
C H R IS T IA N S C U N C C SOC IETY
C 0 S we etw at er A c a d e m y
F a s t L ab e Brantley D riv e
Longwood
10 00 a i
Sunday S ervice
10 40 a i
S u n d a y Sc hoo l
W ed Testim ony
1 K p m
M eeting

GOOO S H EPH ER D

Church Of Christ

Hie l oul seems to t»e lemindinc) his to!lo*efs that *e depend toi
our very sumv.il on wti.it Cod provides.

C H U R C H OF C H R I S T
1)12 P a r k A . e n u e
F re d Baker
E vangelisl
10 00 a m
B . b i e Study
11 M a m
M n r n m g W orship
4 M p m
( v e n m g Ser vi ce
L a d i e s B i t i e Cl as s
II K i n
Wednesday
7 N pm
W e d n e s d a y B i b l e Cl

With stionij emphasis too on the
ot Cjod s (jiviih )- -bread not cake

s im p le

hut wholesome natuie

Stiessinr) the tact ilia! our need continues without abatem entday after day alter day

Church O f God

Monday
E/ra

Sunday
I Chronicles

22 l 12

W 1b

lu esd ay
Isaiah
2b 1H

Wednesday

Thursday
E/ekiei

Friday
Daniel

1110

J e re m ia h

2 1-7

6

Our thanksyivincj. too. should be continual But it never hurts to
express it all together witlr common lervor as on Thanksgivtnrj Day
Then live it every day ot the year.

C H U R C H 07 G O D
001 W 22nd STrerl
Pastor
R e v B .H T h o m p so n
Sunday School
f D a w
M o rn m g W orship
II 0 4 a m
E v a n g e i i s f i c Se rv
4 M pm
F a m ily Enrichm ent
Service
7 M p m

.

2 M -23

" M * B r-y lr * A.»rw*t.% rt; Sr*v^n

■ () • 0 0 ) 1 t * y u t t f i ' . • ••

T»«* A i*8

i.s

E 'S i u t m f r a n c h u r c h
SR 424 4 R e d B u g R d
O v ie d o ( S la v a )
Edw in J R osvow
Pa ster
SwndaySchool
f 4)a m
W o r sh ip S e r v i c e s
I M 4 I I O tim
We m a i n t a i n a C h r i s t i a n Sr hoc 1
K i n d e r g a r t e n t h r o u g h E i g h t h G r ad e
l u k

Presbyterian

M o rn m g W orship
ChurchSchool
M o rn .n g W orship
Nursery

I )0am
tD im
II M a m

T H E L A K E M ARY UNITED
P R E S B Y T E R IA N CHURCH
W ilbur Ave Lake Mary
R e v A F S te v e n s
M inister
S u n d e r C h u r c h School
14) a m
M o r n m g W orship
II
Man
Touth G roup
7
)9p m
W e d C7*o.r P r a c t i c e
•
Mpm

Methodist

W-23

Saturday
Ho sea

FIR ST PENTECOSTAL
C H U R C H OF IO N G W O O D
S41 0» o n g r S treet lon qakood
R w E R uth G ran t
Paste
Sun d ay Scheot
j »
M o rn in g W orship
HOC am
S u n d a y E v e n .n g
7 SC p m
W e d B ' b i e Stu dy
7 ))pm
C o n q u e r o r s M e e f m g Sunday 4 10 p m

Phone 132 244)

2417 O r l a n d o D» 17 42
1 L u th e ra n C h u r c h in A m eric a)
Rev R a lp h l L u m e n
Pastor
Sund ay Sctsool
4 4) a m
W o r sh ip
10 M a m
N y r i t h P ro vid e d

ST

Pentecostal

F IR ST P R E S B Y T E R IA N CHURCH
O a n A v e A Ivd f t
R » « V i r g i l L R»v««9 *««»•«

l u t h e r a n c h u r c h

At thr heart ol the most cherished of Christum ptii&gt;ers is the plea
Cjise us this ct.iv our daily bread

I Am e ric an )
STS P E T E R A PAU L
1110 M a g n o l i a Ave
Sanford Fla
R e v F r Anthony G rant
Pa st o r
D ivin e L itu rg y
1 0 a m S un da y
C on fession s
By A p p o m tm e n t
R ecto ry
) ) ) 7)77

G R A C E U NITED
M ETHO O IST C H URCH
A i r p o r t B i r d A W o o d l a n d Dr
W illiam j B oyer
Pa st er
C h u rc h S c h o o l
f M p m
W a rs h ip Ser v i c e
It M a m
Y eu th F e l l o w s h i p
4 Mpm
Tue sday B i b l e S t u d r
lOMam
N u r s e r y p r o v i d e d ler a l l s er v ic e s

TO U CAN FEATURE
TO UR CHURCH
IN THIS S P A C E FOR
I I 7) P E R W E E K
C A L L )23 24H

•The Follow ing Sponsors M ake This Church N otice And Directory Page Possible1
A T L A N T IC N ATIO N AL B A N K
Sanford, Fla.
H o w a rd H Hodges an d S ta ff

C E L E R Y CITY
PR IN T IN G CO., INC.

COLONIAL ROOM
RESTAURANT
Downtown Sanford
115 East First St.
B ill &amp; Dot Painter

F L A G S H IP B AN K
OF S E M IN O L E and Staff
200 W. First St.
3000 S. Orlando Dr.

G R lfiO R Y LUMBER
TRUE•VAI
VALUE HARDWARE

K N IG H T 'S SHOE ST O R E
Downtown Sanford
Don Knight &amp; Staff

OSBORN'S BOOK
and B IB L E S T O R E
2599 Sanford Ave.

L.D. PLANTE, INC.
Oviedo, Florida

PANTRY PRIDE
DISCOUNT FOODS
and Employees

500 Maple Ave., Sanford

H AR R ELL &amp; B E V E R L Y
TRANSMISSION
David Beverly and Staff

Insurance

STENSTROMREALTY
Herb Slensfrom and Staff
WILSON-EICHELBERGER
MORTUARY
Eunice Wilson and Staff
WILSON MAIER FURNITURE CO.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Wilson

SENKARIK GLASS
&amp; PAINT CO., INC.
Jerry &amp; EdSenkarik
and Employees

MEL'S
G U LFSER VICE

Sanford Plaza
Ed Hemannand Staff

Mike &amp; Connie Smith

PUBLIXMARKETS
and Employees

THE McKIBBIN AG EN CY

JC Penney

SMITTY'S SNAPPIN' TURTLE
MOWERS, INC.
2506 Park Ave.

Mel Dekleand Em ployees

WINN-DIXIE STORES
and Employees

•S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y A R E A C H U R C H D IR E C T O R Y 1
t t iE M t iv or 000

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CONOBIOATIONdL
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�Briefly
Dr. Kamala Edwards O f India
To Speak At District Rally
Dr Kamala Edwards, president of the Isabella Thobum
College. Lucknow, India, will be featured speaker at the
Florida United Methodist Orlando D istrict Mission Rally to
be held Tuesday at Conununity United Methodist Church,
Casselberry The annual district meeting will begin at 5:30
p m with Dean Martin as speaker followed by a dinner at
6:30 and the ra lly at 7.
Dr. Edwards is president of the oldest and first women’s
college in Asia. She is a third generation Christian, who is
knowledgeable about religious practices and trends in
India. The Florida Conference supports the work of the
college through the conference Advance Specials.
The district rally mission offering w ill go to scholarships
for the Kyodan Church in Japan and projects selected by
the district.

All Souls' Auction
All Souls Church will hold a Christmas auction and
barbecued chicken dinner Dec. 4 in the church social hall at
Ninth Strict and Oak Avenue, Sanford. Dinner will be
served from 4-/ p m. The auction will be from 6-10 p.m. with
all new merchandise, including toys and sport's equipment.
Proceeds will benefit the All Souls School building fund.

Homecoming Celebration
The third annual Homecoming celebration will be held
this Sunday at the Sanford Alliance Church, 1401 South Park
Ave The activities begin with Sunday School at 9:45 a m.
The morning worship service at 11 a.m. will feature Dr.
Charles Dees as guest speaker. Dr. Dees served as pastor of
Sanford Alliance Church from April 1961 through October
1%4. He is currently pastor of the Downey Memorial
Church in Orlando.
A carry-in dinner w ill follow the worship service and will
be held in the fellowship hall.
At 2 p.m. a ra lly of Praise and Thanksgiving will be held.
The pastor. Peter Courlas, and the congregation invite
the public to attend.

By Texas Christian

Bible Inspires Oil Search In Holy Land
By P E A R L S H K F F Y G E F E N
Special to the Herald
Tel Aviv — A Christian oil man
from Texas is drilling a well in
Israel, based on readings in the
Bible and backed up by belief,
technology and hard cash.
The story began during World War
II, when fighter pilot Andrew C.
Sorelle Jr., was strafing a German
truck convoy in Normandy. His
American Air Force Thunderbolt
was hit by a German 88-mm. shell
and went out of control.
The plane continued to do the
im possible, and Andy Sorelle
arrived intact back at his base.
“ After I turned off the ignition
switch, I sat quietly in a super­
natural hush. In that silence, God
became real to me."

That experience changed Sorelle
from a non-religious hell-raiser into
a believer. Now 61, he spent years
"wondering why God saved my life,
when I saw so many good guys get
killed. I felt I had a destiny, that God
saved me for a purpose. I think I now
know what it is."
In 1968, Sorelle and his wife visited
Israel as part of a 13-nation tour.
"Before that, I had never thought
about Israel, but I became hooked,
and I wanted to do something for the
country. The only thing 1 knew,
being a petroleum engineer and in
the oil business, was that Israel
needs oil and maybe I could help."
Several years later, he came to
Israel to do an oil exploration job.
"We surveyed most of the country,
and found a few weak prospects, but

Sociologist To Speak
Building tomorrow's society through religion is the topic
scheduled at Valencia Conununity College, West Campus,
on Tuesday, at 7:30 p.m. in building 5, room 111.
Guest speaker Professor J. Mahmoudi, reknowned
sociologist und linguist from the University of Utah,
upholds the fam ily and religion as the two most important
social institutions.
He has worked with the Peace Corps training program,
authored books on economics and foreign languages, and is
listed in the "Who's Who of California 1981-1982" and the
fifth edition of the Directory of Am erican Scholars.
An open discussion will follow Dr. Mahmoudi's talk. All
interested persons are encouraged to attend the event,
which is sponsored by the Baha'is of Central Florida.

Missionary Volunteer
The Rev. Walter Harrison, m issionary volunteer to
Mexico with Baptist International Missions, Inc. of Chat­
tanooga, Tenn., will speak at the 7:30 p.m. service Sunday
at the First Baptist Church of Deltona.
The church young people will meet at the church Thur­
sday from 8-11 a.m. for a Thanksgiving Breakfast.

Circles To Meet
DeBary United Methodist Church Circles meeting at 1:30
p.m. Tuesday will be the following: E sther, 131 Plantation
Road; Ruth, 97 Fleetwood, Highland Estates; and Mary,
church parlor. The Martha Circle will meet Nov. 30 at 9:30
a.m. in the church parlor.

Young Life Party

Sorelle brought with him new
equipm ent which his com pany,
Energy Exploration, Inc., of
Houston, Texas, had developed. Use
of this equipment, followed by
seism ographic and geological
readings, confirmed Sorelle's belief

If, however, we can for the moment keep from thinking of
the uncertain — even bleak — future, we may be able to find
something in the present for which to be thankful.
In her book, "G ift from the Sea," written shortly after the
end of World War II, Anne Morrow lindbergh says, "Since the
war, Europe has been forced into a new appreciation of the
present.

Thanksgiving Services
Many area churches and temples will be observing the
Thanksgiving holiday with special services. In Sanford
and Oviedo community services are planned.
The Sanford M inisterial Association w ill sponsor a
community Thanksgiving service on Wednesday, at 7
p.m. at Central Baptist Church 1311 Oak Ave., Sanford.
This family service of thanksgiving and praise will
feature the Seminole High School Concert Chorus under
the direction of Mrs. Laurel EUmore.
Peter H. Courlas Jr., pastor of the Sanford Alliance
church and president of the Sanford M inisterial Assoc,
will present the message, "In Everything G ive Thanks” .
The offering will go to the Sanford Christian Sharing
Center, now located at 314 Magnolia Ave. The center is
Jointly sponsored by Sanford churches.

"The good past is so far away and the future so perilous that
the present has a chance to expand into a glorious eternity.
“ Europeans are enjoying the present moment even if it
means merely a walk in the country on Sunday or sipping a cup
of black coffee at a sidewalk cafe.” The present moment is God’s greatest gift to us. If we m iss
the wonder and enjoyment of it, a certain luminous quality w ill
be absent from our lives, something that abundance, success
or achievement of our goals cannot bring.
Happiness comes from an appreciation and a savoring of
moments in our life which we can later recall with pleasure.
Here is poet Kenneth Rexroth re-living such a moment in his
past:

I eater the ring of firelight, bringing you
A string of trout for our dinner.
As we eat by the whispering lake,
I say, “ Many years from now we will
Remember this night and talk of IL"
Many years have gone by since then, and
Many years again. I remember
That night as though It was last night.

The Oviedo Community Thanksgiving Service will be
held on Wednesday at 7 p.m., at the First Baptist Church,
Oviedo. Sponsored by the First Baptist and First United
Methodist Churches, the Thanksgiving eve service is open
to everyone.

I

I

that the Caesarea-Haifa stretch was
“ one of the m ost interesting
geological prospects ever to be
mapped in Israel."
He points out that he is drilling not
far from Megiddo, the prophesied
site of the battle of Armageddon
"The Bible says that Israel will lx
attacked by — and rapidly defeat the Russians, who will be coming
after
'spoil',
which
means
something of great value. The&gt;
wouldn't come for cucumbers and
tomatoes. So there's got to be
something big here, and that's oil
/An oil discovery in Israel would
certainly make is enemies mad.
“ Everyone knows what Golda
Meir said, that when Moses crossed
the Red Sea, he turned the wrong
way. Well, I don't believe he did It
simply wasn't God's time for Israel.

Temple Israel, 4917 E li St., Orlando, w ill hold a
Thanksgiving service at 10 a.m. Thursday followed by a
brunch at 11 a.m. sponsored by Mr. and Mrs. Allen Schwalb in honor of their son, Sammy's Bar Mitzvah.
Sanford Church of God, 801 W. 22nd St., Sanford, will
hold a special Thanksgiving Eve service at 7 p.m. Wed­
nesday.
Community United Methodist Church, Casselberry, will
hold its Thanksgiving Eve service at 7:30 p.m. Wed­
nesday. An offering of non-perishable food w ill be
received for the mission cupboard.
Holy Cross Episcopal Church will have a Thanksgiving
Day service at 10 a.m. on Thursday. The choir w ill lead
the music.

Saints And
Sinners
G eorge I'lagcn/

We are most truly thankful when we have such moments in
our lives to remember, moments which come to life "as though
it was last night" that we experienced them.
Most of us have had more than our share of the good things
which have been passed around in this world. We are thankful
for them but yet we have to admit they have not brought us the
happiness we seek.
Thus is often because we live such problem-oriented, futureoriented lives. Our preoccupation with our troubles and our
fretful concern over the future - what we w ill be doing an hour
or a week or a month from now - keeps us from enjoying the
present moment and from "the recollection in tranquility" of
the magic moments in our past.
Still it Is true that trouble and worry lose their hold on us and
on our attention in the measure that we experience the miracle
of the present moment or can recall from our yesterdays those
moments that have the quality of a “ golden eternity" about
them.

I think of those who have loved me,
Of all the mountains I have climbed
Of all the seas I have swum la.
The evil of the world sinks.
My own sin and trouble fall away
Like Christian's burden . . .
True thanksgiving includes gratitude for a moment at the
breakfast table with a pot of coffee, com muffins and mar­
malade or “ a walk in the country on Sunday" as much as for
good fortune, good health and a bountiful table on
Thanksgiving Day.

.

Fund Drive A Success

Pastor Jennings Neeld of the First United Methodist
Church will deliver the Thanksgiving sermon. Special
music will be presented by the Adult Choir of the First
Baptist Church.

Y

' J

i Y

Seminole Heights Baptist pastor, Dr. J.T.
Cosmuto (center) ami co-directors of the building
fund drive Vic Hichburg (left) and Ned Julian J r.,
have a lot to smile about.

Seminole Heights Baptist
Church,
Sanford,
w ill
celebrate the victory of its
"One in the Spirit , drive to
obtain gifts and commitments
to build a new facility. The
church presently holds ser­
vices at l-ake M ary High
School
and
Covenant
P r e s b y t e r ia n
C h u rch .
Campaign workers hope to
achieve the “ H allelujah" goal
of $250,000 by Sunday. The
total pledged had reached

$203,932 through Tuesday
night plus a salable gift worth
$500. The service will be
characterized by prayers of
thanksgiving and dedication
The commitment banquet
was held last Sunday night
was attended by 152 persons
at the Sanford Garden Gub.
Presiding were Ned Julian
Jr., assisted by co-director of
the drive, Vick Hichburg
Thirty-eight families pledged
an average of $4,000 each.

Mormons Organize New Stake
DeLand has become the
seat of a new stake of the
Church of Jesus Christ of

L atter-d ay Saints (M or­
mons).
The new stake will include
all of Flagler, Lake, Sum ter
and Volusia counties and part
of Seminole County. Marvin
Knowles, a produce company
owner, was selected to be
president of the DeLand Stake
by Elder Bruce R. McConkle,
a visiting general authority
from
the
c h u rc h 's
headquarters In Salt Lake
City. McConkle Is a m em ber
of the church's Quorum of
Tw elve Apostles
which
governs the 5.3 m illion
m em ber church under the
direction of the president of
th e church, a position

currently held by Spencer W.
Kimball.
Knowles' counselors will be
Ranler Munns and Bruce
Gordon, both Central Florida
attorneys.
A stake in the Mormon
church is a geographic
division, like a diocese, in
which several Individual
congregations operate. The
DeLand Stake will have
congregations, called wards,
in Bunnell, Daytona Beach,
New
Sm yrna
Beach,
Leesburg, DeLand and two in
Sanford.
Announcement of the for­
mation of the DeLand Stake
came Nov. 14 during a con­

ference session of the Orlando
Stake on Sunday. More than
2,000 people participated in
the semi-annual conference at
the Orlando Stake Center at 45
E. Par St., Orlando.
To form the new group the
Orlando Stake w ill lose the
Sanford,
DeLand
and
leesburg congregations. The
Jacksonville South Stake will
lose the Bunnell Ward and the
Cocoa Stake w ill lose the
Daytona Beach and New
Smyrna congregations.

The Cocoa Stake was for­
med in 1977 after a similar
redistricting of the Orlando
Slake.

ATTEND THE

Scientists Give Thanks

The latter p art of the hour-long service has been set
aside for expressions of gratitude. Hymns, the Lord's
Prayer, and the President's Thanksgiving Proclamation
complete the order of service.
Like all Christian Science services, the meeting is open
to all.

"I suddenly realized that the only
area we had not surveyed in Israel
was between Haifa and Caesarea,
along the coastline. So back we
came to Israel."

Bad times — and these are bad times — wouldn’t seem so
terrible if we knew things were going to get belter soon.
But in the present recession nobody w ill tell us that with any
assurance. Not every economist is as pessimistic as the one
who said recently, "Some unemployed people in their 50s may
never work again." But even those who can muster some
optimism about the future are hedging their bets on when we
can expect a recovery.

Church Street Station's new Cheyenne Opera House will
be the setting for Young life's annual Information and
Fund Raising Party on Sunday from 3 to 6 p.m. The gala
western festivities will feature a barbecue, silent auction,
entertainment, and slides of Young lif e 's many activities.
William Folwcll, Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Central
Florida, will be the main speaker. Proceeds will help
maintain and expand the exciting program Young Life
makes available to teenagers in the G reater Orlando area.
Young lif e provides young people of many different
backgrounds an opportunity to explore for themselves the
Christian faith and its reality in today’s world. An in­
ternational, non-denominational youth ministry, it is
currently reaching more than 750 teenagers at Winter Park,
Lake Brantley, Lake Howell and Lyman high schools. The
goal, according to area director Bob Bingham, Is to be
active in every high school in Central Florida.

A special sendee of thanksgiving a t 10 a jn . Thursday at
the Christian Science Society, held at Sweetwater
Academy, E ast Lake Brantley Drive, Longwood, will
trace the Scriptural record of God's blessings — even in
times of widespread economic challenges. The Bible
lesson-sermon, drawn from both the Old and New
Testaments.
Brief relevant selections from th e Christian Science
textbook, Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures
by Mary B aker Eddy, will also be read.

of Israel. “ There’s a passage in the
Old Testam ent, Deuteronomy
33:24," noted Sorelle, “ where
Moses, talking about the blessings of
the twelve tribes, said Asher would
dip his foot in oil. Well, on that map,
the leg of Asher started in I&gt;ebanon,
the heel of the foot was drawn in
Haifa, and the toe m Caesarea.

The Present Moment — God s Gift

Tin- R ev. M ilton K .
W h ite , p a s to r of M l.
(H iv e C o n g re g a tio n a l
C h u rc h ,
T a lla s s e e ,
A la ., ro u n d er a n d e x e ­
c u tiv e s e c re ta ry o f th e
A la b a m a A s s o c ia tio n
of
C o n g re g a tio n a l
C h r is tia n
C h u rc h e s,
w ill s p e a k th is S u n d a y
a t th e C o n g re g a tio n a l
C h r is tia n C h u rc h
at
2 till S. P a rk A v e., S a n ­
fo r d , in c o m m e m o r a ­
tio n of the c h u r c h 's
P ilg r im h e rita g e .

Christian Dramatist A t Oviedo
A special demonstration of the art of Christian drama will
be presented at the First Baptist Church of Oviedo this
Sunday, at 7 p m. Wayne Johnson, m inister of media at the
First Baptist Church of Orlando will be the guest artist. He
will present his dramatic monologue, “ Blind Bartimeus."
Johnson is one of the leading specialists in Christian
drama in the entire Southern Baptist Convention. He has
presented his ministry at Southern Baptists' national
assembly at Ridgecrest, N.C. lie has also done drama in
numerous churches, conventions, and conferences
throughout the United States.

nothing we wanted to drill. Then
they asked us to go down to the Sinai.
We stayed there a few weeks,
mapped five very promising sites
and asked for a license."
But that was in November 1977,
and a week la te r, Egyptian
President Anwar Sadat made his
historic trip to Jerusalem . "They
began the peace negotiations and
asked us to wait. We wanted for two
years, and then they gave the Sinai
back to Egypt, with the oil fields and
the promising sites.
"There's a scripture in the Bible
where God says, ‘They that bless
Israel, I will bless.’ Well, we'd tried
our best. But that seemed like the
end of our venture in Israel."
It wasn't. Two years later, a
college friend of Sorelle’s came to
him with a map of the twelve tribes

THIS SUNDAY

ORGANIST
HONORED

Mn. Doris MUam, (center) organist at the First
Baptist Church of Sanford, w as recently honored
at the church on her birthday. She was recognised
for her m any years of faithful service as church
organist. The Rev. Paul E. Murphy Jr. (left) and
David Haines, minister of m usic, presented Mrs.
Milam with a dozen red roses during the morning
worship serv ice on Nov. 7.

SUNDAY SCHOOL - »:4S
MORNING WORSHIP - 10:45
EVENING WORSHIP — 4:00
WEDNESDAY - FTH - 7:00
NURSERY PRO VID ED FOR A LL S E R V IC E S
BUS S ER V IC ES

Bill Thompson, Pastor
Ml W. 22nd St.-Sanford, Fla. 32771 - (MS) 322-3*42

�8B—Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

B L O N D IE

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by Bob M ontana

HOROSCOPE
By B E R N IC E BED E OSOL

For Sunday, November 21, 1982
YOL'R BIRTHDAY
November 21,1982
Your inborn ingenuity will
be the key to your success in
the coming year. It will point
out in novative ways to
sweeten your lifestyle and
better your security.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 221
Your material aspects are
encouraging
today.
Som ething could suddenly
develop
from a leastsuspected source which could
add to your holdings or in­
come. What lies ahead for you
in the year following your
birthday? Send $1 to AstroGraph. Box 489, Radio City
Station, N.Y. 10019. Be sure to
specify birth date. Send an
additional $2 for the NEW
A stro -G rap h Matchm aker
wheel and booklet. Reveals
romantic combinations and
compatibilities for all signs.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) Others see you as
being very personable today.
You have the ability to light
up any room you enter.
Impressions you make on new
acquaintances
w ill
be
favorable and lasting.
C A P R IC O R N (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) F o llo w your hunches
today regarding ways which
you feel w ill best serve your
self-in terests. You’ ll know­
how to get what you want
without stepping on anyone's
toes.
AQ U A RIU S (Jan. 20-Fcb.
19) Don't turn down any social
invitations today. There's a
p o s s ib ility
you'll
meet
someone interesting who
could open up a new circle of
contacts.
PIS C ES (Feb. 20-March 20)
Things could suddenly take a

turn for the better today
pertaining to an ambitious
desire which you have been
harboring. Be prepared to
react.
ARIES (March 21-April 191
A friend might talk to you
today about an idea or project
which is unique. Be attentive.
W hat's said could be of
benefit.
TAURUS (April 20-May 201
Even though this may not be a
business day for you, there's a
chance something profitable
might develop. It will be a
joint venture.
GEM INI i May 21-June 201
In a partnership situation
today your cohort could be
more on-track than you are.
Play a supportive role if his or
her way of doing things is
better,
CAN CER i June 21-July 221
Others may come to you with
their problems today because
they'll innately recognize that
if anyone can find solutions
for them, it w ill be you.
They’re right.
L E O (July 23-Aug. 22) This
w ill be a very enjoyable day if
you associate with active
friends who are young at
heart and have nothing on
their minds except having a
good time.
VIRGO i Aug. 23-Scpt. 22)
Instead of merely idling your
hours away today, occupy
yourself with things which
you feel are truly productive.
You need to keep your hands
and mind busy.
LIR RA (Sept. 23-Oet. 23)
Try to break away from your
usual routines today and seek
activities which are fun, but
different. A change of pace
w ill brighten your outlook.

For Monday, November 22, 1982

EEK &amp; M EEK

by H o w ie Schneider

tO J CO 1 UCVC THCE ?
LET fM (OUfJT THE VUAVS .

FROM AFAR

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B U G S BUNNY

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Opening load

Y

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West opened the queen of
diamonds A careless East
would simply signal comeon with the eight spot South
would duck, win the second
diamond, go after trumps
and eventually discard one
spade on dummy's fourth
club
East wasn t at all care­
less Ho plunked his king on
West's queen South couldn t
atlord to duck that one He
knew a spade would come
right back and West could
cash two spades, a diamond
and the ace of trumps So
South won and led his jack of
trumps in an effort to bam­
boozle West. Not that West
couldn't duck if he wished,
but South, like most declar­
ers. was a natural trickster
Anyway, West went right
up with h'ts ace and was now
faced with a real problem If
East had held just king and
one diamond, it was up to
West to play his jack and
then give East a ruff

Its Oswald Jarob&gt;
and James Jacobs

West decided that wasn't
the case and that hts onlv
hope was to find East with
the 10. so West led his deuce
of diamonds

Tho Lord helps those who
help themselves certainly is
an appropriate expression
(or what tho defense did
against South's heart game

Sure enough East did pro­
duce that delightful card and
led a spade to send declarer
to the never-never land

r— ;------ - -

(MUkSPAPKH KNTKHHRISF. ASSN |

YOUR
BIRTHDAY
November 22,1982
Your leadership qualities
will be substantially enhanced
this coming year and you’re
lik e ly to take on new
re s p o n sib ilitie s you were
re lu cta n t
to
handle
previously.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
You should be rather for­
tunate today materially, but
you might not handle yourself
so well in other matters,
especially when dealing with
the fam ily. New predictions
for the year following your
birthday are now ready. Send
)1 to Astro-Graph, Box 489.
R ad io C ity Station. N.Y.
10019. Be sure to specify birth
date. Send an additional 82 for
the NEW Astro-Graph Match­
maker wheel and booklet.
R e v e a ls
rom antic com ­
binations and compatibilities
for all signs.
SAG ITTAR IU S (Nov. 23Dec. 21) Today, try not to
boast about things you've yet
to accomplish. There's the
p o s s ib ility an inaccurate
schedule could cause you to
make excuses later.
C A P R IC O R N (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) Review your expenses
carefully today if you think
you have been spending too
much money. You should be
able to find ways to trim
nonessentials.
AQ U ARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) It's important to treat the
objectives you set for yourself
seriously today, or you maycoast and fall short of your
mark.
P IS C ES (Feb. 20-March 20)
Try not to concern yourself
today
about
negative
Im aginings which might

never happen Focus on your
positive goals and bring them
into being.
A R IES 'March 21-April 19)
Think your moves through
today. Don't let your im ­
pulsive urges involve you in a
situation which could cause
complications.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Ile ly more upon yourself
today
and
less upon
associates.
They
m ay
promise to do things for you
which they’ll be unable to
deliver.
G EM IN I (May 21-June 20)
Beware of tendencies today to
ratio nalize or
postpone
things where your work is
concerned. Unfinished tasks
will prove to be harder to
accomplish later.
CA N CER (June 21-July 22)
Unless you schedule your
time properly today, there's a
possibility you could become
involved in several un­
productive d iversion s and
have little to show for your
efforts.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Be
ca re fu l
about
m aking
prom ises or com m itm ents
today. You might not take
them seriously, but those
whom they're m ade w ill
consider them binding.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
When passing on instructions
today, make doubly sure to be
clear and specific. Fuzzy
d irectives could lead to
mistakes.
LIBR A (Sept. 23-Oct. 23)
You're likely to have lots of
bright ideas today, but you
might not put them into action
properly, turning a poten­
tia lly profitable situation into
a no-gainer.

G A R F IE L D
FR A N K AND ERNEST

^ LOANS

by Jim Davis

by Bob Thaves

I W

N O T ^ U P 6

w h a t

I T

X 'M

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w A N r

P o p ................

A N

IM p U L * e

5h0PPep..
in V f i

TU M BLEW EED S

this Monrrw -the co vm v plack
FEATHER GOES TO T H E T T W S
N PW PSYCH O AAJAU STJ "THAT
VAUNTEP TAUWTER0 1 HE HAUWTEP:
M m 6 *T W 0 MU IB , I N AM E YOL)

INPIAW O FIW eM W TW U

II

It

by T. K. Ryan

A N N IE

Leonard Starr
-SOMETHING MUST SURE/ A FALLEN
HAVE TRIGGEREP
BRANCH OR
THE ALARM SYSTEM SOMETHIN'/ IU
BY ACCIDENT—
GO CHECK (TOUT/

-THATS PROB'LY
IT. ALL RIGHT- r
FUNNY NO ONE
ELSE SAN IT
THOUGH

Pc

�Sunday Nov ?1 l«8I-»B

Evening H erald Sanford FI

TONIGHTS TV
7:30

SATURDAY

0 4 Fl o r i d a s w a t c h i n g
l ’ (351 BARNEY MILLER

230
tt) HOI IT S EVERYBODY S BUSI­
N ESS

2 35
IT 1171 MOVIE
uhLo-queted
' *T Q l ' i i c te i B • t na rio li
‘ ' n(i*. Fo-t P » l l r j j j i . j aga.ntt
" .i-.ifiY a»&lt;J I'tM cr.i" .ui A f m s * te

t'm help otatacTi^n hem , ,rg,n„,

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W ALT
D ISN EY
B acktea d i Ghost A college
l f rcr
ach 'D ear Jo nen g eti lad
J ed w.ih in* g n c it ol (he tamed
1 ’ i'» R ac«f*ard 'P ete' Ultm o.
*• .aa teen c u 'ie d to wanfle1 .-&gt;
m(
UKM "e perfcrrmi a gond
deed iP j't tt
' O ’ J HOOKER

3 30
r O N CAA FOOTBALL
ED 1101 TONY BROWN S JO URN AL
Sergeant Rnn^m-n T or, Bronn
P 'o b e i tn«. i j f t gt o **•’ Mack
i i ■-! ha.n -n flumat'C lme,i$ion
ti’ dcjcl on* fx u v n g on m ji
-

0
4
O'FF R ENT ST R O KES
l l |35|WILD WILO W EST
ED (101 MOVIE
Bngadocn
W 4 i Gene nelly C rd Chamce
Te h.eridi stumble upon Bi g.)
‘
i , age n the Scottilh highl' 1) eh'Ch cornel to H e tor a »«U« Jar e,er, tDO yeari

8:05

Private

Benjamin

11 (17) NCAA FO O TBALL

4 00

8:30

i)
A
SPO RTSW O RLO
Schpdu^d £6y#rigt of th# P k a
**.»»ate Champ.ofi^itu (from Mon-

O
4
S ILV E R
SPOONS
Grandfather Stratton insists that
Edward and Pick r J0m him on the
d.Hi At .i d nr i*r held in h«$ honor

t r t 'il

C a ra d i

cover ag#

o» tfi-«

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if.tinat A efob aft! Oa^CHOnih ip u f r o m F o n d O u lic a &gt;* i
* O M O V !|
Tho Return Of Tr.»•
P.nk P*nTM*f
19’ S Peter S**o*r%
C^MStOpfier Piyrnmer
Accident
prone inspector Clooseau dagui%e»%
himself as a fsefihop and a pool
repairman in order to trap an «*iu
sure d iam on d thief

H I35MNCREOIBLEHULK
ED 110) PA PER CHASE V o c e s Ol
S ile n c e

C4

ABC

O rla n d o

0 (3 5 )

lnd» prndF-rit
Orlando

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Atlanta Ga

5 |

C R Y ' O rla n d o
NBC

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O ayto n a B each
Or lando

A volunteer m lh# s ch o o l s

P r is o n
A s s is ta n c e P r o g r a m
t v'Comes emotion^* involved with
i pol.tiCai activist * ro *5 bemg held
n solitary COn, inemenf

500
II 1351 DANIEL BOONE
ED (10) WASHINGTON W EEK IN
REVIEW

5 30
O
i
LORNE GREENE S NEW
W ILDERNESS
ED (10) W ALL I1REET W EEK A
Star! f nr HfHjiitig1 Guest Barba’ &lt; A ie ijr d e r fitit v.co u-es.dent
S m ith Barney Harr it u p h am A
C o m p a r,

5:35
IJ (17) MOTORWEEK ILLUSTRAT­
ED
EVENING

6:00
f ) a i Q new s
II (35l KUNG FU
ED 110| NATURE On The Edge Ol
P a r.iiM e An riphifation o l a 300
m ne long archipelago of isla n d s in
fti»* C&lt;iriCbean ,i piace of great rial

11 117) O PEN UP

1230
0
4 MOVIE
S u '. . e '
Pab’Q Te"?! Hugo Stigi tz

3 O
MOVE
See m 0» Sh*
Runs
-9 7 '. joanne W oodea’ d
John Cor-Sidire

O r la n d o P u b l i c

(1 0 ) B

1-976.

12 35

R roadcastinq Svsfen

in a d d itio n to th f channels ftife d table^ H ion su b scrib ers m ay tune m to independent channel *4
St P e te rsb u rg by tuning to chann el I tuning to channel 11 w hich ta m e s t ports and the € hr i f ti an
B ro a d c a stin g Network ( C B N I

' ♦•ntur» industnaliiation is present1,

ed

605
l] (1T|WRESTLING

630
O 4 NBC NEWS
A O C B S NEWS

7:00
O 4 h e r e s Ri c h a r d
5 O H EEHAW
'
a MEMORIES w i t h LA W ­
RENCE WELK
n (33) THE JEFFERSONS
CD (101 NATIONAL GEO GRAPHIC
SP E CIA L Gonna E G M .irih jil
h u lls a look at the eftorti o l too
rlirectcHi dedicated indrviduaia arm
v c ie n lu li eho are working to
e n u re that the largeit ot the great
a t m does not tail victim to eitin ck « t IRI

*» o
MOVIE Hear No Evil
iPtfn ve rei Qii G erard
Bernte
Casey An independent police
detective cames out ht* own
TiqiithOfu of a m otorcyde gang sus
Cec.ted (if rr.anufacluring and difIfiPuling -illegal drugs after an
ii! tempt on hti life leaves him deaf
t
O
LO VE
B O A T On a
Th risg.y.ng Day Cf^se the crew
Ste p Vpeafc-ng to each other a Mt*
Dot &gt;s torn between two fathers
and a qifi ;ets a surprise when she
introduces her fiance to her par
enfs r*
l l (ISfO UN SM O KE

10:00
7
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FAN TASY ISLAND An
Ambitious country linger hndl himveil the tu r illr a t lio n at a lecondr,de ca(n and a divorcee Hand! lo
rwtei.fi ,i fortune il she can turn re
a hot tor Tiled errek end p i
t i (35i i n d e p e n d e n t ‘N e t w o r k
NEWS
E D l'O lO A V E A LLE N AT LARGE

10:30
11 (331 AT Th E MOVIES

Mlxrd Vrgrlublrs
OranKi' Juice

0

2:05

11:00
Q

o
) Q new s
ii (351 BENNY HILL
ED 1101 FALL AND RISE OF REGI­
NALD PERRIN
m

11:05
I] (17|NEWS

12:05
II (17) MOVIE
»19541 Anthony
Coburn

The Long Wad
Quinn
Charles

12:30
5 O MOVIE
Vendetta For The
Saint 1 196®i Roger Moore i»n

0

1:00

7 O

W EDNESDAY. NOV.:
ENTREES
Turke&gt;
Whipped I’utBlor*
Circen Branti
l ranberr&gt; Sauce
Ou-n-Raked Roll*
Sweet Potato
Cake or Pie
M ilk
K X I’ KESS
Manager'* Cholrr

7:05
7:15

7:35
11 (17) IT IS WRITTEN

5 O JOHN MCKAY
(35) MOVIE
hqi Million*
i' 19F i 1
u §1mov Maggi# S m »in
An ««&gt;con rridhei money on com.
\1

p u te rt #ht-e h it w fe c o lle c tt hi»
U,ic.fc»*t change

8:00
O 4 VOICE OF VICTORY
3 O REA HUMBARD
7 O B O B JONES
11 (351JO N N Y QUEST
FD (10l S E S A M E STREET | R ) g
13 (IT )CAR T O O N S

830
O 4 SU ND AY M ASS
i O DAY OF DISCOVERY
7 Q O R A L ROBERTS
l l (35) JOSIE AND THE P U S S Y ­
C AT S

t i l (10) EVERYDAY COOKING
WITH JACQUES PEPIN Ja c g -e i
Pep-n demon$tr.ite4 e«er* step «n
mjfcing ctucStn fi*er pale

12:30
0 4 NFL 12
3 O TO BE ANNOUNCED
7 o C h a r l i e PELL
( E (101 WOOOWRIGHT S SHOP
C u llin g Your te e th
Roy
Underhill looks at the man* diite'erd kinds of saws

O 4 THE W ORLD TOMORROW
3 O SUND AY MORNING
7 O BEST OF KIDS ARE P E O ­
PLE TOO G u e ili S u g j' Par Leon
ard Charlie Damen Char'ene Til­
ton rFat
"
1351 BU O S BUNNY ANO
FRIENDS
ED (10l MATINEE AT THE BUOU
‘ eatu 'ed
T a ir a n i Re&lt;enge
|!9 )fli itarrm g Glenn M orrii and
Eleanor Holm EJunn,mooning
a
1937 cartoon a Neaipatade ol
1939 and Chaplet 6 nl
The
Uruietsea Kingdom (I93LI

9:05
9:30

O
4 MOVIE
The -ten Daugh­
ter i O l JoMtu* C a te i 1976i John
Mclntire Jack Elam J o ih u a C a b e i
three daughter! plot to smuggle
the-r adopted lathet Oul Ol p n io n
helore he is hanged lor a murder he
didn t commit
7 O
HOLLYWOOD AND THE
ST AR S
11(35) MOVIE
K i A Great Life
1 7943t Penn, Singleton Arthur
L a ke The lo&gt; has no eornes when
Osgukood is invited to a fo&gt; hunt

10:05
11 (17) LIGHTER SIDE OF THE
NEWS

10:30
5 O B L A C K AWARENESS
7 O FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
(£) (101 MOVIE
Aiga»s |193R|
Charles Boy*&lt; ned, Lamarr An
international teeei Ih.el takes
reluge in (he eio liC Casbah

THIRTY MINUTES

11:30

4 BOBBY BOWDEN
5 O FACE THE NATION
7 Q THIS WEEK WITH DAVID
BRINKLEY

11:45

NEW TAK-A-WAY WINDOW

1.05
12 (17) MOVIE
Wa'k Don t Run
t * H 6 i C ity Grant
Samuntf
Eggar a middle-aged man tnes to
pi j* Cupid tor the Two young people
he is forced to Lye wth during the
Tokyo Olympics

1 30
7 Q PRO AND CON
EE 110) FLORIDA HOME GROW N
0
4 BASKETBALL Uni.ersdy Ot
Kentucky Wildcats »s
Russian
National learn ilrom Rupp arena m
1

ekiM gton Ky 1

5 O SPORTS SUNOAY
T O WALL STREET JO U R N AL
II 0 5 ) MOVIE
*'rsl &gt;Ou Cry
(19701 Mar* Tjtet Moore Anthcn,
Per sins News woman Bett* Roiiin
e»per«ences me anguish and trau­
ma of discovering she has hr east
cancer
© &lt;t0) MOVIE
The Sfra-»ger
H1946 1 Edward G MoDinson O rson
W elles A small.town co' ege pro­
fessor and pillar of h it corrm unit’i
lyfns out 1 be t hunted Nai- wa'
criminal

2:30
y O
MOVIE
Watch On Th#
Rhine 1 19431 Paul U.*as Belle
Uavis Nans intimidate a German
underground leader and his family
♦n (he United States

3:35
U (17) MOVIE
Once More Wilh
Feeling^ {1960) Yul Brynner Wjy
K flndA ll Afiet lo sin g his ta»#ni and
fu i wife an orch estra conductor
h ie s to regain both

4:00
O
4
MOVIE
Futurenkorld
1 1976i Pelet Fnnds B l,lh e Danner
Tea reporters dig beneath the sur­
face Of a fantasy eortd ehere
patrons pay handsomely to i.»* oul
their e.idest dreams among a popu­
lation oltobots
II |3S)INCREDIBLE HULK
CE (10) SURVIVAL Orangutani
Orphans Ol The Wad Peter Usti­
nov narrates a close-up loos at the
genii# and intelligent orangutan
and the efforts being made fo save
the spec#s from eitm clion

4:30
5 O

TO BE ANNOUNCED

12:00

5:00

4 MEET THE PRESS

7 Q TO BE ANNOUNCED

Bring Your fomiy i Friends To

Anne Bonnies Tavern
Sunday
Crab &amp; Oyster
Feast
(M e a w 25- s a c h
Roasted Oysters *10*•acti
45* ka Cram Sunidaoi l
‘ 1.00 Hamburgars For tn* k m »

2 For 1 All Hi Balls

FAMOUS M C M t C M O t t o w n

l« 01 FrtncHl&lt;e IH w y llV H
lA N FO ffD
12) U U

l Most Cocktoils

11 H Hery H U
C A I lE L » t R » y
m *m

SUNDAY
S P E C IA L

&gt;&gt;ot. Giaiui oi Tat ar Coka 45*
Imported Baor *1.00
Damastk Baar 75*
LO CATED

uOOD
ALL
DAY

5:30
3 O TO BE ANNOUNCED
i OSPORTSBEAT

5:35
■3 117) DETROIT F iQHTS b a c k
Pwjer Arnett eiam ines the plight
"f the Amer-can auto industry and
whjf factohe* m Detroit are trying
f" *" to improve the situation
EVENING

600

11 (JS) LAUREL AND HAROY
AFTERNOON

IRINGTHE FAMILY AFTER CHURCH
FOR DINNER INOUR NEW
LARGE DINING ROOM

sor of ipot'-ficif acidic# and ibciofog» at American Untyerftty Dr M T
Mehdi pfe$idcnl of the Arab-Amef •
■can Reiationi Committee

O 4 y O 7 Q NEW S
M (3$) KUNQ FU
(D (TO) NOVA Adventures Ot
Teen Age S c ie n t is t s
Som e
a ner* of this »ear s vVestinghoose
Sc-ence Tjient Search whose »nter
ests »4nqe from silkworms to SO«ar
Cel's J»e introduced

10:35
11 (17) MOVIE
Hud H963I Paul
Neysman Melryn Douglas A young
boy is lorn betaeen love lor his
hee-liying uncle and his grandlaIhet

prates-

1:00

2:00

l l (17) LOST tN SPACE

Am os PerimutTer

4 ALI A TWILIGHT p o r t r a i t
The highlights of the career ■f for­
m er h#»day w eigh t c h a m p io n
Muhammad Ait
3 O SPORTS SUNDAY
I E 1101 MAGIC OF OIL PAINTING

0

900

G uests

IN S ID E

^afiania
3SM French Ave, (Hwy. 17-92)
Sanford

6.30
0 4 NBC NEW S
3 O CB S NEWS
7 Q ABC NEW S

6:35
11 (171 NICE PEO PLE

7:00
O
4 VOYAGERSI Phineas and
jetirey tr, lo rescue President Lin­
coln from Contedetate sold'ers but
accidentally end up rn London
ehere they meet Charles Oickens
3 O « 0 MINUTES
7 O RIPLEY 9 BELIEVE IT OR
NOTI Featured unusual sports
classic cars body snarenars the
m arceii of I me and nature s odd*t e i among insects and snaas
It (35l WILD WILD WEST
( B (10) PAUL SIMON Composer
poet and enter lamer Paul Simon
i,Here j neari, nonstop contchon ol
hn gieateil h ill and current la»0f•les Itom the lower Iheahe .n
Uppe' Darby Pa

7:05

11 (17)1 DREAM OF IEANNIE

800

3 00

II (35) F R E D FLIN TSTO N E A N D
F R IEN D S

0 4 FANTASY
3 O
3U1DING LIGHT (MONWEDl
3 O TO BE A N N O U N C E D lT M U l
1 O O E N E R A L HOSPITAL
11 (351 CASPER

8:05
11 (171 MY THREE SONS

0 4 CHIPS
) O ARCHIE BUNKER 8 PLACE
7 O MATT HOUSTON
11 |35l HEALTH MATTER9
Sudden Infant Death
tD 1101 EVENING AT POPS John
Williams and the Boston Pops
Orchestra ate |0.ned by r'H unlo
,iolm.sl ilihae Perlman lor a par*
tormance ol Bruch s ViOI'h Concer­
to No 1 iRl

8 05
11 |17) N A S H V IL L E ALIVEI
G uests
G en e C o lto n
Leon
Everell Ronnie Prophet

8:30
} O GLORIA
n (35) JERRY FALW ELL

9:00

830

900
4 R ICH A R D S IM M O N S
5 O DONAHUE
' Q M O VIE

I . M O V IC l A N D ) !

n (351 LEAVE IT TO BEAVER
CD HO )SESAM E S T R E E » lR lg

9 05

5 UKDAY

11 (17) MOVIE

10:00
0

4 O lF r n t N T
IM O N -W EO . FRl)

10:05
10:30
II (13) JIM B A R K E R
0 ) HO) BUTTERFLIES

S

11:00

4 1 a NEW S
110) S N E A K PREVIEWS Neal
Gabier and Jeffrey Lyons review
C ree p in g * and Heidi s Song

11:05

• 10
TO

EAKLY
„
Bira&gt; $o &lt;

930
0
4 S O YOU THINK YO U G O T
TROUBLES
II |35l FAMILY AFFAIR

' n C H E E C H H C HO NGS
T H IN G S A R E TOUGH
ALLOVER
1
NICE D R EA M S

S T R O K E S (Rl

0

4 m a c y s t h a n k s g iv in g
DAY PARADE (THU)
3
O
MARY TYLER M O O R E
(M O N -W E D l

5
O
A L L-A M E R IC A N
THANKSGIVING DAY P A R A D E
(THU)
3 O M R M A G O O S CHRISTM AS
CAR O L(FR I)
11 (33) ANDY GRIFFITH
CD 110) ELECTRIC CO M PAN Y IR)

10:30
O
4
WHEEL OF FORTUNE
(MON-WED. FRl)
5 O CHILD S P L A Y (MON-WED)
II (35) DORIS OAY
CD 1 1013-2-1 CONTACT ( R i g

11.00
O
4 T E X A S (M O N -W EO F R l)
5 O THE PRICE IS RIGHT (MON-

WEOl
J O C B S AFTERNOON P L A Y ­
HOUSE (Fflll
7 O LOVE BOAT (R)
II (35) 35 LIVE
CD (10| OVER EASY

I S u p c r S h c i S u n d v v ic h

11:05

A** s f j r I w it h 1* qu«ir ts-r p o u n d

o f i O O p c f fuft*

ri- rf urui ptit- if htqh A tlh iu s f aibout c v i'f yfhmq

II (17)PERRY MASON

11:30

-------------------------- C O U P O N -

II (35) INDEPENDENT NETW ORK
NEW S
CD (10) POSTSCRIPTS
AFTERNOON

BUY 2
SUPER SHEFS for

$199

P ric e If
**ch
(o u p o n We-quir r d Good Thru i I 10 • J
Good A i S j nfoi cJ L o&lt;Ition Only

1200
4 SO A P WORLD
QNEW S
Q NEWS (MON-THU)
Q N CAA FOOTBALL (FRl)
(351 BIO VALLEY
110) MYSTERY (MON)
CD (10) MASTERPIECE THEATRE
(TUE)
CD (101 NATURE (WED)
CD (10) SPORTS AMERICA (THU)
CD (10) EVENING AT PO PS (FRl)

O

3
)
7
It
CD

B urgerC hef
O M E N 7 A M SUN A 20 M O N T H R U SAT
C L O S E I 0 M M SUN T M U R S 11 I* M F R I A S A I

12:05

PHONE 323-1990
ISM S. FR EN CH A V E . SANFORD

1J (17) PEOPLE NOW

fip p le U y * -a*

&amp; LY 2U u n

u r e te tt in
y &amp; te ty e c L t.
You’ll find that Captain
Appleby's reveals its special
style not only in its wellpreserved decor but also in
' food preparation. Captain
Appleby's attracts folks
who are proud of their
resistance to fads.

9:30

t l |17l NEWS

‘ A C C O R D IN '; T O (,A K P

0

9:05

10:00

T H F W O R II)

8:35

I I (17) W EEK IN REVIEW

}
a
T R A P P E K JOHN. M O
0 110) TO THE MANOR BORN

A W * / . * - ™ !N j

13 M7| THAT G iR l

0
4 DOB H O PE'S PINK PANTH­
ER THANKSGIVING OALA Bob
Hope celebrates the JOlh anniver­
sary o l Pink Panther Mms with spe­
cial guests Julie Andrews Robert
Wagner Dean M arlin Robert Pres­
ton and the Pink Panther
I
O
THE JE F F E R S O N S A
make-totiene murder begins (O
look like Ihe teal thing when
George Louise and Florence go on
a m ,n e t, writers cruise iPart 1|
7 Q
MOVIE
Escape From
Alcana; I &lt;979i Cimi Eastwood
Patrick M cGochen A hardened
convict makes elaborate plans to
break out o l the escape proof pr.son n
(D 00) MASTERPIECE THEATRE
To Serve Them All My Days
Da.Id runs into Some lough compe­
tition Item within h.s own ranks and
Irom an outsider when he become*
a candidal* lor headmaster of
Bamfyide Scnod (Pari 7iqj

I a ONE OAY AT A TIME A .try
pregnjrt Jul.e returns home Seek­
ing Ann t Support for her uncon­
ventional delivery plans (Pail 1|
M (15) JIMMY SW AGQART

*•-v*e • » • hi. «

11 (35IOREAT SPACE COASTER
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MONDAY, M IY . 22
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TUESDAY, NOV. 23
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You'll find an array of interesting item s
on the m enu. Mew m enu features
include QriHed Seasoned Shrim p and Old rash toned Barbecued
Baby B ack Ribs. It'll be love at first bite. In addition to a fine
seafood m enu, steak and chicken lovers won't be disappointed.
Each dinner entitles you to a trip to the Salad Buffet — featuring
barreta of Georgia Ice Cream (ch eese grits) and baked beans. Our
special hush puppies, fresh from the oven cinnamon roll, and
choice of potato or vegetable also to accom pany your m eal.
Enjoy We. Enjoy style. And when you visit —
by all m eans enjoy Captain Appleby's.

/ ,

»1 (17) JERRY FALWELL

11:20

o

1 Q SPO R T S SUNOAY
7 QNEW S

" !&amp;

11:30
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WEEK

ENTERTAINMENT THIS

M (M | IT S YOUR BUSINESS

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12:00

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M o n d a y t h r u F r id a y
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IOB—Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Sunday, N o v .II, I t l l

M e m o ry G a rd e n
R e q u e st D e la y e d
The Sanford Planning and Zoning Commission tabled Ihe
request of Holy Cross Episcopal Church Thursday night for
a conditional use to permit locating a ‘‘memory garden" on
its 3O-by*J0 foot lot adjacent to the church on Park Avenue.
The board tabled the matter until City Attorney William
Colbert can give a legal opinion on whether the ‘‘memory
garden" can legally be placed on the sm all lot.

The church had asked the conditional use for the in­
terment of ashes at the site which is to be landscaped and
surrounded by a wall with a freestanding cross.
In other business, the board turned down a request from
Robert and Remedious Rutledge to rezone 1317 E lm Ave.
from residential to commercial. The couple did not tell the
board how they planned to develop the property.
The site plan for a monument company to be located at
2208 W. 25th St. submitted by Cilenn McCall was approved
but with a stipulation. The stipulation was that McCall get
approval from the Sanford City Commission for his parking
plan on the properly. - DONNA ESTES

CALEN D AR
S U N D A Y, NOVEMBER 21
Seminole Brnm ellod Society, 2:30 p.m., Seminole
County Agreculturc Center auditorium. Highway 17-92,
Sanford. Sick plant clinic by Bromeliad expert Ervin J.
Wurthmann, Tampa. Open to public.
Ijingwofld Women's Club bazaar, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.,
150 Church St., Ixmgwood. Food available. Open to
public.
Cth Annual Arts &amp; Crafts Festival sponsored by
Central Florida Society for Historic Preservation, 10
a m. to 5 p.m., Historic l/jngwood. Display of
American glass in Bradlee-Mclntyre House.
M O N D AY, NOVEMBER 22
Seminole League of Civic Associations, 7:30 p.m.,
Westmontc C ivic Center, Spring Oaks Boulevard,
Altamonte Springs. Speakers: Bill Suber, county
property appraiser ami Troy Ray Jr., tax collector.
Open to public.
Free dating service for mature adults, 1 p.m.,
Deltona Public Library, 1691 Providence Blvd.

All

A boooaar

TAM PA i U P I i — Slate transportation officials are betting
$900,000 that the latest Amtrak passenger train, the Silver
Palm , will attract enough tourists and residents for its MiamiTampa route to make it a financial success.
The new rail route, which with numerous stops w ill cross the
state in five hours, is the experimental stepchild of the Florida
Department of Transportation.
Since the new route is nol one ot Am lrak's established run*,
the nationally subsidized rail service would not launch the
route unless Florida financed 45 percent of the first two year’s
operating deficits.
The $900,000 approved by the legislature earlier this year is
expected to pay the state’s share through June.
"One thing we are trying to prove is that International
tourists, especially Europeans, are Mxuulumed to taking
trains and they w ill be attracted to such a service,," said
David Blodgett, manager of the DOT'S rail program
development.
The train will depart daily from Miami at 8 a.m., and begin
its return trip from Tampa at 4:30 p.tn. In between there will
be stops at Hollywood, Fort l-auderdale, Deerfield Beach,
Delray Beach, West Palm Beach, Sebrtng, Winter Haven and
lakeland.
"We feel from the marketing studies that we and the state of
Florida have done, there is enough interest to make this go,”
said Amtruk spokeswoman Diane Elliott. "B u t it is an ex­
periment and now we will see."
The train will be equipped with the latest Am trak cars, and
will travel at speeds of up to 79 tnph. But because of the
frequent stops, it w ill still take os long as an automobile to
cross the 255 miles between Tampa and M iam i.
Amtrak will charge $38.50 for a one-way ticket, and $53 for
the roundtrip fare. While some airlines offer a special $27 one­
way Miami-Tampa fare, the standard one-way ticket costs $81.

Legal Notice
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY, FLORIDA
CASE NO.: 12 11)4 CA 01 L
ll A R N E 11 HANK OF CENTRAL
FLO R ID A
n a , a national
banking association (form erly
HARNETT BANK OF ORLANDO
WINTER PARK, N A I,
vi
THEODORE C P R O V E A U X .a k
d
THEODORE
GEORGE
PROVEAUX,
D ALLAS
B
PROVEAUX. U N IT E D STATES
OF
A M E R IC A .
SEARS.
ROEBUCK AND C O M PA N Y and
RO BERTS INSURANCE CON
TRACTORS. INC O F ORLANDO.
Defendants
NOTICEOF S A LE
Notice It hereby given that
pursuant lo Sum m ary Final
Judgment ol Foreclosure entered
m Ihe above entitled cause in the
Circuit Court ol Seminole County,
Florida. I will tell the property
situate In Sem inole County,
Florida, described as
Lot 174. W EKIVA HUNT CLUB.
FOX HUNT SECTION I, ac
cording lo Ihe P la l Ihereol.
recorded in Plat Book II. Pages 7*
through U. Public Records ol
Semmolt County, Florida,
at public sale lo the highest and
best bidder lor cash al the west
ironi door ol Ihe Seminole County
Courthouse in Sanford, Florida, at
II 00 A M on Dec 14th. 19*2
ARTHUR M B ECKW IT H JR.
Clerk ol me Circuit Court
By Cynthia Proctor
Deputy Clerk
ISEALI
Jere F Daniels, of
T U R N B U L L.
ABNER
AND
DANIELS
147 West Lyman Avenue
P 0 Bos 100
Winter Park. Florida 37790
ATTORNEYS FOR P LA IN T IFF
Tel phone No JOS *47 7WO
Publish November 71. 71, If 17
D EB IM
***(

A

» l U M •U A

OHMIJUICI
U M I A K

IN THE
SERVICE
JE FFE R Y BROWN
Navy Airm an Jeffery F Brown,
son of Cor a L and Louit Brown Sr
ot 110 M cKay Blvd . Sanford hat
completed recruit training at the
Naval Training Canter, Orlando
During the eight week training
cycle, trainee* studied general
m ilitary subjects designed to
prepare
them
tor
lurther
academic and on Ihe lob training
m one ot the Navy'* IS basic oc
cupational Held*
included in Iheir ttudie* were
seamanship, close order drill,
Naval history and tin t aid

Legal Notice
FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice I* hereby given that t am
engaged in business at 444
Alder wood Court. Winter Spring*.
Seminole County, Florida under
Ihe tictitiou* name of S O S SE
CURIIY and INVESTIGATIONS,
and lhat I Inland lo regitier said
name with Cleric ol the Circuit
Court. Seminole County, Florida in
accordance with the provisions ol
ihe Fictitious Nam* Status*. To
Wit. S e ctio n IAS Of Florida
Statute* I f 57
RON TUM . INC
RONALD A TUMMINIA
Publish November 7, 14, II, 71.
If17
DEB 71
FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice is hereby given that I am
engaged in business at 444
Alder wood Court, Winter Springs.
Seminole County, Florida under
the lic titio u s name ol S O.S
SYSTEMS OF SECURITY, and
lhat I intend to register said name
with Clerk ot the Circuit Court.
Seminole County, Florida In ec
cordance with the provisions Of Iht
Tictitiou* Name Statutes. To Wit
section BAS Of Florida Statute*
IIS7
RONALD A. TUMMINIA
Publish November 7. 14, It, 71.
Ifl7
n tm o

Legal Notice

CLASSIFIED ADS

IN T H E C I R C U IT C O U R T F O R
S E M IN O L E COUNTY, F LO R ID A
P R O B A T E DIVISIO N
F ile N u m b e r II 4II CP
D iv is io n

IN RE

ESTATE OF

Seminole

Orlando * W inter Park

3 2 2 -2 6 1 1

8 3 1 -9 9 9 3

M A R T H A M A R IE M ILL E R
Deceased
N O T I C E O F A D M IN IS T R A T IO N
H im *
54c a line
TO A L L P E R S O N S H A V I N G
J consecutive tim e* 54c a line
C L A IM S
OR
DEM ANDS
7 consecutive tim e s 4&lt;caline
A G A IN S T T H E ABO VE E S T A T E
8:00 A M. - S:30 P M
AND ALL
OTHER P ER SO N S
K1 consecutive lim e s 47c a line
MONDAY Ihru FR ID A Y
I N T E R E S T E D IN THE E S T A T E
52 00 M in im u m
SATURDAY 9 Noon
YOU
ARE
HEREBY
J L in e s M in im u m
N O T IF IE D
th a t
Ihe
ad
m in is t r a t io n o l the e sta te o t
DEADLINES
M a r t h a M a r ie M ille r, deceased.
Noon The Day Before Publication
F ile N u m b e r 87 4JI CP. is pending
in th e C ir c u it Court tor S em ino le
Sunday Noon Friday
C o un ty. F lo rid a , Probate D iv isio n ,
Monday 5:30 P M Friday
the a d d re ss ot which is S em ino le
C o u n ty C o u rth o u se , S a n lo r d ,
F lo r id a
J7771
The p e r s o n a l
re p re s e n ta tiv e ol the estate is
A id e n J N ephew whose address i*
4—Personals
4— P e rso n a ls
SSS 4th Street, Lot f, V ero Beach.
F lo r id a 32940 The nam e and
a d d re ss
of
the
p e rso n a l
• ABORTION*
I W ILL N O T B E R E S P O N S !
re p re se n ta tiv e 's attorney are set
B LE F O R A N Y D E B T S IN
1st Trim ester abortion 7 17 w k s .
fo rth below
CURRED
BY
ANYONE
IH O
V r d c a d 5170 IJ 14
A ll p ersons havinq c la im s or
O T H E R T H A N M Y S E L F AS
w ks tax) - Ved ca d 51*5
d e m a n d s ag ain st Ihe estate a re
OF N O V 19. 1983
G y n C lin ic 525
P reg n a n cy
r e q u ir e d ,
W IT H IN
THREE
C lilt o n A Scott Jr
rest m ale ste r.tira tio n , tre e
M O N T H S F R O M THE O A T E O F ,
counseling P ro fe ssio n a l c a re
T H E F IR S T P U B L IC A T IO N O F J
It you a re h a v in g d ifficu lty
s u p p o r t iv e
a tm o s p h e re
T H IS N O T IC E , lo file with th e
l&gt;nq ng a p la c e to liv e , car to
confidential
c le rk o l the above court a w ritte n
drive a iob . or so m e service
CEN TR AL F LO R ID A
sta te m e n t o l any claim or d em and {
you have need at. rea d a ll our
W O M EN SH EALTH
they m a y h a v e Each c la im m u st
wan! a d s e v e ry day
O R G A N IZ A T IO N
be In w r itin g and must indicate Ihe
N EW L O C A T IO N
b a s is to r the claim , the nam e and
1700W Colonial Dr .O rla n d o
a d d re ss o l the creditor or his agent
305 89* 0971
o r a tto rn e y, and Ihe am ount
I *00 771 7548
c la im e d It the claim is not yet
due. th e d ate when it w ill becom e
due s h a ll be slated It the c la im is
c o n lln g e n t o r unliquidated, Ihe
n a tu re ot the uncertainty shall be
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF
S ta le d l l Ihe c la im is secured, th e
THE EIGHTEENTH JUD ICIAL
s e c u rity s h a ll be described T he
C IRCU IT
IN
AN D
FOR
c la im a n t sh a ll deliver su fficien t
SEMINOLE COUNTY. FLORIDA
co pie s ot th e c la im to the c le rk to
TA
CIVIL ACTION NO 171*34 CA Of
• *
zS
en a b le Ihe c le rk to mail one copy
P
lo e a c h personal representative
S&gt;]
AM E R IF IR S T
FED ER AL
A l l perso ns Interested In th e
S A V IN G S
AND
LO AN
e state to whom a copy ot th is
A S S O C IA T I O N , a c o r p o r a t io n
N o tic e o l A d m in istratio n has been
o rg a n iie d and existing under the
m a ile d are required, W IT H IN
law s o l the U n ited States ot
T H R E E M O N TH S FRO M T H E
A m e r ic a , f o r m e r ly k n o w n as
DATE
OF
THE
F IR S T
F IR S T F E D E R A L S A V IN G S A N D
P U B L IC A T IO N
OF
T H IS
L O A N A SS O C IA T IO N ,
N O T I C E , to tile any objection*
P la in tllt,
th ey m a y h a v e that challenges th e
vs
v a lid ity ot Ihe decedent's w ill. Ihe
J A Y T E E M O L D IN G S . I N C . a
Q u a lif ic a t io n s o l Ihe p e r s o n a l
F lo r id a corporation, B A N K OF
re p re se n ta tiv e , or Ihe venue o r
M O N T R E A L , and C H R I S T I N E
ju r is d ic tio n o l the court
HARFO RD .
A L L C L A IM S , D EM AN D S. A N D
D e fe n d a n t
O B J E C T I O N S NOT SO F I L E D
Aloe Products
NOTICEOF S ALE
W ILL B E F O R E V E R B A R R E D
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G I V E N
D a le o l th e lir s t publication of
lh at on the 13th d ay ot D e cem b er.
th is N o lic e o l A d m in istration
1987. at 11 00 a m at the West
N o v e m b e r tJ. 19*7
H A V ': Y O U R fin a n c ia l dream s
F ro n t Door ol the C o urth o use ot
A id e n J Nephew
become a r e a lity w ith Aloe
S e m in o le C o u n ty . F lo r id a , a l
A s P e rs o n a l Representative
PT, no in v e stm e n t 373 7288
Santord. F lorida , th e un d ersig ne d
o l Ihe E sta te ol
C le rk w ill offer lo r s a le !a the
M a r t h a M a r ie M ille r
h iq h e s t b id d e r lo r c a s h the
D e cease d
fo llo w in g described re a l p ro p e rty
A T T O R N E Y FO R PERSO N AL
Lot 6, Block B. S W E E T W A T E R
Arts &amp; Crafts
R E P R E S E N T A T IV E
O A K S SE C T IO N 17, a c c o rd in g lo
Ja m e s O Sloan. Esquire
Ihe P la t Ihereol a s re co rd e d In
3S5 E a s t Sem oran Blvd ,
P la t Book 71. P ag es SI and S3, ol
A lta m o n te Springs. F.L 32701
A F R IC A N ART
Ihe P u b lic R ecords o l Sem inole
te le p h o n e (JOSI 1)4*111
F O R " S P E C IA L " G IF TS
County, f lor*da, less ih e W esterly
P u b lis h N o v e m b rr 14. 71. 191)
377 385)
p o r t io n d e s c rib e d a s to llo w s
D E B 73
B egin al Ihe Southwest c o rn er of
said Lot 6 and fun N o rth 78 degrees
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
T0‘ E a st along the So u therly lin e ol
N o tic e is hereby given that 1 a m
A d d itio n s &amp;
sa id Lot A, 71 075 lo st, thence run
e n g a g e d in b usin ess a l 4aa
R
em odeling
N orth 0 degrees I V 17" E a st
A ld e r wood Court. Winter Sp ring s.
p a ra lle l w ith Ihe W est lin e o l said
S e m in o le County, F lo rid a u n d er
L o t A. 39 774 le f t ; th en ce run N orth
th e lic t itio u s nam e ot U N I V E R
14 degrees 18 4 V W est 90 354 le e l
B A T M S .'k .ich e n s r io tin g block,
SAL
H EALTH
AND
HOM E
lo the Northwest c o rn er ot s a id Lot
c o n c re te , w in d o w s add a
D I S T R I B U T O R S and lhat I Intend
4.
th
en
cr
run
South
0
degrees
IV
room tre e e stim a te s 37) 846)
10 re g is te r said name with C le rk of
17"
West
along
ih
e
W
est
lin
e
ot
th e C ir c u it C o urt, S e m in o le
sa
id
Lot
4.
131
829
feet
to
the
P
e
n
t
NEW R E M O D E L R E P A IR
C o u n ty . F lo rid a in acco rd a n ce
ot Beginning
A ll types and phases ot con
w tlh th e provisio n s ol the F ic
Including
sp
e
c
ific
a
lly
,
bul
not
by
struction, S G B a lin t 37) 4837.
litio u s N a m e Statutes. To W it
w ay ot lim itation, the toliow in q
377 8M S Sta te L ice nse d
S e ctio n IAS 09 F lorida Statutes
equipm ent
1957
R ange Oven
R O N T U M . INC
Disposal
B t N l u f ’y G t M '
R O N A L D A T U M M IN IA
Dishw asher
P u b lis h N ovem ber 7. 14. 21. 78.
C e n tra l Meat and A ir
1987
T o g e th e r w ith a l l Ihe im
TO W ER S B E A U T Y SALO N
D E B 79
p r o v e m e n ls now o r h e r e a lt e r
F O R M E R L Y H a r r ie t t s Heauly
erected on ihe p ro p e rty , and all
Nook 519 E 1st S1 , 322 5742
easements, rights, app urten ances,
NOTICE UNOER FICTITIOUS
rents, royalties, m in e ra l, o il and
N A M E STATUTE
gas rights and p ro fits, w afer,
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN
w ater rights, and w a te r stack, and
B icycle R epairs
Notice i* hereby gwen thal the
a ll fixture s now o r h e re a lte r at
undersigned, pursuant to the
tached to the p rop e rty, includ ing
" F ic t it io u s
Name Statute,"
re p la c e m e n ts
and
a d d itio n s
Chapter 8SA09, Florida Statutes,
thereto
B IC Y C L E R E P A IR S
w ill register with the Clerk ot
This sale is made pursuanl lo a
F re* p ic k u p &amp; delive ry
Courts, in and lor Seminole
Summary Final Judgment in
371 1906
7107 S Fren ch Ave

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
HOURS

THE BARGAIN STORE ■$(
Ladies shoes NEW 11 up

C H I L D C A R E s p e c ia lijin q in
in fa n ts 0 6 months But w ill
ta k e
o ld e r c h ild r e n
in
tormAI'On 37 2 9 343 un lit 12

404 W l l l h v
L O S E 10 14 L B S IN 14 D A Y S
G U A R A N T E E D W IT H T H E
DOCTORS'
D IE T
53 00 A
D A Y 33) 8797

C H I L D C A R E IS yrs exp
A ffo rd a b le rates re le re n ce s
M o th er o l 7 323 7759

RATES

18—HelpWanted

12—Special Notices

6 C h ild Giro

18—He Ip Wanted

C H I L D C A r e ln m y
h o m e t 530.2 *45 B re a k ,
lu n ch A snack 373 1*16

S « ro ta ry IV
L ib r a r y S e rvic e s
S la rtin q sa la ry S197 w k ly H igh
school grad . w ith 3 yrs ex
perience Typing 65 wpm and
a b ility to use sh orth an d or
dictaphone
A p p ly Sem inole
C o u n ly
P e rso n n e l
Cour
thouse. N P a r k A v e . Santord
by noon N ov 30, 1987 Ap
plications g ive n an d accepted
Mon F r i I 39 a m t ill noon
An Equal O p p o rtu n ity E m
p loycr M F H V

Sp ring is here and It's a good
lim e to choose a new hom e
tro m
th e
pages ot
our
c la s s ifie d ads
c h il d c a r e

A lm a A v e . Lake M a ry
323 0945
I'M A M A T U R E lady who g iv e s
e x c e lle n t ca re lo c h ild re n in
m y hom e 333 8359

5— Lost &amp; Found

Radio D is p a tc h e r
Com m unication S p e c ia lis t I
Starting sa la ry 51B4 w k ly H igh
school grad . w ith t y r ra d io
d is p a tc h in g e x p e r ie n c e in
P u b lic 5alety o r L a w E n
lo rc e m e n t A p p ly S e m in o le
Counly Personnel Courthouse.
N P a rk Ave by noon N ov 29,
1992 A p p licatio n s g ive n and
accepted M onday th ru F rid a y ,
8 30 a m to noon A n E q u a l
Opportunity E m p lo y e r M F
H V.

L O S T 5 m o old pit bull, le m a le .
b r m d ie (L w h ile No c o lla r
Low! in a re a ol Orange A Y a le
Ave
349 5570 days 331 0843
eves
LO ST D O G Sm , brown trim m e d
in b la c k , lem a le about 3 y rs
old It anyone has seen or
kno w s where this dog is p le a se
c a ll 377 3957 Owner g rie v in g
R e w a rd !

A V O N N eeds y o u 1 Supplement
you r
in c o m e 1
R e t ir e e s
W e lco m e Too11 372 0459
S T O P A N D T H IN K A M I N U T E
ll
C la s s ifie d
Ads
ddn i
Aork
t h e r e w o u i d n t be a n ,

O Y S T E R Shuckers exp only
A p p ly U n c le N ic k s Liflu or and
O yste r B a r 327 7807
LE G A L SECRETARY
T em porary.
P a r t Time,
co m p le te R esu m e to Room
260. Sem m ole County
Courth o use
C A B IN E T M A K E R S E X P E R I
E N C E D L A M IN A T O R S . A S
S E M B L E R S 339 S«4J
N O E X P E R I E N C E R E Q U IR E D
lo r t h is n ig h in c o m e o p
p ortu n ity with national o il
co m p any in S A N F O R D area
R e g a r d le s s o l e x p e r ie n c e
W rite P M Read, Box 696
Dayton, O hio 45501
C U S T O M E R s e rv ic e E a rn fro m
SA hr o r m o re W ork tro m
hom e on estab lish ed telephone
p ro g ra m , Ilex hrs 331 0183
A V O N p ro d u cts needs lad eJ 1
m e n . s e ll o r b u y
On jo b
fra m in g , advancem ent
372 5910

CONSULT OUR

legal Notice

County. Florida, upon receipt ot
proof ot the publication ot this
notice, the lictitious name, to w it:
DEAN B CO.
under which we are engaged in
business at I09S0 Cedarburg Road.
SAW, Mequon, Wisconsin. 53097
That the parlies interested in
said business enterprise are as
tollows
H eritage
Trust Company,
Trustee lor Wendy Kyle Oearholl
Irrevocable Trust ol 1971
Alexander M Kaslen, Trustee
lo r Nancy Rebecca Kasten
M alorlly Trust
Alexander M Kaslen, Trustee
tor Wendy Elizabeth Kasten
M alority Trust
Alexander M Kasten. Trustee
tor Alexander Kyle Kasten
Minority Trust
Deborah Lynn Bitcholf M alority
Trust
B arbara Kathleen Bischotf
M alorlly Trust
WHHam Kyle Blscholl M ajority
Trust
Amy Ward Averill M alority
Trust
Wendy Ann Averill M aiority
Trust
Katherine Kyle Averill Minority
Trust
Deborah Lynn Bischotf Trust ol
1970
B arbara Kathleen Bischotf
Trust of 1970
Nancy R Kaslen Minority Trust
ol 1977
Wendy E Kaslen Minority Trust
of 1977
W illiam Kyle Bischotf Trust ot
1970
Alexander M. Kasten M inority
Trust ol 1977
Amy Ward Averill Trust ot 1970
Wendy Ann Averill Trust ot 1970
Katherine K Averill Trust ol
1972
Lindsey B Dearholt Trust ot
197*
Courtney B. Dearholt Trust ol
1971
Samuel T. Peter Trust of 1979
Robin Kyle Peter irrevocable
Trust ol 197*
Det*d at O rlindo. Orange
County, Florid*. November ).
1911
Publish: Nov 7, 14, II, n . If*)
D EBTS

Foreclosure en'ered in Civil Ac
lion No 12 1*2* CA 09 P now
pending in theCIrcuit Court in and
tor Seminole County, Florida
D ATED Ihl* 1119s day ol
November. 1912
(SEAL)
ARTHUR ft BECKW ITH JR
Clerk ot the Circuit Court
By Cynthia Proctor
Deputy Clerk
Publish November 71 B 71. 1987
D EB 107
NOTICEOF ACTION
T0

V

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB
To List Your Business...
Dial 322-2611 or 831-9993

C O O O v K SONS
T.ie C o n ' r a t t o r s
,c

321 0IS2

,n'

Cleaning Services
H O M E O W N E R S , relax on you r
d a y s Oil L e i us Clean your
h o m e at affordable rates C a ll
now 331 3566 P a tty ’s H o m e
P a m p e rin g Service
A M
K e lly cleaning s e rv ic e .
S p e c ia llim g in restau ra n t A
o ilie r buildings. 42) 03SI.
D U S T E R ’ S hom e or o t l lc e
c le a n in g
D a lly or w e e k ly
cle a n in g Reas rates 327 0485

M IS T E R F ix l l Jo# M c A d a m s
w ill repair your m o w e rs a l
your home C a ll 322 7055
Make
ro o m
to
sto r e
Y O U R W IN T E R I T E M S . . .
SELL
" D O N 'T
NEEDS"
FA ST W IT H A W A N T A D
Phone 372 7611 or 831 9993 and
a friendly A d V is o r w ill help
you

Major Appliance
Repair
Jo h n m e i A p p lia n c e )
We
service all m a jo r A p p lia n c e )
rA te v 31 y r P ttp frip n cp
j; j s m

E.J. THOMPSON, L.M REH
BIN D ER , W ILL B U S B Y and
F R E D CLARK.
It alive, their
Bookkeeping
unknown spouse* It married, end It
dead, their unknown heir*,
devisees, legatees end grantees,
DtGermeau Bookkeeping Ser
and against any and all other
Bookkeeping, consulting. Taxes,
persons having or claiming any
J33 7307
right, title or interest in and lo the
following described land lying and
being in Seminole County, Florida,
Brick &amp; Block
to wit:
On* hall (' i) acre square in the
StoneWork
Southwest corner ot the Northeast
&gt;«of the Northeast '* ot Section 27.
PIAZZA MASONRY
Township 70 South, R a n g e Jl East, Quality Work At Reasonable
Seminole County, Florida.
Price*. Free Estimates
YOU ARE N O T IFIED lhat an
________ Ph 349 5500_______
action to quiet title to tha above
described property has been tiled
ATLAS M A S O N R Y . Brick,
against you. the abbreviated title
chimney*, stone art, loun
ol which Is: LAN G JOHNSON,
datton wall*, slept, pallot,
Plaintllt, v E.J. THOMPSON, *t
slabs J71 15*2.
a) . Defendants. Civil Action No.
*7 7117 C A U L , In the C ircu it
Court of the Eighteenth Judicial
Carpentry
Circuit, Seminole County, Florida.
You are required to iarv* a copy
of your written defenses. II any, lo
C A R P E N T E R repairsand
the tame on W.C. Hutchison Jr., ot
additions 20 yrs exp
Hutchison S Mamela, attorney*
C a ll 327 1352
tor plaintllt, who** address is p.o
Drawer H, Santord, Florida 37771,
ALL TYPES CARPENTRY
on or before the 77th day of
Custom Built additions. Patios,
December, 19*7, and Ilia the
screen rooms, carport. Door
original with the Clerk ot the
locks, p anellin g, thinglei,
Circuit Court, Semlnola County,
retooling For last servlet,
Florida, either betort service on
call 1*5 2371, 323 *917_______
plaintiff* attorney or Immediately
thereatttr; otherwise a default
will be colored sg a in it you for tho
Ceiling F m Irwtallition
r tl let demanded In said complaint.
WITNESS my hand and the
official teal ol this Court thl* 17th CEILING F A N INSTALLATION
day ol November. A D , 1912.
Quality Work
ARTHUR H. BECKW ITH JR.
W* Do Most Anything
Clerk ol tho Circuit Court
295 9171
*77 4711
By Carrlo E. Buottntr
Deputy Clerk
W.C. Hutehlton, Jr.
Ceramic Tile
HUTCHISON * AAAMELE
P O Drawer H
Sanlord, Florida 11771
Attorney* (or plaintllt
M EIN TZ ER TILE Exp unc#
1951 New B o ld work comm B
Publish November 21, 21 l
December J, 17. 1912
res id Free estimate **9 85*2
D EB 10*

R e p a y s fa u ce t) w C
Spf nkH-rs 323 1510 32) 0706

R EP A IR S

&amp; le a k s

f asf k

dt*

pendabie service Reasonable
ra le s No iob too sm a ll L i t
P lu m b e r
fre e e s i
SA.M
Plum b*ng 349 5S57

Roofing

It y r s e x p erien ce, Licensed A
Insured
R e R o o tin g and R ep airs
S h in g les. B u ilt U p and Tile.

N u rsin g C rn t e i
B E * l Concrete I man q u a lity
o p e ra tio n patios (P 'v e w a v s
D a y s 331 7)3) Eves 327 1321
C O N C R E T E work a ll typ e s
F o o le r s , d riv e w a y s , p a d s ,
f lo o r s , p o o ls, c o m p le te o r
rc tm is h F re e est 322 7103

Firewood

CLASSIFIED ADS ARE FUN
ADS REAO &amp; USE T H EM
O FT E N YOU'LL LIK E THE
RE5ULTS.

OUR RA T E S A R E L O W E R
I t t k e v e * N u rs in g Center

?1f E Second Sf
197*10?

Oil Heaters
Cleaned
OIL H eater cle a n in g
and s c r y ic in q
Calj R a lp h 323 7183

Painting

HAN D YM AN Services Painting,
re p a irs, etc
Reasonable
guar work 425 0*51, *7Z 47*t.

Horne Improvement
SEAM LES S aluminum gutters,
cover those overhangs waluminum solf.l I fascia. (f&lt;W)
775.7*90 collect. Free *st.
P A iN T I N G a n d r e p a r pat.o and
s c r e e n p o rc h g u ilt
C a ll
a n y tim e 377 9411

Free Est. No 10b too large or
small. Lie. A Insur 121 8071.

3 2 2 -9 4 1 7
H O O F IN G Ol a ll xm as com rner
o d l A re s id e n tia l Bonded 6
insu red 373 2597 it no answer
834 85)7
Ha , , sum* , amp ng ,-qu pr* ivi1
you no longer u se1 Sell if all

w in a C la s s ifie d Aq n The
H. r.ild C a ll 17.1 7611 or 911
9991 a n d a Ir tuut;, ad «isor
w ill’ h e lp you

J E A N ’ S ROOFINI
Licensed, insured, lowes
m town 323 1844
R E R O O F IN G
c a r p e n try
ro o t
r e p a ir A p a in tin g
15 y e a rs

ex p 177 1976

i t Michael 5. Dempsey ^
E x te rio r painting, ex p erien ced ,
reliable, w o rk
A l b arg ain
prices F re e est. (M S I 3*5 31*0
24 hr. Jlne,

PAINTING and sheet rock
specialist Free Estim ate*,
quality work Financing —
ye*. 323 2*05
HEILMAN roofing, painting &amp;
repairs
Q u a lity
work,
reasonaoi*
rates
Free
estimate* Anytime 134 1490

WINDOW repair and install*
lion ,
screen
re p a ir
&amp;
r e p la c e m e n t ,
w in d o w
cleaning 321 5994.

P LU M B 'S P a in tin g lines!
material and work. 3 yr
guarantee. Licensed. *77 4032

C O L L IE R 'S Home R e p a irs
carpentry, rooting, painting,
, window repair 321 *422.

ED W EIM ER PAINTING
Quality work guaranteed
Licensed
321*743
Insured

WINDOWS, doors, carpentry.
Concrete slabs, ctramic A Hoar
III*. Minor repairs, fireplace*,
insulation Lie Bond 3711111.

JAMES ANDERSON
G. F. BOHANNON

Sanford

• CALL A N Y T IM E •

ANIMAL Haven Boarding ana
Groommg Kenneix Shady, in
6ul*t*d. tcreered. Ily prool ih
S'de. outiide runs Fans Also
AC cages We cater to your
t*tv wn 377 j ; j j

Eredd e Robinson Plumbing

Free Estim alrs on Roofing,

Cottfi I'fi* Work

Handyman
Boarding &amp; Grooming

Plum bing

Lawn Mowers

Ceramic Tile

B&amp;L ROOFING
$60 A Square Shingle
T H IS A D W O R T H
$50 O F F T O T A L JO B
( 3 0 5 ) 3 2 3 7 1 83

Built up and Shingle roof,
lice n se d and Insured.
Free estimates. 322-1936.

JAM ES E. L E E INC.

Secretariat Services
P E R S O N N E L U N L IM IT E D
P u b lic
S te n o g ra p h e rs
and
te m p o ra ry help a v ailab le
C a ll today 377 5649

P A IN T IN G A h o o f i n g
L ic tm rd . g u a ra n te e d w ork

371 5949

Tree Service
Home Repairs
C A R P E N T E R 15 yr* exp. Small
remodeling iobs, reasonable
rate* Chuck 313 9*45
I
Maintenenceot all type*
Carpentry, painting, plumbing
A electric. 373 *031

Lawn Service
* A - 1 LAWN S E R V I C E #
AAow. weed, trim, haul. Regular
Service I lime clean up. I*
hrs. best rile*. 171 *43*
SHAMROCK LANDSCAPE
MAINTENANCE
"A Cut AbovtTh* Rest"
Complete lewncart B la rtiliiin g
service. Serving in d u stria l,
commercial and residential
customers. Frte soil sampling
and estimates. 371 0574.
MOW . Edge. Trim. Renew
Landscaping
Clean ups,
Hauimg Thatching, Weed-ng,
Mulch Lmdsey'S 373 0A*t

LONGWOOD Services interior A
Exterior Painting. Done at
rtaaonebi* rate*. 131 9007

Plastering
ALL
P h ase s o* P la ste rin g
P la ste rin g re p a ir, stucco, hard
rn te .sim u la te d b ric k 321 5991

Remodeling

Remodeling Specialist

TRI County Tree Service Trim,
remove. (rash. hauling, fir*
*&lt;xxt Fr Est 327 9410
JOHN A L L E N YARD B TREE
SERVICE. We'll removt pin*
tree*. Reas, price 131 53*0
THEE B STUMP REM OVAL
Hedge* B shrub* cut back. Sell
employed Rem Tree JJ9 479I
F R E E estim ates. DeGroa
Palm , tr** trim m ing
removal Hauling, lawn can
odd iobs 373 0162

Typewriter Repair

We Handle The
Whole B a llo t Wax

B.E. Link Const.
3227029
Financing Available

Modermiing your Hornet Sell no
longer needed but useful items
with a Classified Ad

T Y P E W R IT E R R e p a lt por
tables to IBM Salectnc Guar.
Low Rales B ill 313 4117
Have some camping equipment
you no longer ustT Sell it all
with a Classified Ad &lt;n The
Herald Call 3717*11 or (31
9993 and a trlendiy ad viior
will help you

�16— Help Wanted

m

mm

M E rY JT _

mm

m

TRUST YOUR C A R E E R
W ITHTHE BEST
m anage

o r t / A is e e

stscim o

Cod ec f»on i' ip * f •&lt;n e e n et e v v .n r.
G ood a 'tt- P i &lt;pif r . r Hien*

opportu^ S

:,rn«»f *%

L A R N E n,ce p a r t iy turn,Shed
•'•Her fu rn ish e d A d ult;, no
Ptts SI9S m o SIS0 dep n s
French A v e 322 6817 or

*28 i * s ; ______
S A N tO R O
lease

If

u s Wk

u til,

I B R . no

ll

A n il t r a i n fa r Mc cnve p a r t t i m e to
qo f y 111 i m e P e r f e c t f o r r e t i r e d

person or fa m ily m an to help
income

31A—Duplexes
7 ON R I D G E W O O D
Lane,
screened p orch 1380 mo

G IR L F R IDA V

L A n E M A R Y 2 b d rm , kit appl.
tented 1285 See 339 7700
Sav On R en ta ls, Inc R e a lto r

tl
nvoice * o rk

co m p any

ton

p er

manent

RO O FER
||
M ust havesomr* e x p e rie n c e and
own tools, very busy com pany,
perm anent qu&lt;ck ra&lt;ic*
L A N D S C A P IN G
13 SO hr
E xp e rie n ce netd e d , a e p eftd a b 11 ,
p e rm a n e n t, r a is e s
O w ner
Qettmg new co n tra c ts
W ill
Ira m if w ilting

TOO MANY
TO LIST

U N F U R N I S H E D San lord L ake
M ary are a 2 b d rm I ch ild , no
pels S28S m o 7B8 3145 A ll 4

1917 FRENCH AVE
323-5176
PAT

21—Situations Wanted
M R &amp; M R S w ill clean your
home or o ffic e th o ro u g h ly at
reasonable rates W ill work
days, ndes A weekends C a ll
June at )?? 8678

24-B u sin ess Opportunities
S T E E L B u it d n g D e a le r by
M an ufactu rer Double P ro tl!
Construction A S ales Bcnc-lds
E a y i lo te ll Steel const r u t t, on
only 2 3rd pr te o l m aso n ry
f r e e e n g in e e r in g . q u o te s
Quick d e live ry M a k e $100,000
$200,000 an n u ally n your own
business C all lo r Openinq
1800) 525 9340

2&amp;—Apts. &amp; Houses
To Share
S H A R E M Y n r a ] b d rin . 3 ball,
town boos i- in W inter S p ring s
ISO w v e k U T m a ____________

P A R K A V E 2 b d rm kids, lu ll
kit ir p l 1250 Sec 339 7200
Sav O n R en tals. Inc R ealtor
7 B D R M . I B ath, w all w all
carpel Cent H A fenced yard,
kitchen appl 831 4798

37— Houses Unfurnished
1 h o w ? putty w t fi Double car
gjf^ go. and execuNw f type
honiH n D e lto n a C a ll 574 14)7
d ays,
7)6 169) e*es
and
weekends
,V IN T E R S p n nq s. 3 2 V .ds pets,
appl. 1350 See 339 7200

S A N F O R D 3 bedroom s. 5335
m o n lh ,
5300
sec
dep
References C a ll 372 Ii7 t
C A S S E L B E R R Y C o ly collage,
air. appl S375 See 339 7200
Sav On R en ta ls, Inc. R ealtor
U N F U R N I S H E D 2 Bedroom
H ouse F o r Rent
337 3858
111 G A R R ISON D R
2 B d rm . I Bath
1300 m o f’ lus Se curity
I bdrm I bath, L R &amp; r R appl ,
uoiel area S125 plus dep
337 021* or 321 1050
S O R R E N 1 0 3 2, eat m hd , trp l
Country s e ltin q . k id s, pets OK
904 383 5*48 o r 831 7845

34— M o b ile H o m e s

S A N F O R D . R e a s ' w e ekly 8.
m onthly ra le s U t il me eft SOO
Oak A d ults 1 841 788)
RO O M iwr rent w ith m a id ser
vice F a m ily a tm osp h ere 13i
wk or pay by the mo 327 9066

30-Apartments Unfurnished
S A N F O R D , lo v e ly 3 B d rm , a ir,
lurm tu re a v a ila b le 1260 m«.
H I 78*3_______________________
1 2 A N D J B D R M F ro m 32*0
Ridgewood A rm s A p l
J580
Ridgewood A ve. 323 *120
l u x u r y

a p a r t m e n t s

T a m ily A A d u lt s s e c tio n
Poolside 2 B d rm s , M aster
Cove A p is 323 1900 O pen on
weekend*
E X T R A n ice I b d rm ap t Meal A
A ir S200 m o p lu s SI SO d ip
Ce ntu ry 21
J u n e P o r iig . R e a lto r
323 1*28
M E L L O N V IL L E
1RACE
APARTM ENTS
S p r.« ous.
modern 2 bdrm 1 b ath apt ,
carpeted, kdch'en m u p p e d
C m ! H A W alk 10 town 6. take
no pels S29S 3213905.
E N JO Y ic iu n lry liv in g 7 2 B drm .
Dupie&gt; A p t s , O ly m p ic s i
pool
S h e n a n d o a h V illa g e
Open »‘ lo » J23 2920
G ENE VA C A R D EN S
i B drm ap a rtm e n ts
W D Hook up
F ro m SJOO per mo
•SOS W 23th St
322 2090

3 B D R M T R A I L E R , b u ilt on
room and b ig screened porch
1250 mo N O P E T S and fenced
in yard B ith lo area 373 4308

M a rin e r's V illa g e on L a k e A d a. I
bdrm Irom S2*5. 2 b d rm fro m
SJOO Located 17 92 lu st south
ot A irp o rt B lv d in S a n lo rd A ll
A d ults 323 8670
S A N F O R D A re a , e ffic ie n c y apt.
com pletely re m o d eled
(23J
mo C a ll I 123 35S* M o n d a y
thru F r id a y 9 * A sh lo r Sie ve

300 SQ F T O F F I C E
space on F re n c h A v e
323 7340

37-6—Rental Offices
P R IM E
O F F IC E
SPACE.
P r o v id e n c e B lv d . D e lto n a
21*4 Sq F I Can Be D ivided
With P a rk in g
D a y s 305 574
1434
E v e n in g s &amp; W eekends
904 73* 1*93
1 C O M M E R I C A L Ollice*
N ew ly re m o d eled 595 per mo
323 9090
1600 Sq II o ltlc e , 115 M ap le
Ave , S a n lo rd A v a il Immed
B roker O w ner 332 7209
O F F IC E SPA C E
I OR LEA SE
830 7723

37C-For Lease___
S P A C E F O R L e a s e at Sanlord
A irp o rt F o r storage o r sm all
business 322 4*01

LARGE private 1 bdrm eat-ln
kitchen. CHA. w w carpet,
e.ceileni location Adults list
P&lt;os sec. deposit.
Harold Hall Realty Inc
Realtor
323 5771

St K

REALTY -

M O V IN G TO T H E
SANFO RO AREA?
A sk us lo r o u r c o m p le te
R E L O C A T I O N KIT co ntain ing
in f o r m a t io n
on
ho m e s,
schools, shopping an d other
in te re stin g (acts about our
C ity !

B E A U T I F U L ! 3 BR. &gt;&lt;i B ath
Pool H om e on a lovely land
scaped corner lo ll F o rm a l D R .
F R . E g E a t in K it. CM AC.
W W C . p atio A m o tel 194.1041
D R E A M H O M E 1 4 B R . ] B ath
hom e in Ram blew ood! M an y
e i l r a s i C H A C . WWC. eq k it,
O R , scr porch, paddle Ians A
m o re! 1*5.900!
G O O D IE S G A L O R E ! 3 B R . I
B ath hom e in Wynnewood on a
Ig lan d sca p e d lot! M a n y b u ilt
ins, F R . r a l i n kit, len erd yard
A close to school A shopping)
*44.904!
M A Y F A I R V I L L A S ! 3 A I B drm .
7 B a th Condo V illa s. ne&gt;t to
M a y t a ir Country C lu b Select
your lot. Hoot plan A interior
d eco r! Q u a lity constructed by
Shoem aker lo r 147.700 A up!

C A L L A N Y T IM E

322-2420

B Y O W N E R A ttra c tiv e 3 bdrm ,
2 bath bouse, screened en
closed pool. 149.500. 700 S
L a u re l A v e , Sanlord. 323 0852
By ap p o in tm e n t only

JUNE PORZIG REALTY
REALTO R
803 S Fren ch A v e

61— Butldmq

N O q u a lify in g 2 B d rm , 1 bath
and study Larg e lot 55.800
dow n an d a s s u m e 135.000
M ortgage at #’ i% V3I5 p a y s
a ll Owner 131 5085

E X T R A larg e 2 sto ry Colonial on
1 a tre Ot O ak tre es A ll the
am enities p lb s guest apt Best
lo ca le .
SIOO.OOO
WM
M A L IC 2 0 W S K I
R EALTO R
322 7983

A L L F LO R ID A R E A L T Y
OF S A N F O R D R E A LT O R

R l a I TQ n 5•

L O G H O M E on Ige. lot. 2 story,
energy saving features. 24 It
hi ceiling , natural wood in sid e
and out. firep lace and la m
room. S74.SOO
E X C E L L E N T sandw ich an d ice
cream rrsta u ta n t. one ow ner 7
y rs open 7 days, sep a ra te
gam e room pays overhead,
very good location. B usine ss
N IC E 3 2 home in g re a t area
L a rg e
g re a t
ro o m
w ith
gorgeous rock fire p la c e and
paddle Ian Split p la n Double
lot w ith huge oaks
D R IF T W O O D V IL L A G E
L a k e M ary. F lo rid a 3174*
O ffice: 11011 131 5005
N E E D to s e ll y o u r h o u se
q u ic k ly l
We
can
o tte r
g u a ra n te e d sa le w it h in 10
days C a ll 3111*11
SAN FO RO REALTY
R EALTO R
123 5114
AII Mrs III *91* 333 43*5

M A Y F A I R location, la rg e 2 I
assum able m o rtg ag e O w n er
w ill help w ith se rio u s b u ye r,
a ll
a p p lia n c e s
in c lu d e d .
*54,900 37) 43*9

ROBBIE'S
REALTY

322-8678
T H R EE GREAT BUYS
R educed to $37,900 this 2 bdrm . 2
bath c h a rm e r w ill please you
w dh its la rg e rooms. Irpl , and
fenced ,n y ard «&gt;lh lots ot
c ilr u s G o V A o r F H A or cash
to m o rtg ag e
R E D U C E D to SIS,000Situated on
71 1 acres, th is m obile hom e
has 7 b d rm . I 1 1 b alhs Owner
fin a n c in g w ith 57500 down
R E D U C E D 10 $69,900-Se lle rs
a re m o tiv a te d 1 And you w ill be
too. when you see th is 3 o r 4
b d rm , 7 bat ti, im m a c u la te
la rg e pool hom e, w dh b uildin g
fo r la u n d ry and recre atio n
C o m p le te ly fenced
U N D E R 17 000 DO W N
3 b d rm . d oll house A ffo rd a b le
m o n t h ly
p a y m e n ts
C a ll
O w ner B ro k e r 331 1411

R EA LT O R M LS
1701 S F re n c h
Suite 4
Sanlord F la

24 HOUR

(B

322-9283

STEM PER ‘AG EN CY
A R E Y O U C R O W D E D ’ Then
you should see th is ne w ly
"d o lle d u p " 4 B d rm . 7 B ath
home in suburban L o c h A rb o r
lust a hop. skip and lu m p Irom
ihe G o ll Course R e a lis tic a lly
p rice d at S59.SOO
THIS S Q U E A K Y C L E A N and
a ttra c tiv e 3 B d rm . 7 B a th
hom e is in first c la s s condition,
and y o u 'll be su rp rise d by Ihe
e ilr a s
This " ju s t on Ihe
m a rk e t" home is o n ly 545.000

Ca '

B e U to e

Call Keyed
FOR A LL YOUR
R E A L E S T A T E NEEDS

323-3200

MODULAR P E A U T Y O N I ACRE
3 Bdrm, 2 Bath country kitchen
Zoned At with la rfa treat.
Wohlva River a ccrit. Minutes
to 1-4. Try FHA-VA, 843,1*1.
Susan L ta Realtor Associate
E v tl. 131-13#9.
S49 W. Lake Mary Blvd.
Suita ■
Lake Mary. Fla. 3374*
333 31##

b u l l e t *60

O VER li»« IQ. FT.I Lovely 4
bdrm, w - llx ll It. pool, lam ily
room, filflca, Snakiest rut.
plus utility washer B dryer.
Can't be replaced at 111,###.
A S S U M E NO Q U A JJP Y IN Q
Low down payment an this
large 1 bdrm ham* with lam ily
room, n ic tly landicapad.
lanced yard with wall, utility
shad, and much maret Only
*39,140.
&gt;13-1774

84 2 996)

CallBart
REAL ESTATE
R E A L T O R . 112 7491

KISH R E A L E S T A T E

FHA-VA 12%
WE NEED LISTINGS!
CALL US NOW! III

321-5774
3434HWV.iy.92

CoaM

Apprtiaovy

ffo r s r

*Vtlco S .itrs

IF

67A Feed
H A Y SJ 50per b ale.
75 or m or e t r e e d e l
O th er leed5 a v a i l 34 9 5194

'.e

G ood Used T V s
M ILLE R S
?A19 O r la n d o O f

.'y,in t u it t i

Buy

17 Real Estate Wanted
A t.

BUY
e q u it y
in Houses,
a p a rtm e n ts r a c a n t la n d and
a cre a g e
LUCKY
IN

V E S T M E N T S P O B o i 2500.
S a n lord E la
32771 127 47*1

47 A—Mortgages Bought
&amp; Sold
A E P A Y c a s h tor H I A Ind
mortgages
H ay Leg g L ie
Mortgage B ro k e r 788 2S9N

&amp;

M a r &lt;ne Sa cs
Hu

MO I OR
HOME:
Chevy
M/
19 m * n&gt; i le % O r e a 1 t d f ld 11 1&lt;&gt;ri
by ow ner 2707 F r e n c h Ave

N IC E C L E A N baby te rn s fo r
resa le Must tie ch e ap To*s
dons clothes )?? 9S04

C A R S s e l l fo r S 1 17 95 ( a v e r a g e
A ls o Je e p s P i c k u p s A v a i l a b l e
at lo c a l G o v f A u c t i o n s f or
D ir ec to ry c.»il 80S 687 6000 f .t
8496 C a l l r e f u n d a b l e

M a - e s om e c a m p - n q equ ip m i' ^f

i,iiy no longt-r uSi*** Si*ll I all
th a C lass•*■»*(! A d n The
M e r a i d Can 17 ; ? a i l , r a n
md a tr&gt;**ndly id v s« r
•n il help you

B ad ( fe r ti *
N o c t erf it'*
»Vt f 1n a n c e
N o C r e d 11 C h e t K E a s y T er m
N ATIO NAL A U T O S A L E S

a

if
72?0)S?

1170 S a n fo rd A v e
321 4075

F O R S a l e C a r p e n t e r tools, h a n d
tool** a l s o p o w e r tools 370 O l d
M o n r o e R d 22) 8749

F O R 5 A l E 1 9t ; M G M t d u e f . 1018
Elm A v e , Sanford
)?? 9)? 7
after 5

F 0 R t S T A 11 C o m f ? i i f t «a:l or
R e s deni«ali A u c t i o n s % A p
t x a s a ' s C al l O e l T s A u c t i o n

? F A M I L I E S 107 Reel C ourt
f u rm lu re , clothinq, m isc
Satu rd ay Sunday

)?) 56)0

78 P O N T I A C

S u n b rd

Pow rr

St eering, A u t o
T r a m . A.r
H at c h B a c k V450 Down Ca*,h
or Tradr* 339 9100 8144605

PUBLIC AUCTIO N
MON., NOV. 727 P M

C la s s ifie d ad» verve the b u yin g &amp;
s e llin g co m m u n ity eve ry day
R e a d 6 use Ihem oflen

L o t s of fu r n itu r e in c lu d in g
sever at hows Hi o Ids consigned*
a tittle bit of e v e ry th in g

G A R A G E Sale Sat Sun
L o t s o f m is c items. TV.
fu rn itu re 12VPinecresf Dr

SANFORD A U CTIO N
121) S Fren ch A v e .

______

55— Boms &amp; Accessories

______

C O M M U N IT Y
B U LLE T IN
BOARDS ARE
GREAT
C L A S S IF IE D
ADS
ARE

1979 15' 8 in L u c r a lt boat 70 hp
John son power trim, nawq,
( r o llin g
m o to r,
H a rd e e n
gal Vitnl It’ d I lit trailer w ith
ctepih tin d er 3JI 7172

even

be h e r

75— Rocreatiof«l Vehicles

D O N k T E your boat to F lo r id a
In stitu te o l TechnoloqT tor
I'K) ! t j i deduction C a ll 773
3701 e i t 2*4

DAYTONA AUTO AUCMUN
H w , 97 1 m ile w e s t ot 5p«ed
w a r D a y t o n a B e a c h w i l t hol d
a p u b li c
AUTO
AUCTION
e v e r , W e d n e s d a y a t 7 30 p m
I t s the o n l y o n e in F l o r i d a
You set t h e r e s e r v e d p e c e
Ca ll 904 2SS 8311 lo r tgrthe,
det ails
1971 S U P E R
B E E T L E New
motor n e w d u t c h , h e w paint
3210616

F O R D a? G ra n a d a t dr , 6 c yI
lu«ur * t r i m p k y (s handled
m les l ac w a rr $1995 Aus
tain W nsle O utlet, 321 1*60

M O T O R H O M E C h e v y 407 &gt;9300
* m iles G reat c o n d itio n by
owner 7702 F re n c h A v e

79 H O B I E Ca&lt; I* lull ra c in g
eq u ip g a lv tra ile r n e a r new
cond (3500 o r best otter D a y s
321 7*90, nigh ts 321 5)88

77— Junk G irs Rem oved
f O P D ollar P a id to r j u n k ft
Used cars, tru c k s ft h e a v y
equ pment 322 5WO

B O A T tra d e r tor sale
Good condition 1165
372 3431

49-&amp;—Wafer Front
Property

Auto

at ros s t h e r»vftf l o o of n.

va ns c o o p e r le ad.
t? 'a s \ s il v e r g o l d W e e k d a y s
8 4 )0 Sat 9 1 ¥ k o M o Tool
C o 918 6 H I St ) ? ) 1100

54—Gciraqo Sales

B U IL D IN G w o lt lc e A bath on
leased p ro p e rty , w security
guards, on U S 17 92 1232 sq
tt B id d ing at San lord Flea
M arket C a ll 371 6463

DeB.iry

a lu m in u m

72—Auction

46— C o n ir n e r c t a l P r o p e r ty

YOU are
f h m k t n q about
leasing a new* e a r or truck
F in d oui H O W y o u cart af am
in c r e d i b l y lo w c o st E n q a q r A
Car a n ew i d e a in teasmq
WHOSE T I M E H A S C O M E '
C a l l 3)1 2066 l o r i n f o r m a t i o n

Ha* P 9; D h B a r *

co nso les and portables E X
A M P i E Zenith 25 co lo r m
w a ln u t console O r-g o a l p r &gt;ce
over 1750, balance due 1196
&lt;ash or p*»yments i l f m onth
NO M O N E Y D O A N S t.II &lt;n
w a rra n ty C a ll J ls l Ce ntu ry
S ales 86? 5)94 da v or rui*. f r e e
hom e fr»al no obi.Qaf on

74 G R A N D P R I X
L ik e new S99 Down
339 9100, 8)4 4605
1977 P IN T O wagon, ft parts eat
Runs ro u g h P le n ty o l p a rts, to
make g oo d r u n n in g c a r. 6 good
tires, auto and 4 Speed tra n s
5400 a ll o r best O tter 32) 7169
alter 5 p m o r weekends

B U IL D IN G T H R O U G H O U T C E N T R A L F L O R ID A

T r i ___

ON YOUR LO T

nr

R EALTO R
802 S F re n c h A ve

Custom, Affordable, Luxury Homes
BBSS. ftom S30’8 10 S70’s

M LS

322-8678
IF YOU A R E looking lo r Iht
p o rted tp o t to get aw ay from
IT all co nsid er th is fish erm an '*
heaven 7 b d rm . 7 bth, elegant
ft fully lu rm sn e d double wide
mobile ho m e w targe tot on
can aton St Jo hn s R iv e r. Even
has co ve red G a /e b o ft tithing
docks 1*4,500 w ith owner
w illing to h e lp fin an ce

S0-Miscellaneous lor Sale
Carstops, sand, patio block*
Oi*l box. rock, drywell
Ready mix concrete, steps
Brownrlver rock, windowsill*
Miracle Concrete Company
»9 Elm
3275751
SMALL doghouse with
latched doot SI*
373 0573

Example ol ton model* to choo** from.

Palmbreeze — Lovely California inspired 3 bedroom,
2 bath home with double garage, cathedral ceiling,
breakfast area and 1,666 sq. ft. under roof — $43,500.

^ Hdlm ark

MINT CONDITION! 3 bdrm, IVy
bath, Cant. HA, naw carpal,
m w raaf. easy terms. *41,90#.
IM# West f ir s t Street — Sanlord. Florida 33)71 - &lt;*#*2311 *129

l

MON. - FR!.
VtM'StM

B U Y IN G A NEW
CA« OH TRUCK*
Sa v r 4 b u n d i i 1 by h iivirtq fho
facts Ii f s i !
S e n d 5) 00 lor
Dealer C os t q u o t e and Ta el s
t i l l mafcr, m o d e l vogr nam e
Address a n d p h o n e n u m b e r
F l o r i d a A u t o B r o k e r s 206 E
Is? St S u it e 206 S a n f o r d F l a
32771

Livestock Poultry

N ov 21 9 JO A m
Aren a, Sanford

Ve
s e it
repossessed
co lo r
t e l e v i s i o n s , a l l n am e b r a n d s ,

J O H N S R , , ‘ t I, il i l a g , J
a&lt;m p a r c e l s
a l s o inter,or
P a ' i e l S r . v e r a c c es s 1 11 900
*' .1 r w . l t r r J0 n- n
Ai*a
’•o n te M a l l
IJ • . JO , r
t nanc n g
no
Q u a lity ,n g
B ro k er t ; e a a j j

111 00*1
R EALTO R
Alter Mrs. 373 7**# ft 32) 715*

NOWS TH E T IM E
TO BU Y!

80—Autos for S«)!c

c l u b open performance v h o w

R t PO SSESSED CO LO W T V S

It

31) 71)2

3 BDRM, Masonry home with
reasonable down paymenl and
TERRIFIC owner financing
Priced to sell at *32,500 Call
Today!

At! 5 30 327 U * l

53—TV Radio Slereo

S P A R K U N O POOL HOME 1
bdrm with family roam, sarinhitchan. Screened parch,
manicured tamed yard. Many
Mtra*. Only ML###. Owner
financing. HA]It*

C A LL US QUICKI 1 bdrm,
lanced yard, citrus I r t t i ,
c lf M B convenient. 02.9#*.

67

, c - n m u r e p a r t s , y r r &gt; c f us e d
w a s h e r s 111 0(9'
M O O N E Y A P R ia NCES

ORE DOR v M O B I L E H O M E S
JlO tO riaedo D i
l; I 5,-JO
V A s F H A F .nancm q

43 Lots Acreaqe

.

AC P 5 P B c a m p e r !op n. a
t-res S 1000 o r t r a d e l o r (, »
equal v a l u e 322 1 117

L O V IN G home needed
tor Tiny T e r r ie r
127 1093

FAST

JUNE PORZIG REALTY

L A R G E CORNER LOTI Ibdrm.
w.lamily room, CHA tompftttiy fenced, citrus Ireei *
much morel **2,144.

1977 O t r v H O l E t 1'iC kuP *

K M ft ); 1 7SA3

C A N A R Y a n d C O C k a lie l
and cagesSSO
327 8813

A 11 SO N V A i ( H I UR Ni T UR E
t i l 115 E F IR S t 5T
111 5*2J

SEI S K V L IN t 5 h i AEST
P a l m 5p, m q i A P a l m M ar u it

19(1 S K Y L I N E
M o b ile Home
7j *S2 m
s c r e e n e n closure
porch u t i l i t y s h e d
C en tr al
heat and .s r J B d r m 2 Bath
Lot s-Ie s 50,100 Sa'e V &lt;e
Sal »00 I,n a m ing a v a i l a b l e at
80 ’ of s a le s p r «ce m e r e s t r a l e
14
• 7 P o m t 5 C a n b e seen
IJ* L e i s u r e
D'
North
Denary
ria
n
me
Mead w le a
an
th e w v er
M o bile H o m e c o m m u n t ,
Pm,is-- cu n t a c t T o m L.,, ki or
G ib t J m n n d v F *rst f ederat Ot
5em r u l e 305 J27 «747

mi if*

17 C H t V V V e in v it f r doo r i k.
w w m u s t s e l l 16 500 5Y4 3)M

42—M ob ile Homes

I B D R M 1970 IOaJ6
gnod c o n d itio n S3795
373 1730

10 000

H U N T IN G m fe m a tio n ., s , ( '

S O F A , Lovasea! A ch a ir
q r p m good cond 5275
323 tSJO

H ALCO LBERTR EALTY

S A N F O R O S a n o ra
S o u th , )
bdrtn, 2 bath, d o u b le g arag e.
C H A . S55.000 373 4450

ip door o n ly
15.000 5/4 2351

65 Pels Supplies

D I N I N G an tiq ue solid w alnut
q la s s Iront china S75 M atch.nq
buttet S75 Both *1*5 W alnut

A S S O C IA T E 5 N E E O E O

C L E A N 3 I In low n. Cpt. tir e p i .
new drapes, fence. 332,750 w
negotiable seller lin a n . Rent
opt A L S O , a v a ila b le e a rly
J t near new hosp N ew d ra p e s
*31.250. seller ho ld R en t opt
Owner A sso ciate 830 01Q7

F 0 9 D 1 -I *f h.Qfs Cub e v.m r o ll

P C k u p S1000

R E A L T O R 111 4991 p a y o r N ight

707 E IS th S t.

79 Trucks Trailers

F I L L D I R T A T O P SO*L
YELLOA SAND

52—Appliances

S A N F O R O q u a d ra p le i on 2 lots,
good condition. W alk to shops
&amp; restaurants CB B ld g Good
area SIJ.000

M a te ria ls

62—Lawn Garden

SI A —Furniture

41-B—Condominiums
For Sale
SA N O A t W O O D V i l l a s by ow ner
li todfrn
I baffY, all e l e c ,
was her, d r y e r
C H A , porch
c lu b ho u se
p o o l, m u s t sell
129.900 C a l l )?2 10)1 d a y s 32)
310? eve

H O N D A 75 3*0
N,-ed s w o r t S H
323 S I 1*

C L E A R S P A N Steel t iu ild n g s
M aiOr brands S u rp lu s 1.700 to
10 BOO sg it Irom t? *5 so tt
331 4445 9 a m to 9 p m

C a n t o . p an ts A la c k e t s
A R M Y NAVY SURPLUS
310 S a n l o r d A v e
372 5791

M LS

P LA N T LOVERSI Double sited
house B lot, w garden B pot­
ting shed, detached garage wworkshop. *41,040 323-1774.

*VC m REALTORS

7P-M otorcycles

P i A N O F o r Sale
K ro h le r A
C t i m r t j e i i with s i l e n c e r
E*
ce l lent co nd S800 323 81*6

D O V O U l i k e (’ A B T i E 5 1
N a m e b r a n d toy* ptnd g It t e r n s ’
Just caU m e l dem onstraN
t o y s a n d qiMS A i l a r e low
p r i i r d S h o p n the c o m f o r t Of
yOur h o m e
SAVE M O N E Y
a n d qe t , o u r shopp-ng do n e
F R E E H a v e a House ol L i O r d
n a r t y V - c k v P h i l i ps 13* 3170

T E R R I F I C ! 4 B H . I B a th home
on a q u ie l c u l d r la c ! C e n lra l
H eat. E a t in K d . L q lot i
m u ch m o re! 134,100!

IVt*
P ark

Ceili JJJ.I6J4

59-M u s ic a l M erchandise

J* IN C H 10 sp, ,-d b o v stu k e $50
W a ll re c lm e r c h a r
brow n
v in y l 565 177 7S?5 a ll 6

41— Houses

W E L IS T A N D S E L L
M O R E H O M ES THAN
A N Y O N E IN N O R T H
S E M IN O L E CO UN TYI

]I

V
*41 C a y S K T ^ I,
* rci»T
1*0 or cu

m

REALTORS

Rom ovP&lt; 1

M nt condition )?1 J S J 1

P O R T A B L E Dishw asher good
cond
$95
G la m o r o u s
m ita l.o n tur atket $15
323 *339

F U N S '* /

B s A&gt;*?0 P .*h*k,

380

a

MB

**.f P A V * p .i.t 11 •
re f .ire, |r*n* ? t , .

Dan .\e*sson 317
LMm

371 5*16

STENSTROM

L E A V IN G TOW N
3 BDRM
H om e. 579,900 A s s u m a b le
F H A M o rt S77.000. 322 1477

OWNER FINANCING H it
A (real buy at 131,0##. T arrlllc II Very good condition. Kitchen
appliances and drapes In­
cluded. City water and sawer.
Well and above greund
sprinkler. Deltona ewnar will
hold mortgage at btlaw
market rate. Hurry - Call
now I Deborah M tloy 44MM3
ol Susan Nawtan 111-1991
Realter Associate*.

CHULUOTA. Free utilities. I
bdrm , appl 5770 See 319 7200
Sav On Rentals, Inc. Realtor

J

IT V E R Y

REALTOR

Furnished ap a rtm e n ts tot Senior
C iM e n s 311 P a lm e tto A v e . 3
Cowan No phone c a lls

F U R N I S H E D I B d rm apt
no pets o r kid s S JJSm o
332 SftJl

E5:GVER 5HlfC~ . ; &amp; 3 ’w N«S
-T he C\ E t h a t V . M l661N
RiVE6 the cyscw b r
,
• -

p tS T O LS

* n:

L O V E L Y 7 y r old 3 b d rm , 2 bath
house in Id y llw ild e Lo ts ot
e ilr a s 584.500 173 8953

O PEN HOUSE
Saturday, Nov. 20,1-4 p.m.
1)12 IDAHO RD.. DELTONA
Call lor direcllons.

1 B D R M . Carpeted and p an elled
w alls, a ir cond. ove r 35 p re fe r
red, No c h ild re n 322*3*14

* T he p j u c e
MA&gt; NL2T FiSiC* -

clo ck

glass
Make offers

ID EA S
in v e n tio n s
new
p r o d u c t s w a n te d tor p r e s e n
l a t l o n ! o in d u s t r y Can f r e e '
800 578 *050 E v t 811

41—Houses

S P R IN G
M O U S E C LEA N IN G ?
S E L L T H O SE NO L O N G E R
N E E D E D I T E M S W IT H A
C L A S S IF IE D A D

31—Apartments Furnished

d inette and B
d o o r Arith f r a m e

Junk C a r s

?7

322 7643

37—B usiness P roperty

G A R A G E A pt I b d rm , I Path
1225 mo U n tu rn 1250 mo
turn 1st last, d am a ge 322 14*9
R eferences req A v a il D ec 1
BAM BO O COVE APTS
100E A trp o rl B lvd
• &amp; 1 B d rm s
F rom S2J0 mo
Phone 323 1310

EVE

\ Vv „

; v t &gt; ) -v-

D I N I N G rc o m Iru d trees,
w orkshop. n,ce neighborhood,
p ric e d r ig h l SJJ.500

Sav O n R en ta ls, Inc. R e a lto r

29— Rooms
jA N f OWD F u rn is h e d roo m s by
the week R easonable rates,
m a jd s e r v ic e
C a t e r in g to
w orking people U n fu rn ish e d
Apartm ents I 6 7 B ed roo m s
32) 4507 500 P a lm e tto A v e

needs

C O U N T S Y I acre with 3 7 b lock,
c a rp o rt. m o re acreage a v a il
SS9.900

321 0759

i7A-Gons&amp; Ammo

used

S anford's Sales Leader

S A N F O R D unfu rnished d u p le.
7 B drm , Bath, appl , u tility
room SJ50 mo 339 8547

D IS C O U N T F E E - T E R M S
2 W EEKS SALARY
SI 00 R E G I S T R A T IO N F E E
F R A N C H IS E S A V A I L A B L E

BEVER LY

O W N E R fin a n c in g 3 1 ',
rep,* r 534 9(30

Sunday. N o v 21 l«e;

•ip p ro * tm a tp lr 7 mo 5 p iece
U

JU N E P O R 7 I G R E A L T Y ,
R EALTO R
3?2»6'8
LO N G W O O D A re a
7 B d rm
duple. SMS m o C a ll I 473 3SS4
Monday th ru F rid a y 9 6 Ask
tor Steve

good

Ev ening Herald. Sanford. Ft

50 Miscellaneous for Sale
*5 000 B Y u S P A C E header

L ,c . R e a l E sta te Broker
7M 0 S a n lo rd Ave

See 119 7200

Sav Ori R e n tals Inc R e a lto r

O F F IC E C L E A N I N G
$3 SO hr
W ill tram evening* No hca*y
work E m p lo y e r needs sev e ra l
im m ed iately

IOb.

BATEM AN REALTY

II

IN S U R A N C E

tig h t typing

with Major Hoople
\

A A A

E M P L O Y

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

41— Houses

31 Apartments Furnished

SAT.
lOiN-StM

SUN.
1:00-5:00

1 and 2 bdrm. apts.
Clubhouse w-hMlttt club, on Site Lake
Tennis, Rscquetbell, Volleyball, Jogging Trail,
Swimming,tSelf-Cleanlng Oven, Icamakar A More.

BUILDERS, INC.

^

Call Collect (305) 327-0000

SOM I M LAClf HAVI
t i)

/

■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■
■
■

Nam e.

■

G ly _

■
i
■

Pi*«M M nd mor* Information ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ § ■ ■

------------------------------------------------- ----- P h o n e ______ _________________________

Street.

I m interested in a .

I own property «i.

State .
. bedroom . .

ZP. bath home

. and ptan to bu*) m .

Mftil to: HALLMARK BUILDERS, INC PO Box 696* Longwood.FL 32750

I
I
I

I
I

I

J- *

�12B —Evening Herald. Sanford. FI.

Sunday, Nov, 21. 1982

GOOD SUN., M O N ., TUES. &amp; WED.,

Double
manufacturers'
Coupons
PRICES GOOD
NOV. 21-24, 1982

NOVEM BER 2 1 -2 4 , 1 9 8 2 ONLY!

BRING ALL OF YOUR MANUFACTURER'S
COUPONS TO W INN-DIXIE
AND WE'LL GIVE YOU DOUBLE THE VALUE
TOWARD THE PURCHASE OF THEIR PRODUCT.
THIS O F F E R E X C L U D E S SU P ER B O N U S S P E C IA L S ,
FREE C O U P O N S &amp; R EFU N D C E R T IF IC A T E S .

ORANGE, LAKE, SEMINOLE
OSCEOLA COUNTIES ONLY!

VALUE O F THE C O U P O N S C A N N O T EXCEED THE PRICE OF TH E ITEM.
C O U P O N S OF $ 1 . 0 0 OR M OR E A R E INVALID
PRICES IN THIS ID ARE 0000 IN
THE FOllOWINQ FLORIDA COUNTIES ORLTT
0I4NGI SEMINOLE OSCIOU IIEVAIO
V01USI* LAKE CIT1US SUNTII
M il ION. INDIAN UVEA A ST LUCIE

QUANTITY RIGHTS
RESERVED
WINN-DIXIE STONES IN C
COPYRIGHT — 1982

FOR A LL OTHER COUNTIES
PLEASE SEE TOUR LOCAL NEWSPAPER.

\

y

SUPERBRAND GRADE A'

COFFEE
1-LB.
BAG

DOZ.
(T )
w

WITH ONE FILLED SUPER BONUS C ERTIFIC A TE
0 0 0 0 NOVEMBER 21-24, 1912

I

(T j)

WITH ONE FILLE D SU PER BONUS CERTIFICATE
G000 NOVEMBER 21-24, 1982

TAB. SPRITE,
MELLO YELLO OR

DEL MONTI
SLICED OR HALVES
&lt; /

T,

X H &gt; J
2-LTR.
BTL.
G )

29-or.
CAN

WITH ONE FILLE D SUPER BONUS C ERTIFIC A TE
GOOD NOVEMBER 21-24, 1982

Here’s how it works!

©

(5 )

WITH ONE F ILLE D SU PER BONUS CERTIFIC ATE
GOOD NOVEMBER 21-24, 1982

Pick up tree Super Bonus Certificates
at our checkout counters

WITH ONE F IL L E D SUPER BONUS C ER T IFIC A T E
GOOD NOVEMBER 21-24. 1982

LAND O SUNSHINE

■•=.?, « BUTTER
'

PKO.
KD

$129
|

WITH ONE F IL LE D SUPER BONUS C E R T IFIC A T E
0 0 0 0 NOVEMBER 21-24, 1982___________

You get 1 S u p e r Bonus Coupon for every
SI you spend. Psete 34 Super Bonus

(T 3 )
^

WITH ONE FIL LE D SU PER BONUS C ERTIFIC A TE
00 00 NOVEM BER 21-24, 1982

J’ jt e

'

W-D W HOLE HOG

* SAUSAGE
1-LB.
PKG.

99c

WITH ONE FIL LE O SU PER BONUS CERTIFIC ATE
GOOD NOVEM BER 21-24, 1982

When you check ou t. present one Med
Super Bonus Certificate for each Super

S A V EIt $14°

U S D A O R A D I ’A
W -0 H A N D
N O N -S A S T I D

W D BRAND
100% PURI
( 1 0 - lB PKO .)

Broadbreasted
TURKEYS

GROUND
BEEF

18 LB S .
A UP

$ jl9

IB.
USDA G R A D ! A W D BRAND
B RO ADBRCASIID (N O N B A S K O
10 TO 17 IBS I

Turkeys

$169

USDA CHOICC (10 TO 12 tB AVG |
WMOIE UNTRIMMCD R B I K S

IB

W D M A N O W H O LE M OO (MUD. MEDIUM OR HOT)

Delmonicos . . .• s3"
U SO A GRADE A ' IR O IE N W D BRAN D (4/6 II. A V O )

»RISM OR SMOKED ECONOMY

AVAILABLE AT YOUR FRIENDLY WINN-DIXIE A
BAG SAUSAGE . . . . . . . . . . !S »1» BAKING HENS.................. 59- PORK CHOPS...........
*1
COMPLETE SELECTION OF TURKEY PARTS.
full V . M E S H O R SM O KED PORK l O * « S lI C tD IN T O
• • • • • • • • • -a
N O 89‘
f lif ik
-"
W $1M GEESE. STUFFED TURKEYS. FRESH TURKEYS,
tIVIRS •...............
DUCKLINGS................... „ QQc
FROZEN
I^ SON C O R N B H ip W N PACK)
' '
FRESH
OR......................
SMOKED FULL I t e M.............................
A t f PORK
•
-------1
' SMOKED TURKEYS. SWIFT PREMIUM ,
FRY
• • • • • • • •
II 49‘ GAME HEN.................. S S *3" URN BOAST . . . . . . . . . . . . .
BUTTERBALL TURKEYS. BROILER TURKEYS,
*1”
FRESH
| S B AMP A W P V t n #
.
. . . .
W O BRAND REDl BASTED
•141 s iin n H f e A r A y
’
u . sis#
CAP0MS'
CURED HAMS- boneless
LARGE OVSTIRS............. &amp; ‘1" TURKEY BREAST .. • • • • • •
1
SUUP »MOW . . . . . .................. PRO. M” FULLY COOKED HAMS k BONELESS CANNED HAMS.

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

m sm m

SAVE 20*
Slir-RISINO.
U N B I I A C H I D OR P L A I N

Gold Medal
FLOUR

�</text>
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                    <text>M i s s F l o r id a
Pitman In Her Shining Glory In Miss America Pageant

DEANNA PITMAN
...Miss Florida

Photo by Ed Stout

By DORIS DIKTitlCII
PEOPLE Editor _
Miss Florida, Deanna Pitman, is in the'height of her shining
glory this week in Atlantic City. The bright lights and glamour
of the famous eastern metropolis that's spinning with
festivities when beauties are trumps and a few Jokers are wild
— is right up Deanna's alley.
Tlu* vivacious beauty queen who won the Miss Sanford 1982
Scholarship Pageant, the immediate forerunner of the Miss
Florida Pageant, is writing a daily diary'- That daily report is
being published in an area new spaper and Deanna said she is
being paid for it, but isn't certain of the amount. She said the
Florida Pageant people have that information. The first day
she wrote that she was frightened and homesick — pageant
litters.
But not today.
"I don't want to come home," she said between rehearsals
Thursday in the Atlantic City Convention Hall. And Miss
Florida is deeply saddened that the pageant will soon be over.
“Sure I would do it over again," she said. “ I just wish this
was not my last chance,” she remarked about the hectic week
of frustration, competition, stress and smile, Deanna, smile.
She loves every second of it.
“The press is wild over me," she extolled with exuberance.
"They picked me as their favorite. The Atlantic City paper has
run two full pages of me, and they have used a picture or a
quote of me every day."
For the safety-conscious, don’t fret. Deanna says each of the
50 contestants have at least four police officers escorting them

whenever they leave the six hotels the Miss America con­
tenders are calling home this week.
"There are guards everywhere," she said. Each contestant
also lias her own state chaperone in addition to two Miss
America pageant chaperones. One of Deanna's chaperones is
Lynn Caterson, state attorney for Atlantic County, N.J.
Deanna is safely sheltered in the luxurious Bally's Park
Place Casino Hotel with the comforts of home right at the tips
of her pink-enameled fingernails.
“My room is Just beautiful," she beams, “contemporary
furnishings decorated in orange, peach and mauve with two
king-sized beds and a sitting room. Oh. it's the room Miss
America of 1981 was supposed to stay in with a gold emblem on
the door. It’s my good luck. And the hotel sends flowers and a
basket of fruit dally. Just great!"
But keeping in tune and in step with the rigid schedule
pageant officials have established has not been all play. It's
tiring.
Miss Florida admits she has losl sleep and is restless.
She said she slept about six hours Wednesday night. But
previously, four or five hours sleep nightly was all she could
manage. "My mind is constantly going, but my body feels
dead," the beauty queen mumbled.
Thrilled over what she terms as a favorab(e interview with
the judges Wednesday, Miss Florida recalls that she was
questioned on Temik, the Haitians in South Florida and
legalized gambling in Florida
"Another question they asked me was: How would you
handle a difficult situation’?” she said

Chamber
Panel: Zoo
Should Stay
The Bankers Committee of the G reater Sanford Chamber of
Commerce endorsed the retention of the Central Florida Zoo in
Sanford.
“The zoo shoulij stay where it is," said Howard Hodges,
chairman of the Bankers Committee and president of the
Atlantic National Bank of Seminole after a committee meeting
Thursday.
The committee unanimously supported the present location
of the zoo, south of U S. 17-92. The committee’s adopted
resolution was supported by members of the Chamber’s Board
of Directors.
Hodges said he can see no reason to move the zoo to Orange
County "to aid Orlando's financially ailing Turkey lake Park.
"The zoo has been in Sanford for over 50 years and is
somewhat a beloved landmark in this area," he said.
The com m ittee’s resolution requests city and county of­
ficials in Seminole County to provide leadership and support to
retain the zoo at its present site.
Representatives of the chamber also will ask to lie included
on future agenda of these elected bodies to discuss the issue.
Members of the committee, in addition to Hodges, are: Gib
Edmonds, the chamber's board chairman and president of
First Federal Savings and 1-oan Association of Seminole;
Walter A. Gielow, retired publisher of the Evening Herald;
Wayne Doyle, publisher of the Evening Herald; Mack N.
Cleveland Jr., former state senator and Sanford attorney;
Jack Horner, chamber president; Jerry Poppel of the Tropic
Bank in Sanford; John Mercer, vice president and manager of
the Sanford office of Southeast Bank; Wayne Keeling of
Flagship Bank and Joseph Justice, m anager of the new
ComBank in Sanford. - DONNA ESTES,

3 Testify
They Burned
Jones' House
RyTENIYARROROUr.il
Herald Staff Writer
Die arson trial of ex-Sanford police officer Walter Ia?e Jones
continues today following D iursday’s testimonies by three
people who said they set fire to Jones' Goldsboro home at
Jones' request and for payment from an insurance policy he
was to collect from the fire.
In the opening day of the trial against Jones, a 15-year police
force veteran who was fired in February, Sharon Meeker,
Jones' girlfriend, testified Jones offered her $2,000 if she would
torch his 1839 Jerry Ave. home on Dec. 30, 1980.
Ms. Meeker said she agreed to burn the home so Jones could
collect money on an insurance policy which he needed to pay
off gambling debts and other bills. She added she committed
the crime out of love for Jones.
Jones, who also is slated for trial in Orange County next
week on insurance fraud charges, is accused of solicitation to
commit arson, second-degree arson and burning to defraud an
insurance company. Jones received between $30,000 and
$10,000 in insurance settlements, prosecutors said.
Ms. Meeker, who pleaded guilty .to her participation in the
arson and is serving a 10-year probation sentence, said she
solicited the help of her former roommate, Patricia Williams,
and Ms. Williams’s ex-husband, Jim m y, to burn the home.
Ms. Williams is currently serving a 10-year probation sen­
tence while Williams is serving one year in the county jail for
their participation in the arson. Both testified in the trial
Thursday, saying tliey agreed to burn \he home in exchange
for payment from Jbnes, which they said they have never
received. Williams also said he agreed to commit the crime in
an effort to win back the love of his ex-wife.
,
"Today 1 plan to call Sharon Meeker back to the witness
stand to answer a few more questions concerning the arson.
See ARSON, Page 2A

Well, how would she?
"Like I always have, with a smile and a sense of humor," she
said confidentally.
Deanna said she was excited over the evening gown com­
petition Thursday and the talent contest tonight. Talent is the
big winner across the board — 50 percent of the rating.
The winner of the evening gown competitions are not an­
nounced, so no tine know s how well Miss Pitman did last night
A Miss America Pageant official said the winners of the
three evening gown competition preliminaries are not
revealed "to add a little mystery to the pageant "
Winners announced from Thursday nigh' competition were
Miss North Carolina F.lizaDeth Gray Williams, swimsuit
competition winner, and Miss Mississippi Dianne Evans,
talent preliminary winner
Miss Florida's positive attitude is still shining through— just
like the bright lights— the glitter—the glamour
Sure, she's going to wear the Miss America crown. If you
don't believe it, ask her
Or watch for yourself Saturday night on Orlando’s Channel 2.
Her dance routine Friday night will be to the song, "I Hope I
Get It."
"1 am finally getting to do the big show," she bubbled "It's
what I've been waiting for, waiting lobe in for years."
Deanna, a college business administration major, com­
mented, "When things wind down at night, I think about how
do I face the people who helped me if I don’t win or at least
place in the top 10? I don't know. All I know is I want to show
that Florida has it together. I’m ready."

Double Tax
Peace Sought
By Officials
DONNA ESTES
Herald Staff Writer
Officials of six Seminole County cities and County
Administrator Roger Nciswender began talks Diursday
designed to bring peace by settling the many years’ war over
double taxation locally.
At the conclusion of more than two hours of intensive
discussion when city representatives and Neiswender
Jockeyed for position, final agreement was reached on a
number of issues to allow the talks to continue in earnest,
searching for agreement.
Agreement was reached to:
—Stop the clock on the 90 days the county has to respond to a
resolution from the city of Altamonte Springs accusing the
county of doubly taxing city residents for services they do not
receive, choose not to receive or receive in a lesser measure
than unincorporated area residents. The county had only 12
days left to respond to that resolution.

M trald Photo by Tom Vincent

Bengal tigers, even when totally relaxed, are crowd pleasers.

The

— Instruct Dick Kelton and Associates of Del .and to reveal
to Neiswender within the next week how it defined "real and
substantial benefits" in its study of double taxation, com­
missioned by the county’s seven cities. State law requires that
city residents receive "real and substantial" benefits from the
county tpxfcs they pay.
— Hammer out an agreement on the least controversial
items of cjouble taxation cited by the Kelton report leaving the
public works department operations and the Sheriff’s
Department until last.

Z oo

University To Proceed With Study
A decision on whether the Central Florida Zoo at Sanford
will move to Orlando's Turkey Dike Park is drawing near.
Orlando’s share of the funding for a feasibility study on
such a mpve got the Orlando Budget Review Committee’s
stamp of approval this week A letter notifying a University
of Central Florida department to proceed with the study
went into the mail Thursday to Dan Gunn, director of
Orlando's Bureau of Parks and Facilities.
Some $2,500, the zoo’s share of the $5,000 cost of the study,
is in hand from the Dr. P. Phillips Foundation, said A1
Rozon, executive director of the zoo.
Additional approval was not necessary from the Orlando
City Council because it had earlier voted yes when it
routinely approved minutes of a parks and recreation board
seeking money for the study.
Dr. Duane Davis, who heads UCF's Dick Pope Sr.
Institute of Tourism Studies, has said the study will take
three-to-four months.
The $5,000, D avis said, would pay the expenses of the
study. The zoo and Orlando are splitting the costs evenly.
Dr. Davis’ research will look at the problem of: Will the
relocation of the Central Florida Zoo from Sanford to
Turkey Lake Park be mutually beneficial for both the zoo

and Orlando?
In his proposal to the zoo and Orlando's Bureau of Parks
and Facilities, Davis said a number of conditions promoted
the discussion. "F'irst, attendance at Turkey Lake Park has
dropped substantially, causing a serious shortfall in
revenue needed to maintain the park. Second, the future
potential of the current zoo site is limited."
The proposed research, Davis says, would investigate
and make specific recommendations on the desirability of
moving the zoo to Orlando.
Meanwhile, Rozon has said the zoo is not interested in
relocating to Orlando or another site "at our expense.
"But if the city of Orlando or Orange County or Central
Florida businessmen will come up with $20 million to $30
million over the next five years, it could happen," Rozon
said.
Todd Persons, administrative aide to Orlando’s Mayor
Bill Frederick has said that at this point Orlando is not
prepared to commit large sums of money for construction
or maintenance of A zoo.
Decisions are hinging on the results of tlie feasibility
study. - DONNA ESTES.

— Set the goal of completing all discussion on the ad­
ministrative level prior to Neiswender’s leaving county
government for a job in private industry in mid-December.
— Set additional negotiating meetings for the next two
Wednesdays (Sept. 15 and 221 beginning at 1:30 p.m. each day
at Sanford City Manager W.E, "Pete" Knowles' conference
room at Sanford City Hall.
As part of these agreements, the cities reserved the right to
stop all discussion at any point where it was felt a deadlock had
been reached. If that happens, the city governing bodies are to
be notified that court action is the only recourse left to solve
the problem.
Knowles, with backup from Altamonte Springs City
Manager Jeff F.tchberger noted if the cities went to court
without determining whether room for compromise exists, the
court would likely cite their failure to exhaust all the available
remedies.
While Casselberry Mayor Owen Sheppard and Oviedo Mayor
Robert Whittier stated their concerns about whether the cities
can legally “stop the clock" on the 90 days the county had to
respond, Knowles and Etchberger quieted their fears.
Etchberger particularly stated hard facts to his colleagues.
He said a delay at this point is not of major importance. The
manager said it is already too late for the issue to be resolved
in the county's 1982-83 fiscal year budget. scheduled for
adoption before the end of the month.
He said if it is found that the cities did not have authority to
stop the clock, the available remedy would be to adopt new
resolutions and start the clock rolling again.

Girl Beaten With Hammer Dies
An autopsy of a 14-year-old Dingwood girl who
died Diursday at Orlando Regional Medical Center
just two days after she was found brutally beaten
with a hammer is slated to be performed today.
Seminole County Medical Examiner Dr. G. V.
Garay is expected to conduct the autopsy on
Katherine Suzanne Greco of 1685 Glenethel Court in
Longwood at 10 a .m. at the Central Florida
Regional Hospital in Sanford.
Seminole County sheriff's deputies discovered the
injured girl at about 7 p.m. Tuesday after the teen's
brother, Richard David, 16, notified their father,
Richard J., 37, at work und told him Katherine had
been beaten iifr the head numerous times with a

hammer.
Greco called deputies, asking them to check on
his daughter's well-being while also calling a neigh­
bor, Michael Young, and asking him to go to the
home, deputies said.
When deputies arrived at the home, they
discovered the young boy lying on the front porch,
apparently in shock, saying only, "My sister, my
sister,” deputies said. Deputies entered the home
and were met by Young who directed them to the
girl, deputies said.
The girl was taken to Florida Hospital-Orlando
and later transferred to Orlando Regional Medical
Center where doctors operated on her, deputies

said. Doctors said the girl had been struck at least
14^pr 15 times in the head with a hammer.
The operation came after a three-hour delay when
family members would not allow blood transfusions
during surgery because of their religious con­
victions as Jehovah’s Witnesses, deputies said.
However, the surgery was conducted after an
Orange County judge issued a court order allowing
the doctor tb take whatever measures necessary to
save the girl's life, deputies said.
Deputies are still investigating the beating and
added that it does not appear the attack was the
result of an attempted burglary at the home
because nothing appears to have been stolen.
— TENIYARBOROUGH

T0DAV
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�^ __?VF_!1i n9 Herald. Sanlord, FI.

F riday, Sepl. 10,1983

NATION
IN BRIEF
Reagan Lobbies Senators
In Veto O verride Battle
WASHINGTON l UPI) — (’resident Keagan lobbied
early today by telephone in a last-ditch effort to avert
an override of his veto of a "budget buster" - the $14.2
billion supplemental appropriations bill.
Tlie House voted, 301-117, Thursday 'n override the
veto. The Senate was expected to cast ballots at about
noon today and the outcome was uncertain
A two-thirds m ajority by both chambers is needed to
override a veto.
Reagan vetoed the supplemental spendjng bill Aug.
2fl, complaining it contained too much unrequested
money for social programs. It also cut into an area
Keagan wants to increase — military spending.
Although Keagan called the measure a "budget
buster," it actually is SI.3 billion less than what he had
requested from Congress.

Businessmen In Space
HOCKI’OHT, Texas (Ul*l (. — For a company that
wanted to slip in and out of space secretly, the first
success of Space Services Inc. of Houston was a
rousing, jubilant show for the 400 investors, guests and
reporters at the launch.
When Conestoga 1 roared off a small concrete launch
pad on Natagorda Island and pierced the atmosphere
Thursday, the spectators erupted in wild jubilation,
ending the year of tension that followed a 1981 attempt
scuttled when an engine exploded.
SSI officials hoped that if the 37-foot, test rocket
could place a simulated payload in space 195 miles
over the Earth, potential investors and clients would be
convinced that the company could put satellites in
space cheaper and quicker than the U S. government.

Radio M a rti Gets Support
WASHINGTON | Ul’I l —President Heagan's "Radio
Marti" project to broadcast the U S. version of Cuban
news to Cuba Is a step closer to becoming reality.
Despite warnings that Cuban leader Fidel Castro
may retaliate against U.S. broadcasters, the Senate
Foreign Relations Committee approved the project 115 Thursday, rejecting propnsaLs that the Voice of
America be used instead, and that a $7.5 million
student scholarship program be substituted for it.
The legislation, which (Hissed the House Aug. 10, nowgoes to the full Senate, The radio is named for Cuban
patriot Jose Marti, who led Cuba's war of in­
dependence from Spain.
Radio Marti is strongly opposed by the National
Association of Broadcasters, whose executive board
approved a resolution in Cancun, Mexico, Wednesday
warning of "the devastating Impact" that retaliatory
interference from Cuba would have on U.S. stations.

WEATHER
NATIONAL REPORT: A Greyhound bus slammed into a
van that skidded on a California freeway during a torrential
rainstorm, killing two people and injuring 39 others. Gulf Coast
residents warily eyed the sky as threats of a tropical storm
grew. Heavy rains sent flood waters coursing through more
than 150 homes in Tampa where residents criticized
authorities for being slow on delivery of sandbags to help
control the rise of waters from another round of expected
storms. A low-pressure area in the Gulf of Mexico continued
moving slowing to the west-northwest, threatening to become
a tropical storm a s early as today. If a storm developed,
forecasters said it would provide little time for warnings.
T (dice said a van towing a boat spun out in heavy rain on an
interstate highway near Castaic, Calif,, and crossed a center
divider, turning directly into the path of the Greyhound bus.
The bus ripped the van apart, then flipped on its side against
an uphill embankment. Two unidentified people in the van
were killed, a third was listed in serious condition. The driver
of the bus and all 38 passengers suffered injuries — most of
them minor, but at least four people were hospitalized early
today.
AREA READINGS l9 n.m.): temperature: 80; overnight
low: 75; Thursday high: 87; barometric pressure: 30M;
relative humidity: 91 percent; winds: south at 5 mph; rain:
.72; Sunrise 7:08 a.m ., sunset 7:37 p.m.
SATURDAY TIDES: DAYTONA REACH: highs, 2:36 a m.,
3:24 p.m.; lows, 8:32 u.in., 9:38 p.m.; PORT CANAVERAL:
highs, 2:28 a.m., 3:16 p.m.; tows, 8:23 a.m ., 9:29 p.m.;
HAVPORT: highs,7:00a.m., 10:31 p.m.; lows, 12:56a.m., 3:07
p.m.
BOATING FORECAST: St. Augustine to Jupiter Inlet, Out
50 Mile*: Wind easterly uround 15 knots becoming east to
southeast 10 to 15 knots this afternoon and southeast tonight
and Saturday. Seas 4 to 5 feet, wind and seas higher near
scattered showers and thunderstorms.
AREA FORECAST: Variable cloudiness today with a 50
jiercent chance of afternoon thunderstorms. Highs near 90.
Wind cast to southeast 10 to 15 mph. Tonight and Saturday
partly cloudy with a chance of afternoon and evening thun­
derstorms. Liws in the mid 70s. Highs near 90s. Light
southeast wind tonight. Itain chance 20 percent tonight and 50
percent Saturday.
EXTENDED FORECAST - Mostly cloudy Sunday through
Tuesday with scattered thundershowers. I xjws in the 70s.
Highs in the 80s.

HOSPITAL NOTES
Central Florida Regional
H ospital

Thursday
ADMISSIONS
Sanford
V ictoria Bailey
Anme l Blackvhear
fle le o C Cooper
Louise T, Crawford
-Ada Johnson
Everett L Mannon
JNillie 0 M adiion
Thomas D Nulty
‘J ohn L. W illiam *
C arry L. Fot*. Apopka
J o trp n J Bauman, Deltona

ibUTting Herald

Anna P

Hawkin*. Enlerprue
BIRTHS
Alma M. Flowers, a baby boy,
Oviedo
DISCHARGES
Sanford:
Astrid Anderson
Ida E!*!e Bennett
Larry E F ith e r
Virginia M Green
Karen E. Hale
E itra R Hanson
lo i* O M o rris
Anita D Powell
Frank W illiam s
Joan B Edwards and baby boy

tmr* &lt;8i-ias&gt;

; -Friday, September 10. 1982—Vol. 75, No. 18
I Published Dally and Sunday, cactpi Saturday by The Sanlord
' Herald. Inc.. 300 N. French Aye., Sanlord, Fla. 13331.
1 Second Class Postaga Paid at Sanlord. Florida 13331
• Homo Dotlvory: Wook, 11.00, Month, M.1S/ I Months. IM .M i
: Year. MS 00 By M a lt: Wood 11.11/ Month. IS .lS i 0 Month*.

^ U M ^ jr o o r jJ S M ^ ^

Patrols Increased In 'High Crime* Area

Crowd Interfered With Pot Bust; 8 Arrested
By TENT YARBOROUGH
Herald Staff Writer
WhaL started out as an arrest of one man on a charge of
possession of marijuana near Altamonte Springs Thursday
night ended up with the arrest of seven other people.
Seminole County sheriff’s deputies said they were in the
process of arresting Milton U-e Wilson, 20, of 117 Ixomard St.,
Altamonte Springs, (or drug possession when a crowd
gathered around them at North and Jackson streets, near
Altamonte Springs.
Wilson, who was being held in ttie county Jail on $500 bond
'oday was arrested and charged with possession of less than 20
grams of marijuana after undercover deputies said they were
approached at their vehicle by a man who tried 1o sell them a
small bag of the illegal drug. While being processed into the
jail, a second bag of marijuana was discovered, jail officials
said.
Depulies said they also arrested seven other people who
gathered during Wilson's arrest for interfering with Ihe arrest
and causing a disturbance.
Among those arrested were:
—Elishia Denise Haggins, 18, of 306 Teakwood I-ane,
Altamonte Springs, arrested on a charge of interfering with a
police officer. Bond was set at $500.
—Kyle Martin Duncan, 21, of 109 Holiday Line, Winter
Springs, disorderly conduct,$100 bond.
—Michael Dorsey Stewart, 25. of 955 Florida Ave., Oviedo,
disorderly conduct, $100 bond.
—Arthur I,eo Wilson, 24, of 606 Pine Ave., Altamonte
Springs, disorderly conduct and possession of drug
paraphernalia including a hypodermic needle, $500 bond.
—Je rry Everest Chandler, 25, of 504 Oak St., Altamonte
Springs, disorderly intoxication, $100 bond.
—Bradford Jacinto Gonzalez, 32, of 103 Albert St., Winter
Springs, obstructing a police officer, $500 bond.
—Anthony Tyrone Collier, 18, of 218 North St., Altamonte
Springs. Collier was arrested at North and Marker streets on a
charge of possession of less than 20 grams of marijuana. Bond
was set at $500.
Depulies described the area of North and Jackson streets in
ihe Granada South housing development as a "high crime
area" and through rountine, selective patrolling of the area
area" and through routine, selective patrolling of ihe area are
attempting to eliminate some of the problemsBOATING EQUIPMENT TAKEN
Thieves stole a 25 hp electric-start boat motor, gas lank, gas
line and battery from a Sanford m an’s boat, which was parked
behind his home.
Virgil Gracey, 62, of 2599 Sanford Ave., told police the boat,
valued at $2,050, was stolen between 6:30 p.m. Sept. 3 and 7:30
a.m. Tuesday,

FIRE DAMAGES CAR
A Casselberry man's car was extensively damaged by fire at
3:55 p.m. Wednesday when the blaze broke out as a result of a
damaged fuel line.
Bill Brown, 40, of 382 Francis Ave., told deputies he was
driving his car along U.S 17-92 when he discovered his car
engine was on fire. Brown called fire personnel who responded
and extinguished the blaze, deputies said.

Action Reports
* Fires
★

Coorfs
* Po/rce

DRIVING WITH DRUGS
A 24-year-old Sanford man was arrested by la k e Mary
police Thursday morning for possession of narcotics and
carry ing a concealed weapon.
Raymond Hall, P O. Box 269. Sanford, was arrested at 10 40
a.m. during a routine check for proper drivers licenses at a
roadblock on Rinehart Road in lak e Mary. Lt. Scott Fyfe said.
Fyfe said Hall was stopped in traffic at the roadblock and
turned his car around. At that point, officer Linda Payne
stopped the car and checked Hall’s license.
The check revealed Hall was driving on a suspended license
and had the wrong license plate on his car. A search of the car
uncovered a pistol under the seat, a quantity of marijuana,
hashish and unknown pills along with drug paraphernalia,
Fyfe said.
Hall was taken to the Seminole County Jail where he
remains in lieu of $5,500 bond on charges of driving while in
possession of narcotics, an illegal license plate, faulty brake
lights, and driving without a financial responsibilitystatement.

BOAT MOTOR, BATTERY MISSING
Someone broke into the boat storage lot at Carriage Cove in
Sanford and stole a Sanford woman's Mariner 60 hp electricstart outboard motor and battery between Sept. 3 and Wed­
nesday.
Pamela Wilde, 29, of 172 Windsor Court, told police the boat
motor and battery are valued at about $3,500
r u Its F, G RA n BED, MONEY TAK e n
About $101 was stolen from a Sanford woman after a man
reached Into her car, grabbed her purse, removed the cash and
fled at 10-.35 p.m. Wednesday.
Isayvette Falcon, 20, of 172 Crystal Lake Ave., told police
she was sitting in her car in the parking lot of Joe's Pool and
Variety Store when a man grabbed her purse, removal $101,
threw her purse back into the car and fled.
SEATS STOLEN FROM CAR
Someone stole two front car seats from 3 Jeep parked at the
Royal AMC parking lot in Casselberry between 4 p.m. Sept. 3
and 9:35 a.m. Wednesday.
Deputies said the two seats, valued at $525. were taken out ol
die jeep while parked at the car dealership at 555 E. Semoran
Blvd.
COUPLE FREE ON BOND
A Sanford couple is free from the Seminole County jail todayafter posting $5,000 bond each following their arrests at 4:05
a.m. Wednesday on drug-related charges.
U w is Robert Milton, 23, and his wife, Arlene Charmaine, 29,
both of 2500 Country Club Road, were arrested at their trailer
home and charged with possession of more than 20 grams of
marijuana and possession of cocaine paraphernalia, deputies
said.
Sanford police said they received a call concerning a
disturbance at the couple's home and upon their arrival, the
pair showed police a tray containing drug paraphernalia and
suspected marijuana. Police said Milton also showed them a
plastic container in the kitchen containing several bags of
suspected marijuana.
Slieriff’s deputies, who assisted in the arrest, said they have
not determined why the couple appeared so eager to showofficers the illegal drugs and paraphernalia, adding that an
investigation is continuing.

MAN FOUND GUILTY
A 34-year-old Orlando man is facing up to 6 years in jail
following his conviction in Seminole Circuit Court Wednesdayon charges of carrying a concealed firearm and culpable
negligence by exposing other people to danger.
Tyrone Bernard Jones, of 524 lakeland Ave., is to be sen­
tenced at 8:30 a.m. October 14 before Circuit Judge C. Vernon
Mize Jr
Jones was arrested April 19 after witnesses told deputies he
was the man who argued with a couple — Dwight and Daisy
Ityals — in Ihe Altamonte Springs mall March 8, attempted to
take the couple's child, then pulled a gun, hit Dyals over the
head with it, causing the gun to discharge. A bullet fragment
struck the wall of a nearby store, ricocheted and struck a
bystander in the chest, according to prosecutor Steve Plotnick.
Plotnick said Jones placed people in fear for their lives by
exhibiting the firearm.
Plotnick said Jones could face up to five years in jail on the
charge of carry ing a concealed firearm and one year in jail for
culpable negligence. He said Jones is also scheduled for
sentencing in Miami following a drug-trafficking conviction in
that city for which he could face at least three years in jail.

...Arson Trial Nears End
Continued From Page 1A
then I’ll call Dick Prnble, the Insurance agent,
who paid the claim to Jones, and Ray Pippin,
ihe county's arson in v estig ato r," said
Prosecutor Steve Brady. "After that, the state
will rest its case."
Brady said he hopes to "wrap up the case
today and send it to the jury for a verdict. Once
they have it, it's up to them, how long it will
take before the case is over," he said.
Police first learned of the possible illegal
activities after Ms. Williams confessed to the
crime, saying she “couldn't take the pressure

Icom
Bor
s

Sorenson: 'Let Labor
Take Care Of Itself'

YET ANOTHER
Ground lias been b ro k e n and construction will b e g in immediately on the
Com Ha nk-Sun ford office to he located al the corner of Commercial Street
and Park Avenue next to the Seminole County Courthouse. The bank will
include four drive-in windows and a 24-hour teller machine. This will he the
seventh Comllank location in Seminole Countv and the 17th in Central
Florida.

Iron Bridge Decision
Could Save Millions
By MICHEAL BE1IA
Herald Stall Writer
A plan to connect five area cities via pipeline
with the Iron Bridge regional treatment plant
may save customers millions of dollars.
The South Seminole and North Orange
County Wastewater Transmission Authority
Thursday voted to proceed with plans to sell
'bonds to finance construction of 26 miles of
sewage lines to connect the authority’s par­
ticipating cities with the Iron Bridge plant in
south Seminole County,
The board's strategy in waiting to issue the
bonds nine months after they were approved
was in the hope interest rates would decline.
That strategy has worked, the board's
financial advisor, Norman Pellegrini said.
Interest rates were 14 percent in December
and have dropped to around 11.5 percent,
Pellegrini said.

The 2.5 percent difference will save the
authority $250,000 annually over the 30-year
life of the bonds for a total of $7.5 million, he
said.
•
The board’s Thursday action does not
obligate the authority to issue Ihe bonds. It
sets in motion the process for the bond sale but
leaves open the option for the board to drop the
plan.
A final decision on the bond sale will come at
an unspecified later date and will be deter­
mined by market conditions, Pellegrini said.
The board cannot sell the bonds until at least
December because state law requires the
board to give 90 days notice to the member
cities.
The pipeline will connect the plant, located
near Oviedo and operated by Orlando, with
Casselberry, Winter Park, Maitland and
Seminole County's sewage systems.

liike Mary Mayor Walter Sorenson has
joined a national organization which ad­
vocates repeal of the Davis-Bacnn Act.
The Like Mary City Council in August
unanimously authorized the mayor's mem­
bership in the Committee of Local Officials To
Repeal Davis-Bacon.
Sorenson said city fathers believe the law,
requiring local governments to pay federallyset prevailing wages on all construction
projects financed by federal funds, causes
"unreasonable and unwarranted expense."
Admitting L ike Mary hasn’t been inundated
with federally-financed projects, Sorenson

office said the two men smuggled the uncut,
slightly flawed money from Ihe U.S. Treasuryoffice under their clothing while other em­
ployees were out to lunch. Officials are unsure
just when the thefts occurred. Kroesser and
Harmon were security officers at the U.S.
Treasury Bureau of Printing and Engraving in
Washington, D.C.
Police first learned of the two m en's illegal
activities from Miss Queen who turned the
men in after Kroesser became angry and left
her after she discovered the uncut sheets of
money in their home.
Prosecutors In the case said that aboui
$127,000 of (he suspected $500,000 stolen during
the m oney-sm uggling operation was
recovered. - TEN1 YARBOROUGH

said nevertheless that it is "one of those things
the federal government ought to stay out of,
"In this day and age, I don't think labor has
demonstrated an inability to take care of it­
self. Libor doesn't need the feds anymore,"
Sorenson said.
The committee, based in Alexandria, Va.,
claims the Davis-Bacon Act is a depression
era law intended to prevent out-of-area con­
tractors from undercutting local wage scales
on federally financed construction.
“ As it lias worked in practice, it lias had just
the opposite ol its intended effect," the
committee said.

Swiss Reject Polish Plea
refused an extradition request by Poland’s
military rulers and said four gunmen will go
on trial for seizing the Polish Embassy and
'hreatening to blow it up today with their
hostages.
"Possibly they would prefer being in
Switzerland than in some countries where
freedom does not have the same value. But
they will be brought to court, they will be
punished. Our penal law never exempts this
kind of crime,” Justice Minister Kurt Furgler
said Thursday.
Hours earlier, red-bereted police com­
mandos charged into the embassy in the Swiss
capital under a hail of stun grenades and tear
gas to rescue the five remaining hostages and
capture the four gunmen. They first blew open
the door with a remote-controlled device

The whole operation carried out with clot
work precision took only 12 minutes and no o
was injured. However, some of the hostag
told Polish journalists the gunmen, who c
manded an end to martial law in Poland, be
them and threatened them with executi
during their captivity.
At a press conference at the end of the :
hour siege, Furgler only identified one of t
four gunmen and indicated Switzerland wot
not satisfy an extradition request, noli
Poland was not a signatory to a Weste
European agreement on the prosecution
terrorists.
He said the leader of the gunmen, Flori
Kruszyk, was a "fanatic driven by politic
desires" and could not be equated with t
cause of the suspended Polish union Solidari

FALL CLEARANCE SALE
g j ! FALL VEGETABLE PU N TS
K
READY TO GROW!
T a m il*. P taptr. Cucumbtr.
I f f Plant * Many Mari

M oney Smugglers To Be Sentenced
Two Sanford men convicted of stealing over
$500,000 in uncut U.S. currency could face up to
20 years in prison and $20,000 in fines each
during their scheduled sentencing in U.S.
District Court in Orlando loday.
Kenneth Kroesser, 33, of C-5 Sandlewood
Villas, 110 Airport Blvd., and Roger Harmon,
48, of 300 Art Lane, are scheduled to be sen­
tenced by District Judge John Reed, Jr.
Kroesser and Harmon were arrested April
28 after Kroesser's girlfriend, Cynthia Lee
Queen, 23, informed police of their crime. The
two men were found guilty of retaining and
concealing government properly Aug. 16 and
have been free on $150,000 bond each while
awaiting sentencing.
A spokesman for the U.S. District Attorney’s

anymore of knowing she had done it."
Ms. Williams testified she heard Jones tell
Ms. Meeker, "When it’s burned. I don't want to
know anything about it, I just want to he away
from it."
Ms. Williams added that on the evening of
Dec. 30, 1980, Ms. Meeker, Williams and she
went to the Goldsboro home and white Ms.
Meeker circled the area in the car, she and
Williams entered the home, Williams set the
blaze, and they were picked up by Ms. Meeker,
who drove to the St. Johns River where they
got rid of items used in the arson.

4
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FLORIDA
IN BRIEF
Murder Suspecfs Returned ;
W ill Face Alachua Jury
GAINESVUJJ-! i UP 11 — Three youths described as
polite, boyish-looking male prostitutes face an Alachua
County grand jury on charges of sadistically mur­
dering the University of Florida’s “ junk food
professor."
The three were arrested over a 24-hour period in New
York Monday and Tuesday and flown hack to
Gainesville by three detectives Thursday night.
Detective Dennis Stinson said they would be taken
before a grand jury on charges they murdered Howard
Appledorf, 41, who was dubbed the "junk food
professor " for championing fare served at fast food
franchises.
Appledorf’s bound and gagged body was found
Sunday in his Gainesville apartment, where the word
"m urder” spelled forward and backward had been
scrawled on the wall with food.

Battling The Bid Riggers
TALLAHASSEE I UPI) — Attorney General Jun
Smith, calling bid rigging in Florida an epidemic, has
filed a series of anti-trust suits against more than a
dozen construction companies and their officials in the
Tampa and West Palm Beach areas.
Smith, who would not reveal the specific details of
the cases, said the value of the contracts involved in
the suits is about $330 million. It is uncertain how much
the state will be able to recover, he said, but it should
be in the “multi-million-dollar range.”
His office is reviewing Department of Tran­
sportation highway construction contracts of more
than $3.5 billion over the past seven years for more
evidence of bid-rigging.

D rinking Age M ay Rise
ORIJVNDO (UPI) — Insurance Commissioner Bill
Gunter says a higher drinking age is necessary
because so many young people are involved in alcoholtriggered traffic accidents.
Gunter said Thursday he will ask the legislature
during the 1983 session beginning next spring to raise
the drinking age from '19 to 21.
Young people between 16 and 24 accounted for 35
percent of last year’s 25,000 drinking-related motor
vehicle accidents in the United States.

WASHINGTON . U1’! ■ Wholesale price inflation grew al a
.aderate 7.5 per ,. annual rate in August, restrained by a
slowdown in gasoline price hikes and food prices, the labor
Department said today.
The Producer Price Index for August moved up 0.6 percent
Spreading the tigure over 12 months revealed a slight increase
over July’s annual rate of 7.1 percent, owing to adjustments for
seasonal variations.
Tlte two major influences, food and fuel, moved in opposite
directions from July to August, canceling out the changes.
Modest gasoline price increases reflected a substantial
slowdown, as the continued surplus nf oil in world markets
once again worked its way back to dealers. Gasoline prices
were up only 1.3 percent in the August report, compared to 7.9
percent in July.
But food prices, which had gone down 1.5 percent in July, the
most in more than six years, climbed again in August but only
slightly, showing a 0.1 percent gain, the department said.
The August Producer Price Index for finished goods was
282.4, equivalent to a price of $282.40 for the government’s
sample "market basket" of wholesale goods and services that
cost $100 in 1967.
Through August of this year, wholesale prices have climbed
only 3.7 percent, compared to 9.2 percent for all of last year.
Many leading private analysts predict tlie year will end with a
rate of between 4 percent to 5.5 percent, which would be the
lowest annual rate since 1976.

Within the index were signs that demand has not firmed up
as could be expected during an economic recovery. Sensitive
raw m aterials prices, the first to reflect changes in basic
trends, declined 0.6 percent in August, the third consecutive
month of declines in that category, the department said.
Alt figures were adjusted to compensate for routine seasonal
price variations.

Small Businessmen Say
Reaganomics Not Working
MIAMI 4U P I)—A majority of small business executives
surveyed in south Florida say they don't think President
Reagan's economics are working for them, but they expect the
recession to be over in a year.
Out of 116 replies, 77 percent of south Florida's small
businessmen—those with annual sales of $30 million or le s s said they expect Ihe recession to last no more than 12 months.
But a majority also said they expect their earnings to be off
and plan no capital expenditures over the next two years and
plan to reduce their work forces.
In reply to the question: "Is the President’s economic
program working for you," only 42 percent of the south Florida
small business executives answered “ yes."
The affirmative responses from Texas, Southern California
and Oklahoma responses ranged from 55 to 59 percent. In
Boston, it was only 19 percent.

'Doonesbury's* Trudeau Taking A Break
FAIRWAY, Kan. (U P I&gt; Garry Trudeau is suspending
his Pulitizer Prize-winning
“ Doonesbury" comic strip to
rest and provide unrecon­
structed hippie Zonker Harris
and the other residents of
Walden Puddle Commune the
chance to evolve Into the
"w orld of grown-up con­
cerns."
T rudeau, who com bines
editorial-page gravity with
funny-paper
levity
in
"D oonesbury," has a n ­
nounced an unprecedented
hiatus from cartooning —

perhaps for as long as 20
months.
Universal Press Syndicate
President John P. McMeel
said "Doonesbury" would be
suspended in more than 700
new spapers, including the
Evening Herald, beginning
Jan. 2, 1983. The specific
length of Trudeau's leave was
not announced but be told the
syndicate he would likely
resume the feature by the fall
of 1984.
"This is simply a lull in the
action," he said in a prepared
statement. "It is not r*»neat

not, a mid-life crisis.
"I need a breather," said
Trudeau, 34, a New York City
resident and husband of
NBC’s "Today Show" host
Jane Pauley. “ Investigative
cartooning is a young man's
gam e. Since the industry
frowns on vacations, I'll be
claiming a medical leave."
Trudeau, who refuses to
grant interview s, said he
considered the time off as a
reprieve from the pressure of
writing a daily topical comic
strip. He often works only two
weeks ahead of deadline.

Arab Leaders Reach
M ideast Peace Plan
FEZ, Morocco (UPI) — Putting aside their dif­
ferences, Arab kings and presidents issued an eightpoint Middle East peace plan calling for creation of a
Palestinian state and Israeli withdrawal from the
occupied West Bank and Gaza.
After four days of deliberations, the 12th Arab
league summit ended late Thursday compromising on
a Saudi Arabian plan modified to give the Soviet Union
a role in future peace moves.
The plan specifically mentioned a Palestinian state
but did not mention Israel, although it appeared to
implicitly recognize the Jewish state’s right to exist.
President Reagan’s recent Middle East initiative,
which called for Palestinian autonomy in the Israelioccupied Arab territories in conjunction with Jordan,
was not mentioned.

U.S. M arines Leave Beirut

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 10
Bingo for Muscular Dystrophy, 7-11 p.m., Church o(
the Nativity, County Road 427, l-ake Mary. All
proceeds to MDA.
Sunbelt Daylily Chapter, 3 p.m., DeBary Community
Center, 38 Shell Road, DeBary. Program and plant
auction.
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 11
Orphan Voyage of Florida, Central Florida Chapter,
1 p.m., 714 N. Woodland Boulevard (The House Next
Door), DeLand. Help for adoptees and women who
have given up a child for adoption seeking to find each
other. Call 904-734-7571 for information.
Florida Symphony Youth Orchestra’s Training
Orchestra auditions, Winter Park High School band
room. For information call Mrs. Garcia at 869-1899.
Sanford Rotary Club Charity Golf Tournament,
Mayfair Country Club. Players must be on course by
noon for 1 p.m. tee-off. Call Ralph Larson 323-1673 for
information.
Central Florida Civic Theatre Guild’s “ Funny Girl
Follies,” 8 p.m., Stars Hall of Fame, Orlando. Buffet
and preview of "Funny Girl." For information and
reservations call Maud Sanders at 644-7187.
Blood Bank Drive, In front of TG&amp;Y Store, 17-92,
Longwood.

Another key category of prices, for capital equipment in­
cluding automobiles and machinery, rose 0 7 percent com­
pared to 0.5 percent in July mostly because new and used cars
were more expensive.
But construction machinery and some other large categories
of equipment turned down in price for the month, the report
said.
The overall energy index, including gasoline, fuel oil.
natural gas and electricity, climbed 1.2 percent, held back by
an actual decline for fuel oil products.
Gasoline prices in the August report were largely based on
July figures because of a lag in the government's data collec­
tion process. Since then more declines in the wholesale price
for gasoline have occurred, promising continued overall
moderation in the September index, analysts say
Prices continued to decline for beef and vegetables. Lgg
prices also turned down in August.
The construction industry took its toll on its suppliers in
August, who found demand far too weak to raise prices.
Construction materials and components declined 0.4 percent in
price, the largest drop since August, I960.
The August report contained a revision of April's index
figure that turned it from a minus 0.1 percent to a plus 0 1
percent and a revision for May’s index that turned it from zero
— indicating no change in prices - to a 0 1 percent decrease.
With the revisions, the past twelve months have shown rare
declines in producer prices for February. March and May
------------- -- C O U P O N ----------------

IN BRIEF

CALENDAR

Friday, Sept 10,1932 -2A

Wholesale Prices Inch Up In August

WORLD

United Press International
Eight-hundred U.S. Marines finished their peace­
keeping mission and withdrew from battle-scarred
Beirut today but tension persisted in eastern Ubanon
with the second Israeli air attack on Syrian missile
batteries in as many days.
The leathernecks marched two abreast up the
gangplank of the USS Manitowoc and beneath the U.S.
and U banese flags and a banner reading "Mission
accomplished — farewell."
Hours later, fighting broke out between U banese
army regulars and leftover Palestinian guerrillas in
Beirut, and Israeli warplanes attacked Syrian anti­
aircraft batteries in U banon’s eastern Bekaa Valley.

Evening Herald. Sanford. FI.

FuelPrices Climb Slightly

Herald Phots by Tom Vincent

THE FIRST

Two years in office was not enough for Sanford City Commissioner Milton
Smith. Smith, at left, here qualifies to fun for a full four-term with City Clerk
Henry Tamm. Smith was elected in 1980 to complete the four-term of of John
Morris, who resigned. The other incumbent commissioner, David Farr, has
also qualified for a second four-term in office.

AREA DEATHS
BERT BEHRISFOHl)
Bert It. Berrisford, 67, of
Pensacola died Sept. 3 at
Sacred Health H ospital,
Pensacola. Born Dec. 12,1914,
al St. Paul, Minn., he was a
former Sanford resident and
moved to Pensacola 26 years
ago. He was an active
member of Ihe Kiwanis Club
and a Mason. He was retired
and was a Baptist.
Survivors Include his wife,
Margarette; a son, Thomas,
of Houston, Texas;
a
daughter, Mrs. Nancy Nigels,
of Lakeland; a sister, I a u ra
B. Ozier, of Sanford; five
grandchildren and one greatgranddaughter.
Funeral services and burial
were Tuesday In Pensacola.
MRS, IVA E TOLAR
Mrs. Eva Elizabeth Tolar,
95, of 3030-CN Beach Road,
Engewood, died Thursday in
that city. Born Aug. 22, 1887,
in Forest City, she moved to
Englewood last October.
She is survived by two
daughters, Mrs. Elsie Tolar
Baldwin, of Englewood, and
Mrs. Elma Tolar Echols, of
Lincoln, Neb.; three sisters,
Mrs. Alma Neese and Mrs.
Helen Haskins, both of San­
ford, and Mrs. F lorence
Everson, of Hastings; three

grandchildren; and two great­
grandchildren.
Brisson Funeral Home-PA,
Sanford, is in churge of
arrangements.

MRS. ALTA FLORENCE
STANDEL
Mrs. Alta Florence Standel,
74, of 1475 Layton Ave.,
Deltona, died Thursday at
Florida Hospital-Orlando.
Born May 3, 1908 in
Massachusetts, she moved to
Deltona from U s Angeles in
1972. She was a retired
banking clerk and a member
of ihe Reorganized Church of
Jesus Christ of Utter-D ay
Saints, Orlando.
Survivors include her three
sons, Arthur E. Cardinal, of
Charlotte, N.C., Alan Car­
dinal, of Boston, and George
Cardinal, of Mabelvale, Ark.;
two
daughters,
Muriel
Johnston, of Concord, N.C.,
Norma Falzone, of Orlando; a
sister, Clara Ward, of Onset,
Mass.; and 25 grandchildren;
and six great-grandchildren.
Hawthorne Funeral Home,
Orlando, is in charge of
arrangements.
MRS, IJCOLA HAMPTON
Mrs. Leola Hampton, 85, of

2025 Jone&gt;. Ave., Sanford, died
Sunday at Central Florida
Regional Hospital. Born in
Cordele, Ga., she was a
m em ber of the Hickory
Avenue C hurch of God,
Sanford.
Survivors include her
‘d aughter, M arie Smith,
Sanford; two sons, Oscar
Hampton of Cordele, Ga., and
Benjam in
Hampton
of
Cleveland, Ohio.
Sunrise Funeral Home, 900
IxK’usi Ave., is in charge of
arrangements.

Funeral Notices
HAMPTON, MRS. LEOLA Funeral service* for Mrs Leola
Hampton. IS. of »2S Jones A v e ,
Sanford, who died Sunday, will
be al noon Sunday at Hickory
Avenue Church of God with the
Rev Israel Black officiating
B u ria l w ill be In Shiloh
C em etery, S anford. Sunrisa
Funeral Home, 900 Locust A v e .
in charge.
T O LA R ,
M RS.
IVA
E LIZ A B E TH — Funeral ser
vices for M rs iva Elliabeth
Tolar, 95, of Englewood, who
d&lt;ed Thursday, w ill be al 10 a m.
M onday at B risso n Funeral
Home. B u r ia l In Lakeview
C e m ete ry, S anford. Viewing
hours w ill be 2 a p m . Sunday.
Brisson Funeral Home PA in
charge

A news conference " to
amplify" Trudeau’s decision
was scheduled for today at the
syndicate’s offices.
Trudeau said it was time to
reappraise his characters and
review development of the
strip, which he started while
attending Yale. It went into
sydication in 1970.
"There are a few problems
that need to be ironed out," he
said. "F or almost 15 years,
the main characters have
been trapped in a time warp
and so find them selves
carrying the colors and scars
of two separate generations.
It was unfair to stretch their
formative years to embrace
both Vietnam and preppy.
"My characters are under­
standably confused and out of
sorts. It’s time to give them
some $20 haircuts, graduate
them and move them out into
the larger world of grown-up
concerns.
"The trip from draft beer
and mixers to cocaine and
herpes Is a long one and it’s
time they got a start on it."

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Sanferd

SANFORD BREAKFAST ROTARY CLUB

"CHARITY AUCTION"
SEPTEMBER 12, 1982
1:00 PM to 5:00 PM
BOB DANCE DODGE
HWY • 17-92

RESERVED SEATS AV A IL AB L E
CALL 323-0411
Auctioneer ■Art Crindle

LADIES* PLANT SALE
LIVE ENTERTAINMENT

�Evening Herald
&lt;u s p s 4»i : k »

1

300 N. FRENCH AVE., SANFORD, F U . 32771
Area Code 305-322-2611 or 831-9993

But the cause of the complaints was a little
different. This year most of the problems
stemmed from a misunderstanding by some
people about tax rates and tax bills.

F rid a y , S eptem ber 10; 1982—4A
Wayne D. Doyle. Publisher
Thomas Giordano. Managing Editor
Robert Lovenbury, Advertising and Circulation Director

!»*»

'•
'*"&lt;*■■
...
:
Home Delivery: Week, *1.00; Month, *4.25; 6 Months, *24 00;
Year, *45.00. By Mail; Week, J1.25; Month, *5.25; 6 Months.
*30 00; Year. *57.00.
By MICHEAL REHA

...N o t A

With the annual budget hearings come the
inevitable rash of people to complain about their
taxes. This year was no different from other
years, the people did show up to complain.

For example, one man complained to county
commissioners this week that while they were
saying his tax rate went down his taxes actually
went up.
The commissioners agreed that his taxes may
have gone up, but explained that the reason was

Alphabet
Leads To
Computer

Neither a twrrower nor a lender be, Polonius
advised his son. The world runs on credit,
nonetheless. It is left to bankers to exercise
prudence in their lending, and to urge the same
prudence on borrowers, to prove that the highprincipled Polonius was wrong.
• But the gathering problems for the in­
ternational banking community suggest there has
By LeROY POPE
: been something less than prudent by both lenders
UPI Business Writer
•.••and borrowers in the flow of credit from the
NEW YORK (UPI) - Although the home
United States, Western Europe and Japan into the computer is used now mainly for videogames,
Third World and the communist bloc.
these are laying the groundwork for more
'Hie bad news from Mexico has been especially serious uses in the long run, says Fernando
bad for U.S. banks. By one calculation, our nine Herrera.
Herrera is the young Colombian-born
biggest banks have the equivalent of 40 percent of
their capital and reserves tied up in the faltering computer expert who won Atari's *25,000
grand prize for inventing the videogame, "My
Mexican economy. Falling oil revenues and fiscal First
Alphabet."
mismanagement have left Mexico scrambling to
He invented the game to test the vision of
cover payments due on an $80 billion foreign debt. his son Steve, who was born with cataracts.
Mexico’s predicament is not unique. Disap­
Although doctors believed the two-year-old
pointing oil exports also have made Nigeria a was blind, Herrera proved them wrong when
liasket case. Sudan and Zaire are rescheduling he responded well to the program Herrera
debts because of a slump in export revenue. The had designed for him on his newly-purchased
list of problem-clients for international bankers in Atari computer; initially a display of the
this hemisphere includes not only Mexico by letter "E " in various sizes.
Not only could Steve see even the smaller
Costa Rica, Jamaica, Nicaragua and Bolivia. letters, but Herrera noted he would play
Even Argentina, otherwise doing well in ltappily for hours with the computermanaging its credits, may be unable to cover generated letters. Herrera added a picture of
current debts because of its costly Falklands war. an elephant to go with the E and then more
Poland is not the only communist country letters and pictures. Thus developed the
unable to cover its debts to Western banks. unique award-winning teaching program.
Herrera has other startling proof in his own
Hungary and Romania also are in trouble. Some
family of the educational effectiveness of the
bankers are even worried about the relatively home computer. His 12-year-old daughter,
productive East German economy.
Vivian, showed little interest in the computer
The total in outstanding international bank or in the games played on it, but did well at
loans stood at $70 billion only a decade ago. Today them when she could be induced to try.
it is estimated at $300 billion, and the signals from
When Herrera was pressed for time on a
abroad indicate rough weather ahead if there are professional programming assignment, he
further defaults. These problems add to the strain jokingly told Vivian she could try her hand at
on the U.S. banking system produced by the high it and could have the fee if she could do it.
"To my amazement she completed the Job
rate of mortgage foreclosures and bankruptcies in satisfactorily
in only three weeks, earning
our own economy.
*600," Herrera told United Press Inter­
The U .S. government has aided and abetted the national.
extension of credit to foreign countries with loan
That was an eye-opener It showed Herrera
guarantees and other programs that had the best youngsters can learn programming a lot
intentions. We are a trading nation. Loans which faster than adults and that working or playing
help other countries develop their economic at games with the home computer teaches
potential serve our mutual interest. A rising tide them to think in an orderly, step-by-step
manner.
lifts all boats.
It reinforced his conviction that ultimately
But we are seeing what happens to over- practically every home in America will have
ambitious borrowers and lenders when the tide its computer — and it will be used for a lot
turns. International banks have been pouring more than the games Herrera makes his
loans into foreign countries with doubtful records living from.
"After all, a videogame is short-lived and
of fiscal responsibility or with socialist systems
known to be inefficient and unproductive. Both the whole fad could slowly lose its hold on
borrowers and lenders are victims of their own people," he said. "Good educational and
other practical programs sold on cassettes or
optimism in projections of economic growth.
floppy disks, perhaps with an accompanying
Bankers dealing with less developed countries book, can last for many years."
now must do what they have been reluctant to do
Herrera, although involved with computers
in the past — be hard-bitten in responding to only a few years, has built his Interest and
requests for new loans or rescheduling of old ones. skill to the point where he has launched his
The borrowers must accept what they have been own company, First Star Software, witlj
reluctant to accept — fiscal discipline and lower partners Bill Blake and Richard M. Spltalny,
expectations on the hard road out of debt. independent filmmakers. Herrera will be
originating and designing programs with
Polonius would have warned them that this might entertainm ent and sm all business ap­
happen.
plications, including movie and TV tie-in

Mideast Realism
•

.

What happened, in effect, was this, the recent
stafCaSales tax increase and its accompanying
regulations resulted in the county lowering its
tax rate. That means you pay less per dollar of
the assessed value of your house.
But, the reassessment of property increased
the assessed value of your house.
So, you're paying a lesser tax rate, but on
property that is assessed higher than previously.
Seminole County School Board member Pat
Telson is concerned that installing digital clocks

in schools may make students forget the
meaning of the term s clockwise and counter
clockwise.
It seems there are provisions in the plans for
the county’s new Tuskawilla elementary school
to allow for digital clocks to be installed.
Mrs. Telson said that might not be a good idea
because students wouldn't be able to learn the
two directions.
But Hugh Carlton, director of auxiliary ser­
vices for the school district, doesn't think it will
matter much.
“My wife is over 40 and she still doesn't know
the difference."

DON GRAFF

SCIENCE WORLD

Lender Be

**• • •

a third factor, the countywide reassessment of
property values.

. . * , * ■ *

President Reagan took a strong new initiative
on the Middle East when he recently delivered a
•• television talk to the nation and a letter outlining
peace pluns to the Israeli government.
It was expected that the Israelis would reject
the initiative, but that is simply the first reaction
of the government in Jerusalem. Many in Israel
will welcome the president’s new leadership.
Mr. Reagan, with the help of his new secretary
of state, George Shultz, and secretary of defense,
Caspar Weinberger, must continue to press for a
just and lasting peace along the lines suggested in
the president's talk.
For the first time, it appears that the Reagan
administration is interested in developing a
Mideast policy of its own, based on realities in the
region, on this nation’s historic dedication to the
principles of self-determination and justice for all
peoples, and on our own strategic interests in the
region.
That’s good. We have a heavy responsibility for
finding a peaceful solution for the problems of the
Middle East. We helped create them.

BERRY'S WORLD

video games.
Herrera, now a New Yorker, until this
spring managed a computer hardware store,
and served as a programming consultant to a
number of firms. He came to computer
programming by an interesting route.
He received his architectural degree in 1967
front the National University of Columbia
and was a self-employed architect for three
years before moving to the United States.
More recenlty, he worked as an industrial
engineer for Williamsburg Steel Products and spent all his free hours pursuing an avid
interest in chess, and winning several U.S.
Chess federation trophies.
Then, Just a few years ago, Herrera said, he
becam e filled with "am azem ent and
curiosity" when he first saw an ad for home
computers.

CAMPAIGN
* fr *

M r*

■k-kA A k A A k

1982

ftty r

6T T A

HULME

© I S &amp; I FOW V&lt;U*TH 5 T A P -T £ l C 6(JA m .

WILLIAM A . RUSHER

Labor Of The Pipeline
NEW YORK (NEA) - There are a lot of
things to be said about this country's current
dispute with its European allies over their use
of American technology to build the Soviet
gas pipeline, the first of which is that the
United States doesn't come to the argument
with entirely clean hands.
We are selling millions of bushels of grain to
the Soviet Union every year, and making a
very tidy profit on the deal. So it is perfectly
understandable, in human terms, why the
major nations of Western Europe should think
there is something just a little hypocritical in
our current outrage over their contract lo
build a gas pipeline for the Soviet Union and
take payment in the form of future deliveries
of natural gas.
Still, President Reagan is quite right to
point out that we are demanding cash on the
barrelhead for our grain, while France,
Germany, et al. are giving Russia generous
credits with which to buy its pipeline.
Moreover, though even our grain un­
deniably strengthens the Soviet economy,
selling the world’s premier dictatorship food
isn't in quite the same moral class as beefing
up its industrial infrastructure the way the
pipeline, with all its attendant network of
roads, settlements, airfields, etc. will do.
But there is yet another factor to be taken
into consideration in connection with the
pipeline, and it weighs most heavily of all
against our European friends; Human hands
are going to have to build this pipeline. Whose
will they be?
The Soviet Union's apologists are fond of
pointing out that there is no unemployment in
the Workers’ Paradise, and indeed there
isn't: Unemployment is a crime, called
"parasitism ," and anybody convicted of it is
subject to a prison sentence. He thereupon
becomes a member of the vast population of
prison labor upon which the Soviet economy
has depended from the very start.
Slave labor is an ancient technique, and
America will never quite eradicate the stain
of its own early involvement with this brutally
simple means of keeping labor costs low. But
the Soviet Union is the only important nation
on earth (with the possible exception of Red
China) that in the fourth quarter of the 20th
century still depends upon the forced labor of
prisoners, political and otherwise, to un­
derpin a substantial part of its economy.
It took Alexander Solzhenitsyn's "The
Gulag Archipelago" to shake most Wester­
ners into an awareness of the vast extent of
the Soviet prison system. But the same
author's "One Day in the life of Ivan
Denisovich" had earlier described in vivid
detail from personal experience, how that

system works. Listen to Solzhenitsyn’s ac­
count of the start of a typical workday:
"The sun came up, red and hazy, over the
empty compound . . . Gang 104 went to the
repair shops, where they’d put window panes
in last autumn, and Gang 38 was making
concrete blocks. Some of those blocks were
lying around in their molds, others were
standing upright, and there was steel meshwork for reinforcing the concrete. There was
a high roof and an earthen floor, and it never
really got warm here. But it was heated and
they weren’t stingy with the coal — not so
people could get warm, but so the blocks
would set better. '
" ‘Now then!' Tyurin looked around. ‘Are
you all here, 104?' And not checking or
counting — because nobody could have gone
anywhere — he started giving them their
working orders in a hurry. He sent the two
Estonians and Klevshim and Gopchik to get
the big cement-mixer from nearby and take it
to the power p la n t. . . He sent two others to
the tool shop, where Pavlo was getting the
tools. He told four others to clear the snow
from around teh plant, by the entrance to the
generator room, and inside it, and from the
ladders. He told another two to get the coal
stove going there and to pinch some boards
and chop them up. One man was to take
cement there on a small sledge. Two were to
carry water, two had to bring sand, and
another had to clear the snow off the sand and
break it up with a crowbar."
That is the way the Soviet pipeline is going
to be laid, inch by painful inch.
I have great respect for British Prime
Minister Margaret Thatcher, but I cannot
help feeling that the deal she is closing with
the masters of the Kremlin, and which will be
consummated with the forced labor of many
thousands of gangs like 104, ill accords with
her neatly-colffed image — let alone with the
socialist compassion of Francois Mitterand,
or the finely-honed Social Democratic sen­
sibility of Helmut Schmidt.

PLEASE WRITE
l&gt;etiers to the editor are welcomed for
publication. All letters must be signed,
with a mailing address and, 11 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.

What's
In A
Name?
A recent letter to the editor of the
W ashington Post makes an interesting
comment on the projected radio campaign
against Cuba.
The subject is Jose Marti and the writer,
David Wald of Santa Clara, Calif., makes the
point that the Cuban poet-patriot was not an
adm irer of the United States, where he lived
in exile for 15 years while carrying on his
campaign against Spanish rule of his country.
On the contrary, he saw the United States as
an imperialist threat to latin America.
Considering the terms in which he depicted
his hosts in some of his writings — “crude,
uneven and decadent" and given to violence,
discord and immorality — Wald concludes
that Marti is a dubious choice of a namesake
for a station to beam the American message
to Cuba.
As things have been developing, the matter
of a name is likely to be the least of the
problems connected with Radio Marti. Cuba
threatens to counterattack with transmitters
10 times as powerful as any in die United
States and with the capability of interfering
with hundreds of American FM stations in 32
states.
The threat has only served to escalate the
airwaves battle. Even die New York Times,
which otherwise suggests editorially that the
plug ought to be pulled on the project, finds at
least an argument for the station in American
refusal to yield to Cuban bluster on die Issue.
Numerous positive arguments have been
advanced. Heard most often is that freedom
needs a voice on this front in the worldwide
confrontation with communism similar to
that long provided by Radio Free Europe and
Radio lib erty in the European theater.
Possibly, but there are some significant
differences in circumstances.
Both Radio Free Europe and Radio liberty
originated as covert CIA operations. They
pretended to be something — free agents with
no obligations other than to the cause of truth
— they were not, which in the rough-stuff
context of the Cold War at that time may have
been Justified.
That time was very different in many other
ways. Telecommunications were less ad­
vanced — domestic programming did not
spill so easily and so pervasively across
borders. There was little people-to-pcople
communication across East-West borders.
The Soviets had sealed themselves off from
the world and sought, somewhat less ef­
fectively, to do the same to their European
satellites.
Radio Free Europe and Radio Liberty
continue to operate today, on a greatly scaleddown basis, primarily because they already
exist. It is questionable that If they did not,
their establishment would be undertaken. It
would make more sense to step up the
pressure through the existing facilities of the
Voice of America than to set up specialized
but essentially redundant new entitles.
This is, of course, one of the arguments
against Radio Marti. Not only does the Voice
broadcast to Cuba but many commercial
American stations can be received, including
programming in Spanish from Miami. It is
being argued that these voices are the most
effective way of getting the American
message across.
Further, Cuba is not sealed. There is still
plenty of people-to-people contact despite
recent administration efforts to restrict it.
Back to Jose Marti, some quick research of
the Britannica variety suggests that he was
much more than a Cuban nationalist. He
considered himself first of all a citizen of the
Americas and his anti-Americanism.

JACK ANDERSON
9

Salesmen Boost Pacemaker Costs
WASHINGTON The half million
Americans who wear pacemakers may be
paying too much for their lifesaving devices,
thanks to a team effort by friendly salesmen
and compliant doctors.
Investigators for the Senate Select Com­
mittee on Aging, chaired by John Heinz, RPa., have concluded that the marketing
system for the tiny battery-operated heart
regulators is riddled with abuse. The reason
Uncle Sam Is Involved is that 90 percent of the
*2 billion annual bill for'pacemakers is paid
by the government through Medicare.
Selling pacemakers is a lucrative business.
Consider this finding contained in an up­
coming report from the Senate committee,
reviewed by my associate Tony Capaccio.

"For heaven's sake. David, don't we have
enough of a credibility problem? "

OKAY, FELLOWSSHORT STRAW GETS TO
HIT UP THE FOLKS AT
PRESSER INDUSTRIES.-.

"There are about 400 pacemaker salesmen
in the country- Their minimum salary Is
$50,000 plus a hefty commission. Average
salesmen earn several hundred thousand

dollars a year. At least a dozen earn more
than $1 million a year.
"For these salesmen, the manufacturers
and
many
pacemaker
physicians,
pacemakers are literally pumping gold."
The staff report notes that most
pacemakers are basically alike In quality and
cost, so inducements are needed. And they
are apparently forthcoming. "Evidence of
kickbacks, potential bribery and other in­
ducements to do business were flagrant and
inescapable," the report states.
But it's not only the salesmen who are
raking in big bucks from the tiny implants.
The most common inducement offered to
doctors by pacemaker salesmen is the free
use of equipment that is used to Implant and
monitor the devices. For example, doctors
are given $3,000 programmers, $2,000
analyzers and $3,000 telephonic transmission
receivers as a sales inducement. As the
Senate staff report notes, “The pacemaker

Industry is notorious for its generosity to
physicians."
That's putting it mildly. Pacemaker
manufacturers have hired the Queen Mary,
entire Las Vegas shows, comedian George
Bums, trumpeter Doc Severinsen and even
the Dallas Cheerleaders to perform at
medical conventions.
The entertainment really isn’t necessary,
though. Pacemakers make big money for
everyone Involved.
"Pacem akers tend to be Immensely
profitable enterprises," the Senate report
observes. "At every level, our investigation
costs are excessive and profit Is Inordinate.
The average pacemaker currently costs *600
to $900 to manufacture and is sold to the
hospital for $3,000 to $5,000."
With that kind of markup, gross profits for
pacemaker firms run up to more than 50
percent of sales.

And it’s a tightly controlled field. Five
companies have over 90 percent of the
pacemaker trade. They are Medlronics,
Intermedics, Pacesetter, Cordis and Cardiac
Pacemakers Inc.
“Intermedics and Medtronics have an
estimated gross profits of 68 and 63 percent,"
the Senate report notes.
The gouging continues at the hospital where
the pacemakers are implanted. According to
the Senate report, hospital markups range
from 50 to 150 percent, even though in most
cases the devices are only delivered to the
hospital on the day uf surgery.
“Most generally, in the words of one
salesman, hospitals ‘turnkey’ the pacemaker
cost," the report says. It then explains the
phrase “turnkey" by explaining: “They’ll
double it (the cost). If we sell it to you for
$3,500, they charge $7,000."
That $7,000, mind you, is for a device that
costs $600 to *900 to make.

i

I

�PEOPLE
Evening Herald, Sanford, FL

Friday, Sept. 10, 1982—5A

Gardening

It's Now Time To Plant Winter Flowering Annuals
it’s time to get out of the summer
doldrum s and sta rt thinking about
gardening. Get set to go. I t ’s about time
to plant winter flowering annuals.
Many of the annual flowers that thrive
in northern gardens can be successfully
grown in Florida, however, the season at
which they are grown is quite different.
Most annuals are classified into two
groups — cool season annuals and warm
season annuals.
Florida's cool season is from October
to April thus we grow many annuals
during the winter which would normally
be planted in the spring in northern
states. As long as the proper planting

Annuals which can lx* planted in
September to October include sweet
alyssum , brow allia, calendula, can ­
dytuft, gaillardia, gypsophila, nastur­
tium, pansy, petunia, phlox, sweet-pea,
verbena and viola.

Desmond
Hastings
Urban
Horticulturist
.123-2500
Ext. 1SI
time is considered, home gardeners can
produce many colorful annuals all
winter.
Remember, however, the cool season
annuals you plant in the fall must be able
to endure frost if they are planted out­
doors.

In And A round Geneva

Organizations

Annuals have numerous uses in the
garden. They are probably best
displayed in front of shrubbery borders.
By choosing annuals of different heights,
deep flower borders can be produced.
Plant the taller species at the rear and
progressively shorter varieties in front.
Use colors which blend well and avoid too
many varieties having different colors.

Beds should be large enough so that
flowers can be cut and used to provide
winter color. Many low growing annuals
make effective edgings for walks and
drives and don't forget to use annuals for
window boxes and porch gardening.
Annuals can be planted
-seeds or
obtained as betiding plants which can be
transplanted into the garden. Bedditu
plants are usually available at
reasonable prices and offer flowers
quicker than growing your own plants
from seed.
When buying seeds you get what you
pay for. Seeds of named varieties of a
specitted color are more expensive than

color mixtures. The latter should not be
expected to produce flowers of as high
quellty as the more expensive seeds. If
possible, plant seeds after the rainy
season or small seeds may be washed
away. The other alternative is to start
plants in flats so they can be moved to
shelter during ram storms. Some annuals
such as nasturtium and sweet peas
should be planted directly where they arc
to grow because they are difficult to
transplant successfully.
Keep a careful watch on young an­
nuals Their roots are shullow so
watering is necessary until they are well
established. Pests must also be kept

FIVE

F ive
generations
gathered at Lake
Butler for a family
reunion of Floridians.
The matriarch of the
clan, Mrs. Donnie
Ward of Lake Butler is
92 and the youngest
family member is
Amy Rodriguez. 6
months old, of Indio,
Calif. Mrs. Carol
Geneva
Correspondent
Hodges oT Sanford,
348-5790
back, is the grand­
daughter of Mrs.
Ward, flunked by her
the Chuluota First Assembly
great-granddaughter,
of God will be leaving the
Denise
Ho d g e s
church site on Highway 419 in
Rodriguez,
who
was
Chuluota Monday, Sept. 13 at
raised
in*
Sanford,
6:30 p.m. to a tte n d the
quarterly Section V W. M.’s
holding her daughter
Rally at Calvary Assembly tn
Amy. Mrs. Ward’s
Winter Park.
great great grand­
President Lilly Simpkins daughter and Mrs.
extends an invitation to all Ward’s son, Lea mon
ladles of the community to
Ward of Keystone
Join in this activity. For
Heights,
further Information, you may
call her at 365-7192.

The Local School Advisory
Committee will hold Its first
meeting
at
Geneva
Elementary School Tuesday,
Hank and Jean Heath had at 7 p.m. in the media center.
an enjoyable trip to Palm Bay A chairman and officers will
this week where they visited be selected at this meeting
with their daughter and son- which is open to all parents
in-law, Mr. and Mrs. W. P. and teachers.
Mrs. Nancy McNamara has
Spencer.
A baby shower was given also scheduled the first parent
for J e a n 's granddaughter, meeting for this year, an Open
Mrs. Michael Stephens House to be held Sept. 21, at 7
(Angela) at the home of Mr. p.m., outdoors on the play
and Mrs. Harvey Huggins by court. This will be a chance
co-hotesses Barbara Home for parents to m eet teachers
and visit their classrooms.
and Lucille Kahn.
By the way, the new sign In
This
was
a
grand
"celebration" according to front of the court was a work
Jean Heath who also said, of art done by Ken Brooks,
"This baby will be our first husband of fifth grade
great-grandchild!"
Angela teacher, Charmane Brooks. If
received many lovely gifts for you haven't seen it yet, drive
down first Street for a peek at
baby-to-be.
another new landm ark for
The Women’s Ministries of Geneva 1

Cook O f The Week
The Herald welcomes suggestions for Cook Of The
Week. Do you know someone you would like to aee
featured in this spot? There U something for everyone
tn the line ol cooking.
Novice cooks, as well u master chefs, add a dif­
ferent dimension to dining.
Please contact PEOPLE Editor Doris Dietrich about
your news and views on cooking.

FASHION
SHOW
1‘i

. .

Marie Lewis, center,
gets style tips from
Ken Hicks and Elaine
Marshall
in pre­
paration for a dinnerfashion show Tuesday
at the
Greenhouse
Restaurant in Lake
Mary. The event,
sponsored by Boule­
vard Hair D esigns,
Village Shop and the
Club at The Crossings,
all of Lake Mary, will
begin at 6:30 p.m. for
information on tickets,
call Ken Hicks, 3214247. Local models will
show the latest hair­
styles and fashions for
the forthcoming fall
season.
H t r t ld Photo by Tom Vincent

Girl Scout Sets Sights On
Space Program Career
By DEE GATRELL
Herald Correspondent
"I did a lot of reading about the space programs and
noticed there weren’t many women in space." Ariella
Reback commented after a visit to the Kennedy Space
Center with the Girl Scouts.
Ten-year-old Ariella, who says she’s "almost 11" says
the visit to the space center has fueled her interest in
pursuing a career in the program, but she hasn't decided
whether she wants to be an astronaut or an engineer.
Ariella was one of 15 girls from Central Florida who
participated in two 2-week programs at the Citrus Council
of Girl Scouts River Point Program Center on Merritt
Island.
The first week's program was designed to teach the
girls sailing and canoeing while the second session dealt
with solar energy and the space center.
The girls also did career explorations. When Ariella fed
her Information into the computer she decided she wanted
to zero In on Astronautical Design Engineering careers.
Ariella is a sixth grader at Rock l^ake Middle School.
Her hobbies include playing the piano, reading and
clogging. She belongs to Girl Scout Troop 157 and is the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Reback of Longwood.
Would Ariella's father like to see her in the space
program?
Jerry Reback replied with fatherly pride, "Absolutely. I
think It would be super to see Ariella in space."

•

All Extension Programs are open to
anyone regardless of race, color, sex or
national origin.

Wife Broods
Over Brews
After Work

GENERATIONS

Ready For Fall
September is the month
when all of Geneva’s civic
organizations revamp after a
summer vacation.
The active Geneva Citizens
Association will hold its first
meeting of the new year
Monday at 8 p.m. in the
community hall. According to
secretary Ixiraine Whiting a
representative
of
the
Seminole County Tax office
will be on hand to discuss the
new tax bills.
Another important topic at
Monday's meeting will be the
Florida Power &amp; Light
■‘power tower issue." Plans
are being formulated at this
time to take a bus of Geneva's
citizens to (he state's capitol
within the next three weeks
for the express purpose of
letting the governor’s cabinet
know the strong opposition to
the tower. This will be the last
chance for voicing of opinions
over this matter.

under control
To produce compact, bushy plants,
pinch off the top pair of leaves after
seedlings have at least three pairs of
leaves This will produce lateral bran­
ches and better quality plants
Most seed packages contain directions
for planting and care of annuals but
experience is the best teacher. The
gardener who learns how to successfully
grow annuals will produce mngnificient
color in his winter garden. So color it with
Florida flowers.

H tr tld photo by Dec G t t r t l l

Ariella Reback: astronaut or engineer?

Chapter
To Hear Dr. Ferris
The first regular meeting of the l,ake Monroe Chapter of the
American Diabetes Association will be held on Tuesday, at
7:30 p.m. in the northern section of the cafeteria of the Central
Florida Regional Hospital, Sanford.
Everyone who has any interest at all in any phase of diabetes
is encouraged to attend. The program will be "How
periodontia is connected with diabetes." Dr. Robert Ferris,
DDA, Ph. D. who lives in Winter Park and practices as a
periodontist in Altamonte Springs, will be the speaker.
Dr. Ferris has been practicing since 1971 and 1ms been in
Central Florida for the past 11 years,
He is a graduate of the University of Ohio in the dental field
and also has a Ph, I) in microbiology. He has taught and is
teaching at Valencia Community College and the University of
Florida.
Dr. Ferris has been active in the community affairs of the
area, having served as president of the Maitland-South
Seminole Chamber of Commerce as well as president of the
Rotary Club of Seminole County South. The public is invited to
this meeting.

GETTING MARRIED
Engagement and wedding forms are available at the
Herald offices, to announce these events. The forms may
be accompanied by professional black and white
photographs if a picture is desired with the an­
nouncement. Wedding forms and pictures must be submilted within two weeks of the wedding.

•I

4

•

DEAR ABBY: Why does a
man have to stop off in a
tavern after work to have a
few beers with the guys he
works with all day? We’ve
been married nearly three
years and have a 6-month-old
son. I know Joe loves us, but
after an 8-hour day working at
construction, he feels he has
earned himself "a few beers."
So how many is "a few,"
Abby? Wien he comes home
two hours late he says, "One
guy buys you a beer, then you
buy hint one and so on..."
I never know when to start
cooking dinner because I
never know how late be is
going to be.
Am I wrong to feel that be is
being inconsiderate? 1 can
understand stopping off for a
beer or two once in a while,
but he's made a habit of
stopping every night now. Joe
has plenty ot freedom. He
bowls two nights a week in the
winter, and In the summer he
plays softball
I’m home with the baby all
day, and if he came home at a
decent hour after work he
could take over for a while
and give me a rest. I hate to
nag him, but this Is really
getting to me What should I
do?
ANGRY
DEAR ANGRY: You have a
right to be angry. You and Joe
should set up some ground
rules and deride which nights
he will be la le — and huw late
he will be. The uncertainly
and endless waiting are unfair
to you.
DEAR ABBY: Why don't
you quit sending people to
church to "m eet" a nice man
— or woman? I was always
under the impression that
people went to church to pray.
If I am mistaken, please set
me straight; Sign me...
ALWAYSONSUNDAY
DEAR ALWAYS: There are
a variety of reasons why
people go to church. Some go
to pray, some go to pray that
they meet someone. Other
reasons:
1. Habit.
2. Training.
3. Fear of punishment from

H e ll, ,

Dear
A bby

the lo rd if they don't go.
4. To be seen.
5. To see who else Is there.
6. To show ofl a new outfit.
7. To get sp iritu al in­
spiration.
8. To socialize.
DEAR ABBY . My husband
and I have just had our first
baby. We’ve been m arried
only 14 months, and although
this baby wasn't ex actly
planned, we are thrilled.
My mother-in-law said, “ I
hope you kids aren’t going to
send out any b irth an­
nouncements to all our friends
who sent you wedding
presents, because it’s the
sam e as asking for a baby
gift."
We had planned to semi
some, but now we don't know
what to do. In your opinion, is
sending birth announcements
the same as asking for a
present?
BABY MAKES THREE
DEAR BABY: It’s not "the
sam e," but it could be In­
terpreted to some as u hint.
Send birth announcem ents
only to those of your friends
who are lar away and may not
have heard (he good news. H
there Is a doubt ns to whether
you should send one — don't!
C O N F ID E N T IA L
TO
DONE WRONG IN LOS
GATOS: Skip It. N'n one said it
better than Francis Bacon:
“ By taking revenge, a man Is
but even with his enemy; but
in passing over ft, he Is
superior."
Getting married? Whether
you want n formal church
wedding or a simple, “ doyourow iMliing" ceremony,
gel Abhy’s new booklet. Send
91 plus a lung, self-addressed,
stamped (37 cents) envelope
to: Abby’s Wedding Booklet,
P.O. Box 38923, Hollywood.
Calif. 90038.

U t i t a iv

s:u 4 2&gt;
,

' w in

ZAYRE PLAZA

COR. 17-92 And AIRPORT BLVD.
2958 OR LAN DO OR.

TRY US - WE'RE NEW HERE

We offer all types of dance,
baton, gymnastics,
and jazzerdse.
Students 3 yrs. and up
F O R M O R E IN F O R M A T IO N
CALL 305-321-4299

�SP O R TS
4A—Evening Herald, Sanlord, FI.

Ram s Take O n
Raiders In 3A

J(\

Varsity Debut
No one knows more about building a foot­
ball program from scratch than Rockledgc’s
Bill McKnight. While at Palm Bay, the 35year-old McKnight helped Palm Bay pul
together 7-3 and 11-2 campaigns its first two
years.
The second year liockledge made it to the
semifinals of the 3A State Playoffs. "Starting
with 10th and 11th graders is the best way to
build the program," said McKnight Thur­
sday. “ It’s a learning experience but if you
have good, young athletes it shouldn't make
any difference."
Tonight at 8, the Lake Mary Rams will get
to find out how good and young they are when
Rocklodgc comes to town for Like Mary's
first varsity football clash.
The Rams may be catching the Raiders on
a down year. McKnight lost 18 starters from
last year's 6-4 squad. He returns his quar­
terback, two defensive linemen and a right
guard.
Leo Misch, a 6-1, 175-pounder, runs the
liockledge offense. The talented senior has
been calling signals for the Raiders since his
freshman year. L ist year, he threw for over
1,000 yards.
“ He's a good one and has been for four
years," says McKnight, whose career record
is 16-14 beginning his fourth year. "All of our
receivers are good,..at least they belter be or :
we’re in trouble."
Terry Bell, Stephon Fleming, Leonard 1-ee
and Jeff Stuckey are the Raider receivers
Robert d ro n e , a 5-10, 210-pounder, is the
mainstay at right guard, Defensive tackle
Jay Hinckley 6-0, 220 and defensive and
Rodney Moore 16-1, 2051 anchor the defensive
line.
I.ake Mary’s sire comes from tackle* Ned
Kolt)jornsen(6-l,205)andF.d Ades (6-0,232).
Those two behemotlis along with tailbackdefensive back dreg Shatto and fullbackmonster back Donald Grayson will go both
ways for the Rams.
Coach Roger Beathard looks for liockledge
to play its passing combination to the hilt,
"They threw nine of 15 times in one quarter of
the jam boree," Bcthard said. "We’re hoping
our multiple defense will stop them."
The Rams have two minor injuries.
Linebacker Billy Caughell is "probable" with
a bruised leg and Charlie Lucarelli, a
sophomore tailback, is "questionable" with a
sore shoulder.
— SAM COOK

ILL82

Don't Compare
To Boone Woes

Posey Seeks To Avenge Last Year's Loss Against Astronaut
Manley at the running back slots behind QB Mike
Futrell.

By CHRIS FISTER
Herald Spurts Writer
Whatever the outcome of Friday night’s key
matchup between Seminole and Titusville
Astronaut, the Tribe and coach Jerry Posey will
probably take it in stride.

':"fr

After all, the ’Noles were beaten by Jay
Donnelly's War Eagles in the opening game a
year ago, but rebounded to finish with an 8-3
record and the Five Star Conference crown. And
if the Seminoles can somehow salvage a victory
this Friday in Titusville, it will be declared an
upset since Titusville Astronaut is one of the 10
best 3A teams in the state.

r \

Donnelly said he expects it to be a close game
hut his team has the edge as far as experience
goes. "We have a veteran offensive unit with M A R V IN P R IN G L E
JERRY POSEY
nine seniors and two juniors returning from last
...Tribe linebacker ...hunts War Eagles
year's team ," Donnelly said of his War Eagles,
who compiled an 8-2 record last season. “ Both
Burke and Danny Evans. The War Eagles lost its
teams have good quickness and that should keep
top linebacker, Terry Warren, who moved to
it close."
Tallahassee for his senior year and will probably
go on to play with Florida State University next
The Titusville Astronaut offense is directed by
year. Defensive end Kevin Massengill will an­
junior quarterback Ethan Waldron. The War
chor the defensive line.
Eagles will go to the air a lot to standout
Donnelly said Seminole's quickness on defense
wingback Scotty McConico who is a co-captain of
and speedy offensive backfield were the things
the team and a senior,
that worried him most about the Tribe. "We’re
"We have speed in the backfield, that plus
not a physical team and probably won't over­
experience Is what we will rely on offensively,"
power anyone like we have in the past."
Donnelly said.
Seminole's backfield includes junior Tim
Defensively, Astronaut has a tough squadron
Liwrence, senior Hon Burke and senior Rcndell.
of linebackers led by senior co-captains Ben

another dogfight Friday night at the
Grenadiers home stadium. "Right now
1 expect an even game and it should go
down to the wire."
While Colonial has only eight
returning s ta rte rs overall, Lake
Brantley has only two returning letlermen. Defensive tackle John Desmct
and center Bill Bragg are the only
returning starters to Dave Tullis'
Patriots.
The quarterback spot could be a big
difference in the game Friday. Lake
Brantley will go with sophomore
Dennis Grosclose who has no varsity
experience. On the other hand, the
Grenadiers are engineered by Gerard
Caron who is entering his senior year
and directed the explosive Colonial
offense last season.
Brad Minear was Colonial's tight end

Titusville Astronaut turns out to be one of the
top 3A teams year after year, something Don­
nelly attributes to depth. "We always have
outstanding depth because we give a lot of
younger guys a chance to play and pick up a
little experience.”
A stro n au ts' recent p erform ance in the
preseason jamboree pleased Donnelly and gave
him a better idea of what to expect for the '82
season. "The jamboree helped us a lot because it
gave us the chance to work out the kinks. We will
be healthy going into the season."
Sendnole did not compete in a preseason
jam boree so nobody has seen the Fighting
Seminoles in action in 'B2, Most critics are
placing the Tribe near the bottom of the Five
Star Conference standings.
Astronaut has an abundance of experience,
losing only a few offensive and defensive starters
while Seminole lost almost half its team. "liist
year more than half of the team is un­
derclassmen."
Donnelly thinks the contest should stay close
and the key to his team’s chances is execution.
"In tlie opening game you have to keep down the
number of mistakes." he said. “ You can't beat
yourself with mistakes and you have to playsound football both offensive and defensively."
According to Donnelly his troops have been
working hard getting ready for ihe 1982 season.
"It's been a long summer and these guys are
hungry, they w ill be ready Friday night."

in '81 but will switch to fullback this
season. At 6-1 and 198 pounds, Minear
is a rugged runner who will be called on
frequently in short yardage situations.
Colonial has four starters returning
to the defense that tuis a mixture of size
and speed. The size is in defensive
tackle Joe Brantley (6-0, 215) and
linebacker Grady Martin l6-2li, 240),
who is one of the state’s top prospects.
The speed demons are defensive Licks
Bill Lennon (5-9,155) and Kevin Snider
(5-7, 155).
Lake Brantley lost two close quarters
in last week’s jamboree to DeLand 1 70), and Like Howell (7-6). Bunning
backs Joe Waresak and Allen Arm­
strong both performed impressively in
the jamboree and will be counted on to
sp ark the offense against the
Grenadiers.
-C H R IS FISTER

Trinity Prep Travels To Tampa Heights
"Basically, we’ll be having a lot of
people playing both ways. We didn't
play in the jamboree, so we’ll just have
Tampa Temple Heights coach Randy
to see how everything works out,"
Hurst is looking forward to a tough
Hurst said. "The key for our whole year
season, and the Trinity Prep Saints will
will be to keep our injuries down."
be travelling to Tumpa to start it off
While Tampa Heights lias only 23
Friday night.
players, Trinity Prep has just 24.
Among Hurst's returhing players is Among them will be quarterback
quarterback Chuck Place. "He’s a Richard Milliman, who, said Saints
pretty accurate quarterback, fie throws coach Ron Vierling, “ is a very
well," said Hurst. Also back are remarkable athlete, who we coul^l put
Tam pa's principle running backs David in any of Ihe skilled positions and he
Wright and Robert Quillan, who, ac­ would do well."
Bryan Butler will be another key
cording to Hurst, "don’t have a lot of
offensive player. He Is a 6-3, 210speed, but they’ll do all right for us.

If Lyman coach Bill Scott thinks he's in a
dilemma with his top running back sidelined
with a bad leg and other players with assorted
injuries, just think how I3oone coach Boh
Whittington feels,
Whittington lias only 26 players — without
injuries.
"W e're 'kind' of thin in numbers," Whit­
tington said of his Braves who go against the
'Hounds tonight at Lyman. "Bill Scott always
says he has a lot of injured players, and
somehow they always manage to play against
us.”
When discussing the Greyhounds, Whit­
tington doesn’t have any sympathy for Scott.
"Lyman has good talent and I’ve heard that
ihey arc being picked to win the Five Star
Conference. If we gel a few key breaks, it
could be a tough ballgame."
Boone will rely heavily on its running gome,
particularly fullback Greg Burden who is one
of the top backs among Orange Countyschools. Halfback Harold Hill teams with
Burden for a flashy backfield tandem. Wide
receiver David Hepburn is also one of Orange
County's finest but Whittington said the
Braves are having trouble in the passing
department.
Up front, tackle Harold Hill anchors the
offensive line and defensive end Mike Guthrie
is a steady defender.
"If the key players stay healthy and per­
form the way they are capable of, we can be
competitive," Whittington said.
While Scott says time is running out on the
'Hounds wounds to heal. Whittington says the
Braves have to avoid any injuries to be
competitive.
The key to Lyman is to get by Boone without
suffering any more casu alties. The
Greyhounds play conference foe Mainland
next Friday in a battle of two teams picked to
run ncck-and-neck for the Five Star crown.
Scott said the winner of that game will be in
the "early driver’s seat," in the conference
title race.
But what about Boone? Are the Braves
merely a pebble in Lyman's trail? Or will
they be a thorn in Lyman's side?
Whittington feels his squad can take ad­
vantage of mistakes as long as the Braves
stay away from turnovers themselves. Some
players will be playing both offense and
defense and Lyman could take advantage if
those players tire early. — CHRIS FISTER

Blanton Eyes No. 1 A t Oviedo
Either Oviedo's Jack Blanton or
Umatilla’s Reggie Forbes will walk off
the football field with his first varsity
coaching victory tonight as the prep
football season opens at 8 at Oviedo.
Blanton, an offensive whiz at Like
Brantley the past few years, inherits a
veteran Oviedo hallclub which \.¥nt to
the district playoffs last season under
coach Joe Montgomery, who moved to
Pensacola ,Pine Forest.
Forbes, who was a receivers' coach
for the Central Florida Knights last
year, has five returning lettermcn from
a G-4 team of Gordon Weidow's last
year.
"We've got a pretty young team
which will have to m ature pretty
quickly," said Forbes about his 2A
squad. "We've got some good ones back
hut we graduated all of our all­
•

By GEOFFREY GIORDANO
Herald Sports Writer

Lyman W ounds

Tribe Hunts War Eagles Tonight

Patriots, Grenadiers Rebuilding
When Like Brantley and Colonial
High clash in Friday night's season
opener, it will be a match of two teams
in a sim ilar situation. Both the Patriots
and Grenadiers lost most of their
starters to graduation last year and
both squads may be in for a rebuilding
season in '82.
"Those people (Brantley) are going
to be tough," Colonial coach Bob
Williams said. “It seems like every
year it's (Brantley vs Colonial) a
standoff, it’s always close."
Williams guided the Grenadiers to an
8-3 record in 1981 hut said it would be
tough to repeal that record this year.
"We won five games in the last quarter
last year and you can’t do that con­
sistently," he said.
L ist year Colonial edged the Patriots
by a field goal and Williams expects

-r~ i

pounder who has long legs and plenty of
speed. "He may be the best 1A running
back around, or 2A," Vierling said. His
backfield partners will include Gerald
Sutton, the state intermediate hurdle
champ, and Bruce Harris.
Linemen will include Andy I)uda,
center, guards Bill Sanui and Pal
Quinn, and tackles Geoff Getz and Chris
Lucas. They, along with Paul Dietrich,
will play both ways.
Trinity will look to belter last year's
3-5 standing, while Tampa will work up
from their 6-1.

conference people."
Among the returnees include running
back John Dotson (6-2,195) and center
Mark Green &lt;6-2, 210). "Dotson will be
our primary running back," continued
Forbes, and Albany State alumnus.
"But we like to mix it up a lot and give
everybody a chance to run,"
Defensively, defensive b3ck Fred
Hester &lt;6-2, 175) returns along with
linebacker Damon Riggins 15-10, 185)
and tackle Tommy Randall (5-10, 190).
Hester doubles up offensively as the
quarterback.
Offensive coordinator Ken Kroog has
a stable of excellent running backs led
by J.W. Yarborough, a 5-10, 205pounder at tailback. THe quick
development of sophomore I.arry
Grayson &lt;5-11,190) at fullback made it
possible to move the speedy (10 flat 100-

yard dash) Yarborough to tailback.
Harry Williams, a shifty runner, gets
a lot of action at tailback while Howard
Lmgard and Charles "Pop" Bowers
could start on a lot of teams in the
Orange Belt. Quarterback Dwayne
Johnson is a solid passer.
Defensively, lineback ers Tommy
Johnson and Clark Herman lead the
Lions' Black F rid ay contingent.
Safeties Jodie Huggins and John
liiPorta make sure nothing gets behind
the defense.
Another ace for the Lons is punter
John Quintana. The strong-legged
senior averaged 43 yards per boot last
year and is expected to keep it right
there this year.
"He also has excellent hang time,"
says Kroog, -SAM COOK

*

Silver Hawks 'Prepared' For Hornets
There were days when a coach didn't
have to prepare his team fur Bishop
Moore. You just pul your squad on the
field and walked off with a victory. The
Hornets' ineptness reached a pinnacle
of 19 straight losses two years ago.
Those days of devastation ended,
however, when Jack Bloomingdale took
over the program. He prixluced three
wins for the Hornets last year and is
shooting for "6-4 or 7-3 " season with
this year's veteran squad.
Lake Howell coach Mike Bisceglia
w as one of the early converts to the
Hornet football turnaround. His Silver
Hawks were upset by Bishop Moore in

last year's season opener. The losing
string reached six before the Hawks put
a "W” on the board.
The Silver Hawks hope to avenge that
loss tonight ut 8 when they take on the
Hornets at I^ike Brantley. The game
was supposed to be held In Bishop
Moore’s new stadium, but a few
finishing (ouches to the bathrooms and
the concession stands have to be ap­
plied. It should be ready for Ihe Oct. 1
game against Ixtesburg.
"We had to sell the kids on football
here," said Bloomingdale. "A lot of
them were discouraged. We had to
show them football was still fun."

Bloomingdale has a huge defensive
line bolstered by noseguard Paul
Y erashunas (6-3, 235) along with
tackles Bob Cannon (6-3, 230) and Greg
Prose (5-11, 200).
Offensively, q u a rte rb a c k Timmy
Schieffelin is the sparkler. Only a
junior, SchieffUen connected on 7 of 9
passes in the jamboree
"He’s a good passer, but he's just as
effective on the run. Timmy runs a good
bootleg," said Bloomingdale. Seniors
Mike Gentile (6-2, 220) and Don Brown
(5-11,195) pave the way for Schieffelin
and running backs Sean Smith (58,150)
and Tommy Lomas.
—SAM COOK

Cheerleading Parents, Not Second Guessers, M ake The Best Fans
Football '82 kicks off tonight with
seven Seminole Comity teams teeing it
up with nonconference games from
Tampa to Titusville Astronaut.
Cross country is three weeks running
while swimming and volleyball begin
play next week. The swimming season
was supposed to start Thursday but a
meet between I-ake Howell and Walt
M organ's Lake Mary Rams was rained
out. Too vyet to swim Hint’s unusual.
As each high school sports season
begins, it's important to keep several
things in perspective.
ParentSt with few exceptions, don’t
m ake very good coaches.
Yet, every year coaches are troubled
by parents who think they are doing
something "for the good of their athlete
» or the good of the program."
The sam e people who sit in these
stands jv ery Friday night would be

1/ v

aghast if a coach would come into their
real estate office or restaurant and
start ordering people around. That
parent, nevertheless, doesn’t hesitate
to throw his two cents the way of the
coach as soon as he feels something
isn't right.
The coaches in Seminole County, with
a few exceptions, ure a hardworking
breed. I’ve coached and observed a lot
of these people for six years and found
the majority to know what they’re
doing.
Still, it's human nature to second
guess. How many times have you found
yourself screaming at Tampa Bay
coach John McKay for some move
which you think is ludicrous. Often, it
turns pul the move might not have been
correct, but so what? McKay has to
make the decision with the heat of the
game staring him In the face, not while

Sam
Cook
Sports Editor

squeezing a Budweiscr and chewing on
a pizza.
And that ts the name of the game. The
coach who makes the correct move
under pressure—and has the belter
players In most cases—comes out the
winner. He's the guy smiling on
Monday who hasn't taken his phone off
the hook over the weekend.
Already a few instances of tampering
have popped up this season. One parent
asked a coach if he needed a playbook.
The parent had coached in a youth
football program and thought it might

be beneficial. Nice gesture, but no
thanks.
A well-meaning booster club thought
it would be a good idea for the coaches
to review the game films with the
boosters on Monday and explain to the
parents why this move was made and
this one wasn't. Get me a seat near the
back of that meeting, it's got the
makings of a nice free-for-all.
In another instance, one parent felt
his son was playing out of position and it
would jeopardize his college scholar­
ship chances. If a kid can play, the
scouts will find him. These college
recruiters are very perceptive. When
they scout a kid they don't look at the
position, they look at Ihe athlete.
A college coach who doesn't come up
with the athletes, looks for a new job the
next year. Something which Isn’t true in
prep football. You must keep the high

school game and college game in
perspective. They are vastly different
in philosophy.
If you feel the coach Isn’t giving him a
fair shake, go to the coach and ask for a
conference. Don’t make a grandstand
play In front of the rest of the parents.
Don't continually bad mouth the coach
behind his back. This makes you look
like a fool, makes the coach feel like a
fool and creates an uncomfortable
situation for your athlete.
If you're a parent, and you really
want to help your athlete and school,
then support your program. The best
tiling o parent can do is cheer. Cheer
long and hard. And be a good sport.
Give credit to the winner and solace to
the loser.
If your athlete comes up a winner,

embrace him and tell him he’s the
greatest. If he comes up a little short,
give him that same embrace, because
he's still the greatest, and tell him there
will be a next time. Because, there also
is. That is what Is great about sports.
Remember now, cheer.
WINNERS AND ljOSERS-There’s
still time to call your bookie. Here's
tonight’s line; Astronaut by 13 over
Seminole. RocUedge by 14 over Lake
Mary. Lyman by20 over Boone. Oviedo
by 17 over Umatilla. Lake Howell by 8
over Bishop Moore. Colonial by 20 over
I^ake Brantley. Trinity Prep by 6 over
Tam pa Temple H eights. Georgia
Southern by 7 over UCF. USCby 10 over
the Gators. Miami's Hurricanes by 14
over Houston, Tampa Bay by 4 over
Minnesota and Miami's Dolphins by 1
over the New York Jets.

�Evening Herald, Sanford. FI.

Braves Hone Tomahawk
For NL West Stretch Run

SP O R TS
IN BRIEF

Friday, Sept. 10,1*82—7A

i—

Benedicts Grand Slam Scalp Valenzuela, Dodgers
Directions To Astronaut;

Standings

Also Saturday, I-ikc Mary und Trinity f’rep's cross
country squads will take part in the Orlando Luther
Invitational at Trinity Prep beginning at 8:30 a.m.
In Thursday's action, lak e Brantley's girls squad
placed Hth at the Titusville Astronaut Invitational.
“ We just ran poorly," said Patriots coach Jim Mar­
shall.

United Press International
The Atlanta Braves appear to have
their tomahawks sharpened for the
stretch drive.
Atlanta flexed its muscles to complete
a two-game sweep of the Dodgers with a
10-3 victory Thursday night and take a
game and a half lead in the National
league West, Bob Horner, Glenn Hub­
bard and Bruce Benedict all hit home
runs off 17-game winner Fernando
Valenzuela.
Catcher Benedict's blast was a grand
slam in the sixth inning and completed
the Braves’ scoring. Actually he was only
playing because of a hunch Manager Joe
Torre had about his ability to hit
Valenzuela.
After narrowly missing a home run in
the fourth inning, Benedict belted a
grand slam in the sixth off the Dodger
ace to give the Braves a commanding 8-2
lead and Atlanta went on to a 10-3 victory
for a sweep of the two-game sries.
The win boosted the Braves’ lead in the
National league West to l l7 games with
22 games to play.
“ It’s a great feeling when you can
come in in a situation like that and help
your ballclub," said Benedict, who was
hitting only .223 entering the game. It
was the second grand-slam of his career
and only his third homer of the season.
"Bruce had hit Valenzuela pretty
well," said Torre, who went with
Benedict despite his .223 batting average.

Kathryn Hayward clocked in with a time of 12:50,
which was good for a 12th place finish overall and
Brantley’s best individual time.

Ladies' Semis First A t U.S. Open

Reserve Tickets On Sale
Seminole High will open its football season tonight at
Titusville Astronaut and if you don't know how to get
there, here’s how:
Take Highway 46 east tn Highway south in Mims that
goes into Titusville and you will turn near Jess Parrish
Memorial Hospital, go tvo blocks south and you will
seh the stadium lights Then you will come to a fork in
the road and turn right to get to the stadium parking
lot.
Back in Sanford, reserve seat tickets are on sale at
the Seminole High athletic office. Tickets are $20 for all
home varsity and Junior varsity football games. To
order tickets call the athletic office at 322-1352 or go by
the office to pick up your tickets.

Lyman Invita tio n a l On Tap
Four Seminole County cross country teams will be
competing in the Lyman Invitational Saturday at 8:30
a.m. at Seminole Community College. The team s in­
clude, host Lyman, Seminole (whose boys team won its
first meet in 10 years earlier in the week), l-ake
Brantley and Oviedo The meet includes the school’s
boys and girls teams.

Bucks C onfer With Cowens
MILWAUKEE (UPI) - The Milwaukee Bucks hoped
today to be able to announce a contract agreement with
Dave Cowens, the retired Boston Celtics’ center.
Both Milwaukee newspapers Thursday reported the
Bucks had agreed to send starting guard Quinn
Buckner to the Celtics for Cowens.
But first the Bucks had to sign Cowens to a contract.
He and his agent, Bichard Gold, met Thursday night
with Bucks' Coach Don Nelson, President Jim Fit­
zgerald and Vice President John Steinmiller.
The Bucks were issuing only a polite "no coiiunenl"
on the talks. But a spokesman said the club hoped to
make an announcement "by noon or 1 p.m. Friday"
depending on how the talks went.
"We hope to get at least a handshake tonight,
although nothing can be official until Friday morning
when we can talk to the league office," Nelson said.
"We want him heretind he wants to be here. It’s Just
a matter of finding a way."

Pitt O ff To 'Fogey 1Start
Pittsburgh's Foge Fazio college coaching debut was
a successful one, but the anticipated offensive show be­
tween two Heisman Trophy candidates was a flop.
“ It wasn’t very' pretty," Fazio said after his No. 1
team survived a bundle of mistakes and a stingy Tar
Heels’ defense Thursday night to edge No. 6 North
Carolina, 7-6. "Offensively, we were disappointing.
Defensively we played great."
But the two Heisman Trophy hopefuls — Marino and
Tar- Heel running back Kelvin Bryant — had their
problems all night.
Marino completed 15-of-28 passes for 126 yards and
threw four interceptions. He also was sacked three
times for 21 yards.
•

However, he threw for the game’s only touchdown, a
1-yarder to running back Bryan Thomas 6:26 into the
third quarter, capping a seven-play, 69-yard march.
Snuffy Everett kicked what proved to be the winning
extra point.
"Danny was under a lot of pressure," Fazio said of
Marino. "The passes he did force were because
Carolina changed to different coverages and he got
burnt."
. V

‘

V

Bryant, the nation's third leading rusher last year,
gained Just 58 yards on 16 carries and fumbled the ball
away on the Pitt 11 in the second period.
North Carolina Coach Dick Crum said, "We tried to
change up on Marino defensively because it just im­
possible to totally shut him down. I thought he was
impatient on those long balls for the interceptions."
Caroltiv vored the only points of the first half on a
39-yard field „ ial by Brooks Barwick — longest of his
career — 51 secords In the second period. The Tar
Heels pulled »; nhln 7-6 with 1:57 left on a 18-yard Held
goal by Bob Rogers.

Jai Alai
AtO rlindo-Sem inole
Thursday nighl resu.ls
First geme
3 L e ia t Aguirre
17.30 4 30 5 40
1 Gabiola Chena
6 60 3 10
4 Simon Farad
3 60
Q (1-1) 17.08) T (1-1-4) 341.40
Second a am t
3 Neg'ui Oyari
7 30 4 30 3 10
1 Ricardo Farah
4 10 3 04
4 Durangokid Chena
3.30
0(1-11 11.41) *(1 -1 ) 184.48) T (21-4) 111.38
Third a a m t
I L e la i Chena
31 80 4 00 1 80
1 Pita Aguirra
4 00 3 60
5 Simon Foruria
3 40
Q ( l- l) 11.88) P (1-1) 77.48) T i l 1-1) 114.48
Fourth game
3 Pita Coir i
7 80 4 30 5 80
8 Rica Area
14 DO 7 40
4 Bilbao Foruria
9 40
Q ( l- I ) 19.88) P (1-4) 134.40) T 11M I 114.88
F ilth gam t
7 A rta 2ulaica
17.30 4 40 4.20
4 L u i5 -Ja vltr
7 00 8 30
4Charola M tndl
510
0(4-7)41 88) P ( 7-4) 148.48) T (74-4) 1049.88
t i l t h aoma
I L f l a i Farah
11 30 4 00 1 30
4 Durangokid Area
4 40 3.30
lO o ro tlo ia Goiri
100
0 ( 1 41 34.18) P (1-4 ) 84.88) T I t4-1) 141.N

Savanth game
4 Ma nolo
9 00 5 40 1 80
3 Bilbao
14.40 7.80
4 A lp iri
400
0(1-4) 17.38) P (4-3) 75.88) T &lt;41-41 171.88
Eighth aama
3 Jesus Atano
31.40 4 40 1 40
7 Aria Zarre
5 40 1 30
SMenolo Zulaice
3 40
O ll- l) 14.38) P (1-31 *4.18) T (115) 414.18
Ninth game
3 Durangokid
Atano
7.40 4 80 1 30
IGorosloia E lo rja
9 00 4 40
8 Aria Javier
4 00
0(1-1) 41.38) P 13-11 188.98) T i l LO)
18th game
3 Mend i
9.80 5 40 1 40
8Jn u t
4 80 5 40
5 Javier
180
O 0-8) 48.88) P ( M ) 141.48) T l l 8-1) 154.48
llt h game
IM anolo Zarre
4.40 4 40 1 80
SGorottola Y ia
4 40 7.40
7 Solaun Zubi
10 30
0(1-1) 11.88) P (1-9) 131.18) T l i ­
s t ) 441.88
llt h game
IM ik e i Javier
5.40 1.40 1 40
S LuisZarra
5 40 1.80
4 Said Soriano
140
O (!•!&gt; 15.88) P (1-5) 147.48) T i l 4-1) 418.40
A - 3149) Handle 1144,114

NEW YORK (U PI) — It’s ladies first in
the U.S. Open Championships, today.
The women’s semifinals are scheduled
with No. 7 Pam Shriver against No. 5
liana Mandlikova of Czechoslovakia in
one match to be followed by No. 2 Chris
Evert IJoyd meeting No. 1 Andrea
Jaeger in the other confrontation.
The respective winners will clash in the
finals Saturday.
Second-seeded Jimmy Connors and No.
1 Guillermo Vilas of Argentina both
advanced to the m en’s sem ifinals
Thursday. Connors overpowered un­
seeded Rodney Harmon of Richmond,
Va., in straight sets, 6-1, 6-3, 6-4, while
Vilas eliminated Tom Gullikson of Palm
Coast, Fla., 6-2, 6-1, 6-3, The top four
men’s seeds now have earned semifinal
berths.
Connors will face Vilas in a semifinal
Saturday to be followed by a match
between top-seeded defending champion
John McEnroe and No. 3 Ivan Lendl of
Czechoslovakia. McEnroe is bidding for
his fourth consecutive Open singles title
while I-cndl has yet to win a Grand Slam

Baseball
Tt's a great feeling when you can
come in in a situation like that and help
your ball club, especially when you
haven’t been playing m uch," said
Benedict.
He also felt it was essential for the
Braves to win both games from the
B E N E D IC T
K E im O S IA N
Dodgers.
"To lose two games to them would
spark the Giants to victory.
have put us in a tough situation with only
Padres 1, Beds I
22 or 23 games to go," he said
At Cincinnati, Tim I/dlar and Luis
Bick Mahler, 9-9, went 5 1-3 innings to
DeLeon combined on a five-hitter and
pick up the victory while Steve Bedrosian
Joe Iiefebvre hit a two-run double to
finished up to notch his 10th save.
spark the Padres to victory before the
Dodger outfielder Bon Bocnicke said
smallest crowd 3— 7,292 — at Biverfrnnt
die Braves "cam e up and they hit. We
Stadium in 10 years.
didn’t come through with the hits with
Indians
3, Orioles 0
guys on base."
At
Cleveland,
John IX-nny and Bud
"But I don't think they have an edge
over us. We've beaten them too many Anderson combined on a two-hitter in
times and we have two games left with pitching the Indians to victory. The only
them in Los Angeles so anything can hits by the Orioles were a lcadoff double
happen. They have a tougher remaining in the first inning by Jim Dwyer and a
single by Ken Singleton in the third
schedule than we do."
The Braves open a threegame series
Yankees 5, Brewers 1
with Cincinnati tonight with Atlanta's
At New York, Je rry Mumphrey
Pascual Perez (0-1) facing the Beds’ Bob
celebrated his 30th birthday by smashing
Shirley (6-11).
a home run with one out in the 10th inning
Giants 5, Astros 1
At Houston. Dave Bergman went 1-for- to lift the Yankees. Budy May, 6-3, who
1, including a solo home run in the pitched the final 2 1-3 innings in relief of
seventh inning, and scored three times to starter Shane Bawlcy, got the victory.

Pro Tennis
tournament.
The men’s final will be held Sunday;
both singles titles carry a first prize of
$90,000.
Connors’ strong overall game over­
whelmed the nervous amateur Harmon,
one of five black players in the men’s
draw.
“ He’s a big strong player," said
Connors, "(and) obviously played great
tennis to get to the quarter-final, beating
(No. 8 Eliot) Teltscher, who 1 think is a
great player."
"I wasn’t aggressive enough," said the
6-fooM, 21-year-old Harmon. "I was told
to lay back when I should have been
much more aggressive and tried to take
control. That’s what my coach (Dennis
Ralston) told me to do and I should have
listened harder."
The Connors-Vilas semifinal will be a
rematch of the 1977 Open final, won by
the Argentine in four sets.

Since the top four seeds are in the
semifinals, Vilas said a victory “is much
more meaningful. I prepared for the
surface here by playing five straight
weeks on cement and I’m pumped up
knowing the best players lie ahead."
Vilas’ mastdry of topspin had the
unfortunate Gullikson alternately hitting
shots long and into the net. Like Hannon
against Connors, Gullikson’s fleeting
moment of triumph was a single service
break.
"Tilings started out poorly for me and
they only got worse," said Gullikson.
In tlie men’s doubles final, the thirdseeded team of South Africa's Kevin
Curren and Steve Denton of Driscoll,
Texas, rallied for a marathon five-set
victory,6-2,6-7 (1-7), 5-7,6-2,6-1, over the
fifth-seeded duo of Victor Amaya,
Louisville, Ky., and Hank Pfister,
Bakersfield, Calif.
"We've been a team for three years
and this is our first Grand Slam title,"
said a joyous Curren, who will split
$36,000 with partner Denton. "We played
when we had to and it feels great."

Pell Puzzled By Southern Cal Offense
GAINESVILLE (UPI) - Florida
Coach Charley Pell says he doesn't know
whether to expect Southern California to
use a passing or a running offense when
the teams compete for the first time
Saturday.
"They have a new offensive coor­
dinator, Ted Tollner, who lias been at San
Diego State and Brigham Young," Pell
said otthe Trojans. "This is his first year
at Southern Cal, and because their
Saturday game with us is their opener,
we're the team that gets to find out what
the coaches on the West Coast wapt to
know.
"How much of their oTfense-will be the
traditional, tailback-oriented Southern
Cal running game and how much will be

College Football
the Tollner four-or-five receivers passing
game?" Pell asked. "Will it be one or the
other or a blend of the two?"
Pell said the mystery surrounding the
Trojan offense "has doubled our
preparation lime."
"And to make matters worse, they
promoted their defensive line coach of 26
years, Marv Goux, to defensive coor­
dinator," Pell complained. “ What
wrinkles has he wanted to put in for the
past 26 years that other defensive
coordinators have overruled?"
The Gators, ranked 16th in United

Press International’s pre-season college
football poll, defeated 15th-ranked Miami
17-11 in last week’s season opener for
both teams.
USC is ineligible for a rating in the UPI
poll because the Trojans are on NCAA
probation.
Florida and Southern California will
split $600,000 in royalties from their
regionally televised game with a 3:30
p.m. kickoff time. The Gators will retain
$66,000 of the cash under the
Southeastern C onference's revenuesharing plan.
Florida tight end Mike Mrkey is a
questionable starter in the USC game
because of a strained knee sustained in
the Miami contest, Pell said.

Mondo Leads Patriots Over Lions
I-ake Brantley's John Mondo scored
two touchdowns and intercepted a pass
as the junior varsity Patriots knocked off
Oviedo, 21-14, in the first football game
for both squads Thursday night in scrambled 43 yards into the end zone for
a score. Oviedo followed with an identical
Altamonte Springs.
Coach Kevin Carpenger's Patriots, 1-0, play as Wiggs scored the two-point
host Lake Mary next Thursday. Oviedo, conversion for an 8-7 halftime lead.
0-1, travels to St. Cloud next Thursday.
In the second half, Brantley forced a
Mondo, who churned for 112 yards for fumble and Mondo took off on a mis­
the night, combined with running mate direction play for 45 yards and a TD.
Craig Marien and quarterback Bobby
"John made a great run," said CarGarrison to move 55 yards for the score
penger who handles the JV along with
four minutes into the game.
Garrison plunged over from 2 yards out t Tony Durham. "He cut across the grain
for the TD and Marien booted the extra and made a nice move Into the end zone."
Marien added the extra point for a 14-8
point for a 7-0 lead.
Brantley dominated most of the first lead.
Oviedo came back, aided by two 15half until the lJons broke through with
two minutes left. Tailback Willie Wiggs yard penalties, to score on a 4-yard run

JV Football

by fullback Chris Finch. A try for 2 on the
point after, however, was foiled as the
teams were tied at 14 all.
I^ke Brantley added a clinching
touchdown when Mondo intercepted a
pass and returned it 15 yards to the
Oviedo 30. Several plays later, Mondo
rambled off tackle for 6 yards and a
score. Marien again hit the extra point
for a 21-13 final.
•

"Jeff Morris and I^rry Froemming
gave us good blocking In the line,” said
Carpenger. "Ruben
Perez was
everywhere on defense."
Perez had 13 tackles and Morris eight
for the Pats. Linebacker Craig Uwson
forced a fumble.

Oviedo

0 8 0 8 — 14

Lake Brantley

7 0 7 7 -2 1

Jam boree Opens SY SA Football Season
The Seminole Youth Sports Association
football jamboree Is scheduled for Sept.
11 at Lake Sylvan Park. Early games
start at 9 a.m. with five different age
divisions Involved. Teams are required
to be at the field 45 minutes prior to game
time for weigh-ins.

9:00 a.m.
9:30 a m
10.00 a.m .
11:00 a m.
11:10 a m.
U 00 p.m
100 p m
1:10 p m
1 00 p m.

P IE ID "A "
,
Mitey-Mite
Rockitke vs Eastbrook
Eastbrook vs English Estates
English Estates vs Rocklake
Ttagua Red vs M ilw e *
T ta g u t Gold vs Jackson Hts.
M ilwee vs Teague Gold
Jackson Hts. vs Lakaview
So Seminolt vs Teagua Red
Lakeview vs So Seminola

9.00 a.m.
9 10a m
10 00 a m
11 00 a.m.
11:10 a m.
12 00 p m.
1 00 p m.
1.10 p.m.
2 00 p m

F IE L D ’ X "
Jr. Midget
Rocklake Red vs Tuskawilia Blue
Rocklaka Green vs Tuskawilia Gold
Tuskawilia Blue vs Rocklake Grn.
Tuskawilia Gold vs Rocklaka Red
Teagua vs Milwee
Jackson Hts. vs So. Seminola
M ilw ea vs Lakaview
So Seminola vs Teague
Lakeview vs Jackson Hts.

Jr. Paa Wee
1:10 p m Teague Red vs So Sem M ilwee
100 p.m. Tuskawilia vs T ta g u t Red
1:10 p.m. So Sem. Milwee vs Teague Gold
P IIL O " B "
Paa Wee
» 10 a m Rocklaka Rad vs Tuskawilia
10 00 a m. Rocklaka Grn vs Rocklaka Red

10 30 a m.
11 10 a.m .

Tuskaw ilia vs Rocklaka G re w
T ta g u t vs Milwee

12 00
11 10
1:10
2 00

p
p
p
p

m
m
m
m

So Seminole vs Lakeview
Jackson Hts. vs Teague
M ilw ee vs So. Seminolt
Lakeview vs Jackson Hts.

J r. Bantam
2 10 p m Silver Lions vs Sem Bulldogs
1 00 p m Sem Bulldogs vs Silver Lions

United P re tt Inter national
American League
National Leaque
East
Cut
W L Pet
OB
CB V lwauke
W L Pet
I ) St 5*3 • 565 4
60 565
St LOU'l
Boston
t V 558 S
’ 6 81 561
1j
Ptula
71 67 514 11
n 85 532 4' j N.-w York
Montreal
70 67 511 l l ' i
P*tt*t)r&lt;jn
u 65 537 4' 3 Detroit
67 70 489 14' i
Cievelnd
O'CrfQO
61 •- 436 16
65 75 464 18
54 83 394 73' 3 Toronto
New York
W rit
West
19 60 568
Kan Cdy
Atlanta
78 67 557
77 62 SS4 2
los Ang
77 64 546 V 3 Cal.l
vq 5 64 536
4 '&gt;
San p ego
74 67 525 4' i Chicago
65 73 471 13’ »
Seattle
San Fran
77 66 514 6
Oakland
59 SI 421 70’ j
Houston
65 75 464 13
56 81 403 23
Te«as
Cmci
57 66 371 76 h
49 90 353 30
V&lt;nn
San Francisco 5. Houston I
Thursday's Results
San O 'fqo 4. C'ncmnat' t
Atlanta 10. Los AnQfies 3
Cleveland 3 Baltimore 0
Chicago (Jenkins &lt;0 14). 7 )S
New York S Milwaukee 4 IQ inn
pm
(A ll Times EOT)
Philadelphia (R uthvm IQ 10)
Detroit
(M orris
IS 141
at
al P Itsburgh (Candelaria IJ SI
Boston (Eckersley 13 101; t 15
MS p m
Cincinnati (Shirley 6 I I I at p m
Baltim ofe (McGregor
13 13)
Atlanta (Perer 0 41. I 40 p m
at Cleveland IBurker 13 11) 7 35
New York iSwan 8 ftl at St
pm
Louis (Sluper A SI. 8 35 p m
Milwaukee (Caldwell 14 I I) at
Los Angeles (Hooton J SI at
New York (Guidry 14 5). 8 p m
Houston (Ryan 14 101 S 35 p m
Seat) (Perry 8 131 at Te«as
San Francisco IBreimng 8 41
(tanana 6 161. 8 OS p m
at San D&gt;ego (Dravecky 4 ?)
Minnesota (Castillo B ID
at
10 OS p m
kansas City IGura 17 9). 8:35
Saturday's Games
pm
Cmcmnati at Atlanta
Toronto
(Leal
10 131
at
Los Angeles at Houston
California IZahn 14 It) .
10 30
Montreal at Chicago
pm
Phila at Pittsburgh, night
New York at SI Louis, night
Chicago (Lam p 9 61 at Oakland
San Fran at San Diego night
(Norns 6 91 10 IS p m

Linescores
By United P re tt International
National League
San Fran
000 010 103- 5 11 0
Mous
000 000 100 I 8 6
M orl.n
Holland (61. Minion
17) and May LaCott. LaCorte
(81. Roberge (9) and Athby W
M arlin (6 8) L LaCott (4 6)
HR San Francitco.
Bergman
(3)

Atlanta. Horner (30). Hubbard
(9). Benedict (31. LE Angelet.
Guerrero (39)
(Only garnet tcheduled)

American League
Hr
000 000 000 0 3 0
Cleve
000 000 30«~3 5 0
O M artin e l, Stewart (71 and
Nolan D
Anderton (6)
San Dqo
000 110 300
4 10 0 and H attey W Anderton (3 11
Cmci
COO000 I0O- I 5 1 L D M artinet (14 II)
Lotlar
DeLeon
I I)
and
Kennedy. Berenyi. Price 17). (lOmningt)
Scherrer (81 and Trevino W
M il*
000 000 040 O 4 10 0
L o lla r(14 81 L BerenyilB 16)
NY
004 OOO 000 1- 5 I 3
VucKovich. Ladd )0&gt; and Sim
Lot Ang
001 1Q0 010
3 6 0 m oot, Rawley, May (81 and
Ladd
Atlanta
330 004 0 3 « - 10 9 1 Wynegar W May (6 31 L
Valenzuela. Beckwilh (7) and (I 7) HRt New York. W infield
Sciotoa Mahler. Bedrotian (61 (311. Mumphrey (7). Milwaukee.
and Benedict W- Mahler (9 9) Oglivie (71)
(Only game tcheduled
L Valeniuela
117 13)
HRt

Leaders
M jio r Leaque Leaders
By United Press Inter national
Betting
(Based on 1.1 plate appear
antes i number ol games each
team has played)
National League
g ab h pet
Oliver. M il
137 521 173 331
Madlock, Pit
136 509 163 320
L Smith,
SIL
133 518 164 317
Queerer
LA
133 508 158 311
Durham. Chi
130 4/9 148 309
Buchner. Chi
139 564 173 307
Schmidt, Phi
US 430 130 302
Morgan. SF
114 397 120 302
Baker. LA
127 493 149 307
Hrnnd7.SIL
137 S10 IS4 J02
American League
g ab h pel
Wilson. KC
. 114 496 166 33S
Yount, M il
134 S43 179 330
Harrah.
Cle
138 523 167 319
Garcia.
Tor
129 537 171 318
Cooper,
M il
133 559 176 315
Rice. Bos
121 480 151 315
Lanslord. Bs
110 414 130 314
M urray. Bal
177 458 143 317
Carrw. Cal
116 441 137 311
McRae, KC
139 530 164 309
H$&gt;me Runs
National League
Kingman.
NY.
and
Murphy,
A ll,
34;
Schmidt, Phi, 31. Horner. A ll,
and Ihompson, Pit*. 30
Am erican League
Re Jack
son. Cal. and Thomas. M il, 34.
Winfield.
NY.
II;
Thornton,
Clev, 30. Cooper. M il, 29
Runs Batted In
National League — M urphy,
Ail, 103. Clark. SF 94, Buckner,
Chi. Horner. All, Oliver. M il. and
Thompson, Pitt, 93
A m tric a n ktague — McRae.
KC 118. Thornton, Clev, 106.
Cooper, M il. 106. Thomas, M il.
100. W infield. N Y . 94

Stolen Bases
National League
Rames.
M il. 65. L
Smith. SIL. 62
Moreno. Pitt. SS. Wilson, NY.
S3. S Sa«. LA. 46
American League
Mender
son. Oak. 124 Garcia. Tor. 48,
J Crul. Sea. 37. MoMor, M il,
and Wathan. KC. 34
Pitching
Victories
National League
Carlton.
Phil. 19 9 Valeniuela. LA, 17
U. Rogers. M il. 16 7. Robinson,
P ill, 15 9 Welch, LA, 15 10
American League — Gura.
KC. 17 9. Vuckovich. M il, 16 4
Zahn. Cal. 15 7. Hoyt. Chi, 15
13. Morris. Del. 15 14
Earned Run Average
(Based on I inning ■ number ol
qames each team has played)
National League — Rogers.
MU. 7 25. Niekro. Hou. "2 81.
Candelaria. P ilt. 7 64. Laskey,
SF, 7 65. Anduiar, SIL. 7 72
American League — Petty,
Del. 3 05. Beall.e. Sea. 3 I I .
Vuckovich, M il,. 3 70, Sutclille,
Cle. 3 21. Eckersley, Bos. 3 35
* Strikeouts
National League - Solo, Cin.
736. Carlton. Phil, 727. Ryan,
Hou, 208. Valenfuela, LA. 168.
Welch. LA, 152
Am erican League — Banms
ler. Sea. 169. Barker. Clev. ISO.
Guidry, NY, 14). Beattie. Sea.
138. Righett), NY, I3S
Saves
National League — Sutter.
SIL.
30.
Garber.
A ll,
and
Minton, SF 77. Reardon. MU.
73. Allen, NY. 19
A m tric a n League — Quisen
berry, KC. 37. Fingers. M il, 29.
Gossage. NY, 28, Caudill, Sea.
74. Davis. Min, 18

Deals
reserve, recalled running back
■ v Untied Press International
Thursday
Frank Wilson
Basketball I
San Francisco — Placed wide
Las Vegas ICBA) — Named
receiver M ike Wilson on injured
Tom Nissalke coach.
reserve; activated running back
Football
Newton W illiam s
Washington (USFL) — Signed
Chicago (U S F L ) Signed
punter M ike Bregg, running back
kicker via d e Janakievskl and
quarterback Kevin Strasser
Buddy Hardeman, running back
C h a rlie W ysocki, p u n te rk lc k e r
Cleveland — Signed offensive
tackle Andy Frederick; waived
Dale Castro, quarterback Chris
offensive tackle Joel Petlen
G a rrily , cornerback Hollis Hall
and defensive end Tony Suber.
Green Bay — Waived linebacker
Thornes Boyd of Alabama.
Hockey
Houston — Signed defensive
Los Angeles — Signed treeegent
back Tale Randall
defenseman Dean Turner.
New England — Placed running
Quebec — Signed d tltn s tm a n
back Andy Johnson and defensive
W ill Paiem tnt to a four year
end Sieve C lark o n in lu fe d reserve; contract and defensemen Andre
activated wide r tc a iv tr M orris
Dupor* to a one year contract.
Washington — Hamad T erry
Bradshaw and ta c k le L u th e r
Henson
M urray assistant coach.
New Y ork Glanfs — Signed
Soccer
linebacker M ike Curccut defensive
M ontreal — Fired Coach Eddie
back.
F irm a n i; named assistants Pierre
Pittsburgh - Placed running
M indru and Andy Lynch Interim
back Sidney Thornton on injured
head coaches

FIELD "O'*
» JO a m.
W 00 a m.
*0 JO a.m.
,11:10 a.m.
12 00 p m
12:10 p.m
1:10 p m.

Rocklaka vs Tuskawilia
Tuskawilia vs Rocklaka
M ilw ea vs Jackson His.
Teagua vs Lakevlaw
Jackson His, vs So Seminole
Lakeview vs M ilwee
So. Seminole vs Teague

Jr. Pee Wee
2 00 p.m. Rocklake vs Tuskawilia
2 10 p m Teagua Gold vs Rocklake

Tha first football taam to uta uniform numbars
was that of tha Univariity of Pittsburgh, in 1908.

�8A—Evening Herald, Sanford, Ft.

Friday, Sept. 10, 1983

Real Estate
Sales In Area
Are Increasing
The Keyes Company, realtors, has completed a
comprehensive market study of major trade areas in
Florida for the period Jan . 1-June 30.
The results indicate that 34 percent of all properties
in the Orlnndo-Scmlnole area listed by brokers are
being sold, compared to 17.6 percent in Dade County
and 22 percent in Broward County.
The high percentage of residential sales is due in
part to the phenomenal growth the Orlando area is
presently experiencing, a Keyes spokesman said.
M ajor industries moving into central Florida are a
contributing factor, but the study also revealed that an
additional factor for the tremendous growth is due to
m igration from northern cities and from the southeast
Florida region.
According to Andy Spatafora, president of Keyes
Florida, Inc., the Orlando division of the Keys Com­
pany, “Central Florida residential real estate is
currently experiencing a boom because we are in the
best business, in the best area, in the best state of the
Union.
"'Additionally, he continued, “a major part of Keyes'
business in Orlando is coming from referrals from
Keyes offices in south Florida where people are
moving out."
The increase of crime, drugs and the influx of aliens,
particularly in Dade and Broward counties, is cause
for many south Florida residents to relocate in the
central Florida area, and more specifically, Orlando,
he said.
Among industries moving into the OrlandtKSeniinole
area, Westinghouse and Western F.lectric are con­
structing facilities which wdl create approximately
2,000 new jobs for Orlando residents. Disney’s new
E p cot (Experim ental P rototype Community of
Tomorrow ) is projected to employ 14,000 to 20,000
people. Additionally, $9 billion of construction plans
have been approved for office buildings, shopping
malls and residential housing. The Orlando area's
population is projected at one million by 1990, an in­
crease of 250,000 currently, i

Sanford Woman
On SBA Council
The Jacksonville District Office of the U S. Small Business
Administration (SBA) lias announced the appointment of
Janice It, Springfield of Sanford to the Jacksonville District
Advisory Council.
Springfield is executive vice president and cashier of the
Flagship Bank of Seminole in Sanford and is a prior member of
Use council having served since 1978. She is also a member of
the E ast Central Florida Regional Planning Council.
The council is comprised of business, financial, professional
and academ ic leaders who serve as a link between the small
business community and live Small Business Administration.
The Council provides the Agency with data and information on
the problems and needs of small business and makes
recommendations for improving the delivery of SBA services
to small business, as well as suggesting new national policies
and programs.

Fire Calls Answ ered
The Sanford Fire Department responded to the following fire
alarm s:
Tuesday
— 12:01 a.m., 519 E. First St., rescue.
— 1:56 a.m., 119 E. 12th St., rescue.
—.8:13 p in., Airport Blvd. and U.S. Highway 17-92, uuto
accident with injuries.
- '
Wednesday
_ 12:28 a.m ., 20th St. and Hays Dr., auto accident.
— 9:18 a.m ., 400 Scott Ave., woman down.
— 10:16 a.m., 48 Redding Gardens, man down.
— 2:38 p.m., Seminole Blvd., sail boat overturned against
sea wall, no injuries reported.
— 2:58 p.m,, 312 Chapman Ave., man down.
— 3:27 p.m., Monroe Marina, boat fire caused by electrical
short, properly damage, but no injuries reported.
— 7:32 p.m., 3100 Sanford Ave., Cumberland Farms food
store, fire caused by electrical short, property damage, but no
injuries reported.
— 11:09 p.m., 2409 Sanford Ave., electrical short.________

IN THE SERVICE
ERICA L RYDER

JEFFREY L RADWICK

E ric a L Ryder, daughter of
M yrna D Vaughn of 104 Shannon
Drive, Sanford, l» underdoing
summ er tra in in g al tea
She is a member of Ihe Naval
Reserve O ffice r Training Corps
(NROTCI unit al ihe U S Naval
Academy, Annapolis, Md This
summ er, she has been assigned to
ihe am phibious Iransport dock
USS Ogden, homeporled in San
Diego
D uring th e ir lour to six week
summer tra in in g cruises. NNOTC
m idshipm en receive Instruction on
s h lp h a n d l i n g , n a v ig a t io n ,
s e a m a n s h ip , com m unications,
damage co n tro l and gunnery

Jelfrey L. Radwick. son of Or ion
J and Unda A Smith ol BIO
M im o sa
Drive.
A lta m o n te
Springs, has been chosen to enter
the Navy's Nuclear Propulsion
O ffic e r
Candidate
P ro g ra m
(NUPOC)

Legal Notice
FIC TITIO US NAME
Notice is hereby given that I am
engaged in business at P O Box
tie , Casselberry Florida 13707
Seminole County, Florida under
Ihe fic t it io u s name ol T ou r
Am erica, and that t Intend to
register said name with Ihe Clerk
Of the C irc u it Court, Seminole
County, F lo rid a In accordance
with the provisions ot the F ic ­
titious Name Statutes, To W it:
Section (6509 Florida Statutes
1*57
•* Sig W illia m E Bonner
Pobtish Sept. 1. 10. 17, 34. 19*7
FIC TITIO US NAME
; Notice Is hereby given that I am
engaged in business et 347]
Stanford D r. Orlando, Fla 13IIO
Stffllnole County, Florida under
ink-.‘ t l c l i l l o u t nam e ol TH E
TALENT BUR EAU, end that I
,fVend to reg iste r said name w ith
C la rk o l the C irc u it C o u rt,
Seminole County, Florida In ac
[ftrO a n ce w Ith th a provisions ol the
F ictitious Name Statutes, To W it:
Section (65 Of Florlde Statutes
SfS7
-Signature L a rry Alexander
Publish August 30. 37, September
1. tt). tf(3
DEY 434

Upon entering Ihe program ,
Radwick w ill report to Newport.
R ,l. lo r 16 weeks of officer can
didale school, which w ill lead to a
commission In the U S Navy,
He w ill then begin an extensive
tra in in g program lasting more
than a year The llrst six months
w ilt be at the Navy’s nuclear
power school In Orlando.

Legal Notice
FICT IOUSNAME
Notice Is hereby given that I am
engaged In business at M l French
Ave Sanlord, Seminole County,
Florida under the fictitious name
of Smith Cun Smithing, and that I
intend to register said name w ilt)
Ihe Clerk ol the Circuit Court,
Seminole County, Florida In ac
co rd a n ce w ilh lh f provisions ot the
F ictitious Name Statutes. To W it:
Section (65 Of Florida Statutes
1957
Sig David R Smith
Publish Sept 3. 10. 17. 34, I f f 3
DEZ10
FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice is hereby given that I am
engaged in business at M6 Parson
Brown Way Longwood. Fla 137SO
Semmole County, Florida under
Ihe fictitious name of EDITO RIAL
SERVICE ASSOCIATES, and lh a l
I intend to regislar said name w ith
the Clerk of Ihe Circuit Court,
Semmole County, Florida in accordance with the provisions of the
Fictitious Name Statutes, To W it:
Section (65 09 Florida Statutes
US7.
Signature
EUiabeth H, Ward
Publish September 10, 17, 24.
October t, 19(1
D E I 19

Legal Notice

_

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY. FLO R ID A
PROBATE DIVISION
File Number I t 41$ CP
Division
IN RE. ESTATE OF
PATRICIA ANNE DUFRESNE
Deceased
NOTICE OF ADM INISTRATIO N
TO ALL PERSONS HAVING
C LAIM S
OR
DEM ANDS
AGAINST THE ABOVE ESTATE
AND ALL OTHER PERSONS
INTERESTED IN THE ESTATE
YOU
ARE
HEREBY
N O T IF IE D
th a t
(he
ad
m in istra tio n ol th e e sta te o l
Patricia Anne Dutresne, deceased.
File Number I I 43S CP, Is pending
in the Circuit Court for Seminote
County, Florida, Probate Division,
the address ot which is P .0
Drawer C, 5anlord, F lorid a 13771
The personal representatives of
the estate are Claude Outresne,
IOB03 Laleunesse, M o n tre a l,
Canada, and M argaret Slkorskl,
114 El C»mmo Del M ar, San
Francisco, California The name
and address ol th e p e rsonal
representative's attorney are set
forth below
All persons having claim s or
demands against the estate are
required.
W IT H IN
THREE
MONTHS FROM THE DATE OF
THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF
THIS NOTICE, to tile w ith the
clerk ot the above court a w ritten
statement of any claim or demand
they may have Each claim must
be in writing and must Indicate the
basis lo f the claim, the name and
addressof Ihe creditor or his agent
or attorney, and the amount
claimed It the cla im is not yet
due, the date when it w ill become
due shall be.stated It the claim is
contingent or unliquidated. Ihe
nature ol the uncertainly shall be
stated It the claim is secured, the
security shall be described The
claimant shall deliver sufficient
copies ol Ihe claim to the cterx to
enable the clerk ol m all one copy
to each personal representative
All persons interested In the
estate to whom a copy of this
Notice ol Adm inistration has been
mailed are required. W IT H IN
THREE MONTHS FRO M THE
DATE
OF
TH E
F IR S T
PUBLICATION
OF
THIS
NOTICE, to file any obleptions
they may have that challenge the
validity ol the decedent's w ill, the
q u a lifica tio n s ol the p e rsonal
represeniative, or the venue or
jurisdiction ol the court.
ALL CLAIMS, DEM ANDS. AND
OBJECTIONS NOT SO F IL E O
WILL BE FOREVER BARRED
Date ot the first publication of
this Notice ol A dm inistration
Sept 1. 1911
Claude Dutresne
Margaret Slkorskl
As Personal Representative
ol the Estate of
Patricia A m e Dutresne
Deceased
ATTORNEY FOR PERSONAL
r e p r e s e n t a t iv e

Frank L Schlavo. Esq
13 E Pine Street
Orlando. Fla 32801
Telephone (1051 041 3353
Publish September 1, 10, 19B3
D E I 34

CLASSIFIED A D S
Sem in o le

V * '* i n

831-9993

CLASSIFIED DEPT.

H im # ..:... ........ . S0caline

HOURS

1 consecutive tlmei soceline
7 consecutive timM .......... (lc
10consecutive timet 33c a tine

J 00 A M . — 5:30 P M
M O N D A Y th r u F R ID A Y
S A T U R D A Y 9 Noon

DEADLINES
Noon The Day Before Publication

18— Help Wanted

EXP MOTHER Lots ot TLC.
w ill babysit In my home
Winter Springs Area 337 04S3.
W ILL BABYSIT
IN MY HOME
131 03K
GA4AGE sates are in season
Tell Ihe people about it with *
Classified Ad m the Herald
&gt;13 34ii e is e w j

CLERK, w ith some sales,
no experiencenecessary
l i t 7577
EX P E R IE N C E D craltsm an lor
a ll types of -home Im
provement w ork Aluminum
type construction 333 4675
CASA M IA P ljla rla (K Mart
Plata I waitress wanted Apply
in person 311 MO*

Opportunities

Plumbing. Hardware, OlY. Bus
W wo‘ Real E s ta te
Wm
Malictpwski Realtor 233 7903

150,000-SfiO,000 per year.

EARN EXTRA
CHRISTMAS MONEY
Olan M ills has 6 immediate
openings lor telephone con
sultants Morning and evening
s h ills a va ila b le E xc e lle n t
opportunity lor housewives to
get out ot the house Also
person with fuel efficient car
or m otor , bike
lo r lig h t
d e liv e ry
M u s t,have
knowledae ol su rro u n d in g
area Apply in person to Mrs
Pickering Days Inn beginning
Thursday, Sept 9 atr 9 a.m
(Please no phone calls to the
Motet )

LO CAL
M E N 'S
C lothing
Establishment is looking lor
AN ambitious career minded
individual tor a lu ll tim e
position
Diversified duties,
sales experience preferred
Send resumes Box 138 c o
Evening Herald. PO
Box
1657, Sanford, Fla 33771
G E N E R A L O FF IC E d u tie s,
good typist, likes detail work 5
day week 333 53(3

Are you bored w ith your Job?
Tired ot working tor the other
man? N a tio n a l Company
based in Lexington, looking tor
Qualified part tim e and full
time distributor, in 4 county
area investment covered by
inventory Call I 800 154 959,

25- Loans
HOME EQUITY LOANS
No points or broker tees, loans to
$75,000 to Homeowners. GFC
Cred l Corp/, Sant, FI, 373 6&lt; 10

28—Apts. &amp; Houses
To Share
ROOM and privileges in
new 3 BdtfTi Townhouse S50
137 7336, 313 7776

17601013

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JO B

i t — Instructions
MUSIC lessons — Plano, guitar,
voice, brass, woodwind, banjo
6 drums 371 (7(1.

To

ELEM ENTARY Piano Lessons
ottered tor beginners ages 4
and up Debbie 331 5931.

L is t Y o u r

D ia l 3 2 2 - 2 6 1 1

B u s in e s s or

8 3 1 -9 9 9 3

12—Special Notices
WESTERN Auto has moved to
3101 French Ave Watch our
sign lor hot special)

Aloe Products

Coitct i*ti* Work

Roofing

Lawn Service

18—Help Wanted
COVER G IRL M OOEL — Types
(over I I) tor fu ll 6 part.tim e
work Free tra v e l to Indiana
Call 319 345 3000 W rite. Cover
Girls. Oiana Hansen. Box 3000.
Roselawn. In 46373
PERSON to p ro g ra m and
operate an Apple It 4BK, 3 disk
drive computer w ith T.t. Omni
BOOprinter M ust also sell your
work to businesses You can
write your o w n llc k e t. Reply in
detail to Data Service, Inc.
PO Box 3131. Sanford. FL
13771

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT IN AND
FOR SEMINOLE
COUNTY,
FLORIOA
CASE NO 13 7134 CA 10 O
IN R E : The Adoption o l:
GEORGE FRANCIS BARRETT
and
ROBERT
M A R T IN
BARRETT,
M in or Children
NOTICE UNDER FICTITIOUS
NAME STATUTE
NOTICE OF ACTION
TO GEORGE F D U N LA V E Y , TO WHOM IT M AY CONCERN
NOTICE Is hereby given that the
JR
undersigned p u rsu a n t t o r the
49 Chestnut Street
Nam e
S ta tu te ’ ’
Lowell. Massachusetts OlSSt “ F ic titio u s
Chapter B6S09, Florida Statutes,
AND ALL OTHERS WHOM
will register w ith Ihe Clerk ol Ihe
MAY CONCERN
YOU ARE N O T IF IE D that an Circuit Court, in and for Seminole
action lor the adoption ol your County, Florida, upon receipt ol
m inor
ch ild re n ,
G EO RG E proof of the publication ot this
FRANCIS
DUNLAVEY
and notice, the fic titio u s name to-wit:
SP E E D Y
P R IN T IN G
ROBERT 7AAR TIN D U N LA VEY SIR
has been tiled against you and you CENTER
are required to serve a copy ol under which we expect to engage
your written defenses, if any, fo it in business at 1330 Douglas
on CHARLENE D
K E L L E Y , Avenue, Springside Center, Suite
tOl. Longwood. Florida, 13750.
Petitioner's attorney, whose ad
The party interested In sad
dress is S00 Highway 17 92. Fern
business enterprise Is as follows
Park, FL 31710, on or before Oc
LONGWOOD DUPLICATING,
tober S, 1912. and tile the original
with Ihe Clerk ol this Court either INC
By: M ICHAEL F. HOWARD.
before service on P e titio n e r's
President
attorney
or
Im m e d ia te ly
thereafter, otherwise a default Publish August 37 A September 3,
10. 1913
w ill be entered against you tor the
rebel demanded In the Petition lor OEY 153
Adoption
WITNESS my hand and seal ot
LEO A L NOTICE
this Court on September I, 19(1,
Pursuant to F.S. Ch 175.1S. Ihe
Seminole County Board o l County
(Seal)
ARTHUR M BECKW ITH, JR
C om m issioners has. at open
Clerk ol the Circuit Court
meeting August 17, 1913, declared
BY Susan E Tabor
the following lot as surplus to
County needs:
Deputy Clerk
Lot 11S. Oookertown, Plat Book
Publish- Sept, 3, 10, 17, 34, 19*3
4, Page 91. Public Records ol
D E I 33
Seminole County, Florida.
FICTITIOUS NAM E
Said lot w ill be sold by Public
Notice is hereby given that I am Outcry to the H ighest Bidder al the
engaged in business at Flea World, West Door (P a rk Avenue) of the
4 llt S Orlando Ave,, Sanlord, Seminole County Courthouse at It
Fla , 33771, S em inole County, o'clock a m , F rid a y , the 17th ol
Florida under the fic titio u s name September, 19(1 M inim um ecol Turbine Toppers, and that I ceptabie b&gt;d is St.1(0 which is the
intend to register said name with assessed value on current lax roll
the Clerk ot Ihe C ircu it Court, plus advertising cost and Clerk's
Seminote County, F lorid a In ac
service cost of SIS.
cordance with the provisions ot the
Robert J. Sturm
Fictitious Name Statutes, To W it;
Chairman,
Section IIS 09 F lorid a Statutes
Seminole County Commission
I9S7,
Attest
Sig EUtabeth M cM ahan
Arthur H. Beckwith Jr.
Sig. Marilyn M cMahan
Clerk, Seminole County
Publish Sept 3, 10, 17, 34, 19(3
Publish- September 1, 10. 19(3
D E I 19
D E I 16

T IM E T O D IE tT
Forever Lite w Aloe Lose weight

N o H iealt^ ^ n erg ^ ^ 2 H g ^ ^

BEAL Concrete I man quality
operation pat'ds driveways
Days l i t 7313 Eves 177 1371
CONCRETE work all types
Footers, drivew ays, pads,
flo o rs , pools, com plete or
rrlm is h Free est 373 7IOJ

Additions &amp;
RomocV'lmq
BATHS, kitch e n i, rooting block,
c o n cre te , w in d o w s add a
room, tree estimates 111 8461

Electrician

NEW. REM O DEL, REPAIR
All types and phases ol con
struction, S G Ballnl i l l 4(17.
122 (665 State Licensed

FOR SALE or trade carpentry,
electrician, plumber, rooter,
a llin o n e (a ,m , t o l l p.m 644
3759

Beauty Care
TOW ERSBEAUTVSALO N
FORM ERLY H a rrie tts Beauty
Nook 519 E 1st SI . 133 574?

Palm Baach

New Smyrna Beach Palatka
St. Augustine

Sanford

Mt. Dora

DeLand

Titusville

Ocala

SMALL HOME REPAIRS
Painting, lawn care, etc
Free Estimates, call 371 0150

IN T E R IO R S B Y E L L E N
Complete window dressings
in Home Service 333 0951

CAR L'S Law nm ow er, sm all
engine and automotive repair
C e rtifie d AC. P ick up 4
delivery 133 &gt;064
MISTER, Fix It. Jo* McAdams
wilt repair your mowers al
your home Call 333 7055

bricks,

block,

concrete, stucco an a repa.rs
Quality Fred 321 5204

Hauling

Boardinq !i Grooming
ANIM AL Haven Boarding and
Grooming Kennels Shady, In
sulated, Screened, liy proof ih
side, outside runs Fans Also
AC cages We cater, to your
pets Pft. 332 5753
-

——|

Want Ads Gef People Together
— Those Buying And Those
Selling 133 3611 -or ( I t 999J.

DeGarmeau Bookkeeping
Service
Quality service to r Ihe small
business 133 3307

Brick &amp; Block
Stonework

Career Opportunity

377 6704

Painting n or
Pressure Cleaning
NO JOB too large or sm all Pro
q u a lify ftO fkm anship anti
m aterial* Ret J2J 0071

Painting

Home Improvement
C A R P E N T R Y , concrete &amp;
plumbing Minor repairs to
adding a room Don 173 1974
PA IN TIN G and repair, patio and
screen porch ou jit
C a ll
anytim e 133 940)

Bar B Ques. patios, fireplaces
No tob too sm a ll. Free
Estimates (14 0973

OUR H A 1E SA R E LO W ER
L akeview, Nursing Center
719 E Second St . Sanford

WHY have iunk lying around
when you can have it hauled
away today Free estimates,
call M r Lucky bet ween 9 9
1711094
LIG HT HAULING ,yard
work and odd Jobs
3119064

Bookkeeping

J

Nut siriq Center
HAULING and Clean Up.
tree trim m ing and removal
349 9310

WINDOW repair and inslalla
•Ion,
screen
re p a ir
4
r e p la c e m e n t ,
w in d o w
cleaning 171 5994

l •i ■
a Jnl lcc H
H Os O
e ic. ™
• DOT C«rtittc8tion
• Financial Assutanc#
• Placem ent A uittance
UNHID TVIKK NULtraU

HOME Remodeling. Room
Additions Complete
GaregeDoor Service
Dick Gross l i t Sail
WINDOWS, carpentry, doors,
m inim um repairs Floor tile ,
cabinets i do it all 177(111
Licensed A bonded

700 E Washington St
Orlando

BAL ROOFING
insured A Bonded References.
S60 per square with tree est
Call 331 710J

STOP AND THINK A M INUTE
It C la ssifie d Ads d id n 't
work
'here wouldn't be any
ROOF S permanently tiberqlass
ed at a fraction ot the cost all
types 100 A comm 67» 6631
JEAN'S Roolmq, licensed, in
Sured. tree estimates, ask tor
Jean Npe, 373 1844
Let a Classified Ad help you find
more room lo r storage
Classified Ads find buyers
last
ROOFING Ot a ll kinds com m er
clal A re sid e n tia l Bonded A
insured 321 2597 if no answer
014 8537
BUILT up and Shingle root.
licensed and insured Free
estimates 333 1936
James E Lee Inc

HEILM AN rooting, painting 6
re p a irs
Q u a lity
w ork,
reasonaole
ra te s
Free
estimates Anytim e 834 8490

RFROOFING, carpentry, root
repair A painting is years
exp 327 1976

LET USheautily your home with
paint interior or exterior '
(14 6100 or 331 6717

EXPERT ROOFING

EDW EtM ER PA IN TIN G
Quality work guaranteed
Licensed
333 6743
Insured
PAINTING &amp; ROOFING
no loo too large or
small. 331 5949

C O L L IE R 'S Home R e p a irs
carpentry, rooting, painting,
window repair. 171 6473

1-425-7105

322-9417

LIT TIKEN CONTRACTORS
RO O FINtf
Licensed, bonded,low prices
Quality workmanship
I roe E stim ates788 3219

fctosonry

F IH E PL ACE 5,

a m m m E
33 yrs experience. Licensed A
Insured.
Free Estimates on Rooting,
Re Rooting and R epairt.
Shingles. B u ilt Up and Tile.

JAMES ANDERSON
G. F. BOHANNON

Blinds

BILL'S PAINTING
VERY REASONABLE
FREE EST 331 6417
PROFESSIO NAL
p a in tin g ,
pressure cleaning A plastering
repair. 169 6001 333 1 360 a ft 6
It

you are having d ifficu lty
finding a place,, to live, car to
drive, a iob. or some service
you have need of, read a ll our
want ads every day

No Big W aiting List
Hoofing Special 10 *, discount
w th this ad when presentee
to Expert Rooting
Rerool
specialists
We honor in
surance claim s For Ihe best &gt;r
roolinq and rem odeling cal
Expert Rooting A Rcmodelinj
Asso The One stop shoppm;
renter Built up. shingles, till
and tin rooting Deal directh
wdh a local contractor whi
has a reputable business
Licensed, Bonded A Insured
34 Hour Service

323-7473
Secretarial Services

Carpentry
FOR SALE o r trade carpentry,
electrician, plumber, rooter,
all in one. ( a.m. t o l l p.m.
644 1759.

CARPENTER I S y r v t x p Small
rem odeling iobs, reasonable
rates. Chuck 371 9645
B 1 M REPAIRS, electrical,
p lu m b in g , c a rp e n try , pain
lin g Free estimates. 14 HR.
Em erg. Service ( I t 13(0

Ceiling Fan Installation
C E ILIN G FAN INSTALLATION
Q uality Work
Wa Do Most Anything
995 9378
4374781

Ceramic Tile

Need Qualified people who can cook and
manage. Tell us about yourself In your
own handw riting. Reply to Holiday
House, 1130 Old Daytona Rd. DeLand,
F L 32720

C L A S S IF IE D
ADS
MOVE
MOUNTAINS ol merchandise
every day

P A IN T IN G , G utters, M eta l
Roofs R* paired 6 Coaled,
Most M inor Home Repairs.
Lie A lte r 3 p.m, 313 7l55

Home Repairs

HOLIDAY HOUSE

MOW. EDGE, WEED EATING
Cleanups 6 light hauling
Tree estimates, call 331 0150

Lawn Mowers

tandyman

Legal Notice

Complete C eram ic T ilt Serv.
walls, floors, countertops, re
model, repair F r. est 139 03H
COODY A SONS
T ile Contractors
114-0157

ins

Pla storing

ALL
Phases o* Plastering
Plastering repair, stucco, hard
r role. Simulated brick 371 S99]

Alhen you place a Classified Ad
n The Evening .Herald Stay
close to your phone because
something wonderful ,s about
&gt;0 happen

Sewing

Landscaping
Plumbing
LAN D C LE AR IN G lilld ir t .
top soil, shale, disking,
mowing 333 341]

Lawn Service

M EIN TZER T IL E . Exp Since
1951 New A old w erk comm A
resld Free estim ate (694567

Lie

f

24 -B u sin ess

CONSULT OUR

CHILD care 6 Mos to 5 Yrs. in
my home Fenced
yard,
weekdays 7 a m .
6 p.m
Lunch Inc I SM w k Sanlord
Lk Mary area 331 6(01.

FRIENDLY home patties has
toys 1 g ilts for a ll ages is
needing dealers In your area
No investment needed Also
booking p a rtie s
C a ll lo r
details (lo st 131 ( t i l l

Orlando

PERSONNEL U N L IM IT E D has
an innovative, new. low cost
way to provide quality em
ploymenf services Interviews
by appointment Call 323 5649

D i s t r i b u t o r s wanted- im
med a tfly E arrinq from 1200
to 1400 weekly part tim e Or full
tim e M r f o r - complete -n
fo rm a tio n w rite P re m ie re
Merchandise Company P O
Box 1103-Dept E h ,4 Sanford
Fla 327ft.’

M A N A G E R T R A IN E E p a rt
tim e. Salary plus commissionand bonuses Potential ad
vancemc-nt
Hospilalitation
and retirem ent, must work
some evenings Apply at ABC
Liquors, Sanlord,
-.
-'

Sund ay - Noon Friday

IF you want a m ature babysitter
who loves children, bring them
JO my home 133 1359

NE ED maintenance forem an lor
m a n u fa c tu rin g p la n t
Ex
penenced in a ll phases ot
packaging machinery Set up,
tro u b le
shooting
and
preventive maintenance is a
must Must b * w illing tg
relocate t o r i this , career
oriented position Send resume
o r c a ll lo r a p p o in tm e n t
Jungle Laboratories Carp Box
30IB. Sanford. F la. 13771
Phone 323 6313

LASTCMANCE
Our last week to hire House ot
L lo y d ,
toy g ilt
p a rty
demonstrators tor I9S3 season
Excellent Income FREE SMO
kit 139 3130

S3.00 M in im u m

------------------1 Linet Minimum

5—Child Cart

m

LOWEST FEE
11,00 REGISTRATION FEE
1917 FRENCH AVE.
1315174.
B E V E R LY
PAT
* * * * * * * *

RATES

IB— Hcfp Wanted

1B-Hclp Wanted

AAA EM PLOYM ENT
T H E BEST
FO R LESS

O rland o -W in ter Park

322-2611

18— H elp W anted

M r. L u cky'iLa w n
Care Service
Q u a lity
w ork
guaranteed,
b e a u tific a tio n w ith o u t in
nation Free Estimates Call
between 9 9 373 3(94
M OW . Edge, T rim , Renew
L a n dsca p in g , Clean ups.
Hauling. Thatching, Weeding,
Mutch Lindsey's 173 OMt

Freddie Robinson Plumbing
Repairs,faucets.w c
Sprinklers 311(510.331 0706
REPAIRS A leaks Fast A de
pendabie service Reasonable
rates No job too sm all Lie
P lum ber, tree set
SAM
Plumbing 149 5557

Psychic Readings
&amp; Counselling
FOR Counselling A Psychic
Readings cell 305 *10 9*94 By
appointment only

ALTERATIONS
to Dressmaking.
A lter 4 p m 121 59*5

Tree Service
TRI Ctkjnty Tree Service Trim ,
remove, trash, hauling and
dean up Fr. E st 112 9410.
TREE Stum prem oval
51 00 inch diameter
Rem Tree Service 119 4291
FREE e stim a te s, O eG roals
Palm, tre e trim m in g A
removal Hauling, lawn care A
odd jobs 3210M2

1

�Evening Herald, Santord. FI.

30 Apartments Unfurnished

4 1— Houses

3 4 - Mobile Homes

80—Autos for Sale

80— Autos for Sale
$ANFORD Furnished rooms by
the week Reasonable rate*,
m aid se rvice C a te rin g to
w o rk in g people Also un
furnished apt 373 4507
4)7 Palmetto Aye
ROOMS FOR RENT
PRIVATE ENTRANCE
.
3?) 3153
SANFORD. Garage apt. J bdrm.
k'ds. air. ties 339 7300
Sav On Rentals, Inc Realtor
SANFORD
Reav w k ly
J.
n o n th tyra lrs U til inc e ll 500
Oak Adult! I 841 7983
"

BAMBOO COVE APTS'
too E Airport Blvd
1 4 3 B drm !
From 5330 mo
Phone 333 1)40

LUXURY
APARTM ENTS
F a m ily A A d u lt! section
Pooliide. 3 Bdrms. Master
Cove Apt! J33 7900 Open on
weekend!

SHOParea to rre n t
17 • 33 It Low rent
373 5060

COMMERCIAL 8(72 French Aye
1300 sq It . carpet, Cent HA
372 9558 323 5789
BOB M BALL JR . PA
REALTOR
323 4111
O FFlCE pr STORE
3107 French Ave
323 3501

37GFor Lease

t. 3 AND 3 BDRM From 5760
o -dm wood A»m \ Apt 3M0
B dqrwoad A»e 171 6130

4 BA YS available Rent
or lease Lake M ary
A 17 93 area 322 7300

SEVILLE Gardens, large, I
bdrm, adults, no pets 5735
with lease Phone 337 6475, 9 5

Mariner s V-llaqeon Lake Ada. I
bdrm from I3S0. 3 bdrm Irom
5790 Located 17 92 ,ust south
ot Airport Blvd in Sanlord All
Adults 173 9670
Sandalwood Villas. I Bdrm, 1
bath, pool, 5340 mo plus dep
Also 3 Bdrm 3 Bath 677 S557
477 8976
WHY RENT?
11,650 down p aym ent w ith
payments starting betow 1350
mo buys a new 3 Bdrm home
in Deltona 30 minutes North ot
Orlando on I 4 Call 638 5656
weekdays 9 5 or I 574 1408 on
weekends 139 900 buys a home
on lo*

40—Condominiums
RENT TO OWN 3 Bdrm, 7 Bath
Condo lu lly equipped, part
ownership lor
ren t and
maintenance For lu ll details
ca ll Berm e Wang 333 3700
Eves 869 1171

A P A R T M E N T nice, d e a n
Furnished or un furn ish e d
References required 333 0 961

31 A—Duplexes
SANFORD 2 bdrm, I i bath.
1320 mo
337 2534
AVAILABLE Sept 7lh, 2 Bdrm 1
Bath, Large u tility room, cent
air, heat, 1325 mo Security
deposit required For Appt
Call 372 4737.
WE have 9 3 Bdrm Duplexes lo r
rent from 1350 lo 1390 June
P o n ig Really. Realtor
337 8678

SANFORD 3 bdrm. 7 bath, exc
condition 1315 mo 1st last,
security dep 322 4494
FOR RENT-SANFORD
3 Bdrm, P i Bath, form al dining
room
and
deri
W ell
established exclusive neigh
borhood, no pets, contact 373
0532 or 323 4070
SUN LAND 3 bdrm. pool,
fenced, lake Iron!
1450plus 323 0946
3 bdrm, fenced yard, kids OK,
option to buy 1375 mo call
owner 331 1611
SANFORD Clean. 3 B d rm , 1
bath, fenced yard, carport,
1335 1st, last, 1 * . 365 4133
3 BDRM, 7 'b a th . Central a ir
heat, enclosed garage, kitchen
fu lly equipped. 1375 mo , 1 st,
Iasi plus deposit, references
required, no pels. Available
Oct. 1st. Call 373 I lia
NEW LY painted, 3 bdrm . 2 bath,
sern. patio, large yard Nice
area 196 0392 or 644 7)87
NEARLY NEW
3 Bdrm. 2 Bath w ith a ll kitchen
appliances and a ir con
d ll toning Only 1375 mo
H.D.REALTY INC.
130 1900
REALTOR
NEW 2 Bdrm, 3 Bath. 7 car
garage. 1350 l i t . last and
security. Evenings 321 0507

SANFORD 3 bdrm, kids. pet. a ir
no iease 1325 339 7200
Sav-On Rentals, Inc. Raaitor

M AYFAIR V ILLA S ! 2 A 3 Bdrm.
3 Balh Condo Villas, neit to
M aylair Country Club Select
your lot, door plan A interior
decor! Q uality constructed by
Shoemaker lo r 147,700 A up)

CALL A N Y T I M E
IV4$
Pf r k

322-2420

FOR ALL YOUR
REAL ESTATE NEEDS

47 A—Mortgages Bought
_
a sold
BATEAAAN REALTY
L*C Real Estate Broker
2640 Santord Ave

323-3200
D ES PERATE OW NER M u ll
sell 7 Bdrm, 7 Balh home in
"The Forest " 17x54 homy has
new Cent HA. huge screened
porch plus u t illly
room
Community Club house, pool,
whirlpool, hidden among large
pine trees. Bernard Wang
Broker Salesman.
Eves 449 $121.

FHA OR VA SPECIAL, S900
down, plus closing c o ils,
apprpx. 11)7 mo PIT), For 30
yrs. based on current FHA
rale 14*.. H u rry! 174.900

CAN YOU AFFORD NOT TO
LOOK? This 4 Bdrm, P i Bath
home has new paint, inside
and out New HAA. new root
and beautiful pool. Assumable
mortgage below m arket rate
See it today and make an ol
te r!
Only i$9,900. Joan
Hoenlng Realtor Associate
Eves 323 1499

COMMERCIAL POTENTIAL 3
Bdrm, fenced, with citrus,
clean and convenient 1)7.900.

PLANT LOVERS Double sued
house and lot. with garden and
potting shed, and much more
S41.80O Terms.

WE NEED L U T IN G !

3 2 3 -5 7 7 4
7404 MWY 17 92

!4t W. Lake M ary Blvd
Suite B
Lake M ary. Fla. 32744
373 3200
When you place a Classified Ad
m The Evening Herald, stay
dose To your phone because
something wonderlul &gt;s about
to haooen

ROBBIE’S
REALTY
REALTOR. MLS
7701 5 French
Suite 4
Sanford. Fla

2 4 HOUR a
STEMPER

3 2 2 -9 2 8 3
AGENCY

tr
FISHERMAN S DELIG HT
Beautiful 2 bdrm. 2' 1 bath, home
w ith guast etttage on Lake
Harney C e n tra l a ir heat,
fireplace, w all to w a ll car
peting plus m uch more
1165.000
BRING YOUR HORSES 3 bdrm,
2 balh home In Lake M ary on 5
acres P a rtia lly cleared and
fenced Central air
Heat,
country living yet dose in
1149.900
SACRE PARCELS and Building
lots Call for inform ation
ASSOCIATES NEE D ED

R E A L T O R S ^
LAKE M ARY En|oy peace and
quiet plus ln h , swim and ski In
Beautiful Crystal L a kt. Nice
la m ily home. B ig trees.
179.900
M A IT L A N D • E X E C U T IV E
AREA. 4 Bdrm , 1 Bath. Fam
rm , plus game room, beaulilul
11x34 screen pool, nice tor
large la m ily . 199,100
CROSSINGS. 4 1. lireplace. eat
In kitchen, sern patio. C-airHI. corner lot. like new, H IE ,
L M ic h l. VA 13 t mtg
Assumable, super, must see.
LARGE HOME on 7 lots, on
scenic M ellonville. Large gr.
rm .
w -lire p la c e ,
Large
spacious rooms, 3 bdrms, 7
bath. D rive by then call.
ATTRACTIVE 3 Bdrm, 7 Bath
home, lots at paneling, large
F lo rid a ro o m , m any Ir u it
frees Only 139.9001

HEALIO R 332 4991 Day Or Night
HOUSE FOR Sale. Lorvgwood.
2S5 W lldmere Ave . 3 Bdrm, 2
bath, on 100x154 f t lot Large
la m ily room w ith fireplace.
Central heat, air, new carpels,
walking distance to shops and
schools 7% VA Price 172,500
339 4093
HOME FOR SALE — DeBary 3
bedroom. 7 balh. fa m ily room.
Ilreplace. in ground pool, large
wooded lot cn canal 175.500
Call 305 669 9091
Oarage sate! are in Season Tell
•he people about it wills a
r' 'Classified Ad n the Herald
173 18M 8)1 9;vj
HAL COLBERT REA LTY
207 E. lilts St.
123-7131
C tN T U R Y 21
Hayes Realty Scrv ces me
Full Service 171 3050

LOTS — Nice home tile in quiet
area, large trees. Choose 1 or 1
lots for your new home. 19,000
eachl Good form s!
LAKE M ARY - The Crossings.
Lovely 3 Bdrm , 1 Beth. Form at liv in g A d in in g rm .
F ire p la c e .
See It now!
Spotless 11 173,900.
SANFORD — Nice
near downtown
h o s p ita l. G re a t
business o r home.

older home
and new
fo r o llic e
Zoned GC3.

HANDYM AN
S P E C IA L —
Needs TLC. Cute cottage with
garage. Large o iks. Fenced.
Can be purchased less than
15,000 down. 138.000.
CURRENTLY seeking n e t ^ n ?
experienced Sales Associates,
tuition Ire * school/ new pVolil
sh a rin g p la n . C a ll B - : ly
Coorsan. M gr. lo r confidential
tinker view.
^

LEAVING TOWN
1 BDRM
home. 129,900 .. Assumable
FHA MOft , 133.000 322 1477.

DRIFTWOOD VILLAGE
549 W. Lake M ary Blvd
Lake M ary. F lo rid * 31744

)

Office: (305) 331-5005

BDRM, Pool home, no
qualifying. 115,000 down Take
over payments 371 0719

WE PAY cash tor 1st A 2nd
mortgages Ray Legg L'C
Mortgage Broker 788 3199

9

COUNTY 1 acre with 3 3, 159,900

50 Miscellaneous for Sale
ACREAGE H.qh A Dry with
trees, 16,000
COUNTY 3 lots 2C convdrr
lease option 127,500
OWNER
fin a n cin g,
needs
repair. 1 t ' j , asking 134,900
N E W ) t ' j Blk,30 year 12 M ixe d
rate 1)9.900
2150 M E L L O N V IL L E . 3 I. needs
repair, assumable mortgage
130,471 78 9‘ , v 1364 71 mo
P IP t 178.900

32 V 0759

Eve

322 7643

Call Bart
p e a l estate
WE A l TOW 1JJ M

fl

KI SH R EAL ESTATE
REA H O H
331 0041
Alter Hrs 321 7468 A 32) 7154

_____________ 339 4391__________
BIG Screen TV. 4 Ft Quasar,
perfect picture, was 12699 now
11198. I yr warranty 339 8855
HOME COMPUTER
Free
de m o n stratio n
w ith
education, home t,nances, and
V deo game* Less than 1500
l i t 7M l Eves
FACTORY
Singer
Sewing
Machine straight needle 1135
K ing sire couch 1)0
A lt 5. 373 1568
Converse, Pro Keds. Kangaroos
ARMY NAVY SURPLUS
310 Sanford Ave
327 5791
B ASSINETTE lu lly padded
withhood 135
3J10S44
1 HOSPIT AL bed complete
with rails I wheel
Chair 333 )853

tn,,se Buv.ng Anq ’ 'v v ,■
Selling

FREE RENT
Rent applies toward purchase
price New 3 bdrm . 3 bath, in
Santord 1552 mo 333 9509

1
\

327 67)1
ood

323 8688
ADM IRAL re lrfg . trost tree,
Penney ! washer, GE d ryer
Exc condition 174 4041 a lt 6
Wagon, auto, a ir, AVi FM
Stereo Weber c a rb u re to r
conversion P erfect m ain
te n a n te h isto ry by same
owner since newi New I ires.
New sitver metallic paint. New
blue Inter.or 37) 5676 eves

51 A—F u rn itu re

t

i

JUNE

7

It .
Call

333 361 1 or 811 9993

LAKE MARY by owner — 2
bdrm home on 1j acre Zoned
A I End ot Humphrey Road,
oft Longwood Lake Mary Blvd
Near new high school S38.SOO
For appt 321 4917 or 678 8733

■

PORI IC M A I T Y

Y H

WILSON M A IE R tU R N lT U R E
311 315 E FIRST 5T
387 5632

R (A L TOR
Ml S
l
137 1478
NEW LISTING Pick your option,
w ill trade, sell or lease option
this 2 Bdrm, new home on
nearly I acre
Completely
lenced large to.* assumable
mortgage. Owner motivated
154.900

SEALY Mismatched mattress
sale Twin set, 1119 95 F u ll set
1159 95 They don't have to
match la be good 331 5788
F LO R tO A S lE E P SHOPS

42 -Mobile Homer

52—Appliances

SEE SKYLINE 5 NEWEST
Palm Spr inqs A Palm Manor
GREGORY MOBILE HOMES
JlO lO rlando Dr
17)1100
VA A FHA Fmancing
Want Ads Get People Together
Those Buying And Those
Selling 32? 7611 or 831 9993
1981 SKYLINE Mobile Home
24x52 It screen enclosure
porch, u tility shed. C fn lral
heat and air 3 Bdrm, 7 Balh
Lot sue it 50x100 Sale c'lce
141.900 financing available at
W ot sales price Interesl rate
15Ax » 7 Points Can Be seen
at 176 Leisure Dr
North
D e B a ry,
F la
in
the
M eadowlea on the R ive r
M obile Home com m unity
Please contact Tom Lyon or
Gib Edmonds F irst Federal ot
Seminole 305 377 1242

43--L o tr Acreage
ONE ACRE LOTS - Orange
Ave.. Santprd, near Wilson
Elem entary School (next lo
Oavidson's Tree Farm ) One
m ile Irom 14 and Route 46
Zoned A t Call 298 0000
LAN D FOR SALE. Osteen Area.
1 7 acres, wooded, paved road,
11.350 down 1170 mo pmt. S
years 323 3787
ST JOHNS River Ironlage. 3' / 1
acre parcel!, a lio interior
parcels rive r access 113:900
Public water / 20 mm to Alta
m onte M a ll
12
20 yr
fin a n c in g
no q u a lify in g
Broker 628 4833,

SOFA and chair, bed.
good condition.
322 2168

Kenm oteparts, service used
washers 37) 0697
MOONEY APPLIANCES
R E F R IG E R A T O R S , m a n y
sires, guaranteed S a n to rd
Auction 1215 S French A v e ,'
32) 7)40
USED APPLIANCES
Refrigerators washers, dryers,
ranges 10 day guarantee
Repairs &amp; Parts
BARNETTS 111 1754
NEW APPLIANCES
F ull line GE and Tappan
Apartment sires avail
New
Electric A Gas ranges
BARNETTS 111-1714
14CU FT WHITE R efrigerator
Freerer, with Icemaker. I yr.
old Good cond 322 1413

S3—TV Radio-Stereo
Good Used TV S121 i up
MILLERS
7619 Orlando Dr
Ph 323 015*
RE POSSESSED COLOR TV'S
We sell repossessed televisions,
all name brands, consoles and
portables
EXAMPLES
1 RCA 35"
color console
117700
1 Zenith 19"
color portable
116600
I Black t. While
71“ console
1100 00
These s e ll are sold w ith NO
M O NEY OOWN and o n ly
H I 00 per month. A ll sets are
in warranty. Free home tria l,
no obligation. Call 71st Can
tu ry Sales 167 1)94 day or
night.

46—Commercial Property

54—Garage Sales

P R O F E S S IO N A L O F F IC E
BLDG
Zoned RM O l, 4 rooms, reception
room , kitch e n e tte ,
CMA,
storage bldg , paved parking,
c e n tra lly located in good
business area 159.100 Owner
financed, appointment only.
668 6401.

SAVE
MONEY
H ousehold
Ite m i, and cleaning products
Discounted
Janice 372 3(325
Karen 32* 7976

47 Real Estate Wanted
WE BUY equity In Houtei,
apartments, vacant land and
acreage
LUCKY
IN
VES1MENTS P O Box 2100.
Sanlord. Fla 32771 322 4741

Whatever tr? occason there's a
Hass l ed ad to s o n * • t r ,
one soon
Ford 70 4 dr sm V8 303 rnq
a,r. auto P S good cond 149)
322 7296

BOAT, motor and tra ile r 16 tt
AMF Bow Rider, 100 HP
Evinrude motor. Gator break
down tra ile r, a ll 1979. A t
Cond 14.000 fir m 321 0077

57A-Guns &amp; Ammo
TWO 30 30 Lever action rifles. 13
gauge pump shot gun, Colt 45
Auto Cal 333 0753 at! 5

61—Building M aterials
CLEAR5PAN Steel Bullclmos
Maior brands surplus 1.300 lo
30 000 sq tt Irom 12 65 sq tt
331 4445 9 a m to 9 p m

1978 MERCURY Zephyr, i r
power a m f m Cassette )SOO
down ana i* V f over payments
- 3 » SQ9»________ __
E 19*6 PON T iAC Mdt on Wagon,
new racial Tires nt-w brakes
all p o *p r &lt;tu »o «vr $169$
'
373 S776

l 1??l CODR A Mustang, very qood
cond'T on $3,000 firm
alt 5 p m

GARAGE t 6ies are In season
Ten the people about it w ith a
Classified Ad in the Herald
332-3611; I3F9993___________
C H ILD ’S bike, electric m ower,
children &amp; women’s clothes,
new coat and more Saturday,
9 ) . 10? Bunker Lane 122 4261
YARDSALE.
251hi Willow Ave,
Saturday, Sept 11.9 4 p m.

loaded 5500 dowh Cash or
trade 339 9)00. 834 4605.
75 MONTE CARLO
loaded, no money down
339 9100 834 4605

JOE BROWN
MOTORS
49 GTO Real Nice C»r. New
M ichelin Tires, AT
Was
17.99)

Now *2195

•up A
73 M ark
Blue
6 White
While
rp C*r
Loaded
Sharp
Car Was
17 19)

Now *1995

71 Eldorado.
Fully Loaded

75 New Yorker. 4 Dr T ilt,
Cruise. Power lee! A Win,

00w
74 Ply

*500 Down
Fury Gran Coupe

*300 Down
7) M ercury Marquis Wagon 9
Rider Thu Week Spec

*200 Down
74 Vista Cruiser • Htder Like
New

*500 Down

71 Granada J Dr Coupe One
Owner. Must See Priced To
Sell

Cheap

3?) 1101

73 Dodqe Window Van

Fair condition driven every
day $600 349 SBIA
| ------------------------------- ------------ —
DeBary Auto A Mar ne Sales
across the riv e r top o l h,II 17c
Hwy 17 ?3 DeBary ! « 8564

ST - Lawn Gordon
F ILL OIRT A TOP SOIL
YELLOW SAND
Can Clark A M-rt 333 7540

AKC Beagle puppies. 1 (F I. 5
(M l, now accepting deposit
Available 10 12 82 175 ea Both
parents on prem ises 322 7510
or 372 3139 a lt 4
AKC R EG I5TERFD Llaso Apso
puppies, adorable, 1200 each
331 3910
COCKERSPANIEL pupp es,
AKC. b ra u titu lb u tl
color. 1150 331 4744
2 FREE KITTENS
and Mother Cat
371 0976

67— Livestock Poultry
WILCO S A L E S NUTRENA FEEDS
Hwy 44 W. I l l 4170
JUST AR R IV ED WESTERN A L F A L F A HAY
14 l V ita lity horse pellets
15.90
Layer pellet
1) 50
Beet Kwlk
14 80
Hog Finisher
15 30

One 0,wrt6r*
60.000 Miles

*800 Down

| fill vW BUG w th \pare eng/np

65—Pets Supplies

OAK Firewood lo r sale
1100 truck load

"’ f i r e w
A i - ' Am C7t-i People Together

1660

34 II ALLMOND, tw in engine,
d r iv e o n . t r a f I e r , d e p rh
recorder, radio, lu ll cabin
Priced right 327 3108

COKF Machine, upright,
runs good. jij j

WESTlNGMOUSE 17 cu
retriq Gold. 5100 cash
333 8257 a ll 6

FOKU 82 Granada i d r t t i l ,
tu«ury t r im pkq |) hundred
miles Fac warranty. 1799)
AuStam Whsle Outlet 131

55—Boats f$ A cce'sories

^

R EALLY NICE
EX CELLENT VALUE
Large. 3 bdrm . t ’ j bth, with
la m ily
room ,
lire p la c e .
screened porch, fenced yard
1404 Valencia Ct , W 142.900

BANANA LAKE RD Country
living 7 Bdrm gorgeous. I 45
acres Huge oak trees, horses
OK
F o r the handym an
1)7,S00

1978 DODGE Aspen n r auto
CB looks A runs good 1750D
firm 574 4092

M OVING SA LE, household
items, tools ol a ll kinds
everything must go 2609 5
Laurel Ave F ri and Sat 9

UNDER 17.000 DOWN
3 bdrm doll house Allordable
m on th ly
paym ents
Call
Owner Broker 331 1611

7 STORY BEAUTY. 4 Bdrm. 3
Bath, tow interest assumable
mortg , large rooms and lots ot
privacy. tS4,900

1976 CORVETT PW PS PB T
top new s ta p le s ! steel braves
new t res 18795 or best otter
323 5540___

CARPOR T SALE
Saturday Baby things
HO Eastwooc Cl

Yours lo r 111.400

JUST FOR YOU ) Bdrm. 3 Bath
home In Wynnewood With
Cent Heal and A ir. wall lo
wall carpetmq. dining room,
porch, new rool Great starter
or |ust re tirin g home SSI,000

FORD 77 Mustang Coupe Auto
a,r. sun root, clean Auitam
Wholesale Outlet 1)t '6*3

YARDSALE.
Friday A Saturday.
408 S Sunland Dr 37) 0545

B E AU TIFU L 3 Bdrm. 2 Balh
home, in The Crossings Cent
heat a ir. Wall wall carpel, eat
in Kitchen, dining, fireplace in
Fam ily room, split bedroom
plan, paddle tan and more

ALMOST NEW. 3 Bdrm. Cent
HA. shaded lo t, fenced.
1)4,909

3 BDR 7 Bath with Double car
garage, and executive type
heme in Deltona Call 574 1432
days. 736 349J eves
and
weekends
W INTER Springs, 3 bdrm , kids,
carport, lenee, 1300. 339 7200
l a v-On-Rentals, Inc. Realtor

LOVELY 3 Bdrm . 7 Bath, 3 story
home on a large landscaped
corner lo t! Coiy fireplace, eat
in K itc h e n , fo rm a l dining
room, la m ily room, decor
touches and much more Only
164.900

JUST LISTED 3 Bdrm. 1 bath
home in Sunland Estates, neat
as a pin Shady lot, fenced lot
Dining area, u tility. In a
convenient area, just 147.500

DAYTONA AUTO AuCTIQN
Mwy 92 t m .ie west ct SPxed
way Daytona Beach w it hold
a public AUTO AUCTION
every Wednesday 4* 7 30 p m
It s the only on# in Florida,
You se’ the reserved prick
Call 904 255 l i l t for further
details

CLEAN OUT G arage1 Clothes,
furniture, etc Thurs thru Sal
9 5 30 M urray Ave . Osteen
323 0341

LARGE CORNER LOT 1 Bdrm
w ith lam room. Cent HA.
C om pletely fenced, citru s
trees, and much more 142.100

3 BDRM. carport A u tility room,
a ir, drapes, carpet, close in
Children welcome 530 0591

32— Houses Unfurnished

WE LIST AND SELL
MORE HOMES THAN
ANYONE IN NORTH
SEMINOLE COUNTY!

AUSTAM Buy! cart \ - rucks
Pay o ft anywhere- Caw V-.
, y O u llI,.371 1660

77 BUl'CK Reqal Jdoor. like new

3 F A M ILY Yard Sale.
Saturday 9 5
1104 M aqnolla Ave

Sanford's Sales Leader

3144 S French
373 g jji
Alter Hours 339 3910 573 0779

2 BDRM. 2 Bath completely
furnished Includes w asher
dryer and all u tilities 1500 mo
323 4767

NICE lurmshed Garage Apt
8S5 week
371 8877 a lt 6 30

REALTORS

ALL FLO R ID A R E A L T Y
OF SANFORD REALTOR

31 —Apartments Furnished

PARK AVE 3 bdrm, appl , no
lease 8700. 119 7700
Sav-On Rentals, Inc Realtor

-

41— Houses

GENEV A GARDENS*
3 A 3 bdrm apartments
Adult and fam ily section
From 1390 per mo
1S0SW 35th St
373 2090

Furnished apartments lor Senior
C llliens 318 Palmetto A ve , J
Cowan No phone calls

REALTY

We buy Cars and Trucks a
M a rtin Motor Saif t
7011 French
1)2 7114

MISC ITEMS, couch, children s
clothing. 135 Country Club
Circle, Saturday. 8 30 to 4 p m

Rental Offices

OFFICE SPACE
FOR LEASE
830 7723

EN jO Y country liv in g * 3 bdrm .
DuplW A p t! , Olympic *1
pool Shehandoah V illa g e
Open 9 to 6 373 3930

SANFOR D. lovely 2 Bdrm,
air, lu rnitureavailable
5360 mo 84t 7681

STENSTROM

37—Business Property

37 B

yardsale

Fri Sept 10, Sat Sept I t
VFW Post 10108 .at the Log
Cabm on Lake Monroe We are
soNdtmq contributions tor this
sale Please call 323 0996 for
pick up

C LA S S IFIE D
AOS
MOVE
MOUNTAINS ol merchandise
every day

t BDRM. oowntown. p a rtia lly
lurmshed 5150 mo
333 0716
M E L L O N V IL L E
TRACE
AP A R T M E N TS
Spacious,
modern 7 bdrm. t balh apt ,
carpeted kitchen equipped
Cent HA Walk to town A lake
Adult!, no pet! 539 5 333 6030

fleam arket

3 BDRM. I * ; bath, partly, lu f
nished with air, 3 m l east ol
Sanlord 332 5659

NEW 3 Bdrm, 3 Bath Mobile
Home in Meadowlea on the
River with fa m ily rm and
screen room included, use ol
pool, tennis courl and boat
ram p
1400 and s e c u rity
deposit and l yr
lease
requTed Eves 305 679 4778

F riday, &gt;opt. 10. 158? - ’ A

S4—Garage Sales

LIN C O LN 78 Town Coupe,
beautiful new trad 1599) Aus
lam Whsle Outlet 321 1660.
197! J E E P WAGONEER,
good condition 11900
331 1260 or 323 6159

‘500 Down
73

Fprd

Work

Van

*500 Down
Ford Pmlo Runabout. AC,

AT

*400 Down

JOE BROWN
MOTORS
1600 Hwy 17 *1
Longwood
North ot Baird-Ray Oallun

61 FO R D Pick Up,Code260,
190 auto 65 000 mi .1750
365 5)82

we 323*5161

STRADA AUTO SALES
197^ Cadillac Coupe - 1400 Dn. - J30 Wk.
1973 Linco'n Town Car - $500 Dn. - $30 Wk.
1978 Ford LTD • $700 Dn. - $35 Wk.
1974 Monte Carlo. $300 Dn. • $30 Wk.
1948 Chevy Malibu • $300 Dn. - $30 Wk.

NO CREDIT • BAD CREDIT
W E F IN A N C E E V E R Y O N E 1
ESTABLISH YOUR CREDIT HERE!
A c r m from

1976 Hwy 17 93
Longwood, FI

321*2200

Lonqwood Lincoln
MCfcyry

WE BUY • SELL • TRADE

67A -F e e d
HAY FOR 11 50 per
bale and up
323 5127

HAV
'“O AVTA l B f r m ud 4
Wi*e &lt;t
i rvv I? $0 o fr b *(p C * h 1G.V
177 UtS day. 171 6404 t * n
oc

W a n k 'd 10 B lTV

ALUM INUM , cans, cooper, lead,
brass. Silver, gold Weekdays
8 4 30. S«! 9 1 K KoMo Tool
CO 911 W l i t SI 371 UOO

71—Antiques
ANTIQUES A COLLECTIBLES,
Olde Tymes
Connection,
B row ser’ s B a rn , 150 W
Jessup. Longwood
ANTIQUE SECRETARY
47 in x 15 in Good Cond
3233631

72—Auction
SA NFuRD B re a k fa s t R o ta ry
Club, ‘ ‘ C h a rity A u c tio n ”
Sunday, Sept 17, I p m to 5
p m at Bob Dance Dodge,
Highway 17 92, in the parking
lot Auctioneer w ill be A*&lt;
Grmdie, Ladies Plant Sale and
Entertainment. 323 0411

Auction Sale
Friday Nlte 7 P.M.
Another new bedroom set. hide
bed, living room c h a irf, small
desk TV’s and stereos maple
bookcase, baker* 'a c k , garden
loots, new blankets and quilts,
plus ail kinds o l misc. toys,
bicycles and household items
CASH DOOR PRIZES

Dali's Auction
imw.Hwy.46
311-1620
FOR ESTATE. Com m ercial or
Residential Auctions A Ap
pfasais Call Dell's Auction
323 5620

77—Junk Cars Removed
TOP D ollar P aid lo r Junk &amp;
Used c a n . tru c k s t heavy
equipment 12? S9V0

fii ! (• |i&gt; |iy Un ifit

GMC 1970 V ; ton V I 4 speed, now
pamt. qood tires. 1140 3)9
4291

tl Hum r» a * »•?»«'tn

515? Hwy. 17 92 Lonqwood

WE PAY to p d o ila r tor
Junk C an and Trucks
CBS Auto P a rts 29) 4505

79—Trucks-Trailers

AT

Phone 323 7730
•uai

u i •«
k T fU N B VAN
Tr y c h a m p io n

or
327 0400

�C h ic Y o u n g

I0A—Evening Herald, Sanford,

B L O N D IE

of disgust

ACROSS

Answer to Previous Putile

9 Madame
(abbr)
10 Beatnik $
abode
12 Pined
13 Biblical land
18 Hoe
20 Perforation
22 Land measure
23 Hindu ascetic
practice
24 Let it stand
25 Invitation

by Mort W alker

B E E TLE BAILEY

R ( s T
" ,Li D s
I Still picture
O l [ 0
0 4 A
6 Fall suddenly
E N F E £ B l ( 0
II Creepily
M E S
D
N A y
13 Piradoi
14 Disoriented
conduct
15 Whipped
16 Cans
17 Adiust
19 Chemical
suffix (pi )
20 Edge
21 Tells
27 Newts
25 Bell sound
28 Subject to
39 City in
44 Succotish
26 Camp bed
argument
Indiana
ingredient
27 Shade of blue
29 Quarry
30 Become
40
Woodwind
45
Nonsense
30 Overshadow
manifest
instrument &lt;6 Food f|Jh
31 Handle roughly
33 Crossed river
41 Pilot s ac- 47Actre„ WeJ,
34 Legal warning 32 Mother of
knowledge- . . _ .
mankind
ment
48 School organ.
35 Pedal digit
36
Wham
36 Smalt
42 Yellow
lation (abbr)
38
Ether
37 Eye infection
pigment
50 Precept
compound
39 Actress Fisher
40 To and
43 Rascal
45 Political group
46 Caveat
49 Cast off
51 Quick lunch
place
52 Spring festival
53 Absorb
information
54 In what place

DOWN
1 S E Asian as
sociauon
(abbr)
2 Former Soviet
leader
3 Presses
4 Fades
5 Samuel s
teacher
6 Crackle
7 Ennumerates
8 Exclamation

HOROSCOPE
11&gt; BEKN1CE BEDE OSOL

For Saturday, September 11, 1982
Bob Montana

ARCHIE
0ETTTV,
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PCX A

6 OWE WOTOeiST K5NOREP
HIM ANP S P E P RIGHT
THROUGH THE SCHOOL
zone

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ONE V
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by Howie Schneider

E E K &amp; MEEK

/ WHATS
( THERUSH7 J

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\ ALREADY v

©mjtnNIA
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PRISCILLA'S POP

TMR#g US *»•! 1 TMO*

Ed Sullivan

YOLK BIRTHDAY
September 11.1982
You will acquire several
new interests this coming
year which will briny; you into
contact with a larger circle of
acquaintances. From those
whom you meet, two im­
portant friendships will
result.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-vScpt. 221
Be hopeful regarding matters
which you deem to be im­
portant today. If you feel
optimistic and lucky, you’ll
act accordingly and much
good could result. Predictions
of what's in store for you in
the seasons following your
birthday and where to look for
your luck and opportunities
are in your Astro-Graph. Mail
$1 for each to Astro-Graph,
Box 489. Radio City Station,
N.Y. 10019. Be sure to specify
birth date.
LIBRA i Sept. 23-Oct. 231
M atters relatin g to your
career and finances should be
given
p rio rity
today.
Something fortuitous is
stirring and it could break
now.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22&gt;
Conditions which have an
effect upon your future plans
are starting to shift in a
fa v o ra b le
d ire c tio n .
Something you're hoping for
may soon come into being.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 211 Two persons to whom
you’re been helpful are both
working on ways to repay
your favors. N either one
may be aware of the other's
efforts.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) This is a good day to get
together with that certain
someone with whom you'd
like to estab lish stronger

Londs. Conditions are ripe for
cementing the alliance.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
191 Don't back away from
situations today just because
they appear to be challenging
or tough. Y ou'll function
admirably when the heat is
turned up.
PISCES ( Feb. 20-March 20)
Temporarily shelve anything
today which is of the
workaday
w orld. Make
arrangements to be with fun
people who like to do fun
things.
ARIES (M arch 21-April 19)
Be optimistic regarding the
outcome of events today.
Things have a way of working
out for your ultimate benefit,
regardless of who or what
triggers the situation.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Dealings on a one-to-one basis
should turn out successfully
for you today. You could also
be very fo rtu n ate where
romance is concerned.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
Be materially alert today.
Opportunity for gain could
present itself from two dif­
ferent sources. It could come
through people who have been
lucky for you previously.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
You’ll be popular with your
peers today and you'll also
have enormous influence over
your in tim ate circle of
friends. Fortunately, you’ll do
all the right things.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) This
is one of those days when you
could be rather lucky through
involvements which others
initiate or already have going.
Chance will Juggle thingr
around to fit you Into the
picture.

Plain club soda does wonders at removing stains
from carpets. Pour a little on the spot, let
it set for a few seconds and sponge thoroughly.

Don't Be Victim O f
Mayo Clinic Diet
DEAR DR. LAMB - 1 am
enclosing a copy the New
Mayo Clinic diet. It strikes me
that your column in our paper
that said grapefruit juice
didn't help burn off calories
and, in fact, contained
calories, is just the opposite of
this diet. I have been on the
Mayo Clinic Diet and I lost 11
pounds in 15 days. It is dif­
ficult to believe your com­
ment, as the results are to the
contrary. I'd be interested in
your answer, as would quite a
few people around here. Yes, I
have been to the Mayo Clinic.
DEAR READER - You
may have been to the Mayo
Clinic but you didn’t get that
grapefruit diet there. It is well
known am ong inform ed
professionals that the "Mayo
Clinic Diet" with "12 eggs and
12 slices of bacon if you like"
lias nothing to do with the
Mayo Clinic. It is a promotion
gimmick to label it as the
Mayo Clinic Diet. So I am
already wondering about you
and your letter.
The so-called Mayo Clinic
Diet is Just another lowcarbohydrate diet. It is not
recommended by competent
dieticians or nutritionists. The
fact that you lost weight on it
is not very important. You
can lose weight on lots of
unsound diets that are bad for
your health.
The diet you sent me is a
h o rrib le
example
of
dan g ero u s dieting. Your
weight loss wasn't even fa*. A
good portion o: it was your
normal body water that was
washed out because of the
absence of sufficient car­
bohydrate in your diet. I
would
com pare
such
responses to a wilted plant
that needs water. And as soon
as you return to a normal
sensible diet your body will
regain the water it needs and
you will have your pounds
back.
Even if you ate nothing you
would only lose about a pound
’of body tissue in a day, one
half-pound of fat and one half­
pound of needed body protein.
A ccording to the U.S.
Department of Agriculture
food values, a half of a
medium grapefruit contains
55 calories. That's not a lot.

but don't assume it is the
grapefruit that is causing a
person to lose weight. The
weight loss is from w ater loss
and the decrease in calorie
consumption. I'm sorry but
calories do count
You badly need to read The
Health Letter 16-2, Dangerous
Dieting, which I am sending
you to avoid being a victim of
the many diet plan ads.
Others can send 75 cents with
a long, stam ped, selfaddressed envelope for it to
me, in care of this newspaper,
P.O. Box 1551, Radio City
Station. New York, NY 10019.
DEAR DR LAMB - I find
it inconvenient to do much
walking in the winter because
of the subzero tem peratures
and snow. Is the exercise bike
a good substitute? I would
especially like to know if it is
beneficial to the heart muscle.
DEAR READER - There
are many different types of
stationary bicycles available
You can get one that you can
adjust to increase your work
by cycling against resistance.
Any of there will help train
your heart. The heart-training
effect depends upon in­
creasing the need to deliver
m ore oxygen to w orking
muscles. It follows that any
exercise that requires lots of
energy and hence oxygen will
condition the heart.
Of course not everyone
should do vigorous exercise.
Individuals with heart disease
should
follow
sensible
programs designed for them
on an individual basis.
As a guide to calorie use,
cycling outdoors usually uses
about half as many calories
per mile as walking. After all.
the wheel was invented to
m ake things e a sie r. Of
course, if you increase the
resistance provided by your
stationary bicycle you can
increase the calorie use.

W IN AT BRIDGE
three no-trump No amount
of bad luck could defeat that
contract. Still, four hearts
looked like a good contract.
Could anything bad happen
NORTH
110-12
to him there?
♦ AQ 10
Suppose East held both
♦ QJ 732
.
king and jack of spades. It's
♦ 853
one chance in four but Pete
♦ Q8
always expected those one in
WEST
EAST
four chances to be against
♦ 972
♦ KJ 83
him. Was there any way to
♦ 84
♦9
guard against that? Pete
♦ J972
♦ 0104
found one
♦ K843
♦ J 10 9 5 2
He let East hold the first
SOUTH
trick with his queen of
♦ 834
diam onds. Now
E ast
♦ AK 10 85
returned the jack of clubs.
♦ AKS
Pete wasted no thought on
♦ A7
the chance that East had led
from the king. He had a sure
Vulnerable: North-South
thing going for him and went
Dealer: South
up with his ace.
West
North East
South
Two rounds of trumps
IT
cam e next. Then Pete
Pass
3*
Pass
4*
cashed his ace and king of
Pass
Pass
Pass
diamonds and led the seven
of clubs.
West took his king and led
Opening lead: +2
a spade. P ete p lay ed
dummy’s 10. As expected,
East took his jack, but had to
By Oswald Jacoby
give Pete the rest of the
and Alan Sontag
tricks.
Note that if Pete had
Pessimistic Pete looked
over dummv. It was too bad played less pessimistically
that iU distribution was an West would have been able
exact mirror of his own. He to lead spades twice and
wished that somehow or defeat poor Pete.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN)
other he could have reached

• -

G A R F IE L D
FRANK AND ERNEST

by Jim Davis

�I! v e ilin g H e ra ld

Complete Week's TV Listings
+

Sanford, Florida — Friday, September 10, 1982

m

High Sch o o l Football In Sem inole

W hat A W ay To Spend Friday Night
By SAM COOK
I It-raid Sports Editor
i A typical F rid a y afternoon in Sem inole County, The
husband, John, h a s ju st u n ite d home from work. His
wife, Karen, has ju st put the final touches on the day's
housework.)
"Honey, I’m h o m e, w hat’s cooking?” ask s John.
“ Nothing y e t," replies Karen. " P v e ju st finished
■leaning the house. Do we have to eat h e re ? It's Friday
night."
Well, w hat do you want to do, go dow n to Lou's for
iuippy hour? I h e a r the eats a re d elicious."
‘ They are good, but do you rem em ber how long it takes
to get a drink? A person could die of th ir s t.”
"How about the m all? They h av e several good
restaurants and we could do a little e a rly Christmas
shopping."
"Are you c ra zy ? Do you know how b ad the traffic is on
irt6V It takes longer to get to the mall th an to get a drink at
Diu’s."
“ Well, we could go to a movie.”
“ I've seen both of them in Sanford. The ones in
Altamonte a re a lw a y s sold out and don't you think we're
getting a little too old for the driv e-in ?"
Friday night. What to do? Every place is crowded, but
it s aiinosl un-American to stay home.
Beginning this F rid a y , however, th ere is an alternative.
High school football season opens for seven Seminole
County schools and the crowds h av e never liven a
problem.
Football lias b ecom e socially accep ted in the United
States. Millions flock to college and professional games
every Saturday an d Sunday. The gam e was never been
more |xipular.
So. why not high school? In little tow ns like Auburndale
it's not uncom m on to see 5,000 people at a gam e. Titusville
Astrounaut, S em inole's first game opponent,-, lias a
tremendous following. On Friday n ights in those two
.s|Mirts hotbeds, high school football is th e only game in
town.
So why riot Sem inole County? Big d eal that your son or
daughter doesn't go to school at Sem inole, Dike Mary,
l.yman, O viedo, D ike Howell, la k e B ran tley or Trinity
Prep? You have to go to only a couple of g am es to become
fam iliar with th e players.
And, th ere tire som e good ones to w atch.
At Seminole, co ach Jerry Posey lost 18 s ta rte rs from
last y ear's F iv e S ta r Conference cham pionship team.
Keturning, how ever, a re defensive stan d o u ts Tim Herring
i no. 18i and H arold Gaines (no. 34). H errin g , a speedy,
high-jumping sa fe ty , is exciting to w atch while Gaines
heads up the Sem inole defense from h is linebacking spot.
At la k e M ary, the Rams begin th e ir initial year of

D ish p a n s ta rs
It’s tough, even for the talented, to
break into show business. Many
starry-eyed actresses spend years
perfecting their craft before making
it big. What do they do before then?
Many work as waitresses. Page 5.

Lake Mary iligli wide receiver Keith Wallace
takes a break from the action in the Kail
Football Jamboree for a refreshing drink.

S e m in o le C o u n ty 's s e v e n f o o llm ll t e a m s k ic k
o ff th e IMK2 s e a s o n lim ig h t.

v a rsity 3A football a fte r jxisting a 4-1 record hist y e a r as a
junior varsity club.
Coach Huger B eathard feels Ned Kolbjornsen (no. 70&gt;
w ill be a m ajor college p lay er by the time lie’s through at

Dike M ary. Kolbjornsen is an offensive and defensive
tackle. Ju n io r fullback
G reg S hatto (no. 24) and
linebacker Jeff Hopkins (no. 23) a re also future college
See HIGH, P a g e 2

G o o d rid d a n ce
You may have heard that John
Schneider and Tom Wopat, also
known as Ho and Luke Duke, have
left "The Dukes Of Hazzard” show in
a tiff over m oney. TV critic David
Handler cheers their departure.
Page 7

Close c a ll
Cllenn Close. You probably never
heard of her until you saw ‘The
W orld According to C a rp .’ (She was
C a r p ’s mother). Now, she is in the
run n ing for an O sca r and film
stardom . She’s already Close.
P a g e 8.

�3— Evening H erald, Sanford, FI.

HAROLD GAINES
• ••

JOHN DESMET

DAN RAE

TOM JOHNSON

CHRIS TSCHIEDER

JEFF HOPKINS

High School Football Kicks O ff Tonight In Seminole

Continued Prom Page 1
prospects. Sanford's Donald Grayson (no. 42) is a gifted
sophomore “ monster” back.
At Lyman, the county’s most explosive performer,
Vince Presley, (no. 36), is hobbled by a leg injury. There
are plenty more Greyhounds to hold your attention,
though. Quarterback Jerry Axley (no. 11) and wide
receiver Todd Marriott (no. 5) are a dynamite passing
combination and offensive tackle and kicker Chris
Tschleder (no. 73) was an All-State second-team choice
last year.

football. And It’ll cost you less than a movie. Here’s a look
at the schedules for the 8 p.m. kickoffs.

At Oviedo, Junior blockbuster J.W. Yarborough (no. 26)
has been awesome in prescason drills. The 6-10,26S-pound
tailback is capable of breaking loose anywhere on the
field. Quarterback Dwyane Johnson (no. 12) can-zip the
ball while linebacker Tommy Johnson (no. 99) is a
standout defensively.
At Lake Howell, the Silver Hawks’ two beared giants —
215-pound guard Dan line (no. 65) and 205-pound tackle
Bill Norton (no. 77) — will make things though on
defensive linemen. Quarterback Troy Quackenbush is a
fine runner and safety Bill Long Is a future all-stater, says
coach Mike Bisceglia.
At l,ake Brantley, coach Dave Tullis is rebuilding
around sophomore tailback whiz Joe Warezak (no. 25) and
quarterback Dennis Groseclose (no. 8), John Desmet ( no.
53) a senior fullback, is another standout.
At Trinity Prep, coach Ron Vierling’s squad has a
m ixture of Friday and Saturday games. Speedy tailback
Gerald Sutton (no. 22) heads a senior-dominated Saints'
squad while Richard Milliman (no. 12) is an excellent
running quarterback.
Give yourself a break Friday, sample Seminole County

epi
Sept
Sept
Oct.
Oct.
Ocl.
Oct
Oct.
Nov,
Nov.
Nov.

Sept 10
Sept 17
Sept 14
Oct.
1
Oct.
I
Oct IS
Oct 77
Oct. n
Nov.
5
Nov. 17
Nov 18
10
17
74
1
8
15
33
39
S
13
19

Sept. 10
Sept. 17
Sept. 74
1
Oct
Oct.
Oct
Oct 13
Oct. 39
Nov,
Nov. 13
Nov. If

S E M IN O L E HIOH SCHOOL
Astronaut
Lake Howell
Edgewaler
Open
:. i f \ ,",
Apopka
DeLand
Kathleen
Lake B rantley
Lym an
M ainland
Spruce Creek
L Y M A N HIOH SCHOOL
Boon*
M ainland
w in te r P a r*
DeLand
Colonial
Open
Apopka
Lake Howell
Seminole
Spruce Creek
Lake B rantley
L A K E H O W E LL HIOH SCHOOL
Bishop Moore
Seminole
Astronaut
Lake Brantley
Open
M ainland
Spruca Creek
Lym an
DeLand
Apopka
Boone

Away
HOME
HOME
HOME
HOME
Away.
Away
Away
HOME
Away
HOME
HOME
HOME
Away
Away
HOME
Away
HOME
Away
Away
Away
Away
HOME
Away
Away
HOME
HOME
HOME
Away
HOME

L A K E M A R Y H IO H S C H O O L

Sept 10
Sept, u
Sept. 34
Oct
I

Rockledge
Barlow
fl/shopM oore
W ym oreTech

HOME
Aw ay
HOME
HOME

Oct.
8
Oct
IS
O ct.
33
Oct. 39
Nov.
S
Nov. 13
Nov. 19

Open
M elbourne
Oviedo
W ildw ood
L a k e B rantley
Cocoa Beach
N ew S m yrna Beach

Sepl.
10
Sept 17
Sept 34
O ct.
1
O ct.
8
O ct.
15
O ct. 33
Oct.
39
Nov.
5
Nov. 13
Nov. 19
Sept.
Sept.
Sept.
O cl.
O ct.
Oct.
Oct.
O ct..
Nov.
Nov.
Nov

10
17
34
1
I
IS
33
39
S
13
19

Sept.
Sept.
Sept.
Oct.
O d.
O cl.
Oct.
Oct.
Nov.
Nov.
Nov.

10
18
34
t
9
14
33
30
S
13
30

O V IE O O H IG H SCHOOL
U m a tilla
St. Cloud
Open
Osceola
Rockledge
Leesburg
L a k e M ary
Eustls
G roveland
B ishop Moore

Cocoa 0esch
LA K E B R A N T L E Y HIGH SCHOOL
Colonial
Apopka
Boone ' ■
L a ke Howell
Open
S pruce Creek
M ainland
Seminole
L a ke M ary
DeLand
L ym a n
T R IN IT Y PREP
Tem ple H eights C hristian
F ro stp ro o f
Shorecrest Prep
H e ritag e Prep
J a c k s o n v ille Episcopal
L a k e H ighland Prep
St. John Lutheran
St. Edw ards
M elbourne CC
Open
F a th e r Lope/

Away
HOME
Away
Awy
Away
HOME
HOME
HOME
Away

HOME
AW AY
Away
HOME
HOME
Away
HOME

Away
Away
Away
HOME
Away
Away
HOME
HOME
Home
Home
Aw ay
HOME
Away
Away
HOME
Away
HOME
HOME
Away
HOME

'Discover' Uncovers Science Secrets
Why do little babies turn
serious, normal grown-ups
into
g u rglin g,
silly ,
squealing clowns?
What is going on at a
u n iv ersity in California
where students spend a day
barricading their rooms and
se ttin g trap s for other
students?
Why can’t a young woman
athlete ever be as proficient
In her field a s other athletes
— Just because she won’t

take drugs?
“Discover: The World of
S c ie n c e ” is a one-hour
syndicated special produced
by Graham Chedd and John
Angler
("N ova,”
"Odyssey") in association
with Discover magazine. It
airs the week of Sept. 13
through IS. (Local tim es will
vary; check listings in your
area.)
H ost Peter G ra v es In*
troduces the first segm ent,

which begins at a “baby
bash" — a picnic with dozens
of gurgling babies and their
parents. He asks: “Why do
we talk baby talk? And what
does the baby m ake of It
all?"
Interviews with scientists
and researchers reveal that
talking baby talk Is Indeed
something all adults do.
Adults raise the pitch of their
voice, speak slower and with
more lilt. They make faces
— grown-ups suddenly

contort their faces with
exaggerated expressions - and becom e very Intimate,
putting their faces nose to
nose with baby’s, even with
an Infant who is a stranger.
What does the baby think
about all this? He loves It.
Experim ents have shown
that the baby will turn off
and b ecom e unreceptive
when the adult stops talking
baby talk and begins acting
“normal." Even very young
Infants continue to make eye

contact with an adult who is
acting silly and they are very
se n sitiv e
to em otional
signals they read in the
parent's face.
In one experiment, babies
actually put themselves In
danger — crawled across a
deep drop that was covered
by a sheet of glass — to reach
a mother who was sm iling
and encouraging In her
expression; but held back
w hen the m other's fa c e
registered fear and disap-

proval.
Graves' ad vice? When
talking to babies, fun is the
name of the game.
In the other two segments,
on the Cal Tech students and
an Olympic discus thrower
who won't take steroids, the
same balance of scientific
examination of the facts and
human interest appeal is
m aintained. It's worth
tuning your m ind Into
"Discover" for an hour this
week.

�Evening Herald. Sanford, FI.

TELEVISION

Ask Dick

S e p t e m b e r 10 thru 16

Cable Ch

d) o
©o
® e

Kleiner

Cable Ch.

*
(ABC I Orlando
(CBS) O rlando
(NBC) Daytona Beach
Orlando

(□) (35)
© (17)
(10) ©

Independent
O rlando
Independent
A tla n ta , Ga

Sled Is The Secret
O f K a n e s R osebud'

O rlando Public
B ro a d c a itin g System

la a d d itio n to the channel* Mtted. c o b le v ilio n lu b ic r lb e r t m ay tune In to independent channel At.
St. P e te rtb u rg . by tuning to chennel 1; tu n in g to channel 1), w h ich c a rr le t tp o rt* and the C h rlttia n
B roadcasting Network (C B N ).

Specials Of The Week
SUNDAY
AFTERNOON

1:00
£D
( 1 0 ) GLOBAL REPORT A
teporl on what happened to the
human family in 1981 i* pteacnled
by live Individuals who ollet their
accounts ol the events they lived
through
3 :0 0
CO (1 0 ) AT THE ROSE BUD Lou
C o n ies Hubbard Street Ranee
Company performs the comical At
The nose Bud" and the sophisticat­
ed "Encerpts From Gershwin Danc­
es."
EVENING

6:00

CD ( 10)

NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC
SPECIAL National Parks Play­
ground Or Paradise?’ Efforts by
the National Park Service to restrict
the public's access to Americas
paths in hopes ot putting a halt to
environmental damage, pollution
and crime are eiammed &lt;R)

Mooneyham and Carol Laurence
host tr&gt;»s documeniary on Ihe more
than sji million people in Africa who
have to&lt;?€&gt;n affected by war and
drought and the results of such
events

THURSDAY

The leaders of five Scandinavian
countries attend a musical tribute
to the cultural legacy of Scandmavia held at the Minneapolis Orches­
tra Hall Neville Marnner hosts with
guest performers including Birgit
Nilsson. Judith Bi-eqen and V ictor
Gorge.
1 0 :3 0
fD (1 0 ) THE RIVER IN THE
DESERT A him about the Colorado
River evamines the water crisis in
Ihe Southwest and the altitudes
and historical forces which have
precipitated it

EVENING

2:30
tt ) ( 10) JUST FRIENDS ROB
MCCONNELL AND THE BOSS
BRASS Bandleader Rob McCon­
nell and the Boss Brass perform
It s Hard To Find One," "Every­
thing Happens To Me and A Time
To Love ' in a conceit Irom Redon­
do Beach; California.
4 :0 0
(} O CBS AFTERNOON PLAYHOUSE Just Pals' The relation­
ship between two 13-year-olds is
threatened when they cross the
threshold Irom childhood to adoles­
cence

9 :0 0
i
O
EVENING WITH THE
STATLER BROTHERS Friends and
associates gather to honor the
Statler Brothers and thee contribu­
tion to country entertainment

1 0 :3 0
€D ( 10) PRESENTING KAREN
AKERS Cabaret singer Karen
Akers sings selections t&gt;y Stephen
Sondheim Billy Joet and Jacques
Brel in a performance from Ham­
burg, Germany

FRIDAY

EVENING

TUESDAY

8:00

9 :0 0
(U) (35) GOINQ STRAIGHT This
documentary looks at a new move­

EVENING

( J i O C B S REPORTS

10:00

8:00

(D (1 0 ) ON STAGE WITH JUDITH

(7 O DISCOVER: THE WORLD OF
SCIENCE Peter Graves discusses
a wide range ol science and tech­
nology topics

EVENING

7 :3 0
NOWHERE TO TURN Stan

the training and gathering otevpenence necessary lor her success (R»

WEDNESDAY

9 :0 0

(D I 10) TONIGHT. SCANDINAVIAI

EVENING
(J ) O

ment In some communities to cre­
ate alternatives to prison

AFTERNOON

MONDAY

SOMOGI A profile ot this young
Amencan conductor looks at her
Me at work and at home, eiplortng

Sports On The A ir
SATURDAY

0 2 (1 7 )
SHOW

AFTERNOON

CD o

12:00

TENNIS "U S. Open" Live
coverage ol the women's finals and
men's semiflnsls from the United
States Ttnnls Association National
Tennis Center. Flushing MeadowsCorona Perk, N Y.

1:00
O ( £ WRESTLING

1:35
© ( 1 7 ) THIS WEEK IN BASEBALL

2:05
3‘30

1030
11:30
GD (1 0 ) HORSE RACING "1982
Kentucky Peeing Derby" Live cov­
erage Irom Louisville Downs of the
third jewel In the Triple Crown of
harness racing for 2-yeer-old
pacers

SUNDAY

4:00

o

CO NFL FOOTBALL Miami Dol­
phins at New York Jets
CD O TENNIS "U S Open" Live
coverage ot the men's final round
from the United Slates Tennis
Association National Tennli Center.
Flushing Meadows-Corona Park,

NY.

0:30

£) O

ILLUS­

WEDNESDAY
EVENING

8:05
0 2 ( 1 7 ) BOXING Live boring from
Madison Square Garden featuring
WBC Featherweights Juan La Porta
vs Merlo Miranda.

THURSDAY

EVENING

EVENING

7:05
1 2 ( 1 7 ) WRESTLING

MONDAY

CENTRAL FLORIDA FOOTBALL HIGHLIGHTS

EVENING

9:00

CD O

CD Q

8:30

NFL FOOTBALL Minnesota
Vikings at Buffalo Brill g

FRIDAY

NFL FOOTBALL Pittsburgh
Stealers el Dalles Cowboys Q

EVENING

TUESDAY

02
(1 7 )
BASEBALL A tla n ta
Btsves at Cincinnati Reds

( llO N F L T O O A Y
CL O CHARUE PELL

1:00

EVENING

a
®
NFL FOOTBALL Houston
Oilers at Cincinnati Bengali

7:35

The moit long-lived animat it the giant tortoite
ol
the
Galapagos Islands. Specim ens have
been estimated w ' be n
old ^ a f - ''1 9 0 " yeBrs.

2 :1 5
02
(1 7 )
BASEBALL Houiton
Astros at Atlanta Braves

5‘30

10:00

a (31 NFL ’S3

Astros at Allanta Braves

CD O 8PORTSBEAT

MORNING

12:30

5:35

6:05
02(17) WRE8TLINa

02
(1 7 )
BASEBALL Cincinnati
Finds at Atlanta Braves

AFTERNOON

Q Q Q NCAA FOOTBALL

EVENING

Cl)
NFL FOOTBALL Tampa Bay
Buccaneers at Minnesota Vikings

2:05

a n (3 5 ) NASL SOCCER KICKS

02
(1 7 )
BASEBALL Cincinnati
Reds el Atianfa Breves

MOTOflWEEK

o

PRE-GAME

(LD (3 5 ) SPORTS AFIELD

2:00

(Ol ( 1 7 )
TRATED

7 :5 5
REDMAN

8 :0 5
(U) (1 7 ) COLLEOE FOOTBALL

O 9 ) BASEBALL Regions! cover­
age of Loe Angeles Dodgers el
Houston Aslros or Dstrotf Tigers el
Boston Red So«

F rid a y, Sepf. 10, 1?8J —3

02

(1 7 )

BA 8 EBALL Houston

DEAR DICK: 1 just saw "Citizen Kane” for the first
time and, lor whatever reason, l cnuldn’t figure out what
or who Rosebud was. Please (etl me, (nr 11 was i|iille
frustrating. LW, Hollywood, Ha.
Rosebud was the n am e on the sled Kane hud a s a boy.
Producer-director Steven Spielberg ( " E .T .," "Jaw s,"
"P olterg eist") recently parted with $55,000 at auction *o
purchase the actual sled used in the filming of the movie.
DEAR DICK: Is Alice Cooper the son ol Rob Keeshan
(( apt. Kaugorou)? 1( nut, does Keeshan have a famous
son? A.P., Plnlnwell, Mirh.
Keeshan has a son, Michael, who is temporarily nonfamous. Alice Cooper is not related.
DEAR DICK: I would vrry much like to know what
happened to llohby Breen, the tenor discovered by Eddie
Cantor, lie did some movie musicals, but where Is he
now? Is he still alive? Does he still sing? T.M., lralhbrldge, Alberta, Canada
I've had trouble tracking him down, and my report is
noi too recent. But I did learn that until a few y e a rs ago, at
least, he was singing in clubs and dinner th e a te rs, and was
based in the Miami, F la ., area. Maybe this note will elicit
later information,
DEAR DICK: I suw “ West Side Story" recently and
Natalie Wood braked very short, compared to Richard
Beymer. How tall was Miss Wood? K.V.V., Albuquerque,
N.M.
She was 5 feet 3 inches tall.
DKAK DICK: I recently heard that Burt Reynolds had
married Irani Anderson. Could you verily whether or not
this is true? If it isn’t, will they marry soon? D.V.,
Kalamazoo, Mich.
Breathlessly, 1 can tell you that they a re still two
sep arate entities a s 1 w rite these words. They a re , as the
euphem ism goes, good friends. Burl has said he has no
plans to get m arried.
DEAR DICK: Irass than five years ago, I watched a
movie on TV that I think starred the actor who played on
"Columbo." It was a spoof on all the Bogart movies. It
was hilarious, but I forgot the name of the movie. Can you
help? A.F., Cheyenne, Wyo.
1 believe you must mean "Murder by Death," which
starred Peter Falk, and was released in ’76.
DEAR DICK: I say Gil Gerard (Buck Rogers) is
married to Connie Sellecca ("The Greatest American
Hero") in real life and they have a new baby. My dad says
he is married to the girl from “ Buck Rogers," Erin Gray.
Help soon! D.F., Vancouver, Wash.
You win. Call her Connie Sellecca Gerard.
DEAR DICK: Wasn't Blair, from "Farts of Life," one ol
the Mousketeers on “ The Mickey Mouse G ub’’? C.D.G.,
Decatur, Mich.
Yes, although U sa Whelchel, who plays Blair, was on
"The New Mickey Mouse Gub," not the old one. She’s 19,
from Fort Worth, Texas, and a young actress of great
promise.

7:35
2:15
02
(1 7 )
BASEBALL A tla n ta
Braves at Cincinnati Reds

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ ^
It is against the law when riding a bicycle in Denver,
Colorado, to.-lift'your feet higher-then the Iront-wheel.

DEAR DICK: I have an elbow-bending neighbor who
used to be well-acquainted ( tennis, etc.) with the late Guy
Irambardo. I recently mentioned that Lombardo had once
killed a pedestrian accidentally, while driving a car. I
believe It happened In New York some 20 or so years ago.
My neighbor insists I’m wrong. He swears Irambardo
never killed anybody, even racing boats. Help me set my
friend straight — I’m going to nail him for a 1.75 liter of
vodka M.C., Ventura, Call!.
Prosit! A pal of mine, who was lrambardo’s press agent
for years, backs you up. It happened in Queens, on a dark
comer off Queens Boulevard, probably in the early '60s, so
you'd be roughly right as to the date. Irambardo was
absolved of all charges. Witnesses agreed that the
pedestrian Tan In front of his car. &lt;
&lt;v,

�4— E v e n in g H e r a i d , S a n lo r d , F I.

F r i d a y - S c p l. 10,

1»B1

SATURDAY

September 10

FRIDAY
Hogg s dirty dealings |R)

EVENING

6:00
a
is) a c d o n e w s
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© (1 0 ) ART OF BEING HUMAN
6 :0 5
5 1 (1 7 ) CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
8 :3 0
0 ( 4 1NBC NEWS
IS 1O CBS NEWS
1 n o ABC NEWS
© (1 0 ) ART OF BEINO HUMAN
6 :3 5
&lt;11( 17IBOBNEW HART
7 :0 0
C QD t h e m u p p e t s
CD O P M MAGAZINE A usedhouse lot in California: an onion
eating leslivat in Georgia
(f) O TEEN AGE SUICIDE: DON'T

(7&gt; O BENSON the IRS orders ,
Benson, whose records have acci­
dentally been destroyed, to appear
tor a la i audit ( R ) r i
It) (3 5 ) THE ROCKTORO FILES
© (1 0 ) W ASHINGTON WEEK IN
REVIEW
0 :3 0

(?) O MAKING A LIVING During a
wedding rehearsal in the res'*urant. the groom announces that ho
is still rn love wtth his old girlfriend.

Cassie (R)
©

(1 0 ) WALL 1TREET WEEK
The International Scene Guest
Martin G Wade, senior portfolio

MORNING
dicate bosses use Murphy s ex-wile
to set him up lor an assassination
&lt;R)
il lj (3 5 ) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
NEWS
© (1 0 ) HARO CHOICES Genetic
Screening The Ultimate Preventa­
tive Medicine?" The options o f pre­
natal testing and genetic counseling
and how these tests have affected
parents ol children with genetic dis­
eases are examined (R)

9 :0 0
Q
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Chromclosi The Expeditions" (Part
1M 1980) Rock Hudson, Gayle itunTRY IT Academy Award winner
mcutt The commander and crew ol
Timothy Hutton fo cuses the
an eiploratory mission to Mars m
nation's attention on the need to
the year 1999 discover that the
combat the growing epidemic ot.
planet s population was destroyed
teen-age suicide
by earthly diseases transmitted by
II t) (3 5 ) THE JEFFERSON3
an earlier expedition (R)
©
(1 0 ) MACNEIL / LEHRER
i)
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REPORT
tion Bobby about his involvement
with
Farraday
and Chit faces ruin at
7 :0 5
1h« hands ot J R (R)
fill (1 7 ) WINNERS
1 ( 1 0 t h e GREATEST AMERICAN
7 :3 0
HERO Ralph is exposed to the
B 141ENTERTAINMENT TONIOHT
world on the cover of a (wit gossip
■&gt; O YOU ASKED FOR IT
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(11 (3 5 ) BARNEY MILLER
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0 3 (1 0 ) DICK CAVETT Guest G
© ( 10) EVENING AT POPS John
Gordon liddy (Part 3 )|R I
Williams and the Boslon Pops are
'"joined by w or td *renowned soprano
7 :3 5
Leontyne Price for a performance
51
(1 7 ) BASEBALL Cincinnati
of Puccinis " Un Del Of Vedremo
Reds at Atlanta Braves
from Madam© Butterfly and tetoctions from Verdi''s "Ernarni " (R)
0:00
0 ( 4 CHIPS Two criminal master •
10:00
minds threaten to unleash a deadly
H i O FALCON CREST Chase
nerve jas unless their extortion
gathers enough concrete evidence
demands are met (fl|
to take Angela to court over his
Si O THE DUKES OF HAZ2ARD
lather s mysterious death (Part 1|
I tie Dukes Imd Roscoe s diary, in
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which he has recorded all ot Boss
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B
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SPRING TO LIFE
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K l Q D R . SNUGGLES
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7 :3 0
B (4) QILUOAN'S ISLAND
&lt;5 0 THIRTY MINUTES
(7 : 0 FONZ / HAPPY DAYS GANG

1 1 :3 0
B
QD TONIGHT Host Johnny
Carson Guests Dr Carl Sagan.
Bert Convy
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U S Open from tho United Stales
Tennis Association National Tennis
Center, Flushing Meadows-Cotona
Park. N Y 1 ! ) O ABC NEWS NIQHTLINE
111 (3 5 ) STREETS OF SAN FRAN­
CISCO

7 :3 5
1 1 i 17} VEOETABLE SOUP

8:00
B 141 THE FLINTSTONES
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© (1 0 ) THIS OLD HOUSE Norm
Abram install* the chimney and
Bob su ei up the renovation job in
the bathroom ( R ) n

1 1 :3 5
(11) (1 7 ) ALL IN THE FAMILY

8 :0 5
I I (1 7 ) ROMPER ROOM

12:00
( » O MARY TYLER MOORE
(? ) Q MOVIE
One, Two, Three
(19611 James Cagney. Arlono Francr*

8 :3 0
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! 7 1 O THUNDARR / GOLDIE
GOLD
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1 2 :0 5
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Burt Reynolds. Barbara Loden
1 2 :3 0
B
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shall Crenshaw, test pilot Chuck
Yeager, comedian Bio Theodore
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Isn I It Shocking? '
( 19F3) Alan Alda, Louise Lasser
n (3 5 ) WANTED DEAD OR ALIVE

0 :3 5
Q3) (1 7 ) THAT GIRL
9 :0 0
n (3 5 ) HERALD OF TRUTH
© ( 10) FLORIDA HOME GROWN
9 :0 5
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4 NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT

9 :3 0
B 4 KID SUPER POWER HOUR
V O
BUGS BUNNY / ROAD
RUNNER
I O IAVERNE &amp; SHIRLEY
M (3 5 ) LIFE BEGINS AT CAL­
VARY
f f l ( 10) FRENCH CHEF

2 :0 5
ill
( 1 7 ) - BASEBALL Cincinnati
R«d* at Atlanta Braves'

2:10
U NEWS

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10:00

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f a.m.-5 p.m.

CD O

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B ( 4 1D A FFY/S P E ED Y
11 TENNIS "U S Open " Live
coverage ol the women's finals and
men s semifinals from the United
States Tennis Association National
Tennis Center, Flushing MaadowsCorona Park, N Y
(7 ) O WEEKEND 8PECIAL The
Notorious Jumping Frog Ot Calav­
eras County" A young boy with a
passion for wagering challenges a
stranger Irom the past to a frogjumptng contest (R) n
(IP (3 5 ) MOVIE
Super seal"
© ( 1 0 ) GROWING YEARS

12:30
B (4 j AMERICA’S TOP TEN
( D O AMERICAN BANDSTAND
© (1 0 ) QROWING YEARS

1:00
PG

3 :0 0
© ( 10) PRESENTEI
3 :3 0
n O NCAA FOOTBALL
© (1 0 ) TONY BROWN'S JOUR­
NAL "The Struggle Within The
Struggle" Tony Brown examines
the role ot women '.i the traditional­
ly male.dominated black leader­
ship (R)
3 :4 5
(111 (3 5 ) YESTERDAY'S NEWREEL
4 :0 0
ill (3 5 ) INCREDIBLE HULK
©
( 10) ARTUR RUBINSTEIN
"Paris" Rubinstein discusses
music with critic Benard Gavoty,
attends a private concert by cellist
Paul Tortelier and otters advice to a
young colleague
5 :0 0
B &gt; 4 EMERGENCY
11 (3 5 ) DANIEL BOONE
© (1 0 ) WASHINGTON WEEK IN
REVIEW
5 :1 0
11 (1 7 ) NEWS
©

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5 :3 0
WALL 5TREET WEEK

Th© ici tor national Seen© Guest
Martin G Wade senior portfolio
manager. F Row© Price InlernaUon-

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8:00

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,n | 3 5 ) k u n g f u
© (1 0 ) LUCY IN DISGUISE The
discovery ol the oldest and most
complete human skeleton found in
Ethiopia by Donald Johan son and
the Afar International Research
Expedition is documented

O a ’ WRESTUNQ

© (10) FAMILY PORTRAIT

6 :3 0
8 ( 4 ' NBC NEWS

7 :3 0
(.4 1FLORIDA'S WATCHING

(Tl1 ( 1 7 )
SHOW

7 :5 5
REDMAN

9 :0 0

(J )i O
MOVIE " C H O M P S
(1979) Wesley Eure, Valerie Bettinelli A clever young man Invents a
computerised robot dog pro­
grammed to stop criminals and
solve crimes
CD O
LOVE BOAT The ere*
suspects that a beautiful woman is
trying to kill her millionaire hus­
band. and a glamorous divorcee
lues to get reacquainted with her
son IR) r j
T ()(3 5 )&lt; J u NSMOKE
© ( 10) NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC
SPECIAL "National Parks Play­
ground Ot Paradise?" Efforts by
tho National Park Service to restrict
the public's access to America s
parks in hopes ot putting a halt to
environmental damage, pollution
and crime are examined (R)

10:00
B &lt;4 MISS AMERICA PAGEANT
Gary Collins hosts this year * fes­
tivities with co-host Susan Powell
and special guest star Marilyn
McCoo, livo from the Convention
Hall in Atlantic City, N J
; (D O FANTASY ISLAND A secre
tary tries to Win a fortune by slaying
inside a haunted house for two
hours and a bounty hunter stalk*
the only man ever to etude him (H|
( 3 5 ) INDEPENDENT NETWORK

NEWS
© ( 1 0 ) NO, MONESTLYI
1 0 :3 0
lit (3 5 ) SPORTS AFIELD
© ( 10) DAVE ALLEN AT LARGE

11:00

1 ( 0 7 ONEW S
II ( 3 5 ) BENNY HILL
© (1 0 ) FALL AND RISE OF REGI­
NALD PERRIN
1 1 :0 5
1 1 ( 1 7 ) NEWS
1 1 :3 0

4 O BARRY FARBER
1 1 ) Q MOVIE "The Alamo (1980)
John W ay no. Richard Widmark Th©
B attle o f the Alamo I* waged by
heroes who fight to fr©© Texas from
Mux.co
M ( 3 5 ) STREETS OF SAN FRAN­

CISCO
© ( 1 0 ) HORSE RACING 1982
Kentucky Pacing Derby ‘ Uiv© cov­
erage from Loutsvitie Downs of the
third Jewel in the Triple Grown of
harness racing for 2-year-old
pacers

12:00
B

4 NEWS
1 2 :0 5

B
3 ) SATURDAY NIGHT UVE
Host Daniel J Travanti Guest
Johnny Cougar (R)
III O
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"Strange New
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(ID ( 3 5 ) MOVIE
Werewolf Of
London" (1935) Henry Hull, Warner
Oland

2:00
B 3 ) AMERICA S TOP TEN

PRE-OAME

8.00
B

B ( 4 1 TEXACO STAR THEATRE
OPENING NIGHT An array ot top
stars from television. Broadway and
the m otion pictures perform some
Of the greatest show-stopping
musical numbers ot all time g

1 2 :3 0

7 :0 0
B 3 ) IN SEARCH O F ..
I i t O H EEHAW
(DO LAWRENCE WELK
111(35) JEFFERSONS
© (1 0 ) UNDERSEA WORLD OF
JACQUES COUSTEAU

B

8 :0 5
Tl! (1 7 ) COLLEGE FOOTBALL

I I (1 7 ) MOVIE
Lady Sings The
Blues" ( 1972) Diana Ros*. Billy Deo
Williams

6 :0 5
'll) (1 7 ) WRESTLING

B 14 iSPACE STARS
I V O SOLID GOLD
17 1O LASSIE
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MENT

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11:00

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YOUR EYEGLASSES
SAVINGS CENTER

BUDGET
OPTICAL

1 0 :3 0
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(II 135) THREE STOOGES
© (1 0 ) PORTRAITS IN PASTELS

IM u ltM C M R * !

T IN T S * PHOTOGREY AVAILABLE
• Y o u r D o c to r s P r e s c r ip t io n F i lle d
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2 :3 0
© (1 0 ) IT'S EVERYBODY'S BUSI­
NESS

.al Funi,1

' l l (1 7 ) MOVIE
Villa Rides
(1 9 6 8 ) Yul O rynn er. R obert
Milchum An aviator teams up with
Rancho Villa to further the cause oi
the Mexican Revolution

| FJ F lo y d T h e a t r e s B

—

2 :0 5
111 (1 7 )
BASEBALL Cincinnati
Reds at Atlanta Braves

1 0 :0 5

4 :0 0
O ' 4 NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT

[ fLAZAI

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age of Los Angeles Dodgers al
Houston Astros or Detroit Tigers at
Boslon Red Son
(ID (3 5 ) MOVIE
Dangerous
Exile (1918) Louis Jourdan. Bolin- ,
da Lee During the French Revolu­
tion, a young girt and a daring
young rascal rescue a king horn
decapitation al the guillotine
© (1 0 ) IT'S EVERYBODY'S BUSI­
NESS

RICHIE RICH / SCOOBY

© ( 10) MAGIC OF OIL PAINTING

4 &lt;NEWS

Need Not Be Expensive

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two

3 :0 0
4 ENTERTAINMENT TONIOHT
3 :3 0

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7 :0 5
11 (1 7 ) BETWEEN THE LINES

11:00

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Hi (3 5 ) BENNY HILL
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2:00
B

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MR. MOON’S
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phant tor a cover of LIFE magatme

8:30

1 :3 5
1 1 ( 1 7 ) THIS WEEK IN BASEBALL

7 :0 0

1 0 :3 5
H D ( 1 7 ) NEWS

1 :0 5
(11 (1 7 ) A CONVERSATION WITH
JACUUES COUSTEAU
1 :3 0
7 B TO BE ANNOUNCED
© ( 1 0 ) FAMILY POPTRAIT

8 1.4) QILUOAN'S ISLAND
11 O b l a c k a w a r e n e s s

2:00

TAKE A F L O R I D A

HEROES

6 :3 0
(J l O SPECTRUM
| J | Q SPACE KIOETTES

1 0 :3 0
CM) ( 3 5 ) MAUOE

manager, f Rowe Price Internation-i
al Fund

0:00

September 11

3)
DIFF'RENT STROKES
Arnold gels the chance lo perform
with a famous ballerina (R)
1) O WALT DISNEY ' Gus. The
Pigskin Mule A Yugoslavian mule,
hired by a losing football coach,
help* the team begin a remarkable
winning streak (Part I)
CD O T.J. HOOKER A young
woman who was persuaded by
Hooker and Romano lo testify in a
murder case becomes the kiHor't
new target (R)
(ID ( 3 5 ) CHILDREN ON THE RUN
Johnny Mann hosts a documenta­
ry about the millions ol chad refu­
gees In the world
© ( 1 0 ) PUMPTONt "Adventure*
In Africa'* George Plimpton cap­
tures on him the world'* Iordeal eie-

2:30
B G i (2 )0

new s

3:00
( D O MOVIE "Blood And Sand
|t9 4 t) Tyrone Power, Rita Hay­
worth

3:10
5 1 ( 1 7 ) MOVIE "Dinner Al The
R ilt" (1937) Annabel la. Oavid
Niven
4 :4 5
5 1 ( 1 7 ) RAT PATROL

1

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F L O R ID A -

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Anmvt Aim

i ^ - * 3 W f iH B f t STATE — .

�Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

SUNDAY
m o r n in g

6:00
f f l Q LAW AND YOU
( 7 ) 0 AGRICULTURE U S A.
T j l( 17) NEWS

September 12
The Early Year* 1600-1930"
Modem's early days as a llshing vil­
lage. a Dutch farming community, a
wealthy New York City suburb and
a burgeoning black neighborhood
are reviewed |R)

6:30
(3 ) O SPECTRUM
( D O VIEWPOINT ON NUTRITION

7:00
O ® OPPORTUNITY LINE
( D O ROBERT SCHULLER
CD Q TODAY'S BLACK WOMAN
(I V) (3 5 ) BEN HADEN

7:05
7:30

O CD AMERICAN FORUM
17) O
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH OF ORLANOO
(ID (3 5 ) E.J. DANIELS

7:35
O I * • VOICE OF VICTORY
I'O R E X H U M B A R D
H O BOB JONES
H) (3 5 ) JONNY QUEST
CD (1 0 ) SESAME STREET (R) g

8:05
d3D ( 1 7 ) CARTOONS

8:30
Q (A i SUNDAY MASS
SI O d a y OF DISCOVERY
7' Q ORAL ROBERTS
I I (3 5 ) JOSIE AND THE PUSSY­
CATS

9:00
O (* ■THE WORLD TOMORROW
SI O SUNDAY MORNING
7' O
KIDS ARE PEOPLE TOO

Guests Jon B o w m Y’ Bauman,
comedian Pal HUfley. Linda Gray
IH)
ill
(3 5 )
BUGS BUNNY AND
FRIENDS
CD ( 1 0 ) MATINEE AT THE BIJOU

Gene Autry and Smiley Burnette
are featured in "The Man From
Music Mountain (1938). the shorts
include Weekend In Hollywood"
119371 and a cartoon, and the serial
is Chapter 1 ol "Zorro s Fighting
Legion " (R)

9:05
U ( 17) LOST IN SPACE

9:30
II

(35)

MONTAGE: THE BLACK
NASL SOCCER KICKS

10:00
Q a MOVIE "Strategic An CommancT 1 1955) James Stewart. June
Altyson An untended shoulder »nju*
ry results in the downfall of both a
serviceman s Air Force and base-,
ball careers
G D O CENTRAL FLORIDA FOOT­
BALL HIGHLIGHTS
m ( 3 5 ) MOVIE
"The Time Ol
Their Lives" (1946) Bud Abbott.
Lou Costello Ghosts Irom the Rcvohjtionary War seek lo prove their
innocence to release them from an
earthbound curse

8IDE

G *
NFL FOOTBALL Houston
Oilers at Cincinnati Bengals
i J ( O NFL FOOTBALL Tampa Bay
Buccaneers al Minnesota Vikings
(1 0 )

GLOBAL

8:05
11

REPORT A

9:00
O I f ) MOVIE
Skyward" (19801
Bello Davis. Howard Messeman A
former stunt pilot and an airport
watchman help a 14-year-old para­
plegic girl learn how to fly a plane
|R&gt;
IJ O THE JEFFERSON3 lorn
Shows he has a jealous streak when
an old beau ot Helen s Invites her
out to lunch (R)
( I ) O MOVIE "The Fog" (I960)
Adnenne Barbeau, Hal Holbrook
Terror comes to a coastal town in
the form Ol an ominous mist sur­
rounding the ghosts ot lepers killed
in n shipwreck a century earlier f i

GO O MOVIE
Whatever Map
pened To Baby Jane?" (1962) Bette
Davis. Joan Crawtord Two sislers.
both former him stars, live a bizarre
existence in a terror-ridden house
i!D ( 3 5 ) MOVIE
Im All Right.
Jack" (19601 Ian Carmichael. Peter
Sellers In trying to do a good |ob
lor his uncle in a factory a wellmeaning bumbler actually upsets
the crooked scheme his uncle has
so carefully planned

OF THE

10:30
( D O BLACK AWARENESS
17) O FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
CD ( 1 0 ) MOVIE "A Study In Scar­
le t' (1933) Reginald Owen. Alan
Mowbray Based on the story by
Arthur Conan Doyle
Sherlock
Holmes investigates a bizarre mur­
der involving a foreign word written
in blood at the scene ol the crime

10:35
02) ( 1 7 ) MOVIE - Paint Your Wag­
on" (1969) Lee Marvin. Ctml Eastwood During the Gold Rush days In
California, a pair ot prospectors
snare a wile bought from a Mormon
al an auction.

11:00
(1 ) O t h ir t y m in u t e s

11:30
(3 ) o f a c e t h e n a t io n
( I ) O THIS WEEK WITH DAVID
BRINKLEY
AFTERNOON

12:00
O ® MEET THE PRESS
(S) O FIGHT BACK
(U) (3 5 ) MOVIE "Return To Para­
dise" (1953) Gary Cooper. Roberta
Haynes. A tier spending tana on a
South Seaa island, a man lale In
love with one of the island gets
0 9 ( 1 0 ) I REMEMBER HARLEM

CD ( 10)

2:05
BASEBALL Cincinnati

3:00
CD (1 0 ) AT THE ROSE BUD Lou
C o n ie s Hubbard Street Dance
Company performs the comical "A l
The Roso Bud" and the sophistical
ed Etcerpls From Gershwin Danc­
es "

9:05
TJ (171 WEEK IN REVIEW

9:30
D

3:30

O

ONE DAY AT A TIME The

men get stuck in a snowstorm and
the women aro lelt wading al home
|R|

AMERICAN SHORT STO­

RY "Bernice Bobs Her Hair" by F
S coll Fitzgerald. "I'm A Fool" by
Sherwood Anderson (R)

( II) (3 5 ) JIMMY SWAGGART

10:00

4 :0 0

O TRAPPER JOHN. M D A
mentally retarded young man and a
sarcastic old hermit find that they
have somethmq of value to offer *
each oflier (R)
&lt;5

«
•» NFL FOOTBALL Miami Dol­
phins al New Yofk Jets
3 O TENNIS U S Open 1 Live
Coverage ol the men » linal round
from the United States Tennis
Association National Tennis Center.
Flushing Meadows-Corona Park

NY

MASTERPIECE THEATRE

Teslamanl Of Yputh" Vena,
inspired fo become a wartime
nurse, survives the drudgery of her
training and looks forward to a
Christmas reunion with Roland
|Part2M R)Q

Reds al Atlanta Braves

CD (1 0 )

CD ( 1 0 )7 0 THE MANOR BORN
1 0 :0 5
11 (1 7) NEWS

*

I t (3 5 ) INCREDIBLE HULK
5 :0 0
I h (3 5 ) DANIEL BOONE
CD ( 10) FIRING LINE The Econo

my And The Blacks': Guesl Rever­
end Jesse Jackson (Part I &gt;

5:20
t i ( 17) NEWS

5:30

10:30
.

t l (3 5 ) JIMBAKKER

CD (10) BUTTERFLIES

11:00
B 4 s o
7 Q NEWS
CD 110) SNEAK PREVIEWS Rogw

Cherts and Gen# Sisk el host an
Informative look at what i new at
the movres

11:05

I &gt; Q S P O R TS B E A T

5:35
111 (1 7 ) UNDERSEA W ORLD OF
JACQUES COUSTEAU
EVENING

6:00

(1 t(3 5 |K U N G FU
CD ( 1 0 ) NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC
SPECIAL "National Parks
Play­
ground Ot Paradise?r’ Eliotts by
the National Park Service to restrict
the public's access to America's
parks In hopes of putting a halt lo
environmental damage, pollution
and crime era eiammed |R)
( 7)

o

6:30
ABC NEWS

6:35
a * ( 1 7 ) NICE PEOPLE

(1 X 0 7 ) JERRY FALWELL
1 1 :3 0
Q
( i ) ENTERTAINMENT THIS
WEEK
(7 0 MOVIE "Darby 1 Rangers
(1958) James Garner. Etchika
Chouteau The heroic American
Rangers go m lo combat under the
leadership ol Colonel Darby In their
invasion ol Italy and North Africa
(ID (3 5) i r e YOUR BUSINESS

11:35
( D O SOLID GOLD

12:05
02) (1 7 ) OPEN UP

12:30
Q Gil MOVIE "Foolsleps In The
Dark" (1941) Errol Flynn, Brenda
Marshall

7:00
B

CD CATALINA C-ULB A stray

Navy mine is discovered boating
near an oceanic research laborato­
ry ott the California coast (R)

12:35
( } ) O MOVIE "Devil Dog The
Hound Ol H e ir (1978) Richard
Crenna. Yvelte Mimleus

12:50

( D O W MINUTES
CD O CODE RED Danny s photo

( Z I O NEWS

essay assignment proves Instru­
mental in the apprehension o l a tire
bomb arsonist (R)

12) (1 7 ) MOVIE

(11) (3 5 ) WILO. WILD WEST
CD (1 0 ) NASHVILLE MUSIC

7:05
12) (1 7 ) WRESTLING

CD ( 1 0 )

7:30

SUNSHINE MUSIC HALL
■■Bailee. Stowe* And Bradford"

8:00
D
CD CHIPS Pooch loses N s
nerve following a tarrtfytng m o torcycia accident (R)
Ci) O ARCHIE BUNKER'S PLACE

ALIVEI

8:30

MORAL ISSUES

(1 7 )

NASHVILLE

a l) (3 5 ) JERRY FALW ELL

1:30

IX

(1 7 )

Guest Bobby Bare

report on what happened to the
human family in 1981 Is presented
by live individuals who otter their
accounts ot the events they lived
through

( 7 ) 0 NEWS

10:05
a t ( 1 7 ) LIGHTER
NEWS

Pianitl Earl Wild perform* Ger­
shwins lyrical "Rhapsody In Blue"
In this special encore performance
honoring Arthur Fiedler s litbelh
anniversary with the Boston Pops

1:00

2:00

8:00

t l It*
PRESS

O 'D N F L 'S Z
'5 O NFL TODAY
( D O CHARLIE PELL

(7 ) 0

I t ( 1 7 ) IT IS WHITTEN

(7 ) O MODESTY BLAISE A worn
an is toined by her street-wise best
biend In high-level government
undercover work
I I (3 5) MAUDE
CD (1 0 ) EVENING AT POPS

12:30

CD

(1 1 (1 7 ) JAMES ROBISON

Gloria refuses to tell Archie why
she and Mike have separated when
she returns home with Joey (R|

1:05
"Marine Raiders"
( I944| Pal O'Brien. Robert Ryan

1:20
£ &gt; Q MOVIE "The Kid From
Brooklyn" (1946) Danny Kaye. Vir­
ginia Mayo

0 (2) NEWS

1:45

3 :0 5
(1 7 ) M OVIE
"Beachheed
(1984) Tony Curtis, Frank Lovefoy

12)

4:25

(D O CCU9MRY REVUE

F rid a y , Sepf. 10, 1982—5

Serving
Stardom
By HUTU THOMPSON
Some had college degrees,
all had work experience in
their chosen field, all were
still young when they had to
lake Jobs a s waitresses for
su rv iv a l. W hy? B ecause
their chosen field was show
business.
H ere a re the recollections
of three successful actresses
who look back with laughter
at th eir w altresslng days.
F o r E m ily Bindinger —
now a well-paid regular as
F ra n c in e on the q u ality
syndicated children's show
‘The G reat Space Coaster”
— the c risis cam e just three
years ago when she was 24.
For h e r, it w as a surprise.
She is a product of New
York’s High School for the
Perform ing A rts, which wits
Ihe model for the school in
(he " F a m e " scries. Al 15,
she got h e r first job in a
m u sic a l. She w orked in
Paris, then off-Broadway,
llten on B roadw ay, including
a leading role.
Then suddenly, "1 had to
take a job as a singing
w aitress a t an ice-cream
parlor to pay the rent and
buy the food.”
She ad d s: “ Now don’t get
me w rong — lovely people
run the place and I go hack
as a custom er. But The
G reat Space Coaster' cam e
along at just the right tim e,"

'■

G O GUIDE
If you're thinking of getting out of the house and are
looking for som ething to do this weekend, h ere a re a
few suggestions:
Patchwork C ottage Quilt Show, Sept. 18-25, 222 E.
F irst St., Sanford. M onday, 9:30 a.m . to 9:30 p.m .;
Tuesday through F rid a y , 9:30 a.m . to 5:30 p.m .; and
Saturday, 9:30 a.m . to 4 p.m.
Del a n d Museum — " la n d of the R ising Sun:
Japan ese Art &amp; C ulture in Perspective," through Sept.
26. Museum hours: 9 a.m . to 5 p.m., Monday through
F rid ay ; 2-4 p.m ., Sunday. 449 E. New York Ave.,
D e la n d .
Cornell Fine A rts C enter, Hollins College, W inter
P a rk — "A m erican Illustrations: A Selection from the
Collection of C harles E. W( 'xlsby" through Sept. Pi
l selected works on display through Oct. 3); “ Art of the
Dowry: Women's C rafts of the Sind IX’s e r t" Sept. 25 Oct. 24. G allery h o urs: 10 a.m . to 5 p.m ., Tuesday
through Friday; 1-5 p .m ., weekends.
C entral Florida Civic T heatre G uild's C hildren's
T h eatre presents “ T ales of Beatrice P o tte r," 7:30
p.m ., Sept. 17, T u p perw are Children's T h eatre, la c h
Haven Park, O rlando; Sept. 18 and 19, 1 and 3 p.m .;
Sept. 24 , 7:30 p.m . Sept. 25 and 26, 1 and 3 p.m .
An Evening with John Houseman, sta r of sta g e and
screen 8 p.m., V alencia Community College, P er­
form ing Arts C enter, E ast Campus, 8 p.m . .Sept. 17.
Senior Season kiek-off at Sea W orld's Atlantis
T heatre, 3 p.m. T h u rsday, Sept. 16. Com munity-wide
discount program for those 55 and older for Sept. 16Dec. 19 events. F re e A tlantis Theatre tickets available.
Send stam ped, self-addressed envelope to Senior
Season, P.O. Box 1100, Orlando, FI. 32602.

WEEK-END SPECIAL

B a rb a ra Bosson and Susan
S u lliv an a r e less ly ric a l
about
th e ir sh o rt-te rm
w a itre s s in g . Both w ere
Playboy bunnies.
Miss Bosson perform s as
Capl. F u rillo ’s bewildered,
often h y sterical, but &lt; K klly
likable ex-wife F ay on NBC’s
‘ Hill S treet Blues," a role
that got h e r an E m m y
nom ination this year as best
featured a c tre ss in a dram a.
She w as a d ram a m ajor at
C a rn e g ie M ellon — an d
determ ined to be an actress
from the tim e she was 3. But
it w as long a fte r that before
a real b reak cam e along.
" I w asn ’t really the type to
be a bunny but it paid better
than o ther w aitress jobs and
any of them were better than
the w orst Job I tried —
selling cem etery lots over
the telephone."
B eautiful Susan Sullivan,
who plays Maggie in CBS'
"F alcon C rest," says h er
bunny d ay s were brief. But
even a fte r college (a d ram a
m ajor a t H ofstra University)
and a fte r a few professional
roles, she needed advanced
c o a c h in g a n d th a t co st
money. And bunny money
was the b est at that m om ent
of h e r life.

THRIFT PAK SPECIAL
Include*: I Piece* Hone* Dipped Chicken, I Pin! at
Mathed Potaloe*.
Pint Gravy, I Pint ot Cold Slaw and
t Bitcuit*.

OPE N 11.10 a m - 14pm [X C C k T F k l ( I I I CLOSING 10 JOpm
110* S. French A vt. (H w y . 17-931
SANFORO
111 14SO

41 N. H w y. Il t l
C A SS E LB E R R Y
Ht-OISO

THEWUiWEMAKEIT
ISMAKMGUSFAMOUS.

�* — Evening H tra ld , Sanford, FI.

F rid a y , Sept. 10, 1913

Daytime Schedule
MORNING

6:00
Cl
(D
(D
(ID

® EARLY TODAY
O a i (171 NEWS
O SUNRISE
(3 5 ) JIM BANKER

O

®

O

TEXAS
(J ) O THE PRICE IS RIGHT
( D Q LOVE BOAT (R)
0 1) ( 3 5 ) 35 LIVE
GD( 10) MOVIE
1 1 :3 0
1 !) ( 3 5 ) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
NEWS
AFTERNOON

TOOAY IN FLORIOA
ABC NEWS THIS MORNING

6:45
( 7 ) 0 NEW3
CD ( 10) A M WEATHER
7 :0 0
0 (4 t o d a y
1 5 &gt;Q MORNING NEWS
m O GOOD MORNING AMERICA
3 1) (3 5 ) w o o d y w o o d p e c k e r
(D (1 0 ) TO LIFE! YOGA WITH
PRISCILLA

3 :0 0
0

(4 ) f a n t a s y
GUIDING LIGHT
GENERAL HOSPITAL
(It) (3 5 ) CASPER
CD (1 0 FRENCH CHEF (MON)
CD {1 0 ) COOKIN' CAJUN (TUE)
GD (1 0 ) THE LAWMAKERS (FRI)
3 :3 0
(11) (3 5 ) BUGS BUNNY A N 0
FRIENDS
CD ( 10) ELECTRIC COMPANY (R)

‘D O
GD O

12:00
0 ( 4 1SOAP WORLD
(DO ' 7 ) 0 NEWS
(1 J] (3 5 ) BIG VALLEY
GD ( 10) MASTERPIECE THEATRE
(TUE)
CD ( 10) ODYSSEY (WED)
CD (1 0 ) NOVA (THU)
GD ( 1 0 ) EVENING AT POPS (FRI)

7:15
tD ((0 )A M

11:00

O®

6:30

(D

(MON)
CD (1 0 ) SLIM CUISINE (TUE)
CD (1 0 ) JUST FRJEND9: ROB
MCCONNELL AND THE BOSS
BRASS (WED)
S 3 (1 0 ) PORTRAITS IN PA 8 TEL
(FRI)
2 :4 5
ID
(3 5 ) EPCOT BEHIND THE
SCENES (WED)

1 0 :3 0
a GD WHEEL O F FORTUNE
(S IQ A L IC E ( R )
(JJ)(35) DORIS DAY
GD (1 0 ) 3-2-1 CONTACT

WEATHER

7 :3 0
l l (3 5 ) TOM AND JERRY
ED (1 0 ) SESAME STREET (R) n

1 2 :0 5
3 1 (1 7 ) PEOPLE NOW

7 :3 5
12. ( 17) I DREAM OF JEANNIE

1 2 :3 0

0 '4

8:00
II. (3 5 ) FRED FLINTSTONE AND
FRIEND9
8 :0 5
13 (1 7 ) MY THREE SON3

3 :3 5
&lt;11 { 1 7 ) THE FLINT3TONES
4 :0 0
a
(4 ) LITTLE HOUSE ON THE
; PRA|R|E

NEWS

51 O
THE YOUNQ AND THE
RESTLESS
(7 ) O RYAN S HOPE

1:00
O J DAYS OF OUR LIVES
I D O ALL MY CHILDREN
ID (3 5 ) MOVIE
CD i 10) MOVIE (MON)
CD ( 10) AMERICAN SHORT STO­
RY (TUE)
S3 ( 10) MATINEE AT THE BUOU
(WED)
tD ( 10) GREAT PERFORMANCES
(THU)
GD ( 10) FLORIDA HOME OROWN

8 :3 0
I I (3 5 ) GREAT SPACE COASTER
0 ) i 10) MISTER ROGERS (R)
8 :3 5

(UM 17) THAT GIRL
9 :0 0
0 ( 4 RICHARD SIMMONS
; D O DONAHUE
m o m o v ie
I I (3 5 ) LEAVE IT TO BEAVER
(D (1 0 ) SESAME STREET ( R ) g

(FRI)
1 :0 5
3 1 ( 17) MOVIE

9 :0 5
f ll (1 7 ) MOVIE
9 :3 0
0
(4 ) SO YOU THINK YOU'VE
GOT TROUBLES
111)( 3 5 ) FAMILY AFFAIR

1 :3 0
(J O AS THE WORLD TURNS
£D ( 10) THIS OLD HOUSE (FRI)

2:00
Q

4 i ANOTHER WORLD

1 • a ONE LIFE TO LIVE

10:00
Q m DIFF'RENT STROKES (R)
1 J ) O MARY TYLER MOORE
111(35) ANDY GRIFFITH
(D 1 10) ELECTRIC COMPANY (R)

(D (1 0 ) MAGIC OF OIL PAINTING
,FRI’
2 :3 0
( D O CAPITOL
GD ( 1 0 ) TO BE ANNOUNCED

1 D O HOUR MAGAZINE (M ON.
TUE. THU. FRI)
( D O CBS AFTERNOON PLAYHOUSE (WED)
I TS O MERV GRIFFIN
fill (3 5 ) TOM AND JERRY
CD (1 0 ) SESAME STREET ( R ) g
4 :0 5
3 X (1 7 )T M E M U N S T E R S
4 :3 0
(U) (3 5 ) SCOOBYDOO
4 :3 5
I X (1 7 ) LEAVE IT TO BEAVER
5 :0 0
O
4) LAVERNE &amp; SHIRLEY A
COMPANY (MON-WED. FRI)
( ! ) O HOGAN'S HEROES
( 7 ) 0 ALL IN THE FAMILY
II 1J (3 5 ) EIGHT IS ENOUGH
CD 110) MISTER ROGERS (R)
5 :0 5
I X (1 7 ) THE BRADY BUNCH
5 :3 0
Q '4 i PEOPLE'S COURT
&lt;D O M *A *S 'M
CD O NEWS
CD (1 0 ) POSTSCRIPTS
5 :3 5
(IX (1 7 ) BEVERLY HILLBILLIES

It was EASY to lose 28 pounds
and 13 inches, in 5 weeks...

MONDAY

September 13

EVENING

6:00

0 (4)3) O CD O NEWS

(ID (3 5 ) CHARLIE'S ANGELS
® (lO )O C E A N U S
8 :0 5
&lt;51 (1 7 ) CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
6 :3 0
0 (4) NBC NEWS
CD O CBS NEWS
( 7 J O ABC NEWS Q
CD (1 0 ) O C E A N U S ~

7 :0 0
0 ( i ) THE MUPPETS
&lt;D O P M, MAQAZINE A Hunt tty-

er who pilot* a 1 !-loot mim-|e1.
interviews with stars at a country
music awards show
( 7 ) 0 JOKER'S WILD
i i :(3 5 )t h e je f fe r s o n s
(D (1 0 ) MACNEIL / LEHRER
REPORT
7 :0 5
(1 X (1 7 ) g o m e r p y l e
7 :3 0
0 4 ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
D O NOWHERE TO TURN Sian

Mooneyham and Carol Lawrence
host this documentary on the more
than sin million people In Africa who
have been affected by war and
drought and the results ot such
events
1 r 1O FAMILY FEUD

11 (3 5 )

BARNEY MILLER
( 10) DICK CAVETT Guest

8:00
O

(41 LITTLE HOUSE ON THE

PRAIRti Charles

undergoes

a

deep religious experience when he

learns that hts young son James will
soon die {Part 2){R)
(7 )

O

T H A T’S

meriqan Health and.
ifttairtDml Clinics

1 8 (3 5 ) THE ROCKFORD FILES
OS (1 0 ) GREAT PERFORMANCES

"Guests 01 The Nation" Frank
Converse and Estelle Parsons star

6:35
(0 )(1 7 )B O B N C W H A R T

7:00
O ® THE MUPPETS
3 ) O P - M . MAGAZINE A proM eol
Chef TaH Erhardt. a tug-of-war that
It contested over two-and-a-halt
iTiHee ot waler.
(7) O JOKER'S W ILD
1 8 (3 5 ) THE JEFFERSON 8
®
(1 0 ) MACNEIL / LEHRER
REPORT

7:05
3 2 (1 7 ) GOMER PYLE

7:30
O ® ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
U l Q T I C T A C DOUGH
&lt; 7 ) 0 FAMILY FEUO
3 8 (3 5 ) BARNEY MILLER
GD (1 0 ) WCK CAVETT Guest
actor Albert Finney |P a rl2 )(R )

Ij WINTERHAVE n I

| AZALEA PARK

| WINTER PARK | SANFORD

j 2824666

S 629-1441 1323-6505]| 299-831l|

( y A » A * A « &lt; M A IA » ^ «

7:35
31 (1 7 )
BASEBALL Houston
Aslros al Rllanta Brave*

Where weight control is More than just o diet”

Jl o

9 :3 0
HOUSE CALLS

10:00

(D O

LOU GRANT
l l ( 3 5 ) INDEPENDENT NETWORK

NEWS

12:00

3 ) O TRAPPER JOHN. M O
Gonzo Gales, a Vietnam veteran
applies lor a post at a large hospital
lust as emergency cases are Hood­
ing in from a hotel fire (R)
( I ) O NEWS
1 2 :3 0
® LATE NIGHT WITH DAVID
Lb I TERM AN Guests: comedienne
Carol Leilter. aclor Paul Dooley
l ' O ABC NEWS NIGHTLINE
III: (3 5 ) WANTED: DEAD OR ALIVE

O

1:00
(7 ) Q MOVIE
Claudia (1943)
Dorothy McGuire. Robert Young

1:10

Q ) O COLUMBO A woman asks
for Gelumbo's help when she
suspects that her e**husband has
been murdered
0

1:30
4 NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT

2:10
OX (1 7 )

8:00
O
*
FATHER MURPHY
3 ) O UNIVERSE Waller Cronkit*
reports on various occurrence* and
phenomena In the world ol science
(D o HAPPY DAYS
3 8 ( 3 5 ) THE ROCKFORD PILES
® ' 1107 * N O V A ''T a F rth a * Whd

MOVIE

(1953) Ronald
Fleming

0

®

3 )0

NEWS

(3 5 ) SOAP
11 12
€D &lt;[110 ) POSTCRIPTS
11:20
32 ( 1 7 ) ALL IN THE FAMILY
0

®

1 1 :3 0
THE BEST OF CARSON

Rhonda

2 :3 0
ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT

(D O

NEWS

O ®

NEWS

10:20

11:00

"Tropic Zone"

Reagan.

0 (4

2 :4 0
3 :0 0
3 :1 0
( D O MOVIE
Goodbye, My Fan­
cy" (1951) Joan Crawloid. Robert
Young
3 :3 0
O 14 NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT
4 :1 0
31' (1 7 ) MOVIE
"Ski Lift) To
Death" (1978) Deborah Ratlin.
Charles Frank
4 :3 0
0 ' 4) NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT

S e p t e m b e r 14

T U ESD A Y

6:30

5HARON DENNIS

9 :0 0
0 (? ) MOVIE "Murder In Tesas
(Part 1| 11981) Farrah Fawcatl,
Katharine Ross A wealthy Te«as
oilman sets out to prove that his
daughter was murdered by her hus­
band. plastic surgeon John Hill (R)
(5) O M *A *S *H
CD O NFL FOOTBALL Pillsburgh
Slimiers al Dallas C owboysn
l l ( 3 5 ) QUNSMOKE
tD ( 1 0 ) TONIGHT. SCAN DINA VIAI
The leaders ot live Scandinavian
countries attend a musical tribute
to Ihe Cultural legacy ol Scandina­
via held al Ihe Minneapolis Orches­
tra Hall. Neville Marrmer hosts wilh
guest performers including Birgit
Nilsson. Judith Blegen and Victor
Borge

INCREDIBLE

Featured the U S Rubik's Cube
championship, a legless high school
athlete, a 13-year-old magician, a
young water-skier (H)

O ® NBC NEWS
( D O CBS NEWS
(7) O ABC NEWS Q
CD ( 1 0 ) U N D E R S T A N D IN G
HUMAN BEHAVIOR

★ NO PRE-PACKAGED FOODS ★ N O HABIT
FORMING DRUGS ★ NO EXERCISE ★ N O
CONTRACTS ★ CHOICE OF DIFFERENT
PROGRAMS ★ PAY AS YOU LOSE
★ SUPERVISED BY FLA. PHYSICIAN

8 :3 0
WKRP IN CINCINNATI

1 0 :3 0
(Ifj ( 3 5 ) IN SEARCH OF...
GD (1 0 ) THE RIVER IN THE
DESERT A him about Ihe Colorado
River examines the water crisis in
me Southwest and the attitudes
and historical forces which have
precipitated it

6 :0 5
3 1 (1 7 ) CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS

★ SAFE ★ EFFECTIVE
★ ECONOMICAL

O

7 :3 5
1J (1 7 ) ANDY GRIFFITH

0 ( 4 ) 3 ) 0 ( D O NEWS
3 8 (3 5 ) CHARLIE'S ANGEL 8
OD ( 1 0 )
U N D E R S T A N D IN G
HUMAN BEHAVIOR

if your weight Is on
a gain-loss cycle, they can help you lose
pounds and Inches too...and keep them
oft. Their programs are safe, effective
and economical and they are In­
dividually designed to Insure you suc­
cess.
For best results In solving an over­
weight problem see an American Health
&amp; Weight Control Clinic. Take the first
step to better health. Call them today.

1 1 :5 0
3 1 ( 1 7 ) MOVIE
Enter Laughing"
(1967) Rem Santoni, Elaine M ay

OX ( 1 7 ) NEWS

EVENING

A m erican Health 8. W eight
C lin ic " ................S im la # D tu r n

6 :0 5
(Q) ( 1 7 ) MOVIE "Any Wednes­
day" (1966) Jane Fonda. Jason
Robards
Every Wednesday, a
"model" husband visit* his mis­
tress in a tax-eiem pt suite

actor Albert Finney (Pari l|(R )

6:00
at an
Control

Host Johnny Carson Guests
Sammy Davis Jr.. Marietta Hartley.
Bob 6 Ray. Marie Earle &lt;R)
3 ) 0 MORE REAL PEOPLE
(U) ( 3 5 ) STREET8 OF SAN FRAN­
CISCO

(U

8 :3 5
ll(1 7 )B O B N E W H A R T

GD

in a dramatization of Frank O'Con­
nor's short story set In Ireland In
1921 revolving around a pair ol Irish
insurgents and the two captured
British soldiers they are ordered to
guard (R)

Telescopes
Ur Philip Morrison,
pro lessor ol physics al Massachu­
setts Institute ol Technology, pre­
sents a provocative commentary on
Ihe nature ol civilization (R) n

8:30
3) O
MOONLIGHT After stum­
bling upon a killing, a delivery man
reluctantly agree* to work under­
cover with government agents to
trap an inter national terrorist.
CD O LAVERNE A SHIRLEY

9:00
O ® MOVIE "Murder In T e ia *"
(Pari 2) 11961)
CD O THREE S COMPANY
1 8 ( 3 5 ) GOING STRAIGHT This
documentary look* at a new move­
ment In tom e communilia* lo cre­
ate allernallvea to prison,
ffi
( 1 0 ) MYSTERY "Sergeant
Cnbb Something Old, Something
New" Sergeant Cnbb suspect* that
an old man hat l*ll*n victim to a
marriage-lor-proin scheme (R ) q

9:30
(D O
FORT

TOO CLOSE FOR COM­

10:00
f f l Q CSS REPORTS "The Gold­
s'’ L e a r BM Kuril* reports on the
politic* Involved In th* marketing ol
tobacco In America.
( D O HART TO HART
1 8 ( 3 5 ) INOCPENOEWT NETWORK
NEWS
® ( 1 0 ) CRISIS TO CRISIS WITH
BARBARA JORDAN Book* Under
Feet" The controversial and grow­
ing druggie over book centorahlp
in America la examined

10:30
1 8 ( 3 5 ) IN SEARCH OF...

10:39
3 2 )(1 7 )N C W 8

11:00
) 3 ) 0 ( D O NEWS
3 8 ( 335)
5 ? !SOAP
f f l ( 10) 8VOHS UNDER FIRE

O

®

1 1 :3 0
TONIGHT Host

’4
Johnny

Carson.
3 ) O MORE REAL PEOPLE
( D O ABC NEWS NIQHTLINE
1 8 ( 3 5 ) STREETS OF SAN FRANCOCO

11:35
32) (1 7 ) ALL IN THE FAMILY

12:00
( I ) O QUINCY
O FANTASY ISLAND

M

CD

12:05
(Q ( 1 7 ) MOVIE "The Slory Ol
Eriher Coriallo" ( I9S7) Joen Craw­
ford. Rotteno Brazzt

12:30
O ® LATE NIGHT W ITH DAVID
LETTERMAN Q u ad*: com edian
Paul Mooney, critic CaMn Trillin.
1 8 (3 5 ) WANTED: DEAD O R A UVE

1:10

_
CD

O
MOVIE "The Revolt Of
Mamie Slover" (1956) Jane Rutaell.
Richard Egan

I
a-i
9

,;n

1:30
O ®

NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT

„

i

1:35

dS O

MCMILLAN A WIFE

2:15
31
( 1 7 ) BASEBALL H ou alo n
Astro* at Atlanta Brave*

4

2:30
O ®

e n t e r t a in m e n t t o n i g h t

2:40
( D O new s

*

3:00

O ®

NEWS

3 :1 0
( D O MOVIE "The Jazz Singer
(1953) Danny Thom**. Peggy Lee.

3’30
0

®

NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT

4:30
■D

® NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT
*

�Friday, Sept. 10, 1 9 8 I-7

Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

WEDNESDAY
EVENING

6:00
Q ® O D O ® O N E W 8
J C (3 5 ) CHARLIE'3 ANGELS
© ( 10) FOCUS ON SOCIETY
6 :0 5
ID (1 7 ) CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
6 :3 0
O ( I ) NBC NEWS
5 i o CBS NEWS
' 7 ) 0 ABC NEWS Q
0 0 ( 10) FOCUS O N sO C IE TY

IX (17)

6 :3 5
BOB NEWHART

September 15

scene from Strauss' "Salome ’
8 :0 5
IX ( 1 7 ) BOXING Live boring from
Madison Square Garden featuring
WBC Featherweights Juan la Porte
vs Mario M iranda
9 :0 0
O ® THE FACTS OF LIFE
H i O MOVIE "Firepower" (1979)
Sophia Loren, James Coburn A
chemist's widow and several other
parties converge on the Caribbean
lo learn the reasons behind her
husband s violent death
l l Q T H E FALL GUY
(ID(35) GUNSMOKE

7 :0 0

O (DTHE MUPPETS
( i ) O P M. MAGAZINE

A treasure
hunter who salvaged $40 million
worth ot sunken gold and (ewels; an
energy ehicienl earth-sheltered
home
l? i O JOKER'S WILD
(tO (3 5 ) THE JEFFERSONS
©
(1 0 ) MACNEIL / LEHRER
REPORT
7 :0 5
J 1 (1 7 )G 0 M E R P Y L E
7 :3 0
0 ( ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
U l O T I C T A C DOUGH
(.73 G FAMILY FEUD
(11) (3 5 ) BARNEY MILLER
©
(1 0 ) DICK CAVETT Guest
Timothy Mutton. (R)

D

7 :3 5
(H ( 17) ANDY GRIFFITH

8:00
O ® REAL PEOPLE Featured a
man who is building a rockelship, a
Canadian who claims lo be the
world s strongest man; a champion
wheelchair racer. (R)
( D O CBS REPORTS
ffl O THE PHOENIX
(11) (3 5 ) THE ROCKFORD FILES
0 3 (1 0 ) GREAT PERFORMANCES
"Live From Lincoln Center" Zubin
Mehta conducts the New York Phil­
harmonic In Mozart's "Jupiter Sym­
phony" and Strauss' "Don Juan";
Leontyne Price sings arias by
Mozart and Verdi and the line)

D

a

9 :3 0
LOVE. SIDNEY

10:00
O ( I ) QUINCY Quincy s credibility
is questioned when il appears that
he has made a horrendous error in
his investigation ol a murder case

(R)

d ) O DYNASTY A leu t haunts her
romance with Colby. Steven Is
booked on assault charges, and
Claudia remembers the night she
was shot (R |
111! ( 3 5 ) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
NEWS
© ’( 10 ) O N STAGE WITH JUDITH
SOMOGI A profile ot this young
American conductor looks at her
life at work and SI home, eiplormg
the training and gathering ol eiperience necessary lor her success (R)

1 1 :3 5
d l) ( 1 7 ) ALL IN THE FAMILY

12:00
(5 O ARCHIE BUNKER'S PLACE
A businessman takes over Harry s
interest In the bar and becomes
Archie's new partner (Part 1)(R)
CD O
LOVE BOAT Julie and
Gophor tall in love, three ei-so rvicemen set their sergeant up with a
crew member, and aJieauhM worn,
an finds (he man ol her dreams (R)
1 2 :0 5
(Q) ( 1 7 ) MOVIE "Our M an In
Havana" (I960) Alec Guinness.
Maureen O Mara
1 2 :3 0
(3 ) LATE NIGHT W ITH DAVID
LETTERMAN Guests
comedian
Kevin Nealon, B H Barry, who stag­
es theatrical lights
(ID (35) WANTED: DEAD OR AUVE

G

C t) O

1:10
(X ) O MOVIE
Captain Horalio
Hornblower" (1951) Gregory Peck
Virginia Mayo
O

1 :30
(4 NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT

2 :2 5
(13) ( 1 7 ) MOVIE "We Joined The
Navy" (1962) Kenneth More, Joan
O ’Brien

1 0 :3 0
iD ( 3 5 ) IN SEARCH OF...
© ( 1 0 ) BOARD AND CARE

G

®

1 0 :3 5
a x ( 1 7 ) NEWS

q

u n NEWS

11:00
0 ® (Jj OCX O

1 1 :3 0

O
®
TONIGHT Host, Johnny
Carson Guest: Ksleena Kltf.
(Jl O MORE REAL PEOPLE
d ) Q ABC NEWS NIOHTLINE
( 3 5 ) STREETS OF SAN FRAN­
CISCO

(ID

6:00
0 ( 3 ) &lt; Z ) 0 ( X 0 new s
H.D (3 5 ) CHARUE'3 ANGELS
0 3 (1 0 ) EARTH, SEA AND 8KY

3 :2 0
(D O
G

task ot trailing a detector and proYthhng him trom disclosing tCpsecret Information
d&gt; O

8 :3 0
NFL FOOTBALL Minnesota

Vikings al Buffalo Bills Q
©
( 1 0 ) ALFRED RlTCHCOCK
PRESENTS

6 :3 0
O (4 ) NBC NEWS
(3 ) O CBS NEWS
( 7 J O ABC NEWS O
0 0 (1 0 ) EARTH. SEA AND SKY

O

6:35
7:00
0® THEM UPPET8
CD O P.M. MAGAZINE A surgeon

who uses laser techniques to cure
some causes o l infertility; visit with
John Holdtworth who counsels
troubled youths at a sailboat clinic

CDQ

JOKER’S WILD
a!) (3 5 ) THE JEFFERSONS
GD (1 0 ) MACNEIL / LEHRER
REPORT

7:05
0 X (1 7 )g o m e r p y l e

7:30

G

(3) ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
) 0 TIC TAC DOUGH
) O FAMILY FEUO
&lt;1E (3 5 ) BARNEY MILLER
CD (1 0 ) DICK CAVETT Guest
Cher. (Part 1|(R)

8

7:35
( U (1 7 ) ANDY ORtFFITH

8:00
O

CD

&lt;D FAME
a MAGNUM, P.L

®

O

JOANIE LOVES CMACHI

3 5 ) TrtE ROCKFORD FILES
10) SNEAK PREVIEWS Roger
Ebert and Gena Sisk at hot! an
Informative look at wbat'a new el
the movies

8:05
© (1 7 ) M O V N "T h e SAanoers"
(IM S ) Dean Martin. S ta te Stevens.
A eemt-retired apy la aaalgnad the

NEWS

3 :3 0
(4 NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT

3 :5 0
( X O MOVIE
No Road Back
( 1957) Skip Hpmeier. Sean Con­
nery
4 :3 0
G ( 4 1NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT
(IX ( 1 7 ) RAT PATROL

S e p t e m b e r 16

6 :0 5
OX (1 7 ) CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS

a x (1 7 ) BOB NEWHART

2 :3 0
ENTERTAINMENT TONIQHT
3 :0 0

NEWS

ID ( 3 5 ) SOAP
© ( 10 ) POSTSCRIPTS

1 2 :3 5
The Betsy" ( 197SI

Laurence Olivier. Robert Duval

T H U R SD A Y
EV EN IN G

MOVIE

Glen Campbell
G » ) G MORE PEAL PEOPLE
® O NEWS
(IB ( 3 5 ) STREETS OF SAN FRAN­
C ISCO
1 1 :4 5
OX ( 1 7 ) MOVIE "The Goddess"
) 1958) Kim Stanley. Lloyd Bridges

9:00

12:00

G IM M E
A BREAK
CD O EVENING WITH THE
8TATLER BROTHFRS Friends and
associates gather to honor the
Statler Brothers and their contribu­
tion lo country entertainment
ID ( 3 5 ) GUNSMOKE
© ( 1 0 ) PAPER CHASE The Man
in The Chair" After Ingratiating himsail with fellow students, a para­
plegic student turns out to be a
master at manipulating others In
order lo get whet he wants

( D O QUINCY Quincy comes to
I he defense ol an old tre n d and
politician who was al the scene the
night ol a movie star's death
LX Q ABC NEWS NIGHTLINE

0

GD

CD

9:30
TEACHERS ONLY

10:00
0 GD HILL STREET BLUES
(ID ( 3 5 ) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
NEWS
© ( 1 0 ) THI8 OLD HOUSE Bob
Vila shows how to trim windows and
doors, and gives advice on prepar­
ing and painting interior wailt. (R)

g

1 2 :3 0
G (41 LATE NIGHT W ITH DAVID
LETTERMAN Guest. Steve Allen.

®

O

MOVIE

"The Way West"

( 1967) Kirk Douglas, R ob ert
Mitchum
OX ( 3 5 ) WANTED: DEAD OR AUVE

1:30

O

GD NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT

Bye-Bye Duke Boys,
Hello, G eneral Lee!
BY DAVID HANDLER
Maybe you got real caught
up in the Joiin SchneiderTom W opat s to ry this
sum m er. Then ag ain, maybe
you didn’t.
S ch n eid er a n d Wopat
have, of courso, portrayed
the Duke boys. Bo and Luke,
since ' ‘The D ukes of Hazzard” arriv ed on CBS in
J a n u a ry , 1979. R e cen tly ,
they engaged in a bitter
d isp u te w ith th e show 's
p ro d u c e r, W a rn e r B ros.,
over lic e n sin g ro y a ltie s.
They ended up not reporting
for work when the show went
back inlo production at the
end of July.
R esu lt: W a rn e r B ros,
hit^ed two new hunks,
C h risto p h e r M a y e r and
Byron C herry, to play two
new Dukes cousins.
The big concern over at
CBS now is w hether the
show’s som ew hat m ystifying
p o p u la rity
w ill
su ffer
without its original stars.
I've been w ondering about it
myself, but I hav en 't felt
qualified to com m ent. I’ve
never been a b le to get
through an episode of “ The
Dukes of H azzard .”
I’ve tried. Ixird knows,
I’ve tried. I ’ve tried wat­
ching It alone. I'v e tried
wntching it w ith friends. I've
tried before din n er and after
dinner. Cold so b er and not
entirely.
It’s no use. I ’ve never been
able to last m ore thun five
minutes without jum ping to
my feet, scream in g "Life is
too sh o rt!" and flipping to
a n o th e r s ta tio n . O nce, I
flipped so h a rd the dial cam e

m iS T *
( 1 0 ) POSTSCRIPTS
11:15
© ( 1 7 ) ALL IN THE FAMILY

11:30
0
(2 ) TONIGHT Host: Johnny
Carson., G u e a tl Marilyn Home.

Cut lo the f ir s t co m ­
m ercial. 1 fall back in the
sofa cushions, in a cold
sw eat, hands shaking. A
wave of nausea passes over
me. It is now 8:14. I change
the channel. I m ust. Still,
I’ve shattered m y record.
In regard to the defection
of Schneider and W opat, 1
can offer this observation:
The show w ill s u rv iv e
without them. If G eneral I a.*c
leaves though, then "The
Dukes of Hazzard” will have
both feel In the bucket.

J

1:35

SAVE

ers a plot to tell diluted stolen med­
icine to unsuspecting Central Amer­
ican countries (R)

2:00

2:30

NEWS

3:15
(X Q

NEWS

G ®

NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT

3:30
3:45
®
O
MOVIE "Strangs Homecoming" (1974) Robert Culp. Glen
Campbell.

4:00
©
( 1 7 ) MOVIE
"Chink Girl"
(1943) G ene 'Ramey, George Mont­
gomery.

4:30
0

®

N K NEWS O V C V M H T

O N LY

99*

ON

3:00
O ®

SPECIAL

1.00

OX (1 7 ) MOVIE "Flight To Tan­
gier" (1953) Joan Fontaine. Jack
Palancs

10:30

11:00

It is not, reply the Duke
Boys, Bo and Luke. They
decide to head on hom e in
G eneral U*e. On the way
they arc caught by the new­
fangled speed sign. Roscoe
takes after them al high
speed. More banjo m usic,
screeching tires and clouds
of dust.

CHOOSYOOCKENLOVIJtSCHOOSX 1
Yf* CHURCH’S ^
I D IN N E R
( 1 FRIED
&gt;
■ SPECIALS from ^■CHICKEN

G CD ENTERTAINMENT TO NIG H T,

(Q ( 3 5 ) IN SEARCH O f...
GD ( 1 0 ) PRESENTING KAREN
AKERS C ab are t singer Karen
Akers tings selections by Stephen
Sondheim. BMty Joel and Jacques
Bra! In a performance trom Ham­
burg. Germany.

to use chop slicks so ho can
e n jo y a C hinese * lunch.
Sheriff Roscoe and Deputy
Cletus are showing him their
new invention for trapping
speed -d em o n s
—
a
revolving, rem ote-controlled
sp e e d lim it sig n . T hey
dem onstrate it for him .
It revolves so fast it sends
all of his papers flying. Then
the coins fall out of the pay
phone. The jukebox goes
haywire. Popcorn flies. Girls
scream .
The Duke boys, Bo and
Duke, pull up in G eneral I at
at the Boar’s N est. Their
cousin Daisy Duke ta k e s one
look at the Bugs Bunny doll
and says. “T hat’s the cutest
I’il ol' Bugs Bunny doll I ever
seen! Is it for m e ? "

| Z^DC AT

CD O MCCLOUD McCloud uncov­

10:15

ax ( 1 7 ) NEWS

off in m y hand.
I w atch 'em all. I can sit
through anything. I’m a pro.
But I ’ve never been able to
m ake it past the five-minute
m ark of the "D ukes." The
other nigpt I decided lo give
it one m ore shot. All of this
controversy, after all. H ere
goes.
I m ake it through the
credits, where our halladecr,
Waylon Jennings, describes
our down hom e Duke boys.
Bo and Luke, as "fightin' the
system like two mwlcrn-day
Robin Hoods." I usually get
this far.
Then com es scene one. The
Duke boys, Bo and Luke, a re
zipping around dirt roads in
their c a r, G eneral Lee, when
«i plane goes over. A package
is throw n out and parachutes
to the ground. Two thugs
with shotguns wait for it to
land. It lands right in the
laps of the Duke boys, Bo and
Luke.
It is a Bugs Bunny doll.
"A in’t nev er seen no Bugs
Bunny paratrooper afore,”
observes Bo. Or possibly it
wus Ijik e. "Told ya there'd
be tro u b le,” says Thug One.
"Shut u p ," says Thug Two.
They hop in their car.
The Bugs Bunny doll is
stuffed to the eyeballs with
real diam onds. The Duke
boys, Bo and Luke, take off
in th eir c a r, General Lee.
Thugs One and Two take off
a fte r them , shooting. Here
c o m e s th e b an jo m u sic ,
screeching tires and clouds
of dust.
We cut lo the Boar's N est,
Boss Hogg’s hang-out. Boss
Hogg is trying to learn how

F A M ILY
O RDERS

O N 2 PIECES
OF CHICKEN

With Ttili Coupon
Lim it 1 Par Cutlomar
On 1$ Larga Plata Sugar Family
orlO Larga Plata*Fam ily
'— —

B a p lr a t V-17-41m w w

W ith E ith ar
F ra n e h F r la i o r Cota Slaw
W ith T h li Coupon
L im it 1 P ar C u tto m tr

an — V . m m m no mm ■ a E a p ira t M M ! I

2 5 6 7 FRENCH AVE.

SANFORD

32 3-1933

i
a
i

J

�— Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

F rid a y , Sept. 10, 1983

TOYS H US
cCCHILDREN'S

B a u } a i« % x *i

UVE IN PERSON
TOMORROW
TTiT-V/

edGRAND 0PENIN6
OF THE
WORLD'S BIGGEST

UW*11

Her Role In Garp' Put
Glenn Close On Track
By DICK KI.KINT.lt
HOLLYWOOD (N E A ) - I
recently had a pleasant chat
w ith (llenn C lo se , the
rem arkable a c tre ss who will
a lm o st c e rta in ly net an
O scar nomination for her
work as C arp 's m other in
"The World A ccording to
G arp."
And so, in her honor, we
will get the Close jokes out of
the way im m ediately. Yes, I
did have a Close encounter.
Yes, it is true th at she may
come Close to getting an
Oscar. And. it is also true
that if she m isses, it will
probably be a case of Close,
but no cigar
Glenn Close is a Green­
w ich, C onn., g irl, the
daughter of a doctor. The
product as she say s, of 12
generations — the P ecks, the
Weeds, the Closes and the
Meads — who have helped
m ake Greenwich strong.
"W e’re dyed-in-the-wool
Yankees," she says. And she
looks it, proud and patrician
and strong. And fiercely
independent. S h e alw ay s
was, and her fam ily still is.
When she w;us 5. they put
h e r in b a lle t c la s s in
Greenwich. But the teacher
m ade a m istake and called
her Glenna, instead of Glenn,
and she walked out in a huff
(A huff is som ething tike a
tutu only less frilly.)
"I just quit,” she says. "If
she couldn't call m e by my
rightful nam e, I w asn't going
to stay th ere." Anyhow, she
didn’t want to dance, she
wanted to act. She says her

childhood d ream was to run
away and go to wherever
they m ade Disney movies
and be in them.
Her p a re n ts thought her
dream of acting was not a
good idea. They had nothing
against acting or actors,
they just felt it was the
wrong thing for their child.
But while (ilenn was in
prep school — Rosemary

(II.KNN C’LOSK
Hall
two things happened.
F irs t
sh e
and
som e
c la s s m a te s began doing
plays. And, second, Glenn's
parents w ent to Africa.
When G lenn’s folks finally
returned, they settled in Big
P in e y , W yo., where h e r
father now runs his own
m edical clinic.
So she becam e an actress.
She s tu d ie d in college
(William and Maryi and
then s h e w orked in a
p ro c e ssio n of A m erica's
fin est r e p com panies
Princeton and Milwaukee
and such — and then moved
onto Broadway.

The play that changed her
life, as it developed, was
"B a m u in ," in which she
p la y e d the c irc u s mi
p r e s s a r io 's wife. C h a rity
She says she just found out
exactly what an im portant
step that role was to her
"O nly last night," she
say s, "George Hoy Hill (he
directed G arp') told m e the
whole story of how he found
m e. He and his casting
director, Marion D ougherty.
saw Barnum ’
"A t the beginning of the
p la y ,
C h arity
my
c h a ra c ter — sits in a box.
knitting. George told m e that
I w as still for about five
m inutes, and he didn't know
if 1 was real or just a m an ­
nikin. He said he w as struck
by my composure, which is
the quality he w as looking
fo r for Je n n y , C a r p 's
m o th er.”
“ G a rp " was not, a s lias
been w ritten, Glenn Close’s
film debut. She says she did
"tw o weeny little ro les" in a
couple of TV movies. She
liad one scene in "Too F a r to
Go,” and in "O rphan T ra in ,”
in w hich she played a woman
who took off her jew els so
that a girl could pay for the
truin.
Now, suddenly, she is a
movie person. And she likes
it. She w ants to do m ore and,
c e r ta in ly , she w ill h a v e
plenty of opportunity There
is no question — Glenn Close
m ay be the next star.
O r, at least, she'll come
very Close.

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                    <text>74th Y ear. No. 307—M onday, August 16. 1982—Sanford, F lorida 32771

Evening H erald —(USPS 481 200)—P rice 20 Cents
■a

ic ia n s
A Threat To Themselves And Their Unsuspecting Patients
EDITORS NOTE — Doctors, perhaps
the most respected of all professionals,
are Indeed human, too. I/ing thought to
be the pillars of society, miracle workers
for the sick and suffering, physicians
them sehes are not Immune from the
sam e p ressu res and anxieties that
contribute to alcohol and drug abuse In
ever) other profession. In part two of a
series on physicians who are Impaired by
drug and alcohol abuse, the dangers to
them selves, th eir patients and the
reputation of the medical profession Is
examined.
By JOE DeSANTIS
Herald Staff Writer
Second in a series
For Dr. William Smith, the “ last
straw” came when he turned his back on
a long-standing successful career in

surgery because of an alcohol abuse
problem.
Dr. Smith (not his true name! had just
been on a three-day drinking binge and
was preparing to step into the operating
room again when he told his fellow
surgeons, "I Just can’t do it anymore."
The "last straw " would come for Dr.
Smith several more times before he
learned to cope with an alcohol problem
that began as social drinking during his
teens, later blossomed into a threat
during his medical school days and
eventually led to him losing his wife and
family, his home, his practice and nearly
his life.
His experience with alcohol tumbled
him from the lofty position as a
respected, financially successful, skilled
surgeon, through years of humiliation,

the depths of degredation and depression
before he was finally able to put the
pieces of his life together again.
Today, Dr Smith is remarried and has
started a new career as a hospital ad­
ministrator in New Jersey. But for all
that he went through because of an
alcohol abuse problem, he was lucky. He
never harmed a patient, never operated
while he was drunk, was never sued for
malpractice.
Dr. Smith's story is not unlike similar
experiences recounted by two Seminole
County physicians or those experienced
by an estimated 10 percent of the nation's
physicians who are considered unable to
perform properly because of alcohol or
drug abuse problems.
Once ignored and swept under the rug,
the problem is receiving more attention

from organized medicine. Efforts are
increasing to identify and treat impaired
physicians before they harm their
patients, destroy their practices, lose
their licenses, get sued for malpractive,
and damage Ihe credibility of the
medical professions.
The dangers to patients being treated
by physicians under the influence of
booze or drug abuse are obvious.
The possibility of an im paired
physician reaching an incorrect
diagnosis and prescribing potentially
harmful medication or an improper
dosage are serious patient concerns.
Normal inhibitions dashed by the ef­
fects of alcohol or drugs can lead to illicit
sexual activity between doctors and their
patients.
"Surgeons with nervous hands because

M an Drowns;

Longwood Psychiatric Facility
Hearing To Be Held Tonight

For Swim m er
ByTENI YARBOROUGH
Herald Staff Writer
Altamonte Springs police continued their probe today into
the death of a 45-year-old man, found drowned in his pool
Saturday, while Seminole County sheriff’s deputies searched
the St. Johns River for a 16-year-old Sanford boy presumed
drowned.
According to police, James Herman Thornton, of 617 Spring
Oaks Blvd., was discovered lying on the bottom of his algaefilleil swimming pool at about 11 a .in. Police said the body Is
believed to have been in the pool for about a half-hour before it
was descovered by a family member.
Seminole County medical personnel, who performed the
autopsy on Thornton, confirmed death was caused by
drowning. However, police are continuing their investigation
into the fatal incident.
Meanwhile sheriff’s deputies continued their search of the
St. Johns River today in search of Robert Daren Sherman Jr.,
16, of 1508 W. Summerlin Ave., who is believed to have
drowned in the river at about 7 p.m. Sunday.
According to deputies, the teenager and a friend, Robert C.
Holcomb, 16, also of Sanford, were swimming in the river near
the Osteen bridge when young Sherman suddenly went under
the water and never surfaced.
"Today, we have county fire department skin divers out
there and we're dragging the river bottom to see if we can find
him," said sheriff's spokesman John Spolski. "He may not
even be drowned but it is believed that he was swimming
across the river, panicked and drowned."

Molly Magee's Fire
Ruled An Accident
An investigation into Saturday’s fire which caused $75,000 to
$100,000 damage to a Sanford restaurant-lounge has been ruled
accidental.
According to fire officials, the early morning fire at Molly
Magee’s Restaurant, 2544 Park Drive, was caused by an
electrical short circuit in a fuse box, possibly caused by mice
whose charred remains were found in the box.
The fire broke out at about 2:35 a.m. while five employees
were still in the building, although the business had closed a
short while earlier. No one was injured in the blaze, but fire
investigators reported an extensive amount of fire and smoke
damage at the restaurant.
The restaurant was sold Wednesday for $150,000 to Donna
Jon, Inc. of New York. New owner Dorothy L Relsch, of New
York, says she plans to reopen the restaurant as soon as the
damages can be repaired.
— TENI YARBOROUGH

TODAY
Editorial
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Horoscope
Nation
People
Sports
Television
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World

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See DOCTORS, Page 2\

Hospital

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Action Reports
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of w ithdraw al, m isjudgm ents in
diagnosis and the over prescription i»f
medication are some of the most com­
mon dangers associated with the im­
paired physician," says Dr Dolores
Morgan, addiction treatment director at
South Miami Hospital, one of three
Southeastern facilities that offer
rehabilitation programs for impaired
physicians.
For the doctors themselves, drug and
alcohol abuse more often than not leads
to despondency and depression
Occasionally suicide.
"They get to the point where they don't
like themselves," said Dr Morgan.
"That leads to broken marriages and
homes. Often, doctors move from town to

The city of Longwood has been known to
have some packed City Council meetings on
occasion, and tonight’s public hearing on a
conditional use permit for a proposed
psychiatric hospital should be no exception.
1/mgwood residents are expected to flock to
City Hall, 125 W. Warren Avenue at 7.30 p m.
to hear what decision is made on Hospital
Corporation of America’s (HCA) request to
build a psychiatric hospital on a 5.9-acre site at
State Road 434 and West Like Road
HCA first received permission from the city
to construct a 150-bed general use hospital on a
26-acre site at the same location about six
months ago. But HCA officials took 1/mgwood
by surprise by later announcing plans to
construct a separate psychiatric facility.
That announcement prompted City Attorney
Marvin Rooks to advise HCA officials they
would have to seek a separate conditional use
permit for the psychiatric facility because the
commission approved the general use hospital
permit request with the understanding it
would include only a psychiatric wing.

There's No Mad Rush
To Food Stamp Office
Although new federal guidelines allow
food stamp recipients to earn 10 percent
more money and still receive assistance,
the number of Seminole County households
participating in the program has changed
little.
Under the new guidelines, which went
into effect July 1, a family of four is now
eligible to receive food stamps if its gross
monthly income does not exceed $1,008.
Local officials say they do not expect the
higher limits to result in significantly more
people receiving food stamps. Nationwide,
about 22.7 million persons participate in the
program.
George Easley, food stamp unit super­
visor in Sanford, said that the average
gross monthly income in the central
Florida area is far below the $l,008-a-month
level, noting that many recipients are
unemployed.
"This Is a citrus area and a lot of
households drop off the program in the
winter months," Easley said. “ Plus, there
are other seasonal factors like whal crops
are being harvested and when" that cause
the number of food stamp recipients to
fluctuate.

As of July 1, the monthly income at or
below which families are eligible to receive
food stamps was: one person, up from $467
to $507; two persons, from $617 to $674;
three persons, from $766 to $841; four
persons, from $916 to $1,008; five persons,
from $1,065 to $1,175; six persons, from
$1,215 to $1,342; seven persons, from $1,364
to $1,508; and eight persons, up from $1,514
to $1,675.
Income limits are set at 30 percent above
Ihe Office of Management and Budget’s
poverty lines for the various household
sizes.
According to Jeanne Alshou.se, district
program specialist for food stamps, the
number of Sanford area households par­
ticipating in the food stamp program in
July was 1,563. In the south end of the
county, the number was 1,477 for a total of
3,040 Seminole families receiving help
meeting their monthly food bill.
Easley said that new regulations which
went into effect in October resulted in a
drop in the figures over the same period of
a year ago because children living with
their parents were no longer certified by
the welfare department to receive food
stamps as separate households.

3A

HCA immediately filed for a conditional use
permit for the psychiatric facility, and
following a lengthy question and answer
period before I/mgwood’s Land Planning
Agency, initial approval was granted in July,
setting up tonight’s public hearing on the
matter.
On July 30, HCA flew Mayor June Lormann,
several commissioners and other city officials
and a handful of Longwood residents to a
similar psychiatric hospital in Chattanooga,
Tenn, for an inspection. The trip was designed
to give officials a first-hand look at what type
of facility would be built in Longwood.

Upon return from the Chattanooga trip, the
contingent expressed their satisfaction with
HCA’s facility.
Although no decision has been made,
tonight’s commission vote is expected to come
after residents ask similar questions ex­
pressed by the Lind Planning Agency board
last month.
Among ihe concerns from Longwood
residents are proper security to ensure no
psychiatric patients will be escaping, n hat
type of patients will the hospital treat, will
any criminally insane patients be housed at
the facility as well as general admission
policies and outpatient care.
At last month's Lind Planning Agency
meeting, HCA had several of its officials on
hand to field the same type of questions ex­
pected from the public at tonight's meeting.
Donald E. Annis, administrator at IlCA's
Cypress Hospital in Oiattanoogn, assured
commissioners and concerned residents that
the 1/mgwood facility would not be treating
criminally insane patients.
Annis explained that the majority of cases
handled in Ling wood would be for depression
and stress and that Ihe majority of cases
treated would be short term.
"You shouldn’t have visions of people
running around in straight Jackets," he said.
Annis added that security at the facility
would lx&gt; adequate, althought he said there
would be no bars on the windows.
"We’re attempting to get away from that
concept," said Annis.
"Patients need a place that feels like home,
not like many of the state facilities. We won’t
have goons for guards." he said.
— JOE DeSANTIS

Casselberry To Review
Double Taxation Study
The Casselberry City Council is expected
tonight to debate a report which documents
the existence of double taxation in Seminole
County and claims it cost municipal residents
$2.4 million last year.
The council is scheduled to meet at 7:30 p.m.
at City Hall, 95 Izike Triplet Drive.
The report, compiled by Kelton &amp; Associates
of Defend, was unanimously accepted last
week by the City of Sanford, one of seven
Seminole municipalities which commissioned
the double taxation study to find if city
residents are paying county taxes for which
they receive no substantial benefit.
The report shows that county taxes for cityresidents should decline by about $1.80 per

$1,000 assessed property valuation, while ti
taxes of residents living in the unincorporatc
areas should go up by $3.G0 per $1,000 assesst
valuation, because residents of the county
unincorporated areas receive a higher degr
of service.
The Helton report notes that the count;
rather than levying a tax large enough
totally fund transportation, shifts other funt
into ne account. Thus, they sliare less tnont
with the cities.
Casselberry, along with Ihe other si
Seminole cities, is expected to begin talks wit
the county in an effort to solve the doub
taxation problem. Officials have said leg;
action will be used only as a last resort.

Police Interview Survivors

What Caused Wall To Fall ?
Sanford police today are interviewing
the survivors of Friday’s collapse of a
wall at the W. Atlee Burpee Seed Co.
building to determine what caused the
accident which killed three men.
Officer Larry Monti said detectives are
interviewing seven men who survived
tragedy which occurred shortly before 5
p.m. Friday.
Darrell Jackson, 29. of 102 Scott Drive,
Sanford, was discharged from Central
Florida Regional Hospital Sunday. Two
other Sanford men: Robert Walton, 34, of
1849 Jerry Ave.; and Charley Jones. 26,
of 1726 W. 14th St., are still in the
hospital. Walton is in serious but stable
condition in the intensive care unit while
Jones is in good condition.

An autopsy report of the three men
killed In the collapse, William Gracey,
Nathaniel Bailey, and Vincent Foster,
showed the men died from injuries they
received in the collapse. The autopsy is
required by Florida law for all accident
victims.
Gracey Construction Co. had been
working for two weeks to gut the Interior
of the Burpee building at 206 W. First St.,
Sanford. Survivors of the tragedy said
they were about an hour away from
finishing that Job in preparation for
dem olishing the building the next
morning when the wall fell.
Several of the survivors said the crew
involved in demolishing the 78-year-old
building was largely inexperienced.
Nathaniel Bailey, one of the dead men.

had worked for Gracey for only three
days.
Cleanup efforts at the site began early
Saturday morning. Several area con­
tractors donated their time and equip­
ment to knock the rest of the building
down and haul the debris away.
Flagship Bank President Dennis
Courson, whose bank owns the property,
said today, "we extend our sympathies to
everyone involved."
Courson said crews would begin filling
the site today and the property will be
seeded and landscaped. “ It will be
maintained as lawn and eventually we'U
develop it for more parking," he said.
F u neral service inform ation on
Gracey, Foster and Bailey is on page 2A.

Htrild Photo by

This is all that's left of the \V. Atlee Burpee Seed
Co. building, First Street, Sanford, where three

men were killed Friday when a wall
during demolition of the structure.

�7A— Evening Herald. 5anlg rt.jP*,. .

Monday, Aug it , it*?

NATION
IN BRIEF
Uphill Fight Expected
For Federal Tax Bill
WASHINGTON (U P I) — White House and
congressional leaders agree the administrationlutcked $98 3 billion tax hill faces an "uphill fight" and
will need strong Democratic support to become law.
Exhausted House and Senate negotiators hammered
out the compromise measure early Sunday after backto-back night-long session. It's now up to the House and
Senate.
“ It’s going to require bipartisan support. It will
require strong Democratic support. I can't sit here this
morning and tell you we have those votes. This is going
to be a very, very difficult battle. It’s very much
uphill,” said White House Chief of Staff Jam es Baker,
interviewed Sunday on CBS’ "Face the Nation."
“We hope and believe that when the vole comes later
this week... that we'Uhave a majority in both houses."
lie said.
The joint conference committee completed its work
at 2 a.m. Sunday with an agreement to double federal
cigarette taxes to 16 cents a pack — a severe blow to
tobacco-state lawmakers who had hoped to scale back
the increase.

Tax Hike Fight Broadens
WASHINGTON (U PI) — President Heagan im­
pressed 32 House members with invitations to Camp
David and a low-pressure sides pitch, but picked up
few hard votes and today broadens his fight for u $98.3
billion tax increase.
Heagan scheduled more meetings with House
Hcpublicans whose help he needs to win passage this
week of the three-year tax increase bill approved by
House ami Senate conferees early Sunday morning.
Heagan also reserved time this aftemnon to work on
a televised speech set for delivery at 8 p.rn. EDT — a
crucial step in his final drive to win public support for
the tax bill and push it through Congress.
An aide to House S|&gt;eaker Thomas O'Neill said there
"certainly" would be a response to Reagan's speech
from Democrats. At least one television network
planned to carry the response directly following the
Heagan speech.

Elvis Fans Mark Death
MEMPHIS, Tenn (UPI) - Sobbing and singing
their idol's favorite hymns, 7,000 Elvis Presley fans
swarmed at his Graceland mansion early today to walk
past his grave and commemorate the fifth anniversary
of the death of the rock 'n' role legend.
Holding candles lit from the eternal flame at
Presley's grave, the fans endured a light drizzle and
were allowed in small groups to walk to the meditation
garden and grave beside the white-columned mansion.
The grave U open to the public during the year but
tixlay marked the first time it was opened for the an­
niversary ritual.
Two women in tears comforted each other as the rest
of the crowd joined in the sing "In the Sweet Bye and
Bye," "There Will Be Peace In Tlie Valley," “ Amazing
Grace" and "How
Great Thou Art," proliably
Presley's most popular gospel recording.
After two of Presley's cousins brought a flame to
light the candles, musician J.D. Sumner, a long lime
Presley friend, called for a silent prayer and led the
singing. Presley recordings then were played and open
sobbing was heard when the loudspeaker blured, "1
Did It My Way."

WEATHER
AREA HEADINGS (9 a.m .): temperature: 78; overnight
low: 72; Sunday high: 91; barometric pressure: 30.05; relative
humidity: 76 percent; winds: southeast at 6 mph; rain: .23;
sunrise 6:55 a.m., sunset 8:M p in.
TUESDAY TIDES: DAYTONA BEACH: highs, 7:15 a m .
7:50 p.m.; lows. 12:55 a.m ., 1:00 p in.; POUT CANAVERAL:
highs, 7:07 a.m., 7:42 p.rn.; lows, 12:46 a.m., 12:51 p.m.;
IIAYPOKT: highs, 1:46 a.m ., 12:27 p.m.; lows, 6:51 a.m., 7:52
p.m.
BOATING FORECAST: St. Augustine to Jupiter Inlet, Out
50 Miles: Wind east to southeast 10 knots or less through
Tuesday with seas less then 3 feet. Gusty wind near widely
scattered thunderstorms.
AREA FORECAST: Partly cloudy today with a 50 percent
chance of afternoon thunderstorms. Highs near 90. Wind light
and variable. Tonight partly cloudy with a 20 percent chance of
thunderstorms early tonight. Ixws in the mid 70s. Variable
light wind. Tuesday partly cloudy with a 50 percent chance of
afternoon thunderstorms. Highs near 90.
EXTENDED FORECAST: Partly cloudy
Wednesday
through Friday with scattered mainly afternoon and evening
thunderstorms. Higlis upper 80s to mid 90s. l/&gt;ws in the 70s
except around 80 southern coasts and keys.

HOSPITAL NOTES
Central Florida Regional
Hospital
Saturday
A D M ISSIO N S
Thomasine F Elam. Deltona
Jennie C McKenna. Dellona
John T Cain. Longwood
B IR T H S
Sanlord
W illiam L. and Patricia M
Overstreet, a baby girl
Benny and A lic e . M ackeyroy. a
baby g irl
D IS C H A R G E S
Sanlord.
Eunice T Martin
H arvey M urray
‘ Kenneth L M yifS
Christine Perkins
A lice E. Grem. DeBary
M a n e B Pernicano. D e B ary
M arlon E Tebo. D eBary
Delbert A Jones. Casselberry

Beatrice E

Ryan, DeLand
Sunday
A D M IS SIO N S

San lord
Jacqueline D Anderson
Wannetta F . Dulley
Evelyn l Scherr
Selma E Sechrei!
Kim L. Tucker
George M W arren
Leano ra B P its . A ltam onte
Spr ings
Joy M Chambers. Apopka
George N. Jaso. Deltona
Reed Wright, Deltona
Harold E Long, Geneva
Edmond R Senei J r . Orange
City
■
D IS C H A R G E S
San lord
Darrell Jackson
Annie G Thomas
Thomasine F Ela m . Deltona

..TJoctors A s Patients
Continued From Page 1A
town before they get themselves in
trouble.
"And," she adds, "drug and alcohol
abuse can lead to serious physical
disabilities for the doctors themselves."
With easy access to a wide variety of
narcotics, doctors abusing drugs seldom
even have to write themselves a
prescription. Drug samples readily
supplied by pliamiaceutical salespersons
give doctors a ready supply.
"If doctors have a drug problem, these
are occasions when they may have a
tendency to over prescribe drugs for a
patient because of their own abuse," says
Dr. Morgan.
But does the medical profession differ
from any other profession whose ranks
include members with drug and alcohol
problems?
" Y e s ,” said Dr. LeClair B tssell,
president of F.dgehill-Newport Inc., a
private alcoholism treatment center that
played an important role in the
development of the impaired physician
program of the Medical Society of New
York.
"Because doctors are in a greater
position to do more spectacular harm ."

cases, prescribing treatm en t and
determining the length of hospital stays.
An American Medical Association
report indicates that as many as 25
percent of physician-patients leave
hospitals against medical advice.
"They think they know how to deal with
their own problems," says Dr. Morgan.
“It can be very traumatic for a doctor
to have to lx* treated for drug or alcohol
abuse," she said.
“They have a feeling that they possess
all the answers, yet they have to be
convinced that they're sick with
something that's considered a social
stigma.
“While many doctors will admit to
having a "problem" with alcohol or
drugs," she said, "Seldom will they
admit to being addicted.
"But having a 'problem' is like being a
little bit pregnant," Dr. Morgan said.
"Either you are or you aren't."

Dr. Bissell adds that the public's view
of doctors as "father figures.” sup­
posedly immune from the "ailments"
that hinder others, can be shattered when
the public comes to realize that doctors
are human too, with human problem;
At the same time, Bissell says that
doctors can easily fall into the trap of
feeling different from the rest of the
world as a form of protection.
Dr Bissell illustrates her point by
using doctors who deal with cancer
patients as an example.
"The doctors say io Ihemelves, ‘This
can't happen lo me.' That's denial— But
it helps them get through," she said.
While the medical profession attracts
hard-working, dedicated and con­
scientious workaholics that make others
successful in other career fields,
research shows that doctors become
different when they are the patients,
which makes .successful rehabilitation
for alcohol and drug abuse more difficult.
According to the 1976 survey, the latest
available, conducted by the National
Association of P riv ate Psychiatric
Hospitals, most doctors are reluctant to
accept the role of being a patient, ofter
insisting on consulting on their own

In tomorrow's continuation of the
impaired physician series, Herald Stall
Writer Joe DeSantis reports on the ex­
periences and reactions ol two Seminole
County doctors who have been through *
'he South Miami Hospital rehabilitation
program.

Foster Services Pending

Funeral Services Set
For Gracey And Bailey
William S. Gracey, 55, of
2551 Palmetto Avc., Sanford,
died Friday when a wall of the
old W. Alice Burpee Co.
collapsed. Born June 27, 1927,
in Sanford, he was a lifetime
resident.
He
was
an
engineering consultant and a
member of the First Baptist
Church of Sanford.
Survivors include his wife,
Ann; three sons, Toni, Billy
and Danny, all of Sanford;
Ihree brothers, Virgil and
Charles, both of Sanford, and
Clifford of Miami; one sister,
Mrs. E stelle Coleman of
Merritt, Island; and Ihree
grandchildren.
Brisson F u n eral Home,
Sanford, is in charge of
arrangements.
Also killed in the accident
were Vincent F oster and
Nathaniel Bailey.
Mr. Foster, 29, of 1120 W.

Foster; his mother, Armetta
F o ste r; three children,
Vincent Jr., 7, Kshonda, 5,
and Benard, H i; two step­
daughters, Iela Dcllafield, 13,
and Tara Dcllafield, 12; nine
siste rs, Jacqueline F iste r,
Newark, N.J., Delores Foster,
R ochester, N.Y., Arletha
F o ste r, Leesburg, Nadine
Holt,
Sanford,
Geneva
F ayson, Peggy F isher,
Sanford, Carolyn and Shelia
Foster, and Kevin Bailey, all
of Sanford; six brothers,
Jam es, Sanford, Theron and
Ralph, Detroit, Anthony,
Newark, N.J., McArthur, Ft.
Worth, Texas, and I-enard,
Fort Riley, Kan.
B ro w n s’ P a ra d is e
Memorial Chapel is in charge
of arrangements.
Mr. Bailey. 31, of 0124
Cypress Ave., Sanford, was
born in Sanford. He was

NATHANIEL KAII.KY
14th St., Sanford was born in
Sanford and was a life-long
resident He was employed by
the G racey Construction Co.

lb 1 is survived by his wife,
I.ela; his father, Jam es

raised in Pensacola, moving
back here 13 years ago. He
wits employed by the Gracey
Construction Co. and was a
Missionary Baptist.
Survivors include his
mother, Ethel I.ee Davis, of
Sanford; a son, Nathaniel Jr.
of Pensacola; two brothers,
Willie Henry Bailey of
Sanford, and Eddie Lee
Bailey of K issim m ee; a
sister, Pattie Jean Jones of
Sanford; numerous uncles,
aunts, nieces, nephews and
cousins.
W ilson E i c h e l b c r g e r
Mortuary is in charge of
arrangements.

Seminole
Officials
Win Suit
By MICIIEAL HEI1A
Herald Staff Writer
Seminole County commissioners have been found in­
nocent of denying the civil rights of a Casselberry real
estate broker by refusing to allow him to cut trees on
property in the environmentally fragile Spring Hammock
area.
A federal court jury in Orlando rendered the innocent
verdict following 44 hours of deliberation late Friday in the
civil suit against the conuiiissioners filed by Arthur Ixx&gt;
Scligman, former owner of Cross County Realty. Inc.
Seligman claimed the commissioners violated his civil
rights in 1977 when they refused to grant him an exemption
to cut trees on his 32-acrc tract near I-ongwood.
Scligman said he sought an exemption because he wanted
to use the property as a horse ranch and a garden but the
commission denied the exemption because he refused lo
promise not to develop the property for five years.
But Scligman claimed the five-year clause, which
commissioners cited in denying his exemption, was not in
effect in 1977. The county ordinance, adopted in 1973 to
protect the county's forests from developers, was changed
in 1976 and the five-year clause was removed.
The defendants in the suit were current commissioner
Bill Kirchhoff and former commissioners John Kimbrough,
Robert French, Richard Willianus and Harry Kwiatowski,
along with arbor inspector Irving Kaufman, the county
officer charged with enforcing the ordinance.
Attorney Howard Marsee, who represented the county
officials in the case, argued that Seligman did not meet
qualifications to exempt him from the ordinance which
prohibited tree clearing on the property.
Seligman did not qualify for agricultural lax
classification because he was not going to use the property
for commercial purposes.
In the rejection of Seligman's request, commissioners
said his plan to remove the trees would seriously endanger
Spring Hammock, a water recharge area for Soldiers
Creek.
Following the 1977 rejection of his waiver request,
Seligman appealed the commission's decision to Seminole
Circuit Court. A three-judge panel ordered commissioners
lo grant Scligman a permit to clear the property. An ap­
peals court in West Palm Beach eventually upheld the
circuit court decision but by that time Seligman had sold
the property.
Seligman claimed he lost $94,000 in tlie deal and filed Ihe
civil suit in 1979.
In the commissioners’ defense, Marsee argued Seligman
had made a bad investment and wanted the county to pay
for it.
Seligman said he lias not made up his mind whether to
appeal of the verdict.

Funeral services for Mr.
Bailey will lx* at 11 a.m.
Saturday ut Springfield
Missionary Baptist Church,
Sanford. Burial will be in
Restlawn Cemetery.

*0 *

AREA DEATHS
MELVIN SCIII.OTTMAN
Melvin A. Schlottman, 51, of
2490 Stanford St.. Altamonte
Springs, died Saturday al
Florida H ospital, Orlando.
Born Feb. 22,1928, in Jackson,
Mich., he moved to Altamonte
Springs in 1976. He was a
branch manager for Canteen
of Florida.
Survivors include his wife,
Phyllis; two sons, David, of
Tam pa, and Steve, of
Altamonte Springs; a brother,
Keith, of Homer, Mich.; three
sisters, Mrs. Ava Dike, of
Oregon, Virginia Stevens, of
Jackson, and Helen McLean,
of Monroe, Mich.
Semoran Funeral Home,
Altamonte Springs, is in
charge of arrangements.
ANA MARIA LOPEZ
Ana Maria I-opcz, 1, of 437
E. Orange St., Altamonte
Springs, died Friday at
Orlando Regional Medical
Center. Born July 24. 1981, in
Orlando, she was a member of
the
Iglesia
Mcthndista
Hispana.
Survivors include her
parents, M aria E. and
G erardo O. Lopez, of
Altamonte Springs; paternal
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Gerardo Ixjpez, of Altamonte
Springs; m atern al grand­
parents, Mr. and Mrs. W.
Kong, of Orlando; and a
brother, G erardo W., of
Altamonte Springs.
Garden Chapel Home for
Funerals, Orlando, is in
charge of arrangements.
MRS. BETTY F. BALI.EW
Mrs. Betty F. Ballew, 48, of
613 Marshall St., Altamonte
Springs, died Friday at the
Navy Base Hospital, Orlando.
Born Jan. 11, 1934, in
Cullman, Ala., she moved to
Altamonte Springs from
England in 1964. She was a
bookkeeper and a member of
St. Mary Magdalen Catholic
Church.
Survivors include her
husband, George W.; two
sons, Fred Holleritter Jr.,
Gastonia, N.C., William Lynn,
Cullman; a daughter, Mrs.
Barbara Bays, Orlando; a
sister, Mrs. Doris Adants,
Chicago; a brother, J.C.
Twilley, Blanchcstcr, Ohio;
five grandchildren.

i

Church. He was a Navy
veteran of World War I.

Semoran Funeral Home,
A ltam onte Springs, is in
charge of arrangements.
EARL O. Til ARPE
E a rl “ D igger" Odelle
Tharpe, 57, of 2993 Moore
Drive, Oviedo, died Friday at
his home. Born April 22,1925,
in Savannah, Ga., he moved to
Oviedo from Albany, Ga., in
1965. He was a retired car­
penter and a Baptist, lie was
a veteran of World War 11 and
the Korean War. He was a
member of Oviedo Masonic
Lodge 243, FM&amp;AM, and
Orlando Scottish Bite.
Survivors include his wife,
Audrey; a son, Dan II., of
Oviedo;
two
stepsons,
Thomas C. Jahn, of Hickory,
N.C., and Kaymond D Jahn
of Houston, Texas; (our
sisters, Mrs. Martha Poss, of
O rlando,
Mrs. Orleane
Monroe of MilUboro, Del.,
Mrs. Kellah Witsey of
Seaford, Del., Mrs. Katherine
Mercer of Tampa; 10 grand­
children.
Winter Park Funeral Home,
Winter Park, in in charge of
arrangements.

Survivors include his wife,
Gwen E.; four daughters,
Mrs. Margaret Hall Gove, of
Atlanta, Mrs. Elizabeth Hall
Swartz of Denver, Mrs. Linda
F.. Allison of Gettysburg, and
Mrs. Ixdgh Utsech of Rich­
mond, Va.; two sons, lxrnis P.
Kooken of Detroit, Mich.,
Thomas S. Kooken, of Den­
v e r; ihree sisters, M ary,
Virginia, and Beatrice, all of
Columbus, Ohiv; a brother
Alfred C. of Columbus; 13
grandchildren.
Funeral services were held
today at Geneva United
Methodist Church. Burial was
in Geneva Cemetery.

Woman’s Club of DeBary and
the DeBary Orchestra. An
accomplished violinist, she
played for the Utica (N.Y.)
Symphony for many years
and was an equestrian who
showed in New York horse
shows for many years.

Gramkow Funeral Home,
Sanford, is in charge of
arrangements.

MRS. ERNESTINE J. PUGII
Mrs. Ernestine W. I‘ugh, 93,
of 312 Maple Ave., DeBary,
died Saturday in a Del .and
nursing home. Born Nov. 6,
1888, Elmira, N.Y., she moved
to DeBary 31 years ago from
Bameveld, N.Y. She was a
RUSSELL G. HALL
hom em aker. She was a
Russell G. Hall, 83, of First m em ber ol All Saints
Street ut Florida Avenue, Episcopal Church, E n te r­
Geneva, died Saturday at prise, and a former member
Winter
P ark
Memorial of Holy Cross Episcopal
Hospital. Born Feb. 6,1899, in Church, Sanford. Site was a
Marietta, Ohio, he moved to member of St. Ann’s Chapter,
G eneva from Gettysburg, an associate of the Society of
Pa., in 1970. He was u retired St. Margaret, Boston, Mass.,
fa rm e r and attended the the Daughters of the
Geneva United Methodist A m e ric a n
R e v o lu tio n

Survivors include two
daughters, Mrs. Andrew
Canterbury and Mrs. David
Murphy, both ol Bameveld,
N.Y.; a son, the Rev. Ernest
B. Pugh, DeBary, retired
rector of Ail Saints Episcopal
Church, E n te rp rise ;
12
grandchildren; six g reat­
grandchildren.
Stephen Baldauff Funera
Home, Deltona, is in charge of
arrangements.

Funeral Notices

B A IL E Y . M R. N A T H A N IE L F u n eral t e r v lc e t
lo r M r.
Nathaniel Bailey. 3t. ol tl2 'y
Cyprett Ave . Sanlord. who died
Friday, will be at I t a m
Satu rd ay
at
Sp rin g lie ld
M lttio n a ry B a p tist C hurch.
Sanlord
B u r ia l w ill be In
R e ttla w n C em etery W ilto n
Eichelberger M ortuary it in
charge ol arrangements

G U TTER

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OUR CEDAR
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r m o i n A o n n iu K
FLO R ID A RO OM S

s 0»&lt;ta&lt;N«

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7 N in o u t ^ u

4 Joint Pa*n

| I l f wfoe(Cl«M fl

Mo*»a Pr*»fog»«t,ri*
cata Sp^a&lt;
«»vl Mu%oa

No Extra Out Of Pocket
Expense. We Accept
Insurance Assignments
Group .Auto •Health 'M ed icare -Union ’’
Workman*! Comp.

S A N F O R D P A IN
C O N T R O L C L IN IC
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2017 S. F R E N C H A V E . (A cro tslro m P in a H ut) SA NFO RD

323-5763

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« ray! or Ireelmenl are Ind.caled Mott Insurance Include! chiropractic
coverage Mott insurance attignmerMt accepted at payment In lull with
no eitra out o* pochet e.pente beyond policy llmllt

working for
the fam ily
It's understandably difficult for families to
do things during a time of loss. . . and yet so
many things have to be done. We're here to
do everything for them that we can.

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1

G R A C E Y . M R . W IL L IA M S. —
F u n eral cervices
lo r M r
William S. Grace/, 55. o* 2551
Palmetto A y e , Sanlord. who
died Friday, w ill be Tuesday at
'0 30 a m at the F irs t Baptist
Church, with the Rev. Paul
Murphy officiating. Burial in
Oaklawn C em etery. B ritto n
Funeral Home PA. Sanlord. in
charge.

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P h o n e 3 2 3 -8 4 6 3

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FLORIDA
IN BRIEF
Teen Runs Away From Home
And Into Cuban Jail Cell
KK^ WhST tU PIi — What she thought would be a
IwatinK adventure in the sunny Caribbean has turned
on 16-year-old runaway F.lisa Steedly and put her
behind the bars of a Cuban jail.
F.lisa now spends her days in prison writing poetry
and reading. Her future, like that of the other 25
Americans jailed in Cuba, is uncertain.
F.lisa, a 10th grader, ran away with her 23-year-old
boyfriend Ignacio Castellano April 1 She thought she
was going to take a pleasure cruise to Jam aica with
friends and return to her mother. Dale, in Key West.
Hut instead, Klisa is charged with drug trafficking
and illegal entry She is locked up in a prison outside of
Havana, Cuba - the youngest of the 26 U S. citizens
held by Fidel Castro’s government.

Abandoned Infant OK
FORT I.AUDKRDAIJ-'. i UIMi — A newborn boy
found abandoned on the sunbaked asphalt of the
twrking lot at Fort Lmderdale-Hollywood Inter­
national Airport may be adopted by one of the
paramedics who helped save him.
The infant, only hours old, was found lying between
two parked cars Saturday wrapped in towels and
placed in a plastic bag. His umbiblical cord was still
attached. Now in the custody of state officials, the boy
late Sunday was in good condition at Broward General
Medical Center

Pot Smuggler Faces 5 Years
ORI&lt;ANDO i U P I i — Sentencing has been set for
Sept. 7 for Uiwrence Wolfson, the owner of Key West
Airlines who was convicted of conspiring to import 800
pounds of m arijuana from Jamaica to Brevard County
in May 1980.
A federal court jury deliberated about three hours
Friday before returning the guilty verdict against
Wolfsan, 65. He faces a maximum of five years in
prison and up to $15,000 in fines.
Wolfson told insurance investigators after the plane
was confiscated that it was to deliver six drums of
insecticide to Haiti and return to Florida with a load of
mangos.

Sisters Are Found
United Press International

A man suspected of kidnapping two pro-teenage
sisters who had been living with their mother and her
boyfriend in a car parked near Walt Disney World was
expected to lie extradited to Florida today.
Myma Lynn Faur, 7, and her sister, ltaquel Hose
Faur, 12, disappeared Aug. 2 from an Interstate t rest
area of the L ike Buena Vista interchange in tlie
Orlando area near Walt Disney World
Cherokee County Sheriff C M "M ack” Garrett said
the children were found Saturday night in Centre, Ala.,
after their apparent abductor wrecked his car Garrett
said the girls weren’t hurt and were being cared for by
state welfare officials.
Before the children were abducted they had been
living at the Florida rest area in a 1970 Cadillac with
their 14-year-old brother, Patrick, their mother, Alice
Rose F aur, and her boyfriend, Herbert Johnson.
A man babysitting the two girls, Steve Osborne,
allowed them to leave with another man he had only
met three days before. Oslxirne said the man, known to
him as Jam es Elliott, offered to take the girls to Walt
Disney World.
"He didn’t seem like a killer, a rapist or a child
molester," Osborne said after the youngsters disap­
peared. “ I still don’t think lie’s that type of guy. I still
consider him a friend."
Orange County sheriff'sCapt. John Guemple said the
kidnapping suspect was drunk when he wrecked his
car in a ditch near a Centre residence in northeast
Alabama.

W O RLD
IN BRIEF
PLO Guerrillas To Begin
Withdrawal This Weekend
United Press International
Palestine Liberation Organization guerrillas trapped
in west Beirut will begin leaving the U'banese capital
by the end of the week under the agreement negotiated
by U S. envoy Philip Habib, lebanon’s prime minister
said today.
“I expect the implementation of the plan prepared
by Mr. Habib at the end of this week at the latest,"
Prime Minister Chefik Wazzan said after conferring
with the American diplomat in Beirut.
Wazzan said the 1Lebanese Cabinet will meet Wed­
nesday to discuss the final mechanics of the evacuation
of the estim ated 7,000 to 9,000 FIX) fighters in the
beseiged capital.
The Cabinet also will formally call on the United
States, France and Italy to send troops as part of a
peace-keeping force to supervise the withdrawal.
Wazzan’s rem arks came as Beirut’s leftist
newspaper As Safir — which is sym pathetic to the PIG
— said the guerrillas would begin their evacuation of
west Beirut Friday or Saturday.

CALENDAR
FRIDAY, AUGUST 20
Seminole Sunrise Kiwanls, 7 a.m „ Je rry ’s Airport
Restaurant, Sanford.
Seminole South Rotary, 7:50 a.m., L&gt;rd Chumley’s,
Altamonte Springs.
South Volusia Sertoma, 7:30 a.m., Deltona Inn. 17-92
Big Book AA, 8 p.m., Messiah Imtheran Church, 17-92,
'Casselberry. Closed.
Longwoood AA, 8 p.m., Rolling Hills Moravian
Church, State Road 434, Longwood. Closed.
Tanglewood AA, 8 p.m., St. Richards Church, l*tke
Howell Road. Closed.
• South Seminole Family AA, tno smoking), 8 p.m.,
open discussion, Community United Methodist Church,
Casselberry.

Evening Herald. Sanford, FI

Monday, Aug. 14, W 2 - J A

Woman, 77, Scares O ff Armed Robber
By TENI YARBOROUGH
Herald Staff Writer
A 77-year-old Ling wood woman scared off an arm ed robber
by faking a heart attack but not before the man stole $140 cash
and an undisclosed amount of jewelry from her trailer home.
Elizabeth Fritschi, of 753 Poinsetta Street, in the Like
Katherine trailer park, told deputies she was robbed by a man
who knocked on her door at about 11 a.m. Sunday, asked her if
she had been in a nearby drugstore Saturday evening and if
she had lost the wedding ring he held in his hand.
When Mrs. Fritschi told the man she had been in the store
but bail not lost the ring, the man pulled out a pocket knife, put
the blade against Mrs. Fritschi’s neck, said "this is a holdup,"
and forced her into the trailer and to a rear bedroom where her
husband, who suffers from a heart condition, was lying in bed,
deputies said.
The robber then demanded the couple’s money and took $140
from Fritschi’s wallet, deputies said. He also stole an un­
disclosed amount of jewelry which he placed in a plastic bag.
In an effort to scare the armed robber into leaving her home,
Mrs. Fritschi faked a heart attack and fell to the floor, deputies
said.
Tin robber, who Mrs. Fritschi said was about 30 to 35 years
old with a space between his front teeth, ran from the home,
cutting telephone lines before fleeing in a small white car.

Action Reports
★

Fire s

★

C o u rts

★

P o lic e

Mrs. Fritschi then s&lt; ught help from neighbors who notified
deputies of the robbery.
SANFORD HOME III 'HGi.AK17.KD
Thieves broke into the home of I a’c Moore, 2456 Mellonville
Ave., and stole an undetermined amount of property Sunday
Police said they discovered the burglary at about 12 54 a m
Sunday while on routine patrol. A bathroom window had been
broken and the home entered, police said
AUTO PARTS SHOP HIT
About $793 cash was stolen from a cash box in the Parts City
automotive parts shop, G05 W. 25th St., between 6 p.m
Saturday and 8 45 a.m. Sunday.
Police said the thieves entered the shop after removing an
air vent on the roof of the building. After stealing the money,
the thieves replaced the vent and fled, police said

Dr. Irrgang Heads Seminole Cancer Unit
Dr. Sara Irrgang has been named unit chairman of the
Cancer Prevention Study II for the Seminole Unit of the
American Cancer Society.
Cancer Prevention Study II is slated to begin in the Seminole
County area on Sept. 1. Similar to a study the society con­
ducted from 1959 to 1972, the new study will follow a million
Americans for a minimum of six years to learn how lifestyles
and environment may relate to cancer and other diseases.
Irene K Brown, president of the society's Seminole Unit,
spoke of Dr Irrgang's record of service to the Community.
“ Her work in our upcoming environment and lifestyle study
will bo another example of continuing public service for
Seminole County."

Legal Notice
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
Notice a hered* given that i am
engaged n business at State Rd
47/ Bon 248/. west Longwood, F I .
Seminole Count*. Florida under
the fictitious nameot S O U T H E R N
M O TO RS and thal I intend to
register said name with Clerk ot
the C ircu it Court. Sem in o le
Count*. Florida in accordance
with the provision* ot the FIc
tiliouv Name Statutes
To Wit
Section 865 09 Florida Statutes
195/
F R A N K SVANCAR III
Publish Ju ly 26 &amp; August 7. 9. 16.
1987
O E X 179
IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U RT OF
T H E E IG H T E E N T H JU D IC IA L
C IR C U IT .
IN
AND
FO R
S E M IN O L E COUNTY. F L O R ID A
C A SE NO 12 14/2 CA 04 L
IN R E THE M A R R IA G E OF
JA N IC E M A R IA Y E R IA N . Wife
and
FRED
LERO Y
Y E R IA N ,
Husband
N O TICE OF SU IT
TO F R E D L E R O Y Y E R IA N
/0B FranKIm Street
M arietta. Ohio 45/50
YO U
ARE
H EREBY
N O T IF IE D that a Petition tor
Dissolution ot Marriage has been
tiled agamsl *ou and you arc
required to serve a copy ot your
written defenses. It any. to it on
R IC H A R D B OWEN. Attorney tor
Petitioner Wile. JA N IC E M A R IA
Y E R IA N whose address is P O
B o i 38. 290 5 Highway 1/92.
Casselberry. Florida. J270Z. and
tile the original with the Clerk ot
the above styled Court on or betore
August 30. 1987. o th e rw ise a
judgment may be entered against
you tor the rebel demanded In the
Petition
W IT N E S S m* hand and the seal
ot said Court on this 23rd day ot
Ju ly , 1982
(S E A L !
Arthur H Beckwith. J r
As Clerk ot said Court
By E v e Crabtree
Deputy Clerk
Publish Ju ly 76 &amp; August. 7. 9 X
16. 1987
O E X 145
A M E N O E D N O T IC E
OF S H E R IF F 'S S A L E
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
that by virtue ot that certain W rit
of Execution issued out of and
under the seal ol Ihe C O U N T Y
Court ol Orange County, Flo rid a,
upon a final judgment rendered in
the aforesaid court on the 70th day
ot April, A D , 1982, In that certain
case entitled, Hartford Insurance
Company ol the Southeast Hart
lo rd A ccident 8 In d e m n ity
Company, a corporation Pla ln tllt,
vs Leroy A Terwilliger a k a L
A
T e rw illig e r d b a
T w ig s
Ceram ic Tile. Defendant, which
aforesaid W rit ot Execution was
delivered to me as Sh erill ol
Seminole County. Florida, and I
hav&lt;* levied upon Ihe following
d escrib ed property owned by
L e ro y
A
T erw illig er.
said
properly being located in Seminole
C ounty, Flo rid a , m ore par
tlcularty described as follows
One 197} Fiat Sport 8S0. Green In
Color. ID No 112593
and the undersigned as Sheriff of
Seminole County, Florida, w ill at
11 00 A M on the 24th day of
August, A D 1987. offer for sale
and sell fo Ihe highest bidder, (or
cash, subject to any and all
existing liens, at the Front (W e st)
Door at the steps ol the Seminole
County Courthouse In Sanford,
F lo r id a , the above d escrib ed
personal property
Thai said sale is being made to
satisfy the terms ol said W rit ol
Execution.
John E Polk.
Sheriff
Seminole County, Florida
Publish August 2. 9 38 73. w ith Ihe
sale on August 24. 1982
D EX 4

Thanks
to you,
it works,
for
A L L OF US.

U n tttd W fty

Dr. Irrgang, pathologist at Central Florida Regional
Hospital, will oversee the start-up Cancer Prevention Study II
and manage the study over the next six years She will be
responsible for organizing and directing the recruitment of
volunteer researchers who in turn will enroll local residents in
the study. These participants will be asked to complete a
detailed, confidential questionnaire atx&gt;ut their health and
lifestyle practices.
"From information provided by Seminole County residents,
and study participants all over the U.S., scientists at the
society's national office will try to find factors related to
cancer that may l&gt;e useful in instituting measures everyone
can take to prevent cancer," said Irrgang

Legal Notice

Legal Notice
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
Notice is hereby given that l am
mgagrd in business at P O Bo«
301/ Longwood Fla 37/50 S*m.nolr
Count*. Florida under Ihe lie
9It i ous name ol C R E A T I V E
M A R K E T IN G , and that I intend to
register sad name with the Clerk
ot the Circuit Court, Seminole
County, Florida In accordance
with the provisions ot the Flc
titious Name Statutes. T o W t
Section 865 09 Florid a Statutes
195/
Signature S A M aurer
Publish August 16. 73. 30. Sep
tember 6. 1982
D E Y 9/
IN THE C IR C U IT C O U R T IN AND
FO R
S E M IN O L E
COUNTY.
F LO R ID A
CA SE NO 12 30) C P
P R O B A T E D IV IS IO N
IN R E E5 T A T E O F
G EO R G IA N N A N A L L E N
Deceased
NOTICE OF A C TIO N
TO
Hrnderson C Nelson, and all
parties who claim by. through,
under or against Henderson C
Nelson
YOU A RE N O T IF IE D thal a
probate p roceeding has been
initiated in the a b o v e entitled
estate wherein
you
a re
a
beneficiary ot the decedent, and
said proceeding involves the rights
m and to the lollowmq property m
Seminole County. Florid a
Lot 21. Academy Manor, Unit
One according to Ihe P lat Ihercol
as recorded In P lat Book 13. Page
9). according lo Ih e Pu b lic
Records ot Se m in o le County.
Florida
has been Med agamsl you and you
are required to serve a copy ot
your written defenses. It any, to it
on Stephen M Coower. p laintiffs
attorney, whose address is P O
Drawer H. Sanford. Flo rid a 32//I.
on or betore September 70. 1982,
and tile the original with the clerk
ol this court either before service
on plaintiffs attorney or im
mediately Iherealter. otherwise a
default will be entered against you
lor Ihe relief demanded in the
complaint or i ytition
D A TED on August l)th . 1982
A RTH U R H B E C K W IT H . JR
As Clerk ol Ihe Court
By Betty M Capps
As Deputy Cterk
Publish August 16. 23. 1987

DEY 10/
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 D IV IS IO N
F ile Number S3 30) C P
Division
IN R E E S T A T E OF
G EO R G IA N N A N A L L E N .
Deceased
NOTICE T O C R E D IT O R S
TO A LL P E R S O N S H A V IN G
C L A IM S
OR
D EM AN DS
AGAINST THE A B O V E E S T A T E
Within three months from Ihe
time ol the first publication ol this
notice you are required to tile with
the clerk of the Circuit Court ol
SemmoleCounty, Florida. Probate
Division, the address of which is
Sem inole County Courthouse,
Sanlord. FL. a written and verified
statement ol any claim or demand
you may have agamsl the estate ot
G E O R G IA N N A
N
ALLEN ,
deceased
Each claim must be in writing
and must indicate the basis lor the
claim, the name and address ot the
creditor or his agent or attorney,
and the amount claim ed It the
claim is not yet due. the date when
it will become due shall be slated
It the claim is contingent or
unliquidated. Ihe nature ol the
uncertainty shall be stated. It Ihe
claim is secured, the security shall
be described The claim ant shall
deliver a copy ot Ihe cla im to the
clerk who shall furnish the copy to
the personal representative
A L L CLA IM S A N D D E M A N D S
NOT SO F I L E O
W IL L
BE
FO REVER BARRED
Dated August 17, 1983
Stephen H Coower
Attorney
HUTCHISON 8 M A M E L E
P O Drawer H
Sanford. F L 37/71
Telephone (305) 372 40SI
Publish August 16. 73. 19(7
D E Y IM

N O TICE O F D ISP O SIT IO N
OF C O L L A T E R A L
TO Peggy To *er*
A D D R ESS
148 Sandcove O r.
Sanlcrd. F I
AND A L L
PERSO N S
IN
TERESTED
IN
PU R C H A SIN G
M O B ILE H O M E
Pursuant to Florida Statutes
679 S04 you a re hereby notified that
the undersigned lienholder *&gt;n
otler lor p rivate sale atter August
17 1987 the following described
property
1987 Skyline Mobile Home 60 X
74 Serial No OUT AR BR **th all
related eq u ipm en t and tur
mshings.
any. which «s presently
locaied at C arriag e Cove MNP.
Sanford. F I
Any person interested n pur
chasmg the ab ove described
property should contact the un
derS'Qned
SO U TH ERN
GUARANTY
CO RPO RA TIO N
P O D R A W E R 9409
W IN T ER H A V E N F L H880
Publish August 9 16 1987^
D EY 41
IN THE
AND FO R
FLO R ID A
CASE NO
CRED ICO

C IR C U IT COURT. IN
S E M IN O L E COUNTY.
13 1194 CA 09 P
F IN A N C IA L . INC
Plamtilt.

n
JON M IC H A E L K lR C H t N S anil
PAN A M E R I C A N
B A N K OF
ORLANDO N A
Oetendanls
N O T IC E OF ACTION
TO
Jon M'Chael Kirchens
5/0 Brooks.de Circle
Maitland. Flo rid a
YOU A R E N O T IF IE D thal an
action to foreclose on mortgages
on Ihe
fo llo w in g
described
properties located in Semmole and
Orange Counlles respectively
Lot 28. F O R E S T
BRO O K .
Semmole County. Florida, ac
cord ng lo plat thereot. recorded n
Plal Book IS. P a g e ? , ol Ihe Public
Records ol Sem in o le County.
Florida
and
Begm at the Northwest corner ol
Lot 78. F O R E S T
BRO O K, as
recorded in P la t Book IS, Page 7,
Public R e c o rd s ol Seminole
County. F lo rid a , run S 0 degrees
74' 12" West, along the West lineol
said Lot 78. 70 feet lo the S E corner
01 Lot 70. D O M M E R IC H MILLS.
SECOND A D D IT IO N , Block E. as
recorded in P la t Book l . Page 48.
Public Records ol Orange County,
Florida thence run S 0 degrees I/'
58" East. 16 50 teel along Ihe West
line ol aforesaid Lot 78 to the point
ot beginning Fro m the point ol
beginning, run N 89 degrees 32'
35" West. 66 leet. thence run S 6/
degrees 30' 00" West. 25 teet more
or less to the water 's edqe ol Lake
Waumpi, thence Southerly along
Ihe water's edge to a point bearing
N 89 degrees 3S' 48" West Irom Ihe
SW corner ol aforesaid Lot 28.
FO REST B R O O K .thencerunS 19
degrees IS' 48" East. 7S teel more
or less lo Ihe S W corner ol Lot 28,
thence run N 00 degrees I/' 58''
Wesl 53 S leet to the point ol
beginning.
O ra n g e
County.
Florida
has been tiled agamsl you and you
are required to serve a copy ol
your written defenses, it any. to it
on F e n im o re Cooper. J r . ol
M IL L E R 8 C O O P E R . P A , whose
address is P O Drawer 12/1.
Orlando. Flo rid a 12802, Attorney
lor Pan A m e r ic a n Bank ol
Orlando. N A , on or betore Sep
tember 17, 1982. and tile Ihe
original with Ih e clerk ol this court
either betore service on Ihe at
torney lor P a n Am erican Bank ol
Orlando. N A . or immediately
iherealter. otherwise a default
will be entered against you lor the
relief demanded in the Cross
Cla&gt;m
W IT N E S S m y hand and the seal
of this Court on August 17, 1982
IS E A L )
Arthur H Beckw ith. J r
As Clerk ol the Court
By E v e Crabtree
As Deputy Clerk
Publish August 16. 73. 30. 8 Sep
lember 6. 1987
D E Y 108

According to folklore, if the first robin you see in
the spring flies up, you will have good luck for
the rett of the year.

Legal Notice

SANFORD SC1IOOUHT
Thieves broke into the Sanford Elementary School, 301 W.
Seventh S t . between 3-10 p.m. Thursday and 9 a.m. Friday
stealing a small amount of money, searching classrooms,
offices and cabinets and spraying paint on a chalkboard and
clock
Police said the culprits entered the school after removing
two glass window panes from a hall window. Once inside, the
thieves searched desks, cabinets and classrooms stealing a
small amount of money from one desk and spraying paint on a
clock and chalkboard, police said The vandals sprayed the
word. "Funkadelic” on the chalkboard, police added
FOUR DRUG CHARGES FILED
Four Soin nole County people were arrested Friday by
Seminole County Drug Task Force agents on charges of
cultivating marijuana.
Agents raided the home of Kenneth Fillinger, 20. of 2825 S.
Magnolia Ave., Sanford, at about 5 30 p.m. Friday and
arrested Fillinger on charges of cultivating marijuana,
possession of a controlled substance and possession of drug
paraphernalia.
Police reported the m arijuana was seen grow ing in the back
y ard of the residence and just prior to the raid Fillinger was
allegedly seen in a car outside the property giving marijuana
in another man.
The car also was searched and Jimmie Johnson, 39, Osteen,
was arrested on the sam e charges.
Fillinger today was in the Seminole County Jail in lieu of
$8,000 bond.
Jones was lodged in jail in lieu of $500 bond.
Agents from the drug task force also arrested John and
Betty Schultz, of Geneva, on charges of cultivating marijuana,
possession of m arijuana and (mssession of drug paraphernalia.
They were released on $500 Ixmd each.
TWO CHARGED IN FRAUD
Martin Moore and Brian Rist, of 105A, Spring wood Village,
Lmgwoo , were arrested Friday afternoon on charges of
intent to defraud several Seminole County residents.
Police seal Moore, 22, and Rist, 28, were arrested at their
apartment after depositing fraudulent checks, police reports
said. Several banks in South Seminole County said they had
lost a total of $2,000

Legal Notice

f ic t it io u s n a m e

tlot'CC .s hereby g vrn that I am
enq«*ged in buvnevv at 708 C'frus
Or
Sanford. FI. 37771. Seminole
Count*
Flonda under the tic
M ious name ol THE C L E A N
M A C H IN E and that I Mend to
register sa d name wth Clerk ol
the C irc u it Court
Sem inole
County
Florida in accordance
w lh Ihe provisions ot the Fic
To Wit
t.t'Ous Name Statutes
Sect'On 865 09 Florida Statutes
195/
JO H N C N O EL HI
Publish August 7 9 16 71 198?
D E Y 72

f ic t it io u s n a m e

Notice -s hereby given that 1 am
engaged in business at 102 E
Airport Ulvd Sanlord. FL , under
me fictitious name ot OeGAR
M E A U B O O K K E E P IN G S E R
V IC E and that l intend lo register
said nam e with the Clerk ol the
Circuit Courl. Semmole County,
Florid a in accordance with the
provisions ol the f ictltious Nam e
Statutes, to Wit
Sect on 865 09
Florid a Statutes 195/
Florence G la n e r .
Publish Ju ly 26 8 August 2 9. 16.
1987
O E X 3 140

F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
Notice is hereby qiven that I am
engaged m busmrss at P O Box
3093 Longwood.
F la
377 SO
Seminole Count*. Florida under
the fictitious name ot A D V A N C E D
SA LES
and that I intend to
register said name with the Clerk
ol the Circuit Court, Semmole
County. Florida in accordance
w th me provisions ol the F lc
titious Name Statutes. T o W iI
Section 865 09 Florida Slatutes
1957
Signature S Olson
Publish August 16. 21 30. Sept 6.
1982
O E Y 98

FIC T IT IO U S N A M E
Notice \ hereby given that i am
engaqed m business at 405 Josian c
Court, Altamonte Springs
FL
12/01 Seminole County. Flo rid a
under Ihe fictitious n am e ot
U N IT E D SA LES A S S O C IA T E S .
INC DBA MID S T A T E P U M P
AND S U P P L Y , and that I intend lo
register said name with Clerk ot
ihe C ircu it Court. Se m in o le
County
Florida in accordance
with the provisions ol Ih e F lc
titious Name Statutes. To Wit
Section 865 09 Florida Statutes
195/
Roger Esthenroeder
Publish August 2. 9. 16 2). 198?
O E X 20

Legal Notice
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
Notice is hereby given that l am
engaged in business at 610 E
Altamonte D r iv e .
A ltam onte
Springs.
F lo r id a .
Sem inole
County. Florida under Ihe tic
titious name ot M ID A S M U F
F L E R SH O PS, and that I intend to
register said nam e with Clerk ot
the C ircu it C o u rt, Sem inole
County. Florida in accordance
with Ihe provisions ol the Flc
titious Name Statutes, To Wit
Section 865 09 Flo rid a Statutes
195/
R A LPH K O R A N S K Y
Publish Ju ly 26. 8 August 7. 9. 16.
198?
D E X 114

N O T IC E
OF
IN T E N T
TO
R E G IS T E R F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
NOTICE IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
thal Ihe undersigned, desiring to
engage m business under Ihe
fictitious nam e of SO LA R F IL M
U N L IM IT E D al 615 N Highway
421. Longwood. F lo r id a . 17150
intends to register the said name
with the Clerk ol the Circuit Court
of Seminole County. Florida
OATED this 9th day of August.
A D 1987
G EO R G E M A R T IN
PA U LA M A R T IN
Publish August 16 21. 30. 8 Sep
tember 6. 1987
O EY I I

IN T H E C IR C U IT COURT F O R
IN THE C IR C U IT CO U RT FOR
NO TICE OF P U B L IC
S E M IN O L E COUNTY. F L O R ID A
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y , F L O R ID A
H E A R IN G
P R O B A T E D IV ISIO N
P R O B A T E O IV IS IO N
T H E BO ARD OF C O U N T Y
F ile Number 8? 181 CP
File Number I I 37S CP
C O M M IS S IO N E R S
OF
Division
Division
S E M IN O L E COUNTY will hold a
IN R E E S T A T E OF
IN R E : E S T A T E OF
public hearing n Room 200 ol the
M A R IE A P A LA M A R
G REG O RY V E N C E .
Sem in o le County Courthouse,
Deceased
Deceased
Sanlord Florida, on A U G U S T 24.
N O T IC E OF A D M IN IST R A T IO N
NOTICE OF A D M IN IS T R A T IO N
1912 al 7 00 P M , or as soon
TO A L L P E R S O N S H A V IN G
TO A LL P E R S O N S H A V IN G
iherealter as possible, lo consider
C L A IM S
OR
D EM AN DS
OR
DEM AN D S
a specitic land use amendment to C L A IM S
A G A IN ST T H E A BO VE E S T A T E
AGAINST T H E A B O V E E S T A T E
the
Sem mole County
Com
A N D A L L O TH ER P E R S O N S
AND A LL O T H E R
PERSO N S
prehensive Plan and R E Z O N IN G
IN T E R E S 1 E D IN THE E S T A T E
IN T E R E S T E D IN T H E E S T A T E
ot the described property
YOU
ARE
H EREBY
YOU
ARE
H EREBY
AN O RD IN A N C E A M E N D IN G
N O T IF IE D
that
the
ad
N O T IF IE D
th a l
the
ad
O R D IN A N C E
77 25
W H IC H
m in is tra tio n ot the. estate ol
m inistration ol the estate ot
A M E N D S THE D E T A IL E D L A N D
M A R IE A P A LA M A R . deceased.
Gregory Vence, deceased. F 'J J
USE
ELEM EN T
OF
THE
F ile Number 8? 181 CP, is pending
number 82 175 C P . Is pend'NJ
S E M IN O L E
COUNTY
CO M
in
the
C ircu it
Court
lo r
the Circuit Court lor Seminole
P R E H E N S IV E P L A N
FRO M
S E M IN O L E
County. F lo rid a .
County, Florida. Probate Division,
Probate Division, the address ot LO W D E N SIT Y R E S ID E N T IA L
Ihe address ot which is P O
TO L O W IN T E N S IT Y
COM
which is Semmole County Cour
Drawer C. Santord. F L 32771 The
M E R C IA L FOR T H E P U R P O S E
mouse. Sanlord Florida
personal represenlative ol Ihe
The personal representative ol OF R EZO N G IN G F R O M R IA
estate is Hilda M a rie Vence. whose
S IN G L E
F A M IL Y D W E L L IN G
the esta te
IS W A L T E R
C
address is Route 7. Box 4J4 R.
P A L A M A . whose address is 184 D IST TO OP O F F IC E D IS T R IC T .
Maitland. F L 33/St The name and
T H E FO LLO W IN G O E S C R IB E D
To llg a te
Road.
Longwood.
PRO PERTY
address
ol
th e
personal
Florid a The name and address ol
Lots 1 through 10 and Lots IS
representative's attorney are set
the p erso n al re p re se n ta tive 's
through 24 inclusive. Block B. plus
lorth below
attorney are set torth below
Lots 1/ and 18. Block A. Tract 77,
All persons having claims or
All persons having claims or
SanlandO Springs Subdivision, P B
demands against the estate are
demands against the estate are
4. Pg 56. Section 2 21 29, Sem inole
required.
W IT H IN
TH REE
re q u ire d .
W IT H IN
TH REE
County. Florida Consisting ot 3 S MONTHS F R O M T H E D A T E OF
M O N T H S F R O M THE D A T E OF
acres MOL (Generally described
THE F IR S T P U B L IC A T IO N OF
T H E F IR S T P U B LIC A T IO N OF
THIS N O T IC E, to tile with the
T H IS N O T IC E , to tile with the as al the SE corner ol I 4 and SR
434) I DIST No 4)
clerk ol Ihe above court a written
clerk ol Ihe above court a written
A P P L IC A T IO N
HAS B E E N
statement ol any cla im or demand
statement ol any claim or demand
S U B M IT T E D
BY
CO N TEL
they may nave E a c h claim must
they may have Each claim must
D EVELO PM EN T
PZ18 4 07I45
beinwrllmg and must indicate the
be m writing and must indicate the
Further, the P L A N N IN G A ND
basis tor Ihe claim , the name and
basis lor the claim, the name and
Z
O
N
IN
G
C
O
M
M
IS
S
IO
N
O
F
address ol the creditor or his agent
address ol the creditor or tus agent
S E M IN O L E COUNTY will hold a
or attorney, and the amount
or attorney, and the amount
public
hearing
in
Room
200
ol
the
claimed II the claim is not yet
claim ed It the claim is not yet
due. the Ja te when it will become
due, the date when it will become Sem in o le County Courthouse.
due shall be stated It the claim is
due shall be stated It ihe claim is Santord. Florida, on A U G U S T 4.
198? at 7 00 P M , or as soon
contingent or unliquidated, Ihe
contingent or unliquidated, the
nature ot Ihe uncertainty shall be
nature ol the uncertainty shall be iherealter as possible, to review ,
comments
and
m ake
staled It Ihe claim is secured, the
slated It the claim is secured, the hear
security shall be described The
security shall be described The recommendations to Ihe Board ot
County Commissioners on the
claimant shall deliver sullicient
claim ant shall deliver sufficient
copies ol the claim lo the clerk to
copies ol the claim to the clerk to above captioned ordinance and
reroning
enable the clerk to mail one copy
enable the clerk to mail one copy
Additional Information m ay be
lo each personal representative
to each personal representative
obtained by contacting the Land
All persons interested in the
A ll persons interested in the
Management Manager at 173 4330.
estale to whom a copy ol this
estate to whom a copy ot this
Ext 160
Notice ol Adm inistration has been
Notice ol Administration has been
Persons unable 'o attend the
mailed are required. W IT H IN
m ailed are required. W IT H IN
hearing who wish to com ment on
T H R E E M O N T H S F R O M THE
T H R E E M O N TH S FR O M T H E
the proposed actions may submit
D A TE
OF
THE
F IR S T
DATE
OF
THE
F IR S T
written statements to the Land
P U B L IC A T IO N
OF
T H IS
P U B L IC A T IO N
OF
T H IS
Management Oivision prior to the
NOTICE, to tile any objections
N O T IC E , to tile any objections
scheduled public hearing Persons
they may have that challenges Ihe
they m ay have thal challenge Ihe
appearing at the hearings m ay
validity ol the decedent's will, the
validity ol the decendenfs will, the
submit written statements or be
q u alifica tio n s ot m e personal
q u a lific a tio n s ol the personal
heard orally
representative, or Ihe venue or
representative, or the venue or
Persons are advised that, it they
jurisdiction ot the court
jurisdiction ot the court.
decide to appeal any decision
ALL C L A IM S . D E M A N D S . AND
A L L C L A IM S , D EM AN D S, A N D
made al these meetings, they wilt
O B JE C T IO N S NOT SO F IL E O
O B JE C T IO N S NOT SO F I L E D
need a record ol the proceedings,
W IL L B E F O R E V E R B A R R E D
W IL L B E F O R E V E R B A R R E D
and. tor such purpose, they m ay
Dale ot the lirst publication ol
Date ot the first publication ol
need lo ensure that a verb atim
this Notice ol Administration
this Notice ol Administration
record ol the proceedings is made,
August 9, 1982
August 9, 198?
w hich
record
In clu d es
the
Hilda M a ri* Vence
W a lle r C Palam ar
testim o ny and e v id e n c e upon
As Personal kep re se n la lly*
As Personal Representative
which the appeal is to be based,
ol the Es ta le ol
ol the Esta te ot
per Section U 6 0 I0 S . F lo r id a
Gregory Vence
M A R IE A P A L A M A R
Statutes
Deceased
Deceased
Board ot County
ATTO RNEY FO R P ER S O N A L
A T T O R N E Y FO R PER SO N A L
Commissioners
R E P R E S E N T A T IV E
R E P R E S E N T A T IV E
Semmole County, Flo rid a
Kenneth M Beane. Esquire
W illia m A Greenberg Esq
By Robert Sturm,
315 South H ig h w a y 17 V}
Post C tllce Drawer K
Chairman
Casselberry. F L 37/07
F e rn P a rk . F la . 33730 0 356
Attest Arthur M Beckw ith J r
Teles none (3M&gt; 134 IS IS
Telephone: I JOS) 339 5944
Publish July 368 Auqust 7, 16. I9 IJ
Publish August 9. 14. 1912
Publish August 9. It. 1912
D E X 99
D E Y 60
O EY SS

�Evening Herald

A in;,n could earn a living that way.
That was the reaction of Like Mary Coun­
cilman Ray Fox to the report that State Rep.
Jason Steele, R-Rockledge, in his bid for a
Senate seal has taken nearly half his campaign
funds.for his personal salary.
It’s all legal.
Rut Fox said if a person enjoyed campaigning,
and had a good fund-raiser on the payroll, he
could earn his living doing what he liked by being
a perennial candidate.

IU S P S 4(1 380)

300 N. FRENCH AVE., SANFORD, F IA 32771
Area Code 305-322-2611 or 831-9993
Monday, A ugust 16, 1982—4A
Wayne D. Doyle, Publisher
Thomas Giordano, Managing Editor
Robert Lovenbury. Advertising and Circulation Director

Home Delivery: Week, *1.00; Month, *4.25; 6 Months, $24.00;
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$30.00; Year. *57.00.

Inconsistency Can

By DONNA ESTES

Lead To Incoherence
»

One of President Reagan's least-defensible
decisions last year was his lifting of the U.S. grain
embargo against the Soviet Union.
In Des Moines recently, Mr. Reagan com{xuinded this mistake by promising a one-year
grain-sale extension beyond the Sept. 30 deadline
that would permit farmers record sales to the
Soviets.
Some administration spokesmen have pointed
out that the president is keeping the Soviets on a
short leash by not renewing long-term grain sales
contracts. Critics, on the other hand, maintain the
administration could have minimized negative
reaction by refusing to negotiate a new pact at
this time and by simply allowing grain sales to
continue without an agreement.
Instead, Mr. Reagan made much of “the sanc­
tity of the contract” he is proposing with the
Soviets. "... We must restore confidence in U.S.
reliability as a supplier," he said.
The cheers in U es.Moines over the promised
deal were jeers in Bonn, Paris, and London. Our
West European allies have been up in arms over
the Reagan administration’s decision to block
foreign subsidiaries of U.S. companies from
selling equipment for the Sovict-Siberian natural
gas pipeline. 'Ihey regard as hypocritical the
president's renewal of a one-year grain sales
contract to the Soviets at a time he is pressuring
them to forgo the Soviet pipeline. And his homily
about the sanctity of U.S. contracts is especially
enraging for them because he is enforcing his
pipe line boycott by requiring U.S. firms to break
their European contracts.
It is true that the grain embargo imposed by
President Carter after the Soviet Union invaded
Afghanistan in December 15)79 was only partially
successful because other grain suppliers did not
join in. Nevertheless, withholding U.S. grain was
not without a telling effect on the Russians.
Moscow was forced to scurry around and find
o th e r s o u r c e s a m i p a y h a r d c a s h a t h ig h e r p r ic e s .

The Carter grain embargo cost the Soviet Union
an estimated $5 billion extra that it could ill af­
ford.
One thing everyone agrees on, according to Jan
Vunous, East bloc specialist at Wharton
Econometric Forecasting Associates, is that a
grain embargo would be damaging to the Soviets.
"Where they are most vulnerable is where we are
helping them the most," he warns.
A grain embargo would hurt much more now
than in 19B0 because Soviet dependence on
Western grain is soaring. The Russians now must
import more than 20 percent of their grain
requirements compared with about 15 percent two
years ago and only alxjut 6 percent in 1978.
In the full knowledge pf these facts, West
Europeans angrily ask why the Reagan ad­
ministration shedd expect them to do all the
sacrificing in a get-tough attitude toward the
Soviet Union — why their firms and workers
should give up doing business with the Soviets on
the pipeline while U.S. farmers are enjoying
record grain sales.
Despite its arguments about the difference
Ijetween obtaining Soviet cash for grain in con­
trast with paying the Soviets for natural gas, the
Reagan administration has failed to justify its
obvious inconsistency. The bigger problem is that
such inconsistency in foreign affairs often lapses
into incoherence.

PLEASE WRITE
I&gt;i‘U m to the editor are welcomed (or publication. All
letters must be signed, with a mailing address and, it
possible, a telephone number so the Identitiy of the writer
may be, verified. The Evening Herald will respect the
wishes of writers who do not want their names In print.
The Evening Herald also reserves the right to edit letters
to eliminate libel or to conform to space requirements.

BERRYS WORLD

"The Challenger," the official newspaper of
the Republican Party of Florida, published in its
August edition a selection of rhetorical gems as
only politicians can provide.
The gems were originally reported in the Wall
Street Journal jn an article by Eugene Carlson
The quotes were heard in Ihe chambers of the
Michigan State legislature.
They are as follows:
— “ Before I give you the benefit of my
remarks, I'd like to know what we’re talking
about."

weird ducks and I think that’s reflected in this
senate, wit!) all due respect "
— "L et’s violate the law one more year."
— "M r. Speaker, what bill did we just pass”
At the same time, the Democratic Express, the
weekly newsletter from the Florida Democratic
Party, reports that Stale Rep. Robert Hattaway,
D-Altamonte Springs, has come out swinging
against Republican State Sen. Toni Jennings of
Orlando in his drive to take the 15th District
Senate seat away from her.
"H e's challenging her role as a member of the
Semite Democratic-Republican coalition and
accuses her of short-changing Orange County
interests as a result," Ihe Newsletter states.
Rut, Miss Jennings is obviously popular in the
Seminole-Orange district. She has been able to
raise *27,000 for her campaign while Hattaway
has raised less than *7,000
Hattaway’s supporters say, however, that
Hattaway will have all the money he needs and
that now he is concentrating on campaign
organizing.

JEFFREY HART

DON GRAFF

Saving
You Some
Money

Democrats
Throw
A Rod
For a proposition of such minimal merit
that kicked around so long generating so little
enthusiasm am ong so many political
professionals, Ihe balanced budget amend­
ment appears suddenly to have acquired the
momentum of an inevitability.
Mind you, it’s not that the idea itself is so off
target. Fiscal responsibility in public affairs
is greally to be desired. But so are minimizing
loss of life in earthquakes and avoiding abuse
of alcohol.
The point is that these worthy social goals
are not achieved through mere words, even if
enshrined in basic law.
Writing off Senate approval of the amend­
ment proposal as political hypocrisy, a
cynical election-year maneuver to blunt
negative public reaction to ballooning budget
deficits, is too easy. What is happening is
more complex and more demeaning to the
democratic process than that.
While public support for the principle of
budget balancing is unquestionably broad,
public comprehension of what it involves is
not. The budget m akers may be doing a poor
job, but there is no way that they can be
compelled to guess right every time on
economic uncertainties that ultimately shape
a budget. That is what this proposal would
attempt to do.
Much of the public may lack the legislative
expertise to comprehend this, but its elected
representatives in the Senate presumably
know better. A majority, however, has
responded to public sentiment by abdicating
its responsibility to act in ihe best interests of
the public. Thai is what the vote reflects, not
the real convictions of most of the senators
who contributed to it.
It is one of those occasions when
democracy’s flaws triumph over its virtues,
and the democratic process throws a rod. Is
there anyone who really believes that a body
that could be pressured into this vote cannot
later be pressured into taking advantage of
the proposed am endm ent’s mile-wide
loopholes when expediency calls? As it cer­
tainly will — again and again and again.
Ixx)pholes are a major objection but far
from Hie only one. As Vermont Royster,
editor-emeritus of the Wall Street Journal
observes, the am ondm ent’s intent and
language d ep art from the procedural
character of the original Constitution and
most of the existing amendments. It would
mandate what to do, not how to do it.
In the process It is specific without being
really binding, stopping just short of
scheduling congressional lunch breaks during
budget debates. And too wordy. Its six sec­
tions are not much briefer than the original
Constitution's entire Article III, establishing
the federal Judiciary.
It exemplifies one of the great dangers in
constitution writing. Again borrowing from
Royster, it is all too easy "to be caught up in
the emotions of the time about what needs to
be done and find ourselves afterward un­
wisely locked Into a rigid cons.ltutioria! vise."
There is no need to look far (or bad
examples. State constitutions provide many.
There was a time, remember, when ERA
looked inevitable.

ANTHONY HARRIGAN

Year Of The Giveback
With many industries in deep trouble, it is
widely believed that labor unions will have to
make major concessions. Indeed Dun's
Business Month recently referred to 1982 as
the Year of The Giveback.
This means that unions will have to yield
part of the wage gains that they obtained in
the affluent 1970s, Certainly, a number of
union members are beginning to see the
handwriting on the wall. If they don't make
concessions, the Industries they work in are
likely to disappear. In the steel industry, for
example, layoffs continue at a high level.
Production in the steel industry is at about 47
percent of capacity, and there is little
likelihood of improvement in the months
ahead. Unions must face up to the fact that
hard-pressed employers can't pass on labor
costs to the consumer.
The Industrial unions won’t yield without a
fight, of course, and we continue to see strikes
even at a time when the economy is going
downhill fast. Nevertheless, there ts little In
the way1of a strike attitude in the labor
movement as a whole. Realism is beginning
to emerge.
limitations on income growth are hard to
adjust to, of course. Industrial workers, like
other Americans, have high expectations.
They aren’t the only victims of recession,
however. Many large businesses have cut or
frozen executive and white collar employee
salaries.
Business, for its part, may concentrate too
much on wage givebacks. This would be a
serious mistake. Archaic, hurtful work rules
are more threatening to American business
than excessive wages. In many industries,
union agreements over the years have
stripped m anagem ent of flexibility in

assigning employees.
Under many union contracts, workers can’t
be shifted from job to Job as they are needed.
One example that came to my attention
recently was of a worker whose job it was to
attach taillights to tractors. He would com­
plete his task in two hours of the working day.
Thereafter, he sat around and drank coffee.
The company couldn’t assign him to other
duties. This rigidity contributes to a decline in
productivity and profits. In the long run, the
worker is the loser because his employer goes
out of business.
The example of railroad worker rules is the
classic case. A trip of 100 miles remains the
working day of a locomotive engineer. The
reason is that 100 miles was a full day's trip at
the turn of the century. How can a tran­
sportation company hope to survive if it is
required to accept work rules that belong to
the age of steam? Obviously, it can't.
Americans have read about British
locomotive drivers who refused to accept
flexible work rules until British Rail
threatened lo shut down the entire system.
The no-work, slow-work procedures in effect
in Great Britain are duplicated in the United
States.
Everyone understands how Britain lost its
preeminence because of indolence and union
rigidity. The U.S. public is much less aware of
tlx? extent to which British type union ob­
structionism exists in American industry.
Archaic management practices are a
reality. In this case, however, management
that fails to adjust to changing times simply
loses out.
The only way to lialt the process of this de­
industrialization is to abolish archaic work
rules.

In a recent column, 1 reported on Reagan's
proposal to transfer some 40 federal
programs to the states in exchange for a
federal takeover of Medicaid.
The idea, really, is not that the states will
continue to fund the former federal programs
at their present levels, but that when the
voters get a good look at those programs they
will decide that they would rather keep their
tax money, or at least a lot of it.
At present, it is very difficult for public
opinion to have much impact on these
programs. Congress is vulnerable to small
but well-focused pressure groups, and publicopinion doesn't really know what is involved
here.
As I remarked iri my earlier column, most
people have never even heard of most of these
federal programs.
Government in the largest states, such as
California and New York, is still pretty
remote from the grass roots,
U*l us make a preliminary test of my
assertion that you are paying for a lot of
federal programs which you have never
heard of. And, as you scan the following list,
please give at least preliminary answers to
the key question, Do you really want this
program ami, Are you willing to be taxed to
pay for it?
Here are some of the programs, large and
small, which Reagan's New Federalism
would submit to review at the state level:
Education amt Training
Vocation and rehabilitation, *952 million;
Vocation and adult education, 750 million;
State Education and Rehabilitation Block
G ran ts, *537 m illion; Comprehensive
Employment and Training Act, *2.9 billion;
Work Incentive Program , *245 million,
Energy Assistance
I,ow-income home energy assistance, *1.9
billion.
Social, Health, Nutrition Services
Child nutrition, *3 2 billion; Child welfare,
foster care and adoption assistance, *485
million; Runaway youths and child abuse, *15
million; Social Services Block Grant, *2.4
billion; I^egal Services, *240 million; Com­
munity Services Block Grant, *348 million;
Preventive M edicine Block Grant, *82
million; Alcohol, Drug Abuse and Mental
Health Block Grant, *432 million; Primary
care health care centers, *248 million;
Maternal and Child Health Block Grant, *348
m illion; Prim ary ca re research and
development, *2 million; Family planning,
*125 million.
Transportation
Urban tran sp o rtatio n , *800 million;
Secondary tran sp o rtatio n , *400 million;
Appalachian highways, *75 million. Urban
Mass Transportation Administration, con­
struction, *2.4 million; Urban Mass Tran­
sportation Administration, operating, *640
million; Highway safety, *10 million.
Community Development, Facilities
Water and sewer grants, *125 million;
Water and sewer loans, *375 million; Com-,
munity facilities loans, *130 million; Communily Development Block Grants, *3.5
billion; Waste water treatment grants, *2.4
billion.

JACK ANDERSON

Who Is To Blame For Killing Of Civilians?
BEIRUT — A smoldering question mark
hangs over the ruins of Beirut: Who Is to
blame for the indiscriminate killing of
civilians?
Yassir Arafal, the grizried PLO chieftain,
has pronounced Israel guilty. In Ihe midst of
defeat, he has lofted by communique, in­
terview and leak a salvo of Inflammatory
accusations.
Outside his battered press office next to a
barricade of sandbags, for example, he went
through a show-and-tell act. Leaning against
the wall were half a dozen cluster-bomb
canisters, each six feet high. The markings
revealed that they had been purchased from
the U.S. Navy.
Canisters like these, dropped by Israeli
planes, had opened over Beirut; each had
scattered hundreds of golfball-slze bomblets
over a neighborhood, he said. Then each liny
ball had exploded like a grenade, raining
down lethal shrapnel on the populace below.

"Horn, it we just m ess around together, would
that be considered ‘quality time'?"

— "There comes a time to put principle aside
and do what's righl."
— "I don't sec anything wrong with saving
human life. That would lx? good politics, even for
us."
— "This bill goes to the very heart of the moral
fiber of human anatomy."
— " f t’s a step in Ihe right direction, it's the
answer, and it's constitutional, which is even
better."
— "Some of our friends wanted it in the bill,
some of our friends wanted il out, and Jerry and
I are going to stick with our friends."
— " I’m not only for capital punishment. I’m
also for the preservation of life.”
— "From now on. I'm watching everything
you do with a fine-toothed comb."
— "The chair would wish ihe members would
refrain from talking about the intellectual levels
of other members. That always leads to
problems."
— "I don't think people appreciate how dif­
ficult it is to be a pawn of labor."
— "This stale's atypical. We’ve got some real

The wily Arafat, with his flair for dram atics
appeared as the embattled leader of an
heroic, last-ditch stand. Any leader can be u

hero In victory; only Arafal could project
himself as Ihe hero of a catastrophe.
I confronted Ariel Sharon, the big, bluff
Israeli defense minister, about the cluster
bombs. Who ordered their use? "I did," he
said bluntly.
Sharon believes in the sweeping strategies
required for total victory. He doesn’t pretend
to believe that the concept of limited war is
other than a contradiction in terms, a per­
version of military logic and a betrayal of the
troops in the field.
He regretted the necessity, he said, of using
duster bombs. They were designed to knock
out tanks and artillery, and that’s what he had
used them for, he claimed. (The canisters
that Arafat showed me, sure enough, were
marked “Anti-tank Bomb Cluster.")
Sharon pointed out that he had not chosen
Beirut as a battlefield; the choice had been
made by the P I/), which had deployed its
forces behind a civilian cover.
His aides showed me reconnaissance
photographs of Beirut. I could pick oul P I /)

tanks and artillery strategically located near
embassies, hospitals, apartment buildings
und other sensitive sites, 1 saw a P I/) am ­
munition dump that had been situated bet­
ween a church and an adjacent graveyard.
I saw evidence that the Israelis had tried to
concentrate their fire on military targets. But
I also saw evidence of indiscriminate shelling
by both Israeli and P I/) artillery.
My associate Dale Van Alta, who ac­
companied me to Beirut, checked with
American sources on Israel's use of cluster
bombs. Under the agreement by which Ihe
United States provided the deadly bombs,
Israel was lo use them only for defensive
purposes, against fortified military targets
und only if Israel were attacked by two or
more "Arab states."
Yet the Israelis have reportedly been using
the duster bombs since their 1978 anti-PLO
action In Ubanon. Civilians, unfortified cities
and even an Armenian hospital have been hit
on a number of occasions. One reliable source
said the bombs have been used so often in the
past four years in Ix?banon that in some areas
fragments are "as common as pine cones in c

»

pine forest.”
One particular horror of the cluster bomb is
that the mini-bombs sometimes land on a soft
surface, or otherwise fail to detonate as
they’re supposed to; then they become
tempting, lethal toys for curious children who
find them lying around on the ground.
Even soldiers find the bomblets attractive
souvenirs. The results can be fatal. Lt. Gen.
Rafael Eitan, Israeli's chief of staff, warned
his troops not to pick up the cluster bomblets
"Because your life may depend on it."
Eitan’s confidential directions revealed that
eight Israeli soldiers had been wounded in
such souvenir hunts.
In the past, the Israeli government denied
using cluster bombs. But in the 1978 incursion,
an Israeli journalist not only saw some
dropped near civilians; he himself was badly
injured by one. He wrote a long story about
the incident from his hospital bed. Instead of
printing it, his paper published a government
press release that played down the use of the
weapon.
Sales of cluster bombs have always been
wrapped In tight security; the documents are
classified "Secret" at a minimum.

�SP O R TS
Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Monday, Aug 14,1982—5A

Golsteyn Looks Sharp In Fourth-Quarter Surge

Morton, Carver Raise Stock In Buc Romp
TAMPA (U P li
A pair of fleet
running backs from Nevada-Ias Vegas
raised (heir stock with the Tampa Ray
Buccaneers Saturday night as they broke
open the NFL exhibition name with the
Philadelphia Eagles in the fourth period
of a 35-7 romp.
Michael Morton, a 12th-round draft
choice, scored on a 9-yard touchdown run
and then broke loose for an 80-yard

Chris
Fister
Herald Sports Writer

Pro Football
scoring jaunt, while free agent Melvin
Carver jolted the Eagles with a 39-yard
run for the Bucs final score.
But despite the score. Eagles Coach
Dick Vermeil, was not overly concerned
with his club’s performance.
“Wc had some mismatches there at the
end," he said. “They had some pretty
high draft choices playing against guys
that will probably have to be sent home
Monday. After tonight, I'd have to say we
haven't progressed as much as I would
like, but you have to think maybe it lias
more to do with (coaching) approach."
“ I think we got everybody in that we
could," said Tampa Coach John McKay.
“1 thought for a preseason game it was a
good game for us."
McKay saw his veteran quarterback
Doug Williams and tight end Jimmy
Giles team up on a 2-yard touchdown
pass and then watched his rookies strut
their stuff.
In addition to the Morton-Carver show,,
rookie linebacker Jeff Davis of Clemsoni
rambled 29 yards for a touchdown with i
an intercepted pass.
The Epgles only score came on a
second quarter pass of two yards from
Ron Jaworski to rookie light end
1-awrence Sample!on of Texas.
Jaworski gave way to Joe Pisarcik
midway through the second period. He
remained in the game until late in the
final period when he was knocked un­
conscious while scrambling to pick tip the
ball after it had been centered over his
head.
Pisarcik w as hospitalized for
observation and released Sunday.
Williams played only the first period
for Tampa and was followed by Chuck
Fusina and then former New York Giants
quarterback Jerry Golsteyn, who was
directing the team during the threetouchdown fourth quarter.
McKay said Golsteyn looked "much
sharper" Hum Fusina but added, "1 think
he was going against lesser people."
Vermeil said the Eagles passed more
than they normally would because they

Bucs Look
Impressive
In Opener
Some 65,000 football-hungry fans
went home happy Saturday night when
the Tampa Bay Buccaneers put on an
im pressive showing in its first
preseason outing, a 35-7 trouncing of
perennial powerhouse Philadelphia
Eagles.
A lot of folks have been anxious to
know if the Hues could improve after
last year's 9*7 record and the NFI.
Central Division title.

Herald Photo by Sam Cook

Mike Washington (left), Tantpa Hay right cornerhuck, watches a
pass slip off the hands of Philadelphia wide receiver Hnn Smith in
Saturday night’s exhibition season opener at Tampa. The Hues used

a strong fourth-quarter showing by running backs Michael Morton
a n d Melvin Carter to stomp the Eagles, 715-7.

already know about their running game,
In all, Vermeil used 83 players in the
anchored by Wilbert Montgomery.
opening exhibition game and McKay
“ We wanted to look at all Ihe little used 68.
things,” he said. “ We know we can run.
All but one player from both squads
We know Wilbert can run. And wc know
met ai Ihe center of the field prior to Ihe
our offensive linemen can block for the
game for a mass hand-shaking show of
run. But we wanted to throw more, player solidarity in the contract talks
because we wanted to give all the young with the owners.
guys more opportunities to catch.”
The only player not participating was
Tliv Eagles had 17 different pass
receivers and 14 different twill carriers Tampa free ageni offensive lineman
Matt Petrzelka from Iowa.
representing 24 different players.

"I didn’t do that for publicity, I can
guarantee you that," Peirzclka said
later. "I just instinctively didn’t do it. I
just liad my mind on football. I didn't
even notice them going out and sluiking
hands when ihey did.
“To be honest, I was saying a prayer at
the time," he said. I'm preoccupied with
making this football team.”
The players had been warned l hey face
minimum fines of 9100 each if they
participated in any such action, a move

union representatives said they would
fight
Eaglet

0 7 0

Butt

7 1 0 J l —J*

0— 7

TAM — G ile s ? pats from Williams ICapence
Kick I . OH I — Sampletoo 2 pats Irom Jaw orski
(Franklin kick). T A M — D avit 79 past in
tcrtrpllon (Capece kictd, TAM — Morion 9
run I Capece kick)
T AM — Morion 40 run
IC a p e c e k ic k l, TAM -Carver 30 run ICapece
kick). A - 4V4S9
F IE L D G O A LS M IS S E O — OhilatJelpfi.a
Franklin 47, 47. Tampa none

Dolphins Shake Up Skins
MIAMI (U P!) — Except for the
"solidarity shake" before the game,
Miami's 24-7 victory over tpc Washington
Redskins was about what you would
expect from an opening preseason game.
There were 13 penalties and six tur­
novers. Most of the obvious mistakes
were by the Redskins but untimely
penalties and dropped passes by the
Dolphins, especially in the first quarter,
took their toll.
The Redskins threw two interceptions,
lost three fumbles and were penalized 13
times for 192 yards. The turnovers led to
two of Miami's three touchdowns.
"No way you can get that number of
penalties, and turn the ball over that
often and win. That's just cut and dried,"
said Redskin coach Joe Gibbs after the
game Saturday night.
Q uarterback Joe Theismann, who
played the entire first half, heartily
agreed.
“It boils down to the fact we fell down
on fundamentals. It’s that plain and
simple," Theismann said. "There’s no
mystery to football when you make that
many m istakes."
Dolphin Coach Don Simla preferred to
look on the bright side. "We did the Job in
all phases. Our first team against their
first team, our second team against their
second team ,” he said. "The defense
played well except for the opening drive.
It came up with a lot of balls for the of­
fense.”
Among the bright spots for Don Simla
and his staff was the running of l^irry
Cowan, a stubby seventh-round draft
choice from Jackson State, who carried

Pro Football
ihe ball 11 times for 69 yards, including
long gainers of 16 and 13 yards.
Simla called his performance "out­
standing" and said the 5-foot-ll 190pound Cowan may be "the slashing-type
runner" the Dolphins have been looking
for in the past few years.
No answers to uncertain place-kicking
were provided by either team. In the
Redskin duel between Mark Moseley and
rookie Danny Miller of the University of
Miami, Mosely missed a 53-yanl field
goal and Miller was short with a 48yarder.
As for the handskakc to show union
solidarity during the currently
deadlocked NFL contract negotiation,
nine dolphin rookies anti veteran guard
Bob Kuechenberg remained on the
sideline.
"I didn't think it was appropriate,’’
said Kuechenberg, the only non-union
member among Dolphin veterans. “I
have been pretty conslstant with my
view s toward (p la y e rs associalion
representative Ed) Garvey. The most
important thing is that this team sticks
together.
"Management needs to put a decent
offer on the table and the players need to
get off this nickel-and-dime stuff so wc
can get down to what negotiations are all
about."
In other games Saturday, Baltimore
downed the New York Giants 19-14,

Green Bay nipped the New York Jets 2119, Atlanta lopped Minnesota 20-17,
Buffalo downed Dallas 14-10, Cleveland
slipped by Detroit 17-16, Denver defeated
the l/&gt;s Angeles Hams 33-20, Miami
clubbed Washington 24-7, Pittsburgh
stopped New England 24-20, and Tampa
Bay routed Philadelphia 35-7.
On Friday night, Kansas City edged
Cincinnati 26-20 and Seattle blanked St.
Ix&gt;uts 14-0.
At Baltimore, a 45-yard interception
return by reserve linebacker Ricky
Jones of a Mark Heed pass in the closing
moments of the final quarter set up a 1yard plunge by Howard Jackson with just
13 seconds remaining.
At Green Bay, Wis„ Rich Campbell
passed for one touchdown and Willard
Heaves and Eddie lee I very ran for two
more to lead the Packers.
At Atlanta, reserve quarterback Mike
Moroski threw a 19-yard TD pass to
rookie running back Reggie Brown with
4:38 remaining to lift the Falcons.
At Irving, Texas, Mat I Robinson, the
fourth Buffalo quarterback of the night,
threw a 2-yard swing pass to Arthur
Whittington for the winning touchdown
with 39 seconds left to spark the Bills.
At Pontiac, Mich., Cleo Miller scored
on an 8-yard run with 7:20 remaining and
M att B a h r’s conversion clinched
Cleveland’s victory.
At Anaheim, Calif., Steve DeBerg
passed for 161 yards in the first half and
Murk Herrmann keyed a second-half
rally to lead th Broncos.
At Miami, veteran Don Struck directed
a third-quarter touchdown drive that

FIRST D A Y

Herald Photo by Tom Vincent

Seminole Hit'll foot hull coach Jerry Posey (left) puts Tim Herring
through the paces Monday morning as fall practice opened in
Seminole County for six gridiron squads. Players from Seminole,
Lake Mary, Lyman, Oviedo, Lake Howell and Lake Brantley will
workout most of this week in shirts and shorts before donning the
hitting equipment.

Winter Haven Ousts Altamonte Legion, 9-2
By CHRIS FISTER
Herald Sports Writer
FORT PIERCE - A four-run, sixth­
inning led to the demise of the Altamonte
Legion Post 183 Saturday night as Winter
Haven went on to claim a 9*2 victory in
American Legion State Tournament
action.
Tommy Williams led off the sixth by
crushing a 380-foot homer off starting

and losing pitcher Davie Martinez. After
Martinez walked I&lt;ou Marriott, Billy
Stripp caine on in relief.
With still no outs in the inning a
breakdown in com m unication cost
Altamonte a chance at a double play. The
runner on first was breaking and a pitch
out was called fur by Altamonte’s second
baseman. Stripp missed the call and Tmn
Clark rolled a grounder to second which

Baseball
went into right field since the second
baseman was covering second on the
play.
With runners on second and third, one
run scored when Tom Jantom aso’s
grounder was booted. That put Winter

«

Haven up 4-2 and Ihey added to the
cushion with three more runs in the
seventh inning.
Martinez was making his first mound
appearance of the year. He went five
innings, gave up four runs (two earned),
struck out four and walked six. Stripp
went the final lour fry ics, giving up five
runs, (three were earned) while striking
out and walking three.

Well, if Saturday night is any in­
dication. the answer is a definite yes.
Tlie Hues got outstanding all-around
performances and some of the rookies
showed they are ready for the NFL.
And, the Bucs show ed, when it comes to
depth, they are quite a few steps ahead
of the Eagles.
The veterans got in some work in the
opening half as Tampa took a 14-7 lead
at intermission. Doug Williams com­
pleted seven of nine passes for fifl yards
and one touchdown. Williams should
establish himself as one of the premiere
signal callers in the game this season.
Jam es Wilder showed versatility at
running kick with 19 yards rushing on
three carries and he caught three
passes for 37 yards. The Uuch bucks
turned in 211 yards rushing for the
game while the Eagles managed only 97
and were led by I.M. Hipp’s 30 yards.
Tampa Bay dominated the Eagles
throughout most of the game but the
Eagles had a few chances to tie it in the
first half. Tony (when 1 kick with my
bare feeties, I gel the eaties for my
Wheatles) Franklin missed two field
goals and Joe Pisarcik, the second
string QH for Philadelphia, threw three
interceptions.
The second half was a different story .
Tampa Bay’s defense totally shut down
the Eagles offense. A Neal Colzie in­
terception late in the first half seemed
to fire up the Bucs for the second half.
Dana Nafzigcr, converted from tight
end to linebacker, led the defensive
effort along with Scot Brantley and Jeff
Davis.
In the fourth quarter the Rues turned
a close game, it was still 14-7 after three
quarters, into a run away with 21
fourth-quarter points.
Four newcomers put on a fine
showing for Tampa Ray in the decisive
second half. Jerry Rolsteyn, an cx-Ncw
York Giant QB, led the Rues to Us third
touchdown that seemed to take the air
out of the Eagles. Golsteyn completed
three of seven passes for 49 yards.
The most outstanding single per­
formance of the night belonged to
T am pa Ray rookie running back
Michael Morton. Morton, a powder keg
in football armor, exploded for touch­
downs of nine and 80 yards. He ended up
gaining 104 yards on just five carries.
The 80-yard run was a Buc record.
Another rookie in the Rues backfield,
Melvin Carver, scored the last TD on a
30-yard run. Carver carried nine times
for 61 yards.
•
The Bucs other TD was scored when
Davis picked off a Pisarcik pass and
returned it 29 yards.
The preseason is usually dubbed as a
time for the NFL teams to work out the
kinks ami look at the rookies and new
players to the team. As for the kinks,
there weren’t many at all. As for the
rookies, they showed they have what It
takes to play professionally.
The 1982 version of the Tampa Bay
Buccaneers could shape up to be one of
the finest years in Buc history if
Saturday night’s game was a preview
of things to come.

In Sunday’s Evening
Herald, Doug Chiodini
w as
in c o r r e c t ly
identified as David
Martinez and vicev e r sa .
M artinez,
Altamonte
Legion
centcrfielder, is at the
left and Utiodiui, a
right fielder, is at the
right.
MAKTINKZ

CHIODINI

�tA - E v tn ln g H trald, Sanford,

I.

M o n d a y , A ug. U ,

Schmidt Makes Expos Pay;

SP O R T S
IN BRIEF

Gerulaitis Gets Serious,
Trips Lendl For Canadian
TORONTO (UPI) — Thi* reformation of Vitas
Gerulaitis is now a “ serious" m atter.
The blond New Yorker, his rakish ways replaced by
a devotion to tennis, worked quickly back from a oneset deficit Sunday to defeat Ivan I&gt;endl 4-f&gt;, 6-1, 6-3 and
win the $300,000 Canadian Open Tennis Championship.
"1 just want him ilin d l) to know that nothing he
does perturbs me," said Gerulaitis, talking very tough
for a man who was working harder at his nightlife than
at his serve less than a y ear ago.
But the words were fully earned against l*ndl, who
had not lost a set in his journey to the final, including a
shockingly easy 6-4, 6-t win over John McEnroe
Saturday in the semifinals.
In mid-season last year, Gerulaitis allowed his in­
clination for parties and late hours to get the better of
his tennis game. He plunged to the low teens in the
computer rankings for the first time in eight years.
"I mean, you could not find me. I was having a great
tim e,” he said. "Then I decided it was no fun losing to
guys I used to beat 6-0, 6-0.

Norris Out-Foxes Floyd
WETHERSFIELD. Conn. (U PI) - Wily old fox Ray
Floyd chased Tim Norris over the Wethersfield
Country Club golf course for four days, but he never did
catch the record-setting rabbit.
Floyd, however, could relate to the first-ever victory
by Norris, a Fresno, Calif., native who can now pay his
bills from the $54,000 jackpot he earned Sunday.
Norris, 24, blasted a S-underpar final round of 66 for
this y ear’s lowest lour total, 259, which was Just two
strokes shy of the all-time low. He led the earlier
rounds with cards of 63, 64 and 66 over the par-71
course.
"I feel blank now," said Norris, a serious, plodding
worker on the course struggling to hang on to his PGA
tour card. "This will be something I’ll remember for a
long, long time."

4

Baseball To Hold Sign Ups
The Seminole Pony Baseball and Softball league
will soon be holding its winter baseball and softball
registration for boys and girls ages seven through 16.
Registration will be held on Saturday, September 4
and Saturday, September 11 at the Seminole Pony
Baseball Complex on State Road 419 near Winter
Springs. Registration runs from 10 a.m. through 2 p.m.
Cost is $20 per child and birth certificates are required.

Rogers Does It
All At Speedway
NEW SMYRNA BEACH - David Rogers did everything
right and ended up the big winner on Saturday night at New
Smyrna Speedway. Rogers turned fast time, won his heat, won
the flip of the coin setting him on the pole and led all the way to
win the 25-lap late model main in his new Miller High Life 1982
Firebird.
But Rogers definitely did not run away with it, as he had to
contend with the extra strong challenge of second quickest
"leaping" LeKoy Porter who stayed right up on his rear
sjKiiler lap after lap, ready to take advantage of the slightest
mistake.
Third was Dick Anderson, followed by division's high point
man Joe Middleton and seasoned veteran Bob Eggert. Second
heal winner was Jim Ownby.
Joe Coupas won the thunder car feature, ahead of previous
week’s winner John Cochran. Apparent third place finisher
Pete Starr was again disqualified for an illegal carburetor,
moving Randy Tyler, Mike Fitch and Tom Balmer up in
positions three to five. Heat winners were Coupas and Chuck
Burkhalter.
Steve Rambaugh won the street stock feature, besting the
DtCandio brothers (Ron and Lynn), Mike Barfield and the new
ABC I/iunge machine of Bob Collins who won the first heat.
Second heat winner was Lynn DiCandio.
Alan Howell, a member of the Bob's Space Racers' No. 96
late-model crew, won the four cylinder feature. Second to fifth
were Charlie Tolson, Eddie Tovat, Richard Newton and Bob
Clurk.
Jay Catulano outlasted and outbanged 26 hopefuls to win the
giant demolition derby. Second was George O’Berry.
LATE MODELS
Fastest Qualifier David Roger'. Orlando. IS M l w c
First heal (10 laps) — 1 Rogers.
Second heal (10 laps) — I. Jim Ownby, New Sm yrna Beach.
Feature (IS laps) - I David Rogers. Orlando. I. LeRoy Porter,
Orlando. 3 D ick Anderson. Wildwood. 4. Jo e Middleton. So Daytona.
S Bob Eg g ert. Fort Pierce. I. David Viers. L a k e Helen, I. Jim Ownby.
New Sm yrn a Beach. I Stan Rutland, Bunnellj » Don McCalllgan,
Bunnell. 10 Roger Haliburton. Oviedo.

THUNDERCARS
Fastest Q ualifier Joe Coupas. Holly H ill, 20 I t sec.
First heat (• laps) - I Coupas
Second heat (0 laps) - I. Chuck Burkhalter, Orlando
Feature (20 laps) - I Joe Coupas, Holly Hill,- I John Cochran, Oak
Hill. I. R a n d y Tyler. Chulvota; 4 M ike Fitch. New Smyrna Beach, 5
Tom B alm er, Orlando Lap leader Coupes 1 20

STREET STOCKS
First heat (t laps)
I. Bob Collins. Orlando
Second heat i t laps/ — I LynnDiCandio. Sharpes
Feature (IS - la p s ) — I Rick Lokey. Orlando. 2. Hon DiCandio.
Sharpes. 3 Lyn n DiCandio. Sharpes; 4. M ik e Barfield. Daytona Beach.
S Bob Collins. Orlando

*

FOUR CYLINDERS

F irst heat (t lap s) — I Charlie T olson. P o ri Orange
Feature (10 laps) - I Alan Howell. Ormond Beach; 2 Charlie
Tolson. P o rt Orange. J Eddie Tovat. Apopka; 4. Richard Newlon.
Osteen. S. Bob Clark. Orlando

DEMOLITION D E R B Y
I Ja y Catalano. Orlando. I George O 'B e rry . St . Cloud

•

•

•

Sweep Lifts Cards Sky High
United P ress International
Mike Schmidt usually receives more
intentional passes than a mini-skirted
girl on a U.S. Navy base.
But Montreal Manager Jim Fanning
went against the basic idea of purposelywalking baseball's most dangerous slug­
ger Sunday and it ended up costing the
Expos.
With first base open, the tying run on
second and two out in the ninth inning,
Fanning and p itch er Steve Rogers
elected to pitch to Schmidt rather than
George Vuckovich, and the hot-hitting
third baseman unloaded his 26th homer
to give the Philadelphia Phillies a 3-1
triumph.
The late m anager Fred Hutchinson
used to say after consistently walking
Ted Williams intentionally, "I'd rather
see Ted on first base because then I know
where he is, rather than at home plate
because I don’t where he’ll wind up."
Fanning said he let Rogers make the
decision about pitching to Schmidt.
"Normally, I tell the pitcher whether
he should pitch to the man or walk him.
But in this case, Steve figured he’d get
him out," Fanning said.
Pete Rose led off the ninth with a single
and went to second on a sacrifice by
Manny Trillo. One out later, Schmidt
homered to send Rogers down to his sixth
loss in 20 decisions. It was the first
decision (hat Rogers had lost lo
Philadelphia since April 29, 1981.
Marty Bystrom allowed only three hits
in eight inning! to get the victory. Tug

National League
McGraw relieved in the ninth but was
replaced by Ron Reed after giving up a
leadoff single to Warren Cromartie. Reed
got the last three outs to gain his eighth
save.
Cardinals 12-5, Pirates 5-2
At Pittsburgh, Keith Hernandez was
the hitting star for the Cardinals,
knocking in five runs in the doubleheader to trigger the sweep. Hernandez
knocked in three runs with a triple and a
double in the first game and had three
hits in the nightcap. John Milner had a
grand slam for Pittsburgh in the opener.
Padres 6, Braves 5
SAN DIEGO (UPI) - When it rains, it
pours. This time, it was baseballs from
heaven.
After rallying lo tie it in the ninth, the
hapless Atlanta Braves dropped a 6-5
decision In 10 Innings Sunday when
center fielder Dale Murphy lost a fly ball
in the sun to open the door for the San
Diego Padres' victory.
"Usually a ball like that goes into the
sun and comes out. This one didn’t come
out," Murphy said after the Braves lost
their 12th game in the last 13 attempts
and 10 of 11 on this road swing to tumble
out of first place.
"I waited it oul and said to myself,
•Maybe this one will hit me in the glove,’"
Murphy added.
Terry Kennedy opened the 10th inning

with a single to right and Gene Richards
ran for him. Sixto Iwrzcano then hit the fly
that Murphy let drop, allowing Richards
to reach third. Luis Salazar hit loser
Steve Bedrosian's second pitch into left
field for the gamewinner.
"I was looking for a ball to hit to the
outfield," Salazar said. "We had some
very good luck in that last inning."
Luis D eleon picked up (he victory in
relief.
Giants 8, Dodgers 6
At I j i s Angeles, Darrell Evans and Jeff
taonard homered to pace the Giants to
their fourth straig h t triumph over
Fernando Valenzuela. The Giants tagged
Valenzuela for eight hits and five runs in
only three innings and helped rookie Bill
Laskey to his 12th victory.
Astros 7, Beds 3
At Cincinnati, Don Sutton, 12-8, allowed
five hits in eight innings and struck out
10, while Dickie Thon collected four hits,
including three doubles, to pace the
Reds. Reds starter Tom Seaver failed to
retire a hatter in the first inning before
being removed from the game with an
aching right shoulder. He was charged
with his 13th loss in 18 decisions.
Met! 6-5, Cubs 5-4
At New York, Ed Lynch scattered nine
hits in seven innings and George Foster
and Mookie Wilson had BBI singles in a
three-run third inning lo lead the Mets to
victory in the opener. l.eon Durham hit
two home runs, including an ins«de-thepark shot, as the Cubs salvaged a split in
the nightcap.

M j|or League Standings
By United Press International
National League
East
W L Pci
GB
47 H 571 —
St Lou
66 51 S64 1
Phila
M il
61 55 .536 Sly
Ptsbgh
60 57 .51)
7
NY.
50 V 431 14'r
Chi
51 69 425 17V&gt;
West
LOS Ang
66 S3 5S5 —
Alia
61 53 543 IV*
San Dgo
61 55 514 I ' l
San Fran
42 57 .521 4
Hous
52 ia 4S7 i ll y
Clncl
42 73 359 3)
Saturday's Rtsults
Philadelphia IS. Montreal It
Chicago 7, New York a
St. Louis 4, Pittsburgh I
Houston 2. Cincinnati 0
Atlanta 6. San Diego S
San Francisco 4. Los Angeles

2
Sunday's Results
New York S. Chicago 4, 1st
game
Chicago 4. New Yo rk S. 2nd
game
St Louis 12. Plttburgh S. 1st
game
SI. Louis 5. Pittsburgh 2. 2nd
game
Philadelphia 3. Montreal 1
Houston 7, Cincinnati 3
San Diego A. Atlanta S. 10
Innings
San Francisco I. Los Angeles
4
Today's Probable Pitchers
(All Times E DTI
Houston (R y a n
13 9)
at
Cincinnati (Shirlay a t ) ,
7:35

pm

A m erican League
East
W L PCt
584
68
M&gt;lw
63 52 548
Boston
60 54 524
Balt
58 57 504
Detroit
56 58 491
NY
55 458 487
Cleve
57 61 483
Toronto
West
66 49 574
Kan City
66 50 569
Calll
63 52 548
Chi
•
58 M 500
Seattle
52 81 441
Oaklnd
46 68 404
Texas
40 77 242
Minn

GB
—
4V&gt;
7
9'S
11
111*
12
—
V|
)
siy
IS’ y
19' y
27

Sunday's Results
Kansas C ity 6. Detroit 1
Boston 8. Baltim ore 0
Chicago 6. New York 4
Seattle 10. Minnesota 2
Toronto 1. Milwaukee 2
Oakland 1. California 2
Cleveland 6. Texas 4
Today's Pro b a b lt Pitchers
(A ll T im e t E O T )
Kansas City (B lu e 9 8 and
Black
11)
at
New
York
(Righettl 6 S and M ay 4 3), 2,
5 30 p m
Cleveland
(W aits 1 11)
al
Toronto (Gott 3 8). 7 30 p m
Seattle
(Ban nister
117) al
Detroit
(M o rris
13 11).
7 3S
pm
Baltimore (D M artinet It 10)
al Boston (R a in e y 6 4). 135
pm
Chicago
(Dotson a l l )
at
Texas (Honeycutt
5 13). 9 35

pm.
California
(Zahn 12 5)
at
Oakland (M cC atty a 2). 10 15

pm

Llnescores
Ma|or League Results
United
Press
Netiontl League
First Gam e
St. Lou
202 240 101 - 12 12 0
Ptsbg
OOO 000 401 - S 9 3
Mura and Tenace.
M cW II
Hams, Guant* (S ), Nelm ann (8)
and Pena W - M u ra 0 1 7 ). L M cWillam s (7 6). H R s — St.
Louis. Green O );
Pittsburgh,
Milner (I).
BY

Daniel Coasts By 8 Strokes
JERICHO, N.Y. (UPI) - Beth Daniel’s victory in a
$125,000 tournament was so anticlimatic — she won for
the fifth time this year to take home $18,750 —that she
herself began to wonder who would capture The Battle
For Second Place.
When the dust settled Sunday, Daniel had a tour­
nament-record, 12-under-par total of 276 for an eightstroke victory over—get ready—Martha Hansen and
Ayako Oknmoto.
l ne tournament was known as the \VU1 Classic.
"But 1 don’t want to hear anybody saying, 'Who are
these people?"’ said Daniel, 25, who boosted her 1982
winnings to $199,298. "1 think 1 deserved to win and 1
ihlnV boUy Martha and Ayako deserved to finish well.
They’re up-and-coming pros."

•

DENNIS LEONARD

TERRY FELTON

...h e lp in g h a n d

...15th s t r a i g h t lo ss

MIKE SCHMIDT
...m akes Expos pay

D O N SUTTON
...s tr ik e s o u t 10

Leonard's Helping Hand Swats Tigers
United Press International

With his fingers heated, Dennts
Iwonard figures to give Kansas City a
hand.
"He gives us a good-pitched game,"
said Royals Manager Dick Howser
Sunday after watching Ix-onard spark a
6-1 triumph over the Tigers at Detroit.
"We’re going lo have a heckuva time
winning if he doesn’t pitch well."
Bight now, though, it appears l.eonard
m ay pitch well. The right-hander,
making only his second start since suf­
fering two broken fingers, did not allow a
hit for 5 1-3 innings and scattered four
hits over eight innings.
"This is just one time out," Howser
said. "It is encouraging. You have to like
what you see. But next time out it could
be different. I'm not going to start
waving banners."
Howser would gladly postpone waving
banners if he can eventually hoist a
pennant, l-eonard’s triumph put the
Royals right on target, launching them
into first place in the AL West by a halfgame over California.
When the right-hander had his middle
and index fingers broken by Buddy Bell’s
comebacker on May 21, it seemed
Kansas City's season might end. Instead,
the Royals stayed close enough to strike
now.
"They did a heckuva Job winning while
I was hurl," U onard said. "If we were

American League
losing, it would be worse for me. It was
disappointing getting hurt. Then I came
back against Baltimore and pitched bad.
I thought, ‘What’s the deal?"’
This time, Leonard, 6-3, allowed a
seventh-inning run when rookie Glenn
Wilson put a 3-and-2 pitch into the upper
deck in right field with two out for his
sixth home run of the season and fifth in
nine days.
Dan Quisenberry pitched the ninth
inning for the Royals, allowing one hit.
The Royals scored four runs in the
fourth. Greg Pryor doubled in one run
and Willie Wilson followed with a two-run
double, before Wilson scored on Hal
McRae’s grounder.
Red Sox 8, Orioles 0
A! Boston, Glenn Hoffman and Dwight
Evans each knocked in two runs in an
eight-run seventh and Mike Torrez and
Bob Stanley combined on a six-hitter to
lead the Red Sox. Torrez was hit in the
right side of the head by a line drive off
the bat of Ken Singleton and was taken to
the hospital, where X-rays showed no
evidence of a fracture.
Mariners 10, Twins 2
At Minneapolis, Todd Cruz hit a grand
slam to cap a sevenrun Mariners sixth
and Terry Felton suffered his 15th

straight loss. Felton, 0-12, has broken the
f&gt;8-year-old record of Cleveland's Guy
Morton for the worst start to a career.
White Sox 6, Yankees 4
At Chicago, Steve Kemp’s two-run
double highlighted a four-run eighth for
the White Sox. Carlton Fisk's shot for a
single off shortstop Rodney Scott
provided in su ran ce. Dennis Lamp
worked the final 1 2-3 innings to pick up
the victory. Reliever Rich Gossage, 4-5,
look the loss.
A’s 3, Angels 2
At Oakland. Calif., Mitchell Page hit
reliever Dave Goltz' second pitch in the
bottom of the ninth for a home run to give
the A’s their victory. Reliever Tom
Underwood picked up the triumph. Brian
Downing homered for California.
Blue Jays 3, Brewers 2
At Milwaukee, Ernie Whitt singled
home Alfredo Griffin for Toronto’s
victory. Griffin opened the ninth with a
walk off losing reliever Jim Slaton,
moved to second on a sacrifice by
Damaso Garcia and scored on Whitt's
two-out single to left.
Indians 6, Rangers 4
At Arlington, Texas, Rick Manning’s
two-run single highlighted a five-run
Cleveland uprising in the sixth inning and
Miguel Dilone went 4-for-5 and drove in
two runs to lift the Indians. Ed Glynn
picked up his first save as Cleveland
snapped a six-game losing streak.

Mears Regains Confidence With Championship
MOUNT POCONO, Pa. (UPI) - One
race Is all Rick Mears needed to regain
his confidence and head him in the right
direction for a second straight CART
driving title.
Mears, admitting he was gelling a little
worried when he failed to win a race in
his last five starts after capturing the
first two races of the season, blended
experience with an experimental tur­
bocharger to break the losing streak
Sunday In the Pocono 500.
Nearing $1.5 million in caminRs in only
his sixth full season as a championship
c a r driver, Mears beat his Roger Penske
teammate Kevin Cogan by two seconds
and was sitting comfortably in the cat­
bird seat when he took the checkered
Bag.
“The car was operating where I could
lead and run comfortably," Mears said.
“ I made up my mind I was going to take
it East for 500 miles. At the start I ran
hard for a few laps and look the lead. But
then I backed down and let Mario
(Andretti) and Johnny (Rutherford) go
by me. I Just decided I would run the
sam e pace they ran, feeling I could go in
front again whenever I wanted."
Mears, clocked at 145.879 miles per
hour, really had no problems after
Rutherford crashed on the 138th lap,
suffering a broken right hand, and
Gordon Johncoek went out on the 195th
with a broken gear box.
Johncoek had been seeking to become

Racing
the only driver besides Al Unser to win
the triple crown of 500-im!e races in a
single season. He won al Indianapolis
and Michigan this year.
Earning a winner’s purse of $66,435,
Mears said he thought theJapanese-built
turbocharger “didn't make that much
difference. It was not a big deal at all. It's
the sam e as other turbochargers we have
made in the past. We were taking a
chance in using it. Ii wasn't a proven
unit. We weren’t sure how our fuel
mileage would be when we started."
Gaining the pole position Friday with
tte first 200-mph lap ever recorded al
Pocono and winning Sunday's race gave
Mears 66 points and moved him past
Johncoek into firs! place in the CART
standings with 191 Johncoek earned 24
points for a sixth-place finish and is the
runner-up with 185.
Mears and Cogan were the only drivers
Sunday to go the full 200 laps. Bobby
Rahal was third and Geoff Brabham
finished fourth, both three laps behind
ihe leaders. Tony Bettenhausen was
fifth, covering 195 laps.
Mears said, “ I felt that on any par­
ticular lap during the race, I had
everybody else on the track covered. Bui
too many things can happen. You’re
never comfortable until a race is over."
.

Mears led the field 12 limes for 142
laps. He was in front for the last 21,
wearing down Johncock’s car and
beating off Cogan’s challenge.
Penske, who has fashioned numerous
championship teams during the last
decade, was particularly delighted over
the 1-2 finish of Mears and Cogan.
"I’d been concerned in previous races
about our cars finishing," Penske said,
"but obviously with this kind of result,
It’s a great day. Kevin ran real strong at
the end and ran Gordy down, which was
terrific — especially for the point stan­
dings."
Penske hopes the team can do as well
over the next three CART races which
will be run over road courses.
Cogan, who said Penske’s only in­
struction prior to the race was to "go out
and win," admitted there was no way he
could catch his teammate at the end.
“When I was leading in the middle of
the race,” he said, "he went right by me.
He was going too fast. I knew there was
no chance I could stay with him."
Johncoek also said he couldn’t catch
Mears and was just hustling to stay
ahead of Cogan when his gear box broke.
"Naturally, I ’m disappointed at not
taking the triple crown," Johncoek said.
"When we tipped the wall during qualify­
ing and our suspension was damaged, I
thought we might be in trouble. The car
did not handle too well in the late stages
of the race."

k
I

Second Game
St. Lou
Oil 020 100 — S U 0
Ptsbgh
OOO too 001 — 2 7 1
LaPoint,
Sutter
(t )
and
Porter, Sarmiento. Romo (7),
Scurry
(f) and Nicosia W —
LaPoint (6 3) L —Sarmiento (5
3)
HR-P&gt;ttsburgh.
Madlock
1131.
First Game
Chi
002 000 011 — 4 10 3
NY
013 100 OOk - 5 I 0
M a rti. Campbell
(4),
Her
nandei 17). Tidrow
(II
and
Davis; Lynch. Scott ( I ) . Orosco
(9). Zachry (91 and Hodges W
- L y n c h (2 4) L —M a r f l (61 )
Second Game
Chi
101001010 — 6 10 2
NY
001 t » OOO — S 9 1
Kravec. Proly (6), gsmlth (9)
and
Moreland.
D a v it
(9);
Puleo. Orosco IS ) and Hodges
W - P r o ly (4 2)
L- O ro sco (2
I)
H Rt-Chlcago. Durham 2
( I I ) . New York, Foster (12)
Ph il*
000 000 012 - 3 7 1
M il
010 000 000 - 1 4 1
Bystrom, M cG raw
(9).
R
Reed (9) end Virgil, D ia l (9);
Rogers and C arttr.
W -Byt
trom (54). L — Rogers (146).
H Rs — Philadelphia, Maddox
(S). Schmid) (26)
Hous
203 101 000 - 2IS I
Clncl
010 000 002 - 1 7 2
Sutton. LaCoss (91, Roberge
(9) and Ashby,
P u jo lt
(9);
Seaver, Lelbrandt (1 ), H arris
( I ) and Van Gorder, trevino
(I).
W -Sutton
(121).
LSeaver (S 12).
(10 innings)
Alla
004 000 001 0 - S I I
Sn Dg
010 400 000 1 — 6 12 I
Niekro. Bedroslan
(7)
and
Benedict, Sinatro ( | ) ;
Lollar,
DeLeon (7) and Kennedy W —

DeLeon (5 4) L — Bedrosian i y
6) H Rs—Atlanta. Horner (24),
Chambliss (14)
San Frn
2)2 021 000 - 8 13 2
LOS Ang
010 000 023- 6 S3
Laskey.
Braining
(6),
(81. Minton (9) and Brenly;
V i l e n ; u r I 4. Beckwith (4),
Wright (6), Forster
(81 and
Scioscia.
Y eager
(8)
W—
Laskey
(12 8)
L —Valenruela
(15 9)
H R * — San
Francisco,
Evans 111), Leonard (3)
Am erican League
Kan Cty
004 000 002 - 6 10 1
Detroit
000 000 100 — 1SO
Leonard. Q uisrnberry (9) and
Wathan;
U jdu r,
Jam es
13),
Rucker (7),
Tobik g)9) and
Parrish W — Leonard (6 3) L —
Uidur (6 6) H R s —Kansas City,
M arlin (10); Detroit, G Wilson

(61
Ball
000 000 000 — 0 6 0
Boston
000 000 80x — 8 10 0
McGregor. Stoddard (7), Boddicker (7) and Nolan. Torret.
Stanley (51 and Allenson W —
Stanley (8 S) L —M cGregor (12

It)
NY
001 010 M O - 4 12 t
Chi
010 000 tlx - 6 8 3
Guidry, G o s s a g e
(7),
LaRoche
(8)
and
Cerone;
Burns. Barofas (4). Hickey 17),
Lamp (81 and H ill, Fisk (8) W
—Lamp (8 6). L — Gossage (4 5).
Toront
000 110 001 - 3 7 1
Milw
010 001 000 - 3 6 0
Clancy,
M u rra y
(9)
and
Whitt; Medich. Slaton (6) and
Yost
W —C lan cy (10 10). L Siaton (9 4). H R s —Milwaukee,
Thomas (32), Yount g )20)
Calif
100 000 001 - 2 1 0
Oaklnd
002 000 001 - 3 SO
Forsch. G o tti (8) and F er­
guson;
Kingm an,
Beard
(9),
Underwood (9) and Heath W —
Underwood (9 4)
L —G old (6
4)
HRs—California,
Downing
(18); Oakland, Page (2).
Cleve
000 015 000 - X L. Is H
Texas
000 300 010 - 4 11 1
Sorensen. Spillner (8). Glynn
(9) and Hassey; Hough. Mirabell* (6), D arw in (6). Matlack
(4) and Sundberg W —Sorensen
(101) L- H o u g h (11 10) H R Tex»s, Hostetler (21)

Leaders
Ma|or League Leaders
B y United Press International
Batting
(Basad on l.l p la it appear,
ancts a number ef games each
ttam hat playtd)
National League
8 eb h pel.
Oliver, M il
114 430 140 326
Knight. Ho
116 442 138 .312
Baker. LA
107 410 138 .313
Durhm, Ch
111 407 127 .313
L.Sm th, S
11) 435 134 308
Mdlck. Pit
US 438 131 306
Jones. SD
89 323 98 30)
Cartr. M il
109 392 1)8 M l
Leicn. SD
114 181 114 .299
Pena. Pitt
102 373 111 .298
American Ltagla
h P«».
• «b
Wilson, KC
90 189 134 144
H arrah, Cl
114 417 14) 327
Garcia. Tr
114 492 158 321
Cooper, Ml
109 457 146 319
Yount, Mil
110 4S0 14) .318
Hrbk. Mnn
102191 124 .117
M cR a , KC
113 434 137 .314
R V IC E . Bos
106 417 130 .312
M urry, Bit
101 361 112 .310
Bonnll, Tr
106 14S 107 .310
Heme Runs
National Leagut — M urphy,
All
29,
Kingman.
NY
21;
Schmidt, Phil 26; Horner, A ll
24. C arttr, Mil and Guerrero.
L A 21
A m erictn League — Thomas,
M il
32; Rt.Jackson.
Cal 22;
Thornton. Clev 26; DeCInces,
Cal, Harrah, cit and Ogllvle,
M il 24.
Runt Batltd In
National Leagua O liver,
M il 13; Murphy, A ll 12; Clark,
SF
and Hendrick,
Stl 26;
Carter, M il and Guarrero. L A
74.
American League — M c R a e .
KC
9|; Thornlon,
Clev 91;
Cooper, M il 17; Thomas. M il;
14; Lu iln tk i. Chi 10

Stolen Bases
National League — Raines,
M il S4; Moreno, Pitt St and
L.Sm llh, StL S I; Wilson, NY 44;
S4I. LA 41.
American League — Hender
son. Oak 109, G arcia. Tor 43;
J.C ru l. Sea 10. Wathan. KC
and LeFiore, Chi 29
Pitching
Victorias
National League — Carlton,
Phil 168; V aieniu ela. LA 1S9;
Rogers. M il 14 4; W elch, L A 14
2; Robinson, Pitt 13 6
American League — Gura,
KC
14 8;
Hoyt.
Chi
14 8;
Burns. Chi and Vuckovich. Mil
11 4. Morris, Del and Stleb, Tor

11 It.
Earned Run Average
(Besed an 1 inning a number ol
g a m ti each team has playtd)
National League — Laskey,
SF 3 44. Rogers, M il 2 48;;
Cindelaria. P ill and S o la Cm
2.55; Krukow. P h il 228.
American League — Underwood. Oak 291S, Sutcliffe. Cla
2912; Stanley. Bos 2 98; Witt,
Cal 102. Hoyt. Chi 1 OS
Striktouls
National Ltag ue — Soto. Cln
194; Carlton. P h il 191; Ryan,
Hou 172; Vaieniu ela. LA 114;
Sutton. Hou 112
American Lta g u e — Bannis­
ter. Sea 141; B a rk er. Clev 121.
Beattie. Sea 122. Guidry. NY
114; Eckersley. Bos 108
Saves
National Leagua —
Sutler,
SI L 24; Minton. S F 21; Garber,
All, 20; Allen. N Y and Reardon,
M il I f
American League — Fingers,
M il
22;
Quise
berry,
KC
21.
Gossage. NY 21; Caudill. Sea
21; Baroias. Chi. Davis, Minn
and Spillner' Cle IS

�PEO P LE
Evening Herald, Sanford, El

Monday, Aug. 14,1981— IB

In And Around Winter Springs

TONIGHT'S TV

Cham ber To Conduct Blood Drive
A Joint meeting of the I/mgwood-Winter Springs
Chamber of Commerce and the Greater Seminole
Chamber will be held on Aug. 23 at 11 45 a.m. at the
Quality Inn, I/mgwood.
A representative from the blood bank will give a
short presentation on the blond drive to be held on
Sept. 11, in front of the TG&amp;Y store in I/mgwood
Gary bemiller is chairman for the event.
Four local high school coaches will present a
luncheon football preview to the chamber mem­
bers.
Catherine Ray, president of the Chamber, and a
resident of 1/ingwood, and Bill Daucher, vice
president of the Chamber, and a long-time resident
of Winter Springs, are merging (marrying) on Sept.
4 at the Winter Springs Community Church.
I’m sure I speak for everyone when I say we wish
the very best for these two terrific people.
Meta Burgess says she is really excited these
days. She is planning her “first real vacation ever."
Meta is going to Mexico to see the Pyramids with a
psychic group on Sept. 23-26. She says she'll fill us in
on her trip when she gets back.
Dorothy McGonigal is home after having surgery,
and her son, Bruce, says she's doing quite well.
There are more wedding bells in the air. This time
they are for Robin Ranson and Joe Perez. They
have set Nov. 6 for the day when they'll tie the knot.
The wedding will take place at the Maitland Art
Center in the garden, amidst the flowers and

Cable Ch

It seems like this is a week for seeing old friends
My husband and I were visited by Jan and Bill Ross,
along with daughters Kathy and Juliet, whom we
haven’t seen in over a year
We all used to live in the same neck of the woods
in Ohio. They now live in Clearwater and we've
decided that's loo close to not see one another for so
long a time. It's always so good to see good friends.

Dee
Gatrell
Winter Springs
Correspondent
327-0378
&lt;hopefully i a bright blue sky.
Robin is the daughter of Mr and Mrs Ralph
Scogin of Altamonte Springs.
Our birthday wishes go to Dorlisa Jennings, Aug
2; Cindy Blackburn, Aug. 4; Wayne Robinson, Aug.
8; Kristi Moore, Aug. 21; and Danny Ienhof, Aug.
27. We wish each of you the very best birthday ever
Shelly and Kevin Moore have returned from a 3week vacation in Georgia where they visited with
their grandparents, aunts, uncles and cousins.
While their parents, Donna and Chuck, looked
forward to having some noise back in the house, I'm
not sure if they had planned on so much, all at once.
Three days after Shelly and Kevin returned, they
not only had them, but also seven other kids for the
night.
Two of the children are former Winter Springs
residents who have moved to Chicago. Nikki and
Todd Gatuso are visiting with their grandparents,
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Bott of Umgwood, and decided to
spend three days of their vacation in their former
neighborhood to see old school chums.

Andrew Camlinoe just returned from a month's
vacation in New York where he visited with his
grandparents. He wasn't home a day when he took
off on vacation with his parents, Chris and Scott
Wyse and brother, Jason, for South Florida.
Andrew returned from New York with New York
Yankee T-shirts for some of his friends and family.
If any of you have been to Sanibel and Captiva
Islands in the past, when you go again and you think
things somehow look different, you will be right.
When we were there a few weeks ago we were
surprised to see how the storm, Hurricane Alberto,
managed to change some of the land around.
At Turner Beach you can no longer park your car
and walk directly on the beach. It now has a chanel
cut through the bench with signs telling of an un­
dertow Many of the trees lining the streets have
beer, uprooted and the other are leaning sideways.
We also had a chance to visit the Thomas Edison
Museum in Ft. Myers, Thomas Edison is said to
have had a learning disability, When you see
everything he was responsible for inventing, it's
absolutely incredible.

Cable Ch

(D O

(A B C ) Orlando

dD (35)

Independent
Orlando

(D O

&lt;C0 SI Orlando

(@) ( 17)

Independent
Atlanta Ga

(N B C ) Daytona B ra th
Or lando

(10) (3)

O'lando Public
Broadcasting 4ystem

®

0

In addition lo the channels listed, cablevnion subscribers may tune m to independent channel 44
41 Petersburg, by tuning to channel 1 tuning to channel 13 which carnet sports and the Christian
Broadcasting Network (C B N )

MONDAY

by Larry Wfight

KIT 'N' C A R L Y L E u

EVENING

a \ , WAiT A M.NuTe.YoOWONT
ivw -t a f all-, u a w x m
Affee Ai l . That’s a HiYTeN scratch,
not *&gt;oe rove i;N e.

6:00
0 3 ) 0 ) 0 ( D O NEWS
3D (35 ) ANDY GRIFFITH
CD (10 ) MOVIE
Bools And Sad
dies (1937) Gen* Autry, Judith
Allen A young earl decides lo Seep
Ihe rench he has inherited instead

01 selling it

6:05

1 ii &lt;■'
’ jT)?. .1-

31(17) MY THREE SONS
6:30
0 ® NBC NEWS
[ J t O CBS NEW S
■X) O ABC NEWS
{ft) (35) CARTER COUNTRY

6:35
|JJ) (1 7) FATHER KNOWS BEST

7:00
0 ® THE UUPPET5
J &gt;O P M MAGAZINE
® Q JO K E R S WILD
3D (35 ) THE JEFFERSO N S
CD (10 ) MACNEIL / IEHRER
REPORT

7:05
J J ( 1 7 ) O R E E N ACRES

AMVETS
INSTALL

7:30
O ® ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
(f ) O CHANNEL SIX REPORTS
"The Space Shuttle from Kitty
Hawk To KSC"
® O FAMILY FEUD
ID (35) BARNEY MILLER
ED (10) DtCK CAVETT Guest S J
Pei elm an (R)

Recently
installed
officers to serve Amvets Post No. 17 am)
Auxiliary for the IUH2-s:t term are, from left,
Ktiiel franklin, out­
going president; Jo
Ann Williams, second
vice president; Ituthia
Hester, state president
of the Amvets Auxi­
liary;
W.
Agnes
Higgins, local presi­
dent of Auxiliary No.
17; Leroy Williams,
commander of Post 17;
William Seay, state
commander; Jerry
Hester, senior vice
commander; Clarence
Ford, outgoing com­
mander; and Richard
Medlock. junior vice
commander.

*|

®
PRA IRIE

0

8:00
UTTLE HOUSE ON THE

3D (35) MOVIE
Ad.entuies Ol
Don Juan" (19491 Eriol Flynn, Viveca Lindlors Don Juan invades the
court ol England and Ihe hearts ol
the English ladies
(D (10) EVENING AT POPS John
Williams and the Boston Pops
Orchestra are joined by virtuoso
yiotiniit Itjhak Perlman lor s perlormsnce ol Bruch s Violin ConcertoNo 1 (fl)

6:05
JX (17 ) MOVIE
"Easy Coma.
Easy G o " (1967) Elms Presley.
Oode Marshall A Navy frogmen
mistakenly believes he has found a
vast sunken treasure

8:30

CD

o W K R P IN CINCINNATI
(2) O BA SEBA LL Regional coverage ol California Angels al Oakland
AT of Baltimore Orioles al Boston
Bed Sos

9:00

Penchant For Pain Puzzles Woman
DEAR ABBY: I recently met a man I'll call Rick,
and we hit it off from the minute we met. He’s a
nice-looking guy who works at a health club during
the day and tends bar at a classy club three nights a
week.
One thing led to another, and he told me if we
were going to have any kind of intimate relation­
ship, he wanted to be perfectly honest with nie.
Then he said he was a "masochist." He said he likes
to be "spanked" — hard! I told him I didn't care for
violence. He said if he enjoys it, it’s not violence. He
asked me to go ahead and hit him, and I said no.
Then he asked me to think about it. It sounds weird
to me.
1 don't know what to think of him now. I like him a
lot. but I'm afraid if I go along with his wishes, he
may try to hurt me. I was married to a wife-beater
for a year and have had enough broken bones for
one lifetime.
I’m 22, and Rick is 29. Is it dangerous to get mixed
up with a masochist? And can you tell me more
about masochism? I’m not sure I understand what
it Is.
WONDERING ABOUT RICK
DEAR WONDERING: You are wise to wonder.
•‘Masochism" is a sexual perversion characterized
by a desire to be physically abused in order to
achieve sexual gratification. It can be dangerous, so
do not agree to engage in any practice that you
consider frightening, abnormal or weird.
DEAR ABBY: A couple we have known for many
years visited us recently. We truly love them as
friends, but the lady is a cleaning nut! Believe me, I
am a very good housekeeper and I am nol lazy, but
just watching her digging in the corners wore me
out.

Dear
Abby

DEAR ABBY: 1 am wriling about an office
problem that is creating friction here at work.
We have a large office with three clerks, and two
1 don't mind if a houseguest helps with the dishes
or keeps the guest room picked up, but this friend of them have radios that they play all day, every
was vacuuming and dusting the whole time she was day. The stations selected are hard rock and the
here. She made me feel "dirty" and hurt my volume Is loud. I have asked both clerks to keep the
volume down, but they persist in keeping it up to
feelings.
Why would a guest come into someone’s home and what I find a distracting level.
work like a horse? I wouldn't do this to my own
I am 20 years older than the other two "girls" and
family. Abby, please tell folks that when they’re
was not brought up to appreciate rock music. I have
guests they should relax and not work so hard.
no objection to soothing music; In fact, I like it. My
FEELING DIRTY IN KENTUCKY
supervisor, with whom 1 have talked about this
DEAR FEELING; I'll tell them, but I doubt if It
problem, agrees that the volume should be kept
will help compulsive cleaners. Such people work
down but does little to enforce it.
like a horse, digging and cleaning, not because they
think the place is “ dirty," but because it provides
We are working in an office at a college, not a
regular "business" office.
an outlet for their nervous energy.
DEAR ABBY: I-ast year at a county fair I won
first place in the pie category with “Dear Abby’s
Pecan Pie." This year I won first place with your
"Dear Abby's Cheesecake." I really am thrilled and
want to thank you for sharing your terrific recipes.
Love,
MRS. DIXIE CORUL.E. BLAINE, KY.
DEAR DIXIE: My pleasure. And II anyone else
out there wants the above-mentioned recipes,
they're yours for the asking. Write to: Dear Abby,
P.O. Box 38923, Hollywood, Calif, 90038. Please

When we look i t the g i li x y Andromeda, we are seeing
light that left it before the first men appeared on Earth.

SUMMER LIQUIDATION

Sq£c
A LL ROSES
Reg.
$7.50-*9.00
$9.SO
J f.1 V

enclose a stamped, self-addressed envelope.
What you don't know can hurt you. For Abby’s
booklet, “ What Teen-Agers Ought to Know," send
12 and a long, stamped, self-addressed envelope to
Teen Booklet, P.O. Box 38923, Hollywood, Calif.
90038.

$£00
M O RRIS

F E R N S A E X O T IC P L A N T S

PH. 322-397*
*01 Celery Ave. • S anford

Do you think that there is any way out of this
dilemma? Do you think that rock music has a place
in offices? I would like your thoughts on this and any
solution (hat you think we could come up with.
NO NAME. PLEASE
DEAR NO NAMES: Regardless ol what kind of
office It is, music of aiiy kind at a disturbing level
should lie prohibited. Complain to your supervisor
again, and if nothing is done to Improve the
situation, complain to the person who supervises the
supervisor.

Leisure Time Classes
All of the following classes begin during the
week of Aug. 31, under the leisu re Time
Program at Seminole Community College.
COMMUNITY CHORUS (evening class) Offers a wide variety of types and periods of
choral literature. Designed primarily as a
form of recreation and cultural enrichment for
college students and members of the com­
munity.
CONDITIONING (evening class) — Modern
day conditioning using (he Nautilus equip­
ment. Jogging and calisthenics are also a pari
of (he program.
MODERN DANCE (evening class) —
Instruction in fundamental modem dance
techniques. Emphasis is placed on developing
skills in expressing elements of rhythm,
design and movement.

COMMUNITY BANK (evening class) - An
organization open to anyone in the community
interested in performing all styles of concert
band literature. No audition is necessary. Any
band instrument will be acceptable.
FITNESS AND FIGURE CONTROL
(evening class) - Instruction in ways of
improving fitness and appearance through
diet and exercise. Each student participates in
endurance aclivilics, flexibility exercises and
muscle strengthening activities.
BAI.1ET (evening class) — Instruction
through movement to music. Students will
learn to carry themselves with correct
posture, develop Iheir physical fitness,
stamina, control, flexibility and coordination
through classical ballet techniques.

4.30
4 NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT

0

4 45
12 I 17) MISSION IM POSSIBLE

o
®
MOVIE
Loving You"
(1947) Elvis Presley. Lllabelh Scott
A small I own smger meets a hard■•oiled press agent who transforms
Im Into an overnlghl sensation IR)
D O M *A -S‘ M

_____ TUESDAY_____
MORNING
5:05

31 (17) RAT PATROL (THU)
5:20
32 (1 7 1WORLD AT LARGE (MON)
® Q

5:25
CELEBRITY REVUE

5:30
0 iD WEATHER (TUE-FRI)
(4 1 O SUMMER SEM ESTER
31 (17) IT'S YOUR B U SIN ESS
(MON)
5:35
32 (17) WORLD At LARGE (WED.
THUI
5:45
32 ( 17) W O Rl 0 AT LARGE (TUE)

6:00
O ( ® EARLY TODAY
( J o CABLE NEWS
(7 O SUNRISE
3D (35 ) JIM BA K K ER
J i t 17) NEW S
630
Q (J ) TOOAY IN FLORIDA
® Q ABC NEWS THIS MORNING

CD (10) GREAT PERFORMANCES
Dance In America Two Duets
Mikhail Baryshnikov and Natalia
Makarova perform Jerome Rob­
bins' "Other Dances' lo music by
Chopin, and lb Andersen and
Healher Walts perform Paler Mer­
lin t "Calcium Night Light" lo music
by Charles Ives (R)

9:30
(X) Q FILTHY RICH The greedy
Becks try to disprove Wild Bill s kin­
ship with a blood Iasi

10:00

(D Q LOU GRANT
3D (35) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
NEWS
OD (10) JAZZ AT THE MAiNTENANCE SHOP "Gleet Omtara (No
3)" Barney Keeael. Herb Eft* and
Charlie Byrd pertorm from Ihe
Maintenance Shop at Iowa Slate
University (R)
10:05
31(17) NEWS

6:45
(J)

t COUPLES
I O 'T 'O N E W S
| t (35) BIG VALLEY

12:30
4 NEWS
5 O THE YOUNG AND THE
RESTLESS
( J O RYAN S HOPE

700
O 3 ) today
( D O m o r n in g NEWS
(71 o QOOO MORNING AMERICA
31: (351 CA SPER AND FRIENDS
CD 110) VILLA ALEGRE ( R ) g

7:05

0 ® (D 0 (7 )0

7:30
3D (35) SCOOBY DOO
CD (10) SESAM E STREET (R) g
7:35
32 (17) I DREAM OF JEANNIE

000
3D (35) GREAT SPACE COASTER
8:05
52 (17 ) MY THREE SONS

GD (10) POSTSCRIPTS
11:05
3 2 (1 7 ) ALL IN THE FAMILY

11:30
O (3) TONIGHT Guest host Joan
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Ihe detectives al Scotland Yard and
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Ph. 377 6461
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�J B — Evening Herald, Sanford, F I,

Legal Notice
N O T IC E OF P U B L IC
H E A R IN G
T H E B O A R D OF C O U N T Y
C O M M IS S IO N E R S
OF
S E M IN O L E COUNTY will hold a
pubhe bearing in Room 300 ol I he
Sem m o le County C ourthouse,
Sanlord, Florida, on A U G U ST 24
19B3 at 7:00 P M . or as soon
thereafter as possible, lo consider
a specific land use amendment to
the
Sem in o le County
Com
prehensive Plan and R E Z O N IN G
ol the described properly
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 JS
W H IC H
A M E N D S T H E D E T A IL E D LA N D
U SE
ELEM EN T
OF
THE
S E M IN O L E
C O UN TY
CO M
P R E H E N S IV E
PLA N
F RO M
H IG H 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 FO R T H E
P U R P O S E OF R E Z O N IN G F R O M
R 3 M U L T I F A M IL Y D W E L L IN G
D IS T R IC T
TO C 2 R E T A I L
C O M M E R C IA L .
T H E
F O L L O W IN G
D E S C R IB E D
PRO PERTY
PA RC EL B
From the NW corner ol the S W 'a
ol the S W ’* ol Section 34 Township
71 South, Range 30 East, Seminole
Coumy. Florida, run S 03 degrees
38' 41" E 560 53 leel along the
West line o* Ihe said SW 1* ot the
SW '* tor Ihe point ot beginning ol
this description Run thence N 88
degrees 01' J l " E 381 94 feet
parallel with the South line ot Ihe
said S W ’ i lo the westerly right ol
way line ol Slate Road No 436,
thence run S 31 degrees S4' 3S" E
408 73 leet along the said westerly
right ot w ay line o4 Slate Road No
, 436. thence run S M degrees 0 1 '3S"
W SI I 06 leel along a line parallel
with the South llneol the said SW '*
ol the S W '. to Ihe west line ol Ihe
said S W 1a ol the SW'a, thence run
N 07 degrees 78' 41" W 318 63 leet
along the West line ol Ihe said
SW 'a ol Ihe SW 'a lo Ihe Point ol
Beginning
Containing 3 7938
Acres 'Subject to any easements,
rights ol way or restrictions ot
record
PA RC EL C
From the IIW corner ol the SW' a
ot Ihe SW '» ot Section 34, Township
71 South, Range 30 East, Seminole
County, Florida, run S 03 degrees
38' 41” E 939 14 leet along the
West line ol the said SW'a ol the
SW 'a lor the point ot beginning ol
me description. Run thence N 88
degrees 03' IS " E Sll 06 leet
parallel with the South line ot the
said S W ’ a to Ihe Westerly right ot
way line ot State Road No 436
thence run S 73 degrees 54' 3S" E
414 77 feci along the sad westerly
right ol w ay ol Stale Road No 436.
thence run S 88 degrees 03' 35" W
M3 61 feet along the South line ol
me said SW 'a ot the SW'a to the
SW corner ol the sad SW'a ot the
SW 'a thence run N 03 degrees 38
41" W 384 73 leet along the west
line of me said SW 'a ol the SW 'a to
the Point ol Beginning Containing
S 1836 A cre s
Sublect lo any
easem ents, rights Ol way or
restrictions ot record
Further described as on the
West S'de ol SR 436, 300 teel South
ot Cassa Atoma W ay Consisting ot
8 9 acres M O L (OIST No 1)
A P P L IC A T IO N MAS B E E N
S U B M IT T E D BY R O B E R T B
SC M U M A K ER K W A LTER
E
JU D G E
Further, me PLA N N IN G A ND
Z O N IN G
C O M M IS S IO N
OF
S E M IN O L E COUNTY will hold a
public hearing in Room WO ol Ihe
Sem inole County Courthouse,
Sanlord, Florida. on AUGUST 4,
1983 AT 7 00 P M , or as soon
thereafter as possible, to review,
bear
com m ents
and
m ake
recommendations to the Board ot
County Commissioners on the
above captioned ordinance and
reroning
Additional information may be
obtained by contacting the Land
Management Manager at 133 4110,
Ext 160
Persons unable to attend the
hearing who wish to comment on
the proposed actions may submit
written statements lo the Land
Management Division prior to Ihe
scheduled public heannq Persons
appearing at the hearings m ay
submit written statements or be
heard orally
Persons a re advised that, It they
decide to appeal any decision
made at these meetings, they will
need a record ol the proceedings,
and, lor such purpose, they may
need to ensure that a verbatim
record ol the proceedings is made,
w hich
re c o rd
Includes
Ihe
testim o n y and evidence upon
which the appeal is to be based per
Section 766 0105, Florida Statutes
Board ol County
Commissioners
Seminole County, Florida
By Robert Sturm,
Chairm an
Attest Arthur M Beckwith, J r
Publish Ju ly 76, A August 7. 16.
1983
O E X 101

N O T IC E OF S H E R IF F 'S
SA LE
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
that by virtue ol that certain W rit
ol Eaecuhon issued out ot and
under the seal ol the CO UNTY
Court ot Seminole County, Florida,
upon a final judgement rendered
in the aforesaid court on Ihe 70th
day ol M ay, A O , 19*7. In lhal
certain case entitled, Sun Bank,
N A I k a Sun Bank ol Seminole
Plaint ill, vs Je r r y Ann M. Greer,
Defendant, which aforesaid W rit
ol Execution was delivered to me
as Sheriff ol Seminole County,
Florida, and I have levied upon the
lo llo w ln g d escrib ed property
owned by Je r r y Ann M Greer,
said properly being located in
Seminole County, Florida, more
p articularly described as tallows
Assorted Clothing: 5 Slack Suits,
75 Blouses. I Sweater. I Dress, I
Bell and one chain with heart
shaped charm .
Being stored at A J
Loosing
Transfer &amp; Storage In Sanlord,
Florida P ro p erly to be sold In a
lot
and tne undersigned as Sheritl of
Seminole County. Florida, will at
11.00 A M
on Ihe 74th day ol
August. A D 1987. filler lor sale
and sell lo the highest bidder, tor
cash, subject lo any and a ll
enisling liens, al the Front (W est)
Door at the steps ol Ihe Seminole
Counly Courthouse In Sanlord.
F lo rid a , the e b o v t described
personal properly
That said sale is being made lo
satisfy the term s ol sa d Writ ol
Etecution
John E Polk.
Sheritl
Svn ih d le Counly, Florida
P i biisn August 7, t, 16. 73, with tinsale on August 74. 1917
D EX 5

l / x

Monday, Aug. U , i m

Legal Notice
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
Notice Is hereby given that we
are engaged In business at 10413
G ro v e Court, O rla n d o 33810,
Seminole County, Florid a under
the fictlt'tws name ot B U R P E E 'S
LA W N S E R V IC E , and lhal we
intend to register said name with
C lerk of the C irc u it Court,
Seminole County, Flo rid a in ac
cordancewiththc provisions ot the
Fictitious Name Statutes. To w a
Section 865 09 Florida Statutes
1957
Signatures Beth A Burpee
Bruce Burpee
Publish Ju ly 36 ft. August 7, 9, 16,
1987
D E X 141
IN T H E C IR C U IT CO U RT OF
T H E E IG H T E E N T H JU O IC IA L
C IR C U IT ,
IN
ANO
FO R
S E M IN O L E CO UNTY. F L O R IO A
C IV IL ACTION
Case No, 82 1417 CA 09 L
F IR S T F E D E R A L S A V IN G S 8.
LO A N
A S S O C IA T IO N
OF
O RLAND O, a corporation.
PI.lint ill,
vs.
B R U C E G W IN T E R and B O N N IE
L W IN T E R , his wile, C IT IC O R P
P E R S O N TO P E R S O N F IN A N
C IA L C E N T E R O f F L O R ID A ,
INC . a Florida corporation and
ANN L C H A M B E R S .
Defendants
N O T IC EO F A C TIO N
TO
B R U C E G W IN T E R and
B O N N IE L W IN T E R ,
his wife
YO U A R E N O T IF IE D that an
action to lorectose a mortgage on
Ihe following property In Seminole
County, Florida
Lot
75, W E K IV A
H IL L S .
SEC T IO N N IN E, according to Plat
thereof as recorded in Plat Book
77. Paqes 18 and 19. Public
R eco rd s ot Sem inole Counly
Florida
has been Med against you and you
are required lo serve a copy ol
your written defenses, II any, lo it
on Carey L Hill, ol G IL E S ,
H E D R IC K A RO BIN SO N , P A ,
plaintiff's attorney, whose address
is 109 East Church Street, Suite
301, Orlando, Florida 37801, on or
belore October 5, 1913. and l.le Ihe
original with ihe clerk ol this court
either belore service on plaintiff's
atto rn ey
or
im m e d ia te ly
thereafter; otherwise a default
will be entered against you lor the
rebel demanded in the Complaint
W IT N E S S my hand and the seal
ol this Court on July 30. 1983
(S E A L )
Arthur H Beckwilh J r
Clerk of Ihe Circuit Courr
B y E v e Crabtree
Deputy Clerk
G IL E S . M EO R IC K A
RO BIN SO N . P A
O RLAND O, FLO R ID A
Publish August 2, 9, 16. 73, 1982
D E Y 23
N O T IC E O F P U B L IC
H EA R IN G
T H E BO ARO OF C O U N T Y
C O M M IS S IO N E R S
OF
S E M IN O L E COUNTY will hold a
public hearing In Room 200 ot the
S e m in o le 'C o u n ty Courthouse,
Sanlord, Florida, on A U G U ST 24,
1982 al 7 00 P M . or as soon
thereafter as possible, lo consider
a specific land use amendment lo
the
Seminole County
Com
prehensive Plan and R E Z O N IN G
ot the described property
AN O RD IN A N C E A M E N D IN G
O R D IN A N C E
77 7S
W H IC H
A M E N D S THE D E T A IL E D LA N D
U SE
ELEM EN T
OF
THE
S E M IN O L E
COUNTY
CO M
P R E H E N S IV E
PLA N
FRO M
LO 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
FO R
THE
P U R P O S E OF R E Z O N IN G F R O M
R 1A
S IN G L E
F A M IL Y
D W E L L IN G D ISTRIC T TO R 3
ONE
AND
TW O
F A M IL Y
D W E L L IN G
D IS T R IC T
T H E F O L L O W IN G D E S C R IB E D
PRO PERTY
Commence al Ihe most Nly
corner ol Lot 17, Block C, Meredith
Manor, Nob Mill Section, P B 9, Pgs
S4 A SS, Seminole Counly, Florida,
and run S 37 degrees 43' 30" W,
along Ihe W iy line of said Lot 17, a
distance ot 20 It tor a P O B . thence
run N 57 degrees 14' 30" W 29 II to
the E ly line ol Relocated Nor
Ihwood Drive, thence run N Ety
along ihe arc ot a curve concave to
the N W having a radius ol 923 92 It
a distance ol US 23 11. thence S 66
degrees SI' SS" E 168 80 tl to ihe
W ly
R W line ot East Lake
Brantley Drive, thence SW Iy along
said R W line ol Ea s t Lake
Brantley Drive, thence SW Iy along
said R W and along Ihe arc ot a
curve concave to the NW having a
radius ot 1117 93 it, a distance of
146 71 tt. thence N 57 degrees 14'
30" W 147 87 II, lo Ihe P O B
tOescr.bed as being in the general
location of I ' i blocks North ol SR
434 on East Lake Brantley Drive,
Meredith Manor I ID IS T R IC T No
3)
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
M AYO
G R A H A M P Z I I 4 821 46
Further, the P L A N N IN G ANO
Z O N IN G
C O M M IS S IO N
OF
S E M IN O L E COUNTY w ill hold a
public hearing in Room 300ot the
Sem in o le Counly Courthouse,
Sanford, Florida, on A U G U S T 4,
1982 AT 7:00 P,M . or as soon
thereafter as possible, to review,
h ear
com ments
and
m ake
recommendations to the Board of
County Commissioners on the
above captioned ordinance and
reioning
Additional information m ay be
obtained by contacting the Land
Management Manager at 371 4330,
E k l 160
Persons unable to attend the
hearing who wish lo comment on
Ihe proposed actions m ay submit
w ritten statements lo the Land
Management Division prior to Ihe
scheduled public hearing, Persons
appearing at Ihe hearings may
submit written statements or be
heard orally
Persons are advised that, if they
decide to appeal any decision
made a l these meetings, they w ill
nerd a record ol Ihe proceedings,
and, lor such purpose, they may
need to ensure that a verbatim
record ol the proceedings is made,
w h ich
reco rd
Includes
Ih e
testim o n y and evidence upon
which the appeal is lobe based per
Section 788 OIOS, Florida Statutes
Board ol County
Commissioners
Seminole County, Florida
By Robert Sturm.
th a m a n
Attest Arthur h Stck w ilh J r
Publish Ju ly 78. A August 7. 16.
1917
D E X 100

Legal Notice
N O T IC E OF P U B L IC
H E A R IN G
THE B O A R D O F CO UNTY
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 will hold 4
public hearing in Room 700 ol Ihe
Seminole County Courthouse,
Sanlord, Florida, on A U G U ST 74,
1983 al 7.00 p m , or as soon
thereafter as possible, to consider
a specific land use amendment to
the Sem inole
C ounly
Com
prehensive P la n and R E Z O N IN G
ol 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 2S
W H IC H
A M EN D S T H E D E T A IL E D LAND
U SE
ELEM EN T
OF
THE
S E M IN O L E
COUNTY
COM
P R E H E N S IV E
PLA 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
Pu r p o s e o f r e z o n in g f r o m
R 3A
M U LTI
F A M IL Y
D W E L L IN G D IS T R IC T TO C l
R E T A IL C O M M E R C IA L OR OP
O F F IC E
D IS T R IC T .
THE
F O L L O W IN G
D E S C R IB E D
PRO PERTY
The E a s t 1a ol Ihe SW 1&lt; ol Sec
3A21S30E. lying North ol SR 476;
plus the E 700 II ot the SW 1v ot the
SW ' . of Sec 36 21S B E North ol
Railroad R W (less the North 30 II
of thr E 1j ol Ihe SW 1. ol Set 36
SIS IDE. also less Railroad R W
and less all of the property North
ot the Railroad R W Consisting ol
4 4 acres M O L
(Described as
being in the general location ol
Bear Gull Road, West between
Aloma (S R 426) and railroad
tracts, opposite Trinity Prep )
IDIST It
A P P L IC A T IO N
H AS B E E N
S U B M IT T E D B Y A R T H U R M
BARR PZI8 4 821 49
Further, the P L A N N IN G AND
ZO NING
C O M M IS S IO N
OF
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y will hold a
public hearinq m Room 300 of the
Seminole County Courthouse,
Sanlord. Florida, on A U G U ST 4,
1982 AT 7 00 P M , or as Soon
thereafter as possible. Ip review,
hear com m ents
and
make
recommendations to the Board ot
County Commissioners on the
above caphoned ordinance and
reioning
Additional information may be
obtained by contacting the Land
Management Manaqer al 131 4330,
Ekt 160
Persons unable lo attend the
hearing who w s h to comment on
the proposed actions may submit
written statements to the Land
Management Division prior to the
scheduled public hearing Persons
appearing at the hearings may
submit written statements or be
heard orally
Persons a rc advised that, it they
decide to appeal any decision
made at these meetings, they will
need a record ol the proceedings,
and. tor such purpose, they may
need to ensure Inal a verbatim
record of the proceedings is made,
which re co rd
inclu d es
the
testimony and evid ence upon
which the appeal is to be based
Board Ol County
Commissioners
Sem.nolc County. Florida
By Robert Sturm,
Chairman
Attest Arthur H Beckwith, Jr
Publish July 76. A August 7. 16,
1982
O E X 98

Legal Notice
IN T H E C IR C U IT COURT OF
TH E E IG H T E E N T H JU O IC IA L
C IR C U IT
IN
A ND
FO R
S E M IN O L E COUNTY. F L O R ID A
P R O B A T E D IV ISIO N
F I L E N U M B E R M 39$C P
IN R E : T H E E S T A T E OF
M A R G A R E T PLA CID O .
Deceased
N O T IC E O F ACTION
TO
p h i l O M E N A P l a c i DO and all
parties having or claiming to have
any rights, title or Interest as heirs
ot the Estate ol Margaret Placido
YO U
ARE
H EREBY
N O T IF IE D that a Petition to
Determine Heirs under the Estate
ot M argaret Placido has been tiled
with the Probate Court ot the
Eighteenth Judicial Circuit in and
for Seminole Counly. Florida,
bearing case number 80 395 CP,
and you are required to serve a
copy ot your claims, it any, to
JA C K T B R ID G E S . E S Q U IR E .
OF C L E V E L A N D A B R ID G E S ,
Post Otlice Drawer Z, Sanlord.
Florida, 32771, on or before Ihe
llth day ol September. 1997, and
tile the original with the Clerk of
this Court, either before service
upon P e t it io n e r ’s Attorney or
im m e d ia te ly therealter
any
(ailure ol the above named or
designated persons to tile and
claim on or before the 13th day of
September, 1987, may result in a
denial of your claim and same will
be forever barred
W IT N E S S my hand and the seal
ot the Court on this 6th day ol
August. 198?
(S E A L I
A R T H U R H B E C K W IT H J R
Clerk ol the Circuit Court
BY Anna M Golden
Deputy Clerk
JA C K T B R ID G E S , E S Q U IR E
of C L E V E L A N D A B R ID G E S
Post Ottlce Draw er Z
Sanlord. Florida 37771
Telephone (30S) 17? 1314
Attorney tor Petitioner Personal
Representative
Publish August 9, 16, 73, 10. 1987
D E Y 59

30 A p a rtm e n ts

IS—Help Wanted

CLASSIFIED ADS
Seminole

Orlando -Winter Park

322-2611

831-9993

B R A K E &amp; F R O N T EN D
E &lt; p rrirn c rd m e ch an ic with
tools A references - eicellent
income and hn^et ts Call Carl
373 596e

CLASSIFIED DEPT
HOURS
8 00 A M , -

H O P M

M ONDAY thru F R ID A Y
SA T U R D A Y 9 Noon

RATES

52,00 Minimum
3 Lines Minimum

DEADLINES
Noon The Day Before Publication

F U L L time RN 7 3 shdt.
La k e vew Nursing Center
919 E 2nd SI

it’s easy to place a Classified Ad
W e lt even help you word
it C all 327 2611

O S T E E N resid ents
Avon
representatives needed to sell
■n Osteen and Deltona Free
kit Call 574 4053

7 B D R M . 1 Bath, ups'a rs
S2S0mo HOOdamage
Phone 831 4479

Sunday - Noon Friday

3—Cemeteries
2 C E M E T E R Y lots and vaults
Oaklawn Memorial Park SBOO
172 9721

5—Lost &amp; Found
LOST black cane witn silver
head Vicinity 432 W Crystal
Dr , Sanford, R e w a rd lor
return 323 7256

6 -Child Giro
IF you w art a mature babysitter
who loves chitdren, bring them
to my home 373 8359
W IL L B A B Y S IT
IN M Y H O M E
371 0718
C H IL D Care In my home State
licensed and experienced II
years Prefer tl p m to 7 a m
shift Sanlord Area 332 2715

IN T H E C IR C U IT COURT, IN
IT—Instructions
ANO F O R S E M IN O L E COUNTY,
F L O R ID A
C IV IL A C TIO N NO. 82J4lf-CA OF S P E C IA L summer proqram lor
6 1?
yea r
olds
W eekly
P
swimming, movies, skating
F IR S T F E D E R A L SA V IN G S AND
LO A N
A S S O C IA T IO N
OF
Included Calf 173 8*34
S E M I N O L E C O U N T Y , a corporation organiied and ekistlng
12—Special Notices
under Ihe La w s ol The United
States ot Am erica,
vs
IM E C O U N T R Y Attic 604 W
E D W A R D C SC H U LZ and wife,
11th St is open tor business
BARBARA
L . S C H U L Z , and
and is taking handmade crafts
F L O R ID A N A T IO N A L BAN K AT
and arts on consignment Call
O RLAN D O ,
391 5758 171 6264
Defendants
N O T IC E OF S A L E
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
18— Help Wanted
lhal pursuant to Final Judgment ol
Foreclosure rendered on Ihe 6lh
day ol Aug . 1987, in that certain
M E C H A N IC good w llh car
cause pending In Ihe Circuit Court
burelors. AC, and tront ends
in and lor Sem inole County,
Ekcellent opportunity, salary
F lo rid a ,
w h erein
F IR S T
and commission, uniforms and
F E D E R A L S A V IN G S AND LOAN
holidays Enper ienerd only
A SSO C IA TIO N OF S E M IN O L E
574 5196
C O U N TY, a corporation organited
and ekistlng under the Laws ol The
IT ’5 TOY P A R T Y T IM E
United Stales ot America, Is
New hostess program! 200 new
| P la in t ltl. and
EO W A R D
C
toys, gilts, book early
{70
SC H U LZ and wile. B A R B A R A L
tree gilts, plus any catalog
SC H U LZ.
and
F L O R ID A
Item ' r price lor party now
N A TIO N A L B A N K AT O RLAN D O
thru Sept 15 Hiring toy party
are Defendants, Civil Action No
demonstrators too Free 5300
IN THE C IR C U IT CO URT OF 82 2587 CA 09 P . I, A R T H U R H
kit 339 1120
B
E
C
K
W
IT
H
.
JR
.
Clerk
ol
Ihe
THE E IG H T E E N T H JU D IC IA L
aforesaid Circuit Court, will at
C IR C U IT .
IN
AND
FO R
It 00 a m , on the 30th day of
S E M IN O L E COUNTY- FLO R IO A
August. 19B7, otter lor sale and sell
CASE NO 82 757 CA 09 G
to Ihe highest bidder tor cash at
IN T H E C IR C U IT COURT OF
C O M F O R T A B L E M O R T G A G ES.
the West front door ol the Cour
T H E E IG H T E E N T H JU D IC IA L
INC . a South C a ro lin a cor
(house in Sem inole Counly,
C IR C U IT
IN
ANO F O R
potation.
S E M IN O L E , F LO R ID A
Plaint III, Florida, m Sanlord, Florida, Ihe
follow ing d escrib ed property,
C A SE NO I J I J t f CA 29G
vs ■
IN R E T H E P E T IT IO N OF
situated and being in Seminole
SUN R IS E E R E C T O R S . IN C , a
County. Florida, lo wit
T IM O T H Y
W A LTER
ROT
Florid a co rp o ratio n ,
K E V IN
TINGM AUS.
Unit I I . Building C. COACH
KNIGHT and P A M E L A K N IG H T
tor the Adoption ot V E R O N IC A
LIG H T E S T A T E S , SECTION II. a
his wile, and M O R T O N
B
L Y N N E (H E R N A N D E Z ) ROT
Condominium, according to the
G IL B E R T
TIN G H A U S,
D e cla ra tio n ol Condominium,
Defendants
am lnor child
recorded in Official Records Book
C L E R K 'S
N O T IC E OF ACTION
1772, Page 1910, ot the Public
N O T IC E OF S A L E
TO
M E L V IN H E R N A N D E Z
Records ol Sem inole County,
NOTICE IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
whose present resident is unknown
that pursuant to a Fin a l Judgment Florida
and whose last known residence
Said sale w ill be made pursuant
dated Ihe 6lh day ol August, 1992,
was c 0 Carrie Hunt, 3160 Banter
to and In order to satisfy the terms
and entered in C ivil Action No 82
Street, Lumberton. N C
ol said Fin al Judgment
757 CA 09 G in Ihe Circuit Court ot
YOU A R E N O T IF IE D that an
the Eighteenth Judicial Circuit, in (S E A L )
action lor the adoption ol
A R T H U R M B E C K W IT H , JR
and tor Seminole County Florida,
V E R O N IC A
LYN N E
(H E R
C L E R K OF T H E C IR C U IT
w h e r e in ,
CO M FO RTA BLE
N A N D E Z I R O T T IN G H A U S has
COURT
M O R T G A G E S , IN C .,
I* the
been tiled agamst you and you are
B y: Carrie E Buetlner
P la in tltl,
and
SU N
R IS E
required lo serve a copy ot your
Deputy Clerk
E R E C T O R S . IN C ., a Flo rid a
written delenses, if any, to It or*
Phillip H Logan ot
corporation. K E V IN K N IG H T and
W IL L IA M A L E F F L E R , III,
S
H
IN
H
O
L
5
E
R
,
L
O
G
A
N
.
MON
P A M E L A K N IG H T , his wife, and
P e titio n e r's Attorney, whose
C R IE F
MORTON B G IL B E R T , are the
address Is POST O F F IC E BOX
AND B A R K S
DelendAntt, I, Arthur H Beck
2398, S A N FO R D . F L O R ID A , 3777 1
Posl o illc e Bok 7279
with, Jr., Clerk ot the above
0029, on or belore Augusl 77, 1982,
Sanlord, Florida 32771
entitled Court will sell lo tbe
and tile the original with the Clerk
Attorneys lor Plaintltl
highest and best bidder, or bidders
ol this Court either before service
I30SI 371 3660
tor cash, at the west front door ol
on Petitioner s Attorney or Im
Publish August 9. 16. 1982
the Seminole County Courthouse,
mediately thereafter, otherwise a
D E Y 58
in Sanlord, F lorida at 11 00 o'clock
default wdl be entered against you
A M . on Ihe lis t day ot August
tor the relief demanded In the
Complaint or Petition
1987, the follow ing described
IN TH E C IR C U IT COURT, IN
properly as'set torn* in sa&gt;d Final
W IT N E S S my hand and the seal
AND F O R S E M IN O L E COUNTY,
Judgment, situate in the County ol
ot this Court on Ju ly 23, 1983, 1982
F L O R ID A
Semmole, Slate ol Florida, lo wit
AS C L E R K OF TH E COURT
CASE NO. 10 1187 CA 01 P
Lot No 179. S U N R IS E UNIT
B y: Catherine M Evans
L U K E AMOS ST A LL W O R T H ,
TWO B " according to Ihe Plat
As Deputy Clerh
Plaintltl,
thereof as recorded in Plat Book
Publish Ju ly 36 ft, August 7. 9. 16,
vs
74. Page 63. Public Records ol
1982
M A R Y S T A L L W O R T H BROWN,
Seminote County. Florida
D E X 148
Defendant
All ol said lands lying and being
N O T IC E O F S A L E
N O T IC E OF S H E R IF F 'S
in Seminole County, Florida
NOT IC E is hereby given that at
SA LE
W IT N ESS my hand a &gt;d Ihe
It 00o clock In Ihe lorenoonon the
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
otlicial seal ol this Court at San
1st day of September. 1912, at the
that by virtue ol that certain Writ
lord, Seminole Counly, Florida,
front tW est) door ol the Seminole
ol Execution issued out ol and
this 6lh day ot August. 1983
Counly Courthouse In Sartlord,
under the seal ot Ihe County Court
(S E A L )
Florida, the property hereinafter
ot Orange Counly. Florida, upon a
A RTH UR H B E C K W IT H JR
final judgement rendered in the
described wilt be ottered lor public
Clerh gt Circuit Court
sale, to the highest and best bidder
aforesaid court on the 12th day ol
BY Susan E Tabor
tor cash pursuant lo an Order ol
July. A D 1983. In that certain
Oeputy Clerk
Court entered in the case entitled
case entitled. New Careers, Inc
Publish August 9. 16. 1987
"Lu ke Amos Stallworth. Plaintltl,
Plaintltl, vs Tony Lee Creamer,
D E Y 61
vs M a r y Sta llw o rth Brown,
Delendant. which aforesaid Writ
Defendant." being Case No 80
ol Execution was delivered to me
1187 CA 09 P, Circuit Court In and
as Sheritl of Seminole County,
N O T IC E
lor Seminole County, Florida, Ihe
Florida.and 1have levied upon the
OF
properly to be sold being described
lo llow ln g described property
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
as follows:
owned by Tony Lee Creamer by
TO WHOM IT M A Y C O N C ER N
Begin at a Point 10 0 chains
(Melinda Cream er I said property
NOT ICE is hereby given that the
being located ,n Seminole County,
I860 00 leet I N orlhot Ihe Southeast
undersigned, p u rsu an t to Ihe
F lo rid a ,
m ore
p a rtic u la rly
Corner ol the S E ’ « Ol Ihe S E ',4 Ol
"F ic titio u s
N am e
S ta tu te ,"
Section 10. Township 21 South,
described as follows:
Section 185 09 ot The Florida
Range 11 Ea st, Seminole Counly,
On* 1968 M ercedes 4 door
Statutes, intends to register with
Florida, said Poinl being on the
autom obile, reddish brown In
the Clerk ol C irc u it Court,
Easl line ol said S E ’ « ol the S E U .
color. ID No 1140102004846, Title
Seminole County, Florida, upon
run thence N 81 degrees 31' 40" W
receipt ol proof ot the rtquireo
No 15213416 being stored at Oavt
publication ot this Notice, the 20 00 leet, thence South parallel
Jo n es W re c k e r S e rv ic e , Fern
following fid nous name
Park. Florida
with said East line. 57.25 leet,
thence N 88 degrees 31' 40" W
and Ihe undersigned as Sheritl ol
TRYCON A S S O C IA T E S
Seminole Counly, Florida, will at
122 56 leel. thence South parallel
under which ihe undersigned in
with said East tine, 118 50 leet,
II O O 'A M on the 34th day ol
tends to engage in business at 80)
August, A D. 1987, otter lor sale
West Highway 416. Altamonte
thence S 88 degrees 33* 40" E
and sell to the highest bidder, lor
Springs. Florida
143 56 tret lo ta ld E a it lint, run
The party interested in said thence north along said East line,
cash, subject to
any and All
business enterprise is:
existing liens, at the Front (W est)
175 75 leet to the Point ot Begin
Trycon Associates
ning
Door a l the steps ot Ihe Seminole
801 West Highway 436
Counly Courthouse in Sanlord.
W IT N E S S my hand and official
Altam onte Sp rin g s , F lo rid a
F lo rid a , th e above described
seal as Clerk ot the Circuit Court,
personal privately
32701
in and for Sem in o le County,
Qated this 2tst day ot Ju ly. 1982
That
f i e is being made to
Florida, on Ihe Sth day ol August.
Trycon Associates
satisfy Ihe terms ot said W rit ol
A D 1917
By Maguire. Voorhis A
Execution
A R T H U R H B E C K W IT H , JR
Wells. P A
John E Polk, Sherilf
Clerk ol Ihe Circuit Court
By TED R B R O W N
Serrnnole County, Florida
By Catherine M E .a n t
Publish Ju ly 26 w Augusl 2. 9, 18,
DC
Publish. August 7, 9, 16, 23, with
1982
the sale on August 14, 1912
Publish August 9, 16, 1982
D E X 137
D E Y 67
D EY 3

Legal Notice

V 4

F U L L lime sales clerk with
re ta il se llin g ekp erien ce
Group insurance and other
benefits o tte red Apply in
person S w e e n e y 's
O ttlce
Supply. 779 Magnolia A v e ,
Sanlord
In te rv ie w s Wed
nesday A Thursday Irom 8 30

18— Help Wanted
*
Ol S T R 1B U T O P S wanted
mec* V e t*

7 *

,m

t a r n rx) fro m |?00

fo Ji'', wffMi part ftme or full
time V F For complete .n
format'on write Premrerc
Vfrchflndit* Company p O'
BrM MSI Dept Eh e Sanford

GAS A T T E N D A N T
S Seminole Station
Good salary hospitaliiation, I
week paid vacation every 6
months
E k p e rie n c e
not
necessary Call 321 3643

Fta )JJ71

D E M ONST RA TOWS wanted,
part ttme or full time No c*p
necessary
F rie n d ly
per
sonal.ty a must
For ap
po ntmeni can 322 2029

E X P E R IE N C E D
B u ilt up
Rooters P a y based on e i
perience Call 32? 1936

toys Si illff for all ages is

M A IN T E N A N C E M AN ,
Experience motets or apart
ments Must have own tools
Salary tied tq capabilities
Phone Mr Robert Deltona Inn
305 374 6693

needing dealers «n your area
No investment needed Also
booking parties
Call for
details I30S 321 0218

L A D IE S part time at home 7
hrs ot your tim e $15 or more
guaranteed 1 35? 9095 Bruce

F W tE N D L Y

home parties has

SA LES
R E P R E S E N T A T IV E S
Expanding firm with un,qut* new
carpet cleaning system is
looking tor sales agents to call
on commercial accounts High
earnings potential and chance
to be on ground Moor ot
dynamic program
Guaran
teed territories Call (305) S67
0290 Monday thru Frid ay 8 S
C A SH IE R, honest, sincere,
experienced
139 5S10

R E G IS T E R E D P H Y S IC A L
T H E R A P IS T
Immed'a'e openmq available tor
registered physical therapist
with well established Home
Health Agency F u ll lim e or
contract position available I
year ol e&lt;perience, car and
phone are required Call 371
7700 EO E

F

*

*

Y

*

*

*

*

*

AAA E M P L O Y M E N T
THE B E ST
FOR L E S S

LO W EST F E E
H M R E G IS T R A T IO N f e e
C O N V E N IE N C E
3917 F R E NCII A V E .
13)5174
ST O R E C A S H IE R S
BEVERLY
PAT
Good saiar* ttgspilalijation. t
* * * * * * * *
week pa d vacation every 6
months
E»pec&gt; ncr
nnt
n ecessary
Fo r ,n te r v e w
BR O W SE AND S A V E
It's
phone 'he manager at
easy and tun
The Want Ad
Airporl B ird 66
3236251
Way
Casselberry 66
1)91733
Celery Aye 66
3376233
Lake Mary 66
1778)44

?l- Situations Wanted

O R T H O D O N JC
a s s is ta n t
. position available W &gt;11 train
S a la ry com m ensurate with
ekperience Resume only P O
Box 3214 Altamonte Springs.
F la 37701
LIG H T delivery, must have
vehicle and know area
Phgne 377 8 585

LA W enforcement olticer seeks
port time employment Hours
must be flexible Reply Box
135 c o Evening Herald. P O
Box 1657, Sanlord. F la 32771
W IL L lake care
ot elderly person
Call 373 8057

M AN AG ER W A N TED
Famous Recipe Fried Cnickcn,
minimum 2 years last food
experience, honest, sincere,
hardworking Apply in person
at 16 North Highway 17 92.
Casselberry No phone calls
please

A C C U RA TE typist, good speller
desires on job training Typing
lor court reporter or medical
transcription in doctors office
Sanford area Mature, depend
able, 13 years exp personal
lines insurance 37) 0625 eves

5750 W E E K L Y paychecks (fully
quaranterd) working part or
full time at home Weekly
paychecks mailed directly to
you from Home Ottlce every
Wednesday
Sta rt
im
m ediately
No ek p erien ce
necessary National company
Da your work right In the
comlorl ,*nd security ot your
own home Details and ap
plication mailed Send your
nam e
and
address
to
American Fidelity Company,
Hiring Dept 77. 1040 Lone Star
Dr New Brauntels. Tx 78130

H O USE C L E A N IN G .
Very reasonable, references
321 5)73

T E L E P H O N E so licito rs lor
Ja y c c e s
project
Exp
preferred Phone 322 S58S
R E G IS T E R E D N U R S E
f u lltim e part time or contract
position available With Home
Health Agency tor the ex
p erienced
RN
R e lia b le
transportation and phone are
required Call 323 2700 E O E

Legal Notice
IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U RT, IN
AND FO R S E M IN O L E C O U N TY,
F L O R ID A
C A SE NO 83 1854 CA 04 P
IN R E : I H E M A R R IA G E OF
P A U L P K O E N IG ,
Husband,
and
M A D E L IN E K O EN IG ,
W ile.
N O T IC E O F ACTION
TH E ST A T E OF F L O R ID A TO
M A O E L IN E K O E N IG , whose
last known residence and mailing
address Is
11 Spencer Place
Garlleld. New Jersey 07026
YO U
ARE
H EREBY
N O T IF IE D that a proceeding tor
dissolution ol marriage has been
tiled against you and that
Petitioner. P A U L P K O E N IG , is
seekmq relief against you
YOU A R E R E Q U IR E D to ap
pear and tile your Answer or other
defense or pleading with the Clerk
ol the Circuit Court in and tor
Sem mote County. Florida, and
se rve
a
copy
thereof
on
Petitioner's attorney, R O G E R L
B E R R Y . Post Ottlce Draw er O.
Sanford. Florida 37771, on or
belore Ihe 2nd oay ol Sept , 1982,
otherwise a default will be entered
agamst you
W IT N E S S my hand and otlicial
seal ol Ihe Clerk ol the Circuit
Court on the 79th day of July, 198?
(C O U R T S E A U
A R H T U R H B E C K W IT H . JR
C L E R K OF THE C IR C U IT
COURT
By Carrie E Buettner
Deputy Clerk
RO GER L B ER R Y
Attorney lor Petitioner
La w C ilices ol
BERR Y A FU LLER
Suite S
K irk P la ta Building
HO E i S I Cgmmer al Street
1 Post Ottlce Drawer 0
Sanlord. Florida 17771
Publish August 7. 9, 16. 71, 1982
D EY 1

L A R G E d ean I Bdrm near
hospital Reasonable rent tor
re lia b le p erm anent single
person No pets Phone 644
1947 aft 5 p m
S A N F O R D 3 Bdrm, kids, no
lease 5170 339 7300
Sav On Rentals. Inc. Realtor

C A R P E N T E R , plumber,
pa&gt;nters helper P a rt I , me
37? 8278

t time
SOcallne
J consecutive times soc aline
7 consecutive timei
43c
10 consecutive times 37c a line

U nfurnished

24—Business Opportunities

U N IQ U E O P P O R T U N IT Y
FlftST TIM E O F F E R E D , B E
YO UR OWN BOSS, W IT H O U T
C A P IT A L
IN V E S T M E N T ,
WITHOUT H E A D A C H E S !
We are looking tor dependable
people lo ^operate our ex
ceptlonal carpet cleaning
service throughout Ihe stale ol
Florida No previous experience required F re e training,
customers supplied, very high
earnings potential Start at
once! Call 13051 547 0390
Sunday thru Tuesday 8 5

MAKE
room
to
sto re
YO U R W IN T E R IT E M S
SELL
" D O N 'T
N EED S"
FAST W ITH A W A N T AD
Phone 322 2611 or 831 9993 and
a tn m d ly Ad Visor will help
you

25—Loans

B A M B O O CO VE APTS
300 E Airport Hlvd
1 &amp; 2 Bdrm s
From S21Smo
Phone 831 4479
GEN EVA G ARD EN S
1.7 bdrm apis . adult section
From $245 mo
Open Monday to Saturday
1505 W 25th 51.
322 7090
L A K E F R O N T apts 1, l'S 6 7
bdrm
on Lake Jenny, in
Sa n lo rd
Po o l, recreation
room, outdoor BBQ, tennis
cou rts
disposal, walk to
shopping Adults only, sorry no
pet* 37) 0743
LU XU RY
APARTM EN TS
F a m ily A A d ults section
Poolside. 7 Bdrm s. Master
Cove Apts 373 7900 Open on
weekends
E N j OY country livin g ' 2 Bdrm,
D u p lA Apts . Olympic si
pool
Shehandoah V illage
Open 9 lo 6 32) 7920
Mariner s Village on Lake Ada t
bdrm trom 32S0. 3 bdrm Irom
$2*0 Located 17 92 iust south
ot Airport Blvd in Sanlord All
Adults 373 8670
M E L L O N V IL L E
TRACE
A PARTM EN TS
Spacious,
modern 2 bdrm, 1 bath a p t,
carpeted, kitchen equipped
Cent HA Walk lo town &amp; lake
Adults, no pets 129 5 333 6030

B E A U T I F U L I Bdrm
In Town S?25Mo
I 886 6871
WHY RENT?
tt.650 down paym ent with
payments starting below $350
mo buys a new 2 Bdrm home
m Deltona 30 minutes North ol
Orlando on l 4 Call 628 5656
weekdays 9 5 or 1 574 1608 on
weekends 139,900 buys a home
on lot

31—Apartments Furnished
Furnished apartments lor Senior
C'tuens 318 Palm etto A v e . J
Cowan No phone calls
1 B D R M . lufnlshed apt car
peled, panelled, all utilities
included
Single adult
No
childrrn or pels 5280 mo 6
deposit I Block trom down
town A lter 4 p m 17) 0229

PA R K A V E I Bdrm . appl, no
lease 1195 3)9 7200
Sav On Rentals. Inc Realtor

—______________ •

-

U P S T A IR S garage apt 2 bdrm,
wall wall carp e t, air heat
K ids ok, no pets 5250 mo
322 0008 belore 5
123 0025 Alt 5 &amp; weekends

31 A—D uplexes
2 B D R M , extra nice duplex with
carport
1350
June Pori.g
Realty, Realtor, 332 8678

BRAND new and beautiful! !
bdrm. 2 bath duplex Reduced
1)80 mo , carport and utility
room
Ju n e Po riig Realty
Realtor 377 8678

32—Houses Unfurnished
IM M A C U L A T E 3 Bdrm, I'.y
Bath, s lo v e , re frig e ra to r,
family rm , lenced yard, cent
HA. 1350 plus deposit Alt. 5
645 7124
SA N FO RD 2 Bdrm , kids, appl
air, 5275 3)9 7200
Sav On Rentals, Inc. Realtor
3 BOR 3 B a th with Double car
garage, and executive type
home in Deltona Call 574 1411
days. 7)6 369) eves
and
weekends

E Q U IT Y LO A N S
No points or broker Ices, loans to
125.000 lo Homeowners. GFC
Credit Corp .Sant. F I 37)6110

D ELTO N A 3 Bdrm 2 Baths,
fireplace, screen porch, all
ap plian ces,
d rap es,
con
venient location, no pets 1420
mo 305 834 1514 a ll 5 p m

2ft—Apts, &amp; Houses
To Share

CO UNTRY C L U B R D 4 ?, kids.
Pets, fence. 1400 339 7200
5av On Rentals, tnt. Realtor

home

3 B D R M home in Paoia, needs
f inane rally secu red, able
bodied female age 50 to 65 to
share home with female age
68 3)9 52)1 or 373 7197

3 bdrm, lenced yard, kids OK,
option to buy 1375 mo call
owner 3)1 1611.

}3—Houses Furnished
2?—Rooms
ROOM For Rent, separate en
trance, use ol household
labilities Alt 6. 371 7192

L O V E L Y I Bdrm furnished, 1300
sec 175 p lu i utilities.
Call 371 6947 or 33) 7169

i l —Mobile Homes
D EBARY A REA .
IC H IL D O K
C A L L ) ? ? 2617.
S^N FO RO
Reas
w k ly
ft,
monthly rates Util Inc ett 500
Oak Adults 1 161 7881
S L E E P I N G rooms with kitchen
pr i v . couples, disable vet,
singles, no kids pets 321 9228
ROOMS FO R R E N T
P R IV A T E E N T R A N C E
37? 3851

30 Apartments Unfurnished

•— l l a n d i B D R M * rum 12x5
R.dgrwoOd Arm s Apt 2540
R.dqi w*"&gt;d A , i 121 6470

LO N G W O O D 3 B d rm , pelt
appl , 1775 339 7200
la v On R e n ta lt, Inc. Realtor

37— Business Property

FOR RENT
FULLY EQ UIPPED
BBQ&amp;RESTAURANT
m a w . n t h SI.. Sanlord, Fla.
Call 1)0 0)02 or 830-4141
Clayton or Calltaftno Thomas
wren you ptare a Class iTea'id *
n The Evening Herald, stay
close to your phone Because
somelh.ng wonderful .s about
to hapoen

�Rente!I Offices

37 B

Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

41— Houses

Monday, Aug. 16,1982—JB

80— Autos for Sale

----- 1_____________
O F F IC E S P A C E
FOR L E A S E
810 777)
M A KE
RO O M
TO S T O R E
YOUR W IN T E R IT E M S
sell

don

t

2W4 5 French
Alter Hours

80— Aufos for Sale

1978 C H E V R O L E T MON2A
s ilv e r
w b lack
stripes,
burgundy
interio r
48 000
miles, rad ial tires good con
d'tion V 8 auto. AC stereo w
Cassell S3 000 Lake V a ry 122
88S1. eves and wknds

A L L F L O R ID A R E A L T Y
OF S A N F O R D R E A L T O R
122 0211
122 0279

'1976 C O R V E T T PW PS P R T
top. new stainless steel brakes,
new i r e s 18791 or best otter.
123 1S40

n eed s

FAST w i t h a W A N T AD
PTOPf 327 76!1 or 111 W ) and
* tr,fndlv Ad V s o r will hf|p
vou

Q u i c k S a l e Affordable home
2 Bdrm
Fam
Rm. Quiet
neighborhood, beautiful oaks
110 OOQ down 331 41ST or
139 S5I0

40—C ondom inium s

HAL C O L B E R T R E A L T Y
207 E J l l h S I
3737837

SPACIO US 1 Bdrm , 2'» Bam
double garage. pool and tennis
courts 373 2392

L

1974 J E E P C J l 2f 000 m l like
new. original owner
Brand
new dealer retailed factory
top Must see to appreciate
S3991 323 0688

IT67 P O N T IA C
Bonneville In
etc
c o n d itio n with good
cu j'n e Asking 12?S 7|| 3842
aft 6

It s easy to place a Classified Ad
W e II even help you word
it Call 322 36H

DeBary Auto A M ar ne Sales
across the river loo ol hill 174
H a y 17 92 D e B a r , SM 1168

'

80 Autos for Salle
NO C R E D IT 1 Bad C re d it’ Need
Car1 Cali Velm a s Auto Sates
W* finance our own As low as
1110 down 121 wh up 3811 So
Orlando Aye . Sanford
TT1 1000
W H EEL A D EA L
U SED CAR R E N T A L
A LL cars l i t 10 per day, 160 per
week Corner ol Wilbur A
Country Club
La k e M ary
131 1781

CONSULT OUR

I ul» Service 121

41—Houses
1

BDRM ,
Pool home, no
Qualilying, 115.000 down Take
over paym ents 1210218

Somebody s lookmq tor your
bargain Offer it ioday us the
Classified Ads

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB

SA N FO RD R EA LT Y
REALTO R
321 1324
Atl Mrs. 327 *954. 371 4141

C A LL US Q UICK 11! Gorgeous 1
Bdrm, J Bath, fam ily rm , and
fireplace 139,500
TW O ST O R Y B E A U T Y . 4 bdrm,
I blh, low inferesf assumable
mortgage, large rooms A lots
ol privacy, 956.900
ALM OST N E W 1 bdrm, Cent
air, shaded lot, 114,TOO Terms,

To

D ia l 3 2 2 - 2 6 1 1

O L D E R H O M E W IT H CHARM
Only 116 000 2008 Palmetto Aye
3 Bdrm, fam ily room, dining
room
and
com pletely
remodeled kitchpn Close to
everything

CallBart
BATHS k.ichens rooting block
concrete w ind o w s add a
room, tree estimates 323 8463

W I AL TOW i n M il

323-5774
24C4MVYY ft »2

I J I 004'

H E A L to n

A tier Mrs 37? 74A8 A 321 /111
U N D ER 12.000 DOWN
3 bdrm. doll house Altordable
monlhly
p a y m e n ts
Call
Owner Broker 131 1611
C O N F ID E N T IA L
IN T E R V IE W S
Associates needed New oltice at
902 Lake M ary Btvd Bob M
Bali, Jr PA, Realtor, 321 4118

STENSTROM
REALTY -

REALTORS

Sanford's Sales Leader
W E LIST AND S E L L
M ORE H O M ES TH AN
A NYO NE IN N O R T H
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y I
Reduced) ) B R , 1 Bath home in
Highland Park! Lq corner lot.
CH AC, WWC, F R , B rk ll Bar,
Scr Patio A M orel Now, lust
119.9001
Super) 3 BR. 2 Bath home in
Dreamwold. Coiy eat in Kit,
CH AC, W W C . fen ced ydl
Assume 10 .* M lg l O wner
Assist! 141,400!
Ju st For You! 2 B R , 1 Bath
Starter home on a Ig fenced
corner loti Pan F R , Breakfast
Bar, Built Ins, in a nice neigh
borhoodl Low Downl Assume
FMA M lg.1 113.1001
M A Y F A IR V IL L A S ) 3 A 1 Bdrm.
2 Hath Condo V illas, n eit 1o
Maytair Country Club Select
your lot. floor plan A interior
decor! Quality constructed by
Shoemaker lor 147,200 A up(

s e t S K Y L I N E s NE WEST
Palm Springs A Palm Manor
G R E G O R Y M O B IL E H O M ES
J40) Orlando Or
321121)0
VA A F HA Financing
Hawr some camping equipment
you no longef use1 SHI it all
a m a Classified Ad n The
Herald Call 122 26H ur 1)1
999) and a Itiendly ad vsor
•ell help you
1981 S K Y L I N E Mobile Home
74«57 t* sc re e n enclosure
porch u tility shed. Central
heat and air 3 Bdrm . 2 Bath
Lai site Is S0.10Q Sale price
S4I.900 financing available al
80 T ol sales p rice interesl rate
16'.*.
Can be seen at 126
Leisure Dr
North DeBary.
Fla &lt;n Ine Meadowlea on the
River M o b ile Hom e com
mumly Please conlad Tom
Lyon or Gib Edmonds First
Federal ol Seminole
101 372 1247
11100 DOWN 1410 mo will secure
this brand new 2 2 Mobile
Home Call tor details,
862 1700
* BO W LES •
Realty Inc R E A L T O R •
Better Homes and Garden
863 1700

13

L o t^ A c re a g e

S I JO H N S R iver frontage 2 i
acre parcels
also
nterior
parcels fiv e r a c c e s s 'll! 900
Public w ater. 20 mm to Alta
n o n tr M a ll
17
20 yr
I nane ng
no Q ualifying
Broker 678 4833.

17 Real Estate Wanted
W E B U Y equity m Housel.
apartments, vacant land and
acreage
LU C K Y
IN
V E S T M E N T S P O Bo. 3100.
Sanford F la 32771 133 4741

V A-Mortgages Bought
&amp; Sold

C A L L A N Y T IM E
2S41
nark

322-2420
PARK P LA C E

Associates Inc. Realtors
699 0200

R O B B IE 'S
R EA L T Y
R E A L T O R . M LS
2301 S French
Suite 4
Sanlord Fla

24 HOUR E 322-9283
STEM PER

AG EN CY

RED UCED
13200
O wner
aniiout 7 B d rm .7 Bath condo
Cent air and heat, washer and
dryer, good l#cation, 132.500
ROOM TO S P A R E Lo vely 4
Bdrm, 3 Bath, e.ecutiveh o m c,
heated pool, Cent air and heat,
fireplace, large lot. e .cc llrn l
area, must see 1115,000.
B U Y NOW B U IL D
LA TER
Building lots, easy term s, good
location, only 18.900
A SSO C IA TES N E E D E D

W E PA Y cash lor 1st A 2nd
mortgages Ray Legq Lie
Mortgage Broker 788 3599

49B—Water Front
Property
L A K E F R O N T &gt;4 ths Acre in
Lake
M a rk h a m
Estates
126.700
W
M a lle io w ik l
Realtor 322 7981,

50—Miscellaneous for Sale
HOME C O M PU TER
F re e
d em o n stra tio n
with
education, home finances, and
Video games Less than 1100
111 7501 E v e s
Packs, Cots. Tar ps
A RM Y N A V Y S U R P L U S
310 Sanlord A ve.
322 S79I
M OVING S A L E , living room set,
washer and d ryer, kitchen set,
etc 123 8091
C O PPERTO N E
G a s O ry e r,
dihelte set, 6 chairs, 2 carpets,
9«12 Like new 337 2017
Let a Classified Ad help you find
more room
tor storage
Classified Ads find buyers
last

N E W .R E M O D E L . R E P A I R
All types and phases of con
Slrudion, $ G Balm t 323 4812
323 8661 State Licensed

M A T T R E S S SE T S Interspring
by Spring A ir Twin site set
178 F ull site set 198 Queen
Site set 1148 A King site set
1198 See them al
F L O R IO A S L E E P SHOPS
1817 N Orlando Aye . Highway
17 92 Maitland, 331 5288

C O A STA L
Berm uda
Weed
Free 12 10 oe' bale Call 101
127 7481 day 171 6404 eves

08 Wanted to Buy

52—Appliances

BATEMAN REALTY
Lie Real Estate Broker
7640 Sanlord Ave

Eve

.i.MV t

322 7643

7 N E W tires, site 14. 4 cushion
red corduroy couch. Clolhes.
327 Il7|
K E N M O R E p o rta b le e le c tric
dishw asher, ex celle n t con
dition. 1100 373 7149 before 6
pm
COUCH Steeper
by
Rowe,
Wurhlier piano organ com bo,
Magnus cord organ w legs, 77
Chevy Chevette, 322 4S42

M S W

- R E E Schooling lor Real Es la te
License1 Call lor details
L A K E M ARY, FLA
U ) 3208

C A R L 'S La w n mower s m a lt
engme and automotive repair
C e " lied AC, Pick up A
delivery 3?) 3864

Kcnm ore parts, service, used
washers 121 0697
M O O N EY A P P L IA N C E S

SOL ID wood desk A
chair w ith wheels
Call 327 7079

377.6

W e n you place 1 'las- bed Ad
iis Tre E . w n g weraid stay
close to iOur phone because
someth ng wondf’ tul S about
to haooer.

G IG A N T IC S A L E
C li'fin g / io s ro u ll
Buy 2 items - 3rd tree. * .
.VilCO Sales Hwy.44W
4 M ilts W. ol 1-8
322 8170 or l l t f / i l

Have some camping too pmen!
you no longer use’ Sen ■' all
w th a Classified Ad n The
Herald Call 12? 7611 or 831
9991 and a friendly aa v sor
will help you

M i s t e r Fix It Joe M cAdam s
will repair your mowers at
your home Call 322 705S

N ursing G ire

TO W ER S B E A U T Y SA LO N
F O R M E R L Y H arnett s Beauty
Nook 519 E 1st St
32? 5742

General Services
W IL L Crtrr for your
elderly loved ones n
my home 1115315

S r r v c r S ■in. If
pium
Tiiitsj, i itHJl,^ r i‘
-1nfl
(Are roofing vm.or c t Jrn*
discount (-m *** *V
MtOTfM

L O V IN G Home kind e* ce Herd
r*p er enccd care lor elderly
person Reasonable 3JJ 4305

Blinds
H andym an

71—Antiques

R E F R IG E R A T O R S ,
m any
site s, guaranteed. Sanlord
Auction t i l l S French A ve ,
123 7340

H E N D R IX
A N T IQ U E S
8.
Refmishinq Free Es*
365
J7 (C Day n.qhi lo cate d 2 m,
N at Ov too on Mwy 419

U S E D A P P L IA N C E S
Refrigerators washers dryers,
ranges
30 day guarantee
Repairs A Parts
B A R N E T T S 331 1714

A N T IQ U E S &amp; C O L L E C T IB L E S .
O ld *
Tymes
Connection.
B ro w s e r's Born.
350 W
Jessup, Longwood

N E W A P P L IA N C E S
F ull line G E and Tapoan
apartm ent sites avail
New
E lectric A Gas ranges
B A R N E T T S 3111714

72—Auction
FO R E S T A T E . Com m erce! or
Residential Auctions 6 Ap
praisais Can Deli's Auction
323 5020

M AKE
R O O M TO S T O R E
Y O U R W IN T E R IT EM S
,
SELL
"O O N ’T N E E D S "
F A S T W IT H A WANT AD
Phone 373 2611 or 131 9991 and
a friendly Ad Visor will help
you

C L A S S IF IE D
ADS
M OVE
M O U N TA IN S ot merchandise
every day

F R IG
30 in drop in self
cleaning oven Cost 3700 Sell
1295 Sears harvest gold sell
detrost refrigerator. IS 2 cu tl.
excellent cond 1275. 15,000
B T U 720 volt AC 1250, electric
dryer 1135 327 4296

* AUCTION «
Monday, August 16.7 p.m
Lois ol furniture, TV's. mlsc.
items. Some antiques and
collectibles
IC A S H , VISA . M C I
• SA N FO R D A U C T IO N *
1215 3. French A vt.
321 7340

53—TV Radio-Stereo
Good used TV S 125 A up
M IL L E R S
2619 Orlando Or
Ph 222 0152

Bourdtuq tt. G ro o m m q

A N IM AL Haven Boarding and
Grooming Kennels Shady In
stilated screened fIy proof ih
Side, outside runs Fans Also
AC cages W e cater to your
pets Starling slud registry
Ph 322 57S?__________

Nutsinq Center
L IG H T H ju l ng. carpentry
sm all home repair,
odd mbs 123 8877

MAKE
ROOM
TO S T O R E
YOUR W IN T E R IT E M S
SELL
D O N 'T
N EED S
FAST W ITH A W ANT AD
Phone 122 7611 or 831 9V9J and
a friendly Ad Visor will help
you

O U R R A T E S A R E LO W E R
Lakeyiew NursmqCenter
?1» t Second SI . Sanlord
122 6707

P A IN T IN G pool service, lawn
care and etc Anytim e 322 5186
all 5 788 2407 Messaqe to Jut!
Kipp

Painting «, ot
P re s s u re Cleaning

S M A L L H O M E R E P A IR S
Pamting. lawn care, etc
Free Estim ates, call 321 0150

Lei a Classified Ad help you tmd
more room lor
storage
Classified Ads tind buyers
last

NO JO B loo large or small Pro
q u a lity workm anship ,incj
mdler nils N e l l ? ? 00/1

H a u lin g

Brick &amp; Block
Stone Work

H E IL M A N rooting, painting A
re p a irs
Q uality
w ork,
re a s o n a o le
rates
F re e
estimates Anytime 834 8490

Home Improvement

Plastering

R E M O D E L IN G .
A DDITIONS,
electrical and rooting Cer
M ifd bonded, licensed Phone
19041 787 BIS?

Career Opportunity
TOP Dollar Paid tor Ju n k A
Used cars, trucks A heavy
equipment 372 5990
W E P A Y lop dollar lor
Junk Cars and Trucks
C B S Auto P a ris 293 4505

K it b a th 's additions Quality
w o rk m an sh ip in a ll home
improvements
L IC E N S E D S IN S U R E D
CALL K E N T A Y L O R
831 1954

1-425-7105

ISI uMi kI l ftC
cHH
OOOOiL. -

M AKE
RO O M TO S T O R E
Y O U R W IN T E R IT E M S
SELL
"D O N 'T
N EED S"
F A ST W IT H A WANT AD
Phone 322 2(11 or 1)1 9993 and
a friendly Ad Visor wilt help
you.

" *

• DOT Certification
a Financial Assistance
• Placement Assistance
UNITID T tlK K MASTERS
700 E Washington St
Orlando

Ceramic Tile
77 Y A M A H A 650 custom sissy
bar. highway pegs and tubes
New battery and motorcycle
cover, less than 4500 original
miles Adult owned, garaged
the past 3 yrs 1st 31500 W ill
consider trade lor bass boat.
Call atl 3. 32) 0229

B E N E F IT Y A R O SA LE
SAT. A SUN.
A U G U S T 2 l.il.
19I8LOCUST A V E.
SA N FO R D
Articles and Cash contributions
gratefully accepted Proceeds
to pay lor transportation end
(■ponses of Concor potlont to
B u r t o n 's
E ip o r lm o n t o l
C lin ic In
the
Bohomos
lor treatment. For additional
Into. Call 111 III) or mo9«&lt;
Eves ; 349 3132 Oiys.

M E IN T 2 E R T I L E En p Since
1953 New 6 old work comm 6
rrsid Free estimate 669 8567

PA I NT I NO and f e p a r pa' a and
screen p o rch puiH
Call
anytime 327 9481

Complete Ceramic T il* S try
walls, floors, countertops, re
model, repair F r est 339 0211

F O N S E C A P L U M B IN G All
types Em ergency Service.
Sewer Dram Cleaning 11) 4075
Fred d ie Robinson Plumbing
Repairs, faucets, W C
Sprinklers 17) 1510.33) 0706

H O M E Remodeling. Room
Additions Complete
Garage Door Service
Dick Gross 131 5618

R E P A I R S A leaks
pendable service
ra les No lob too
P lu m b e r. Ir e *
Plum bing 349 SSS7

WINDOWS, carpentry, doors,
mmimum repairs Floor tile,
cab.nets I do It all 322 8121
Licensed 6 bonded

Fast A de
Reasonable
small Lie
set
SA M

Roofing
79— Trucks-Trailers

55— Boats &amp; Accessories
IN V A D E D I I It. Bowridw, 335
Johnson, must see to ap
P red ate 33,950 323 2791

Cone tele Work

19I0CHEVY VAN
FOR SALE

B E A L loncrete 1 man quality
operation patios, drivew ays
Days 331 7311 Eves 327 1321

SU M
BUD G ETS
ARE
B O L S T E R E D W IT H V A L U E S
FR O M
THE
WANT
AD
COLUM NS

w a buy Cars and Trucks *
M artin Malar Salas
7(1 S. F rench
323-76)4

GUN C A B IN E T , custom built,
solic^dark wood Holds 9 rillos
4 I I hand guns Fram ed glass,
w light A dohumidifler. 78"h x
S3 "w x I2''d, 3 drawers t 3
storage compartments,
317 7183

D A Y T O N A AUTO A U C T IO N
H w y 97, I mile west ol Sj&gt;**d
w ay. Daytona Beach w ill hold
a public AUTO A U C T IO N
every Wednesday at 7 30 p m.
i n the only one in F lo rid * .
You set the reserved p rice
Cell 904 2331331 tor further
detail*.

59—M usical Merchandise
P A 's. E le guitar, A m o rt
Must sell Beslotttr.
322 4296

71 H O N O A. soma hail damage
but runs great Sacrifice 331S0
372 7491.

When you place a n o s S 'ie B Ad
n The Evening Herald Mo&gt;
close to &gt;our phone because
someth.nq wonderful S about
10 hapoen

(6 B A R R A C U D A Fast Back V
I Runs good, good tires 3600
E v e s , Weekends 322 *521

.

.

ins
L A N D C L E A R IN G tilld,rt,
tooso l sh ale.d skinq
mowing 122 2433

86-rAutos for Safe

GUN A U C T IO N Sunday. Au«. 21,
l p.m S A N F O R D AUCTION
1213 S. French Ave. 321.7341.

Landscaping

1983 FOR D F 100
NgwOCyl Engine
321-005* altar ( p m

32112)3

57A-Gum A Ammo

Uc

COOO F A SONS
Tile Contractors
321 0152

2) Y rs E « p Licensed A Insured
T il*
sp e cialists.
F re e
E s tim a t e s on Rooting A
Repairs.

Contractor
A D A IR C O N STRU C TIO N
New constriction, additions, re
modeling 6 blueprint se rvice
Residential 6 Commercial
Licensed

699 1017

Insured

Courtesy Service

T A X I CAB and Delivery Service
A ll Airports W e are open 7
days a week Call 322 SI7S

W hatever the occasion, there is a
classified ad to solve it Try
one soon

B A L RO O l ING
Insured A Bonded References,
S60 per square with tree est
Cali 321718)

Law n Service

Mr L u c k y '* Lawn
C a rt S ervice
Quality
w orh
guaranteed,
b eau tilicat ion w ith o u t in
n ation F re e Estim ates Call
between 9 9 321 3894

A D A IR R O O FIN G
Shmgle root*, carpentry
and Sky lights
Licensed
699 1017
insured

MOW, E d g e . T rim , Renew
La n d scap in g . C lea n
ups.
Haulmg. Thatching. W eed r^ ,
Mulch Lin dsey's 371 I'M ’

L I T T I K E N CONTRACTORS
R O O F IN G
Licensed, bonded, tow prices
Q uality workmanship
F re e Estim ates 788 3219

MOW. E D G E W E E D E A T IN G
Cleanup* e. gut li*Ui..'.g
Free estimates, call 371 0150

J E A N 'S Rooltng. licensed, in
sured. Ir e * estimates, ask lor
Je a n No*. 323 1144

M asonry

F IR E P L A C E S ,

bricks,

Garage sales a re m season Tell
the people about it with a
Classified Ad in the Herald
327 261 1 8)1 97V1

A L L S T A T E R O O F IN G ,
INC.
Repair Specialists A Rerooting
Fully insured. 3? yrs exp
F R E E E S T IM A T E S
321 S011 or B9MI0CI Orl
R O O F IN G ol all kinds commer
d a l A residential Bonded A
insured 32) 259? it no answer
834 8537
B U IL T up and Shmgle
licensed and insured
estimates 322 1936
James E Lee Inc

root
F ree

RC R O O FIN G . carpentry root
repa.r A painting
is years
exp 323 1726

insurance S yrs In Cent F la
General Contractor 1 268 2JS1 '

EXPERT ROOFING
Roofing Special 10 •* discount
with This dd when presented
To Expert Roofing
Reroof
sp ecialists
W e honor in
surance claims f o r the best m
roofing and rem odeling can
Expert Roofing A. Rem ode'ing
Asso The One slop shopping
center Built up, shingles, tile
aricl Tin roofing Deal d irectly
with a focal contractor who
has a r epuMbie business,
Licensed, Rond id &amp; Insured
?4 Hour Service

Secretarial Services
PERSO N N EL
U N L IM IT E D
377 5649

Tree Service
TRI County Tree Service Trim,
remove, trash, hauling and
Clean up Fr EM 371 0B05
T R E E Slump rem oval
SI QO inch diam eter
Rem T ret Service 339 4291
F R E E estim ates, D e G r o a 's
P a lm
tre t trim m in g
A
removal Hauling, lawn care A
odd jobs 323 0867

Typing Service

G .F. BO H A N N O N
JAM ESAN DERSO N

321-9417
C O N C R E T E work all types
Footers, d riv e w a y s , pads.
Iloors. pools, co m p le te or
refiniih F re e e sl 322 7101

a

,

Plum b ii.q

W IN D O W
r e p a ir
and
In.
stallatio n
C ellin g
tans,
e l e c t r ic a l
re p la c e m e n t ,
•endow cleaning 321 5994

•

i m

323-7473
siucco, simu
la tv d b rick
patch work
Quality, Reas 121 7360
32? 1627

p l a s t e r in g

C O L L IE R 'S
H om e R e p a irs
carpentry, rooting, painting,
window re p a ir 373 6422

78—Motorcycles

54—Garage Sales

Phases ol Plastering
Plaster ing repair, stucco, hard
role, simulated brick 121 5991

all

K.T R E M O D E L IN G

3

SUN B E L T
Free Estim ates

No Big W ailing L ist
L E T U S beaut it y your home with
paint Interior or e«1erior
831 6100 or 321 671?

CA RPEN TRY.
concrete
6
plumbing Minor repairs to
adding a room Don 323 1974

Bar B Ques polios fireplaces
No job too s m a ll
F re e
Estimates 834 0973

NO
Down Paym en t
With Approved
IN S U R A N C E

F R E E E S T IM A T E S . John F
Herring, me we c a rry run
workman comp A liability

Painting

WHY have iunfc lying around
when you can have il hauled
away Ioday F ree estimates,
can Mr Lu cky between 9 9
323 3894

I

77—Junk Girs Removed

R E P O S S E S S E D COLOR T V S
We se ll repossessed color
televisions, all name brands,
consoles
and
portab&gt;'.-9.
E X A M P L E RCA COLOR TV
IN
W A LN U T
CO N SO LE
O R I G IN A L P R I C E O V E R
1700, B A L A N C E D U E 1188
CASH OR P A Y M E N T S t i l
M O N TH NO M O N E Y DOW NII
S T IL L IN W A R R A N T Y C A LL
2ltt C E N T U R Y SA LES. 862
5394, D A Y OR N IG H T F R E E
H O M E T R IA L . NO O B U G A
TION.

• a

IN T E R IO R S B Y E L L E N
Complete window dressings
in Home Service 32? 09S3

R o o fin g

BO N D ED 6 IN S U R E D

Br-.iuT&gt; G i r t *

A L U M IN U M , cans, cooper, lend
brass, silver, gold W eefcdayl
8 4 30. Sol 9 1 k koM o Tool
Co 918 W 1st SI 123 1100

R E A L T O R 137 4991 Day or Nighl

321 0759

NE E D a F r n c r 1 Commercial.
Industrial. Residential
Phone 322 B474

\2 Mobile Homes

K IS H R E A L E S T A T E

or 8 3 1 - 9 9 9 3

Lawn M o w n

Fencing

w ea l esta te

WE N E E D L IS T IN G S

L is t Y o u r B u s i n e s s . . .

R O O F S permanently fiberglass
td af a traction ul the cost stt
types res A comm 629 4*3)
block,

W I L L DO Roofing,
painting and odd jobs
373 S771

concrete, stucco and repairs
Quality Fred 221 S784

.

m "xr- -V r'

O V E R L O A D Oltice and pert
at, straight dictaphone, X t
copies, highly qualified
321 0231

Upholstery

C U ST O M upholstery a ll types
turn F r t * t s l , pickup A deliv
Sharon Railty 373 2880

Well Drilling

M A N N 'S W E I L D R IL L IN G
And Pump repair (A ll work
g u a ra n te e d ) 30 y rs
c «p
Licensed A Bonded F re e Est
1271018 Local Cracker

When you place a Classified Ad
in The Evening Herald, stay
close to your phone because
something wonderful is about
to happen

-"Xfc-ib

TBkr *

�Monday, Aug. It, 1983

4&amp;— Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

B L O N D IE

42 Mao
lung
1 Second month 43 Actress
Louise
(abb')
NO...
J
44 Dollar bill
4 Flat piece
IC O U L D N T
9 Coneshaped 46 Sum up
48 SMI picture
REME/VN&amp;EQ
cap
51 Football in
12
Scriptural
can­
W HERE I
England
ticle
RUT IT
55 Boat gear
13 Fabulist
56 Cape Kennedy
U Gold |Sp)
rocket
15 Unity
60 Native metal
16 Fracas (2
61 Enemy
wds)
17 Brazilian port 62 Face with
stone
18 Day number
63 Grease
(Pi)
64 Balaam s
20 Sets of
mount
regulations
65 Condition
22 Coloring
66 Fastidious
by M ort W a lk e r 24 Housing
man
ageny (abbr)
25 Cut off (si)
DO WN
28 Fued charge
30 Playful child
1 Nourishment
34 Flat shallow
2 Novelist
container
Ferber
35 Remote
3 Rod rod!
36 Over (poetic)
vegetable
37 Western-hemi­ 4 Pert
sphere orgam 5 Southern
ration (abbr)
general
38 Mistake
6 Doctrine
adherent
39 Elderly
40 Legend
(suffn)

THE B O S S SAID I X
W ASN'T O R G A N IZ E D '

BEETLE

B A IL E Y

1

by A rt Sansom

T H E BO RN L O S E R

Answer to Previous Puzzle

ACROSS

b y C h ic Y o u n g

2

4

3

5

Has Many Causes

7
8
9
10
11
19
21
23
24
25
26

27
29
31
32

6

33 Energy
Canvas bed
agency (abbr)
Age
Cross a river 39 Aleutian
island
Indian tribe
4 1 Coal scuttle
Menageries
45 Comes close
Swirl
Cereal grass 47 Speak
eloquently
Worn out
48 Convertible
Search out
49 Thailand s
Something
neighbor
small
50 Irritates
Aid in diagnos­
52 Mistake
ing (comp
53 Vivacity
wd |
54 Utter a shrill
Direction
cry
Corn plant
57 Come by
parts
58 Actress Gabor
Hindu ascetic 59 Before
Eager
deductions
7

8

9

12

13

14

15

16

17

18

19

25

26

20

•

22

28

31

40
"
44

THAT SOUNC?S LIKE | ( I T S
A NEAT MOVIE.
NOT
AH AT THEATPE IS /FLAYING
IT PLAYING AT** y AT A
TWEA7FE.

53

54

36

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now w o u l p mdu l ik e t o
SEE TONS OF INANIMATE
O BJEC T S G«DWiNG IN
N U M B E R UNTIL THEY

33

m

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38

37

ME TOO.
JUG. I P LKE TO ] BUT TMEttS
SEE A GOOP J NOTHING
HORTON r &lt; \ AKXINP,

32

1

34

\

11

21

29

■

48

10

24

23

27

Urea Buildup

49

39

1
1
45

4i
46

50

47
51

57

58

59

52

55

56

60

61

62

63

64

65

66
H

ARCHIE

HOROSCOPE
By BERNICE BEDE OSOL

For Tuesday, August 17, 1982
YOLK BIRTHDAY
Aug. 17,1982
In the coming year you may
by H ow ie Schneider
establish many new outside
interests. They will be fun and
I'M A
R)R7UeT
time-demanding, so you must
be careful not to neglect your
FEDERAL FCOD STAMP
family life.
PRO G RA M
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
Hushing into things could do
you more harm than good
today. Everything will work
out far better if you relax,
take your time and don’t
pressure yourself. Find out
more of what lies ahead for
you in the seasons following
your birthday by sending for
your copy of Astro-Graph.
Mail )1 for each to Astroby Ed S u lliv a n
Graph, Box 489, Radio City
OH. I
BUT V Q J ^ ' r KNOW. I G U E S S
Station, N.Y. 10019. Be sure to
ANVWAV, I
'N
rRxEzCnIR
n cErR, \
A LWAVS
IT JU S T SH O W S
L IK E S O U R F'ICTURE
specify birth date.
IT WAG
THOUGHT
O F TOM S E L L E C K
I'M "G RO W IN G UP*
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
KIN R CF
MUCH B E T T E R /
H E WAG SO
D on't waste tim e today
S ILLS'/
HAMRSOME
quarreling with those who
want to blow everything out of
proportion. Smile and be nice,
but ignore their outlandish
thinking.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23)
Keep your cool. Don't be
rushed into purchasing
som ething today without
taking time to get quotes from
other sources. You'll be glad
by Stoffel &amp; Heim daht you did.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
m o o s e SEASON ISNT
Lady Luck cannot be relied
Till NEXT MONTH DOC.
upon to carry you over today's
hurdles, but your charm can
break down barriers and open
doors. Don’t fear to pour it on.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) Be modest even
though you may be bursting to
boast about your a c ­
com plishm ents.
A cclaim
travels faster and is better

E E K &amp; M EEK

dCUKXU?

P R I S C I L L A 'S P O P

he

BU G S BUNNY

received when the news Is
carried by others.
CAPRICORN ( Dec. 22Jan.
19) There is no reason to feel
ashamed if you cannot do
everything you'd like to for
another today. Being sup­
portive of those who can is
equally appreciated.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) Keep even the wellintentioned out of your affairs
and decision-making today.
You have a better handle on
your situation and you won't
gum things up as they could.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
In your work today you could
get so hung up on the over-all
picture you m ight forget
details. If anybody Is trying to
point out your flaws, listen.
ARIES (March 21-AprU 19)
No matter what you feel
another has done to you,
maintain your high ideals
today. Use their tactics and
you’ll end up on their level.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
AU those nice little things you
do for the family aren’t
unappreciated Just because
today they're not showing
their gratitude. They will
tomorrow.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
Because you need a change of
pace from routine, chances
are you won’t perform well
today. This Is one of those
times when taking a break is
important.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
The lure of high-ticket Items
beckons you today. Be wise.
Stay away from stores that
carry such m erchandise.
Your whims could prove
expensive.

G A R F IE L D

F R A N K AND E R N E S T

Sa Y x

t h e

d

° u a r

o p e n e d

? 5rP°NG TtoCW AGAINST THE
p o u n d , Fr a n c a n d y e n ,
gur

w e a k a s a 'n s t f °o d ,

C L O T H IN G A N D S H E L T E R .
»l 'V*t| »**l*vc«

by T. K. Ryan

TUM BLEW EEDS

WHAT A RAYJ— WOTONLY HAVE I
MET"TWE LEeeWBARYHIG FOOT..

AMP IW A HAKP9ALL COUKT
MTWIM A1HOUSANP MILES J

NT

Zir ■'

* !

T f

Dr.
Lamb

which will explain kidney
function to you.
Others who want this 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.
I doubt the tranquilizers
had anything to do with your
father's azotemia. His kidney
function probably declined
with age. and perhaps poor
circulation to the kidneys. If
there is not enough circulation
to the kidneys, they cannot
filter very well.
DEAR DR. U M B - My
mom had a com plete
hysterectomy when she was
33. She is now 42. Her regular
doctor did a Pap sm ear every
year. Recently she moved and
went to another doctor for her
Pap smear. The nurse told her
there was no sense in having a
Pap smear if she has had a
hysterectomy because there
is no way to get cancer if there
w as nothing down th ere.
Should she have her Pap
sm ear or not?
DEAR READER - It is
unlikely that a woman will
have cancer of the vagina but
a purist might think of that as
a reason to have a Pap sm ear.
But before the nurse so
quickly told your mother that
she didn’t need a Pap sm ear
she should have known what
kind of hysterectomy your
m other had, A p a rtia l
hysterectom y leaves the
cervix intact and e a rly
detection of cancer of the
cervix is the main reason for a
Pap smear. The answer to
your question depends then on
whether your mother still lias
her cervix or not If she does
not know already) her doctor
can tell her that when she is
examined.

W IN AT BRIDGE
NORTH
♦ 96 5
V K 8 52

s ta ll

♦ 82

♦ KQ95
EAST
WEST
♦3
♦A 8 2
▼J 9 4 J
v q 107
♦ X Q J 1091
♦ 7 6 4J
♦ J 1083
♦4
so u t h

♦ KQJ1074
TAB
♦A
♦ A 7 62

Vulnerable. Both
Dealer: West
18
Dbl

North
Pass
2V

Pass
Pass

Pass

Writ

East
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

South
28
4*
68

Opening lead: ♦K

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag
Oswald: "Some players
run into squeezes by acci­
dent. Good players should
recognize possible squeeze
situations and prepare for
them."
Alan: "Today's slam is a
trifle hard to bid. In fact,
when it occurred in a region-

al pair game, most pairs
stopped at four spades At
one table East and West got
into the act and played five
diamonds doubled just two
tricks down lor minus-500
and a very good score "
Oswald *One South play­
er, who had stopped at four
spades, played the hand
quicklv and carelessly and
wound up making only 11
tricks when clubs broke
four-one "
Alan "Whatever spade
contract South is in, he
should make 12 tricks by
giving himself the extra
chance of a squeeze provid­
ed that the man with four
clubs also holds four
hearts "
Oswald "He wins the dia­
mond lead and knocks out
the ace of trumps Then he
ruffs the second diamond,
d ra w s the re m a in in g
adverse trumps and then
plays ace, king and a small
heart, ruffing that small
heart. This leaves him just
one trump and he cashes it
while discarding a club from
dummy."
Alan: "He is down to four
cards which are all clubs.
East must also come down
to four cards and must
retain the jack of hearts as
one of them. Hence, he must
let a club go and South has
four club winners "
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN )

by Jim Davis

by Bob Thaves

x r

DEAR DR. IAMB - My
elderly father died recently
from azotem ia. The dic­
tionary didn’t explain it very
w ell.
Would
taking
tranquilizers over a long time
contribute to this urinary
trouble? Is it an acute disease
or something a person would
have chronically? He did not
eat very much for several
months before he died.
DEAR
READER
Azotemia refers to a build-up
in the blood of high levels of
urea. Urea is the end product
of protein metabolism. As the
amino acids that are in the
protein are broken down to
release energy, the "am ­
monia" group is split off and
two of these are hooked
together to form urea. The
water-soluble compound is
then eliminated through the
urine.
When the kidneys fail to
filter the blood adequately for
any number of reasons, they
don't filter out enough urea.
Many normal people will have
high urea levels because they
eat a lot of protein, as in
meats, and may not drink
enough water. The kidneys
filter out urea best if they pass
a lot of water, and for that to
happen you must drink water.
It follows that elevated urea
levels are more common In
people who sweat a lot and get
dehydrated as usually seen in
hot, dry climates. Now, most
people to lerate minimal
elevations of urea. It is im­
portant to doctors as an in­
dicator of how your kidneys
are working. But if the ability
to eliminate urine is com­
promised, as from an ob­
struction from an enlarged
prostate, the level of urea
may be many times its nor­
mal level and the patient will
still live.
A lot depends on what
causes the elevation. If it is
caused by an obstruction that
can be removed, it is tem­
po rary ,
and
successful
rem oval m ay result in
complete recovery.
I am send you The Health
Letter number 12-12, Your
Kidneys and How they Work,

K K % \ ^

•

•

�N ew Hospital
Longwood People Want Psychiatric Facility, But O n Their Terms
By JOEDeSANTIS
Herald Stall W riter
It's not that l/mgwood city officials
and residents don’t want a proposed
psychiatric hospital built in their city.
It's more a case of wanting it built under
their conditions.
That’s the message the Longwood City
Commission and a standing room only
crowd at I/mgwoodCity Hall delivered to
Hospital Corporation of America (MCA)
officials during Monday night’s public
hearing on HCA's conditional use permit
req u est to construct an 80-bed
psychiatric hospital on a 5.9-acre site
near West la k e Road; part of a 26-acre
parcel at State Road 134 and West lak e
Road for which HCA has already
received approval to bpild a 100-bed
general use hospital.
With the exception of one com­

missioner, the remainder of the board
and the majority of about 100 residents
who packed City Hall last night have no
qualm s about HCA building the
psychiatric hospital.
What remains to be resolved, however,
before the commission will approve the
conditional use permit request are dif­
ferences over what name the facility will
have, whether the psychiatric hospital
will in some way be physically connected
to the general use hospital, and some sort
of guarantee that HCA will indeed build a
general use hospital following con­
struction of the psychiatric hospital.
That decision is expected to come
Friday at a special meeting between the
commission and representatives from
HCA over differences of opinion ex­
pressed at the public hearing.
The grass roots of Monday's impasse

actually began more than a year ago.
Based on a certificate of need
assessment by the state, HCA received
approval to build a 100-bed general use
hospital in Longwood.
During that initial approval stage,
HCA
officials
indicated
the
hospital would have a psychiatric wing.
Seven months ago HCA also received a
certificate of need assessment front the
state to build an 80-bod psychiatric
hospital. A site near Goldenrod was
purchased but prior to actual con­
struction, HCA found sinkhole problems
on that site which prohibited con­
struction,
Goldenrod re sid e n ts weren’t too
thrilled about having a psychiatric
hospital in their backyard and neither
were longwood officials when they were
somewhat taken by surprise in March

when HCA announced plans to build the
psychiatric hospital in Urn gw nod.
The city advised HCA at that time that
the company would have to seek a con­
ditional use permit because Hie city
commission approved the general use
hospital with the understanding it would
include a psychiatric wing and not a
separate facility. HCA immediately filed
for a conditional use permit and after a
grueling question-answer session before
I.ongwood’s Land Planning Agencyreceived initial approval that eventuallybrought the m atter to a public hearing.
Two weeks ago HCA flew several citycommissioners and Lmgwood residents
to Cypress Hospital, a similar facility to
the one proposed for longwood, to give
officials and residents a first-hand look at
what kind of facility would be built in
their city. The trip proved to be con­

vincing. but both residents and members
of the commission expressed their desire
for a guarantee that the two proposed
hospitals would be connected somehow
and that HCA would not change its plans
for a general use hospital.
C om m issioner
Steven
Uskert
remained adamant in his opposition to
separate facilities.
“ If the psychiatric hospital is ap­
proved, you'll put the general use
hospital on the back burner," Uskert told
HCA officials.
"f worked hard for a year gathering
petitions in this city fur a general use
hospital. That’s the one I want to see built
first.
"I think Ixmgwood should look at
1-ongwood’s needs first, not the central
Florida area or the state or the
Southeast, I firmly believe the two

facilities should be one unit, not two
separate units," said Uskert.
HCA director of hospital development.
Bill Trivett, explained to Uskert that
HCA had several reasons for wanting to
build the psychiatric hospital first.
"We're interested in holding down the
cost of medical care for patients," ex­
plained Trivett. “A lot of diagnostic and
medical testing facilities associated with
a general use hospital aren't necessary in
a psychiatric hospital
"Our certificate of need from the state
expires in five months, while the cer­
tificate of need for the other hospital
doesn't expire for some time," Trivett
said. "If we don’t start construction we
run the chance of having to go through
the whole process of starting from
See FRIDAY'S. Page 2A

Year's Delay Expected

Speer, Others To Fight
Downtown Sanford Ruling
By DONNA ESTES
Herald Staff Writer
It could be nine months to a year before the city of Sanford
finds out whether it can redevelop Sanford's downtown.
Attorney G. Algernon Speer, representing himself and other
property owners, filed notice in the circuit court at Sanford
late Monday that he will be appealing a circuit court decision
favoring the city in Speer’s lawsuit.
And a clerk of the appellate court said today the notice of
appeal and a certified copy of the lawsuit must be sent to
Daytona Beach and it will be 110 days thereafter before It is
assigned to a judge or a panel of judges for a decision.
If It is assigned to a judicial panel, it will be even longer
before a decision is rendered.
"When a case is assigned to a panel of judges, there is no
time limit on when it will be decided," the clerk said.
On April 19, Circuit Judge Roger Dykes ruled against Speer
and his clients, declaring that the city of Sanford has the right
to spend money to redevelop the downtown section und that the
proposed development plan is in accordance with law.
Just a few weeks ago, Dykes refused to hold a rehearing in
the case.
City Attorney Bill Colbert said he was hand-delivered the
notice of intent to appeal at about 5 p in. Monday.
The civil division of the Seminole County Clerk of the Circuit
Court has not as yet received a written decision from Dykes,
denying Speer's motion for rehearing.
Colbert said today he never doubted that Speer would appeal
the local court decision. " I t’s not unusual for cases to be in the

The plan calls for reconstructing the north half block of
Magnolia between First Street and the adjacent alley to turn it
into a pedestrian plaza.
It also provides for improvements to a two-block section of
First Street between Park and Palmetto avenues, with ad­
ditional landscaping and lighting. Additional parking is to be
provided through construction of a new parking lot at the
corner of Second Street and Magnolia.

SW/AiyiAFf? IS FOUND
Tlte body of a Ill-year-old Sanford boy, missing
since Saturday, was discovered float ini' in the
St. Johns River at about 10:30 a.in. today, one
mile north of the Osteen bridge just east of
Sanford where the youth and a friend had been
swimming. Seminole County sheriff’s deputies
identified the body as Robert Daren Sherman
Jr., of 1508 Summerlin Ave„ after Volusia

County deputies spotted him while* palrolinj' the
river daily using divers, boats and the
helicopter since Sherm an’s disappearance
Saturday afternoon. Sherm an's father said his
son and a friend were sw im m ing in the river
when the youth suddenly disappeared under the
water and never resurfaced.

W all Collapse Investigated By State

TO DAY
Action Reports
2A
Around The Clock
4A
Bridge ......................
6®
Calendar ......................••• 111
Classified Ads ................ C5B
Comics ......................... ®®
Crossword
6B
DearAbby ....................... 1R
Deaths . . . i . .................... 2A

appeal court for three to nine months and I've had them there a
lot longer," Colbert said.
He said after the records are sent to Daytona Beach, Speer
will present the court there with a brief of his contentions in the
suit. Colbert will have an opportunity to respond for the city
and both attorneys will have one more go-round each with
additional responses before the court will begin consideration
of- a ruling.
In the original law suit, Speer said the planned im­
provements for the downtown would hinder emergency
vehicles, adversely affect the safety and convenience of
motorists and double flooding hazards downtown.
He said it also would reduce the number of parking spaces
and that the city by spending money for the improvements
would be violating state law.
Dykes ruled that none of the contentions are true.
The Sanford City Commission adopted the downtown
development plan in May 1980 and budgeted $251,000 for
materials and labor in the 19804)1 fiscal year budget.
While the lawsuit has been going on, the city has continued
funds for the project in the city budget.

Dr. I a m b ........................... 6B
E d ito ria l......................... 4A
Horoscope ...................... ®®
Hospital .................. ........^ A
N a tio n ............................. 2A
P e o p le ............................. 1®
S p o rtl............................
Television ...................... 1®
Weather ........................ 2A

Strike Up The Band
Seminole High School's Marching Seminoles will jump into
pre-school band activities Thursday and Friday at the SRA
Band Hall, according to band Director Bob McGuire.
Orientation, which will run from 9 a.m. until noon, will
continue throughout next week. McGuire said all current and
new band members should attend to receive information on
Fall band activities.
Band members should dress casually and bring instruments,
he said.

lly MICHEALBEHA
Herald Staif Writer
Sanford police have concluded that last Friday's collapse of
a wall at the W. Altee Burpee seed company building in San­
ford which killed three workmen was caused by a strong gust
of wind.
Investigators from the Florida Department of labor began
their own investigation of the tragedy today, But an official
with the state office in Tampa said the inquiry is "routine.”
Officer Larry Monti of the Sanford police Department said
the investigation by Lt. Ralph Russell and Detective Karen
Reynolds confirms the theory that the collapse was an ac­
cident not caused by negligence and was caused by a gust of
wind.
"Lieutenant Russell and Detective Reynolds have said
they're going with the wind theory," Monti said. "Every in­
dividual involved has said there was a wind blowing right
before the wall fell."
tie said no charges will be filed as a result of the police
inquiry.
Howard Stevens, of the Department of Labor's Occupational

Safety and Health Act office, said that office probes every
industrial accident with fatalities that occurs in the state.
“ We investigate all fatalities," he said.
Stevens said the team of investigators will visit the scene of
the collapse at 206 W. First St. and interview all the survivors
to determine the cause of the tragedy.
" lt will make it more difficult to investigate since the
building Is no longer there," Stevens said.
He said any information gathered in the probe is confidential
until the inquiry is completed. The investigation will try to
determine whether the collapse was an accident or caused by
negligence.
"That’s what we're trying to determine —whether there was
negligence involved," Stevens said.
The wall collapsed Friday afternoon killing three men who
were working to prepare it for demolition the following day.
WilliamGracey, 55, of 2551 Palmetto Ave., Sanford, owner of
Gracey Construction Co., and two workmen for the firm,
Nathaniel Hailey, 31, of 612li Cypress Ave., Sanford, and
Vincent Foster, 29, of 1120 W. 14th St., Sanford were killed in
the collapse.

Two men remain in the Central Florida Regional Hospital in
Sanford with injuries they received in the collapse. Robert
Walton, 34, of 1840 Jerry Ave., Sanford, is in serious but stable
condition in the intensive care unit and Charley Jones, 26, 1726
W. 14th St., Sanford, is in satisfactory condition, hospital of­
ficials said.
Darrell Jackson, 29, of 102 Scoit Drive, Sanford, was
released from the hospital Monday. Four other men escaped
the tragedy with only minor abrasions.
Gracey Construction Co., had been working for about two
weeks to gut the inside of the building, which wus purchased by
Flagship Hank. The bank plans to landscape the site and
eventually convert it into a parking lot.
The rem ainder of the building was lorn down Saturday
morning by local contractors. The group assembled because
they were friends of Gracey and because they wanted to knock
the building down so It would no longer pose a threat to
passersby or to adjacent structures. The 78-year-old building
had been empty since June 1981.

Im paired Physicians
Rehabilitation Program Leaves Stigma A s Difficult A s Problem
Editor's Note: While there are coun­
tless drug and alcohol rehabilitation
programs nationwide to help Individuals
with abuse problems, there are only a
few that deal specifically with the
problems faced by physicians suffering
from alcohol and drug addiction. And
while Florida la a frontrunner In ad­
dressing the Im paired physician
problem, m ethods of treatm ent,
obligations
of
doctors,
legal
ramifications for those doctors who
refuse treatm ent, and the consequences
faced by peer physicians who refuse to
"turn In” their colleagues remain con­
troversial. Two Seminole County
physicians who have been through the
South M iami H ospital Addiction
Treatment Program openly discuss their
experiences and their reactions to being
physician-patients.

4

By JOE DcSANTlS
Herald Staif Writer
Third In a series
"You have to do something to blunt the
emotional pain and that’s near im­
possible. It’s difficult to find relief when
you walk away from suffering people."
"The main problem with using drugs
or alcohol to excess is that you go through
hell to withdraw. You need some sort of
help."
Those are just a sam ple of the feelings
expressed by two Seminole County
physicians who have been through the
hellish experience of drug or alcohol
abuse battles and are presently at­
tempting to piece back together both
their private and professional lives.
As much of a problem as alcohol and
drug abuse was for them to deal with, the
stigma of having to go through a

reh ab ilitatio n program proved an
equally heavy burden to carry,
"Once we signed into the program we
signed over our rights," explained one of
Ihe doctors.
"I'm not saying that the program
doesn’t have good points. I’m Just saying
that It needs some cleaning up."
The two Seminole County physicians
found themselves signing at different
tim es into South M iam i H ospital's
Addiction Treatment Program after a
fellow physician became aware of their
problems and strongly suggested they
seek help.
Under Florida’s Sick Doctor law ,
passed in 1969, doctors experiencing drug
or alcohol abuse problems, or doctors
facing dehabilitating physical or
emotional handicaps are required to
suspend their practices and seek help.

The law also stales that other physicians,
aware of those problems among Ihe
ranks, can have their licenses revoked
for failing to turn their colleagues in for
rehabilitation.
Both doctors contend that the specifics
of their voluntary entry into the
rehabilitation program were not fully
spelled out and they said they had to go
through the degrading experience of
admitting addiction.
Among the local doctors' unfavorable
contentions about the South Miami
Hospital Program are: that they were
told the program would last four to six
weeks; that they were forced to adm it to
an alcohol addiction problem regardless
of whether they were experiencing
problems with drugs or alcohol; that
some of the staff members at the facility
were not qualified to treat physicians,

and that no provisions were made for
their practices when they were told to go
out of state for additional follow up
treatment for a period ranging from
three to five months.
“The entire month’s stay consisted of a
one-hour session with a professional,"
said one of the Seminole Countyphysicians. "Their contention is that u
one-on-one counseling session has no
value.
"One of the therapists didn’t have a
college degree and no training other than
having gone through alcohol abuse
treatment himself,” one doctor said.
“ If I knew what I know today, I would
have never signed in,” said the doctor.
In response, Dr. Dolores Morgan,
Addiction Treatm ent director at the
See FEW, Page 2A

�I A — Evening Herald, Sanford, F I,

Tueiday, Aug. 17, m i

NATION
IN BRIEF
Reagan Says Tax Package
'A Price Worth Paying'
WASHINGTON (U PI) — President Reagan, using
his persuasive talents to pressure Congress to pass the
$98.3 billion tax increase, asked help from those who
will be directly affected — American taxpayers.
His political clout on the line, Reagan appeared on
nationwide television Monday night to issue his plea for
the tax package he described as a "compromise” he
had to "swallow h ard ” to accept.
"You can help ... by letting them know this
legislation is a price worth paying for lower Interest
rates, economic recovery and more jobs," he told the
viewers.
Terming the issue “a simple matter of fairness,"
Reagan Monday night denied the tax hike he proposed
is the largest in history and insisted the impact on most
taxpayers will be offset by tax cuts and the benefits of a
healthier economy.

Jury To Get Franklin Case
SOUTH BEND, Ind. (UPI) — Avowed racist Joseph
Paul Frankiin concluded testimony in his trial by
saying he was not in Fort Wayne, Ind., on the night he
allegedly shot civil-rights leader Vernon Jordan.
Final arguments were scheduled for today and U.S.
District judge Allen Sharp said the case would go to the
all-white eight-rnan, four-woman jury about noon.
Franklin is charged with violating Jordan’s civil
rights by shooting him in the back in the parking lot of
a Fort Wayne motel on May 29,1980. Prosecutors claim
he was angered after seeing Jordan in a bar wilh a
white woman.

Draft Resister To Trial
ROANOKE, Va. (U PI) — A minister’s son says his
faith in God will protect him in court today against
federal authorities prosecuting him on charges of
disobeying the draft registration law.
Enten Eller, 20, an honor student and the son of a
Brethren minister refused to register for the draft
because he believes military service is counter to the
teachings of Jesus Christ.
Federal attorneys decided to prosecute Eller as an
exampte to the estim ated 500,000 other draft-age men
who have failed to obey the registration law, risking
the threat of a five-year prison term and $10,000 fine.

Anti-Abortion Filibuster
WASHINGTON (U PI) - Sen. Jesse Helms’ slightly
watered-down anti-abortion measure — still the most
far-reaching since abortion was legaliied in 1973 — is
running into a filibuster, and both sides are counting
votes to test their strength.
Although weakened, the amendment still would be
the most far-reaching anti-abortion legislation since
the 1973 Supreme Court decision legalizing the
procedure. It would prohibit the federal funding, direct
or indirect, and federal Insurance coverage of abor­
tions, and encourage a quick review of the 1973 ruling
that legalized abortion.
The draft also would overturn the 1962 Supreme
Court ruling outlawing prayer in public schools by
removing the high tribunal’s jurisdiction in such cases.

WEATHER
NATIONAL REPORT: Fierce storms dumped up to 12 in­
ches of rain across the South, washing out scores of homes with
10-foot floods in central Tennessee and destroying "thousands
of acres" of crops. Workers searched today for the bodies of
two women swept away in the torrent. Homes, barns and
garages crumpled under the weight of the rushing waters
Monday. A mudslide blocked at least one highway, authorities
said.
AREA READINGS (9 a.m .): temperature: 79; overnight
low: 72; Monday high: 90; barometric pressure: 30.05;
relative humidity: 76 percent; winds: south at 6 mph; rain:
none. Sunrise 6:55 a.m., sunset 8:03 p.m.
WEDNESDAY TIDES: DAYTONA BEACH: highs, 8:10
a.m ., 8:42 p.m.; lows, 1:49 a.m., 1:55 p.m.; PORT
CANAVERAL: highs, 8:02 a.m., 8:34 p.m.; lows, 1:40 a.m .,
1:46 p.m.; BAYPORT: highs, 2:22 a.m., 1:22 p.m.; lows, 7:39
a.m ., 8:37 p.m.
BOATING FORECAST: SL’Augustine to Jupiter Inlet, Out
50 Miles: Wind southeast 10 knots or less today and southeast
to south 10 knots or less tonight and Wednesday. Seas 3 feet or
less. Strong and gusty winds near widely scattered thun­
derstorm s.
AREA FORECAST: P artly cloudy today with a 50 percent
chance of afternoon thunderstorms. Highs near 90. Light
southerly winds. Tonight partly cloudy with a 30 percent
chance of thunderstorms. Lows in the low to mid 70s. Variable
light wind. Wednesday mostly cloudy with a 60 percent chance
of thqnderstorms. Highs in the upper 80s.
EXTENDED FORECAST: Partly cloudy with scattered
mainly afternoon thundershowers Thursday through Satur­
day. lo w s in the 70s and highs around 90.

HOSPITAL NOTES
C tn tra l Florid * Rational H oipitat

Leroy J . Fink, Orange City

B IR T H S
A D M ISSIO N S
Sanford:
B a ttle M Hurkhaad
Ja c k R. Crew* Jr.

Nancy D Hantcom
Sue J Hulchiton
Ire n * M. M iller
M y ra A M u te
Ju d ith A. Oliver
W illie A. Riggint
C alherine T. Smith

Rulh E. Wurtenoerg, Denary
I treat F lih m a n , Deltona
Joseph Rehak, Long wood

Ei**ning Ilcm Jd

Steven P and Wannetla Dulley,
a baby boy, Sanlord
David S and Ltanora P llt . a
baby boy, Allamonta Sprlngt
D ISC H A R G ES
Sanlord
B e lly Ruth Moore
Selma E . Sechretl
Ru ttetl E. McCain. Deltona
Alice M. Mackeyroy and baby
girl, Sanlord
P a tricia M O vertired and baby
girl. Sanlord

«•&lt;*»••»

Tuesday, August 17, l»»-Vol. 74, No 30*
Published Dally and Sunday, eacepl Saturday By The Sanlord
H erald. Inc., )M N . French A v*.. Sanlord. Fla. U N I.
Second C la n Patlag* Paid at Sanlord, Florida m i l
H am * D d lv e ry : Week, U . M ; Month, S 4 .ll; 4 ManIM. S14.M;
Y e a r, I4S.M . By Mall: Week S M S ; Month, IS . )]; 4 Months,
S H OO; Y e a r. SST.M________________________________________________

For Shooting Daughter 6 Times

Fern Park W oman Gets 35 Years
By TEN1 YARBOROUGH
Herald Staff Writer
Lawyers for a Fern Park woman, sentenced Monday to 35
years in prison for trying to murder her 8-year-old daughter
six months ago, are preparing to appeal her conviction.
Kathy Ruth Oviatt, 26, of 240 Oxford Road, was convicted
July 2 of shooting her daughter, Pam ela, six times and leaving
her to die along a dirt road off State Road 535 near the Walt
Disney World employee entrance. The young girl, discovered
by passing motorists, was rushed to the hospital where she was
treated for gunshot wounds to her chest and arms. She later
testified in court that her mother shot her while the two were
playing a game of blindman’s bluff.
Describing the case as "bizarre," Orange County Judge
Rom Powell said Mrs. Oviatt will spend at least three years in
prison before she becomes eligible for parole because a gun
was used in the crime.
Mrs, Oviatt’s lawyer, Russell Crawford, said the case will be
appealed to the Fifth District Court of Appeal in Daytona
Beach, but that lie is turning the case over to the public
defender’s office for undisclosed reasons. Mrs. Oviatt is being
held without bail in the Orange County jail pending the appeal
which is expected to take six to nine months.
The maximum sentence for an attem pted first-degree
murder conviction is life in prison, prosecutors said.
Assistant State Attorney Ray Sharpe said he believes Mrs.
Oviatt shot her daughter because the little girl had become a
burden to her "foot-loose and fancy-free lifestyle” since Mrs.
Oviatt’s divorce from Pamela’s father.
Pamela is currently living with her father.
MAN CHARGED WITH ARMED ROBBERY
A 25-ycar-old Altamonte Springs man was being held in the
Seminole County jail under $10,000 bond today accused of
robbing at gunpoint the restaurant where he is employed as a
bus boy.

Action Reports
★

F ir e s

★

C o u r ts

★

Po lic e

Richard Charles Faylhefcr, of 823 Hanover Drive, was
arrested in connection with Friday’s armed robbery of the
York Steak House restaurant in the Altamonte Mall, police
said.
According to police, a man wearing dark clothing and a
slocking mask and carrying a gun and a knife ordered the
assistant manager to gather all of the restaurant employees in
the kitchen and then ordered everyone, except the manager,
into the cooler. The robber than demanded the restaurant’s
money which he put into a brown vinyl pouch.
The bandit then forced the manager into the cooler and told
the employees not to call the police for 10 minutes, police said.
Faylhefer was arrested outside the mall after employees
gave police a description of the thief. Police said the stolen
money was recovered and that a gun and a knife were found in
Faylhefer’s possession.
JOGGER’S PURSE SNATCHED
A 33-year-old Altamonte Springs woman told deputies that a
man stole her purse and knocked her down while she was
Jogging along Oak Street near County Road 427 late Friday.
Gail Zowsel, of 120 Peacock Drive, told deputies the man ran
up beside her and started talking to her. She said the man
suddenly grabbed her purse from tier shoulder, causing her to
fall, then fled east on Oak Street. The purse contained about
$150 cash, keys and personal papers.

...Friday's The Day For HCA
Continued From Page 1^
scratch with the stale for another cer­
tificate of need."
"That’s not our problem," Uskert
responded. "J worked for a general use
hospital and that’s what I want to see
first."
Commissioner Russell Grant labeled
Uskert’s comments as "selfish."
"That’s a selfish motive and unjust,"
said Grant. "T here’s no hospital around
that's going to serve the needs of one
community.
"i'm not em barrassed to have a
psychiatric hospital in Longwood," said
Grant. “There’s a need for one. I
wouldn't be em barrassed to lead my wife
through the front door if she needed help.
Most likely she'd be the one leading me
in," tie said.
Grant later said he will file a conflict of
interest form prior to the vote because lie
is a minor stockholder of HCA.
Among the Longwood residents wiio
spoke in favor of the psychiatric hospital
were attorney Mark Rabinowilz, Sue
Bussman, Ruth Grant, Harvey Smerilson
and John Crystal.

Smerilson, a member of Lingwood's
Lind Planning Agency, said, "We've put
HCA through a lot more grueling
questions that are being asked here
tonight before we approved the site plan.
I think the people of Longwood can showmore Intelligence than the people of
Goldenrod by approving this."
Rabinowitz, who works with juveniles
and teenagers in trouble, said, “We’re
dealing with mental illness and I can't
describe the magnitude of the problem.
State facilities are a horrible place to
visit, they arc certainly not the place for
mentally ill juveniles. There's a lack of
proper facilities in this area," said
Rabinowitz. "It's easy to condemn
people who need help. But we’re talking
about emotionally disturbed children
here, not people that are going to be
running around maiming and killing."
Ruth Grant of the First Pentecostal
Church of Longwood commented, "1
have seen the need for this type of
facility. It's not the type of thing you
throw your hands up mid say ’we don’t
want it.' I’m wholeheartedly in favor of
It."

John Crystal added the job of the
commission is to look out for its residents
and that he would rather see a
psychiatric hospital built than another
shopping center on 434.
Mayor June Lormann also expressed
approval of the psychiatric hospital if it
were in some way connected with the
general use hospital while commissioner
Tim OT&gt;eary also expressed a desire to
see the two facilities physically con­
nected and wanted assurances that HCA
would build the general use hospital.
“ I don't know how to offer a guaran­
tee," responded Trivett. "HCA is an
honorable company we m eet our
obligations. HCA has invested a
tremendous amount of time and a con­
siderable amount of money in the
development stages for both hospitals.”
Trivett then suggested HCA officials
and the commission could probably work
out a compromise on connecting the two
facilities in some fashion and work on a
name tiiat would be suitable to both
Longwood and HCA.
Those compromises are expected to be
reached at Friday's special meeting.

...Few Doctors Seek Help On Their Own
cooperative."
"That was a bitter pill to swallow," he
South Miami Hospital facility, disagrees.
said.
"Everything is spelled out before they
Dr. Morgan contends the first step
enter," said Dr. Morgan,
toward recovery is admission of ad­
" It's a tra u m a tic experience for
diction. And she emphasized those
doctors themselves to have to go through
physicians with drug problems are not
a program like this. They feel a stigma of
made to admit to alcoholism.
being connected wilh u social disease.
"If they are drug abusers, we don’t
They worry about acceptance from their
insist on them saying they are addicted,"
peers and they're concerned that their
she said. "But getting doctors past that
practices will suffer."
denial stage is a very Important part of
Morgan said the basis for the facility’s their recovery.
treatment is spelled out before the
"Being an alcoholic or drug addict Is a
doctors enter the program. However, lot like being a little bit pregnant," she
with the threat of license revolution by said. "Either you are or you aren't."
the State Board of Medical Examiners
During the second phase of the
hanging over their heads, troubled, rehabilitation program, the physicians
doctors in reality face little choice.
attend nightly meetings with others at
Following what Dr. Morgan termed as the centers sim ilar to Alcoholics
"usually a month's stay" at the Miami Anonymous groups, where each in­
program, doctors live at similar facilities dividual gets up, admits his problem and
in either Georgia or Mississippi in a tells his history of drug or alcohol abuse.
communal setting among other troubled
Following completion of the second
physicians and other individuals going phase, doctors are then required to
through dru g and alcohol abuse continue on a two-year self help program
rehabilitation.
in which they must attend one meeting a
"Once you’re admitted, there is no month at either a local Alcoholics
turning back," said one of the local Anonymous group
of N arcotics
doctors.
Anonymous group.
"Usually at the second stage of
During Uiat two year period those
treatment there are two people to a room doctors also have a peer physician that
feeling a lot of anxiety.
supervises them and checks up on their
"Doctors have a feeling of uncertainty rehabilitation progress.
about how friends and peers will react to
Dr. Morgan said the addiction treat­
their problems," he said.
ment center's rehabilitation program,
Both of the Seminole County doctors “ Is the only way they’ll survive."
agreed that rehabilitation emphasis is
Site rates the South Miami Hospital
keyed toward alcoholism.
success rate with impaired physicians as
"There is little difference in Ihe 80 percent successful.
treatment between the two centers," said
There are, however, those physicians
one of the physicians. “Everything is who don't make it back to regular
keyed off alcoholism."
practice. Somewhere during the second
The other doctor, who experienced a phase and the two-year self help
drug abuse problem ,. said he resented programs the doctors quit.
being made to adm it to an alcoholism
When that happens, Morgan notifies
problem for fear of being labeled “un­ the State Board of Medical Examiners
Continued From Page l A

with the end result either a suspension or
revokation of that physician’s license.
She added that there have been some
cases where a doctor's abuse problem is
so severe she recommends that he never
return to practice.
One of the local doctors pointed out
some physicians who go through the
program feel so demeaned and afraid
that word of their problem will get out
that they change their names and leave
town.
And he added that in some instances
physicians with abuse problems feel
threatened by Florida's Baker Act,
which allows persons to be in­
stitutionalized if they are considered to
be a threat to themselves or someone
else.
Dr. Morgan states the Baker Act ap­
plies strictly for Individuals with mental
health problems, although she added that
in cases where impaired physicians
refuse treatment, the Meyers Act can be
invoked. The Meyers act deals with
persons who are considered a danger to
themselves or others because of drug or
alcohol abuse.
"Very few doctors will seek help on
their own," she said. "They fear the word
will get out to their patients and they fear
failure of acceptance by fellow doctors.
While the tv. o Seminole County doctors
did have several unfavorable views of the
rehabilitation program, neither denied
the need for it.
"I realized a lot of things bothered me
in my life and I had no effective way to
deal with these problems because my ego
as a doctor got In the way,” said one.
"It was difficult for me as a doctor to
admit that I was fallible and had the
same human weaknesses that some of
my patients had.
"Therapy helped me ventilate my
feelings — whether they were fear,
anxiety or frustration."

Mrs. Zowsel was treated for a head injury at Florida
Hospital-Altamonte, and released, deputies said.
BOX OF JEWELRY, MONEY MISSING
Someone broke into the home of Edward Adam Martinez, 23,
of 400 S. Palm etto Ave., Sanford, between 9 p.m. Sunday and
2:25 p.m. Monday and stole about $819 worth of cash and
jewelry, police said.
Martinez told police the thieves entered his home through a
window.
LAWNMOWER LIFTED
A lawnmower, valued at about $125, was stolen from the
home of Jam es R. Bennett, 53, of 466 Eagle Circle,
Casselberry, between 9 p.m. and 11:12 p.m. Sunday, deputies
said.
BATHTUB, BED, GATE GRABBED
Thieves stole a new bathtub, a bed and a chain-link gate
from the home of Morris Rogers, 41, of 3001 Jewett Lane,
Sanford, between 10 a.m. Wednesday and 8:35 p.m. Sunday.
Deputies said the bathtub and bed were stolen from the home
after thieves entered the house through a window,
CHURCH-GOERS HOME BURGLARIZED
Thieves broke into a Sanford woman’s home between 10:44
a.m. and 2:45 p.m. Sunday while she and her son attended
church, stealing $317 worth of property.
Rosa Mae Payne, 61, of 1111 Second I)r., told police the
thieves entered her home through the front door and stole
sheets, silver half-dollars, two men’s watches and a revolver.
SANFORD MAN JAILED
A 24-year-old Sanford man was being held in the county Jail
today under $5,000 on two charges of carrying concealed
weapons.
Police said they arrested Michael Patrick Garrity, of C05‘;
Palmetto Ave., after they observed him carrying a M-l rifle
under a sheet near Sixth Street and Oak Avenue, at about 5:47
p.m. Sunday. Police said they also discovered ammunition and
a knife in G arrity’s pockets upon searching him.

AREA DEATHS
MRS. ELLEN HARRELL
Mrs. Ellen Harrell, 42, of
603 Fifth St., Sanford, died
Monday at Florida HospitalOrlando. Born August 5, 1940,
she was a life-long resident of
Sanford.
She
was
a
homemaker and a member of
First Shiloh Baptist Church,
Sanford.
Survivors include her
husband, Henry; two sons,
Derrick and Dana, both of
Sanford; a daughter, Donna,
of Sanford; her mother, Mrs.
Ijllje Bell Green, of Sanford;
a brother, Tyrone Green, of
Sanford.
NICK J. BENEKOS
Nick J. Benekos, 84, of 107
Pine Tree Lane, Altamonte
Springs, died Monday at
Florida Hospital-Altamonte.
Born May 6, 1898, in Greece,
he moved to Altamonte
Springs from Ithaca, N.Y., in
1981. He wus a former
restaurant owner and was
Greek Orthodox.
Survivors include two
daughters, M rs. Marina
Wilbur, of Altamonte Springs,
and Mrs, Alexsander Arm­
strong, of Tarpon Springs;
three brothers, Gus, Taki, and
John, all of Greece; and six
grandchildren.
ELMER E. WONTENAY
Elmer Eugene Wonlenay,
66, of 414 Lake Boulevard,
Sanford, died Monday mor­
ning at C entra! Florida
Regional Hospital, Sanford.
Born Jan. 13, 1916, in Union
City, Pa., he moved here in
1946 from there. He was an
Army veteran of World War II
and a communicant of Holy
Cross Episcopal Church, a
member of Eureka Ltdge 336
F&amp;AM, Union City, past
worshipful m aster of the
lodge in 1942 and a 32nd
degree Mason. He was a
graduate of the University of
Pittsburgh and a member of
the Kappa Sigma fraternity.
He retired four years ago as
supervisor of child welfare
and as a social worker with
the Department of Health and
Rehabilitative Sendees.
Survivors include bis wife,
Muriel; two sons, Ross,
Sanford and Scott Wontenqy
of C asselberry; and five
granddaughters.
Gramkow Funeral Home,
Sanford, is in charge of
arrangements.
JO SE PH IN E
V.
CARUBBA
Mrs. Josephine V. Carubba,
75, of 307 P a rk Place,
Altamonte S prings, died
Monday at Florida HospitalOrlando. Born Nov. 6,1906, in
New Orleans, La., she moved
to Altamonte Springs from
MRS.

there in 1968. She was a
homemaker and a member of
Winter Springs Seventh-day
Adventist Church.
Survivors include a son,
Henry J. of Altamonte
Springs; a sister, Mrs. Sarah
Gonzales of New Orleans; a
brother, Frank Vicari, of New
Orleans; three grandchildren
and one great-grandchild.
Bnldwin-Fairchild Funeral
Home, Altamonte Springs, is
in charge of arrangements.
MRS. DEBBIE DURHAM
Mrs. Debbie Durham, 23, of
2301-D S. Bumby St., Orlando,
died Friday at Winter Park
Memorial Hospital. Born Dec.
6,1958, in North Carolina, she
m oved to Orlando from
Winter Springs this year. She
was a sales clerk.
She is survived by her
husband, Timothy J.; her
fa th e r, F ranklin Pope of
Orlando; a sister, Mrs. Kathy
Blackstonc of Orlando and her
gran d m o th er, Mrs. Lula
Williams of Orlando.
Semoran Funeral Home,
A ltam onte Springs, is in
charge of arrangements.
HENRY F. ST. GEORGE
Henry Francis St. George,
69, of 486 Palm Springs Drive,
longwood, died Monday at
F lo rid a Hospital-Orlando.
Born Jan. 12, 1913, in Duluth,
Minn., he moved to Longwood
from Hialeah in 1974. He was
president and owner of an airconditioning firm and was a
Catholic. He was a member of
the Moose, Rolling Hills
Country Club and Sweetwater
Club.
Survivors Include his wife,
Jean R.; three sons, Thomas,
of C incinnati, Curtis of
Longwood, and David of
C alifornia;
a
brother,
Raymond C. of Duluth; and
nine grandchildren.
Baldwin-Fairchild Funeral
Home, Altamonte Springs, is
in charge of arrangements.

Funeral Notices
W O N T E N A Y . M R. E L M E R
E U G E N E — Funeral varvicei
and E u t h a r iil lor Mr. Elmer
Eugene Waontenay, 44, of 41*
Lake Boulevard, Sanlord, who
died Monday, w ill be at II a m
W ed n esd ay at Holy Cross
Episcopal Church with the Rev.
Leroy D Soper J r officiating In
lieu ol Dowers donations may be
made to Holy Cross Memorial
Garden or the Children’s Home
Society ol Florida Friends may
call al Ihe funeral home M p m.
Tuesday. G ra m k o w Fun eral
Home in charge
F O S T E R , M R . V IN C EN T Funeral services lor Mr. Vincent
Foster, 1». ot tllO W Ulh St.,
Sanford, who died Friday, will
b e a t l w p m Saturday at First
Shiloh
M is s io n a ry
Baptist
Church w ilh the Rev H E White
officiating B u ria l in Evergreen
C e m e te ry . B ro w n s ' Parad ise
Mem orial Chapel in charge

Seven Persons A re Charged With DUI
The following people were arrested recently in Seminole
County on charges of driving under the influence (DUI) of
alcholic beverages:
— Elmer M acateer, 44, of 2509 S. la u re l Ave., Sanford,
arrested 2:40 a.m . Saturday, charged with DUI and leaving the
scene of an accident. Macateer was arrested by deputies after
his truck reportedly struck a car along U.S. Highway 17-92,
Sanford, then fled the accident scene. M acateer was arrested
about a mile from Ihe accident scene and bond was set at $500.
— John Dewey Fella. 23. of 150 Pineda SI., l/vigwond,
arrested 3:05 a.m . Saturday, charged with DUI. Fella was
arrested by Casselberry police along Seminole Boulevard near

- •

IJtke Katherine. Bond was set at $500.
— Timothy ThomasTorrey, 22, of 1101 Abigail Dr., Deltona,
arrested 12:26 a.m. Saturday, charged with DUI, careless
driving and violation of driver’s license restriction. Torrey
was arrested by deputies along U.S. Highway 17-52 about
mile north of Gen. Hutchison Parkway. Bond was set at $500.
— Inland Stanley Demers, 50, of 518 Dewdrop Cove,
Casselberry, arrested 2:10 a.m . Sunday, charged with DUI,
and resisting arrest without violence. Demers was arrested
along Stale Road 436 in Casselberry by deputies. Bond was set
at $500.
— Archie Wilbur McCormick, 43, of DeBary, arrested 7:53

a.m. Sunday, charged with DUI, driving with a suspended
driver’s license and refusal to sign traffic citation. McCormick
was arrested by Florida Highway Patrol officers along
Interstate 4 at I.ake Mary Boulevard. Bond was set at $500.
— William Morris Ixxlge, 61, of Sanford, arrested 5:41 p.m.
Friday, charged with DUI, and reckless driving. Ixxige was
arrested along Orange Boulevard, in Paola, near Sanford by
deputies. Bond was set at $500.
- William Robert Fatula, 23. of 3904 S. Conway Road,
Orlando, arrested 1:40 a.m. Monday, charged with DUL
Falula was arrested by deputies along Interstate 4, near Lake
Mary- Boulevard. Bond was set at $500.

�Evening Herald, Sanford, FI,

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�Evening Herald

Tampa Bay coach John McKay is a funny man
— when he wins.
He had good reason to be funny Saturday night
after the Bucs stomped Philadelphia, 35-7, in the
preseason football opener for both'clubs.

IUSPS M l !K&gt;&gt;

300 N. FRENCH AVK., SANFORD, FLA. 32771
Area Code 305-322-2611 or 631-9993
Tuesday, A ugust 17, 1902—4A

"I was encouraged by the running backs,” said
McKay after the game. “Of course, some of the
players they had playing (in the second half)
won’t go to the Hall of Fame."

Wayne D Doyle. Publisher
Thomas Giordano, Managing Editor
Robert Lovenbury, Advertising and Circulation Director

Home Delivery: Week, SI.00; Month, $1.25; 6 Months, $24.00;
Year, $45.00. By Mail: Week, $1.25; Month, $5.25; 6 Months,
$30.00; Year. $57.00.
By SAM COOK

Herald Offers
Its Condolences
The Evening Herald would like to join everyone
in the community in extending condolences to the
families of the three men — William S. “Billy”
Gracey, Nathaniel Bailey and Vincent Foster —
who were killed when a wall of the \V. At lee
Burpee Co. building collapsed Friday.
All three victims were Sanford natives and Mr.
Gracey was particularly well known in the
community, having worked all of his professional
life as a construction worker and lately as a
consulting engineer.
There are no apparent reasons that make any
sense for why the three men would die. There
rarely are understandable reasons for death.
No doubt friends and relatives are having
difficulty consoling the immediate families of Mr.
Gracey, Mr. Bailey and Mr. Foster.
Words at a time like this cannot replace a loved
one. But the presence of other persons who care
and the offerings of help are most essential.

Mexico Vs. Inflation
The latest devaluation of the Mexican peso —
judged at 2B percent — comes hard on the heels of
sharp price increases for tortillas, bread and fuel
and a monetary devaluation of 30 percent last
February. These actions have the Mexican people
reeling in financial chaos.
What is happening is that the Mexican govern­
ment seeks to stop subsidizing fuel and tortillas
and to stop supporting the peso at a false rate. It
recently withdrew price supports. Now it intends
to let the peso float internationally, as other major
nations do.
In a true float, the peso would seek its own level
on the world market. Mexico, however, has an­
nounced it will try something new — Banco de
Mexico will set a preferential rate to pay interest
nn foreign loans and certain imports, with the
government supporting the difference. The
preferential rate will Ik * established each day.
Other exchange rates will be based on supply and
demand.
The Mexican government is making these
financial decisions because the country is plagued
by high inflation, high interest rates, plummeting
prices for crude oil exports and a foreign debt
expected to reach $R(i billion by year’s end, largest
of all Third World nations.
Mexico hopes the latest devaluation will help
restore the confidence of foreign investors. It is
bound to increase Mexico’s tourism business,
once that country’s No. 1 industry. Travel to
Mexico will become a real bargain with the pesodollar exchange at 70 to 1 or more.
These financial maneuvers make it most dif­
ficult for the Mexican people. Those who live near
the border will have to give up some more of their
shopping in the United States — bad news for
many merchants who say business never really
recovered since last February's devaluation.
'Hie government knows the moves are un­
popular and is making them in the "window”
between the election of a new president and his
inauguration. The new president cannot Ik * held
responsible for the actions and the "lame-duck”
president has nothing to lose. Not for six years,
when the term of the new president comes to an
end, will there he another such opportunity for the
party in power to take unpopular actions without
suffering at the polls.
The financial turmoil is to be regretted. But
Mexico is making the right moves. There is no
lasting economic security in price and currency
controls that do not reflect realities.

PLEASE WRITE
U - ttm to the editor are welcomed for publication. All
letters must be sinned, with u •moiling address and, if
possible, a telephone number so the identltly of the writer
may be verified. The Evening Herald will respect the
wishes of writers who do not want their names In print.
The Evening Herald also reserves the right to edit letters
to eliminate libel or to conform to space requirements.

BERRYS WORLD

Concerning rookie defensive end Booker Reese
from Bethune-Cookm an College: “ Booker
played long. Booker played well. If we can get
Booker to keep his shirt in he’ll be all right."
Concerning an interception by linebacker Jeff
Davis; "The first time he touched the ball

TOURNAMENT LEFTOVERS - On the wayhome front Tallahassee after little Major
League State Tournament, truck driver Gary
Taylor pulled into a weigh station and announced
to first baseman Todd Revels that he should get
out and use the scale.
In Revels’ defense, I must relay this situation

which occurred at the Sanford Flea Market.
Taylor, who will never be mistaken for Twiggy,
stepped on a scale and waited for the card to
come out with his fortune.
The card came out and said... ‘‘One at a time,
please."
Back in Sanford at the Little Junior league
Slate Tournament, the following conversation
took place:
"Want some boiled peanuts?" Jim Jernigan,
director of parks and recreation, asked Evening
Herald sportswriter Chris Fister.
“Do you really eat those things?" responded
Fister.
“It’s just like eating an unborn calf," pointed
out Jernigan.

ROBERT W AG M AN

DON GRAFF

Jobless
Figures
Flawed?

Bad News
And Worse
At The U.N.
The situation was going from bad to
potentially disastrous in the Persian Gulf.
Iran, having blocked and then repelled
Iraq’s invasion, was poised for a counterinvasion. Not only Iraq but the Arab oil states
that had bankrolled its military adventuring
were in the line of advance, raising the
prospect that the sputtering 2 year-old war
was about to spread beyond control.
So what was happening at the command
center of world peace-keeping?
Most of the diplomats at the United Nations,
the New York Times reported on an inside
page, took the weekend off.
And why not? It was a natural reaction not
only to the seasonal heat of a sweltering New
York summer, but to political heat about
which the diplomats were only too well aware
that they coud do nothing.
These have not been good times for the
United Nations.
Its m ajor recent
achievement was selection of its own new
secretary general after months of great
power deadlock.
Its efforts in the Persian Gulf and
Falklands wars only served to publicize its
impotence. When it isn’t being ignored it is
being criticized, most painfully to the [mint
recently by one of its own — more or less.
U.S. Ambassador Jeane J. Kirkpatrick
publicly ticked oft the world organization as
"a very dismal place" that has come to be
more problem m aker than solver.
The United Nations has come a long way —
all downhill — from the high hopes of its
founders. Or at least their promises.
There are a lot of candidates for the blame.
In the very beginning, the great powers that
decreed its creation to institutionalize a new
and less murderously anarchic world order
also arranged that it would not develop an
independent will and way of its own.
Those were the years when the West
European and Udin American connections
gave the United States an almost automatic
majority among the 50-odd members. The
General Assembly functioned as a semiautonomous extension of the State Depart­
ment. The Soviets' response was the Security
Council veto.
The self-serving superpowers could not
have provided worse examples for the new
majority that developed with the admission of
the multitude of new nations carved out of
disintegrating colonial empires and, most
recently, a proliferation of mini-states.
It is majority composed of factions and
blocs within blocs, held together by the
realization that in unity there is voting
strength if not the capability to translate
votes into meaningful action. It has tended to
use Its numbers to serve Its ow n various ends
but not to further the effectiveness and
credibility of the United Nations itself. It 1ms
been at its most destructive in pursuing the
Arab vendetta against Israel, crippling the
technically non-political U.N. cultural,
economic and social agencies.
■The sad part is that the nations most ac­
tively engaged in demolition are the very ones
must in need of an international arbiter such
as the United Nations was originally designed
to be.
Even the genuine idealists In 1946
recognized the realities of power. They did
not expect their creation to impose its will
upon the real powers.
Crisis after crisis — from Korea to Hungary
to Afghanistan and even Britain's triumph in
the Falklands—has demonstrated the wisdom
of that initial skepticism.

SPEAKING OF PIPELINES..,.
EDWARD J. WALSH

The Pipeline And Grain
President Reagan’s approval of a one-year
extension of the U.S.-Soviet grain purchase
agreement was received with both jubilation
and smirks. The National Association of
Wheat Dealers was happy, saying the
decision keeps a "form alized trading
agreement in place," and "makes a new
agreement next year more likely." However,
our European allies, who don’t like the
president's ban on sales of natural gas
pipeline equipment to the Soviets by
European licensees of U.S. firms, scented a
whiff of hypocrisy, which the administration
has left undispelled.
Already the French, Italians, and British
governm ents have advised the State
Department that they will permit their
companies to fulfill contracts already signed
with the Soviets. "A contract is a contract,"
saiiLoge Italian official.
The administration’s effort to stop or delay
the Soviet gas pipeline to Western Europe
certainly would have had greater Impact u
announced six months ago, Instead of in June.
Still, it is a healthy sign that the ad­
ministration does not entirely "love com­
merce more than it loathes communism," as
columnist George Will alleged a few months
back.
The grain deal agreement paints a different
picture, because, as the Wall Street Journal
points out, grain Is different from turbines
and rotors. On its face, the sale of grain to the
Soviets on a hard currency basis is not much
different from sales to anyone else. Grain Is
grain, and if American farm ers don't sell it,
the Canadians and Argentines will, and do. In
any case, we don't sell them as much as the
headlines suggest. The United States has
authorized the sale of up to 23 million tons of
com and wheat to the Soviets for all of 1982.
Thus far, they have purchased about 14
million tons, and will probably buy a total of
17.8 million Ions this year. According to the
Department of Agriculture, current U.S.
grain reserves exceed 400 million Ions,

l-ast year, the Soviets paid $1.57 billion for
American grain, miking them a distant
eighth among U.S. customers to Japan, which
bought (6.7 billion worth from U.S, farmers.
The one-year extension of the agreement
will authorize open-ended sales mail October
1, 1983. The extension does represent a
ticklish compromise by the administration on
grain sales to the USSR. Mr. Reagan lias
ruled out a long-term agreement, citing
Soviet conduct in Poland, In the hope that the
Europeans’ hurt feelings will be assauged.
But they know, as the Wheat Dealers
Association knows, that another extension
will be forthcoming next year.
But the balancing act falls when the
president defends his decision as preserving
“the sanctity of contracts" as he did in Des
Moines last week, while he Is asking the
Europeans to swallow their signed contracts
with the Soviets. Further, the conspicuous
back-slapping within the administration over
making a cozy political deal with farm state
congressmen, In the best pork barrel
tradition, ridicules the real distinction bet­
ween U.S. business with the Soviet Union, and
that of our allies.
The Urengoi natural gas pipeline is a
travesty of trade, financed by below-rnarket
European credits, to transport Soviet gas that
is not needed in Europe, through a pipeline
that will very likely be built by Soviet prison
camp labor and slave workers Imported from
Vietnam. The pipeline will earn the Soviets
upwards of $8 billion in hard currency per
year.
The sales of American grain to the USSR
are cash sales, and will continue to be. Such
sales are helpful to American farmers, and a
significant drain on Soviet hard currency.
Those arc the differences between sales of
grain, and sales of pipeline turbines, which
the administration must point out. A contract
is a contract, but some are less defensible
than others.

WASHINGTON (NEA) - The Bernard Cap
Company of Hialeah, Fla., just outside
Miami, expected to win a $750,000 contract to
make caps for the U.S. Army.
But its bid was rejected because the Pen­
tagon awarded the contract under a special
program designed to aid firms located in
areas of at least 9 percent unemployment.
The federal government put the jobless rate
in South Florida at only 7.5 percent.
State and local officials disagree with that
figure. They say that the monthly survey used
to determine the unemployment rate badly
undercounts refugees, of whom there are
many in South Florida.
Says Don Hill, director of the South Florida
Employment and Training Consortium: "Our
own studies show that refugees seem to be
underrepresented in the monthly (unem­
ployment) survey and even more un­
derrepresented when the statewide figures
are broken down into local figures. We and
the state feel that unemployment in South
Florida is running close to 12 percent, not the
7.5 percent that is the official number."
Bernard Cap is filing suit against the
federal government to challenge its method of
measuring local unemployment.
The $750,000 problem of this small company
serves to illustrate a multi-billion-dollar
problem for states, cities and counties across
the nation. That problem concerns the ac­
curacy of local unemployment figures.
Each year the federal governm ent
distributes more than $20 billion to state and
local governments based almost solely on the
monthly or quarterly unemployment figures
for those areas. But even the people who
compile those numbers concede that they are
suspect.
The federal funds are used to support such
programs as unemployment compensation,
Job-creation and Job-training efforts, federal
contract programs such as the one from
which Bernard Cap was excluded.
The late Julius Shiskin, the longtime
commissioner of the Bureau of 1-abor
Statistics, remarked in a 1977 interview that
he had considerable faith in the accuracy of
national unemployment data. But as for state
and loca data, Shiskin said, “my level of
confidence with these numbers Is much
lower."
Little has changed since in the way in which
the slate and local data are obtained. Ray
Konstanl, who heads the Bureau of Ijibor
S ta tistic s' Local Area Unemployment
Statistics Division, Is less critical than was
Shiskin about the data that his division
produces. But he acknowledges that problems
exist.
“We think that the Dade County (Miami)
situation is probably unique," says Konstanl.
"It's true that the numbers we generate for
counties and population cen ters with
populations above 50,000 are subject to higher
rates of statistical error than we would like to
see. But we feel those numbers are as good as
we can produce at this lime given our
resources."
The Bureau of l,abor Statistics knows that it
could produce much more accurate state and
local data. But doing so would cost millions of
dollars that the Reagan administration is
unwilling to spend.
One of those who find this attitude penny­
wise and pound foolish is Dr. Sar Levitan, who
chaired a national commission appointed by
President Carter to examine the collection of
unemployment data.

JACK ANDERSON

Who'll G et Abandoned W eapons?
BEIRUT - One of the sticking points in the
negotiations over moving international
peacekeeping troops into this battered bastion
may well have beerrthd technical question of
who gets custody of the huge cache of military
equipment the PI jO is leaving behind.
I have seen some of the PLO’s weapons in
use here, and it’s clear that the stuff is
valuable. The age-old rules of war give the
spoils to the victor. This may explain in part
the Israelis' reluctance to let the French,
Italian and U.S. forces come between the
conquerors and the booty.
In (act, the Israelis are still smarting over
the way the Pentagon handled Soviet-made
weapons that Israel captured in the 1973 war
and turned over to her U.S. ally for study. As
much as 75 percent of the weapons Israel
captured from Egypt was shipped to the
Pentagon. After studying the stuff for several
years, my sources tell me, the United States
refused to share its final ultra-secret findings
with the Israelis.

"Fred and i are iike Iraq and Iran. -We tsOTh
claim to be winning the war!"

professionally, he scored," said John. "I told the
team that the first man to do that was Red
Grange, and they didn't know who Red Grange
was."
Of course, McKay is just as sarcastic when he
loses, but the press conferences usually don’t
last as long.

One thing is certain: The amount and
variety of PI jO weapons captured even before
the Israelis got to Beirut was staggering.
With my associate Dale Van Atta, I
examined some of the thousands of captured
weapons collected at an Israeli arrfiy base not

far from Haiga. Sources there told us the total
liaul may be worth $2 billion.
The biggest items were Soviet-made tanks
captured from the Syrians. The Israelis
collected 52 T-34s and 72 T-55s, which can be
used for spare parts or recycled for the metal.
What was most impressive about the
crippled Soviet tanks were the gaping holes
cut In their inches-thlck arm or by the Israelis’
new 105-millimeter anti-tank gun. The shells
seem to have cut through the Russian armor
like skewers through butter.
Contrary lo some reports, the Israelis did
not capture any of the latest Soviet T-72 tanks,
the kills were made In territory still con­
trolled by the Syrians. The Israelis did
manage to get a close-up look at one shattered
T-72, however.
The variety of handguns, automatic and
semi-automatic weapons the PLO used can be
attested to by anyone who has careened
wildly through West Beirut streets, hoping to
avoid sniper fire, and seen the gun-toting
guerrilla bands roaming there.
Among the more than 12,000 machineguns
and submachineguns captured by Israeli
Iroops before they got to Beirut were 700
brand-new U2&gt;. M-16s still in their packing
cases. Markings on the crates showed that the
guns were originally shipped from the United

States to Saudi Arabia. If the Saudis willingly
BUowed them to be diverted to Ihe PLO, they
— like the Israelis — will have some
explaining to do about violation of their armssale agreement with the United States.
The M-16s weren’t the only unused small
arms captured from the PLO arsenals. Many
others, like late-model West German G-3
automatic rifles, were found still packed in
their factory grease. How they got to the PLO
is anyone's guess.
Another curious collection in the Israelis'
"war museum" of captured weapons was a
motley display of almost 35,000 rifles from
practically every country that has ever made
one. Half of them were Russian Kalishnikovs.
Perhaps 4,000 were sporting guns, many of
them Intricately hand-tooled, possibly
heirlooms "appropriated" by the PLO from
(heir original Ubanese owners.
Also among the military loot were some
4,000 12-gauge shotguns — a weapon that has
been outlawed for use In war by the Geneva
Convention.
One of the most curious military artifacts
was a huge construction machine the Israelis
nicknamed "The Mole." It was used to gouge
holes about 18 feet in diameter In the side of a
mountain. The Palestinians would then hide
Iheir artillery pieces in the manmade c av a,

safe from Israeli reconnaissance snoopers.
There was even a U.S. military vehicle that
somehow had made Its was to Lebanon from
South Korea.
Disposal of all this deadly booty may pose
something of a problem for Israel. Obviously,
the Israelis don't want to sell them on the
open market, where terrorist gangs (or the
PLO Itself) could buy them.
A more likely choice would be lo sell them
to governm ents that w ant Ihem as
rep lacem en ts for Soviet Weapons they
already have on hand. This would be a safer
way for the Israelis to cash in on their
military success and help to recoup some of
the enormous cost of the Lebanese invasion.
SHU another option Is to use the materiel for
units of the Israeli army. This Is possible
because the quantity of certain captured
weapons Is so huge, along with the needed
ammunition, that the Israelis could get along
for years without need of resupply from ihe
Soviet bloc.
The Israelis have already shown a certain
knack for turning captured weapons back on
the enemy. They have been pounding West
Beirut regularly with captured PI jO weapon*,
p articu larly
Russian-m ade Katyusha
rockets.

�SPO RTS
______________________ __________________________________________________________________

Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Tuesday, Aug.

17, 19S7-5A

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

—

Golsteyn Glitters In Battle For Backup Quarterback
By SAM COOK
Herald Sports Editor
TAMPA — In the Tampa Bay Buc­
caneer lockerroom there is a cubicle
shared by two quarterbacks.
It reads;
GOLSTEYN II
LANE 15
Well, Jerry Golsteyn, at least you were
given top billing over fourth stringer Bob
I^ne.
After the showing, the ex-Orlando
American quarterback put on Saturday,
however, lie not only rates top billing but
probably a spot right behind Doug
Williams on the Buccaneer quarterback
depth chart.
"I was pleased," said the Chula Vista
resident. "We had a lot of guys busting
their butts in there and we came up with
the big plays.’*

Golsteyn, who spent a couple of years
with the New York Giants after a fine
career at Northern Illinois University, is
in a head-to-head battle with incumbent
Chuck Fusina for the backup role to Doug
Williams.
With Tampa clinging to a 14-7 lead just
into the fourth quarter, Golsteyn took
over the helm and engineered the Bucs to
three, fourth-quarter scores to wrap up a
35-7 victory over Philadelphia.
The 6-4, 200 pounder completed 3-of-7
jasses ami had three others dropped. An
interference call of 40 yards also fueled
another drive.
Fusina, by comparison, completed 4of-8 for 36 yards. The ex-Penn State
great, though, fumbled the first snap he
received and tossed an interception.
"I had the opportunity, and I didn’t use
it," said Fusina, a discouraged player,
after the game.

Pro Football
"Golsteyn threw the ball pretty well,"
said coach John McKay. "He was
sharper than Fusina. But some of those
players they were playing against won't
go to the Hall of Fam e."
A Johnny Ray Smith interception set
up Golsteyn with good field position at
the Eagle 36 Pint-sized Michael Morton
bolted twice for six yards to the 17, but a
holding penalty pulled the Bucs back to
the 32.

showed Obradovich caught. The referee,
nevertheless, ruled incomplete.
Undaunted, Golsteyn found a wide
open Jim Obradovich at the 25 for a first
down. A holding penalty cost the Bins
two plays later, but Golsteyn hit Carter
on a swing pass and the Nevada-1-as
Vegas back romped to the Philadelphia 9
Morton, who totaled 10-4 yards on 5
carries, then exploded around the right
side for a touchdown. The series went 45
yards in six plays in just 1:54.

Golsteyn then hit Melvin Carter with a
pass at the 20 but Carver coughed up the
ball to the Eagles.

The next time Golsteyn touched the
ball, it didn’t take nearly as long. He
handed off to the exciting Morton over
left tackle and the 5-7 speedster blew
away from everybody, 8ft yards for a
touchdown.

A shaky Philly punt gave Golsteyn
another good opportunity at the Eagle 45.
He fired a down-and-out to Jim
Obradovich which the instant replay

I turned around and saw a big hole
and expected him to go 10 or 12 yards,"
said Golstey n about the play. "I looked
again and he was gone, it's always ex­

citing to bo in for one play and score."
For Morton, who was deluged by
writers after the game, it had to be quite
a thrill in his first pro game "I
remember having a 77-yard TI) run," he
said between smiles. "But never one this
long "
The next Buc score was also a quicky.
Golsteyn maneuvered Tampa 66 yards in
Just four plays as Carver rapped the
drive with a 30-yard burst off left tackle.
Bill Capece booted his fifth point after to
close out the 35-7 romp.
"I thought Golsteyn did a heekuvn
Job," said Williams, who didn't do too
shabbily himself with 7-of-9 completions
for 68 yards before an early secondquarter exit.
While Golstey n has won his first battle
with Fusina for the number two spot, he
wasn't ready to predict the war was over.

Than Super?

SAN DIEGO (UPIi — Bowie Kuhn is
bracing for a high hard one.
The baseball commissioner's future
may be decided this week when majorleague owners convene for three days to
finalize plans for the restructuring of the
game and iron out some of the problems
confronting the sport.
The owners do not have to act on Kuhn
this week. His seven-year contract does

COACH DICK VERMEIL;
"We were a better team last
year than the one that played
in the Super Bowl — espe­
cially on defense, where
we’ve concentrated our
recent drafts. ”
By MURRAY OLDERMAN
NEA Sports Editor

Baseball

In 1981: 1M, second in NFC East;
wildcard
OFFENSE
PASSING Eagles have brought back old
Sid Gillman to tutor "The Polish Rifle,"
Ron Jaworski, into regaining touch that
directed club to Super Bowl in '80.
Vermeil cleaned out receiver corps to
make room for kids, except for rangy
Harold Carmichael. That means top
rookie Mike Quick, drafted tight ends
Lawrence Sampleton, Vyto Kab could
play right now. FAIR

BLOCKING Mixture of young and old
guys. The old guys — Jerry Sizemore and
Stan Walters at the tackles, Guy Morriss
at center — represent stability on for­
ward wall. Abnost three decades com­
bined on job. Quartet of young guys —
Ron Baker, Steve Kenney, Petey Perot,
Dean Miraldi —compete for guard spots,
with first two leaders. GOOD
DEFENSE
LINE Solid unit in Eagles' 3-4 defense,
with pair of blue-chippers in end Carl
Hairston (touted by Vermeil as best) and
nose tack le Charlie Johnson (unbudgeable). Big Dennis Harrison could
find competition at left end from Leonard
Mitchell, who’s equally big. GOOD
LINEBACKING Two of them - outside
backer J e rry Robinson and inside
veteran Frank leM aster — made Pro
Bowl, so you know this is class brigade.
A1 Chesley succeeded retired Bill Bergey
as inside mate for I-eMaster and tied for
lead in tackles. John Bunting and Reggie
Wilkes divided time on outside, without
dropoff in quality. Need depth. GOOD
SECONDARY There’ll be no changes
back here. Randy I&gt;ogan at 31 is only one
with age factor, and he completed maybe
his best season in nine. All-Pro of
secondary is CB Roynell Young, who
does it all. Herman Edwards on other
comer may be step slow, but he manages
to be where ball is. FS Brenard Wilson
completes crew. GOOD
SPECIAL TEAMS
KICKING Tony Franklin, the barefoot
placekicker with the Iron toe, made
comeback after teetering on edge' of
inconsistency. Punter Max Runager
doesn’t reach rain clouds, but he’s
steady. GOOD
RETURNS lJttle Wally Henry, who’s
also spare receiver, was down as punter
returner and no great threat on kickoffs.
So, Vermeil will be looking for help. He
can always turn to handy man John
Sdarra. FAIR
OUTLOOK
There’s no coach more positive than
Vermeil. Nor more Intense, nor more
hard-working. Way he’s worked team
has been criticized. But results haven't
been bad, despite elimination from
playoffs last season. If Jaworski bounces
back, this team will once again be in
contention.
PREDICTION Tie for second in NFC
East, with J-7 record.

!

It'll probably be good enough to earn
him his own cubicle loo.

Owners
Decide
n Kuhn

Eagles Better

RUNNING
Wilbert
M ontgomery
remains best offensive threat on team,
either running (1,402 yards) or catching
(49 passes). Search for reliable fullback
to complement him continues. If Perry
Harrington, who has talent, doesn't
measure up, soph Hubert Oliver, I&gt;eroy
Harris get job. GOOD

"I'm not ready to jum p to any con­
clusions,” he said. " I’m just going to do
the best 1 can and hope that's good
enough."

UP A N D OVER

Herald Photo

by Tom Vincent

Daryl Manley, first in line, is all smiles as he sails hack and forth shorts most of this week. The opener is Sept, lit at Titusville
during preseason football drills as Seminole High coach Jerry Posey Astronaut.
(left) watches. The Fighting Seminoles will work out in shirts and

--------------- Antitrust?---------------Yea...Or No More Franchises, Says Rozelle
WASHINGTON (U PI) NFL
Commissioner Pete Rozelle warns if a
bill giving the league new antitrust
exemptions doesn’t pass, there will be
no new franchises.
And, NFL P lay ers Association
Director Ed Garvey warns if the
"union-busting" bill does pass, the
players will strike.
Although the bill before the Senate
Judiciary Committee seems on the face
only to restore the Raiders' franchise to
Oakland, there were Indications at
Monday’s hearing, the entire structure
of the NFL Is at stake.
Some of Washington’s top lobbyists
have been working for the bill for
months, and despite Rozelle's denial he

Pro Football
has offered new franchises to certain
cities in return for votes from their
representatives, he stood by his
previous threat: "No exemptions, no
expansion."
Rozelle was testifying on behalf of a
bill that would overturn a l&gt;&gt;s Angeles
court decision and give the league sole
power to approve franchise shifts,
retroactively force R a id e rs' feisty
owner A1 Davis to move back to
Oakland from I/is Angeles, and put the
weight of Congress behind a unique
revenue-sharing scheme Dust gives all

28 teams the same amount from
television — about $11.4 million this
year.
G arvey said while he supports
revenue sharing — which assures most
teams of a profit before a game is
played — it means owners no longer
have to compete for talent, thus forcing
down players’ salaries.
"If this bill passes, there will be a
strike," he warned in an interview.
He said the AFI/-CIO op|x»ses the bill.
Garvey said he supports another bill
that would give the NFL power to block
franchise shifts only if the team can
meet criteria laid down by the league
and its home city.
Rozelle said he opposed it because

owners who wanted to move could
juggle their books to show a temporary
loss.
Rozelle said revenue sharing is the
only way small franchises without big
TV audiences can survive. With
franchises freed from league control,
owners could "auction" their fran­
chises to the highest bidding city,
Rozelle contended.
Although both professed to have the
fans’ interest at stake, it was left to
Rep. Fortney Stark, D-Calif., who
wants the Raiders back in Oakland, to
articulate the concern:
"Who buys the underarm deodorants,
the caps, the Tshirts, the hot dogs and
beer — the one person we’ve neglected
— the fan."

Nay...Or Players Will Strike, Says Garvey
WASHINGTON (U P I) The
executive director of the NFL Players
Association, Ed G arvey, left no
question in anyone's mind.
"If this bill passes, there will be a
strike," he said In an interview
following his testimony before the
Senate Judiciary Committee against
legislation that would restore the NFL's
power to block franchise transfers,
similar to the Raiders' proposed move
to Los Angeles.
NFL Commissioner Pete Rozelle
testified unless the bill passes, no ex­

Chargers
Nip Bears

pansion franchises would be awarded.
The bill, pushed by some of
Washington's top lobbyists on behalf of
the NFL, retroactively would block the
Raiders' move, put into law the notion
that the league Is a "partnership" that
can control franchise m oves and
preserve the unique revenue-sharing
scheme under which all clubs get the
sam e amount from television rights.
Garvey said passage would add to
existing an titrust exem ptions the
league enjoys and would "harden their
position" in labor negotiations.

United Press International
Chicago Bears’ rookie quarterback
Jim McMahon, who set 56 NCAA records
at Brigham Young, got his first look at
the pass-happy San Diego Chargers
Monday night.
And while the Chargers defeated the

The contract between the Players
Association and the NFL has expired
and talks have been deadlocked. .
G arvey said the legislation ef­
fectively would remove labor protec­
tions from the current a n titru st
exemptions.
"I think the league thinks it can
impose its own restraints on players
without dealing with the union," he
said. "I think they're engaged in union
busting."
Rozelle, asked about bargaining
Bears, 28-27, in an NFL exhibition game,
McMahon, who sta rte d the fourth
quarter and rallied the Bears to two
touchdowns, managed to throw his firs*,
pro touchdown.
"1 wish I could have had some open
receivers," said McMahon, who com­

progress, said he hadn't been informed
recently by league negotiators.
Garvey said unless Rozelle or owners
with authority atte n d bargaining
sessions, "they’re trying to force a
strike."
Two owners, Art Rooney of the Pitt­
sburgh Steelers and Ixonard Tose of
the Philadelphia Eagles, attended the
hearing.
Garvey said he would have a
statement Wednesday on union plans if
the owners lock players out of training
camps.
pleted 9-of-H passes for 110 yards, In­
cluding a 10-yard scoring strike to Duke
Fergerson. "The game was what I ex­
pected. I'll luvc to get used to the better
athletes in the NFL."
The better athletes Monday night were
the Chargers, but not by much.

not expire until Aug. 12, 1983, and the
owners could decide to table a decision
until the winter meetings in Hawaii in
December.
However, several owners have ex­
pressed their displeasure with Kuhn and
they may not want to put off a vote any
longer. Under baseball's rules, four
dissenting votes from National league
owners, or five negative votes from
American league owners would result in
Kuhn's removal from office.
NeLson Doublcday of New York, John
McMullen of Houston and Ballard Smith
of San Diego are three NL owners who
openly oppose Kuhn’s being rehired. A
fourth, attorney Lou Susm an who
re p re se n ts Cardinals' owner Gussie
Busch, also was a signer of the infamous
"Dump Bowie" letter that resurfaced at
hist December’s baseball meetings in
Hollywood, Fla
If all four cast a vote against Kuhn, his
contract would not be extended.
AL owners George Steinbrenner of
New York, Eddie Chiles of Texas,
Edward Bennett Williams of Baltimore
and George Argyros of Seattle also have
publicly stated their opposition to Kuhn.
Kuhn, however, feels he will get a
contract extension.
" I ’m willing and desirous to continue
as commissioner," Kuhn said recently.
“ I feel a great many clubs are continuing
to support me."
One thing in Kuhn’s favor is, there is no
experienced person to replace him. Two
rumored to be possible candidates for the
com m issioner’s job a re M ontreal
President John Mcllale and former
Houston General Manager Tal Smith.
Smith currently is a baseball consultant
who specializes in w orking with
management in preparing argum ents for
salary arbitration cases.
"M cHale's the only man who might get
enough votes," said Philadelphia owner
Bill Giles.
Mcllale, however, isn't campaigning
for the job.
"I have never been interested in the
job," Mcllale said, "but I guess you’d
have to see as things developed. It would
be very Haltering if enough people were
interested in me, but I've never really
thought about it."
No m atter who the commissioner is,
his role is going to be quite different in
the future.
At a meeting of the owners two months
ago, it was revealed the restructuring
committee had decided to expand many
of the duties of the commissioner’s office.
Oakland owner Roy Elsenhardt, cochairm an of the restructuring committee
along with Peter O'Malley of l/&gt;s
Angeles, said Kuhn and future com­
m issio n e rs would have " g r e a te r
authority."
"During the strike, the commissioner's
office was standing aside,” said Eisenhardt at the June meeting. "W e’ve
recommended the office of the com­
missioner be centralized — the com­
missioner will report to the owners with
b ra n c h e s of public re la tio n s and
promotions.
"The commissioner’s office will be
en h an ced with m arketing, public
relations and administrative functions.
The responsibilities of the commissioner
have been increased."

�6A— Evening H erald, Sanford, FI.

Tuesday, Aug. 17,1982

SP O R TS
IN BRIEF
O-Twins Within Half Game,

Standings

Gains Split With Charlotte
r.OOSF, GOSSAGE

Na(or League Slandtngs
By United P re tt International
National League

Am erican League
East
w L Pet
GB
Eatt
Miivyauke
69 48 S86 —
w L Pet. G B Boston
64 52 SS2 4
SI Loui*
67 SO 573 —
Balt
60 55 522 I ’Y
66 51 S64 1
Phi to
Detroit
59 &gt;• 509 9
Montreal
61 SS .536 S’Y New York
59
500 10
PitUbrgh
60 57 S13 7
Toronto
58 81 487 m&gt;
New York
SO 44 431 16’ j Cievelnd
55 59 402 12
Chicago
SI 69 425 l l ’T
West
W elt
Calit
57]
87 »
66 5) SSS —
Kan City
Lo* Ang
66 51 564 i
63 51 543 tw Chicago
Atlanta
64 52 552 3’ j
63 55 534 3'y Seattle
San Diego
59 59 496 9
San Fran
62 S7 521 4
Oakland
S3 87 437 16
Houiton
S3 64 453 12
Texas
46
400 20
43 75 364 32'» Minn
Cind
40 77 342 27
Monday's Results
Monday't Result
New York 3. Kan City 0. 1st
Cinei 3. Houston J, t l inns
New York 4, Kan City 3. 2nd
Toronto 2. Cleveland 1
Today's Games
Detroit 3, Seattle 1
(All Times E D T |
Chicago 6. Texas I
Los Angeles (Hooton I 51 at
Boston 9. Baltim ore a
Chicago (Holes a 91, 3 35 p m
California 8. Oakland 4
Montreal (Lea 9 6 and Burris
Today's Games
4 131 a&gt; Atlanta (M ah ler a a and
I All Times E O T )
Wat* 10 Bl. 3. 5 40 p m
Seattle (C lark
2 0 and
B
San Francisco (H am m aker 8 Stoddard 00) at Detroit (Wilcox
61 at Pittsburgh (Rhoden 6 11), 7 6 and Underwood 3 81, 2, s 30
7 35 p m
pm
Cleveland IWhltson 3 2 and
New York (Ownbey 0 0) at
Anderson I I) a! Toronto (Leal
Cincinnati (Soto 9 81. 7 35 p m
San Diego (Show 9 41 at St 8 10 and Geisel t 01, 2, 5 30
p.m
Louis (AndUlar 9 10). B 35 p m
Kansas C tty (Spllttort! 7 6) al
Philadelphia (Christenson 7 7)
at Houston (Ruhle 6 8), 8 35 New York (Morgan 6 71, 8 p m
Baltimore (Flanagan 8 10) at
pm
Minnesota (O'Connor 5 3). 8 35
Wednesday's Games
pm
Los Angeles at Chicago
Chicago
(Koosman
5 5)
al
San Fran at Piltsbrgh, night
Texas ISchmidi 3 41, 8 35 p m
New York at Cincl, night
Boston (D|eda 4 S) at Cali
Montreal at Atlanta, night
lornia (Tianl 1 .) ), 10 30 p m
San Dgo at SI Louis, night
Milwaukee
(H a as
9 71
al
Phil* at Houston, night
Oakland (Langford 8 13), 10 35
pm

(Only game scheduled)
American League
IF lrst game)
Kan City
000 000 OOO- 0 4 0
NY
000 003 0 0*- 3 4 0
Blue and Wathan; Righetll,
Cottage (81 and Cerona W —
Righettl
(75).
L — Blue
(991
H R - N e w York, M a ijllll (8),
(Second Game)
Kan City
000 000 030- 3 6 1
N Y.
000 101 20*— 4 9 t
Black,
Armtlrong
(6)
and
Slaught. May, McGlothen (8),
Cottage (9) and Ramos W —
May (5 31 L —Black (3 4). HRs
— New
York,
Plnlella
(4),
Winfield
&lt;30)i
Kansas
City,
Slaught (3). M cRae 1311
Clevtnd
000 000 100- I 5 )
Toronto
000 001 10*- 3 5 0
W aits
and
Hassey.
Gotl,
M cLaughlin 19) and M artinet,
Whitt (7)
W -G o tl (4 81 L —

G lad To Be In 'Bronx Zoo1
I a x Mazzilli, a native New Yorker who

was traded from the New York Mets to
the Texas Rangers at the beginning of the
season, then traded to the Yankees Aug.
8, is showing his gratitude at being
brought back home.
Mazzilli, in his debut at Yankee
Stadium, slammed a sixth-inning, tworun homer and Dave Righettl and Rich
Gossage combined on a four-hit shutout
to power the Yankees to a 2-0 victory over
Kansas City in the first game of a
Monday night double-header.
In the nightcap, Dave Winfield socked
his 20th homer and hit an RBI triple and
I/iu Plnlella added a solo homer to carry
the Yankees to a sweep.

Baseball

"It felt g reat,’’ said Mazzilli, who was
devastated when the Mets traded him to
Texas. "It's like a dream. I’m happy it
led to a win. This is my biggest thrill in

Blue Jays 2, Indians 1
At Toronto, pinch-runner Alvis Woods
scored from third base in the seventh

two doubles and a three-run homer and
Tom Burgmeicr pitched 4 1-3 innings of
hitless relief to propel the Red Sox,
before a season-high crowd 34,746.
Reds 3, Astros 2
Al Cincinnati, Mike Vail's pinch-hit
single in the 11th inning scored Cesar
Cedeno from third base with the winning
run to boost the Reds.

Mets Rookie Gets The Jitters

Seattle
000 000 10O- 1 8 0
Detroit
010 100 10*- 3 9 0
Bannister and Sweet, Morris
and Parrish W —M orris (14 H I
L — Bannister
( t l 8)
H R —De
Irolt, Lemon (10)
Chi
100 30102061)0
Texas
000 100000t10 2
Dotson, Lam p (9) and Flskj
Honeycutt.
Comer
18)
and
Sundberg
W -D otson (7 11)
L
— Honeycutt (5 14) H R — Chlca
go, Baines ( ’ 71
Balt
000 004 OOO- 4 7 1
Boston
000 2H 1 4*-9 110
O M a r 1 I n e t,
Davis
(6),
T M arllnet (71 and Dempseyi
Rainey, Clear &lt;81, Burgmeler
(61 and Allenson W —Burgmei
er (60) L —Davis (33 ). H R t—
Boston. Evans (30), Lansford
(7), Baltimore, Roenlcke 09),
Lowensteln (18)
Call!
0)0 002 131- 8 9 0
Oaklnd
000 700 020- 4 8 2
Zahn, Gotti (81 and Boone.
McCatty, Owchinko (81, Jones
(8), Hanna (9), Underwood (9)
and Newman W - Z a h n 03 5)
L - M c C a ily
(83)
H R s - C a li
tornla. Lynn (16), Willong (1),
Oakland, Rudl 14)
(Only games scheduled)

84. Lulinskl. Chi 80
Stolen Bases
National League — Raines. Ml
54, Moreno. Pitt SI and L Smith,
S IL St; Wilson, NY 44; Sax. LA 41
American League — Hender
son. Oak 109. Garcia, Tor 47;
J.C ru l, Sea 31, Wathan, KC 29,
LeFlore, Chi 28
Filching
Victorias
• National League — Carlton.
Phil 16
Valentue4a. LA 15 9.
Rogers. Mtl 14 8. Welch. L A 14
7. Robinson. P ill 116
American League — Gura.
KC
14 8,
Hoyt,
Chi
14 10.
Morris. Del 14 11; Burns. Chi
and Vuckovich, M il 13 4; Zahn,
Cal 115; SHeb. Tor 1111.
Earned Run Average
(Based on I Inning a number ol
games each team has played)
National Laagua — Laskey,
SP 2 44; Rogers. M tl 7 48..
Candelaria. P ill and Soto. Cin
3 55, Krukow, Phil 3 78
Am trican League — Under
wood. Oak 7 89. Sulclllfe. Cle
2 97, Stanley. Bos 2 98. Wilt,
Cal 3 03. Hoyt, Chi 105
Strikeouts
National League — Solo, Cin
194, Carttono Phil 193. Ryan,
Hou 179. Valeniucla. LA 114,
Sullon, Hou U7.
American League — Bannis
ter, Sea 145. Barker, Clev 128;
Beattie. Sea 137. Guidry, NY
114; Righettl, N Y 109
Saves
National League — Sutler,
S IL 24, Minton, SF 21; Garber.
All, 20; Allen, N Y and Reardon,
M tl 19
American League - Fingers.
M il 27; Ouisenberry, KC 76.
Gossage, NY 25. Caudill, Sea
21; Barojas, Chi, Davis, Minn
and Splllner, Cle IS

8.

D e a ls
Sports Transactions
B y United Press International
Monday
Baseball
Claveland — Activated Inllaider
Alan Ba n n lsitr; sent infielder
K arl Pagel to Charleston of the
International League
New York ( A l l — Placed cat
char B a rry Foole on tha 15 day
d isab led lis t; moved c a tc h e r
Butch W ynegar trom tha 15 day
disabled list to the 71 day disabled
list; purchased the contract ol
c a tc h e r
Bobby Ram os trom
Columbus ot tha International

inning to lift the Blue Jays out of last
place in the AL East, a half game in front
of the Indians.
While Sox 6, Hangers 1
At Arlington, Texas, Harold Baines
baseball. Being happy and being where
drove in three runs with a two-run homer
you want to be helps."
in the fourth and a sacrifice fly to spark
Reliever Rich Gossage, who saved both
Chicago to its 15th victory in 18 games.
games, clearly doesn't share Mazzilli's
enthusiasm for playing in the “Bronx Angels 8, A’s 1
Al Oakland, Calif., Tim Foli drove in
Zoo." Gossage claimed the Yankees have
to fight the front office, the fans and three runs with a single and sacrifice fly
and Fred Lynn and Rob Wilfong homered
negative thinking by the media.
"It is so negative around here ..." said to lead California back into first place in
Gossage, who has 25 saves. "Negativism the AL West.
is like injected into you. It’s just very Red Sox 9, Orioles I
upsetting."
At Boston, Carney Lansford smacked
Tigers 3, Mariners 1
At Detroit, Jack Morris, backed by
three double plays, pitched an eighthitter and Chet Lemon hit a home run
and scored another run to pace the
Tigers.

Mazzilli, who got a curtain call from
the 26,815 fans, is O-for-20 since coming to
New York from Texas.

Wads tl 13)

Leaders
M alor League Leaders
By United Press International
Batting
(B a te d on 1.1 plate appear,
ances * number at games each
team has played]
National League
g id
n [iu .
114 430 140 376
Oliver. M il
107 410 128 312
Baker, LA
Durham, Chi
I I I 407 177 .317
117 447 138 309
Knight, Hou
113 435 134 308
L Smith. StL
0 5 478 131 306
Madlock, Pit
89 323 98 303
Jones, SO
109 392 0 8 301
Carter. M il
114 381 04 299
Leicano. SD
107 416 174 298
Cncpcion, Cn
American League
1 ab h pci.
93 397 IIS 340
Wilson, KC
115 440 143 375
Hacrah, Cle
115 495 159 .371
; Garcia, Tor
109 457 146 .319
1 Cooper, M il
110 450 143 318
J Yount, M il
103 391 124 .317
Hrbek, Min
117 443 139 314
M cRae. KC
107 348 109 313
Bonnell, Tor
107 421 131 311
Rice, Bos
104 365 117 307
M urray. B a l
Runs
National League — Murphy,
A ll
79 j
Kingman,
N Y 28;
Schmidt, Phil 34; Horner, All
74, Carter, Mtl and Guerrero,
LA 71
American League — Thomas.
M il
37; R e Jackson,
Cal 77;
Thornton, Clev 76. DeCInces,
Cal, Marrah, Cle and Oglivie,
M il 74.
Runs Balled In
National League — Oliver,
M il 83. Murphy. A ll 87. Clark.
SF
and
Hendrick.
S IL 76;
Carter, M il and Guerrero, LA
74.
American League
M cRae,
KC
100; Thornlon, Clev 91;
Cooper, M il 17; Thomas, MU;

...hom er and trip le

ALVIS WOODS
...s c o re s n a m e - w in n e r

Mazzilli Shines In Debut,

Linescores
Major League Results
By United Press International
National League
( I ) Innings)
Hou
000 00Q 020 00- 2 7 0
Cin
101 000 000 01- 3 8 0
Ryan, LaCorte (7), Smith (9)
and Pulols. Shirley, Lesley (8),
Kern (11) and Trevino
W—
Kern (3 5). L - Sm lth (I 4). HRs
—Houston, Scott (1).
O ncin
nan, Walker 3 (4)

TIMFOI.l
...3 It Ml

DAVE WINFIELD

...2 saves

League
Pittsburgh — Acquired Inflelder
Richie Mebner Irom Delrolt for a
player to be named, optioned
pitcher Cecilio Ouante to Portland
of the Pacific Coast League
Feotball
Chicago ( U S E D Signed
lin eb acker Jim F a h n h o rsl ot
Minnesota to a 2 year contract
Cincinnati - Cul wide receivers
Kip Bedard and B a ri Burrell and
cornerbeck Anthony Evans.
C levelan d — W a iv e d w ide
receiver Don Treadwell and light
end Joe Jenkins.

u 'r v t

NEW YORK IUP1) - He had never
been here before. The surroundings
were so strange to him, so new, he
simply sat in front of the locker he had
been assigned and tried to get his
bearings.
Rookie Rick Ownbey’s blue eyes
swept the Mets' entire clubhouse. He
had been in it only a few minutes.
“Where’s the water fountain?" he
asked oufielder Mike Howard, with
whom he played this year at Tidewater
in the International league nnd who
was brought up from there himself less
than two weeks ago.
"O ver th e re ," Howard said,
gesturing toward the front section of
the shower room.
Directly across the room, Rusty
Staub, a veteran of 20 years in the big
league, watched this little banter
between Ownbey and Howard and was
reminded of his first day in the majors
with the Houston Colt 45s. That's what
they called them in 1963, not the Astros.
"Everything was fine until I went to
the field in the lop of the first inning,"
Staub remembered. "I was playing
right field and Howie Goss was playing
center. And when I started to loosen up,
I threw the ball over his head — twice.
He just laughed and said, ‘Cabn down,
calm down.'"

Milton
Richman
CPI Sports Editor
“ I don’t know about all this ‘phenom’
stuff," said the outgoing Californian
who was leading the International
longue with 122 strikeouts in 150 in­
nings when he got the call to move up.
“I’ve been trying to keep the right
perspective about all this since they
told me 1 was going to New York last
Friday. Friday, the 13th.
“The fact that I was with the Mets in
Florida this spring helps. I know
everybody, so that takes some of the
newness away. I wasn’t aware the Mets
consider me a phenom, 1 still have to do
the Job on the field."
Ownbey’s unspectacular 8-7 record
with Tidewater doesn’t begin to tell you
how well he pitched for the Tides. He
went into the ninth inning twice with no­
hitters in games with Syracuse and
Toledo, yet Tidewater lost both games.
That ain’t easy.
In still another contest, he actually
beat Toledo 3-2, but the Mudhens

ORLANDO — The Orlando Twins were within two
runs of first place Monday night at Tinker Field but
wound up splitting a doubleheader with Charlotte to
pull within one half game of Southern league East
Division leading Jacksonville. Two victories would
have had the Twins in first place as Jacksonville lost to
Savannah.
In the first game, Orlando trailed 2-0 going into the
seventh inning when Mark Funderburk belted a shot
over the left field fence, his 19th homer of the year
The Twins rallied in the ninth but failed to push
across a run and Charlotte claimed a 2-1 victory.
In the nightcap. Bob Veselic pitched his first shutout
of the year and was helped by back-to-back homers
from Greg Gagne and Mike Sodders as Orlando
triumphed, 4-0.
The victory was Veselic’s fifth in eight decisions. He
struck out seven and walked two.
The O-Twins race for the second half division title
continues tonight in the first game of a three game
home stand against Savannah.

S w /m m e rs S fa rf M o n d a y
The Seminole High School swimming team will get
off to an "early" start this year wit It its first practice
scheduled for 6:15 a m. on Monday, August 23 at the
Sanford Bath &amp; Tennis Club
Physicals for Coach Donalyn Knight's squad will lxWednesday at the training room in the Seminole High
gym.'Boys physicals are at 1 p.m. follow ed by the girls
at 4.

Cross Country Physicals
Physicals for the Seminole High cross country team
will he held Wednesday at the Seminole High gym
Boys physicals are l p.m. followed by the girls at 4
The first day of practice for coach Tom Tombros’
team is Thursday for all boys and girls in grades 9-12.
Practice gets under way at 3:30 p.m.

Richard, Down On Farm

protested on the grounds one of two
Tides’ baserunners advanced too far on
a wild throw into the stands by the
Hens' shortstop and the protest was
allowed. Tidewater ultimately lost the
replay and Ownbey lost his victory.
He blanked Syracuse for 10 innings in
another game Tidewater lost in 11
inings, 1-0. Had Ownbey won these ballgames, his record might have been 12-4.
Ownbey got the word about his
promotion after the Tidewater-Toledo
contest Friday night, Manager Jack
Aker gave him a phone number and told
him to call general manager Dave
Rosenfield.
"Something's going on in New York,"
Aker said to him.
Ownbey was getting ready to shower
at the time and after he got through,
Rosenfield gave him the news.
"You’re on your way to New York,"
he told him.
The other Tidewater players began
congratulating Ownbey, although the
way the Mets have been going lately,
condolences inigbl haVe been more
ap p ro p riate. Ownbey was excited,
though.
“ 1 didn't wanna freak out and let it
get m e," he said. "Just because I'm
here now doesn’t mean I've got the
Job."

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. lU P li - J.R. Richard is
down on the farm and enjoying it immensely.
“ 1 don’t have anything to prove. But it is fun to be
back in the fast lane,” says the former Houston Astros'
pitcher, who suffered a stroke two years ago that
almost took his life.
"I only think about the future now, not the past I've
learned to take it just one day at a time," the 6-foot-8,
230-pound Richard said recently.
Richard, who has been hit hard since Joining the
Tucson Toros of the Pacific Coast League, isn't
dwelling on his medical setback or the 94 mph slider
that made him the terror of the National league.
Richard said his physicians never warned him
against trying to make his way back to the big leagues.
"I still consider myself another minor leaguer Just
trying to make It," said the man who struck out more
than 300 NL batters in one season. “ I'm very confident
of returning.

Johnson Makes A Boob-Boo
SMITHERS, British Columbia tU Pl l - When Elaine
Johnson's routine tee shot ricocheted off a tree and
landed in the cup, it wasn’t exactly the one she had in
mind.
During a practice round for a tournament, Mrs.
Johnson sliced the lop of the hall off the tee into a tree 5
feet away and caught it in her brassiere on the
rebound, club pro Jake Block said Monday.
“I don't mind taking a two-stroke penalty, but I'll be
damned if I'm going to play the ball where it lies," said
the Terrace, British Columbia, native, with tears of
em barrassm ent streaming down her face.
Block said only Mrs. Johnson's pride was hurt.

Dog Racing
Ja ck
3 60 3 40 7 40
At Super Seminole
4 Hasty Rebel
9 00 5 40
Monday night remit*
6 G E 's E l Greco
3 40
First r » c » — S-14,0; 31.94
Q (4 5) 10 40. T (5 4 4) 139 30
2 Drop Curtain
7 80 4 20 7 60
8 Ina Money
4 00 2 20
12th r a c e — 5-14, A: I I 44
3 Goldie * Be*t
360
2 « W Boomin Bool
Q (2 8) 18 80; T I1 F 1 I 109 99
5
43 20 9 60 1 40
Second race — »», D; 40.31
l E * t r a Classy
4 00 2 20
3 Ja k e '* Hero
9 40 4 40 2 70
7 J B Jay
3 80 3 10
1 Pelite Fashion
770
6 C rlm e P ay *
)3.
Q &lt;3-71 21.10; T (3-7 1) 141.00. T
(37 t ) 157.60, DD (1-31 1530
Third ra c t — 306. M: 3t.lt
5 Jim m y Gin
4 00 2 20 3 00
7 Nur*eDie*el
4 20 17 40
6 Straight Steppln
3 00 4 30
0 (7 5) 27 60; Q (7 4) 0 00; T (5 76) 540.40; T (5 4 3) 717 00
Fourth race — 5-16.0:11.9] ,
2 NO'* K illy F Ire 13 20 4 60 3 00
4Perdurance
4 00 3 60
0 Sea Ot Red
8 20
Q ( 7 41 37 00; T (3 4 0) 1,31900
FUth r a c e -3-14, B 31.17
1 SHIer Slory
10 30 4 80 3 60
3 Je rry Sneva
S 20 3 40
8 Santa'* Helper
380
O (1-7 ) 33 00, T (1-2 8) 724.00
Hath race — &gt;•, C: 40 05
7 Flowin F ir e
70 00 IS 60 4 00
6 JM Vindicator
_ 6 00 3 00
7 Bobbie BiC
'
3 00
0 ( 4 71 41.00; T (7-4-3) 443.60;
Big O (1-1 With 4-7) 1,26100
Seventh race — 5-14, C: 31.10
S G E 's Little Man 11 60
5 80
7 S o n K ltlja
4 00 7 60
) I ’ll W in Atot
3 40
4Prln cel» A yla
2 40
OI2-S) 32.00; T (5 2 1) 134 60; T
(5141 I860
Eighth race — &gt;i. O; 40.17
4 LS Dome
24 80 6 CO 4 00
3Quick F re e ie
9 40 5.70
7 Kid W llk e n o n
3.30
O (3-4 ) 40.40; T (4 1 7) 1.003 66
N in lh ra ce — 5-14. B l l . l i
5 Lido Court
15 80 6 00 3 80
1 D J Big Shot Jak e
4 20 5 20
t Point Pleasure
S40
O (1-5) 10.49; T (S 3-1) 309 40;
DD (4 3) 112.40
I0 &gt; h ta c t- 5-14, C: 31.11
4 Mystery Caper 5 00 4 60 S 00
H o p 's Ace
3 00 7 dt)
3 K iiako Key
1140
O (1-4) 11.40; T (4-1-1) 144.00)
Super I (4 1-3 0 4-7-5 1) no winner
lor 81,750
1 1 th ra c e - * * ,T A ; 39.01
5 Madds Hopper

« i* * * » f

t

t F . ■* d,y« v

* —

3 Frontier Lane
420
Q (1 3 ) 23 10; T (2 1 1 ) 117.40
lllh r a c e — * i,B :4 0 S I
1 HR Rock N Red 5 40 5 00 3 40
7 Con Clone
9 80 1 60
6 M a lis a B a b y
440
Q (2-1) 31 09, T (1 3 4) 194 40,
Big Q 11 1 wilh 2 1) 141 40
A — 1719; Handle 1179,791

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�P EO P LE
E v e n in g H e ra ld , S a n fo rd , F I

T u e s d a y , A u o . 17,1982— 1B

In And Around Seminole

TONIGHT'S TV

A ir O f Excitement
Previews Season

(
'

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Cable Ch

IP

* ; «- • -

CD O
(D O
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A

1 spoke with Joan Madison, president of the
Seminole Chapter of the American Association
of University Women.
Their first meeting of the season will lie held
Sept. 2 at the South Seminole Community
Library. They plan to cover the Library
Iteferendum at that meeting.
The Seminole Chapter has about 58 active
members and is currently seeking to add more
to that number. If you are eligible, sounds like
a good organization to become involved with.
Mr. and Mrs. Jam es Grady (formerly Jean
Hochei of Sanford have Just returned from
their honeymoon in the Carolinas. They were
married at the Upsala Church in Sanford and
had guests attending from as far away as
Virginia, New York and California.
If once a month you would like to share good
food and good company, the Altamonte
Springs Woman's Club meets in a variety of
restaurants. Judy Fallis, past president says
they have m em bers from all over South
Seminole, not just Altamonte Springs.
If you would like to join them call Joan Zoltik
at 896-1090.
Why is Eloise Jerger of Winter Springs
smiling these days? Her daughter, Mrs. Fred
Reuben, and two grandsons, Karl and Ross,
are visiting from Chesapeake, Va.
Every day has been packed with activities
(or them. They will need a vacation to rest
from this vacation.

Marilyn
Whelan

s

-

§ /

A

A

I-ast week I had a plea from Janice Trawick,
the volunteer coordinator for Meals on Wheels
asking for volunteers in the Sanford area to
give a few hours a week
The number I gave at which she could be
reached is not a working number. Please call
her at 831-1631.
Alicen Freund left this week to visit her
father in Philadelphia. Dmgwood just does not
seem the same without her.
Michele Barrett has thrilled her family and
friends by an early graduation from Central
Adult High School, a division of Seminole
Community College.
Michele plans to attend Seminole Com­
munity College in the fall. Congratulations and
best wishes, Michele.

Cyclists
To Ride
For CF
A ccording to Jacq u e'
Maxwell, chairman for the
1982 cystic fibrosis committee
for Sanford, National CF
week is Sept. 19-25. Sanford
will hold its annual Bike-AThon on Sept. 25.
C ystic Fibrosis, as yet
incurable, is a respiratory
and digestive disease which is
inherited when both parents
carry the recessive gene for
CF.
One out of every 20 persons
in the United States is a CF
c a r r ie r , usually without
knowing it. Medical treat­
m ent has helped some
patients live into their teen
years and beyond, into young
adulthood.
Any child with cystic
fibrosis is eligible for treat­
ment. The closest medical
center to Sanford is Orange
Regional Medical Center in
Orlando.
For more information call
Jacque' Maxwell at 322-2805.
Any persons interested in
helping with the Bike-A-Thon,
feel free to call anytime.

M YSELF

I have to Uve with myself, and so
I want to be fit for myself to know.
1 want to be able, as days go by,
Always lo look myself straight In the eye.
I don’t wnnt to stand, with the setting sun,
And hate myself for the things I’ve done.
I want to go out with my head erect,
I want to deserve all men’s respect.
For here In Ihe struggle for fame and self
I want to be able to Uke myself.
I don’t want to look at myself and know
I’m bluster, a bluff and an empty
I never can hide myself from me;
I see what other* may never see.
I know what others may never know,
I never can fool myself, and so.

author Jet jy Ko**n§kl (R|
If (35) WANTED DEAD OR ALIVE

MltS. JOHN DAVID FOX

M/ss Harasti
Bride O f
John D. Fox
Batnbi Jo Harasti and John David Fox were united in
marriage Aug. 14 at 7 p.m. at the Altamonte Chapel,
Altamonte Springs, with the Rev. Fred Suedmeyer per­
forming the double ring, candlelight ceremony.
The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
Harasti of Altamonte Springs The bridgegroom is the son
of Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Fox, Altamonte Springs.
Given in m arriage by her father, the bride chose for her
wedding a white knit silk chiffon gown with a Queen Anne
neckline and full bishop sleeves. The entire bodice and
sleeves were trimmed in silk Venice and Schiffli em­
broidered lace and embellished with seed pearls and
sequins. The A-line skirt extended into a graceful chapel
train trimmed with scalloped lace at the hemline.
She wore a full length mantilla veil which fell from a
Venice lace Renaissance cap. The cap also featured small
clusters of lilies of the valley which framed her face. The
mantilla was detailed with bond-placed silk Venice lace
floral appliques and bordered with laces matching her
gown
She wore diamond earrings, a gift of the groom, and a
diamond ami |&gt;carl necklace which was the first gift given
to her mother by her father. She carried a silk keepsake
cascade bouquet fashioned of while roses, lily of the
valley, liny lavender daisies, white satin i ibbon loops and
flowing white satin stream ers adorned with lily of the
valley.
Sharon Oehler attended the bride as matron of honor.
She wore a long gown of lavendar Qiana with a sheer
chiffon yoke and ruffle. The neckline and yoke were
trimmed with dyed to m atch silk Venice lace. She carried
a white lace fan adorned with silk white roses, rose apple
blossoms, lavender daisies and tied with lavender and
pink streamers. Her hairpiece was fashioned of matching
flowers.
Bridesmaids were Miss Mary Fox, sister of the groom,
and Miss llclalnu Howard. Miss Lisa Krtek served us
junior bridesmaid. Their gowns and headpieces were
identical to the honor attendant’s as were their flowers
except tied with lavender streamers.
Flower girl was Miss Erin Brooks who wore a long white
eyelet gown weaved with pale pink satin ribbons.
Kenneth Oehler was best man. Usher-groomsmen were
Tod Karanglnis, Nick Karanginis and Abet Fox, brothers
of the groom. All the male attendants wore silver and grey
tuxedos matching the groom’s tailcoat.
The bride's mother wore a long light blue Qiana gown
with an attached sheer chiffon blouson with a single
overlay cascading from the waist to the hemline.
The groom's mother wore a long dusty rose silk gown
with long sleeves and a chiffon bodice enhanced with
beading.
Their wrist corsages were fashioned in the sam e flowers
as the bride's.
The reception was held at the Weslmonte Civic Club.
Out-of-town guests attending the wedding came from
Brandon, Miami, Ft. Ijiuderdale, Plantation, and
Tampa; California, Ohio, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania,
Texas and Wisconsin.

Dear
Abby
t

Whatever happens, I want to be
Self-respecting and conscience-free.
DEAR ABBY: My wife and I are friendly with a
couple who live 75 mUes from us. Since their
retirement, they have traveled a great deal and
have taken colored slides of their travels. We have
traveled and taken pictures, too, but we never force
our slides on our friends as they do.
When these friends come to see us (or when we go
to see them), there Is never any conversation — the
whole time is taken up with their pictures.
They came last Sunday, and we had just finished
new landscaping around our home and hurriedly
completed Ihe Job before they arrived so we could
show them «lwt we’d done, but there was no time
because they started right in on their slides. We
served a nice lunch, then they had to rush away to
another engagement.
Next month they want to come and bring Die

Independent
Atlanta Ga
Orlando Public
Broadcasting System

7:00
Q 4 TH EM U PPET S
1)
O
PM
M A G AZIN E
&gt; O JO K E R S WILD
I I (35) THE JEFFERSO N S
fD (10 ) M ACNEIl I LEHRER
REPORT
7:30
0 4) ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
1 O YOU ASKED FOR IT
7 0 FAMILY FEUD
11 (351 BARNEY MILLER
fD (10) DICK CAVETT

5

0
FATHER MURPHT
5 O UNIVERSE Walter CfonMte
e«ammea Ihe risks wo lake in
everyday Me, with report* on the
dangers ol obesity and a company
that investigates the causes ol
maior disasters
1 Q HAPPY DAYS
l it (35) MOVIE
The Hero 119691
Richard Harris Romy Schtueder
An aging soccer player prepares lor
his final moments of glory
fD (10) ODYSSEY Soaking Tire
Full Americans
Archaeologists
from Teias to Alaska search for
clues lo Ihe identity of the last peo­
ple lo tread the American conti­
nent | fl| Q
6:30
LAVEnNE

O

4 SHIRLEY

8:3 5
12 (17) BETW EEN GAMES SHOW
9:0 0
Q
4
BRET
M A V ERIC K
lit o
THE WAY THEY WERE
Ann-Margiet
Nancy Oussaull.
Chaillon Heslon. Patricia Neal
Peler Strauss Cion* Leachman
and many other* are featured in a
benefit performance dedicating a
theatre complev at Northwestern
University
7 O THREE S COMPANY
ffi ( 10) MYSTERY' Rumpole Of
The Bailey Rumpoln And The’Sho w
Folk
Horace Hurnpaki is called
upon to swve as |omor counsel in
delending an actress accused of
the backstage murder of her hus
band fParl 3 | | R )n
9:0 5
11 (1 7 ) B A SE B A L L Montreal
E ipos at Atlanta Braves
9:3 0
®
O TOO CLO SE FOR COMFORT Muriel is infuriated by the
attention paid Henry by a pretty
young arlisl (Rj

Cl

12 ( t ’ l MOVIE

Unholy Wit,.

1:10
7 O MOVIE
The Two M i* Cm
rolls
119471 Humphrey Bogart.
Barbara Stanwyck

0

1:30
4 NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT

0

2:30
4 ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
2:35

12 ( 1 7 )
BASEBALL Montreal
Eapos al Atlanta Braves

3:00
Q '4 NEW S
3:10
n

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0

3:30
4 NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT

n ew s

3:40

®

a

Q

4:30
4 NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT

MOVIE
The Real Glory
11939) Gary Cooper David Niven

____WEDNESDAY____
5:05
32 (17) RAT PATROL (THU)

5:20
32 (17) WORLD AT LARGE |MON)

5:25
®

o

m (35) MAUDE

10:30
0 4 WHEEL OF FORTUNE
J 0 ALICE (R|
11 (35) LEAVE IT 10 BEA VER

11:00
O
5
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'4 1 TEXAS
0 THE PRICE IS RIGHT
Q LOVE BOAT (R)
(35)35 LIVE

11:05
12 (17) MOVIE

11:30
(1.1 (35| INDEPENDENT NETWORK
NEVVS

AFTERNOON

12:00
0 ® COUPLES
J 0 7 O N EW 3
H (3 5 )B ia V A LLF V

12:30
0 14 NEWS
0 o t h e YOUNG AND THE
RESTLESS
11 o RYAN 5 HOPE

1:00
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7 Q ALL MY CHILDREN
111 (35) MOVIE

1:05
i l l (171 MOVIE

V30

CELEBRITY r e v u e

5:30
0 ( 4 WEATHER(TUE-FRI)
5 0 SUMMER SEMESTER
12 (17 ) IT S YOUR BUSIN ESS
I MON!

5:35
IB M 17) WORLD AT LARGE (WED.
THU)

5:45
I I (17) WORLD AT LARGE (TUE)

6:00
0 4 EARLY TODAY
5 O CABLE NEWS
T O SUNRISE
111(351 JIM BAKKER
TX (1 7) NEWS

6.30
O 41T 0 0 AY IN F LORIOA
7 J O ABC NEWS THIS MORNING

6:45
(T j O n e w s
O M 10) A M WEATHER

7:00
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(5 0 MORNING N EW S
7J O GO O D MORNING A M ER IC A
11 (35) C ASPER AND FRIENDS

CD ( 10) VILLA ALEGRE ( R | n
7:05
12 (17) FUNTIME

7:30
11I (35) SCOOBY 000
CD (10) SESAM E STREET ( R ) g

7:35

10:30

10:00
0 &gt; 4 DiFFRENT STRO K ES(R)
5 O n C H M D S IU U O N I
11 (35) FAMILY AFFAIR
fD ( 10) ELECTRIC COMPANY (R)

MORNING

1000
O I f MCCLAIN S LAW McClain
and Iwo others are held hostage in
a hospital by a menially disturbed
Vietnam veteran (R|
7 i O BARBARA WALTERS SUM.
MER SPECIAL Barbara Waders
interviews Kalharrne Hepburn. Vic­
toria Principal and Brooke Shields
|R|
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fD (10) P R A ISE THE DOG FOR
SITTING The progress made by
e&gt;ghl blind people is followed dur­
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9 05
12 (17) MOVIE
11 (351 ANDY GRIFFITH

MCCLOUD

119571 Rod Steiger Diana Dots

8:00
Q

®

CD (10) SESAM E STREET ( R | g

9:30

12:35

6:30
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5 O C B S N EW S
I o ABC NEW S
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12 (17) I DREAM OF JEANNIE

8:00

at) (35) GREAT

SPACE COASTER

8:05
1)2 (17) MY THREE SONS

8:30
U ) (35) KROFFT SUPERSTARS
CD (10) MISTER ROGERS (R)

8:35
12 (17) THAT GIRL

9:00
0 0 HOUR MAGAZINE
5 i O DONAHUE
® Q MOVIE
1)1 (35) OOMEfl PYLE

1 J o

AS THE WORLO TURNS

2:00
0 4l ANOTHER WORLD
7 0 ONE LIFE TO LIVE

2:30
LJ I Q CAPITOL

3:00
0 4) CHIPS (R)
■5 i Q QUIDINO LIGHT
® O GENERAL HOSPITAL
(in (35) BUGS BUNNY
FRIENDS

ANO

3:05
JI(1 7 )F U N T IM E

3:30
ID (35) TOM AND JE R R Y ANO
FRIENDS
CD (10) ELECTRIC COMPANY (R)

3:35
12 (17) THE FLINTSTONES

4:00
0
(4) LITTLE HOUSE ON THE
PRAintE
1 ! Q STAR TREK
17 ) 0 MERV GRIFFIN
I f) (35) SUPERMAN
CD (10) SESAM E STREET' ((R i g

4:05
42 ( 17) THE ADDAMS FAMILY

4:30
ill) (35) I DREAM OF JEANNIE

4:35
-12 (17) OZZIE AND HARRIET

5:00
O 0
LAVERNE 4 SHIRLEY 4
COMPANY
( i i O HAPPY DAYS AGAIN
C?) O ALL IN THE FAMILY
I T (35) CHARLIE’S A NGELS
CD (10) MISTER ROGERS (R)

5:05
12 (17) THE PARTRIDGE FAMILY

5:30
0 ( 1 ) PEOPLE’S COURT
' l l O HOGAN S HEROES
7: O NEWS
CD (10) POSTSCRIPTS

5:35
12 (17) HAZEL (MON. WED-FRI)
I I (17) BASEBALL (TUE)

11:00
0 (4) &lt;D O ® O

n ew s

(11(35)1
(35) b e n n y h il l
CD (10)f
(PO ST SC R IP T S

11:30
O ® TONIGHT
( j ) Q MARY TYLER MOORE
(71 O ABC N EW S NIGHTLINE
(II) (35) STREET S OF SAN FRAN­
CISCO

WEDNESDAY
SPECIAL.

12:00

0) o
ffi O

FANTASY ISLAND

Eat In
or Carry Out

12:05
22 (17) NEW S

12:30
Q

f

LErTERMAN GueVi J«*»ry Garcia

Q 4 5 O ' a NEWS
ill 1 (351 ANDY GRIFFITH
eo (to) MOVIE
SorotMWO Kid
|1942jDofH Htpij Harry Lynn MOf
nek When a cowboy joins a gang of
Outlaws he discovers Ihe town
banker &gt;s (heir leader

'Young' Lady, 91, Lives By Poem
DEAR ABBY: I am a "young" lady of 91, and
have been reading your column since It started.
I hope you will find it In your heart to print Ihe
enclosed poem. I have lived by its dictates for many
years and hope It will do for others what it has done
for me.
MARY HELEN BOWLING. SAN DIEGO, CALIF
DEAR YOUNG LADY: The poem you sent
happens to be the first poem I memorized! (I have
yet to Identify the author.) I will share ft with
pleasure:

Independent
Orlando

ami Bob W*mf of fh# Grateful D»i ad

6:00

F.nzo Agnese of Winter Springs is poorer by
three coins. That is right. He just returned
from a trip to Rome, Italy, where he visited his
mother and sisters. Enzo is of course that
miracle hairstylist known throughout the
county for his creative abilities.

SATURDAY, AUGUST 21
Sanford Women's AA, 2 p.m., 1201 W. First St.,
closed.
Casselberry AA, 8 p.m., Ascension Lutheran Church,
Overbrook Drive, Casselberry. Speaker.
Rebos and U ve Oak AA, noon, Rebos Club, 220 Live
Oak Center, Casselberry. Closed.
"S u p crd a n c e ” to benefit M uscular Dystrophy
Association, beginning at 7 p.m., Handy Way, corner of
Red Hug Road and Tuscawilla Road. Two bands, food
and drink, prizes. Pledge sheets for dancers at Handy
Way.
THURSDAY, AUGUST 26
Friends of the Library of Seminole County quarterly
meeting. 10:30a.m„ Agri-Cenler, Highway 17-92, south
of Sanford. Topic: U brary referendum.
TUESDAY, SEPT. 7
Mumhkin Society for collectors of mini things, 7-8
p.m., Deltona PubUc Library, 1691 Providence Blvd.,
Deltona.

(NOC) Daytona Orach
Orlando

EVENING

No, there is not a beauty contest in town.
That beauty is Kelly Dunne. She is here with
her mother, Mrs. Joanne Dunne, from
lA*esburg, Va.
They are visiting her grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. lou Valente. Kelly celebrated her 12th
birthday in Florida.

FRIDAY, AUGUST20
Seminole Sunrise Kiwanls, 7 a m., Je rry ’s Airport
Restaurant, Sanford,
Seminole South Rotary, 7:50 a.m., I-ord Chumley’s,
Altamonte Springs.
South Volusia Sertoma, 7:30 a.m., Deltona Inn 17-92
Rig Bock AA, 8 p in., Messiah Lutheran Church, 17-92,
Casselberry. Closed.
Dmgwnood AA, 8 pin., Rolling Hills Moravian
Church, State Road 434, Longwuod. Closed.
Tangle wood AA, 8 p.m„ St. Richards Church. I-ike
Howell Road. Closed.
South Seminole Family AA, (no smoking), 8 p.m„
open discussion, Community United Methodist Church,
Casselberry.
Wekha AA, (no smoking), B p.m„ Wekiva
Presbyterian Church, State Road 434 and Wekiva
Springs Road. Closed.
Rebus und Live Oak AA, noon, Rebos Club, 220 lave
Oak Center, Casselberry. Closed.

® (17)
(io) m

1C 8 S 1 Orlando

TUESDAY

Seminole
Correspondent
327-2111

CALENDAR

(ID (35)

In addition to tha channel* listed cablevision subscribers may tune in to independent channel 44,
St Petersburg by tuning to channel 1 tuning to channel 1) which carries Sports and Ihe Christian
Broadcasting Network (C B N )

..

There is an air of excitement about the
county. Preparations for a busy fall season are
underway.
Club boards are meeting to prepare for the
resmnpton of activities, the stores are showing
the latest fall fashions, parents are eyeing
back to school clothes and visiting doctors and
dentists.

Cable Ch
IA B C I Orlando

0

LATE NIGHT WITH 0AV10

« li| i| ir « l

J

vfffrLAZA T W IN t-s

pictures they took of their six-week vacation in
Hawaii. We know we will be in for another three
hours of viewing. What do we tell them? We hate to
hurt their feelings, bul enough Is enough.
SICK OF SLIDES
DF.AK SICK: Tell them In advance that If they
will limit their slide show to one hour to please
come. If they agree, line. II (hey dun’t, what have
you lost? The “ friendship" of a very selfish, In­
sensitive couple who couldn’t care less about your
feelings.
DEAR ABBY: As a coroner, 1 recently performed
an autopsy on a teen-age boy. He was driving an
automobile at approximately 120 miles per hour, his
car became airborne, skidded 140 yards, then hit an
oncoming car. As a resull of that accident, there
were two dead and two injured.
In the wallet of that teen-age driver was a clipping
from a Dear Abby column. It was, “Please, God,
Pin Only 17," If you print this, do not use my name
or state. I did not tell the parents.

COUNTY CORQNOR
Problems? You’ll feel better if you get them off your
chest. Write to Abby, P.O. Box 38923, Hollywood,
Calif. 90038. For a personal reply, please enclose a
stamped, self-addressed envelope.

^

*

FAMOUS RECIPE'S CHICKEN DINNER*
.J iiifccs of golden brown Famous fierii* h u d Chicken

Slashed inUaloes mid gravy
Crvamy cole slaw and tuu fresh, hot biscuits

EX

GOOD A L L D A Y W E D N E S D A Y
I'l i

II it I \ I H \ 11 Wlil s 'M \l

OPEN I I : M i m It s m EX C EPT F B I. 4 SAT CLOSING l|:N p m.
IMS i French Ay«. (Hwy l l t l l
II N H w y .lM I
SANFOtO
CA1IEL41RRY
113 U K
111 tIM
S Fever i f **l liKIwJttl lubthtgliem At I lira Chart*

([ M O V IE L A N D L .
H.y u r n

» :u &gt; i

TUESDAY CAR10AD
NITE

1.75

P E R CAR

GHOST STORY
•“

CAT PEOPLE

THEWIKWEMAKEIT
ISMAKMGUSFAMOUS.

�2 B- Even in g Herald, Sanlord, FI.

Tuesday, Aug, 17,1983

2 Sanford Men
Convicted In
Currency Theft

KFO It

Business
Review

A N Y P A IN T JO B
W I T H T H IS A D

"T? ft Q

Caff 322-2611

^TVlihf ft 'T M t J . ^fth.

2730 South Sa n fo rd A ve .
(30$) 323-2457

P r e p a r e d by A d v e rtis in g D e p t, of

How!

• P U T Y O U R B U S IR [5 S O N T H E M O V l

S anford

ByTENIYARBOROUGH
Herald Staff Writer

Evening Herald
llcr, del Advertiser

A D V E R T IS IN G

A D V E R T IS IN G

A D V E R T IS IN G

Two Sanford men, convicted in U.S. District Court in
Orlando Monday of stealing over $500,000 in uncut U.S.
currency, are free on $15,000 bond each pending a pre-senlence
investigation.
Kenneth Kroesser, 33, of C-5 Sandlewood Villas, 110 Airport
Blvd., and Roger Hannon, 48, of 300 Art !,ane, were arrested
April 28 after Koresser's girlfriend Cynthia I.ec Queen, 23,
informed police of their crime. Each could face up to 20 years
in prison and $20,000 in fines for their convictions on charges of
retaining and concealing government property, according to a
U.S. District Attorney’s office spokesman.
Officials said Kroesser and Hannon were found guilty by a
12-member jury in Orlando at about 3:30 p.m. Monday.
Police first learned of the two men's illegal activities from
Miss Queen who turned the men in after Kroesser became
dngry and left her after she discovered the uncut sheets of
money in their home.
Officials said the money was smuggled from the U.S.
Treasury" office under the two men's clothing while other
employees were out to lunch. Kroesser and Harmon were
former security employees of the U.S. Treasury Bureau of
Printing and Engraving.

A L L C H I L D R E N 'S C L O T H E S
Shirts -Jeans •Dresses ■Skirts •Suits - Shoes

fi

1“

MAGE a t
Hwy 17-92 &amp; 27th St., 333-9421
(N extTo Jew el T ), Sanford

D AVE'S UPH O LSTERY
• FURNITURE • BOATS • CARS
Large Selection of Material
Quality Workmanship
Free Estimates
Free Pickup
And Delivery

490 N. 17-92
Next To Sobik's Sub Shop

LONGWOOD, FLA.
(305) 862-1600

Prosecutors said $127,000 of the suspected $500,000 stolen in
the money-smuggling operation was recovered.

Mon. - Fri, 8.00 AM 6:00 PM

F u n d in g U n a v a ila b le

Plans to construct a second left turn lane from State Road
434 onto Interstate 4 in Ixmgwood have been approved by the
state but no funds are available for the project until "beyond
1987,"

CUSTOM DRAPERIES
are not as expensive
as you may think

PH. 322-0953

State Department of Transportation officials told Seminole
County officials Monday that plans for a second lane have been
approved to accommodate westbound traffic from SR 434 onto
1-4 But even though the $320,000 project has been given the
green Tight, the funds to carry It through have not.
IX)T Engineer Wally Fish said the project ranks high on the
list of projects to be funded exclusively with state funds. But
state legislators have adopted a policy requiring state funds to
be used only as matching money for federal road grants.

c
ii
E Ll Ll Ec N

w
n «F '
CMAPUT

f #

M ilM

. . ^ ’ I L L M cC A L L E Y — o w n e r

M l F R E N C H A V E . 1U-.Q7U S A N F O R D

O P E N MON. T H R U F R I. 8-4
SAT. 8-12
ALL W O RK GU A RAN TEED
1 D A Y S E R V IC E

SPEC IA L

SCU LPT U RED

The Seminole County Board of Adjustment has approved
special exceptions for construction of one business and the
expansion of another business near Oviedo.
The Ixiard Monday granted a land use exception to Jimmy R.
Wilkerson for construction of a saw mill on State Road 426 near
Oviedo.
But there was considerable discussion between board
members and Wilkerson’s representative, Bill Robinson,
about exactly what the mill would do.
The county's saw mill land use classification is a generic
term covering all operations which cut logs or pre-cut wood
into planks or boards.
Wilkcrson's operation would not be a traditional mill
operation, Robinson said. He explained that the facility will be
primarily designed to re-saw wood that has ulready been cut
into lengtlis. He said the mill will be enclosed and small saws
will be used.

N A IL S

JO A N N N EG R O N

*25°°
322-7684

liiugs of jMair
S T Y L Y IN G S A L O N
1911 French Ave.
Sanford

M e d -C a r e S u r g ic a l
and
R e s p ir a t o r y C lin ic

But that operation could be considered a wholesale lumber
yard operation, Glnny Marklcy, of the county’s land
management office, said. A wholesale lumber yard is com­
mercially zoned, not agriculturally zoned.

u

Company flying in from out of town? Is your car
in the shop for body repairs? T h ere are many
occasions when a one-car fam ily temporarily
needs a second car fast.

1 0 % DISCOUNT

Seminole Grants
Zoning Variances

l.ou Whitney, direclor
of industrial relations
at
Strom bergCarlson's
Sanford
plant, has been named
chairman of the Major
Industries Division of
the Seminole County
United Way. Whitney,
of Longwood, will have
his hands Tull helping
the UW raise about
t&amp;lO.QOO by the end of
October.

Steve Lash, right, genera Imanagcr of Jim Lash’s, repairs and services to the public (from left)
Blue Hook Service Center and Hcnt-a-Car with Terry Seay, Halpli Wight, .Merrill Schrimscher
service department staff who keep the rental cars and service manager Jim Din s,
in good repair as well as offering a full auto

Blue Book Cars Offers
%
Rentals, Sales, Service

ACE A U T O

State Rep. Robert Hattawny, D-Aitamonte Springs, said the
state policy isn't expected to change before 1987. Therefore, he
said, no state funds will probably be cvailable until then.

U W F U N D R A ISE R

FO R F R E E E S T IM A T E

EN W O O D S^V
V E R T IC A L S • M IN I B L IN D S • W O VEN
A LL AT D ISC O UNT P R IC E S

Seminole County Traffic Engineer Gary l i s t e r said a DOT
study showed that (100 cars an hour use the leil turn lane from
SR 434 onto 1-4 westbound during peak hours. That is more
than twice the capacity of the intersection.

Board members Roger Perra, Harry' Hagle and Larry Blair
said they know very little about saw mill operations but
decided that live information they had about the operation, end
assurances from neighbors in attendance that the mill would
not bother them, was enough to grant the exception.
The board also approved an exception for J-W Training
Center to construct two buildings for groom’s quarters. The
change to the horse training center's site plan also calls for
construction of recreational vehicle parking spots.
The additional facilities will be used for customers and staff,
a representative of the training center said.
The board also approved exceptions for Jam es Thompson to
operate an auto repair garage at Aloma Avenue and Howell
Branch Road near Casselberry. The property liad previously
been zoned for operation of a service station.
An exception for operation of a paint spray booth was
granted for Henry P. Lo at a facility on General Hutchison
Parkway near Longwood. Lo said the facility will be used to
paint wicker furniture he is importing into the area for retail
sale.
The board also granted special exceptions for placing mobile
homes on agricultural property within the county.
Five-year exceptions were granted for John T. Balleringo,
U s le r Kilmer, Harold Fues, Bill Salyers, H. Jeff Vonier and
Jerry G. Adams lo place mobile homes near Sanford. A 10-year
exception was granted for Brian C. Bone to place a mobile
home on Willingham Road off of Statp Road 419.

'5.

By £te

F o r L e ft T u rn L a n e

It is for times like these that Jim Lash Blue
Book Cars, Sanford, established its independent
car rental service to provide dependable, but
economical good used cars for rental.
Rental cars with automatic transmission, airconditioning and power steering start at $9.99 a
day. the first Ion miles each day are free with a
five cents a mile charge thereafter. Vans rent for
$19.95 for 24 hours. Weekly rates are available.
Cars are serviced at the Blue Book Service
Center at 4114 S. Orlando Ave. (17-92), to ensure
they are in good working condition.
To qualify to rent one of these cars you must Ik?
at least 21 years of age, the holder of a valid
drivers license and have auto insurance.
There is no need to postpone badly needed
repairs to your car because you have no other
transportation. For your convenience Jim Lash
offers rental cars for a flat $9.99 a day fee in­
cluding full collision coverage while your car is
being worked on in the Blue Book Service
Department.

REN TALS &amp; SALES
•
•
•
•

KARATE

w n relchjlrs
«R »s p irito fv Ifie ra p v
Colostomy Supplies
Equipment
Hospital Beds
• Breathing Machine*
Mastectomy Supplies •Oxygen
• Crutches

SANFORD
SCHOOL OF
SELF DEFENSE
C la im For Men
Women — Children

M E D IC A R E A P P R O V E D

•Kenpo K e ra le

Everything for hom e patient care
"W E D E L IV E R "

• Sell Detente,
•Kung Fu,

Phone (305) 122-885 5
S 0 S E . F irst Stree t
Sanford, Fl«. 32771

3 9 1 - 5 7 5 1
**

OPEN
M O N -FRI
I I NOON * P.M.
SAT-10A M.-4P.M

* Jiu Jiltu
Exercise*

• Weigh! Lilting

Tlie low cost rentals enable persons with
policies with insurance com panies with fixed
rates to rent w ithin the rental car allowance. Blue
Book Cars bills direct with so m e insurance firm s.

Owner Jim Lash, who has 2U years experience
in the automobile business in this area, has
operated his used car sales from this sam e
location since 1975. He has a large selection of
quality used cars at Blue Book prices
.Steve Lash, general m an ager of Blue Book Cars
and S ervice Center, announces a new service
availab le for the public. Car owners can now sell
their cars on consignment at Blue Book.
‘‘T he service developed out of the rising need
for people to sell their c a r s ,” he said "It is h assle
free. We take care of financing and if a trade is
involved w e handle all the necessary paper work
for a m inim al cost.
The Blue Book Service Center is a full
diagnostic operation utilizing the latest
tronics system s for w heel balancing,
testin g, wheel alignment and electrical
repair from battery to tail light.

Their computers will diagnose your c a r ’s
problem promptly. They will service any m ake
car. “ We do everything but body work,” said Jim
Durs, se rv ic e manager. Working with Durs in the
service department are experienced Terry Seay,
Merrill Schurmscher and Ralph Wight.

Blue Book Service Center and cars is a one-stop
place for automotive needs. Call 321-0741 or 830*
G088 to make an appointment to have your car
serviced.

7U W E S T F IR S T ST.
(1 Block! W etl 0117 91)
SA NFO RD

Ike Sewice Ceuta

c.—

R E L IA B L E
A N S W E R IN G
S E R V IC E

Tc
For Sick
Aar
Conditioners:

3 2 3 -4 9 1 7
" L E T US B E YOUR S E C R E T A R Y "

CALL T H E
$38

R E P A IR E X P E R T S !

It your central an conditioning isn t doing tne |ob you
think it should, GIVE U S A C ALL

MONTH - I

ZINN'S ACCOUNTING SERVICE

\

t&gt;*

£
5$•

.gewiweae
“

ERN AIR
t m ut

hum

OF SANFORD INC.
PH 005) I I ! 8221
too NORTH M APLE AVE.

- *-• * ' W
*

*

322-1792

Jewelry
Cleaned
Repaired
While you
wait

i-

%X

S P E C IA L IS T S IN
A U T O M O B ILE IN S U R A N C E
SR22's F I L E D

.

ih i

Precision
Sharpening
Center
S c in o r s
Saw *, Etc.

323-4035

ALSO IN SU R E M O B IL E
H O M ES, M O T O R C Y C LE S
H OM ES, REC - V E E S
itr.acicM *

ELECTRICAL • MECHANICAL REPAIRS

BLAIR AGENCY

VWV m A / W W A \ W V v W W V W W
ASK ABOUT O U R
S E N IO R C IT IZ E N S
D IS C O U N T

MONTH - W A K E -U P

That come* lo your
HO M E O F F I C E o r B U SIN ESS

O U R B U S IN E S S L IN E C A N B E
Y O U R B U S IN E S S L IN E 125.00 M O N T H

It your electric bills are too high when the air condi­
tioner is tunning, GIVE U S A C A L L 1
We oltej expert fepaus and service on ait air conditioning
brands Often a quick simple inexpensive repair is an
that’s necessary to cure a sick jir conditioner So it your
air conditioner is sick
&gt;
|

5

24HO UR S E R V IC E

It your central air (Conditioning isn t working GIVE U S
A C A LL

service
in e le c ­
engine
system

Dri

4*

Serving Sanford for 27 Y e ars

0 .0 . B LA IR

O P E N M O N . T H R U F R I . 9 -5

A

PH O N E

323-7710 or 323-3866

8

2510A O A K AVE. SANFORD
(Corner of S. Park Ave.

Oak)

to

CO

o
Cu

CD tO h)
* r ^
=r cp Q-

mil*.} 5i- s 2
AWARD WINNING STYLIST
H air F usion
M an icu re *
Pedicure*
F ac ia l*
M ak e -U p
Solar N a ll*

4

Perming
Coloring
Braiding
Weaving
Styling
Precition Cut*

Open
D a y * a week
Tue*. &amp; Thur*. Evening* until 1:10

9
2

�Evening Herald, Sanford. FI.

Business
Review

Danger Signals ol Pinched Nerves
t Headaches
2 Neck Pa&gt;n
} ShnuNJei Pam

P r e p a r e d by Advertising Dept, of

Evening Herald
Herald Advertiser

CM 322-2611 Kotui
\

• P U 1 W U K B U SIN ESS O N THE M O V E
ADV E R T I S I NG

“

Tuesday, Aug 17. 198J—IB

FREE SPINAL EXAMINATION

"A D V E R T I S I N G

ANNOUNCING

i Difficult fiifafong
5 l o a f Back Pam
H’jj Pam
Pain Down legs

The O pening Of A
U n iq u e K in d e rg a rte n
Fo r 5 Y e a r O lds This F a ll

S A N F O R D P A IN
C O N T R O L C L IN IC

Curriculum Include*
Academic ln*trucfMjn
iMutiC, Art Fiild Trip* And
Phviicai Education

191f S *“r
INAvr „ ttnfgrd
&lt;4cr«mt’&gt;nit ” »HttT
Mo*t Inturantt Assignment*
Accepted With No ( rirs
Out Of Pocfcirt B ip tn m

323-5763

A C H ILD 'S W O R L D
h* ie it Educational OppotiuniN In Central Florida

Thwmai VantftH.. Chirtpritht PnyliCtif)
Frte £ f am Dofi Not tnfiude * Ran op Trtafmtnf

For Further
information

A D V E R T IS IN G

IIM S Sanford Ave
Sanford

C A L L 323-U424

J

JUST ARRIVED

LARGE SHIPMENT
NEW CLOTHES
Dresses-Blouses-Slacks-Accessories-Purses

Twice 9d Hice
N E W a U S E D C O N S IG N M E N T S H O P
S U M M E R H O U R S : O P E N M O N Ihru SAT. 10 S
I 9 I0 F R E N C H A V E . - S A N F O R D
(O ld Hobby Depot Bldg.) BH . &gt;21 0080

f c f *
rm M

—

1

VOLKSHOP

32 FLA V O R S
IT'S NEW

S p e c ia liiin g In S e rv ic e &amp; Pa rts F o r
V .W .'s , Toyota and Datsun
(Corner 2nd &amp; Palmetto)

Jo Ann Negron (left)
new hairstylist at
Kings of flair and
in a n a g e r
(' a l li y
M ollica. right, will
give your hair the best
of care.

The 9ce Ctem Sim

214 S. Palmetto Ave.
SAN FO RD

, OE- ------

- V ID E O G A M E S

t d o o s5
H uO T
n
iD
uO
u iGj S
j

PH O N E

321-0120

C O R N ER OF L A K E M A R Y B L V D &amp; 17 92. S A N F O R D
171 491)

D/iornhiH's Jn/er/ors (Lie.
Is
2 0 % O FF

C O M P L E T E L IN E

Art Supplies

R

W indow Treatm ents,
Wall Paper &amp; Re-Upholstery

OILS
\

-n

1 5 % O FF

ACRYLICS

W COLORS

)■ ^ Everything lor I he

amateur or professional

C U S T O M F R A M IN G

All Floorcovering
IM M ED IA T E IN ST A LLA T IO N

OVER ISO MOLDINGS

GLASS fl. PAINT
COMPANY. INC

755 Suite B 2 W Hwv 454
longwooa Florida J2750

1305) BSD 4386

Omt.'ij Cut(7

\

LOTS

FR O M

*85°°

MO.

Proudly Announce* The Opening OF

r

Kiddie Kottfif

Back-To-School Hairdos
A t Kings Of Hair Salon
Headed back to school or college? Get your
haircut or perm at Kings of Hair Styling Salon, a
full service salon for the whole family. Ixienled at
11)11 French Ave., the salon specializes in all types
of hair care for men. women and children.
Now is the time to gel your hair looking Ihe best
for the busy fall schedule. Cathy Mollica.
manager of Kings of Hair and Jo Ann Negron, who
recently joined the staff, want to help you find an
up-to-date style which will look best on you.
Cathy, who was with Kings of Hair for a year
before becoming manager last Spring, studied
hair dressing in New York before moving to
Deltona from there to years ago.
Jo Ann came to Sanford from Puerto Itico in
March and has five years experience in the field
of hairstyling and beauty care. She specializes in
hair cuts, nail sculpturing and French braiding
Jo Ann, who speaks both English and Spanish,
brings a new service for Hispanic customers who
find it easier to communicate in Spanish.

BARBS
Another nice thing about
the horse It's almost a cer­
tainty no one is going lo
steal his hubcaps
An office with low userhead lends to make Ihr siafi
sloop-shouldered.

THE name to remember when YOU need
• An Extra Bedroom » A Kitchen Moderniied
'•An Extra Bathroom * A Roof Repained
____________ _ •Enclosed Carport

&amp;

A ls o ...
Screened in Porches
and Great Rooms!

Little rules to live by If
you fix the dripping faucet,
the pipe behind the wall will
let go

B

|
E L L
h

b

Y■ D U D
CAR
^

Dallas I. Childers

RENT c« *9.99
i

| Improper
l Alifnmtnt
• Can Cause
j

Eacessive
|,re wear

321-0741
OR

830-6688

R J . Headley

AND
UP

• F R O N T END
A L IG N M E N T
• BALAN CE &amp;
R O T A T E T IR E S
• C H EC K BRA KES

n*

SET FOR SANFORD/
CASSELBERRY
AREA
Electronic hearing tests w ill be
given tree at the O ra n g e
Hearing Aid C t r s . 2701 So
Orlando Dr Sanlord (M onday
only), and 170 S tlw y 17 92
Casselberry Monday
Frid a y
this week H Powers and B
Fisher
c ertified
tjy
the
National Hearing Aid Society
will be at these offices to
perform the tests
Anyone who has tro u b le
nearing or understanding is
welcome lo have a lest using
the latest electronic equipment
lo determine his or her par
titular loss

F ly w h e e l Kingpin

Things To Rent

lA Y L O K
'K I N T A L
c

*v

TONY NAWROCK I, PROP.

PH. 323-0910

30) N. 28th P la c e , Santord , F I.

J1S9 O R LA N D O DR. (H W Y 17 91) SA N FO R D

321*0741

Call For Appointment

32) 5702

830-6688

120So Hwy. 17 92
Casselberry
IH 1774

Mon.-Fri.&amp;a.m.-5:30p.m. Sat. Ba.m.-l p.m.

v %

% *

^

(O tf S a n lo rd A v e .)

323-1909

J A M E S S A L E S C O R P O R A T IO N

FLO R ID A P A TIEN T AIDS

E A S T H W Y . 46

• IN C O N T IN EN T S U P P L IE S
• W H E E L C H A IR S « W A L K E R S
• C R U T C H E i # H O S P IT A L B E D S

CASE TRACTORS
Y A N MA R TRACTORS

• COMMODE C H A IR S
• BLO O D P R E S S U R E K IT S

ty

IMCO
IM P L E M E N T S

- M,

• M IS C . SIC KRO O M S U P P L IE S
• SACRO B E L T S

'

"LOWEST PRICES,

*,
I

COMPARE OUR PRICES'

323-1570

339-1834

O PEN 7 DAYS A W E E K
PVC Pipe And Fittings - Submersible
Pumps, Je l Pumps Pressure Tanks And
Pump Motors And Accessories

SALES AND RENTALS

• PRESSURE BE D PADS
•%ATH EQUI PMENT

SAN FO RD

322 9436

F R E E D E L IV E R Y
W E B IL L M E D IC A R E D IR E C T
"Ownod jnd Operated ky Sanlord Senior CIMtent"

K IN G
IM P L E M E N T S

r

SALES a
S E RVI CE
MOWERS
R O T A VA T O R S
PLO W S
C U LT IV A T O R S

DICK JOYCE WELL DRILLING, INC.
SALES &amp; SERVICE

114 SA N F O R D A V E ., SAN FO RD

______________________________

339-1834

“ People use a lot of methods to
get their carpet cleaned. I think
Stanley Steemer cleans the best!1
SPRING
SPECIAL

*34?

I
I|

M i living
oom and hall
•r family room I
and hall
i

• TRUCK MOUNTED UNIT
• WE HEAT THE WATER
• WE DO NOT USE YOUR
ELECTRIC ITY
• NO WATER MESS IN
YOUR HOME
• WE DO NOT USE SHAMPOC
• TRAINED UNIFORMED
CREWS
V

3 3 9 -4 9 6 9

HEARINGLIOCENTERS
Sanlord

Automotive &amp; Truck Engine Rebuilding

O P E N M O N TH R U SAT 7 5 )0

URANGE

4114 Hwy. 17-92 Between Sanford &amp; Lonqwnnd

SEMINOLE AUTO MACHINE

Serving:
HOME • B U S IN E S S ■CONTRACTOR

US!

M ED CO D ISC O U N T
DRUGS
2701 So. Orlando Or.

Crack &amp;
Casting Repair

For Every Event

The free hearing test w ill be
given Monday Ihru F rid a y
this week at the Casselberry
office and Monday at the
Sanlord location
C a ll the
number below and arrange lor
an appoint men!. or drop In at
your convenience

BLUE B O O K SERVICE CENTER

G as D iesel
In d u stria l
M a rin e - F o re ig n

Work

N E W O W N E R S H IP

Everyo n e should h a v e a
hearing test ai least once a
year it there is any trouble at
all hearing c le a r ly
Even
people now wearing a hearing
aid or Ihose who have been told
nothing cooid be done lor them
can find uul about the latest
methods ol hearing correc
lions

W IT H T H IS COUPON

•TRASH . C ITY W A T E R a S E W E R IN C L U D E D
• L A R G E POOL • A D U L T C LUB H O U SE
• LA U N D R Y F A C IL IT IE S
• A D U LT LOTS A V A IL A B L E
SR 427 S A N F O R D , 2 M l. E. OF 17 92
MON. SAT. 9 *.m . J p.m 23) 8140

U0S1 172 7691

HEARING TESTS

*25 95

I 1 Steering
|
l« pull

ON
CONSIGNMENT
CALL

3 2 7 -3 1 3 0

JIM LASH'S
BLUE BOOK CARS

LET
US
BUT
m

FO R A F R E E E S T I M A T E AND A JO B W E L L DONE
C A LL

M O B IL E HOME M O O tL S O N D IS P L A Y

Hour* 9 a m to S p m Tue* Thru S a l. cloved Mon
169 N Country Club Rd . Lake M a ry. Fla

They also offer manicures, facials and ear­
piercing. The atmosphere at Kings of Hair is
relaxed and friendly with free cookies and coffee
for the customers.
Hours are 8:30 a.m. to 5 p in. Monday through
Friday, 8:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Saturday and
Thursday night by appointment. Daytime ap­
pointments are not always necessary.
Call 322-7I1H4 for an appointment.

OWN FOR LESS
THAN RENT
C O M PA R E T H E S E F E A T U R E S

A Funtastic Experience

Senior Citizens receive a 15 percent discount on
Tuesdays and Wednesdays at Kings of Hair.
Kings of Hair stylists use the latest techniques
in hair fashions and quality brand products such
as Kedkcn. l.uMaur and Apple Pectin.
They specialize in easy to care for blow-dry-cuts
of all lengths for every member of the family and
perms for long or short hair
For the men in the family. Kings of Hair, offers
contemporary hairstyles as well as the above the
ear no-nonsense basic cut

CudfOMt
RenuMiug

Phil Pastoret

Spectalmnq m children'* haircut*
from aqc* p re whool to A year*
Style Haircut 14,*0 Thi* include* a
free photo of your little but karoo

STANLEY STEEMER

The tarpet cleaning company womcnietunimend.
We Work Saturdays Too

Scatchgard
Member Sanlord Chamber of Comm:tret

CUrif mottPlM

�I B — Evening Herald, Sanford, F I.

Legal J'lotice^

REALTY
TRANSFERS

Tuesday, Aug. 17,5982

F L O R ID A S T A T U T E S 197.744
N O T IC E O F A P P L IC A T IO N
FOR TAX D E E D
N O TIC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N ,
thal A R More the holder ol the
following certificates has tiled said
certificates tor a ta« deed to be
issued thereon The certificate
numbers and years of issuance,
the description of the property,
and the names in which it was
assessed are as lottows
Certificate No 464
Y ear ot issuance 197S
Description ol Pro p erty Lot 13
Roseland Parks 1st Add P B 7 P G
64
Name in which assessed Nolan
Witt Heirs
Ail ot said property being In the
County of Seminole
State of
Florida.
Unless such certificate or car
liticales shall be redeemed ac
cording to law the p ro p erty
described In such certificate or
certificates will be sold to the
highest bidder at the court house
door on the 13th day ol September,
1917 at 11 00 A M
Dgted this 5th day ot August.
1917
Signature Arthur H Beckwith J r
Clerk ol Circuit Court
ot Seminote County, Florid a
B Y Cheryl Greer
Oeputy Clerk
Publish August 10. 17. 74, 31. 1987
D E Y 69

A ll Stale Homes, Inc lo Audrey
I M auge Pordc A Kelvin C Fordo,
both sgl , N S9 19' ct Lot 71 A S
M o r of Lot 79. Blk C. Sem.nole
Terr Rcp l . 17,000
E a rle AS Oakley &amp; At Nanette to
H arris C Botwln &amp; wf Marlene B .
S 711 441' Ol N 114 441' of W 933 Of
S E ’ x of NW&gt;* ot Set 30 70 10.
SI3S.004
Robert J, Matthews, Repr Es t
B a r r y S W earn fo Peter E
M cKinnon Jr A *1 Barbara S , Lot
17, M a rk h am Place, 171S.0OO
K M
Sandon to Douglas R
M c B r a y e r, 1 3rd int of arantor In
Lots 19 75. Blk II. crystal Lake
W inter Homes S d, S5S.OOO
B ru ce F
Blankenhorn A wt
Dena to John B King A At Pakela
J , Lot 347. W ckiva Hunt Club Fox
Hunt, Sec 7, 176.900
M ichael D Connor A Louis R
G arrett, P tr to Charles J G ivens
Jr ., s g l . Lot 137, Oakland Hills.
V43.000
Classic Custom Homes Inc to
Sherm an A Evans A a ! Gloria E ,
Lot 74. Woodgage, 175.400
Isabel L Greer. A&gt;d to Audrey
Greer Johnson. N1r ot S W 1, of
SW 'x ot Sec 33 70 37. » acres m I,
1100
South Shore Club. Inc lo Robert
G F eather. Lots 5. 6.7 (less W
84 04' ot 7) A 11. Lake Monroe
F L O R IO A ST A T U T E S 197 744
Indus P a rk , 1300 000
Noticeol Application
Ja m es T Sprlnkmann A a I J o
lor Ta&gt; Deed
Ann lo Harold S Landey A a I
N O TIC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N .
B arb ara A , Lot 39, Blk I, Sabal
that C h a r l e s w s. o h v j o y c e
Point. Amended Plat. 1101.000
F O R D the holder ol the following
(Q C D ) Louis L Baigier, sgl A
certificates has tiled said Cer
Donald L lo Donald L Baigier
liticales lor a lav deed lo be issued
(m a rr ). Lot 7. Blk D. Sausallte
thereon The certificate numbers
Sec T a o . 1I0.0OO
and years ol Is su an c e, the
G reater Constr Corp to M ario
Gome* Lop ei A a I Xiomara A , description ot the properly, and
the names in which it was assessed
Lot 177, Sausaltto Sec
Four,
are as follows
147.400
Certificate No 1733
lAorgan E Lovett f. a I Karen E
Year ol Issuance 1978
to Timothy W
Clitlord A A t
Description ol Property S EC 71
P a tric ia J . S '» ot Lot 4 A all of S.
T W P 2 IS R G E 30E N E U O F N E 'v
Blk 34, Sanlando The Suburb
S P L U S * E OF S U M M E R S E T
B eau lilu l. Sanlord Sec, 117.500
NO RTH SECS 7 P L U S 3 L E S S 70
F I Design A Conslr lo W m T
FT B Y 75 F T S T R IP SW O F LOT 7
H a rris A A t M ary F . Lot 4. Blk B.
B LK A SU M M ER SET NORTH
Slovak V illage s d, I less N BO of E
SEC 3
107 64), 173.400
Nam e
in which
assessed
Norwood Dev , Inc A M ark S
G R E A T E R CONSTR C O R P
W a llr a t l. ind
lo Richard B
Alt ot said properly being in the
Brooke, Lot 1. Blk A, Columbus
County ot S E M IN O L E , State ol
Harbor, 17HO 000
Florida
(Q C D I Beth Anne GAinn Itorm
Unless such certificate or cer
Van Norm an) A hb Elmore C
liticales shall be redeemed ac
G w n n J r to Bethe A GAinn A hb
cording to law the p ro p erty
Elm o re C Jr . S 51' of Lot 3 A N
described m such cerfilicate or
17' Ol 4. Opal Terr . 1100
certlllcates will be sold lo the
Tro yO Stuart A At EdAina O lo
highest bidder at the court house
Pau l W Gruenmger, sg l, Lol 6.
door on the 70th day ol S E P
B lk H, Tier 7, Sanford E. R
T E M B E R . 1917 AT I I 00 A M
Traftords Map, 165,000
Dated this 4th day ol A U G U ST ,
M a rlin Solo A Al M.lagros lo
1917
Aida R M a rlln e j Itnarr I, Lol I,
Arthur H Beckwith J r
L M S Estates, S10.SM
Clerk ol Circuit Court
Lm da W alk er (form Dennis) A
ot Seminole County. Florida
hb
Joseph Walkpr lo Ernest
B Y Cheryl Greer.
Thorne, sgl . Lot 1, ' j vacated St
Deputy Clerk
on No . Blk 1, Tier F, Sanlord. E
Publish August 17. 74. 31 4 Sep
R Tratlords Map, 17.700
lember 7, 1917
T h e rm a l
En e rg y
Consery
D EY H I
H om e Sys
Inc lo Leslie R
Suuthall A A t Eileen u . Lot 51.
N O TIC E OF S H E R I F F !
Timher Ridge al Sabal Point. Itn
SA LE
1, 1700.000
N O TIC E IS H E R E B Y '“•IVEN
Em p lo yee Translcr Corp to
thal by virtue ol lhat certain W rit
M ichael W O'Shea A Al Rebecca
ot Eveculion issued out ot and
G . Lul II. B lk B. Easlbrook s d.
under the seal ot the C O U N T Y
Uh 1. 164.500
Court ot Seminole County. Florida,
L illia n D Rooers itorm Neville)
upon a tlnal lodgement rendered
A hb L y m a n F to Henry F Olsen
m the aforesaid court on the 79th
A A t Ruth E . Lot I A E 40’ ol 7, Blk
day ol March, A D , 1987, in that
C, Sanlando Springs Tr 16, 7nd
certain case entitled, C redithrilt ol
r e p l . 145,000
America, Inc , Plaintiff, vs W illie
Reed and Virginia Heed. Detcn
Dade Sav A Loan to Ralph E
dant, which atoresaid W rit ot
Kelley A A t Rosal'e B , Lol 3, Blk
Execution was delivered to me as
A. Columbus Harbor, 1130.000
S h e rltl ol Sem inole County,
M ich ale C McMillian, sgl lo
Florida, and I have levied upon the
George R Hogan A a I Betty J .
follow ing described p ro p e rty
Lot 7. B lk A. The Colonnades. 1st
owned by W illie Reed, said
Sec . 175,000
property being located in Seminole
County, Flo rid a, m ore p ar
Roland Toureau A a I Elsie to
licularly described as follows
Edw in T Romero, sgl , W 113' ol
One
1973 Lin co ln
4 door
Lot 1, Southern Pines, 177.000
Automobile, Gold in Color ID No
Robert Thomas A wl Alice V lo
3YB7A 806690 stored at Fosters
CSI Protp Inc. Lot 36. Blk C. Sky
Auto Clinic, Longwood. Florida
La rk s d 141.900
and the undersigned as Sheritt of
Seminole County, Florida, will at
It 00 A M on the 1th day ot Sep
temper, A D 1917. otter tor sale
and sell to the highest bidder, lor
cash, sublect to any and all
COM M 1S1ION H EA RIN G
existing Hens, al the Front (W e sll
D O C K E T NO 170097 E ll
Door at the steps ol the Seminole
F L O R ID A P U B L IC 1 E R V IC E
County Courthouse in Sanford.
C O M M ISSIO N
F lo rid a , the above d escrib ed
to
personal property
F L O R ID A P O W E R A N D U G M T
That said sale Is being made to
C O M PA N Y
satisfy the terms ot said W rit of
and
Execution
A L L O T H E R IN T E R E S T E D
John E Polk,
P A R T IE S
Sherlll
IS S U E D ; I 411
Seminole Courtly, Florida
NOT IC E is hereby givenlhal I he
Publish August 17, 74, 31 4 Sep
F lo rid a P u b lic Service Com
lember 7, with the sale on Sep
mission w ill hold a public hearing
tember 1. 1987
in the above docket before Com
D E Y 77
mlssloners Joseph P Crosse. John

Legal Notice

R M arks. I l l , and Katie Nichols
on the Petition ol Florida Power
and Light Company lor an m
crease in ra les and charges at the
following lim e and place
9, 30 A M , Monday, September
13, 1917
Room 104
101 E a s t G aines Slreel
Tallahassee. Florida 37301
Septem ber 14 17 and Srptember
71 7 4 ,19«? have also been set aside.
P U R P O S E AND PRO C ED U RE
The purpose of this hearing shall
be to perm it Florida Power and
Light Com pany to present Its
testimony and exhibits in vupporl
ol Its petition; to permit in
lervenor jtnd stall to present
testimony and exhibits concerning
this m atter, to permit Florida
Power and Light Company to
present rebuttal testimony It It so
chooses, and tor such other pur
poses as the Commission may
deem appropriate all witnesses
shall
be
su b le ct to cross
evam inatloo al the conclusion ol
their testim ony The proceedings
will be governed by the provisions
ol C hapter 170, Florida Statutes,
and C hapter 75 71. Florida Ad
m in iitra tlve Code
JU R IS D IC T IO N
The Comm ission It vested with
jurisdiction o ve r the rates and
charges o l F lo rid a Power and
Light Com pany by the provisions
ol C hapter 364. Florida Statutes
H911). Ju risd ictio n to set rates
and charges lor Investor owned
electric u tilitie s is provided by
Sections 1*6 0 4. 364 041. 366 01.
346 06. 166 077. and 366 07S, Florida
Statutes (1911). The provisions ol
Chapter 75 6 and 71 9. Florida
A dm inistrative Code, are alto
applicable
By D IR E C T IO N ot the Florida
Public S e rv ic e Commission, this
4th day ol August 1917
(S E A L )
Steve Tribble
C O M M IS S IO N C L E R K
Publish August &gt;7, 7*. H W
D E Y 1(79

m

N O T IC E O F l H E R I F F ' t
SA LE
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
that by virtue ot that certain W rit
of Execution issued out ot and
under the seal of the C O U N T Y
Court at Orange County, Florida,
upon a linal judgement rendered
in the atoresaid court on the 17th
day ol May, A D . 1917. In thal
certain case entitled. Sun Bank.
N A .
a
national
b ankin g
association Plaintilf, vs Ana L.
R u ii, Oelendant. which atoresaid
W rit ot Execution was delivered to
m e as Sheritt ol Seminole County,
Florida, and l have levied upon the
fo llo w in g described p ro p e rly
owned by Ana L
R u il, said
property being located In Seminole
C o u n ty, F lo rid a , m ore p a r.
lic u la rly described as follows:
One 197S Triumph Convertible,
ID No FM794754, Brown In Color
being stored at Altamonte Towing
S e r v ic e .
Altam onte Sp rin g s ,
Florid a
and the undersigned as Sheritt of
Seminote County, Florida, w ill at
11.00 A M on the 1th day ot Sep
tember, A O 1917, otter lor sale
and sell lo the highest bidder, tor
cash, subject to any and all
existing liens, at the Front (W e st)
Door at the steps ol the Seminole
County Courthouse in Sanford,
F lo r id a , the above d e s crib e d
personal property.
That said salt is being made to
satisly the terms ol said W rit ol
Execution
John E . Polk.
Sheritt
Seminole County, Florida
Publish August 17. 74, 3), 4 Sep
lember 7, with the sale on Sep
lem ber 8. 1913
D E Y 74

TAKE

A

FLO RID*

ORANCEJUICE

----- B R E A K

Legal Notice

Legal Notice

N O T IC E OF C L A IM
O F L I E N AND
PR O PO SED SA LE
OF V E H IC L E
R E G IS T E R E D O W N E R
Name R a y Ebert
Address 73CS David Blvd
City Ft M yers
state. Zip F L 33906
C U ST O M ER ( I f different as
shown on repair order)
Name Same
Address 3S50 N Orange
Blossom Tr
Ctty; Orlando
State, Zip F L 37804
Names and addresses ol any
other persons claim ing an inleresl
in or lien on the vehicle
none
L IEN O R
Name Central FI. Cycles, Inc
DBA
Harley Davidson Altamonte
Address 1107 A E Altamonte
Dr.
City Altamonte Spgs , F L
Slate, Zip F L 33701
Telephone (305) 131 7888
D E S C R IP T IO N O F V E H IC L E
Year 1969
Make Harley Davidson
Model X L H
Location ot Vehicle:
Harley Davidson of Altamonte
Each ol you is hereby nobbed
that the a b ove nam ed lienor
claims a lien on the above
described vehicle lor labor and
services performed and completed
as ol 6 4 I I in the amount ot
11,714 00 and sto ra g e charges
accrued to dale In the amount ol
11,700 00 lor a total claim ot
13.314 00 Paym ent lo the lienor
prior to the proposed dateol saleot
the vehicle ol the cash sum ot
11.314 00 plus storage charges
accruing at the rate o l 15 00 per
day Irom the date hereof, will be
sulliclent to redeem the vehicle
trom the lien ol the lienor
The lien claim ed by the above
named lienor Is subject to en
lorcem enl pursuant to F S
5713 SIS. and unless said vehicle Is
redeemed Irom said Hen by
payment as allowed b y law, the
above described vehicle may be
sold to satisly the lien It the
vehicle is not redeemed from said
lien as allowed by law, the above
designated lienor proposes to sell
the vehicle as follows (Designate
type ol sale)
At a public sale
to be held al H arley Davidson ol
Altamonte, commencing al 1 00
am ,, on the 38th day ot Sep
lember, 1983
This document shall be notice
that the owner ol the vehicle or any
person claiming an interest In or
Hen thereon has a right to a
hearing at any tim e prior to the
proposed or scheduled dateo l sale
by filing a demand lor hearing
with the Clerk ol the Circuit Court
in the county in which the vehicle
is held, and rnalBng copies ol the
demand lor hearing to all other
owners and lienors as reflected on
their notice, that the owner ol the
vehicle has a right lo recover
possession ot the vehicle without
instituting ludlcial proceed ngs by
posting bond in accordance with
the provisions ot F S SS-S9 917 ol
the Motor Vehicle Repair A d . that
any proceeds Irom the saleo t the
vehicle remaining alter payment
ot the amount claimed to be due
and owing to the lien will be
deposited with the Clerk ot the
Circuit Court lor disposition upon
court order pursuant to F S
S7I3 58516)
Publish August 17, 1987
D E Y 5)7_________________________ _
FLO R ID A S T A T U T E S 197 )44
Notice of Application
tor Ta&gt; Deed
NOTICE IS H E R E B Y G IV E N ,
that Charles W &amp; Or V Jo y c e Ford
Ihe holder ol the following cer
liflcates hat Hied said certificates
tor a la * deed to be issued thereon
The certificate numbers and years
ot issuance, the description ol the
properly, and Ihe names in which
It was assessed are as follows
Certificate No, 741
Year ol Issuance 1971
Description of Property Sec 09
TWP JOS R G E 37E W 361 F t ot S E
&lt;4 Ol SW &lt;4 S Ol RD (Less S 6t Ft
Of W 137 Ft)
Name In
w h ich
assessed
Oreggors B J 4 Lois
All ol said property being in the
County of Seminole, State ol
Florida
Unless such certificate or cer
tiflce'es shall be redeemed ac
cording lo la w Ih e p ro p erty
described in such certillcete or
certificates w ill be sold to the
highest bidder at the court house
door on the 70th day of September.
1913, al 11:00 A M.
Dated this 61h day ot August,
Arthur H Beckwith Jr .
Clerk ol Circuit Court
ot Seminole County, Florida
B Y : Cheryl Greer,
Deputy Clerk
Publish August 17, 24, 31 4 Sep
tember 7, 1917
D E Y 117_________________________

N O T IC E OF N A M E S OF P E R
SO N S
A P P E A R IN G
TO B E
O W NERS
OF
ABA N D O N ED
PRO PERTY
— Pursuant to
Section )3, Chapter 717, Florida
S ta tu te s,
em itted
" F lo r id a
Disposition ol Unclaimed Properly
A c t", notice is hereby given lhat
the persons listed below appear to
be the owners ot unclaimed per
sonal or In tang ib le property
presumed abandoned THIS DOES
NOT IN V O L V E R E A L E S T A T E
o u H ta r , saxom
1600 V 5 t h I t * » t
S*k F0 »O , re
0518*1981-000*

24— Business Opportunities

CLASSIFIED ADS
Seminole
3 2 2 -2 6 11

8 3 1 -9 9 9 3

CLASSIFIED DEPT
H O U RS
8 00 A M
S 30 P M.
M O NDAY thru F R I D A Y
S AT U R D A Y 9 Noon

RATES
Itim e
50c a line
] consecutive limes 50c a line
7 consecutive times
42c
tOconsecutivetimes 37c a line
12.00 Minim um
3 Lines Minimum

57

DEADLINES

F t K O U l . 00k41 0

M AKE
ROOM
TO S T O R E
YO U R W IN T E R IT E M S
SELL
" D O N 'T
N EED S
FAST W IT H A WANT AD
Phone 377 2611 or 831 999] and
a friendly Ad Visor will help
you

iik r o a o , n

Sunday - Noon Friday

0347-1981-01*7
» *» e c tl&gt; » C
a t | f o « 7 59

lis r o a o . r i
1*45-1981-0701
6CV.ua, L H 001
to t xrokoac «d

t lT iK S k U

sre tk o s , r i

1190-1995-000)
6 * I f f Ik • C 0
a l 7 ( 0 * S77*

w *rc « o . n
1*45-1981-0710
H t a t c I k C , v 1VI l i e
801 897

5— Lost &amp; Found

S ih r c a o , re
0167- 198 1-01 7*.
H lT ti, u a a i
11b 0 * 5 0 (0 0 0 * po
C&gt; S SC V BC O ar , FL
0H7-19ai-0571
HUkT, S4XUCI
4vt
S ik F O O Q , FL
0367-t98(-0|99
J 4 CX P B O S S t 0 FQO0, («C
3766 17 87 s o ut h
j i k r o o o , FL
1450-1981-0007

iic s t k F n r ,

jtio M t

150 t C i t n t k l 00
S t k F O B D , FL
57 7 71
0550-1985-0005
"4 » C 1 N 5 *I, i k t t l
•o l o n h i l l
*1 TOhOkTC s a a l k O S , Fv
5106-1981-0005
x i l t l a s i H4B0L0
5*5 S P i k t S h ToACt 0 °
I L t l h O k t t saelkGS, Fi
1500-1987-037)
h lS U B , "4kFO[0
107 U f i r C H I T t l U 51
• H i l l f i s h B i t , Ft
7 5 * 9 - J 9 8 J -0007
noatO k, L 1 L L If
P . 0 , 801 *0*
I t I 4 P 0 H T I S P B l k G S , Ft
1500*1987-0475
P 4 l 10* I k c i a o r H
P . O . 801 816
S i k F o e D , r v 57771
0 ) 5 0 - 1981-0188
paoctoa, a

5 t t lr s t a a y talkC H st
C * 5 i l t B l » » T , Ft
0)67-1981-0857
a * 5H r, "0*015 ikD 5 H (!t i
V l t l * F0R61 I P t 8C
U r i H O k t l 5PB1NG5, Ft
1500-1917-0)85
a n t e , f a ik x h
708 BRIGHtCk . i t
Cm i t B C B B y , FL
055(5- 59B)-G70S

•OfM Hlk, v lik F a
151 1 SPBlkGvOOO CleCIC
LONGuOOO, Ft
0161-1981-0007
570*1 0 , J (
v * l l c t ro a o r
i a t i?*
ILtiH O k T C , Ft
01*7-1 98 1-0 017
lu ap lk , o ia ttk t

7877 M G k O lII 4VC
s i h F o a o , Ft
7715-1981-0007

v iu c ir t,
901

j

LOST black cane with stiver
head Vicinity 422 W Crystal
D r , Sanlord. R e w a rd lor
return 323 7JS4

4VC

5*kF 0 *D , FL
0 )5 9 - 1 9 8 1 - 0 0 1 6
V 1 L L 1 6 H 5 , 5411 T
P . O . BOI 1161

O R T H O D O N IC
a s s ls la n !
position available W ill train
Sa la ry c o m m e n su ra te with
experience Resume only P O
Bo* 1214 Altamonte Springs.
F la 33701

BODY SH O P

PA RT T IM E
N U R S E S A ID E .
373 3853

IF you want a mature babysitter
who loves children, bring them
lo my home 123 1)59
W IL L B A B V S IT
IN M V HOME
371 0218
C H IL D Care In my home State
licensed and experienced t l
years Prefer tl p m to 7 a m
shift Sanlord Area 327 2715

R E C E P T IO N IS T

included Call 1218424
12—Special Notices
I H E C O U N T R Y Attn 604 W
ttlh St 'S open tor bus mess
and is taking handmade tra its
and arts on consignment Call
M l 5758 373 6264

18—Help Wanted
IT 'S TOY P A R T Y TIMfc
New hostess program! 300 new
toys, gilts, book early
120
tree gilts, plus any catalog
item ' ] price for party now
thru Sept 15 Hiring toy party
demonstrators too Free S300
kit 3)9 3170 ________

R E P R E S E N T A T IV E S
loS250wk.

S185

Customers se rvice , a c c u ra te
typing, phone lines, excellent
benefits
AAA E M P L O Y M E N T
1917 French Ave.
32) 517*
LIG H T delivery, must have
vehicle and know area
Phone377 8585

l i — Instructions
S P E C IA L summer O'OQfarn for
6 U
year
olds
W e e k ly
ywifnm r&gt;q movies tkafinq

....... 55

Preping cars for painting Some
mechanical skills helpful
AAA E M P L O Y M E N T
1917 French ave.
373 5176

6 Child Care

A ttractive tree to travel, large
com p an y,
excellent
op
portunily No office skilH, lust
ambition
AAA E M P L O Y M E N T
1917 French Ave
323 S I74

l

H IG k O lII

18— Help Wanted

3— Cemeteries
2 C E M E T E R Y lots and vaults
Oaklawn Memorial P a rk S8O0
327 9221

F IR S T T IM E O F F E R E D . B E
Y O U R OWN BOSS. W ITHO UT
C A P IT A L
IN V E S T M E N T ,
W ITH O UT H E A D A C H E S !
We are looking lor dependable
people lo operate our ex
cep llo n al carp e t cleaning
service throughout the state ot
Florida No previous expert
ence reguired Free training,
customers supplied, very high
earnings potential Start at
oncet C a ll (305) 567 0790
Sunday thru Tuesday 8 5

M A N A G ER W A N T E D
Famous Recipe Fried Chicken,
minimum 2 years Ia s i lood
experience, honest, sincere,
hardworking Apply in person
al 16 North Highway 17 92,
Casselberry No phone calls
please

C U S T O M IZ E R

,...S S

P a m lin g T root w o rk , ex
perience needed, ex celle n t
money
AAA E M P L O Y M E N T
1917 French Ave
37) 5174
S250 W E E K L Y paychecks dully
guaranteed! working part or
lull time at home W eekly
paychecks mailed directly to
you Irom Home Ol flee every
Wednesday
S ta rt
Im
m ediately
No e x p e rie n c e
necessary National company
Do your work right in the
comfort and security ot your
own home OeladS and ap
plication mailed Send your
nam e
and
ad d ress
lo;
American Fidelity Company,
Hiring Dept 77. 1040 Lone Star
Dr . New BrauntelS. Tx. 78130
T E L E P H O N E so lic ito rs tor
Ja y c e e s
p roject
Ex p
preferred Phone 372 8585

5l k f o a O , F t

25— Loans
H O M E E Q U IT Y LOANS
No points or broker tees, loans lo
135.000 to Homeowners. GFC
Credit Corp . Sant. F I 373 6110

. 28— Apts. &amp; Houses
_____ To Share .
7 B D R M home In Paota, needs
fin a n c ia lly
secu red , able
bodied female age 50 to 45 to
share home with female age
68 339 5231 or 377 7197

Want Ads Get Peggie Together
Tnose Buying And Those
Selling 37? 36H or S31 999)

■&gt;9— Rooms
ROOM For Rent, separate en
trance, use of household
facilities Att 6. 373 7192.

D E B A R Y A REA ,
1 C H IL D O K
C A L L 327 7617

S i k F O B b , FV
15 9 J - | 9 1 l -006 8

* t V 5OH, O4LPH
805 H f t k [ 0 BlVO
4LI8HOHTC 5 P B I k G 5 , Fv
1697-1981-0078

• 000, £161 *

8111 HOHTf, F V
75 75-1981-0005

G EN ERA L

365 VHOOPIkG LOOP
4111 H O M E , FL
57101
7575-1911-0006

a K

176 H l H O L I k E t 4*1
4£14HOk9£ 5P81kG5, FL
1*65-1981-0516

info rm atio n
concerning
the
amount ot description of the
property (s u c h as unclaim ed
checking accounts, savings ac
counts, utility deposits, insurance
policies, etc.) and the namet and
addresses of the holder ol Such
personal property may be ob
tamed by any person possessing an
interest in the property by ad
dressing an Inquiry to Gerald
Lewis, State Comptroller, Attn:
Abandoned Pro p erty Section, 1401
StateCapltot, Tallahassee, Florida
53)01 (904 ) 487 758) Be sure to
mention th e account number
A F T E R the name as published in
this n o tice
U n le ss proot ol
ownership is presented to the
holder by October 38. 1912 the
property w ill be delivered lor
custody lo the Comptroller ol
Florida. Thereafter, all lurlher
claims must be directed lo the
Comptroller of Florida
Publish: August 17, 24. 1983
OEY66

R E G IS T E R E D N U R S E
F u lltim e pari lim e or contract
position avadabie with Home
Health Agency lor the ex
perlenced
KN
R e lia b le
transportation and phone are
required Call 173 3700 E O E

D E M O N S T R A T O R S wanted,
pari time or full time No c*p
n e c e ss ary
Frien dly
per
sonalily a must
For ap
poinlment call 332 2029
F R IE N D L Y home parties has
toys 5. gilts lor all ages is
needing dealers In your area
No Investment needed A lio
booking parties
Call for
details 13051 321 0218

Exp erienced m ech an ic with
tools 6 references — excellent
Income and benefits Call Carl
32)5966
F U L L lime R N 7 3 shift,
Lakevlew Nursing Center
919 E . 2nd St.

R E P R E S E N T A T IV E S
Expanding firm with unique new
c arp e t cleaning system Is
looking for sales agents to calk
on com mercial accounts High
earnings potential and chance
to be on ground Moor ot
dynam ic program Guaran
teed territories Call (3051 S67
0290 Monday thru Friday 8 i

• • • • • 6 « * 9 * * 9 * 6

Legal Notice

you are having difficulty
hnding a place, to live, car to
drive, a job, or some service
you have need ol, read alt our
want ads every day.

B R A N O new and beautiful' 7
bdrm, 7 bath duplex Reduced
S380 mo . carport and utility
room
June Poriig Realty
Realtor 372 8478

F U L L time sales clerk with
re ta il selling ex p erie n ce.
Group Insurance and other
benefits ottered A p p ly In
person Sw een ey’s O lfic e
Supply, 229 Magnolia Ave.,
Sanlo rd
In te rv ie w s W e d
rwsday 6 Thursday Irom 8:30

rJ V P T T li-rfT T ti
G A SAT TEN D AN T
S. Seminole Station
Good salary, hospitalitatlon, I
week paid vacation e v e ry 6
months
E x p e rie n c e
nol
necessary Call 323 3643.
* » « i 4 t t 4 « » 6 e *
*
E X P E R IE N C E D
B u i l t up
Rooters, Pay based on ex
perience Call 322 1936
M A IN T E N A N C E M A N
Experience motels or apart
m enu Must have own tools
Salary tied to capabilities.
Phone M r Robert peltona Inn.
30$ 574 669)
L A D IE S part time at home 2
hr* ol your time SI5 or m ore
guaranteed 1 357 9095 Bru ce
R E G IS T E R E O P H Y S IC A L
T H E R A P IS T
Immediate opening availab le for
registered physical therapist
with well established Home
Health Agency, F ull lim e or
contract position available. 1
year ol experience, car and
phone are required Call 323
2700 E O E
B R O W S E AND SA V E
. It'S
easy and tun . . . The W ant Ad
W ay.

21— Situations Wanted
L A W enforcement officer seeks'
part lim e employment. Hours
must be flexible. Reply Box
1)5. c o Evening Herald. P O.
Box 1657, Sanlord, F la 32771
A C C U R A T E typist, good speller
desires on |ob (raining. Typing
for court reporter or m edical
transcription In doctors office.
Santord area .Mature, depend
able, 13 years exp personal
lines Insurance. 32) 0625 eves
H O U SE C L E A N IN G .
V ery reasonable, references
321 537)

IM M A C U L A T E 3 Bdrm.
Bath, stove, re trig e ra to r.
fam ily rm , fenced yard, cent
HA S350 plus deposit Alt S
64S 7174
N E W 3 Bdrm , 2 Bath split plan
all appliances, on S Acres 7
miles West ot Deland 1375
mo 1st, last and security
322 8844
S A N FO R O 2 Bdrm, kids appl
air. S27S 339 7700
Sav On Rentals. Inc. Realtor
3 ADR 7 Bath with DtXible car
garage, and executive type
home in Deltbna Call 574 1432
days.
736 3693 eves
and
weekends
D E L T O N A 3 Bdrm 2 Baths.
Hreplace, screen porch, all
a p p lian ces,
drapes,
con
vemenl location, no pets 5420
mo 305 834 1S14 alt 5 p m
C O U N T R Y C L U B RD 4 7, kids,
pets, fence. S400 3)9 7200
Sav On Rentals. Inc Realtor
3 bdrm. fenced yard, kids OK.
option &gt;0 buy 1375 mo call
owner 1)1 1611

Houses Furnished
L O V E L Y I Bdrm furnished
S7S plus utilities 5700 sec
Cal! 371 6947 or 373 2269

il- M o b ile Homes

S L E E P IN G rooms with kitchen
priv , couples, disable vet.
Sin g les, no kids p»ls 323 9728

L O N G W O O D 2 B d rm , pets,
appl 1375 339 7200
Sav On Rentals, Inc Realtor

RO O M S FO R R E N T
P R IV A T E E N T R A N C E
322 3SS3

30Apart merits Unfurnished
1 I A N D I It l) R M l ram 1745
U rjgewood A rm s Apt
2540
Ridgewood A „ c 171 6470

2 BD R M . wall wall carpel,
kitchen appl .no pets S225 mo
1100 sec Apply upstairs Apl
No 4. 606 S Pa rk A ve or call
894 9658
LA R G E clean 1 Bdrm near
hospdal Reasonable rent tor
re lia b le p erm a n e n t single
person No pets Phone 644
1947 att 5 p m
SANFORD J Bdrm , kids, no
lease St70 339 7300
Sav On Rentals, Inc. Realtor
It's easy to place a Classified Ad
W e’ll even help you word
It Call 377 7611

N IC E unlurn 3 bdrm, l i bath
)S' scr porch. 12 *34 lam
room, large storage arra,
adults only, no pets STSO sec
5335 mo , 1st 8. last 333 9150

NOTICE
BIN G O

K N IG H T S O F
C O LU M BU S
250*Oak Ave.,
Santord

T h u rsd a y 7:30
Su n d ay 7:30
W in S25S100

2 B D R M . 1 Bath, upstairs
IJSOmo SlOOdamage
Phone 831 4479
BAM BO O C O V E APT5.
300 E Airport Blvd
113 Bdrm*
Fro m S3l5m o
Phone 831 4479

B R A K ES. FRO N T EN D

S A LE S

C A S H IE R , honest-Sincere,
experienced
3)9 5510

........ S ltf

Light typing, mall work, sharp,
benefits, lop company
AAA E M P L O Y M E N T
1917 French Ave
223 5174

17701

vooo, £ ia t *

Jt F F t o ,

D IS T R I B U T O R S wanted im
mediately Earning Irom 5700
to S400 week ly part tim r or lull
lim e M F For complete in
fo rm a tio n w rite P re m ie re
Merchand.se Company P O
Bo* r i i ? Dept E b 6. Sanlord
F la 32771

II

SA N FO RD
Reas
w k ly
i
monthly rales Util inc f it 500
Oak Adults I 84) 7883

0550-1981-0766

M itt I * H 5, 59LV15 11 ■
107 S U a t t k G c t

2 B D R M . extra nice duplex wdh
carport
5350 June P o rrg
Realty, Realtor. 373 8678

32— Houses Unfurnished

Noon The Day Before Publication

SC* L 4*f 8L90

C O N V E N IE N C E
5TOME C A SH IER S
IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T FO R
Good salary, hospilahial.on, I
S E M IN O L E C O U N TY, F L O R ID A
week pa.d vacation every 6
P R O B A T E D IV IS IO N
m onths
Ex p erience
not
File Number 81 5)3 C P
n e c e ss ary
Fo r in te rvie w
Division
phone the manager at
IN R E : E S T A T E OF
N O T IC E O F S H E R I F F 'S
Airport Blvd 64
32)4111
R O B E R T L O U IS P A T T E R S O N
SA LE
Casselberry 44
3)9177!
Deceased
NOTICE IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
Celery Ave 64
31161)3
NOTICE OF A D M IN IS T R A T IO N
thal by virtu e ol thal certain Writ
Lake M ary 68
3)11348
The administration ol the estate ot Execution issued out ol and
t t 4 t l l * « &gt; 4 t * «
ol R O B E R T L O U IS P A T T E R S O N ,
under the seal ol the COUNTY
deceased, F ile Number 87 323 CP,
Court of Orange County, Florida,
is pending In Ihe Circuit Court tor upon a linal judgement rendered
i * ' rn rou place a Cidss'f ed ap
Seminole County, Florida, Probate
n tne Even ng Herald Sta,
in the aforesaid court on Ihe 6th
Division, the address ot which is day ol November, A D , 1979, in
ilo S " to your phone because
Sem inole County Courthouse, that certain case entitled, General
someth ng wonderful is about
to happen
Park Avenue, P.O. Draw er C,
Finance Corporation ot Florida,
Sanlord, Florida 37771. The names
P la in tilf. vs Stephen Smith,
and addresses ot the personal
Oelendant, which atoresaid Writ
representative and the personal ot Execution was delivered to me
representative's attorney ere set
as Sherlll ot Seminole County,
forth below
Florida, and I have levied upon the
IN V IT A T IO N TO B ID
A ll Interested p ersons are
following d escrib ed property
Sealed bids will be received In
required to tile with this court,
owned by Stephen Smith, said
the C ity M anager's oltlc*, City
W IT H IN T H R E E M O N T H S OF
property being located In Seminole
Hall, Santord. Florida lor;
T H E F IR S T P U B L IC A T IO N OF
County, F lo r id a , more par.
I. Two (2) Security A larm
T H IS N O T IC E: &lt;)) all claim s licularly described as loilows: One
Systems
against the estate and (1) any
1975 Dodge 2 door Automobile,
II. Chain Lin k Fencing for
objection by an Interested person
Black
in
C o lo r
ID
No
Parks Building and Maintenance
XS77NSR160694 being stored at
to whom notice w a i m ailed lhat
Building
Seminole 76. Longwood. Florida
challenges Ihe valid ity ot the will,
D e ta ile d specifications a re
and the undersigned as Sheritt of
the qualilicatigns of Ihe personal
available in Ihe City M anager’s
Seminole County, Florida, will at
re p resen tative.
ven u e,
or
office. City Hall, Sanlord, Florida.
11.00 A M on the tth day ot Sep
jurisdiction ol the court.
The staled bids will be received
tember, A D , 1917. otter for sale
ALL
C L A IM S
AND
0B
Inthe City M anager's ollice. Room
and stil to the highest bidder, tor
JE C T IO N S NOT SO F I L E D W I L L
203, City Hall. Sanlord. Florida not
cash, subject to any and ill
B E FO REVER BA R R ED .
later than 1:30 PM . Wednesday.
existing liens, at the Front (West)
Publication ot this Notice has
September 1. 1982. The bids will be
Door at tne steps of the Seminole
begun on August 17, 1917.
publicly opened later that same
County Courthouse in Sanlord,
Personal Representative:
dale el 7 P M In the City Com
Flo rid a, th e a b o v e describtd
E V E R E T T B TH O M AS
mission Chambers, Room 117, City
personal property
Post Office Box 6)6
Hall, Sanford, Florida.
That said sale is being made to
Orange City, Flo rid a 3776)
The City of Sanlord reserves Ihe
satisfy the term s ol said W rit of
Attorney lor Personal
rlghl to accept or reject any and
Execution.
Representative;
all bids or any part thereof In the
John E . Polk,
A L B E R T L. L E W IS , P.A .
best Inleresl ot the City,
Sheritt
701 North Palm etto Avenue.
W E . Knowles
Seminole County, Florida
P.O. Box 1947
City Manager
Publish August 17. 34, 31, Sep
Orlando. Florida 37107
C IT Y O F S A N FO R D
tember 7, with the sale on Sep
Telephone (306) 4791955
Publish August 17, 1982
I lember I, 1983.
Publish August 17 4 74, 1987
| D E Y 113
I D E Y 7)
D E Y 110

I

U N IQ U E O P P O R T U N IT Y

Orlando-Winter Pork

31A— Duplexes

G EN EV A GARDENS
t, 2 bdrm apts . adult section
From SJ45 mo
Open Monday to Saturday
1505W JS Ih S t,
322 3090
L A K E FR O N T apts 1. tU) l 1
bdrm .on Lake Jenny. In
Santord
P o o l, re cre a tio n
room, outdoor BBQ . tennis
court*, d isp o sal, w a lk to
shopping Adults only, sorry no
pets 373 0742
LU XU RY
APARTM EN TS.
F a m ily * A d u lts section
Poolside, 7 Bdrm s, Master
Cove Apts 323 7900 Open on
weekends
E N JO Y country H ying) 2 bdrm,
DupiA A p ts , Olym pic s i
pool Shehandoah V illa g e .
Open 9 to * 373 7920

BINGO
V eta ra n io t Foreign War*
PO ST 10108
918 W 1st ST
SA N FO R D
M o n day7 IS
Wednesday 7 15

WIN

*25-*l00

Old you know that your
lub or organitation can
ppear In Ih il listing each
veek lor only l ) SO per
reek? This I* an Ideal way
o Inform the public ot your
;lub activities

Mariner's Village on Lake Ada, 1
bdrm Irom S2S0, 3 bdrm trom
5780 Located 17 91 iusl south
ol Airport Blvd in Santord Ail
Adults 37) 8670
M E L L O N V IL L E
TRACE
A PARTM EN TS
Spacious,
modern 7 bdrm, t bath a p t ,
carpeted, kitchen equipped
Cent HA W alk to town 6 lake
Adults, no pels 5795 32) 6030
B E A U T IF U L 1 Bdrm
In Town S22S Mo
1 886 6871
WHY REN T?
51.650 down p aym en t w ith
payments starting below 5350
mo buys a new 2 Bdrm home
in Deltona 70 minutes North at
Orlando on I 4 Call 618 5656
weekdays 9 5 or 1 574 1408 on
weekends. S29.900 buys a home
on lol.

31—Apartments Furnished
Furnished apartm ents lor'SInibT
Citliens. 311 Palm etto Aye , J.
Cowan. No phone calls.
I BD RM . turnlshed apt. car
peted. panelled, all utilities
included
Single adult
No
children or pets. S280 mo. ♦
deposit 1 Block Irom down
town Alter 6 p m 373 0229.
P A R K A V E. 5 Bdrm , appl, no
lease 5195. 339 7200
SavO n Rentals, Inc. Realtor
Anon you place a Class.) t-a Ad
.n The Evening Herald, slay
dose lo your phone because
someth ng wonderlul is about
to hapoen

BINGO
L a d ie s A u x ilia r y
to V .F .W .
Po st 10108
LogCabin on
the Lakelront

Sunday 1:30

Chamber Ol Commerce
Present*

9 Day Fiesta Tour
Six C ifiei
1877.00
Sept, 27,1983
Applications At
Chamber Office
Or
Sun Travel
2)11 S. French Ave.

II your club or organlutlon
would like to be included In this
listing ta ll;

Evening Herald
C L A S S IF IE D
D EPARTM EN T
322 2611

�W W E H 0 W , 1 T ^ H T ' \ T r !J a t ? £

FO R R E N T
F U L L Y E Q U IP P E D
BBQ &amp;RESTA U RA N T
m m nth s t „ siniom. f i »
Call 110-010} or (3&lt;M761
Claytonor Catharine Thomas
When you place a Classified Ad
n The Even ng Herald sta*
close To

A L L F L O R ID A R E A L T Y
OF S A N F O R D R E A L T O R
JS44S French
Alter Hours

Rental Offices

U N D E R 52.000 DOWN
3 bdrm doit house Affordable
m onthly
paym ents
Call
Owner Broker l i t 1611

Associates needed New office at
903 Lake M ary Blvd Bob M
Ball, Jr PA, Realtor. 333 4I1B
W*en * ol. p 'a c e * Class ' eS Aq

n Thy

r

ng Herald

Stay

'ose 'o tour phone DecauSr
Son rth.n g wonde-tul \ abOU*
»o nacoen

MAKE
RO O M
TO S T O R E
YOUR W IN T E R IT E M S
SELL
D O N 'T
N EED S
F AST W IT H A W ANT AD
Phone 372 3411 or t i l 999) and
a friendly Ad Visor will help
you

Associates inc Realtors
699 0700

322 7W3

F t t t t Schooling »or R i a l Estate

CONDO Winter Springs 3 bdrm,
3 bath, all appt. adults, no pets
S400 plus sec I 851 4575

L A K E M A R Y F L A 11314
3311304
Q UICK S A L E Attordable home
3 Bdrm , Fam
Rm, quiet
neighborhood, beautilul oaks
110.000 down 331 15S9or
339 5510
HAL C O L B E R T R E A V T V
307 E . IS Ih S I
3313413

Have some camping equ pment
you no longer use1 Sell ,t all
with a Classified Ad n The
Heiald Call 372 361 1 or Bit
W31 and a trmndiy ad visor
will help you

C E N T U R Y 71
Hayi-s Real! 1 Serve# * me
Full S r r v t e 371 1050
1

41—Houses

BDRM .
Pool home, no
qualifying, SIS.OOOdown Take
over payments 331 03IB
SA N FO R O R E A L T Y
REALTO R
333 5374
A lt Hrs. 122 *944, 321 4145

[HAROLD HALL
R E A L T Y , IN C .
REALTO R
333-S774
[ If Y E A R S E X P E R I E N C E I

TA INEVITABLE That
I I I 70 A LITTLE

A’’ AN

ART

W A T E R .'

1069 F IR E B IR D , AC AT. PS.
P B Good condition, original
owner, maintenance record.
SHOO 322 5039 alter S

'f - v y - V /

i

i

-

t

i

E X T R A large 7 story Colonial on
1 acre ol Oak trees All the
amenities plus guest apt Best
locale
5300,000
WM.
M A LIC Z O W SK t
REALTO R
337 7983

B

TWO STO RY B E A U T Y , 4 bdrm,
3 bth, low interest assumable
mortgage, large rooms A lots
Of privacy, IS*,900
ALM O ST N E W 1 bdrm, Cent
a ir ,shaded lot, 534,*00 Terrhs.
W E N E E D L IS T IN G S

3 2 3 -5 7 7 4

S U P E R LO C A TIO N
Residential lot 60x120. In county
but clbse to town. Ciyan it up
yourselt and save Only 55.500
ca*h

7404 MWY 17 *3

CallBart

K ISH R E A L E S T A T E
1310011

H EA L e s t a t e
HE A LT O R , 123 7H1

REALTO R

Alter Hrs 333 7MB A 333 7IS4

K

I I T

P alm Sprmqs A Palm Manor
G R E G O R Y M O B IL E H O M ES
JlO lO dando Dr
331 4200
VA A FM A Financing

l

STENSTR0M
REALTY -

REALTORS

San ford's S ale s Leader
W E L IS T AND S E L L
M O R E H O M E S TH AN
A N Y O N E IN N O R T H
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y !
JU S T L IS T E D I 3 Bdrm , IV i Bath
hema wills c h a a , w w c ,
fenced yd. utility room, shad,
new root, well keptl M4.000I
B E A U T IF U L I 4 Bdrm, 3 Bath
homa on about S acresl Tennis
clt., pool A patio, pasturo A
o vary feature Im a g in a b le !
Reduced to 4115,000.
S U P E R I 3 Bdrm, 3 Bath homo in
Hidden L ik e with a ll th« as­
tra l I CHAA, W W C, ttn etd yd.,
A on a q u it! c u l d t s a c l
Uf.tOOl
M A Y F A IR V IL L A S I 3 A 3 Bdrm,
3 Bath Condo Villas, next to
M ayfair Country Club. Select
your lot, Door plan 4 Interior
decort Quality constructed by
Shoemaker lor 547,300' 4 upl

C A L L A N Y T IM E
1545
Pork

322-2420
R O B B IE ’S
REALTY
R E A L T O R , M LS
5301 S. French
Suite 4
Sanford. Fla .

24 HOUR B 322-9283
STEM PER

s n ew est

A G EN CY

JU S T L IS T E D 1 Bdr, 3 Bath
block home on 5 A cre* In Laka
M ary, Cent. HA, wall to wall
carpeting, 3 yrs old, owner
will assist 1149,900
O W N E R A N X IO U S Must sell
beautiful I Bdrm. 2'W Bath
homa, on Lake Harney, guest
cottage, Bar B Qua house plus
much more. M ake oiler.
H A N D Y M A N S P E C IA L 3 Bdrm,
I Bath corner lot. excellent
location, easy terms S29.JOO
A SSO C IA T ES N E E O E D
R E A L T O R 331 499! O'

..N ig h t

1951 S K Y L IN E Mobile Home
24x53 It scree n enclosure
porch, utility shed, Central
heat and a ir 3 Bdrm. 7 Bath
Lot siie is 40x100 Sale price
541.900. financing available at
80 • ot sales price interest rate
14*-»»*
Can be seen at 136
Leisure Dr North DeBary,
Fla in the Meadowlea on tne
R iv e r M o b ile H om e com
munity Please contact Tom
Lyon or G ib Edmonds First
Federal ot Seminole
10S 372 1342

47- Real Estate Wanted
W E B U Y equity in Houses,
apartments, vacant land and
acreage
LU C KY
IN
V E S T M E N T S P O Box 2500.
Santord. F la 32771. 332 4741.

47 A—Mortgages Bought
&amp; Sold
W E P A Y cash tor 1st A 2nd
mortgages R a y Leqg. Lie
Mortgage Broker 788 2599

50UN P • I

v

T&amp; GIVE

A D V IC E =
W ’M
j '1

a

C O P P E R T O N E G a s D rye r,
dinette set, 4 chairs. 7 carpels,
9x17. Like new. J27H&gt;57
Let a Classified Ad help you llnd
more room
lo r ito ra g e .
Classified Ads find buyer!
tail.
7 N E W tires, site 14, 4 cushion
red corduroy couth. Clothes.
327 1171

W H EE L A D EAL
U SED CA R R E N T A L
A LL ca'4 4H 50 per day 540 per
1 week Corner ot W ilb u r A
Country Club
La k e M a ry
13) 5711

r

','.

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB

/

SO—Miscellaneous for Sale

F re e
dem onstration
with
education, home finances and
V deo qames Less than 4400
331 7501 Eves
19 FT
C O L D S P O T 2 door
refrigerator. 4125 Loveseal,
440. both good cond 323 7057

40” S T O V E S100 O0O Butcher
block bklst table. I swivel
chairs 540 Vinyl swivel rocker
4*0 All E * c cond 133 4194

57AGurts &amp; Ammo

SOL ID wooddesk &amp;
chair wdh wheels
Call 322 2039
G IG A N T IC S A L E
Clothmgaloseoult
Buy 2 items — 3rd tree
Wilco Sales Hwy 14W
1 Miles W of I 4
172 6l7Qor83t 9711

To List Your Business...

G U N A UCTIO N Sunday. Aug 11,
1 p m SA N FO R D A UCTIO N
1215 S French Ave 135-7340

Dial 322-2611 or 831-9993

■52 Lawn Garden
F IL L Ot R T A T O P S O IL
Y E L L O W SAND
Call Clark A Hirt 121 7480

Additions a,
Romodrlinq

65—Pets Supplies

66— Horses
FO R S A L E 4 year old mate
Quarter Horse S600 Phone 321
S452 alter 1 p m

N EW R EM O D EL . R E P A IR
All types and phases ot con
struebon. S G Balint 123 4432,
122 8*45 St§te Licensed

N EE D a F en ce ? Commercial
Industrial. Residential
Phone 323 8474

F E N C E S IN S T A L L E D
All Types

M A T T R E S S S E T S Interspring
by Spring A ir Twin sue set
178 F ull sire set S98 Queen
site set 41*8 A Kmg site set
$198 See them at
F L O R ID A S L E E P S M O P i
1817 N Orlando Ave . Highway
17 97. Madland. 331 4288

52—Appliances

Kenm oreparts, service, used
washers 323 0697
M O O N EY A P P L IA N C E S
R E F R IG E R A T O R S ,
m any
site s, g u aran teed , Sanford
Auction 1215 S French A ve ,
123 7310
U S E D A P P L IA N C E S
R rlrig era to ri. washers dryers,
ranges
10 day guarantee
Repairs A Parts
B A R N E T T } 111 5754
N E W A P P L IA N C E S
Full Iln e G E and Taopan
Apartment sites avail
New
Electric A Gas ranges
B A R N E T T S 121 5751
MAKE
RO O M
TO S T O R E
YO U R W IN T E R IT E M S
„ .
SELL
" O O N 'T
N EED S"
F A ST W IT H A W A N T AD
Phone 322 2411 or 831 9993 and
a friendly Ad Visor will help
you.
F R IG . 30 in. drop in
sell
cleaning oven Cost 5700 Sell
1295 Sears harvest gold self
delrost refrigerator, 15.2 cu II
excellent cond. *275, 15,000
BTU 220 volt AC *250, electric
dryer *125 . 327 4796

53— TV-Radio-Stereo
Good Used T V's *25 A up
M IL L E R S
2619 Orlando Or
Ph. 127 0351
R E P O S S E S S E D C O LO R TV S
W e sell repossessed color
televisions, all name brands,
consoles
and
portab'o*.
E X A M P L E : RCA COLOR TV
IN
W A LN U T
C O N SO LE.
O R I G IN A L P R I C E O V E R
1700. B A L A N C E D U E S18I
CASH OR P A Y M E N T S *11
M ONTH NO M O N E Y D O W N II
S T IL L IN W A R R A N T Y C A LL
21st C E N T U R Y S A L E S . 147
5394. D A Y O R N IG H T. F R E E
H O M E T R IA L . NO O B L IG A
TION.

B E N E F IT Y A R D SA LE
SAT. A SUN.
A U G U S T 11,31.
I t l l LO C U ST A V E.
SA N FO R D
Articles and Cash contributions
gratefully accepted. Proceeds
to pay lor transportation and
expenses of Cancer patient to
B u r t o n 's
E x p e r im e n t a l
C lin ic In
Ilia
Baham as
lor treatment. F o r additional
into. Call 313-1513 or 321 4904
Ev a s.; 349 5111 Days.
When you place a Cla»S't ra Aq
,n T&gt;-, F w fn „g Herald kU*
close 'o your phone because
someth ng wonderful s about
10 happen

T T T 'T irT FB
NO
Down Paym ent
With Approved
IN S U R A N C E

SUN B E L T

F ref E iftmatf %
B O N D E O 4 IN S U R E D

N ursing Care

Bt’xiufy C up

HAY
f 'OAST A t
Berm ud a
Free \1 \0 oer t)*'e

Weed

TO W ER S B E A U T Y SA LO N
F O R M E R L Y H arriett's Beauty
Nook $19 E 1st St . 322 5742

General Services
(,VlS w ' v c e *

H ri» r* e

F » fe

trtl

119 0M4

Blinds
jd

W IL L care tor vour
elderly loved ones In
m y home 321 5375

tfvm

tl il&gt;4 ,|r QF'YitT E hylUi ncJ
tare roofing ven«or cHllffWt

B R O W S E A N D SA V E
It'S
easy and fun, . The Want Ad
W ay

W a n t e d 16 Q u v

;m s m

A L U M I N U M cans, cooper, lead
brass, silv e r, gold W e ek d ays
8 4 10, Sat 9 I K KoM o Tool
Co 918 W 1st SI 121 1IOO

Nursing Center

Bo.udmq u. Grooming

M EN DR IX
A N T IQ U E S
A
M etnishng
tre e Fsl
1*4
J ’ j C Da* n.ghr located 7 m,
f* at O* edo on M w, 4lv
A N T IQ U E S A C O L L E C T IB L E S .
O ldc
Tym es
Connection.
B ro w s e r's
B a rn ,
ISO W
Jessup, Long wood

72—Auction
FO R E S T A T E , Commercial or
Residential Auctions A Ap
praisals Call Oell's Aucf'on
323 5420

ANIA4AL Haven Boarding and
Grooming Kennels Shadv. In
sutaled screened, llv prool m
Side, outside runs Fans Also
AC cages We cater to vour
pets Starting s tu d registrv
Ph 377 5757__________________
Let a Classified Ad help vou find
more room lor sto rage
Class it led Ads llnd buyers
last
M A k fc
ROOM
TO
STO RE
Y O U R W IN T E R I T E M S
SELL
D ON T
N EED S
F A S T W IT H A W A N T A D
Phone 122 2*11 or l i t w i and
a friend ly Ag V iso r will help

you

75— Recreational Vehicles

Brick &amp; Block
Stone Work

TOP Dollar Paid lor Junk A
Used cars, trucks A heavy
equipment 322 5990

Pel I rtf lMfJ A or

NO JO B too larqe or small Pro
quo I it y
*orkmanir&gt;&gt;p and
m a tw .a ls H rt 372 0071

Hauling
WHY have tunk lying arouno
when you can have It hauled
away today F re e estimates,
call Mr Lucky between 9 9
321 3894

H E IL M A N rooting, painting A
re p a irs .
Q u a lity
work,
re as o n a b le
rates
Free
estimates Anytim e 834 8490

i

I c h o o l

m m

UNITED TRUCK MASTERS
700 E Washington St
Orlando

78— Motorcycles
M E IN TZE R T IL E Exp since
1953 N e w S old work comm A
resid Free estimate 849 * 547
Complete Ceramic T ilt Serv.
walls, floors, countertops, re
model, repair F r est 339 0211

LE T U S b eau iily your home with
paint Interior or exterior
834 AtOOor 371 6717

Plastering

Phases ot Plastering
Plastering repair, stucco hard
cote, sim ulated bnck 321 5991

Lie

W IN D O W
re p a ir
and
In .
slallatlon.
C e llin g
Ians,
e le c t r ic a l
r e p la c e m e n t ,
window .cleaning. 121 5994

HOME Remodeling, Room
Additions. Complete
Garage Door S e rv le t
Dick Gross 331 5614
WINDOWS, carpentry, doors,
minimum repairs Floor tile,
cabinets I do it all 122 1121
Licensed A bonded

Plunihiiig
F O N S E C A P L U M B IN G All
types Em erg en cy Service,
Sewer Oram Cleaning 313 4075
Freddie Robinson plumbing
Repairs, laucels. W C
Sprinklers 32) 8510. 321 0706
R E P A IR S &amp; leaks
pendable service
rates No lob too
P lu m b e r, tre e
Plumbing 349 SS57

Fast A dr
Reasonable
small. Lie.
set
S&amp;M

Landscaping
Ins

A &amp; B R O O F IN
Concrete Work

LA N D CL E A R IN G .f ill dirt,
topsoil sbeie.disking,
mowing 322 3411

B E A L Concrete I man quality
operation, patios, driveways
Days 331 1333 Eves 327 1321

S L IM
BUD GETS
ARE
B O L S T E R E D W IT H V A L U E S
FRO M
THE
WANT
AD
COLUMNS

79— Trucks-Traiters

1945 F O R O F 100
N gw 6Cyl Engine
3214054 alter 6 p m
I980CH EVY VAN
FO R S A L E

322 1713
8d-r-Autos for S a tr
W t buy Cars and Trucks.#
M artin Motor Salts
741 S. French
113 7U4

D A YTO N A AUTO A UCTIO N
Hwy 97. I mile west o4 Sp.ed
way. Daytona Beach wilt hold
a public AUTO A UCTIO N
every Wednesday at 7 30 p m
It's the only one in Flo rid *.
You set the reserved p rl(t
Call 904 7531111 tor further
details.
71 HO NDA, some hall damage
but runs great Sacrifice 12150.
322 7491.
64 b a r r a c u OA Fast Back V
I Runs good, good tires. 1400
E v e s . Weekends 322 4531.

» P » ^ »

2) Yrs. E x p . Licensed &amp; Insured.
T ile
ip e c le lit t s .
Fre t
E s tim a te s on Rooting t
Repairs.

Contractor
A D A IR CO NSTRUCTIO N
New constriction, additions, re
modeling A blueprint service
Residential A Commercial
Licensed

499 1087

Insured

Courtesy Service

T A X I C A B end Delivery Service
All Airports W e are open 7
days a week Call 333 5135.

Whatever the occasion, there Is a
classified ad to solve It Try
one soon

root
F re e

R E R O O r i n g . carpentry, revil
repair A painting ts years
exp 323 1974

insurance 5 *rs irs Cent F la
G en eral Conti actor I 766 7^51 '

EXPERT

m um

Rooting Special 10 *, discount
with this ad when presented
lo Expert Rooting
Rerool
sp e cia lists
We honor in
surance claims For Ihe best n
roofing and remodeling call
Expert Rooting A Remode'mu
Asso T he One Stop shopcNnq
center Built up. sh ngles. tile
and tin rootmq Deal d i r e c t l y
with a local contractor who
has a reputable business
Licensed, Bonded A Insured
1 7a Hour Service

Secretarial Services

B A L R O O F IN G
Insured 8, Bonded References.
440 per square with fre t est
Call 323 7181

Lawn Service

M r. L u ck y's Lawn
Care Service
Q u ality
w ork
gu aren teed ,
beautification w ith o u t in
nation Free Estim ates Call
between 9 9 321 1194
M O W , Edge. T rim . R e n e w
Landscaping,
C le a n
ups,
Hauling, Thatching, Weeding.
Mulch Lindsey's 321 084’
MOW. E D G E . W E E D E A T IN G
Cleanups A light hauling
Free estimates, call 1310150.

Masonry
F IR E P L A C E S ,

bricks,

A D A IR R O O F IN G
Shingle roots, carpentry
and sky lights
Licensed
699 1087
insured
L IT T IK E N C O N TRA C TO RS
R O O F IN G
Licensed, bonded, low prices
Quality workmanship
Free Estim a tes 788 3219
JE A N 'S Rooting, licensed. In
sured. free estimates, isk lor
Jean Noe, 121 1144

RO O F* perm anently libergiass
ed at a traction ol the cost all
types res 8 comm 42? 4433
block,

concrete, stucco and repairs
Quality Fred 321 53*4

PERSO N N EL
U N L IM IT E D
377 5449

Tree Service
T R I County Tree Service Trim ,
rem ove, trash, hauling and
clean up Ft. Est 12 1 0804
T R E E Stump removal
41 00 Inch diameter
Rem Tree Service 3)9 4291
F R E E estim a tes, D e G ro a ts
P a tm ,
tree trim m ing
A
rem oval Hauling, law nuare A
odd lobs 3730862

Typing Service

G .F . B O H A N N O N
JA M ES AN DERSO N

322-9417
C O N C R E T E work alt types
F o o le rs, d riv e w a y s, pads,
I floors, pools, com plete or
relinlsh. Free est 322 7103

B U IL T up and Shmgle
licensed and insured
estimates 37? 19J*
Jam es E Lee Inc

323*7473
P L A S T E R IN G ,
stucco, simu
laled b ric k , patch work
Quality. Reas 121 7340.
377 1677

Roofing
COOD y A SONS
T He Contractors
111 0152

R O O F IN G ol all kinds com m cr
d a l A residential Bonded A
insured 123 1497 d no answ er
B3i 8537

PA IN T IN G and repair. pat'O and
screen porch b u ilt
Call
anytime 322 9461

C O L L IE R 'S
H o m e R e p a irs
carpentry, rooting, painting,
window repair. 321 6422.

Ceramic.Tile

Repair specialists A Rrruolinq
F u lly insured. 32 yrs exp
F R E E E S T IM A T E S
l i t 5011 or 197 ItM O rl

No Big Wailing List

R E M O D E L IN G .
A D D ITIO N S,
electrical and rooting Cer
tilled, bonded, licensed Phone
1904) 787 8157

K IT, bath'A additions Quality
w orkm anship in all home
improvements
L IC E N S E D A IN S U R E D
CALL K EN T A Y L O R
8311954

• DOT Certihcation
• Financial Assisianc*
• Placement Assistance

A L L STATE R O O FIN G ,

F R E E E S T IM A T E S John I
Herring. Inc we carry full
workman comp A lia b ility

Painting

a ll

1-4 2 5 -7 1 0 5
T im

77 Y A M A H A 650 custom Sissy
bar, highway pegs and tubes
New battery and motorcycle
cover,'less than 4500 original
miles Adult owned, garaged
the past 1 yrs 1st 41500 W ill
consider trade lor bass boat
Call alt. 5, 323 0229

SM A LL h o m e R E P A I R S
Painting, lawn care, etc
Free Estim m es, call 321 0150

K.T. R E M O D E L IN G

M AKE
R O O M TO S T O R E
Y O U R W IN T E R IT E M S , . .
SELL
"D O N 'T
N EED S"
F A ST W IT H A W ANT A D
Phone 122 2411 or 831 9993 and
a friendly Ad V ilo r will help
you

O U R R A T E S A R E LO W ER
La k rv .e w Nursing Center
719 E Second SI . Santord
322 6707

P r e s s u r e C le a n in g

Career Opportunity

77—Junk C irs Removed

W E P A Y lopdoilar lor
#unk Cars and Trucks
C flS Auto Parts 293 4505

PA IN TIN G , pool service, lawn
larea n d e tc Anytime 322 5184
alt 5, 788 2407 Message to Jim
K.pp

C A RPEN TRY,
co n crete
A
plumbing M inor repairs lo
addmg a room Don 321 1974

Bar B Quev patios fireplaces
No i ob too sm all
F re e
Estimates 134 0973

13’ J FT C A M P IN G trailer
5400 or best otter
322 3462 Ask tor Chuck

. IGHT Hauling, carpentry,
small home repair,
odd jobs 333 8877

Home Improvement

C L A S S IF IE D
AD S
M OVE
M O U N T A IN S ot merchandise
every day

G araq r vales are n season T&lt;ti
the people aoout
A ith a
Classified &amp;d &lt;n the Herald
322 2611 1)1 7/vj

INC.

Handyman
IN T E R IO R S BY E L L E N
Complete window dressings
in Home Service 377 0953

71—Antiques

W ILSO N M AI E R F U R N IT U R E
111 U S E F IR S T ST
332 5622

M IS T E R Fix it Joe McAdams
will repair your mowers at
your ho'me Call 312 7055

477 4163

discount

t H O SP I TAL bed complete
wdh rads" 1 wheel
chair 322 3841

C A R L S Law n m o w e r, sm all
engine and automotive repair
C e rtifie d AC, Pick up A
delivery 123 3844

Rooting

67 A — F e e d

37? U*S day 371 M04 p v h
D R A F T IN G Desk custom made
with built m legal Hie cabinet
Butcher block, laminate and
white formica Contemporaty
design, mint condition 4425
322 0701

Lawn Mowers

Fencing

BA T H S kitchens, roofing block,
concrete windows add a
room tree estimates 323 B4M

P IT B U L L P U P P IE S
124 each
321 5486

CO UCH Sleeper
by
Rowe,
Worilt2er piano organ combo .
VaqnuS cord organ w legs. 77
Chevy Chevette. 322 1512

54—Garage Sales

M O VIN G S A L E , living room set.
washer and d ryer, kitchen set,
etc. 777 1091.

Orlando Ave . Sanford
331 1000

e ft

50—Miscellaneous for Sale
Packs, Cots, Tar ps.
ARM Y NAVY SU RPLU S
310 Santord Ave.
137 5791 1

It s easy to place a Classified Ad
W e ll even help vou word
it Call 322 2611

NO C R E D IT 1 Bad C re d it1 Need
C a r1 Ca’ll Vetma s Auta Sates
W t finance our own As tow as
4150 down 474 wk up 385t So

CONSULT OUR

-

43—Lots-Acreage

ST JO H N S River frontage, 7'r
acre parcels, also interior
parcels, river access 113.900
Public water, 20 min to Alta
monte Mall', 12
20 yr
tinancm g
no q u alify in g
Broker 670 4833.

1974 J E E P CJ5. 24 000 mi like
new. orig nal owner Brand
new dealer installed lactory
top Must see to appreciate
5)99 5 373 0488

1961 P O N T IA C
Bonnev lie in
e ic
con d itio n with good
engine Asking S37S 718 3812
alt 6

^
&lt; M W ' f\ 'c r f T T s 'V 5 V
m
® | i f
; ~ . 'W l W
.

42-Mobile Homer
s e e s k y l in e

1974 C O R V E T T PW PS P B T
top, new stainless steel brakes,
new tires, 48795 or best otter.
373 5540

101

10 : M O R T G A G E
O W N E R F IN A N C E D
No points. 7 bedroom, 3 bath,
large 7 car garage, tall attic,
near goll cou rse 540.000,
530.000 down 323 5844-

80— Autos lo r S a le

80— A u tos lo r Sale

1978 C H E V R O L E T V O N 2 A
Silver
w b lack
stripes,
burgundy
in te rio r
18.000
miles, rad ial tires good con
dition, V 8, auto, AC stereo w
(asset! 53,000 La k e Mary 133
SB S I. eves and wknds

DeBary Auto A M arine Sales
across the river top ot hill 174
Hwy 17 97 D e B ary *48 8448

73 C H E V Y IM P A L A
runs great needs
body work 5375 322 0701

51 A— Furniture
C A LL US Q U IC K t l ! Gorgeous 3
Bdrm. 3 Bath, fam ily rm , and
fireplace 4)9,500

77 G R E N A D A
6 c y lin d e r,
autom atic.
a ir ,
power
steering. AM F W Stereo 74
Ceiica sport coupe 4 cylinder, 1
speed, a r conditioning, other
extras No money down, make
payments 339 9100 or 831 1604

c o n s u l t in g

A i^ r t js :

'

lic c n t t ' C j i i lor drfa«ii

SA N D LEW O O O V illas, t bdrm, t
bath, all appii. drapes, car
pets, Cent air. pool. 1250 mo ,
dfp .tease 477 S5S3 437 M76

A,

i N E R V O JA
T w iT ^ H

h o v e co m puter

Eve

40—C ondom inium s
SPA CIO US i Bdrm, 3 ' j Bath,
double garage, pool and tennis
courts 333 3333

l£&gt;$U£P U S ^

Th *N

Lie R e a l E s ta te Bro ker
3440 Santord A ve

321 0759

N C tEP F u T l l R l A t ;
ALTH£U6H I ’M HERE. ~c
\ACAT'CN ANP UNWIND,

J U5

WHEN THE DRIVER

- E ft

P A R tC P lA C E

BATEM AN REA LT Y
C O M M ER C IA L B U IL D IN G on
Highway IT 03. college area, S
Points, Longwood Su itab le
any type ot business, like
architect
A lt
or
part
Reasonable 333 3413

SU T I

CiOT A U S P I C I O U S &lt;

___ _

80— Autos tor Sale

80-Autos for Sale

AM M A JC R

Cb 3. HtfJPlE , Trip

■ p it

C O N F ID E N T IA L
IN T E R V IE W S

______ :_____________
O F F IC E S P A C E
FO R L E A S E
BJO 7723

HE

J M . 'A S l

b C0t1\\l6

6UPPLy&gt; C F

yOur phone because
vomethng wonderlul s about
to happen
37 B

333 0331
333 0779

O iS HJTEL V A f CH

Tuesday, Aug 17,1Q82—5B

Evening Herald, Santord, FI

with Major Hoople

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

41— Houses

37—Business Property

W I L L DO Rooting,
painting and odd lob*
321 5221.

Want Ads Get People Together
— Those Buying And Those
Selling i n 2611 -or 111 9Y93,.

Upholstery
C U ST O M upholstery all types
turn F re e est . pickup A deliv
Sharon Bailey 313 2180

Well Drilling
M A N N 'S W E L L D R IL L IN G
And Pum p repair (All work
g u a ra n te e d ! 30 yrs exp,
Licensed 8 Bonded Free Es t
177 *011 Local Cracker

When you place 8 Classified Ad
In The Evening Herald, stay
close to your phone because
something wonderful is about
(O happen

�&gt; % %

1 1 «

\ * \ 1 9

4B — Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

B L O N D IE
I T O O K M V BRO THERIN -LA W 0 ' J T TO A
RESTAURA N T
V

Tuesday, Aug. 17, 1983

by Chic Young

W LT V ? HOW M UCH DID

B O Y / W HAT A P IG
H E M A D E OC
H IM S E lP /

HEEAT?£311

C O R D IN N ER

I D O N 'T K N O W Y E T
H E 'S S T IL L
T H E R E .1

i.AST NIGHT

o

BEETLE

BA ILEY

by M o rt W a lk e r

HELLO, IS THIS
"A " COMPANY 2

AROUND H ER E
EVERY C A L L T U R N S
IN T O P lA L - A - JO K E

T H I S I S PVT. Z E R O A f J P I ' M iH
"A " COM PANY, B L JT I ' M J U S T A
T E E N Y , T E E N Y , T lN Y P A R T O P
"a " c o m p a n y , b u t , h e t ; E Y E R V
L I T T L E P A R T I S IM P O R T A N T ,
R IG H T ? N O BO PV
W A N T S A CO M PAN Y
W U H A M I 5 S iN G .. .

a

THE

BORN LOSER

by Art Sansom

■n
/r 7 \ f w , e u w 6 , m u t e t w

y

/T, .UJELL, HOU'LL

’/ ( .O L D HlCH S C H O O L &amp;tAU,

te w e o &amp; s

acro ss

1 Sacred bool
6 Increase
12 Rigorous

42 Crumbles
46 Flat bottomed
boat

48 Asian country

49 Pea
52 Anele
14 Wore
53 Armenian
15 Income Irom
mountain
housing
54 Rest
16 Essays
55 Antes
17 Prepares lawn 56 Middle (taw)
IS Jtkylls
opposite
DOWN
19 Container
20 American
Irish cattle
Indians
Egg shaped
24 Fish sperm
Rescue
26 Heavy
Hera s son
grouping of
Comedian
reeds
Sparks
27 Flat hat
6 Biblical pnest
30 Magna
7 Boats
32 Cone bearing
company
tree
8 Diplomat
33 Rope of
9 Wheel track
flowers
10 Sweet Land ot
34 Smells
Liberty (abbr)
35 Cook quickly 11 Food fish
36 Modern fabric t2 Son of Adam
3B Bird s home
17 Mother like
40 Active person 19 Wearing
4 t Burring insect
clothes
13 Stir

DEAR DR. LAMB
Recently 1 had surgery for
the removal of my left kidney
I was in good health and had
no symptonus indicating a
problem existed. A tumor was
found quite accidentally and
definitely determined with an
2 1 Fine volcanic 4 1 Worries
rock
43 Constellation angiogram. The doctor in­
22 Turkish title 44 Verb form
sisted that the only course of
23 Nimble
treatment w as removal of the
45 Satiate
25 Holy image
kidney itself, for all the
4
7
Actor
Sharif
26 Singer Mama
48 Region of the reasons you are probably
familiar with. The tumor
patella
2 7 Awkward
person
49 Binding
proved to be benign.
28 Air (prefn)
custom
Now 1 am convalescing and
29 Carpet nap
50 Stage of
have som e an x iety about
3 t Three spot
history
living with one kidney. I aLso
card
5 1 Joke
wonder if the surgery was
37 Eicrement
52 Body limb
absolutely necessary. 1 would
39 Army
appreciate any comments you
1
4
11
2
3
6
7
10
5
8
9
may have on these poinLs. I
would also like to know if one
TT"
13
can do something to keep the
remaining kidney healthy.
14
15
DEAR
READER
Unfortunately, in a number of
17
16
situations where a lump is
,-v,l
found the only way a
18
22 23
20
,-T • 19
diagnosis can be established
is by removing it. In some
24 25
26
instances this can he done as a
27 28 29
30
31
32
simple lumpectomy hut in
other cases a whole organ
J L ' 34
33
IT "
may be lost.
■} ‘ i
The danger with a tumor in
36
37
38
39
the kidney is that if it is
cancer it is a particularly
41
40
42 43 44 T T "
hard type to treat and the
sooner the cancer is removed
46 47
48
the better the chances of
survival If there is reason lo
49 50 5 t
52
think a tumor is cancer,
surgeons are not happy about
54
r _ '
m anipulating it as might
occur in just taking out the
55~
56
n
tumor. The manipulation may
cause cancer cells to be
released into the circulation,
actually causing spread. By
tying off all the circulation
first, which could mean to the
whole kidney, this can be
By B E R N IC E B E D E OSOL
avoided. And this is par­
ticularly important if you
For Wednesday, August 18, 1982
may be dealing with a highly
invitation hxlay to participate malignant tumor.
YOUR BUM llll.W
You can do just fine with
in a joint undertaking, even if
A uk - 18.1982
one
kidney. Many people with
It appears you’re going &gt;o you have to change directions
disease
of both kidneys would
m order to do so.
I k - making a considerable
tie delighted to have one good
AQUARIUS i Jan. 20-Feb.
change in direction in the year
kidney. As with two good
ahead. Experience has taught 19i Terms may finally be
kidneys it is important to
you many valuable lessons found today concerning
drink plenty of fluids to
and you are now ready to something which you have
provide for about a quart of
profit from them.
iR'cn trying to negotiate for a
urine a day.
I.EO (July 23-Auk. 22» You long lime. They will happily
And I think it is particularly
should find yourself in a satisfy everyone involved.
important to limit your salt
position today to be able to let
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
uo of an unproductive Present to the boss or
today
that
situation without having any inaugurate
regrets. You can now make a program you’ve been mulling
fresh start. Find out more of over. Once it is set in motion
what lies ahead fur you in the you’ll see how good it really
seasons followinK your bir­ is.
ABIES (March 21-Apnl 191
thday hy sending for your
NOKTII
• 17 12
♦ Q82
copy of Astro-Graph. Mail $1 You’ll be given an opportunity
V A Q8 53
for each to Astro-Graph, Box today to get off to a new start
♦72
489. Radio City Station, N Y w ith a relationship important
♦ A 10 5
10019. Be sure to specify birth to you. Make your move as
WEST
EAST
soon as you get the signal.
date.
♦ 85J
♦ 10 7
TAURUS i April 20-May 20 1
VIIUIO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
f 106
▼ K J 97 2
Allow your nobler instincts to Your artistic abilities are
♦J 1063
♦ 954
♦ Q9 4 2
♦ J 76
prevail today and you’ll find a above par today, so if there
m ore com passionate a p ­ are any changes you’d like to
SOUTH
♦ A KJ 6 4
proach to resolving a touchy make around the home, now is
*4
the time to do so.
family financial situation.
♦ A K Q8
GEMINI (May 21-June 20 1
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) It
♦ K 83
is no longer necessary to Plan today the course of
Vulnerable: Neither
delay a project you've been action you’d like to take in the
Dealer North
wanting to start. You can now next couple of weeks to ac­
Weil
North
Kail
South
g arn er proper support if com plish your purposes.
I
V
|&gt;au
24
Fresh, concise ideas can be
you’ll seek it.
Paw 2 NT
Pass
30
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) fnrulated now.
Pass (♦
Pass
4 NT
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
Now is the time lo set your
Pass 5V
Pass
74
Pass Pass
Pass
sights on loftier goals and A financial opportunity may
ambitions. You can achieve come your way today, giving
litem hy following what your you the chance to reorganize
Opening lead: WlO
instincts arc dictating.
your budget and put it on a
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23- stronger, more solvent basis.
By Oswald Jacoby
Dec. 21) Be exceptionally
and Alan Sontag
attentive today. There's an

y
■

by Bob M ontana
an annual K E F te r J w hat
•
m m ten o n a
y k i n p ^,
N A PK IN WITH A T r y
ci
a s a p k in G p f n T
( BUS*N6S5

*CU
•n c w

JUG AND l Af?E GONG

WHAT

INTO BU G lN ESa BETTV.' . you
get
A O u P TOO LIKE TO y
«F AN INVESTORS
ret* io u «
W E6TVFNT

EEK

V ___

y

V

16

IT »

HOROSCOPE

&amp; MEEK

by H ow ie Schneider
----------------------—

WHAT WOULD VOU DO IF 5OME0UL
CAME IN AND MELD S O U UP AT
GUUPDtKTT RIGHT UOJJ. JOMtO'7

R ight except
VJHAT I OWE

RIGHT
GIMME
ANOTHER.

sou

PAL

JM UO
HERO
HE'D GET
IT ALL1

P R IS C IL L A 'S POP
a

p r o b le m

FO R US.
FO P

W E CANT

R EC IPE
WHICH
MOVIE TO
SEE

by E d S u lliva n
ST U A R T W A N T S TO
S E E "P O N T A N S W E R
THE P O O R B E L L

ETH A N 'S FLUSHING
FO R P C N T LO O K IN
THE B A S E M E N T ^ /

BUGS BUNNY

1 HORS ^WTCMlMNEy
SWEEP DOES A GOOD

ANP I
V W ELL
M JA N T T O S E E )
PO
P O N T GO r^ w H A T N E A R THE E V E R YO U
A T T IC ' / P E C lP E ‘

by Sto ffel &amp; H eim dahl

s 0 „ ? C H lM N gv 'S
SPO TLESS DOC-

Dr.

Lamb

in tak e. You have few er
kidney units to filter out
sodium now and a high salt
intake could lx1 more harmful
than usual.
I know you are interested in
how the kidney works so 1 am
sending you The Health le tte r
number 12-12, Your Kidneys
and How They Work. 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!
DEAR I)R. 1.AMR - I’d
like to know uhai miracle
takes place after an operation
where a man becomes a
woman and his or her face
b ecom es so smooth and
hairless. I’m a 74-year-old
female, and I’d like lo remove
the hair from my face. I hate
it when someone says, "why
don’t you shave?"
I’ve had the electric needle
burn some from my upper lip
but the hairs either returned
or more replaced them.
DEAR READER - Sur­
prise: men and women have
about the same amount of
hair on their faces. The dif­
ference is that the hair fiber in
women is so fine you don’t see
it. U nder certain genetic
influences and hormones the
h air shaft may becom e
coarser and longer, making it
visible. Male hormone is a big
factor. And with a transsexual
operation the decrease in •
m ale
hormones
from
castration and taking female
hormones cause a big change.
After the menopause the
adrenal gland in some women
produces more testosterone
compared lo estrogen and
that stim ulates hair growth.
You can’t get rid of the hair
permanently unless the hair
follicle is destroyed. That
usually takes several treat­
ments with an electric needle
under the best circumstances

W IN AT BRIDGE

V

SETTLE

■

y
■

n

ARCH IE

Reader Questions
Kidney Removal

Answer to Previous Purrle

: ALSO ?EASSENT THE E3 SUNNY JANOTAL
SS2v.CE. ^ JOE 'CO 3jSi NOJOS V 0 S v ' a l l .

oppor'unity about you to gain
some knowledge which will be
invaluable to your future
plans.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) Seriously consider any

In explanation of the bid­
ding it seems that North felt
that his two no-trump rebid
not only denied four spades,
but also showed a very mini­
mum hand. South didn’t feel
at all certain about what

North meant South said to
h im s e lf.
"D am n
th e
torpedos" and blasted into
the spade grand slam
One look at dummy made
him wish that he had settled
for six In fact he wasn’t at
all sure (hat six was a sound
contract
There was a simple way
to play for seven Just take a
heart finesse If it worki'd he
would have a parking place
for one of his clubs and
could try for one diamond
ruff in dummy
Then South looked at
West The game was match
point duplicate South had
not seen this West before,
but he didn't look like a man
who would lead from the
king of hearLs Was there a
way to make seven with just
one heart trick’ South saw
there was such a way and he
tried for it.
Up with the ace of hearLs
Three high diamonds to dis­
card a club from dummy
Then three rounds of clubs,
ruffing the third one with
the eight of trumps. Then
back to his hand with a heart
ruff to lead his eight of dia­
m onds and ruff wi t h
dummy's trump queen Then
he ran his trumps and when
the suit broke 3-2 South had
his ambitious grand slam
(N EW SPA PER ENTERPRISE ASSN |

G A R FIELD
F R A N K AND E R N E S T

by Bob Thaves

TUMBLEWEEDS

by T. K. R y a n

'GOTTA P E MOI/IWGOftJ, PIG-FOOT.
REEI\JI\JICE M EETIN G YOU.

by Jim Da vi s

A N N IE

by Leonard S t a r r
•

l f
t
i

W H Y P E SO F O R M A L i — L E T S '

4*

OKAY** THAT’S NOT A5 ■
IWP0KTANT AS GET TIN’ *
YOU NELL AGAIN /
STELLA HAH WOUOHT | (
IN 50WC 6R0CERIE5,
V

50-

Q
XTfib

‘ •"

• v \ * •* *

-- I —

WHAT’5
THAT?.

�</text>
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                    <text>SUNDAY EDITION

Evernn

Evening H e ra ld — M JSPS 481 280)— P r ic e 35 Cents

751h Y e a r, No. 61—Sunday. O ctober 31,1982— Sanford, F lo rid a 32771

ma

Extra Weekend Patrols Added

Police W arn Treaters And Tricksters
injury to the little ones or any foolishness whatsoever. I don't
think I can be any more serious or direct about this than to say

ByTENIYARBOROUGH
Herald SUN Writer
Sanford and l,ake M ary police arc warning trick or treaters
and their parents to be extremely careful of the candy they
receive during Halloween while also warning would-be
pranksters that uniformed and plainclothed police officers will
be out in force to Insure all goes well.
• We usually have eight men on in the evening shift,” said
Herb Shea, spokesman for Sanford Police Chief Ben Butler.
"This year, because of the problems with food tampering and
the usual mischief at this time of year, we're going to have 20
officers on duty, petroling the streets in marked and unmarked
cars. Some of the officers will be in plain clothes and we may
even have some with trick or treaters."
"We want the pranksters to take this as a warning that the
officers have been instructed to make arrests and see to it that
those violators w ill go to the Juvenile detention center or the
county jail.” Shea said. "We will not tolerate any vandalism,

that.
"The food-scare is getting too close to home and we dont
want it in Sanford," Shea added. “ Parents go with your
children if they go trick or treating. Remember to the best of

Food Products Reported Tainted
___________. . . See Page 2 A_____________
your ability who gave them the candy and if something ap­
pears suspicious, call us immediately so we can check it out."
"I agree with Shea's statements and our department will
have five officers on the road accompanied by five firefighters
who will ride with them," said l-ake Mary Police Chief Harry
Benson.
“ This year, because of the dangers with the food tampering,

we plan to really be watching for any problems and we plan to
come down hard on those we catch causing problems." he said.
"God forbid that anything so tragic should happen here or
anywhere."
There is considerable confusion this year ovur which day
youngsters should trick or treat.
Sanford and Oviedo, as well as all of Orange County,
youngsters are being urged by the respective local govern­
ments to enjoy trick or treating Saturday night, and to stay
home Sunday.
Others, however, plan to go out Sunday night, the traditional
Oct. 31 observance.
Those who are suggesting Saturday night for Halloween fun
point to the fact that many churches have religious activities
on Sunday nights and. thus, Halloween would be disruptive for
some people.
,
. ,
.
...
One radio station In Orlando conducted an informal public
opinion poll Saturday via telephone call-ins and r e p o r t e d

There have been many frightening notes already this
Halloween.
With more tainted candy and fruit being found daily across
the nation, the Guardian Angels said they will go trick-ortreating with children this Halloween and a Nashville, Tenn.,
company is sending toys to kids in a Massachusetts town
where candy collecting was banned.
Officials in several cities again asked people not to let their
See POLICE Page 12A

King Wins By Draw
At Lake Mary; Other
City Races Shape Up

Ry M IC H E A L B E H A
Herald Staff Writer

Seminole County’s plan for acquisition
of 1,5000 acres in Spring Hammock be­
tween Lake Mary and I/jngwood is
proceeding according to schedule, said
Joyce Sellen, adm inistrator in charge of
the project.

I^ke Mary Councilman Kenneth King,
42, a natural science instructor at
Seminole Cotnmunity College, won
re-election to a second term when he
drew no opposition Friday as the can­
didate qualification period in that city
came to a close.

Surveyors currently are working at the
site to determine the exact boundaries
and will be done by r ebruary, Ms. Sellen

zoning board member; Susan Stem. 29, a
University of Central Florida student;
George Duryea, 35, an Accountant, and
Barbara Ball, 37, executive secretary ol
Codisco at the Sanford Airport.

Candidates for Fess's seat are: Colin
Keogh. 26, a third generation U k e
City Clerk Connie Major said King’s
Marylan; James D. Stem, 19, a Seminole
name in line with city election law will
Conununity College Student; E. Russell
not appear on the Dec. 7 city election
Megonegal, 61, resident of the Forest,
ballot. His re-election will be automatic. . nnil B ill Durrcnbergcr, 39, an estimator
and permit processer for an Orlando
Completing his first tenn on the
commercial
construction firm.
council, King lias shown particular in­
terest in environmental issues and
Durrcnbergcr resigned from the city
recently authored and pushed through to
planning and zoning board Thursday to
adoption an ordinance designed to
run for the council. He was an un­
protect the city’s trees.
successful candidate a year ago.

by
of
of
by

The state is expected to make offers to
the 37 property owners soon after the
review is completed, Ms. Sellen said.
Spring Hammock, a poorly drained
area dominated by mixed hardwood
trees, is vital for the drainage of in­
dustrial and residential areas on all sides
of it, she said.
"If this had been developed it would
have created drainage problems," Ms.

He and his wife, Christy, are the
parents of three chUdren.
Meanwhile, 13 other candidates
qualified for the three council seats and
the mayor's office on the Dec. 7 ballot.
H rrjld Photo by Tom Vincent

Sellen said.

Samira Tilley, a sales clerk in the cam era and
jewelry department of Sanford's K marl store
on U.S. Highway 17-92, lias her hands full. She
received the assignment of resetting the store’s

"It’s important that we acquire this for
the drainage. It purifies the sheet flow
before it gets into Soldier's Creek."

The hammock was the focus of a
controversy between people who wanted
to develop the area in the late 1970s and
conservationists who argued the land
was environmentally sensitive and would
be damaged Irreparably by develop­
ment.
Spring Hammock borders I-ake Jessup
on the east and State Road 427 on the
west. The l,ake Mary-Sanford area is to
the north of Longwood, Casselberry' and
Winter Springs are to the south­
Spring Hammock will be purchased
using state funds and will be developed
as a passive recreation area. The area
will be used for hiking, boardwalks,
nature trails and other activities that
require no development.
The area to be purchased does not
Include two houses and a small factory,
already in the Hammock.
TTie area was Included on a state list
for acquisition in December 1980 when
funding for the projects was approved. At
that time the project was ranked seventh
on the state’s list. Currently it is ranked
sixth.

many clocks this weekend to "lose" one hour
because of the change, officially at 2 a.in.
Sunday, hack to standard time.

Fall Back An Hour
This weekend everybody will get back the hour they lost
last spring.
At 2 a m. Sunday, clocks will be set back one hour to 1
a m. to officially end Daylight-Saving Tim e and begin
standard time for the next six months
For those who have trouble with the twice-yearly clock
change, remember, "Spring forward, fall back."

i

In 1966, Congress passed the Uniform Tim e Act, setting
Daylight-Saving Tim e from the last Sunday in April to the

last Sunday in October.
Many attempts have been made to change the law In­
cluding legislation passed by the Senate and other
measures awaiting action in the House.
The House version would extend daylight time by two
months, starting the first Sunday in March.
Arizona, Hawaii, Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, U.S.
Samoa and most of Indiana are not affected by the time
change because they voted to exempt themselves from the
law.

Running for mayor are; four-term
incumbent Walter Sorenson, 4b, an
associate realtor with an Orlando firm;
Vic Olvera, 48, a plastics supervisor at
WinTel C o rp , Iiongwood, who resigned
from his council seat to seek the mayor’s
office, and Dick Fess, 37, a vice president
of ComBanks, who is completing his first
term on the council.
Candidates for the one year remaining
in the term of resigned Gene McDonald
are: Burt Perinchief, 43, a music in­
structor at Seminole Community College,
and Josef C. Stem, 54, who is employed
by the Westinghouse Corp.
Candidates for the remaining year in
resigned Olvera’s tenn are: Charles
Lytle, 33, an account executive for Gulf &amp;
Western and former city planning and

Meanwhile, in Sanford, Patricia "Pu t”
Baxley, co-owner of a Sanford
restaurant, qualified Thursday to run
against two-year city commission in­
cumbent. M ilton Smith, a retired
railroad man. Incumbent City Com­
missioner David F a rr has drawn no
opposition so far.
In Casselberry, where three council
seats and the mayor's office are on the
ballot, two Council incumbents, Frank
Schutte and Bill G rier qualified. Richard
Russo and Bertha Rines have qualified to
seek election to the council seat held by
Jirn tavigne.
U vignc, resigned earlier this year,
effective Monday, to unsuccessfully seek
a legislative seat. He decided this week
not to run for re-election to the Council.
And no one had qualified Friday for the
one year remaining in the term of Mayor
Owen Sheppard.
Sheppard has resigned, effective Jan.

— DONNA ESTES

For U.S. House

McCollum, Batchelor
In Close Race Tuesday

TODAY
Action Reports .......................................*A
Around The C lock....... .................... 4A
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Calendar .....................................
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Classified A ds.................................... M B
Comics ................................................1C
Crossword............................................ 1C
Dear Abby............ * ........................... *B
Deaths..................
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H ospital................................................ *A
School Menus .................... •............... 7C
S p o r t s . . . . . . . . ..................... ... ....... M IA
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Weather ....■ ................................... • • !A

Troy Plland For House
District 3 4 ...See Page 4A

Seminole
Prep
Action

by a parent.
J . . . ...
Some teachers simply urged their young students to sta)
home this year and enjoy private Halloween parties with
relatives, close friends or members of their church.

Electio ns

C ounty
Proceeds
To Purchase
1,500 A cres

said.
An appraiser's report is expected
May and the state Department
Environmental Regulation's review
the appraiser's report la expected
July.

Orange County residents who responded said by a 5 to 1 margin
they were observing Halloween on Saturday.
Some local school children were advised Friday by teachers
to trick or treat only on Saturday night and to be accompanied

By DONNA ESTES
Herald Stall Writer
Incumbent U.S. Rep. Bill McCollum, R-Altamonte Springs,
and state Rep. Dick Batchelor, D-Orlando, are continuing their
campaigns down to the wire for Central Florida s 5th
Congressional District seat in the U.S. House of Represen­
tatives in Tuesday’s general election.
McCollum, 38, completing his first term in Congress, was
unopposed In the Republican primaries. In 1980 he beat out
then controversial Congressman Richard Kelly for his party s
nomination and went on to defeat Democrat David Best. Prior
to that campaign McCollum had been chairman of the
Seminole County GOP.
Batchelor, 34, considered a bid for Congress in 1980. but
instead strongly supported Best. Actively involved in the
reapportlonment In the Legislature earlier this year, he an­
nounced his candidacy for the 5th District Immediately after
the district boundaries were set.
A four-term state representative, is giving up his seat in the
Florida Legislature to try for the congressional post.
The 5th District, before reapportionment, had nearly 1

Lake Brantley 15
Seminole 14

Wildwood 34
Lake Mary 0
#

million residents and was the largest in population in the
nation. It stretched from Orange, Seminole and U k e counties
to the Gulf Coast, including McCollum's hometown of
Brooksville. The old fifth district was carved into three
districts during reapportlonment. As far as is known,
McCollum is the first resident of Seminole County to serve in
the Congress.
McCollum after redlstrlcting was reported to be considering

Jennings Vs. H attaw ay, See Page 2A
Vogt Vs. Steele, See Page 8A
moving into the Brooksville congressional district. He was
bom in Brooksville and has family there.
However, in mid July, McCollum said he would stay in
Seminole and run from here.
Batchelor made his announcement for the office first,
choosing as the site for that announcement the Vietnam
, See McCOLLUM Page 12A

Lyman 13
Lake Howell 10

Oviedo 14
Eustls 7

EARLY VOTER
William 1.. Mullins of l(H(i Mahogany Drive in Casselberry
delivers his absentee bajlnt to Seminole Klections Supervisor
Camilla llruce's office, and its accepted by deputy registrar
Helen McGuire. .Mullins, who lives in Precinct 52, will be a poll
worker in Precinct 72 in Ungwood on election day Tuesday and
will be unable to vote at his regular polling place. Absentee ballots
may in* delivered to Mrs. llruce’s offices at the courthouse annex
in Sanford or the branch oiiice in the Interstate Mall on Tuesday.
The branch office will be open until 5 p.m. Absentee ballots will he
accepted at the courthouse office until 7 p.m.

�IA —Evening Herald. Sanford, FI

Sunday, Ocl. II, 1981

WEATHER
N ATIO N AL R EPO RT:A "wall of fog" obliterated Virginia
Highways, causing two auto accidents that killed two people.
Four-inches of rain and heavy snow pounded the Pacific
Northwest, swelling rivers to flood stage. More than 2 inches of
rain doused Eureka, Calif., Friday. Heavy snow fell in the
Rockies Friday and stiff 54-mph winds blasted Casper, Wyo.,
and howled through mountain passes. A gale warning was
posted for f Jike Superior as gusts peaked at 30 mph from the
Dakotas to the Great Ukes. Elsewhere, thick fog covered
Texas, lxiuisiana and Missouri and light rain was reported
over New England. Skies were clear along the Atlantic Coast
Thunderstorms soaked Texas and louisiana, dumping 2 inches
of rain at Houston and more than an inch at Iongview. A "w a ll
of fog" near Chesapeake, Va., caused two traffic accidents on
Interstate 64—one a 12-car pileup that injured one person. A
mile away, a woman and her son were killed in "a wall of fog
with zero visibility," a state trooper said. I^te Thursday,
winds gusting to 38 mph in Milwaukee toppled a temporary
wooden walkway at the construction site of the new Federal
Plaza. Four people received minor Injuries
A R E A READINGS (9a.m.): temperature: 69; overnight
low: 64; Firday high:-64; barometric pressure: 30.17; relative
humidity: 90 percent; winds: south ,-&gt;oulheast at 3 mph; rain:
none, sunrise 7:36 a.in., sunset 6:42 p.m.
SUN D AY TIDES: DAYTONA REACH: highs, 6:42 a m.,
6:08 p.m. lows, 12:09 a m.. 12:41 p m.; PORT C A N AV ER A L:
highs, 6:34 a.m., 7:00 p.m.; lows, 12:00 am ., 12:32 p.m.;
BAYPO R T: highs, 12:02 a.m.. 12:47 o rn.; lows, 6:39, a m..
6:49 p.m.
BOATING FORECAST: SL Auguatlne to Jupiter Inlet, Out
50 Mile*: Wind northeast to east near 15 knots becoming
easterly 10 to 15 knots by tonight and east to southeast 10 oc­
casionally 15 knots Sunday. Seas 4 to 6 feet subsiding to 3 to 4
feet tonight. A few showers.
AR E A FORECAST: Partly cloudy today with highs in the
low to mid 80s Wind easterly 10 to 15 mph. Partly cloudy
tonight and Sunday, lows in the 60s. Highs mostly mid 80s
Wind tonight easterly less than 10 mph.
E X T E N D E D FORECAST: Florida except northwest-Partly
cloudy. Iiiw s mostly 60s and highs low to mid 80s.

For State Senate In 15th

Je n n in g s A n d H a tta w a y C lash
State Sen Toni Jennings, R-Orlando, is being challenged in
her bid (or a second term in the Florida Senate by State Rep.
Robert Hattaway, D-Altamonte Springs.
Hattaway, a four-term state legislator, is a native of
Seminole County, and has been chairman of the Seminole
County Legislative delegation for the past six years
Miss Jennings elected to the Florida Senate in 1980, served
two two-year terms previously in the Florida House §he has
been chairman,of the Orange County delegation for the past
two years,
Hattaway, 45, is married and the father o f two daughters.
Miss Jennings is single.
Miss Jennings is currently serving on the Senate committees
on governmental operations, transportation, finance, taxation
and claims, economic, community and consumer affairs
Hattaway sen e s on the House agriculture, appropriations,
finance and taxation and transportation committees.
He has been chairman of the citrus subcommittee, the
election administration .subcommittee, same day registration
ad hoc committee, vice chairman of the agriculture committee,
and member of the elections, insurance, growth and energy
committees and the select committees on farm labor relations
and worker’s compensation study.
When first elevated to the Florida House in 1976, Miss Jen­
nings was 27 and the youngest woman ever elected to the
Florida legislature She has been designated Republican
leader pro-tern for the 1982-84 sessions of the Slate Senate.

HOSPITAL NOTES
Central Florida Reqionjl
Hospital
Friday
_____ A D M I S S IO N S______
Sanford

V&gt;rq&gt;nirt F Green
Hobr-fl M Miller
Carol k Schooler all
BIRTHS
Glenn A
and Cynthia L
Robinson, a baby girt. Deltona
D IS C H A R G E S

Santord
Eleton H

Cari*eii

llcm hl

Willi* M Dallron
Lillian J Oyfcel
JeW ca M Gill
Julia A Glnier
Vylvira Grady
John 1 Ludwig
Gerald L Rumyay
Vidor P Turner
John E

F o im ire . O eltary

Irma D Montllla Deltona
Lloyd G Shank, Lake Mary
Sarah H Hodge, Lake Monroe
Dorothy R Rev and batiy boy.
Ovleen

(uses mi hoi

Sunday. October 31, 19B?—Vol 75, No 61
Pubtuhed Daily and Sunday eicapl Saturday by The Sanlord
Herald, Inc . )M N French Aye , Sanford, Fla I1TI1
Second C la n Pottage Paid at Sanford, Florida H ilt
Home Delivery; Week, tl 00, Month, M i l l 4 Monlht. 114 00,
Year. t O H By Mail: Week t i l t ; Month, t i l l ; t Mentha.
t)0 00. Year, ttl O*

ELECT
* H' vcit'iit o! Sem inole County voice I9b8
* Sclim tl ol Ninvutg, Umv til Tennessee, 190?
* li.K.hrloi u1 Arts, Um v of Central Flu , 1973
* Master p i Arts
Flor irla. 197 7

They have both received numerous awards.
Horn in Altamonte Springs, Hattaway is a graduate of
Lyman High School. He is president of his own tropical foliage
business, Hattaway’s Inc.; is a broker-realtor, owner of
Altamonte Realty and Is a director of Southeast National Hank
of Orlando.
Miss Jennings received her bachelor’s degree with honors in
elementary education from Wesleyan College in Macon, Ga.,
and attended the graduate school of education as a reading
specialist at Rollins College She taught for two years at
Killamey Elementary School in Winter Park.
She is an officer of Jack Jennings &amp; Sons, Inc., general

TOM ,IK \N !\(iS

KOIIKItT HATTAWAY

contractors, la an associate realtor and a mortgage broker.
She holds a mortgage broker's license.
Tlie single greatest issue facing Florida continues to be
crime, in Miss Jennings’ view.
"Though nationwide crime figures arc dropping. Florida’s
rate continues to rise," she said. "It is my belief that the chief
reason crime continues to rise in our state is the total lack of
concern by the criminal or would-be criminal over the
possibility of being caught, tried and punished. The lengthy
appeal process makes a mockery of the concept of swift and
sure punishment.
"With over 190 people on death row, many there in excess of
eight years, the appeals process has practically done away
with capital punishment in our state," Miss Jennings said.
"A punishment never carried out is no punishment at all and
certainly does not act as any ktnd of deterrent," she said.
Hattaway said the most important issue facing the 1983
legislature will be those issues related to growth such as
transportation, education and law enforcement.
"We need to act today to solve the problems of future growth

rather than waiting 'till the problems exLst and appropriate
revenues are not available." said Hattaway.
"Prudent management and wise use of available revenues
should be the guidelines for developing appropriate legislation
to deal with these problems," he said
"Last year. I was able to obtain funding to keep the crime
lab in Central Florida and to assist Seminole Community
College and other areas of transportation and education. I plan
to deal with those areas with the same attitude that I have
successfully used during my eight years in the Florida House
of Representatives," Hattaway said.
"W hile much has been accomplished, we still have a long
way to go towards solving our growth problems," he said.
Miss Jennings said there are two particular areas where she
intends to introduce legislation during the 1983 session. She
said she will first follow up on the crime problem.
"Through research my office has found the appeals process
continues to be delayed by what are called collateral issues
that have nothing to do with guilt or innocence.
"I will be working on a legislative limitation on these kinds
of issues that serve only to delay the carrying out of a sen­
tence," said Miss Jennings
The second area of legislation deals with funning tran­
sportation needs, she said
" A large portion of the motor vehicle license tag money and
the majority of the sales tax revenue on cars, trucks and buses
do not go to funding transportation needs. I w ill work to
redirect these funds through legislation," she said.
Hattaway said legislation which he will propose for the 1983
session will deal with growth-related issues. "Even though a
complete legislative package has not been formed, subjects
such as the mechanics lien law, crime, education and tran­
sportation will be included," he said.
Miss Jennings and Hattaway are running for the District 15
seat in the Florida Senate. The district encompasses roughly
20 percent of Seminole County in the area west of U S. 17-92 and
south of Stale Road 436 and parts of Orange County.
Voters in Seminole County precincts 11,12, 16, 23, 25, 31, 36,
39,44, 45,48,49,59 and 69 iim i vote in this contest.
_ DI1NNA ESTES

Jacksonville Cola Contaminated

New Tainted Food Product Wave Hit
United Press (ntcraulfonu!
Authorities investigating the Chicago area
Tylenol poisonings studied a Jumble of lends
and police nationwide were busy with
“ copycat" tamperings, including razor blades
in hot dogs in Detroit and a powerful painkiller
added to a brownie in New Hampshire.
Jewel Companies Inc. and the Walgreen Co.,
two of the Chicago area's largest drug
retailers, restocked Tylenol products except
capsules in suburban stores. A citywide ban
on all Tylenol products continues.
Stores' Halloween candy was one of the
primary targets of poisoners and fearful
parents said they would not let their children
trick-or-treat Sunday.
A boy found a pm in a caramel qpple bought

in a North Dakota supermarket, prompting a
recall Friday of more than 1 million caramel
apples by Carnival Products of Minneapolis.
llygrade Food Products Corp, of Livonia,
Mich., announced a voluntary five-state recall
of its Ball Park franks after three Michigan
families found razor blades in them A fourth
frank was sabotaged with a nail. Some of the
families said the booby traps apparently were
made during processing.
A company spokesman said all frank
production at the Uvonia plant would be
hatted while the Investigation continues. The
company offered a J10.000 reward for in­
formation leading to a conviction.
The New Ham pshire P u b lic Health
Department issued a formal recall of brownies

from the Peggy Iuiwton Bakery in Walpole,
Mass., while state and federal investigators
try to figure out how a 50-milligram Demerol
tablet was inserted into one of the sweets,

If

"1 threw away the Tylenol that I had in the
house," said Doreen Valley of Franklin, N il,,
who reported she was lightheaded and short of
breath after eating part of the tainted brownie
"I would have expected it in another bottle of
Tylenol, eyedrops, something like that But not
a brownie."
Police and a hospital spokesman said they
thought the Demerol capsule was baked into
the brownie. But the bakery and the FDA
disagreed, saying It was likely the tablet would
have disintegrated during the baking process

it

had been put in at the bakery.

In other tampering incidents, a Chicago
woman was injured Friday when she bit into a
popcorn ball and a razor blade stuck in the roof
of her mouth, police said.
Health officials in Jacksonville. Fla., con­
firmed at least two bottles of Pepsi-Cola were
contaminated with acid and bleach and
exainmed a dozen other products.
Illinois Attorney General Tyrone Fahner,
head of the task force investigating the
Chicagoarca deaths of seven people who took
cyanide-laced Extra-Strength Tylenol cap­
sules Sept. 29-Oet.l, said authorities are
"narrowing our focus... because we have been
able to discard various leads and individuals."

EXPERIENCED Candidate
* FOUNDER
THE SEMINOI E COUNTY FASK
FORCE ON SFXOAl ABUSE OF
CHILDREN
• CO FOUNDER
SEMINOI E COUNTY TASK
FORCE ON DOMESTIC VIOLENCE

Teaching, University til

• SEMINOLE COUNTY SHERiF F S DEPARTMENT
VICTIM SERVICES UNIT

* riu n rla Police Standards College, Sem inole
Com m unity College, 1977

* SEMINOLE COUNTY
PROGRAM

SCHOOL

VOLUNTEER

1970 PRESIDENT SEMINOLE MUTUAL
CONCERT ASSOCIATION

THE ISSUE IS

* 1980 PRESIDENT SEMINOl.F YOUTH
PLANNING COUNCIL

OUR QUALITY OF LIFE
Y O U R F A M IL Y A N D M IN E, NOW . . .

* 19/9 80 CHAIRMAN
SEMINOLE COUNTY
MENTAL HEALTH CITIZENS'
ADVISORY COMMIT TEE

A N D FO R T H E F U T U R E
* 1980 PRESIDENT

PANKHIJRST

* SALVAI ION ARMY OF SEMINOLE COUNTY
ADVISORY BOARD

LET ME HEAR FROM YOU
YOU’LL GET A RESPONSE

CERTIFIED FLORIDA
OFFICE. Ft

LAW ENFORCEMENT

STATE OF FLORIDA TEACHER SCERTIF ICATE
RANK # ?
ADJUNCT INSTRUCTOR, SEMINOLE
COMMUNITY COLLEGE AND
UNIVERSITY OF CENTRAL FLA

PD. POL. AD.

REAL EXPERIENCE . . .
THAT COUNTS

HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES, DISTRICT 35

D EM OCRAT

�Body Left In Altamonte Springs

NATION
IN BRIEF
D eLorean F re e d ; Puts
Up Cash, P ro p e rty For Bond
l.OS AN G FLKS UPI i—John Del&gt;orean, Indicted on
charges of arranging a S24 million cocaine deal to save
his failing auto company, put up 1250.000 cash and the
deeds to two homes, allowing him to be freed on bail
after U days in prison.
After being released from the Terminal Island
federal prison Friday, DeLore&amp;n was whisked away in
a black Jaguar driven by a bodyguard—with his wife
and mother-in-law Reports said the car was in a minor
freeway accident but authorities said DeLorean was
not involved
Earlier in the day, the automaker was charged in
nine-count indictment with conspiracy to distribute
cocaine, possession of narcotics, interstate travel in
aid of racketeering and unlawful use of a telephone.
The charges carry a maximum prison term of 72 years
and a $195,000 fine.
His bond had been set at $5 million but it was in­
creased to HO million Friday. To meet the figure, his
attorneys posted $250,000 and turned over the deeds to
his tft-acre estate north of San Diego and a Fifth
Avenue apartment in New York. Assistant US.
Attorney James Walsh said Delzirean also promised to
turn over the deed to several hundred acres of farm­
land in New Jersey by next Friday.
Delxirean, who was scheduled for arraignment Nov.
8, did not speak with reporters as he left prison. His
wife, model Christine Ferrare, told reporters at the
courthouse earlier that she was uncertain about their
plans

H onesty M e a n s S o m e th in g
NEW BFHHY. Mich, i U P I)—Honesty means a lot to
Vernard "Ole" Olsen, who found $90,000 when he
bulldozed an old house ^mndation and promptly turned
the cash over to his employer, the state of Michigan.
— m rrn. n nopnrcmenrOT riYararaL Resournrs equip­
ment operator, found the cash while bulldozing a house
foundation in the Tahquamenon Area State Park on
Oct 21, the DMH said Friday.
DNH crews spent the following weekend collecting
the money from under a concrete slab near
Tahquamenon Falls. In a statement released in
1.arising, the P N R praised Olsen, 50, as a hero.
Bill Cornish of the DNH park staff said the money
was found in the basement of an old house the state
bought in 1977 for $32,500. The house, built in the 1930s,
was torn down "some time ago," he said.
The DNH has not yet contacted the former owners of
the property, and doesn't know if those people are the
true owners of the money.

Sta no To Face Another Murder Charge
Altamonte Springs police say they plan to charge mass
murderer Gerald Stano with the 1974 stabbing death of a
woman whose body was found in a field behind a shopping mall
in that city.
In a three-hour interview with Altamonte Springs police at
the Daytona Beach Police Department Friday, Stano repor­
tedly told investigators that he gave a woman a ride as she
hitchhiked along Interstate 4 near Altamonte Springs.
Stano told police he argued with the woman, stabbed her and
left her in an overgrown field behind the Interstate M all
Tiie woman’s IxmJ v was discovered Nov. 24. 1974, by a boy
who was riding his mini-bike in a field behind the m all, police
said. Police added that the woman appeared to have been dead
for about a month and that she bore no identification, except
wedding and engagement rings.
The woman's purse ami shoes were missing, her pants pulled
down and a sweater was pulled around her neck, which police
say is indicative of the condition of many of Stano's previouslyconfessed victims
Investigators say Stano, who is serving three consecutive
life sentences at the state prison in Starke for the murders of
three Daytona Beach-area women, has admitted to 40 killings
between 1969 and 1980 spanning across Florida and into New
Jersey and Pennsylvania. Detectives add the Altamonte
Springs slaying is the first-known murder by Stano m Seminole
County and the first killing he has admitted having committed
in 1974.
Investigators said each of Stano's self-confessed murders
have been similar to that he admits to meeting the victim,
taking her for a ride in his car and if she argued with hun or
frustrated him he would become enraged and strangle, beat,
stab or shoot her and dump the body in a desolate area. Stano
would then clean his car, erasing any fingerprints or other
identifymg evidence which could link him to the woman, and
return to his home near Daytona Beach
MAN F R E E ON BOND
A Casselberry man, who is charged with the second-degree
arson of his own mattress company, is free from the county jail
on $8,000 bond today following his arrest at 4:30 p in. Wed­
nesday.
Leroy Carr Best, 53, of 3 Quad Pond Hoad, owner of (test
Bedding Co. m Casselberry and the Mr. Mattress company at
le frtr U n rT Jecm txngivwtfrts charged witn'” Cohsplriflg liiiilplottmg" to burn down his Ixmgwood store, l&lt;ongwood police
said.

wedding band, bracelets, pullover sweaters, boxing gloves and
an Oriental weapon, with a total value of more than $1,630,
deputies said

A c tio n R e p o rts
★

M OTHER, SON F R E E ON BOND
An Altamonte Springs woman and her son are free from the
county jail today on $500 and $100 bond, respectively, following
their aiTests Thursday night

Fi r es
*

C o u rts
*

P o lic e

Deputies said they responded to a disturbance in the parking
lot of the Spanish Trace Apartments at 397 Wymore Hoad at
about 10 20 p m. Thursday Upon their arrival. Austin Maunz
and his father, Albert, both of the above address, said they had
been arguing with their mother and wife, Betty Ix&gt;u Maunz, 56.
and brother and son, Alan William Maunz, 24, also of the above
address, deputies said.

and early Wednesday .
Deputies added that only three vehicle owners reported
anything missing from their automobiles
Among those who reported the incidents to deputies were
Joseph F Brzuska, 58. of C05 Woodfire Way, who told
deputies the culprits broke into his 1978 Pontiac; Michael
Fortson, 33, of 130 Buck Court, who said his 1978 Dodge truck
was entered; James McNabb, 24, of 127 Buck Court, who said
his 1981 AM C and 1980 Oldsmobilc uer» entered; Grant
McEwan, 45, of 131 Burk Court, who said the culprits broke
into his 1982 Volkswagen; Muse H Matlock. 44, of 625 Deer Hun
Court, who reported his 1975 Ford, 1979 Pontiac and 1979 GM C
truck were entered and 20 cassette tapes valued at about $120
were taken from the Ford; Ruth Ann Speer, 29, of 124 Buck
Court, who said her 1979 Pontiac was entered; Sandra Kay
Doyle, 34, of 533 Pine Song Drive, whose 1980 AMC Jeep wax
broken into; Frederick L Jackson, 33, of 613 Swallow Drive,
who said his 1981 Plymouth was burglarized and that a digital
dock valued at $11 was taken and that his briefcase was
removed from the car and found lying in the roadway along
Eagle Circle; Clois Ray Hubbard, 41, of 1332 Raspberry Court,
whose 1977 Ford and 1978 Ford were broken into; Jose F,
DePedro, 40. of 1333 Raspberry Court, whose 1981 Chevrolet
was entered and a telescope taken; and Robert Angelo
Gianowski, 30, of 123 Buck Court, who said his 1975 Oldsmobile
was entered

Deputies said Alan Maunz continued to argue and Interfere
with their investigation of the incident and was subsequently
arrested and cherged with disorderly conduct
While attempting to nandcuft Mnunz, deputies said Mrs
Maunz began arguing with deputies and interfered with her
son’s arrest After warning her several times not to interfere,
deputies arrested Mrs Maunz on a charge of obstructing
justice
T E N T , STOVE STOLEN F R O M CHURCH
Thieves broke into the nursery of a Sanford church between
June 15 and 7 p in. Oct. 15, stealing a gas stove and a six-man
tent
Dohce said the culprits broke into the First Assembly of God
nursery building at 304 W. 27th St. and stole the equipment
valued at about $245
RESTAURANT K IP P E D O FF
An undisclosed amount of beer, wine, cheese and meat was
stolen from a Sanford restaurant between 10 p m Wednesday
and 9:40 a m. Thursday
Carmela Baio told police the thieves entered his restaurant.
Carlo’s Restaurant at 1008 S French Ave., after breaking a
window. Once inside, the thieves took the beer, wine, cheese
and meat and an AM-FM 8-track stereo set,

ALTAM ONTE H OM E ROBBED
More than $3,000 worth of property was stolen from a home
near Altamonte Springs between 11 a m and 4:40 p in
Tuesday.
Michael It Hutchinson. 25, of 348 E Tangerine Ave., and
William Masayko, 28, of the same address, told deputies
someone broke into their home through a bedroom window.

DL’ I ARR EST
Jimmy Dan Moody, 53, of 960 N. U.S. 17-92, l&gt;ongwood, was
arrested at t:41 a.m. Friday and charged with driving under
the influence of alcoholic beverages and driving without a
license tag, police said,________________________________
Moody was arrested by long wood police along U.S 17-92
near Lake Kathryn Circle, police said.

Among those items stolen were $150 cash, a $20 gold piece,
("'lit chains rirn;« onrrin;’ *-- nor!.a gi ld -inklrl all valued at
more than $1,442 deputies said.
The thieves also stole a diamond ring, stick pin, tie bars,

Police said the fire, which occurred at about 1 08 a m. April
2, caused about $250,000 worth of damage to the structure and
resulted in minor injuries to I&lt;ongwood firefighter Jim Koran,
who battled the blaze.
Police said Best paid Steven Dye $700 to set the fire, adding
that Dy e, of an undisclosed address, was arrested previously
in connection with the fire and reportedly agreed to testify
against Best

CULPRITS BREAK INTO 11 VEHICLES
Someone broke into at least 11 vehicles parked in the Deer
Run subdivision near Casselberry between midnight Tuesday

On November 2
you have the
opportunity to
Re-elect a
Responsible and
Effective County
Commissioner
to the
Seminole County Commission.
V

Dear F rie n d s :
Four ye a rs a g o 1 p ro m ise d , if e le c te d , th a t I
w o uld d o th e fo llo w in g :
• B rin g fin a n c ia l re s p o n s ib ility b a c k lo
our C o u n ty g o v e rn m e n t.
• In s titu te b u d g e t p r io r itie s b a s e d on
p u b lic s a fe ty , p u b lic h e a lth a n d n e ce s­
sary o r e s s e n tia l s e rv ic e n e e d s .
• E s ta b lis h a re a lis tic m illa g e a n d help
run th e C o u n ty o n a b u s in e s s -lik e b a s is .
• In itia te a n a c tiv e a g g re s s iv e p ro ­
gram lo a s s is t in b rin g in g n e w lig h t in­
d u s try a n d b u s in e s s .

Sunday. Ocl 11.1982— 1A

Evening H erald Sanford, FI

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�E v e n i n g H e r a ld
(u s p s m i n o r '

300 N. FREN CH A V E ., SAN FORD, F I A 32771
Area Code 305-322-2611 or 831-9901
Sunday, October 31. 1982-4A
Wayne D Doyle, Publisher
Thomas Giordano! Managing Editor
Robert Lovenbury, Advertising and Circulation Director

Home Delivery: Week, SI 00; Month, 54 25; 6 Months, 124 00;
Year, *45 00 By Mail Week, *1 25; Month, *5 25 ; 6 Months.
530.00; Year. *57 00

Troy Piland
For District 34
So-well qualified and informed about the issues
and problems confronting state House District 31
is Troy Piland that we believe he would lie a
major benefit to his constituency.
Piland knows intimately the problems of
transportation, growth and natural resources of
this area. And he has common-sense solutions for
improving conditions.
Piland has a strong business-education
background as well as a great deal of experience
as a public official, having served as mayor in
Winter Springs since l‘J74 and as a councilman in
that city from 1‘*71 to 1974, Hut he didn't confine
his public service to the duties of those positions.
Piland has been a member of several important
governmental bodies, including Council of Local
Governments, Central Florida league of Cities,
Tourist Development Commission, Fast Central
Florida Regional Planning Council and the South
Sem inole-N orth O range W astew ater T ra n ­
smission Authority.
Piland is highly regarded by a multitude of
public officials and civic leaders of both jxilitical
persuasions as an effective and conscientious
leader.
Piland is the kind of man who will answer a
citizen’s questions quickly and honestly, and if he
doesn't know the answer, he'll say so, but proceed
to research it and find the answer
Seminole County and the small jxtrtion of
Brevard and Orange counties included within the
District 34 boundaries deserve the representation
Mr. Piland can provide.

A Little Respect
Only yesterday, it seems, we were seeing news
photos and television film of anti-war protesters
burning the American flag on one campus or
another or in a public square. As shocking as it
was to most Americans, this was often tolerated
as a form of political expression in spite of a
federal law ag ain st " m u tila tin g , defacing,
defiling, burning or tram pling" on the flag
Hie law remains on the books, and we are
pleased to see the U S Supreme Court give its
assent to a lower court decision upholding its
enforcement Where respect for the flag is con­
cerned. times have changed, and for the better.
The Supreme Couit refused to review the
convict ion of a man and woman who burned a U S
flag at a rally of the Revolutionary Communist
Party outside a federal courthouse in North
Carolina. The two have been sentenced to eight
months in jail under the flag-desecration law.
They were not prosecuted for holding unor­
thodox political views or for expressing them.
They were arrested for a specific act of contempt
for the flag of the United States.
Flag-burning is not only a repugnant act of
protest but a stupid one. What the U S. flag stands
lor, among other things, is the freedom of the
most radical of dissenters to say what they think
about the American system. They can bad-mouth
it all they want. Why should they burn the flag
that protects their right to do so? Besides
breaking the law, they’re not very sm art.

PLEASE WRITE
letters to the editor an- welcomed for publication. All
Irttm must In* signed, with a mailing address and, U
possible, a telephone number so the Identity of the WTlter
may be verified. The Evening Herald will respect the
wishes of writers who do not wpnt their names In print
The Evening Herald also reserves the right In certain
eases to edit letters to eliminate libel or to conform to
space requirements.

BERRY'S WORLD

By DORIS DIETRICH

Un-holidays.
Bah humbug!
How can we expect poor little young 'uns to
ever trust adults.
The calendar tells them that Sunday is the day
for the witches and goblins to debut. Yet,
legislators tell these same little people to get
their kicks, tricks, treats or whatever on
Saturday.
But just because a celebration may come a
little early, plenty of kids will feel crushed that
they can’t celebrate again on the actual day of
mirth and merriment.
So far, nobody has tampered with Christmas.
That, too, remains to be seen.
Kids seem to be cheated all around this year.
With all the "sickos" on the loose, the Joy has
been taken out of greeting the little masked ones
in all their splendor with a treat.

It's always a lot of fun opening the door on
Halloween to see a mob standing there clutching
onto their halloween treat containers for dear
life.
But not this year. We simply will not be a part
of dishing out treats. Kids are told just to go to
the homes of friends and neighbors.
But I don’t know about that.
tat me tell you a true story.
Many years ago when I was a bride in
California. I was friendly with an "older couple"
who had three small children in parochial school.
This was a darling, devout family who never
missed a church service. The mother and father
were more than kind, charitable and generous.
And they were all physically beautiful.
Several days before Halloween I was visiting
these neighbors while the mother was making
chocolate fudge for the kids to take to school to

serve during Halloween festivals.
Two bottles of chocolated-coated laxative pills
were on the kitchen counter. When the fudge was
beaten to nearly the proper consistency, the
mother dumped the two bottles (one would have
been disastrous) into the batch of fudge, kept
right on beating the candy and finally poured the
mixture into a large oblong pan to cool before
cutting.
She laughed all the time she was preparing the
candy. "M y trick with somebody else's treat,"
she said.
I did not think this incident very funny. I
became quite nauseous at just the thought of this
maneuver.
A ll’s well that ends well. The candy never
made it to the school Halloween party. It was
ditched by the school officials due to a young,
nosy neighbor.

RUSTY BROWN

JULIAN BOND

G e ttin g
Blues O v e r
T elephones

Tests
For The
Black V o te
Rep. Gene Johnston, R-N.C., is a first
termer who got elected in the Reagan land­
slide with 51.0 percent of the vote in his
Greensboro district.
South Carolina’s Tommy Hartnett and John
Napier did a bit better in 1980—they won their
seats in the House by a whopping 51.7 percent.
Thomas Bliley marched into his first term
as Richmond’s Republican representative
with 51.6 percent, and Alabama's Albert
Smith got 50.5 percent from Birmingham to
join the G O P’s soldiers in the House.
These skinny winners have more than party
affiliation and whistle-thin margins in com­
mon; each has a 20 percent or greater black
constituency, and each scores below 20 on a 0to-100 rating of roll call votes of interest to
blacks. Alabama's Smith rated a 5; North
Carolina's Johnston scored a zero; South
Carolina's Hartnett and Napier got 15 and 20,
respectively, and Virginia's Trible had a 10.
These contests will decide mure than the
future political lives of obscure, right-wing
Republicans. They provide a test of black
voting strength in 1982 as important as the
more highly publicized races elsewhere in the
country.
National attention has focused on black
against white races for Congress in North
Carolina and Mississippi, and on the attempt
by Ios Angeles Mayor Tom Bradley to
become the first black state governor In the
20th century.
The North Carolina contest ended In defeat
for attorney M.H. “ Mickey” Michaux In a
p rim a ry run-off. Despite a massive
registration effort that put 12,500 new black
names on the rolls, and despite Michaux's
first-round victory, a heavy turn-out of rural
white voters gave the Democratic nomination
to white lawyer Tim Valentine.
In Mississippi, however, veteran state
representative Robert Clark can become the
first rural black in Congress this century if
white Democrats remain faithful to their
party. C la rk enjoys the support of
Mississippi's party leadership, as well as the
endorsement of Gov. William Winter and one­
time arch-segregationist Sen. John Stennis,
but must pull 20 percent of the district’s white
votes to win. His opponent a retired circuit
court Judge, has an open checkbook from the
Republican Party.
In California, the popular Bradley leads his
Republican opponent and runs ahead of
D em ocratic senatorial candidate Je rry
Brown, who now sits in the governor’s
mansion Bradley hopes to occupy in January.
IJke Clark in Mississippi, Bradley must
appeal to more white voters than black ones.
His supporters wam that few voters like to
admit prejudice to a pollster; most will prefer
to wait until they are alone in a polling booth.
In South Carolina's 2nd Congressional
District, black Ken Mosely has won the
Democratic nomination and faces 12-year
veteran Floyd Spence Nov. 2. Thirty-five
percent of the 2nd’s population is black, and
Spence won in 1980 with only 55.7 percent of
the vote. Spence received only a 15-point
rating on minority issues, but Mosely w illlike Clark and Bradley-have to attract white
voters if he expects to win.

I read about the latest in phone service
recently and it did not have a happy ring to it.
Someday soon, the airlines are supposed to
have telephones available to passengers
while in flight.
Drat! I always thought one of the best
things about being up in the air was that I
could read, uninterrupted, ar.il forget about
the calls I should have made before we took
off.
Can you imagine the chaos when the pilot
announces the plane is going to arrive an hour
late? Wow! A couple hundred people will be
like frantic E.T.'s, all rushing to phone home
and tell the folks not to start for the airport
yet.
The only good news about this
breakthrough, which will cost 510 a call, is
that the phones only work on one way: downto-earth. In coming (or upcoming7 ) calls are
out of the question.
Well, for heaven's sake, I should think
so!Can you imagine Right attendants trying
to serve meals and leaping over dinner carts
in the aisle to answer the phone?

JEFFREY HART

Politics, The Econom y
The principal political fact regarding
President Reagan’s approach to economic
recovery stood out clearly in the wake of his
televised address to the nation. The
Democrats are nut offering any alternative
whatsoever.
Senator Donald Reigle of Michigan was one
of the principal critics of the Reagan speech
on national television. All Reigle did was
appeal to the politics of envy, talking
irre le v a n tly about a governm ent of
"m illionaires." He offered no plan of his own,
or of Uie Democratic Party.
The Democrats are certainly not proposing
to rescind the three-year tax cuts which are a
main element of Reagan's plan. Neither
Senator Kennedy nor Speaker O’Neill are
proposing anything in particular. Walter
Mondale, insofar as he is saying anything
about the economy beyond deploring
unemployment seems to be on a protectionist
binge, complaining about foreign products
being sold in the United States.
But restraint of trade is hardly the road to
economic health. The protectionist HawleySmoot Act was a major factor in deepening
the Great Depression of the 1930s. Fritz
Mondale is politically desperate — he
currently trails Kennedy by a wide margin
among Democrats — and he is talking non­
sense.
Of course unemployment is a political
issue, and of course there is hardship; but a
few sober things ought to be said about it
nevertheless.

unemployment count consists of people who
are between Jobs.
3.
Another factor contributing to the
statistics is the existence of unemployment
benefits. The individual who loses a Job is not
under pressure to find another position im­
mediately. With the unemployment benefits,
an idled worker can spend a lot of time
looking around or can even take a vacation.
In an effort to avoid overt partisanship In
his televised address, the president was
deliberately vague in assigning the blame for
our present circumstances, but everyone
knows where the trouble began — and it
wasn't with Reaganomics.
Under President Elsenhower, innation
averaged 1.5 percent, we had full em­
ployment and a federal budget that was
balanced three times. His successor, John
Kennedy, though his tenure in office was
brief, had a sound economic record.
It was Lyndon Johnson who introduced the
bloated programs and entitlements of the
Great Society and debased the currency by
paying for it all with printing-press money.
Successive administrations have had to
struggle with the poisonous legacy of Lyndon
Johnson.
President Reagan knows that without
cutting inflation, Interest rates will never
come down. He has cut inflation, and they
are coming down.
With lowered Interest rates, people will buy
homes and cars and, in Kennedy's phrase, we
will get America moving again.

Current unemployment does not resemble
that of the 1930s, when the economy went into
a kind of coma and people were out of work
for months and years. The unemployment of
the 1980s is very different:

As for unemployment, Reagan could also
quote Kennedy: When the tide rises, all the
boats rise.

In Kansas City, state representative Alan
Wheat, the Democratic nominee in a 23
percent black district, must hope that white
Democrats do not defect to his GO P opponent.

1. The number of people now holding Jobs is
at an all-time high. One problem is that the
national work-force has grown, both because
of population growth and the increasing entry
of women into the Job market. Combine&lt;rwith
a sluggish economy, those factors are bound
to swell the unemployment figures.

At least five black Republicans aie running
for Congress in contests where they are given
little chance of success.

2. It is perfectly true that some industries
have been hard-hit, such as automobiles and
housing. But a substantial part of the

In a recent note to me dealing with other
matters, the president cdncluded with these
two sentences: "Jeff, I hope you won’t accept
some of the press and media interpretations
of my record as based on fact. I'm unchanged
philosophically and with regard to my
determination to accomplish what we set out
to do.”
Perhaps more slowly than he had hoped,
but surely nevertheless, Mr. Reagan’s ap­
proach is working — besides which, it’s the
only game in town.

Frankly, I find the phone frustrating
enough without having to play ding-a-ling
games in the sky.
It seems to me phone calls usually fall into
one of these they types: Dial-A-Kid; Dial-ASecretary; Dial-A-Recording.
01A1/-A-KID: I phone a home and a 6-yearold answers.
"M a y I speak to your mother," I say. The
child says, “ Who is calling?" That really
bums me. I don't see why 6-ycar-olds should
screen adults. Whenever a child gives me that
line, I usually answer Goldilocks or Rumpelstlltskin...somebody they can relate to.
Besides, most 6-year-olds can't pronounce
Rumplestiltskin.
And here's another failure at reaching out:
Me: Hello. Is your mother there?
K id: No. She’s gone to the store.
Me: Will you tell her Rusty Brown called?
Kid: OK. How do you spell Brown?
Me: (Very slowly) B-R-O-W-N. Got that?
K id: Sure. (tang pause) How do you make
a “ B "?
D IA L -A -S E C R E T A R Y C A L L S : These
occu r when phoning most business
executives. It is preceded by dial-areceptionist, which is the warm-up. When I
finally get the secretary of the person I am
calling, I ask, "Is Mr. Jones in ?" She never
gives it to me straight. She has to play her
little game first. "Who is calling?" she asks.
When I tell her, she says, "W alt a minute,"
then comes back to say, “ Mr. Jones isn’t in
right now." That always leaves me won­
dering if he’s "in” to some and "out" to
others.
The next bit of dialog confounds me even
more. She says Mr. Jones w ill return my call,
and when I give her the number, she asks,
"M a y I tell him what this is about?" I figure if
he knows, he may not call back.
I lose another Dial-A-Secretary game when
I'm told "so-and-so” Is in a meeting. There
are some businesswomen I know who are
always in a meeting. I sure wish they'd take a
five-minute break, now and then, to answer
their phone messages. It would not only keep
my blood pressure from rising it would keep
the blood circulating in their legs, which
would be good for them.

JACK ANDERSON

Cost-Cutters Also Lop Off Jobs

lend to look at the BRIGHT side, like Ronnie.
With companies tailing at the rate of 500 a
w e e k , I t s G O O D fo r B A N K R U P T C Y
LA W YERS..."

WASHINGTON-Aside from myself,
perhaps no one believes more strongly in the
work ethic than Ronald Reagan. One of the
rockets that boosted him into the White House
was his expressed belief that welfare is not
only wasteful of the taxpayers money, but
demeaning to the recipients, who would
rather work for a living than exist on
government handouts.
Unfortunately, President Reagan is being
ill served by his Office of Management and
Budget. The false economizers at OMB are
sabotaging two eminently cost-effective
programs that have been putting welfare
recipients back to work and taking them off
the public dole.
The OMB penny-pinchers may even have
violated the law by refusing to spend $70
million Congress voted to help food-stamp
and welfare recipients become self-sufficient.
Even if the programs weren’t working, the
ad m in istra tio n ’s impoundment of ap­

propriated funds is of dubious legality. But, in winner, OMB tried to wipe it out of the 1983
fact, the curtailed programs were successful; budget. Congress not only refused to go along,
they were making productive w orkers-and but appropriated 535 million to keep the
taxpayers—out of people who had beer, living program running while next year’s funding Is
on welfare checks and food stamps.
being worked out.
One of the scuttled programs is called Work
The ta b o r Department thumbed its nose at
Incentive, or WIN. Last year, on a budget of Congress by sending out telegram s on Aug. 4
5389.5 million, it helped find jobs for 310,000 to the states — which administer WIN recipients of Aid to Families with Dependent forbidding them to spend any money except
Children. This saved the government $1.2 for "closeout costs.”
billion in AFDC payments, food stamps and
An angry bipartisan group of senators
Medicaid. It works out to *3 saved for every w rote Labor Secretary R ay Donovan
dollar spent—not counting the Income taxes protesting the decision. They included Mark
paid by WIN'-placed workers on the 52.3 H atfield, R-Ore., ch airm an of the
billion they earned in 1981.
Appropriations Committee; Harrison Sch­
WIN did more than just provide job mitt, R-N.M.; Alan Dixon, D-Ill., and Arlen
referrals. The program also removed the Specter, R-Pa.
obstacles that discourage welfare mothers
The other program that's being starved for
from getting jobs, by arranging for child funds with questionable legality is the
care, vocational training and transportation Agriculture Department's $35 million effort to
allowances.
find jobs for food-stamp recipients. Before the
Despite the evidence that WIN was a administration axed it last April, the program

had put 78,000 people to work in one six-month
period.
But Agriculture’s job-search program is
being turned over to the states. Even if the
financially hard-pressed state governments
elect to pick up the slack, there will be a lapse
of at least nine months before their programs
get under way.
Assistant tabor Secretary Albert Angrisani
told my reporter James Crawford that WIN is
“ an ineffective program," and cited a recent
report by the General Accounting Office as
evidence. The GAO found that tabor
"s ig n ific a n tly ov erstated WINs ac­
co m plishm ents."
But
th e
report
acknowledged a high success rate—38 per­
cent of th e participants found jobs—and
concluded that WIN would have placed many
more jobs except for "funding constraints."
In other words, the administration was
making its claim of WIN’s ineffectiveness
self-fulfilling by cutting off its funds.

f

:

�OPINION
Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Sunday, Oct. 31, 1987—SA

A m endm ent 2 Exclusionary Rule D ebated

PRO:
By K E N N E T H JE N N E
State Senator, F t Ijiuderdale
Assume for the moment that on any
given night an undercover narcotics
agent learns (mm a reliable informer
that heroin and other street drugs may
be purchased at a residence in Broward
County. The agent, working through a
third party, makes arrangements to
buy a quantity of heroin later in the
evening at the dealer's residence. In the
next few hours, the agent notifies his
superior officer, who coordinates the
plans for purchasing the drugs and
making the arrest.
At the appointed time, the narcotics
agent, equipped with an electronic body
bug but without a warrant, meets the
dealer and makes the buy. Several lawenforcement officers in the vicinity of
the residence monitor and record the
conversation between the agent and the
dealer and, when the sale is completed,
arrest the dealer for unlawful sale of
heroin.
If this case is tried in a state court,
neither the tape recording nor the
• testimony of the officers monitoring the
sale would be admissible. State v.
Sarmiento, 397 So. 2d 643 l Fla. 1961).
Yet if the case is tried in the United
States District Court, the tape and the
testimony of the monitoring officers
could be admitted. United States v
White, 401 U S. 745, 91 S. St. 1122, 28 L.
Ed. 2d 453 11370).
The distinction is significant. A tape
recording is the most accurate and
reliable evidence of the drug tran­
saction. In addition, the tape or the
testimony of the officers who monitored
the interception could corroborate the
undercover agent's testimony regar­
ding the sale of the drugs. If the
monitoring of this illegal activity is
prohibited under these circumstances,
the state loses the vital evidence.
Furthermore, the agent may lose his
life without the protection of a body
bug.
In some quarters, Sarmiento has
been lauded because the Florida
Supreme Court has determined that
citizens of this state are provided
greater protection from governmental
Intrusion by the Florida Constitution
than afforded under the United States
Constitution. Actually, a select group of
citizens has benefited from the ad­
ditional rights conferred by the court —
lawless individuals who traffic in drugs
or commit other serious crimes.
In effect, the Sarmiento and postSarmiento ru lin g s
have
been
detrimental because they have thrown
the criminal justice system in a turmoil
on the issue of warrantless in­
terceptions. With the advent of Sar­
miento, the guidelines set forth by the
United States Supreme Court In U S. v.
While are no longer controlling: when
the law Is In doubt, Investigations are
stymied and cases are lost. Even the
Florida Supreme Court appears un­
certain on this issue: recently in State
v. Rickard, No. 54,877 (Fla,, April 29,
1982), the court held that Florida’s
exclusionary rule is no broader than the
federal exclusionary rule.
By amending article I, section 12 of
the Florida Constitution to conform our
exclusionary rule to United States
Supreme Court decisions construing the

Constitutional Amendment
Article I, Section 12
fourth amendment, Florida's search
and seizure law will be stabilized
because the law will be in harmony with
the decisions of the nation's highest
Court. Also, the proposed amendment
should introduce flexibility into the
application of the exclusionary’ rule.
Strictly construed, our present rule
requires the exclusion of evidence
obtained by any violation of article 1,
section 12. Thus, our state courts are
precluded from considering exceptions
to the rule based on good faith or
technical, nonsubstanlia] violations by
the offending law enforcement agency.
The amendment would properly
transform the application of the ex­
clu sio n ary rule to case-by-case
decisions that follow United States
Supreme Court opinions.
The constitutional amendment should
also overrule the Sarmiento line of
cases. It Is Illogical that the undercover
agent could disclose his conversation
with Sarmiento, but the evidence of the
monitoring and recording of that
conversation is inadmissible. With the
amendment, the tape and the testimony
of the monitoring officers could be
admitted into evidence.
The amendment should also enable
law enforcement agencies to conduct
w arrantless interceptions in such
cases, By requiring an intercept
w arrant, Sarmiento has unfairly
burdened law enforcement agencies in
their criminal Investigations. As noted
by Justice Aldennan in his dissent in
Sarmiento, a drug dealer who invites
and unknown purchaser into his home
has no reasonabl" expectation of
privacy concerning his conversation
with the purchaser or the monitoring
and recording of such conversation.
The agent’s presence in the dealer’s
residence does not require a warrant;
the court should not additionally
require an intercept warrant to monitor
and record- the agent's com­
munications.
Law enforcement agencies are
serio u sly handicapped
by this
requirement of an Intercept warrant. In
many instances, there Is neither the
time nor the opportunity to obtain a
warrant. locating a prosecutor and a
judge to issue a warrant within an hour
at 2 a m. on a Saturday morning, for
example, is highly unlikely; a drug
transaction at that hour is not im­
probable.
The proposed amendment to article 1,
section 12 of the Florida Constitution is
a reasonable measure to allow law
enforcement agencies to fight crime
without sacrificing our rights under the
United States Constitution. The op­
ponents of the amendment argue in the
abstract about deprivation of liberties
and speak to hypothetical conclusions.
In contrast, the effects of the con­
stitutional revision are substantial and
readily apparent: the law concerning
searches and seizures w ill be clarified
at the expense of certain criminal
defendants, law enforcement officers
may be protected by wearing body bugs
in hazardous encounters, and we will
continue to be protected by the fourth
amendment from unlawful govern­
m ental Intrusion. The proposed
amendment is critically needed In this
state; I urge you to support it.

OUR READERS WRITE

On Amendment
Recently I received correspondence
inviting my sig n a tu re and the
signatures of all other faculty members
of Florida law schools in support of a
letter to be sent to the editors of all
Florida newspapers. This suggested
newspaper lobbying was to be for the
purpose of urging Floridians to vote
"N o ’, on proposed Constitutional
Amendment No. 2 which deals with the
Fourth A m endm ent and the ad­
missibility of evidence at criminal
trials.
I am concerned about the effect of
this proposed newspaper blitz right
before the Nov. 2 ballot. My concern is
not that some faculty members are
mustering a concerted effort to defeat
this long overdue amendment, but that
their letter m ay be interpreted as
speaking for most or even a large
percentage of law school faculty
members. It should be noted that there
are over 170 full-time faculty members
at Florida’s law schools, Therefore, it
should be clear that the "No" votes
expressed in the letter represent only a
small minority of law faculty members.

I ask that you publish this letter to let
your readers know that such faculty
m em bers do not speak for any law
school or any law school faculty. They
represent only themselves, just as my
letter represents only my view.
Your readers would be better advised
to carefully read the proposed amend­
ment and then decide for themselves.
As for myself, I find no lessening of
p ro tectio n against unreasonable
searches and seizures by this amend­
ment. Rather, the amendment will be a
small but important step in returning
respect for the law and common sense
to the criminal justice system by
making it more difficult for criminals
to escape Just punishment through
tenuous technicalities.
Finally, It should be noted tnat tne
Board of Governors of the Florida Bar,
by a 20 to 10 majority vote, has given its
support to this much needed con­
stitutional amendment. I urge your
readers to do likewise.
William R. Eleazer
Associate Professor of Iaw
Stetson University College of Law

To Be Voted On Tuesday
SK A H U NKS
AM)
SK IZl’ItES Proposing an
amendment lo the State
C onstitution to provide
that the right to hi- free
fro m
n n re a so n a h Ie
se a rc h e s and seizu res
sh a ll he construed in
conformih with the tth

\ rn etui in (‘lit lo the United
States Constitution and to
provide that illegally
seized a rtic le s or in­
form ation
a re
inad­
missible if decisions of the
United S ta te s Supreme
Court make such evidence
inadmissible.

W h a t E x c lu s io n a ry
A m e n d m e n t D oes:
N \ I . K O N A lt n s t III I .T i:

Attorney for Secretary of the
Senate
In a June 1982 special
sessio n ,
the
F lorida
Legislature voted to give the
people of the state the op­
portunity to limit the effects
of Article I, section 12 of the
F l o r i d a C onst it til io n ,
re la tin g to sea rc h and
seizure. The decision of the
leg islatu re lo propose the
constitutional amendment
was apparently the result of
increasingly divergent in­
terpretations of Article 1.
section 12 and the parallel
provision ol the Federal
C onstitution, the fourth
amendment.
Until the adoption of the
1968 State Constitution, there
was virtually no difference
between search and seizure
provisions of the Stale and
F e d e ra l
C o n s titu tio n s .
H o w e v e r , the I9G11 revision
included two m atters that do
not specifically appear in the
U.S. Constitution: an explicit
exclusionary rule and the
right to be secure from (lie
unreasonable interception of
private communications.
The exclusionary rule
began as a judge-made rule
applicable only to federal
courts in Weeks v. United
States, 232 U.S. 3B3 (1914),
and was first applied to the
states in Mapp v. Ohio, 387
U.S. 643 0961).
Although (he rationale tor
s u p p r e s s in g u n la w fu lly
seized
evidence
was
originally the protection of
individual rights by the mid­
seventies the U.S. Supreme
C ourt had re je c te d all
rationales for the rule except
the deterrence of unlawful
police conduct.
The beginnings of the
F lo rid a exclusionary rule
are similar. In Gildrie v.
State, 113 So. 704 (Fla 1927),
the state Supreme Court
relied on the rationale and
holding of Weeks to create a
parallel exclusionary rule
for the state courts, in 1968,
the rule was written into the
State Constitution where it
appears as the last sentence
of Article 1, section 12.
The last few years have
seen great uncertainty as to
whether Article I, section 12
imposes a different standard
from the fourth amendment.
Two recent Supreme Court
c a se s illu strate th e un­
certainty. In Odom v. State,
403 So. 2d 936 (Fla. 1981), the
court found that the ex­
c lu sio n ary rule re q u ire d
suppression of the evidence
regardless of whether the
evidence was obtained in
v io latio n of th e fourth
amendment and regardless
of the scope of the fourth
am en d m en t e x clu sio n ary
ru le , while in S ta te v.
Richard (No. 54,877), decided
A pril 29,1982), th e co u rt
found that the exclusionary

rule embodied in the Florida
Constitution was no broader
than
the
federal
ex ­
clusionary
rule.
The
amendment would eliminate
this uncertainty by requiring
Florida courts to follow the
narrower interpretation of
the exclusionary rule that
has been adopted by the
United S ta le s Suprem e
Court.
Dissatisfaction with the
exclusionary rule appears to
Ih* increasing. The Fifth
Circuit adopted a so-called
good faith exception to the
rule in United Slates v.
Williams, 622 F. 2d 830 (5th
Cir. 1980), cert denied 449
U.S 1127. Arizona recently
adopted a sim ilar exception
by statute.
C a lifo rn ia
re c e n tly
am ended its state con­
stitution by in itiativ e to
prohibit the exclusion of any
relevant evidence. The U.S.
Senate
recently
held
hearings on a bill to replace
the exclusionary rule with a
civil remedy. Should any
such ch an g e eventually
become controlling in the
federal courts, il is to l&gt;e
presumed that, under the
p ro p o se d a m en d m en t
Florida would be required to
follow suit.
A nother aspect of the
p ro p o se d
am endm ent
concerns the controversy
created by the F lo rid a
Supreme Court decision in
State v. Sarmiento, 397 So. 2d
643 (Fla. 1981 ). In that case,
the
court
held
th a t
w a r r a n tle s s e le c tro n ic
monitoring of conversations
by third parties, even with
the consent of a party to the
conversation.
is
un­
constitutional if the con­
versation takes place in the
home of the noneonsenting
party. The court confirmed
that its decision was strictly
limit d
to
in-hom e
monitoring in Hill v. State
(No. 60,144, decided July 15,
1982).
By contrast, third party
c o n s e n s u a l m o n ito rin g
without a warrant has been
approved by the U.S.
Supreme Court in United
States v. White, 401 U.S. 745
(1971) and United States v.
Caceres, 440 U.S. 741 (1979).
The proposed amendment
would bring Florida law into
line with federal law by
allowing the fruits of con­
sensual
th ird
p a rty
monitoring to be admitted
into evidence.
The choice that the
legislature has given the
people is a simple one: shall
the courts of this state be
allowed to continue on what
is perceived as a "liberal”
course, or shall the courts be
required to adopt the current
"conservative” approach of
the federal courts?

CON:
By J E F F R E Y S . WEINER
Past President,
Florida Crim inal Defense
Attorney) Association
We have once again been swept away
by a tidal wave of ‘ 'moral majority"
reactionism. By s '.ysterical response
to a growing crime and drug problem,
the Florida legislature has abandoned
our constitution and the rights of
Florida citizens by drastically at­
tempting to revise Art I, Sec. 12 of the
Declaration of Rights of The Florida
Constitution, which was historically
designed to protect all Florida citizens
from
unreasonable
government
searches and seizures
I recently had the pleasure of
testifying before the Florida House of
Representatives against a proposed
constitutional amendment nearly
identical to that which our constitution
is now about to suffer. Ultimately, after
hearing the arguments of numerous
concerned citizens, the Florida Senate
overwhelmingly rejected the proposed
amendment, which would have acted to
dilute the constitutional protections
involved For purely political reasons,
all of those protections which were so
sincerely defended at the first session,
now stand to be forever eliminated.
What has happened is this — the
Governor called a special legislative
session lo deal prim arily with the issue
of redistricting, which included the
removal of various legislative can­
didates from demographic areas in
which they were well settled, to those in
which they depended for reelection
upon a new electorate. At the same
time, without debate and without
adequate lime for legislative reflection,
the Governor offered as part of his
"crime control package” the now
existing constitutional amendment.
Swept away by political ultra pseudoconservatism and the desire to appear
to take a law and order stand, the
proposed amendment which had been
rejected before was passed. This was
unquestionably a catastrophe for Die
people of the Stale of Florida and a
serious dilution of the protections of our
Florida Constitution.
Art. I, Sec. 12 of the Florida Con­
stitution reg ard in g an individual's
rights lo be free from unreasonable
governmental searches and seizures,
presently states:
The right of the people to be secure in
their persons, houses, pupers and ef­
fects against unreasonable searches
and seizures, and against the
unreasonable Interception of private
communications by any means, shall
not be violated. No warrant shall be
Issued except upon probable cause,
supported by affidavit, particularly
describing the place or places lo be
searched, the person or persuns, thing
or things to be seized, the com­
munication to be Intercepted, and the
nature of evidence to be obtained.
Articles or Information obtained in
violation of this right shall not be ad­
missible as evidence.
The following amendment to Art. I,
Sec. 12 of the Florida Constitution will
be submitted for the electors approval
or rejection at the general election in
November of 1982.
Article I
Declaration o( Rights
Section 12

Searches and Seizures —The right of
people to be secure In their persons,
houses, papers and effects against
unreasonable searches and seizures,
and against unreasonable Interception
of private communications by any
means, shall not be violated. No
warrant shall be Issued except upon
probable cause, supported by affidavit,
particularly describing the place or
places to be searched, the person or
persons, thing or things to be seized, the
communications to be intercepted and
the nature of the evidence to be ob­
tained. This right shall be construed In
conformity with the Fourth Amend­
ment to the United States Constitution
as interpreted by the United States
Supreme Court. Articles or Information
obtained In violation of this right shall
not be admissible in evidence 11 such
articles or Inform ation would be
inadmissible under the decisions of the
United States Supreme Court con­
struing the Fourth Amendment to the
United States Constitution.
As the amendment states, if ap­
proved, it would limit the citizen’s right
to be free from unreasonable searches
and seizures exclusively lo what the
U.S. Supreme Court deems that right to
be. In other words, the Floridian's right
to be free from unreasonable govern­
mental Intrusion would be confined to
what the U.S. Supreme Court sees fit.
The Impact of the proposed amend­
ment, by narrowing the protection
afforded to sta te citizens ag ain st
unreasonable
governm ental
in­
terference,
to
only
fed eral

"safeguards" is not only a mockery ol
the rights of the people of Florida but
also clothes state law enforcement
officials with more power to effectuate
their "line of duty" which is too often
overzealously carried out
The proposed amendment to Art. I,
Sec 12 does not acknowledge Florida's
right, as a sovereign state, to afford Its
citizens additional protection against
unreasonable governmental intrusion,
i.e., over and above those prescribed by
the fourth amendment to the U.S,
Constitution This basic principle was
recognized by the U.S. Supreme Courtin Oregon v Hass, 420 U.S. 714, 719
(1975):
...A State is free as a matter of its own
law to Impose greater restrictions on
police activities than those this Court
hold lo be necessary’ upon lederal
constitutional standards.
Additionally, by limiting Florida's
Exclusionary Rule to exclusively U.S.
Supreme Court constructions of the
fourth amendment, the proposed
amendments implementation to the
Florida Constitution is a blow to
acknowledged federal constitutional
principles, i.e., separation of powers
and federalism. As stated in Ker v.
State of California, 374 U.S 23. 34
(1963):
Ttie States are not thereby precluded
from developing working rules
governing arrests, searches and
seizures to meet the practical demand
of effective crim inal Investigation and
law enforcement In the States, provided
that those rules do not violate the
constitutional
prescription
of
unreasonable searches and seizures
and the concomitant command that
evidence so seized Is admissible Bgalnst
one who has standing to complain see
Jones v. Culled Slates, 382 U.S. 257, 80
S.Ct. 725,4 l_F.il. 2d 697 (I960). Such a
standard Implies no dcrtgatlon ol
unltormlty In applying iederal con­
stitutional guarantees but It is only a
recognition that cuudUluns and cir­
cumstances vary j u s t as do In­
vestigative
and
enforcement
te c h n iq u e s , (emphasis added)
Before long, the so-called "good faith
exception" will probably become the
law of the land (thereby placing a
premium on ignorance by individual
police officers) and thereby further
diluting our precious constitutional
rights even more.
A state’s right "to develop its own law
lo meet the needs of local law en­
forcement" of arrest, search and
seizure so long as said law would not
conflict with federal fourth amendment
rights, was recognized by the United
States Supreme Court in Sibron v. State
of New York, 292 U.S. 40,0041 (1968). In
Sibron, the Court citing Ker, recognized
New York’s right to be a sovereign with
regard to its search and seizure laws so
long as said laws would not conflict with
federal fourth amendment rights,
Strange as it may seem, the Florida
legislature had little knowledge of the
topic of the proposed amendment either
from a legal or practical viewpoint. II
merely took the political issue of crime
and rolled that issue into a proposed
constitutional amendment, the im­
plications of which, if known and fully
understood, would clearly result In the
proposed amendment's defeat. It Is a
shame and a disgrace that the Florida
legislature would use a hot political
issue, such as crime, lo destroy basic
constitutional rights, and lo render
meaningless the effect of Florida's
exclusionary rule.
I can summarize this proposed
amendment to Art. I, Sec. 12 as a
disaster. The governor, the attorney
general, various state attorneys and
other prosecutors and other taw en­
forcement officials who know, or should
at least know, about the Implications of
this proposed amendment, are, un­
fortunately, pushing for this un­
warranted change in our constitution.
(Many of these same type people
characterized the Miranda decision as
a disaster for our nation.)
Responsible lawyers, judges and
other thinking citizens must actively
push for the voters’ rejection of this
amendment in November.

PLEASE WRITE
.. Letters to the editor are welcomed
for publication. Alt letters must be
signed, with a malting address and, U
possible, a telephone number to the
identity of the w riter may be verified.
The Evening Herald will respect the
wishes of writers who do not want
their names in print. The Evening
lteratd also reserves the right to edit
letters to eliminate libel or to conform
to space requirements.

�*A— Evening Herald. Sanlord, FI.

Sunday. Oct. 31, 1983

D r u g s F o u n d B a k e d In t o B r o w n ie s , W o m a n

FLORIDA
IN BRIEF

woman was admitted to the hospital at about
1:22 a.m. but was not seriously affected by the
tablet. She was released after doctors ob­
served her condition.
Demerol is a prescription pain reliever and
can be addictive.

TILTON, N.H. (UPI) — A 26-year-old
woman was treated and released from
Franklin Hospital on Friday after ingesting a
50-milligram Demerol tablet (hat had been
baked into a brownie she bought.
Tilton Police Chief George Prescott said the

Following the discovery, the Food and Drug
Administration ordered all fudge brownies
under the "Peggy I-awton" label off the
shelves in New Hampshire and state police
notified authorities in the other New England
states.

T re a te d

Prescott said hospital officials believed the
tablet was baked into the brownie, not added
at u later time. But he said officials were not
certain how the tablet got into the package.
A state police spokesman said there's no
danger an implanted Demerol tablet would kill

G a n g Kills 1, Injures
S e v e ra l In M i a m i Spree
MIAMI BEACH 1U P I 1 - One man died and three
others were wounded just after midnight Saturday in a
wild shooting spree by attackers who shattered car
windshields and sprayed two apartment buildings with
gunfire, police said.
The unknown assailants escaped after the shooting,
police said. They fired at least eight shots with an
unknown weapon, officers said.
“ You take your pick on a number," police
spokesman Tom Hooiahan said of the shots fired.
"Everybody has a different number."
The unidentified dead man was found by officers
first called to the shooting in an alley between two
while stucco apartment buildings in the poor,
predominately 1-atin neighborhood of south M iam i
Beach, Hooiahan said. He was shot in the back and
neck, possibly while trying to flee his attackers, police
said.
Another critically wounded man was found nearby in
the alley, and the two other wounded Were discovered
one-half block away lying in a street, Hooiahan said.

Two Satellites Launched
C A PE CAN A V E HA I, i U P I ) - Two Defense Satellite
Communications System satellites were successfully
launched into orbit Suturday atop a Titan 34D rocket in
the first use of the newest space agency missile, of­
ficials said.
The new Titan series rocket biased off at 12:05 a m.
and carried the satellites into a "parking orbit" from
95 to 120 miles above the earth, National Aeronautics
and Space Administration officials said.
Also used in the launch was a new device called an
"Inertial Upper Stage," officials said. The 1US was to
be fired sometime early today to place the satellites in
* •stationary orbit 22,300 miles over the equator. The IUS
also is to be used in space shuttle satellite launchings
to put the artificial moons in stationary orbit.

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MARIANNA fU PJ) — Dr. Frederick Boedy, the
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set fire to his house in a hoax, has surrendered to
authorities to face arson and fraud charged.
Boedy, 30, who first claimed he was attacked by
unknown assailants because he culled attention to
pollution in the Chlpola River, lias been charged with
first-degree arson and two counts of filing a false in­
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The maximum penalties on all counts total 37 years
in prison and $17,000 in fines.
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Haunted House, 7-10 p in., First United Methodist
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summer camp fund.

C M E E 1 M

P a c k a g e Ot 3
l i e Pent

Halloween carnival sponsored by the Geneva
Historical and Genealogical Society, beginning at 5
p.m., Community Center, First Street, Geneva.
Costume parade at 6 p.m.
Spook Dance for seniors, 7:30 p.m., Casselberry
Senior Citizen Multipurpose Center. Costumes op­
tional.
Hair Cut-A-Thon sponsored by Young Volunteers in
Action, 10 a.m. to 9 p.m., Altamonte Mall, Haircuts for
adults and children and clown faces for children.
Halloween Eve PUza Party sponsored by Lake Mary
Civic Improvement Association, 11 a.m. to 10 p.m.,
Cafe Sorrento, la k e Mary. Costume contest, children,
S p.m.; adults, 9 p.m.
Halloween party featuring Disney film, "Herbie
Rides Again," for children 4*12,6 p.m., First Assembly
of God. 304 W. 27th St„ Sanford.

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Altamonte-South Seminole Jaycees Haunted House,
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SUNDAY, OCTOBER 31
Jewish Community Center Hummage Sale and Flea
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Seminole AA,8 p.m., open discussion, 591 U k e
Minnie Drive, (Crossroads), Sanford.

5aio Price

Sunday Thru Tuesday

O n W i t h d r a w a l Issues
Halted Press International
U.S. Middle East envoy Norris Draper met with
lebancse leaders Saturday on the withdrawal of
foreign forces from lw'banon amid disagreements over
the presence of civilians in the tri-national committee
to negotiate the pullout.
State-run lebanese television said Draper would
probably leave immediately for Damascus following
his talks in Beirut in his efforts to bring about the with­
drawal of more than 100,000 Israeli, Syrian and
Palestinian troops.
Draper returned tu U-banon from talks with Prime
Minister Menachem Begin tn Jerusalem Friday.
Immediately after arriving, he went into a meeting
with President Amin (lemayel and Prim e Minister
Chefik Wazzan, Beirut radio said.

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�Evening Herald Sanford FI

Sunday Ocf II H8J

lA

Medical Education Diagnosed As Ailing

Herald Phalo by Tom Vincent

OPEN LAB

Sanford G ram m ar School held open house this week for its new federallyfunded reading and math lal&gt; tlesiirned to provjde extra instruction for
students needing help in those areas. I’ictured is Naomi Taylor and her
three-x ear-old son .Perry \\ ilson Tay lor tr\ ini'out the equipment.

By PATRICIA McCORMACK
L’ PI Kduratlon Editor
You lose If you bet that
m edical students * studyhuman sexuality, geriatrics
and nutrition
Most don't, though they
may want to. The reason they
don't: specific courses cen­
tered on such subjects, key in
contemporary society, aren't
offered by the average
medical school
The absence of comprehen­
sive offerings in the threenamed fields is among
ailm ents
in
m edical
education, experts on a panel
examining the making of
doctors said They seconded
what c ritic s of m edical
education have been saying
for years.
The panel, headed by
Steven Muller, president of
Johns Hopkins University and
the Johns Hopkins Hospital in
Baltimore, has just moved
into the second year of a
three-year study of medical
education.
The study, funded by the
Henry J K a ise r Family-

Foundation and sponsored by
the Association of American
Medical Colleges, has come
up with some other ailments
in medical education
Schools drown students with
facts, especially during the
first year. This produces so
much stress that some good
students are driven out.
Rather than submerging
students in facts, , it was
suggested that m edical,
schools give future doctors
scholarly skills. The doctors
need to be lifetime scholars to
keep up with the continuing
explosion of
m edical
knowledge and many in ­
ventions in technology
The panel also said student
doctors must be taught to
interview and listen to
patients, and examine them
with basic instruments. The
alternative leaning heavily
on high-tech inventions and
myriad diagnostic tests at the
expense of such listening and
examination.
"... they should develop
sen sitivity for the unique
qualities of each human being

and leam that physicians are
accorded trust and confidence
that goes beyond technical
ability," the panel said
The future doctors also will
need training in how to be
cost-conscious, knowing the
price of this procedure or that
test. The reason: growing
constraints from third partypayers — government, in­
surance companies, industry.
The third-party payers expect
cost-conscious doctors to help
them get control over the
nation's health-care bill, now
around a record 1274 billion a
year.
Future physicians, it was
also noted, will be challenged
also by the rising expectations
of a better informed public for
sophisticated medical care
"Keeping abreast of ad­
v a n c in g
k n o w le d g e ,
practicing witnin externally
imposed constraints and
m aking ethical judgments
that will be subjected to
critical review will require
that physicians acquire
healthy methods of coping
with stress," the panel said

SHS Volleyball Players Do Well; Tribe Members Chosen
Finishing with a conference record of UMi
and an overall record of 12-8, the varsity
volleyball team has completed an outstanding
season.
To conclude their play, they will compete in
a district tournament on Nov. 3 against seven
other teams in our area.
The members of this hard working team,
coached by Beth Corso, are: Teri Hardy, Iusa
Morse, Trichelle Taack, Sara VonHerbulis,
Tracy Gregory, l-isa Nelson, Penny Morris,
Arlene Jones,Genene Stallworth, Julie Furr,
and Beth Nelson.
The junior varsity volley ball team also had a
terrilic season with a record of 10-2,' their
season ending Oct. 18.
The JV team, coached by Nancy Vanwormer, consisted of Dee Goebelbecker,
Kaylyn Witherow, J ill Witherow, Debbie
Alderman, Jill Bedenbaugh. Keri A1bright, Jill
Janak, Keri 1-ake, Octavia Horn, Angela
Galloway, and Cindy Hogan. Also on the team

team and Is tennis team manager She is in­
volved with yearbook, Fellowship of (Christian
Athletes, and is a Junior (lass representative
in FCA.
The week's activities include
Monday - FC A general meeting, 7 p m
Tuesday — nine-weeks tests in 3rd and 5th
periods; swim meet, home, against la k e

Around
SHS
By
J ill
Janak

were Janet Hauck and Katy Barbour, who
were moved up to varsity for district play.
All of these students showed Seminole’s
spirit and pride and deserve to lx* recognized
for their spectacular representation of our
school.
This week's Tribe members are Kim Byrd
and Julie Farr. K im is the captain of varsitycheerleaders and a senior class represen­
tative. She is a member of Inter-club Council,
and was selected to appear in the Senior
Calendar. Julie Is on the varsity volleyball’

Reading And W riting
A speed reading and study skills course
will be offered next month by the John
Young Science Center at Lake Mary High
School.
The course is designed to increase
reading speed—usually 500 to 700 words per
minute—with improved comprehension.
There will be six classes meeting on
Tuesdays and Thursdays from 7 to 9:30
p.m, The first class is Nov. 4, the last, Nov.
23. While the course is directed towards
students over age 12 special material will
be used for parents who enroll.
The fee for the course is 140 which in­
cludes all material For further details, call
629-0482

Author Robert Newton Peck, noted for
his prolific output of children's books, will
conduit a class at Stetson University this
fall entitled "Secrets of Successful F ic­
tion."
The five-week course will meet Tuesday
evenings from 7 to 9:30 p.m. beginning Nov.
3. The non-credit course is designed
specifically for aspiring writers. The
course will provide advice and instruction
based upon the experiences of Peck who
has had over 30 novels published.
Topics covered in class include
characterization, plot, style, form at,
organization, inspiration for writing.

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Howell, 4 p m.
Wednesday
nine-weeks tests, 2nd and 4th
periods; Start o' volleyball district tour­
nament, Nov 3,4,5.
Thursday - nine-weeks tests, 1st and filh
periods
Friday — no school varsity football at
Lyman. 8 p m.

O dyssey Com es To LMHS
Lake Mary High School is expanding its
artistic horizons with the addition of
"Odyssey," the-school's show chorus.
This group of talented individuals is under
the direction of K im Moyer. L ik e Mary’s newchoral advisor. Odyssey has performed five
concerts so far this year with excellent results.
The singing and dancing members of this
organization are: Juliet Fote, Robert Geitner,
Kelly Hickson, David Krivan, Kara Provost,
Tommy Bell, Noclle Sheffield, Craig Irwin,
Caryn Kussner, David Drummond, Kim
Hlinka, Torn Cardinal, Mmdi Kverelt, David
Amir cone, Fran Sutera, Chris Bonham, and
Julie Jaruczyk.
These performers are aided by a band
consisting of Joy Kipp, Beth Black. Mike
Brock, Don Hearn, and Jay Rauchwarg,
Contrary to popular belief, la k e Mary High
School’s beloved mascot, Rosco the Ram. is
still alive and well. la s t y ear, Rosco just had a
case of the first-year Jitters and was
therefore leary of the mass confusion at
LMHS.

Featuring

Ty

A round
LMHS

Though a little training and the addition of a
halter and lead ropes, last year's scared little
ram is now the proud, stately ram present at
many football games and pep rallies
Here are a few of next week’s activities;
Wednesday — swim meet at Lyman, 3:30
p.m.
Thursday — final J.V. football game of the
season at Lyman, 7:30 p.m.
F rid a y — no school, teacher-slalf
development day, varsity football game at
la k e Brantley, 8 p.m.
Saturday — District AAA cross-country
meet, 9 a m , site to be announced.

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VOLUSIA COUNTY
FAIRGROUNDS

SR. 44 east of 1-4
DcLAND ORMOND BEACH EXIT

AND YOUTH SHOW

I'X'Uv.

For AI1S.. uni
Q

The panel said talk of i
future surplus of doctors, the
costs and debts medical stu­
dents shoulder, and ur
certainties about the effect &gt;f
changes in organization and
payment for medical care are
likely to dissuade students
from the study of median■
,ln the future, it win
suggested, m edical school
faculties may have to recruit-,
capable students to enter
medicine.

NOV. 4-14

SAVE COOLINO .nd HEATING DOLLARS
A L L Y EA R 'ROUND
With High Elficltncy Cllfflil*Control
$

1990 But that's.not the qql',
reason for the drop

COME TO THE 18th ANNUAL

T ftfm r/ 4

•J - •»V

Muller said the panel is
concerned about the enor­
mous competition for entry
into medical school, and the
continuing com petition for
grades
From a peak of 42,600
medical school applicants for
15.000 positions In 1974, the
number has fallen to below
36.000 for almost 17.000 posi­
tions in 1982
This decline is expected to
continue and even speed up
The college age population
will fall between now and

Direct F ro m
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Thurv, Nov. 4 - School Day and
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schools plus special Admission price.
Fri. Nov. 5 • Government Day. Special
day for all elected officials
Sat., Nov. 6 - Cracker Day. Honoring
all Floridians.
Sun,, Nov. 7 - Church Day. Special
day for all Religious Faiths
Mon., Nov. 8 - Tourist Day. Honoring
all Visitors.
Tues., Nov. 9 - Merchants Day.
Honoring all Merchants.
Special "Merchants Day Coupon"
50c off Admission.
Wed., Nov. 10 - Farm &amp; City Day
Livestock Auction 7:00 p.m.
Thurs., Nov. 11 - 4H, FHA, FFA Day
Youth Awards 7:00 p.m.
Fri., Nov. 12 - Youth Talent Day
Sat., Nov. 13 - Senior Citizens Day
Seniors Admission S2.00 Noon - 6 p.m.
I Sua Nov. 14 - Last Chance Day

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Sunday - Nor tin
12 00 noon lo 11 00 p m
Sunday No* 14th
12 00 noon io 6 00 p m
Midway will close T houl l«te»
Fraa Parking

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m

^ L T U 'llF

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I fai
j 50* Off Gate Admission I
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*
Ix c e p t:
Friday - Nov. 5
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■ Saturday - Nov. 6 Sunday Nov. 7
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A D M IS S IO N !

la Years and Older • 53.00
Oxter 11 year* Free when
accompanied by an adult.

A

�BA—E ve n in g Herald, Sanlord, FI.

Sunday, Oct 31, 1982

By Steele For State Senate In 17th
By DONNA ES T E S
Herald Staff Writer
Ten-year veteran State Sen. John Vogt, I&gt;Coeoa Beach, is
being challenged for his legislative seat by one-term state Hep
Jason Steele, R*Roekledge, in Tuesday’s general election.
Vogt, 45, was bom in lake Wales and grew up in Lakeland.
Vogt's great-great uncle was Dr. Daniel A Vogt of Ocala
who served in the Florida House of Representatives from 18561861 representing Marion County. His grandfather, Albertus
Vogt, discovered phosphate near Dunnellon in the 1880s. The
old fam ily residence is still in existence at Vogt Springs near
Dunnellon.
He and his wife, Toni, are parents of five daughters. He is a
civil engineer.
Steele, 34, was bom in Ft. lauderdale. He was a campaign
aide for former Florida Gov. Claude Kirk, the only Republican
governor elected since Reconstruction. Steele is single.
Vogt received his bachelor's degree in civil engineering
from the University of Florida at Gainesville and did graduate
work in management at the University of South Florida and
Rutgers University in New Jersey. He is a registered
professional engineer in Florida, New York and Maryland
Steele received his associates degree from Broward Com­
munity College where he was student government president
and acted in over 50 plays, lie made independent films and
television commercials. He also attended Florida Slate
University. He is a partner and co-founder of Steele Realty and
Insurance Inc. of Indialantic.
Steele, during his two years in the Florida House, has been
on the Tourism and Economic Development Committee and
the Transportation Committee.
Vogt was initally elected in 1972 and was re-elected in 1976
and 1980.
Vogt served as chairman of the Ways and Means Sub­
com m ittee, Sovffreignity L an d s Committee, N atural
Resources and Conservation Committee, Senate Committee on
Economic, Community and Consumer Affairs. He also served
as vice chairman and member of numerous other committees.
He was chairman of the Brevard County legislative
delegation for two years, chairman of the Osceola delegation
tor eight years and of the Seminole delegation for two years.
The 17th Senate district consists of about 40 percent of
Seminole, a large part of Brevard and portions of Osceola and
Orange counties.
Steele sees the single greatest problem facing the Florida
legislature in 1983 as the 10.1 percent national unemployment
rate.
"1 believe growing joblessness is the single greatest problem
facing our nation and our state," Steele said. "Protecting
Florida from massive layoffs hrth e future U essemiatr
"To that end, I have created my four-part ’Jobs Creation and
Development Act’ which I believe will provide economic
stability and growlh. This is the first piece of legislation 1 will
introduce in 1983," he said,
Vogt said the greatest problem facing the Legislature will be
to give budgetary attention to transportation, education, the
fight against crime, and the environment.
"We are seeing our highway system deteriorate from lack of
maintenance because no new money has been put into tran­
sportation for many years," Vogt said. "And we need to
continue to improve our educational system so that we can
inprove our state's position as a destination for hightechnology, high-paying Industry. More money is also needed

1983: an industrial employment expansion art tax credit of
5500 against the Florida corporate tax for each new job created
for a laid-off employee returned to work, for businesses hiring
people receiving compensation, the credit would be increased
to $1,000, if a job is given to a welfare recipient the credit would
be increased to $2,500; a one-year new dwelling exemption to
allow residential lots to be tax-free in the year of initial con­
struction; waiving the documentary stamp tax on land tran­
sactions intended for new facilities for companies relocating in
Florida.
Vogt said he plans to introduce legislation amending the
speedy trial law to grant an automatic waiver when a defense
attorney requests a continuance, that will delay the trial.
He is also planning legislation placing emphasis on punish­
ment for juvenile crimes with less emphasis on rehabilitation.

JOHN VtKS'T

JA SO N STEELE

to fight crime, the number one problem mentioned by
Floridians today," he said.
Vogt also pointed to the fart that federal funds to fight
pollution "are drying up. We are going to have serious water
pollution problems facing us and local government, with
federal money no longer available, and will have to provide
their own construction dollars.
"The most important issue will be whether we can make
unprovements in these programs within existing revenue
sources," Vogt said.
"The national economy casts a long shadow on all stale
Issues and depresses our Florida economy. Florida continues
to grow and have growth problems but a depressed economy
doesn’t provide the revenues to meet the growth.
"The legislature is not likely to consider any major tax
increases which means we have the problem of meeting the
needs of growth and staying within our means," Vogt said.

V IO EO G A M ES1W 4 UP
J U K E BuAfci JW4 UP
( Complete With Records)
P IN 8 A U .S U 0 4 UP
FOOTBALL 1254 UP
BOWLING MACHINES *
PL AVERS 200 4 UP
O T H ER ARCADE EQUIPM EN T
F R E E D E L. 2S Ml RADIUS
S L T CHARGE OVER 2J Ml
R E P A IR S AND PARTS

Research shows, he said, that juveniles who have been ex­
posed to the law and the court system have less fear after the
exposure than before.
Vogt is also looking at safeguards again?' hazardous
pollution of ground water. “ I want the state to get more in­
volved in knowing what types of pesticides are being used to be
sure our water supply is protected," Vogt said.
Vogt said he also wants to see if a revolving loan fund can be
smarted by the state to make low-interest loans available to
local governments for waste water treatment plants.
The portion of Vogt’s district in Seminole includes most of
Sanford, and parts of Winter Springs and Casselberry.
Seminole voters in the following precincts can vote in this
contest: 1.3,5.6,7,8,15, IB, 19,21,22,24,27,28,29,37.38 , 40, 42,
43. 50, 52, 55, 56, 57. 62, 63, 67 and 68.

NEW OFFICE POLICY
In s u r a n c e a s s i g n m e n t s
ACCEPTED WITH N O EXTRA
OUT-OF-POCKET pXPENSES
BEYOND POLICY REQUIREMENTS

m ost

We are happy to announce a

RAM DIST.

//■

NEW OFFICE POLICY -

322-6530

MOST

INSURANCE ASSIGNMENTS ACCEPTED

k io o r l a n o o d r

SANFORD, FL.
COR 17 n 4 LAKE MARY
BLVO
O PEN 10 TO 10 7 DAYS

WITH NO EXTRA OUT-OF-POCKET
EXPENSES BEYOND
POLICY REQUIREMENTS/'

Steele said in line with his "Jobs Creation and Development
Act," he plans to Intoducc the following pieces of legislation in

What does this mean to you? You pay absolutely nothing, we accept whatever yodt in­
surance company pays, you pay no deductible whatsoever. If your policy calls for ISO.00
deductible per year, you pay us nothing. If your policy pays 80 percent alter the deduc­
tible you still pay nothing The reason we are doing this is because we understand that
many people and many families have members who need treatment for some health
problems and find it dilficult to pay the deductible to acquire health care. This way, it
costs you and your family absolutely nothing out of.your pocket (or health care in out-

-officer------------------------—

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

SANFORD PAIN CONTROL CLINIC
Dr. Thomas Yandell
Chiropractic Physician
2017 French Ave., Sanford
P L E A S E C A L L FO R A N A P P O IN T M E N T

3 2 3 -5 7 6 3

i
-M

Ik

A

Your Conservative
Candidate running
issues"
The following business, professional, and Industry associations and/or their committees have supported Carl's candidacy:
ALLIED GASOLINE RETAILERS ASSN.
CENTRAL FLO RID A BUILDERS EXCHANGE
EMPLOYEES UNITED
EVERGLADES AGRICULTURE COMMITTEE
FLORIDA ASSOCIATION OF SU R ET Y AGENTS
FLORIDA BAN KERS ASSOCIATION
FLORIDA BUSINESS FORUM

FLORIDA
FLORIDA
FLORIDA
FLORIDA
FLORIDA
FLORIDA
FLORIDA

CITRUS PROCESSORS
DENTAL ASSN.
FARM BUREAU
FOOD INDUSTRY
INSTITUTE OF CPA'S
LAWYERS ACTION GROUP
LEAGUE OF HOSPITALS

FLORIDA OPTOMETRIC ASSN.
FLORIDA PEST CONTROL ASSN.
FLORIDA REALTORS
FLORIDA RETAIL INDUSTRY ASSN.
GOOD GOVERNMENT FOR FLORIDA COMMITTEE
MORTGAGE BANKERS ASSN.
NATIONAL RIFLE ASSN.

Carl Selph wishes to thank the members and employees of the above recognized groups and all the Seminole County
citizens that have supported Carl’s campaign.
REP.

Florida House of Representatives District - 34

t

PO. POLITICAL AOV.

"

r

�SPO RTS
Evening Herald, Sanford, F!

Sunday, Oct. 31, 1982—9A

B ra n tle y s 2-Point C o n versio n Stym ies T rib e
By CURLS FLSTER
Herald Sports Writer
The way the fans poured on to the field
you would think that lake Brantley had
just won the Five Star Conference
cham pionship. But those fans, the
Patriots’ players and coach Dave Tullis
were celebrating something they had to
hold back on for seven straight games of
the 1982 season, lake Brantley’s first
victory.
With 6:36 remaining in the gnme,
Rrantley’s Ricky Phillips carried in a
two-point conversion and the Patriots
held on for a 15-14 victory over Seminole
Friday night in the "Basement Bowl" at
la k e Brantley High.
“ This game goes to the kids," Tullis
said after his team’s first win in eight
games. "They came from behind twice
and won it and we’re really happy to have
this win.”
The Tribe was livened by a big-play
offense while L^ake Brantley was thriving
on Seminole mistakes. The Tribe’s two
touchdowns were scored by Clifton
Campbell, one on an Bl-yard run and
another on a 64-yard pass.
But, offensive mistakes such as
fumbles and penalties led to Seminole’s
demise as the Tribe's record fell to 0-8
Seminole lost three fumbles, one of which
led to la k e Brantley's first touchdown
and another that ended a Seminole
scoring threat, and the 'Notes were
slapped with 10 penalties for 100 yards.
"We played a lot better than our last
two games but the fumbles and penalties
hurt us,” Seminole coach Jerry Posey
said. "W e rose to the occasion, but we let
it get away from us."
Seminoif jumped uul tu an e a r ly 7-0
lead at 7:59 in the first quarter when
Campbell rambled 81 yards down the
sideline for a touchdown on the Tribe’s
third play from scrimmage. Paul Griffin
booted the extra point for what turned out
to be the last scoring of the first half.
Seminole's first fumble came on its
second possession. Mike Clayborne
jumped on the loose ball to give the
Patriots good field position at the la k e

Prep Football

Desmet recovered the fumble at the
Seminole 21.

Seven plays after the fumble recovery,
on a fourth-and-goal, Andy Heardin
Seminole
7 0 0
7-14 plunged in from one yard out and Chuck
luike Brantley
0 0 7 3-15 Stalling added the extra point to tie the
score at 7-7 with 6:28 left in the third
quarter.
Seminole—Campbell 81 run
(Griffin
kick i
The two teams then traded possessions
l.uke B ra n tle y — Reardin 1
run and Seminole regained the ball as the
(Stallings kick)
tliiu l quarter drew tu ait end. The Tribe's
Seminole—Campbell64 pass
from drive was interrupted by a 15-yard un­
Futrell (G riffin kick)
sportsmanlike conduct penalty, but two
Lake B ra n tle y — Reardin 6 run plays later Campbell took a screen pass
(Phillips run)
from Mike Futrell and scampered 64
yards for his second touchdown of the
Brantley
Seminole
night. Campbell was the game's leading
First downs
8
9
rusher with 153 yards on 11 carries.
Rushcs-yards
51-166
35-227
Griffin's conversion put the Tribe on top,
Passing yards
29
IDG
14-7 with 10:25 left to play.
Passes
2-7-0
5-10-1
Punts
3-35
2-39
lake Brantley look the ensuing kickoff
Fumbles-lost
1-0
4-3
and did something it hasn't done much of
10-100
Penalties-yards
4-30
during the '82 season, had a sustained
scoring drive. The drive covered 73 yards
on 10 plays and consumed almost four
Brantley 42.
minutes of play.
Behind the running of Allen AnnThe drive was kept alive by two 15-yard
strong, la k e Brantley drove to a first
face mask penalties against Seminole.
down at the 'Moles 15. Then the Seminole
Reardin, who owns all four of the
defense rose to the occasion and stopped
Patriots’ touchdowns this season, darted
Armstrong on a fourth down at the
six yards for Brantley’s second touch­
Seminole 6.
down. . The Patriots then lined up as if
The Tribe ran 13 plays on its next drive they would kick the extra point and try
and would have been in scoring range for a tic but. Phillips, who was holding for
had it not been for two 15-yard penalties. Stallings, faked the kick and ran toward
the end zone. At first tt appeared the
With lim e running out in the first half, Seminole's bad read the play, but a fewSeminole had yet another scoring op­ key blocks paved the way (or Phillips
portunity. A Rob Cohen pass to Greg H ill who lunged in for the two-point con­
went for 42 yards to the Dike Brantley 2U version and a 15-14 T-ike Brantley lead.
but before H ill was tackled he coughed up
"We've had that play the last two years
the bait and I-ike Brantley recovered
but never had a chance to use it until
and went into the locker room down Just
tonight," Tullis said, "Ricky i P h illip si
7-0,
has quick feet, got some key blocks and
Seminole made its first big mistake made a heck of a run.
early in the second half. After receiving
Seminole took the ensuing kickoff and
the kickoff the Tribe ran three plays anti
drove 55 yards to the Dike Brantley 20 A
was forced to punt. But Cohen could not
handle the snap on the punt and John
See B R A N T L E Y , page 11A

I,ake Brantley 15, Seminole 14
Wildwood 34, la k e Mary 0
Lyman 13, I,ake Howell 10
Oviedo 11, Eustis 7
Apopka 35, Del.und 32 double
overtime
Mainland 21, Spruce Creek 14
Osceola Kissim m ee 49, Bishop
Moore 0
St. Cloud 47, Uesburg 28
Winter Park 23, Orlando Evans 0
Orlando Boone 24, Orlando
F.dgewater 0
Orlando Colonial 14, Orlando Oak
Ridge 13
West Orange 9, Orlando Jones 8
Dunnellon 7, Groveland 0
Clewiston 23, Cocoa Beach 14
Orlando Heritage Prep 12, la k e
Highland 7
Titusville Astronaut 20, Cocoa 14
Titusville 21, Melbourne 16
B ro o k sville
Hernando
55,
Springstead 7

F iv e Star Conference Standings
TEAM
Five Star Overall
W L GB W L
Apopka
4 1 4 3
3 1 M 4 3
Lyinan
4 2 h 4 4
Mainland
3 2 1 4 3
Lake Howell
2 2 IV. 3 4
Spruce Creek
2 3 2 2 5
DeLand
1 4 3 1 6
Lake Brantley
0 4 3V. 0 7
Seminole
Frida y1* games
Seminole at Lyman
DeLand at Lake Howell
Apopka at Spruce Creek

S em iiittle

defenders Tim Herring (left) and Dyral Manley sandwich Brantley back Mien Armstrong.

Hill, G erm ano H urdle
Hounds Past H ow ell

I'rep Football Score*

Ml Dora 1} W*more lech 8
Umatilla 17 Tavarn ll
North Marion M Cryital River I?
Dunnellon 7 Groveland 0
Brooksville Hernando S5 Sprinosted 7
St Petersburg Dtaie Holland 14 Hudson 7
Land O' Lakes 10 Dade City Pasco 3
South Sumter 14 Claremont 8
Bradenton Manatee 40 Lakeland Kath
leen 10
Lakeland 31 Sarasota Rivervie* I
Sarasota 38 Winter Haven 14
Lake Wales 17 Barto 8
Arcadia DeSoto 33 Lmon Bay 13
Mulberry 31 Haines City 14
Wachula Hardee 1? Palmetto 10
Avon Park 34 Lakeland Santa Fe 13
Fort Mead 14 Lake Placid 7
Tampa Chamberlain 34 Tampa Hills
borough 13
Tampa King 30 Brandon 3
Plant City 58 Tampa Bay Tech 4
Clearw ater Counlryslde 47 Newport
Richey Gilt 0
Cooper City 10 McArthur 4
South Broward 33 Chaminade 4
Dillard 30 Coral Springs »
Homestead 17 Key West 14
Miami Beach 14 Northwestern 13
Norland 14 American IS
South Dade 34 Pace 4
Columbus 31 Miami High 14
Jackson 30 Coral Park 0
Palatka 31 Middleburg 7
Tallahassee Leon tt Perry O
Newberry 31 Chlelland 7
Palm Bay 14 Eau Game 0
Satellite Beach 33 Vero Be ch 17
Daytona Beach Seabreeie 34 St.
Augustine 4
Suwanee Live Oak 37 G ain e syllle
Eastside 7

M enu Photo by Tom Vincent

By S A M COOK
Herald Sports Editor
Any doubts about the all-state football
credentials of Lym an’s Mike Hill were
completely erased in the closing minutes
Friday night against la k e Howell.
The fierce 205-pound linebacker turned
in two superlative defensive gems —
snaring Silver Hawk quarterback Troy
Quackenbush behind the line of scrim ­
mage — to preserve the Greyhounds’ 1310 Five Star Conference victory at la k e
Howell.
"He’s a horse," said Lyman coach B ill
Scott about his senior standout. "He's a
class player and he played one heck of a
game."
So did running back Phil Germano.
The 155-pound Junior powered one yard
for the Greyhounds first touchdown in the
-first quarter and then broke loose on a
dazzling 16-yard scamper for the winning
score in the third quarter.
The victory puts the Greyhounds in the
Five Star driver’s seat with a 3-1 con­
ference record and Seminole i Friday at
home), Spruce Creek and lake Brantley
remaining on the schedule. lake Howell
is 3-2 with DeLand (Friday at home),
Apopka and Boone (nonconference) left
to play. Lyman and Howell are 4-3
overall.
Two fumbles figured prominently in
the scoring as the defenses dominated
play.
On the second play of the game,
Lyman's Vince Presley coughed up the
ball at his 30 and Howell linebacker Steve
Cina covered it at the 32.

•

Herald Photo by Tom Vincent

Mike Hill, Lyman’s ferocious linebacker, stacks up Lake Howell's
Jeff Solomon (left). When Hill realized Solomon didn't have the ball,
he discarded him and pulled down quarterback Troy Quackrnhush.

Jeff Solomon scooted 12 yards on an
Inside trap to the 20 for a first down.
Three more plays, though, gained Just
four yards, so Robert Kerr came on and
drilled a 34-yard field goal for a 34} lead
with 9:26 to go in the quarter.
Lyman bounced right back with a

Prep Football
Lyman
60
7 0—II
Lake Howell
37
0 0-10
la k e RowelT— F G K err 32
Lyman — Germano 1run (kick wide)
Lake Howell — Hobey 1 run (Kenkick )
Lyman — Germano 16 run (Abemethy
kick)
Howell
Lym an
0
First downs
14
33-91
Bushes-yards
36-95
51
Passing yards
102
5-8-0
Passes
9-13-0
3-35
3-38
Punts-average
2-1
. 2-1
Fumbles-lost
a-ao
Penalties-yards
7-70
brilliant scoring drive on the next series.
Quarterback Jerry Axley put on a daz­
zling aerial show, hitting his first s li
passes to move the 'Hounds.
The big play was a 16-yarder which
moved Lyman near midfield. Two plays
later, Presley raced 11 yards to the
Howell 37. After Germano popped for
three, the "Axe" cut loose for 10 yards to
Robert Queslnberry and 13 yards to Theo
Jones for a first down at the 11.
Two plays later, a pass interference
call moved the ball to the 5 before
Presley and Jones powered it to the one
after an Axley misfire.
Facing a fourth and one, Scott went to
Germano who bulldozed In behind blocks
from Graham Mays, Chris Tschieder and
fullback Gene Allen.
“ We knew the hole was there, we Just
had to settle them down some," said
Scott about the call. "If we didn't score
we had them In a hole."
As It was, the hole lasted about eight
minutes. Robert Abemethy's point after

attempt sailed wide to the right, giving
Lym an a 6-3 lead with 1:22 left in the
quarter.
The Silver Hawks immediately put
together a 14-play, 72-yard march which
resulted in a one-yard plunge by Jay
Hobey for the go-ahead score.
Robey accounted for exactly half of the
yardage on the drive, mostly on power
thrusts behind linemen Jim Royal, Bill
Norton and Dan Rae. K err's kick put
Howell back into control, 1041, with 6:47
left In the half.
Neither team seriously threatened the
rest of the half, although a personal foul
hampered a Lyman drive after Axley hit
Jones for an apparent first down at the
Howell 26.
la k e Howell's cosily fumble came on
the third play of the second half when
Solomon couldn’t control a pitch from
Quackeqbush and Lyman sophomore
Pete Crespo fell on the pigskin at the
Howell 27.
“ I should have never called that pitch
play," said Bisceglia about the play.
"That was a critical fumble and probably
the turning point of the game."
Lym an quickly turned tt into six points
and possibly a Five Star championship.
Presley went for one, Greinano for seven
and Presley for three for a first down at
the 16.
It was Germano's turn next He took a
quick handoff from Axley over guard,
ripped out of a tackle at the 14, did a
reverse pivot at the five and sailed into
the a id zone. Abemethy’s kick made It
13-10 Lyman with 9:16 left in the third
quarter.
At the beginning of the fourth quarter,
Lym an moved the ball to m idfield before
it stalled. John Poor, who had an in­
credible, diving catch on the drive,
pinned Lake Howell on its eight-yard Una
See HILL, page 10A

Wildwood Flattens Lake Mary, 34-0
"If a 1-6 team can be flat, we were
flat."
That's the way Lake Mary coach Roger
Beathard summed up the Rams’ 344)
setback at the hands of the Wildwood
•Wildcats Friday night at Wildwood.
The Rams were hit with a few costly
turnovers deep in its own territory and
could not get its sluggish offense on
track. “ We need to find the key that will
turn us on offensively," Beathard said.
"We’re not a bad defensive team we just
need to score some points."
The Ram s' offense was nonexistent as
all-state defensive end candidate John
Brantley and linebacker Frank Dalton
continually penetrated the Lake Mary
backfield to hold the Rams to minus 15
yards on the ground. The Rams total

Prep Football
offense was zero.
Dalton also had a hand in the offense,
scoring two touchdowns. Quarterback
John Larris tossed for two scores while
Patrick Dixon ran for 105 yards on 14
carries.
After a scoreless first quarter, a
blocked punt set up Wildwood’s first
touchdown and the Wildcats led 12-0 after
a controversial interference call against
the Rams. Wildwood tried a pass on a
fourth down and it was incomplete but an
official called interference to prolong the
drive and eventually enable Wildwood to
score.

Wildwood had a chance to Increase Its
lead in the first half but three goal-line
stands by the Lake Mary defense th­
warted Wildwood’s other scoring threats
as the score was 124) at the half.
la k e Mary enabled Wildwood to In­
crease its lead in the third quarter when
it fumbled three plays after taking the
second half kickoff. Wildwood took over
from the Rams’ 30-yard line and pushed
the ball across for an 184) lead.
A short time later, after a punt of about
15-20 yards by l^ake Mary, Wildwood took
a 204) lead on a touchdown and two-point
conversion.
Wildwood scored its last touchdown on
an interception return and the two-point
conversion made the final 344).
Don Meyer, B ill Caughell and Jeff

Hopkins all had good defensive games for
the Rams. "The defense had some good
gang tackling," Beathard said. "It was a
swarming defense at times."
It was the third week In a row the Rams
were shutout after a 27-0 victory
Wymore Tech.
Lake Mary will meet Seminole County
foe Lake Brantley next Friday night at
Lake Brantley H lg h .-C H R IS FISTER
Lake Mar)
Wildwood

1

0 0 0 4 -0
0 12 I 14—M

’ W d w o od - Larris 1 run (pass failed)
Wildwood — Dalton 7 run (pass failed)
Wildwood — Dalton 2 run (Thomas
pass from Larris)
Wildwood — Boatwright 48 pass in­
terception (pass failed)

J e ff Hopkins, L ake
linebacker, was one or the
bright spots defensively in
H am s’ loss to Wildwood
night.

f 'i *

�tOA

Evening Herald. Sanford. FI

Sunday, Oct 31, 1983

Lions Com e From Behind To Topple East is
IK BRESTSMAKTT
Herald Sports Writer
Regrouping from a lackluster first-half
perform ance* coach .lack Blanton's
Oviedo Lions fought hack back to nudge
the visiting Kustis Panthers, 14-7, and
provide a happy outcome for the
homecoming crowd.
The victory pushes the Uons over the
500 m ark to 4-3 and second 12-21 in the
Orange Belt Conference race behind
league-leading St. Cloud and Osceola,
tied atop the standings.
The first quarter got the non­

spectacular affair off to a fitting
beginning as fumbles and lack of offense
kept the scoreboard blank
This stalemate continued to the 7:26
mark of the second quarter, when Oviedo
tailback Barry Williams coughed up the
ball at his own 16-yard line.
Williams and a host of lions and
Panthers alike kicked the ball into the
Oviedo end zone only to have Kevin
Boners pounce on the loose pigskin for a
Kustis tally and a 6-0 lead. Dwayne
Method's extra point made it 7-0.
Oviedo would threaten late in the half.

Prep Football
only to have a Jody Huggins pass picked
off at the Panther 25w ith 1:25 left
When the game finally resumed, a
fired-up lio n squad look its second
possession at its own 30-yard line and
promptly marched 70 yards on the heels
of seven W illiams rushes and a key Tom
Johnson fake-punt first-down plunge.
Williams finally scampered in from
three. David Moody's kick knotted the

score at 7-7 with 33 ticks left on the third
quarter clock.
The I.ions d id n ’t waste their
momentum or time as David Butterfield
recovered a fumble at the Oviedo 42
which ignited an eight-play drive ending
again with Williams dashing over from
eight yards out with 7:08 left in the final
stanza. Moody's kick made it 14-7 IJons.
No real threats were made by either
team as sloppy play and defense took
over again.
F irst-yea r skip p e r Blanton was
satisfied with the victory.

"We just came out in the second half
and stopped beating ourselves and
started executing," he said. "We gave
them their TD on mistakes. Our defense
is always very good and we also came out
in the power-I in the second half."

Eustis — Bowers tumble recovery in
end zone (MdiCod kick'
Oviedo — W illiam s3 run f Moody kick)
Oviedo
W illiam s8 run Moody kick)

Lin ebacker Johnson collected 12
tackles and 5 assists along with his fake
punt effort.

First downs
Bushes-yards
Passing yards
Passes
Punts
Fumbles-lost
Penalties-yards

Miss Deb Die Best also collected the
Oviedo Homecoming Queen crown.
E u s tii
Oviedo

0 7 0 £- 7
0 6 2 2—14

Knights Host

...H ill. G e rm a n o
Continued frum9A
with a nice punt with just 7:14 to go.
Quackenbush, however, marched the
Hawks into Lyman territory with 4:27 to
play The key play was a 23-yard toss to
John McKay. On the next play, "Quack"
hit Robey wjth a swing pass for only two
yards, but Greg Pilot was flagged for
roughing, moving the ball to the Lyman
26.
Solomon knifed for three more and
Robey bolted for five to set up the Hawks
with a third and two at the Howell 18
Then H ill went to work. Quackenbush
shoved the ball into Solomon's belly, but
H ill was on top of him, so he pulled it out
and continued down the line. Hill, in­
credibly, tossed Solomon away and
yanked Quackenbush down with one
hand by his jersey.
Just two minutes rem ained as
Quackenbush lined up the Hawks for the

West Georgia

fourth and three He started down the
line to his right, but Hill blitzed and
sacked him for a two-yard loss, turning
the ball over to the jubilant Greyhounds.
"1 thought Quackenbush would carry
the ball," said Hill after the game. "I just
shot the guard gap and Quackenbush was
there."
Which probably shot the Silver Hawks
chances at a conference title, too. "It was
an option," said Bisceglia. "But Troy
never had a chance to gel it off because
he penetrated."
Bisceglia said he didn't consider a field
goal 136 yards) because "it was out of his
(Kerr's) range."
In retrospect, Lyman’s defense came
up with the big plays in the second half
while holding the Silver Hawks scoreless.
"The defense played a helluva game,"
shouted Hill ns he pranced off the field.
Are you going to argue with him?

There's no place like home. At least
University of Central Florida fooibai!
coach Sam Weir hopes so Saturday night
when his Knights entertain West Georgia
at the Tangerine Bowl in Drlundo at 7:30
p.m.
Neither home nor the road has offered
much respite for UCF which is winless in
seven games and has been outscored.
253-71, by the opposition West Georgia, 66 and ranked second in Division III,
hasn't had much trouble scoring either,
blitzing its foes, 251-15
Weir hopes the fact that West Georgia
is a rank lower than his Division 11
Knights and the homecoming at­
mosphere will inspire UCF to its first
victory.
"W e're pretty beat up, but that's
because of the level of competition we're
playing," said Weir. "We’ ll go after them
again Saturday."

Apopka Escapes To Take Lead
DFI-AND — AjopkB moved into first_
place in the Five Star Conference here
Friday with a pulsating 35-32 double­
overtime victory over the Bulldogs.

Mickey Fergilsqn who sprained an ankle.
Both teams scored the first overtime
with Apopka's coming on quarterback
Hod Brewer's one-yard sneak.

The Blue Darters' victory, coupled
with la k e Howell's 13-10 loss to Lyman,
gives coach Chip Gierke's squad a onehalf game edge over Lyman and
Mainland, which dropped Spruce Creek,
21-14 Apopka is 4-1 in the Five Star

Del .and scored on a five-yard burst by
Terry Nettles for a 25-22 lead with just
9:48 remaining, but the 'Ikigs couldn't
convert the point-after kick, keeping the
lead at three. It was the second time the
Bulldogs failed on a conversion which
eventually led to their demise.

Apopka's Kent Elmore booted a 25yard field goal with 12 seconds left in
regulation to tie the game at 25-25 and
then kicked a clutch 25-yarder to give the
Blue Darters a three-point victory.
Elm ore was subbing for regular kicker

In the Mainland victory, Issac Bell
romped for three touchdowns and 175
yards as the Buccaneers improved to 4-2
in conference and district play. 'Hie Hues
are idle Friday.

SPO RTS
IN BRIEF

Players, M a n a g e m e n t
B a r te r As Strike Lingers
NEW YORK i UI’ l) - With both sides still wailing
for the other to make the first move, the N F L's
Management Council and the Players Association
shake hands and come out talking today.
Negotiations will resume Saturday ul noon ED T in a
midtown hotel as the first regular-season strike in the
league’s 63-year history enters its 40th day with little
Indication that either side has budged from positions
which have been unchanged for eight months and
polarized by a $30*inill)on a week strike Umt has
already forced 84 games to be called off.
Once again, 73-year-old San Francisco attorney Sam
Kagel will attempt to find common ground between the
union and league owners on the key issue of how the
M F L 's $1.6 billion proposal should be distributed to
players.
The N F LP A , headed by executive director Ed
Garvey, is calling for a wage scale based on seniority
tied to a central fund while the Management Council,
led by executive director Jack Donlan, has been
adamant about maintaining the policy of individual
salary negotiations.
Kagel presided over 12 days of fruitless bargaining
sessions in Hunt Valley, Md,, and recessed the talks
last Saturday.
On Friday, the N F L P A filed additional unfair labor
practice charges against Donlan, I jds Angeles Raiders'
owner A1 Davis and Marvin Demoff, a player agent.
The union said the three have been [wiling player reps
directly about the "D avis plan," un alternative
proposal for wage Increases developed by the
maverick Haiders' owner.

Kustis Oviedo
13
1
46-156 32-85
12
9
2-8-1 3-16-1
5-34
6-37
5-1 , 5-1
1-15
4-55

The Knights have made use of three
quarterbacks interchangably which has

H erald Photo by Tom V incent

James. Pilot. Lyman defensive end d m . XH), takes
a look at a tangled up Lake Unwell ipiarterbaek
liny (Juaekenlmsli (will) hall&gt; dining prep action
Friday at Lake Howell. Ly man held off a closing
drive l&gt;\ the Hawks to win. Kl-Hl I.Milan's Alike

Hill (right, no. alt) made two clutch plays to kc\
the victory . I he Hounds fry to move closer to a
l ive Slat Conference title Friday when they host
Seminole.

Del-and High gridder Dana Thyhsen hits
teamed with Raymond Agee and Jaime
Lugo to form the trio.
The running game, however, is weak
with ex-Lake Howell Fullback the only
consistent ground gamer. Carlson has
also been a threat out of the backfield
along with tight end Ed Schenk and
wideout Mike Collier
U C F's once-proud defense has been
vulnerable the past month, due mostly to
being over-matched by Division I-AA
competition.
linebackers Bill Giovanetti and David
King led the Knight defenders in tackles,’

B re e ze — S q u e e ze
Brantley G irls Run A w a y From Field;
Lyman Boys O utstep M a in la n d , 37-39
The Five Star Conference Cross Country
Championships were a breeze and a squeeze at
Seminole Community College Friday.
I-ake Brantley’s girls, placing five runners
ir the top 15, breezed to the championship with
59 points.
Lyman's boys, meanwhile, needed a fivetenths of a second victory by Marc Overbay in
13th place to squeeze past Daytona Beach
Mainland, 37-39, for the boys’ title.
"Coach (David) Huggins told me "The fifth
man would be the key,"' said Overbay after
the race. "H e (Mainland's Ken Daigle) was
ahead of me until the two-mile mark.
"We ran together for a while, then I threw in
a surge und passed him. I kept on looking
around to make sure he didn't catch me," he
added.
He didn't but Huggins had to catch his
breath. “ I thought 1 was having a heart at­
tack," he gasped, ‘ "nicy (Mainland) came to
run...I'm glad we did too;"
I-ake Howell’s Ken Cheeseman look in­
dividual honors with a 15:26.5 three mile.
Lyman’s Doug McHroom was second and
teammate Brian Hunter was fifth. Carl Schmabnaack (ninth), Overbay (13thi and Wayne
Straw (16th) completed the 'Hounds first five.
Freshman Steve Howe was 16th.
Mainland, who Lyman has now beaten five
limes Ihis year, had strung performances
from Harvey Brown l third), Claude West­
brook (fourth), Todd Gordon (seventh), Chris

Cross Couhtry
Maurer (11th) and Daigle (14th),
Howell's Brad Dykes finished 10th and
Bobby Jones 22ml to help the Silver Hawks to
third place. Del-and (1131 was fourth and
Seminole (136) was fifth.
"We could have finished third," sighed
Seminole coach Ted Tombros after the race.
"But we Just didn't run very well. Not like we
did at l-ake Mary (Invitational which
Seminole won)."
Mike Wooten was 12th for the Tribe while
Kent Troutman was 24th and Scott Meek was
25th Wooten's place earned him second-team
all-conference honors. The first eight finishers
made the first team and the second eight were
the second team.
lake Brantley finished sixth, paced by Mike
Garrigues' seventh place finish. The Patriots'
chances were hurt when Robert Jones fell
down and didn't finish the race. He was
Brantley’s second-best runner.
In the junior varsity boys, Lyman blew away
the field, placing the first five runners fur a
perfect score of 15 points. Jon Golnik led the
Greyhound rout. Kelly Faint was ninth for
Seminole and B illy Penlck was 11th. Both are
Crooms' freshmen.
While the boys' race was nip-and-tuck,

coach Jim Marshall's Brantley girls made
sure the same thing wouldn’t happen to them.
Spruce Creek’s Carmen Gardner ran by
herself, as usual, winning by nearly a minute
in 11:18 over the Patriots’ Kathryn Hayward.
K. Hayward finished in 12:16.8 and was joined
by Ellen Stem (fifth), sister Joanne Hayward
(sixth), Barbara Holmes (11th) and I-aura
Barnhill (15th). Ktm Lubcnow was 19th.
"They knew what they wanted and they
went after it," said Marshall. The victory
stamps the Patriots as one of the favorites in
next week’s district run at Del-and. The meet
begins at 11 a.m.
Lyman used a strong third-place finish by
Schowonda W illiams to nip I-ake Howell for
second. Senior Kerry Ryder and freshman
Angie Smith were seventh and eighth
respectively for the Silver Hawks.
I-ake Howell gained a measure of revenge in
the junior varsity run, tipping the Patriots, 3540.
Lyman’s Diane Steiner won the meet in
14:06.5 and l-ake Brantley's Kim Pacetelli ran
second, but Howell received solid showings
from /Angle Hector Ithird), Nancy Nystrom
(fourth), K im MeCullom (eighth), Heather
Biscoe (ninth) and Tracey Mashore i l l lh ) to
pull out the victory.
"Considering they haven't won all year, it
was a nice way for the JVs to end the season,"
said la k e Howell coach Tom Hammontree.
- S A M COOK

H erald Photo by Tom V incent

Joanne llayw anl was out* nl five
Lake Brantley runners in the tup 15
Krill ay in the Five Star Conference
Championships. Hayward finished
sixth to help the Patriots to an easy
victory.

Hockey
Five Star Cross Country Championships
NATIONAL HOCKEY LEA G U E
Calgary
1 ’
2
8
By Unili'd Press international . Vancouver
3 6 3
6
Wales Conference
(Top i o u r ,n fach d'vmon
Patrick Oivnion
q u a lit y
tor
Stanley
Cup
W S
L- T| Pti.
rn .
Frid
ay’s
Results
MY W anders
10 2 0 JO
Edmonton A, Los Angeles 3
Philadelphia
j
4 0 14
: Chicago 2. Vancouver 2 (tie)
MY Mangers
j 6 0 10
Saturday's Games
New Jersey
j S 3 ■9
(All Times E DT)
Pittsburgh
j / |
J
N Y , Rangers at Quebec, I 3S
Washington
j 6 \
s
pm.
Del roil &lt;|1 Hjrtlord. tg .3S p m
Adams Division
Montreal
.
7
Buffalo at Toronto. 8 OS p m
i i
1A
Boston ...
• 4 7 17
Calflary al Pittsburgh- 8 05
Quebec
S 4 1 11 V p m
Boston at Montreal, 8 05 p m
BuUalo
J 5 7 ■8
Hartlord
2 S 7
New Jersey ai N Y
Island
A
Campbell Conference
ers, 8 05 p m
Philadelphia
at
Minnesota,
Norris division
W L T PIS . ( OS p.m
Washington at St Louis. ( OS
Minnesota
8 7 1 ‘ 1/
Chicago
A 7 3 IS p m
Chicago at Los Angeles. 10 35
tt Louis
5 A 0 10
Toronto
J
7 pm
S J
Sunday’s Games
Detroit
? 8 . 1 , ..." S
Vancouver at Edmonton, alt
Sin&gt;me Division
Winn peg
« 7 1 13
Montreal at Bultoio
Pittsburgh at N Y Rangers
Los A iijeies
S 4 2 12
Edmonton
4 S 3 It
Philadelphia at Winnipeg

Girls Varsity I two miles)
Ijk e Brantley (LB)
39
Lym an(Ly)
76
l-ake Howell (I.H)
79
Del-and(D)
91
Seabreeze (Sea)
138
Malnland(M)
152
Semlnole (Sent)
167
Apopka (A)
188
Spruce Creek (SC):
NTS
1. Carmen Gardner (SC)
11:18 2. Kathryn Hayward
(I-B) 12:16.8 3. Schowonda
Williams (Ly) 12:29.2 4. Jean
Bauer (D) 12:30.2 5. Ellen
Stem (LB) 12:32.2 6. Joanne
Hayward (LB) 12:48 7. Kerry
Hyter (I-H) 12:52.6 8. Angie
Smith ( LH) 12:55.6 9. Sherry
Hollings (Sea) 12:58.7 10.

Nicki Williams (D) 12:59 11.
Barbara Holmes (LB) 13:05.1
12. Angle Washington (M)
13:05.6 13. Lyn Lucas (IJ1)
13:09.314. Cindy Gaskell (Ly)
13:12.5
15. Ijiura Barnhill
(L B ) 13:15.1 16. Emily Leny e n (Sea) 13:17.2 17 Judy
pieone &lt;D) 13:21 18. Donna
Killbounte (Ly) 13:21.6 19.
K im Lubenow(LB) 13:23.9 20.
M ich e lle Schindler (Ly)
13:24.9 21. Ange Delello (Ly)
13:34.5
22. Sarah EUinore
(Ly) 13:38.3 23. Elaine Ilubek
(A) 24 Pam Thomas (D)
13:44.6 25. Cathy Compton
(LH) 13:46.3
G irls Junior Varsity
l-ake Howell (I-II)

35

Boys Varsity (three miles)
37
l.yman (Ly)
39
Mainland (M)
1. Diane Steiner ( 1-y)
99
1-akeHowell ( U l)
14:06.5 2. Kim Pacetelli (l.B)
113
Del-andlD)
14:07.3 3. Angie Rector ( t i l l
136
Seminole (Sem)
14:08.7 4. Nancy Nystrom
144
U k e Brantley (I-B)
(L H )
11:15.3
5.
Beth
177
Seabreeze (Sea)
189
Spruce
Creek
(SC)
Glasbrenner (LB) 14:18.4 fi.;
219
Christine Gigicos(Ly) 14:1B.8 Apopka (A)
7, Melissa Meghdadi (1-B) :
1. Ken Cheeseman (LH)
14:19.7 8. K im M eCullom
15:26.5 2. Doug McBroom
(L H ) 14:39.4 9. Heather
(Ly) 15:49.7 3. Harvey Brown
Biscoe ( I J ll U:46 10. L o r i’
(M) 16:01.7 4. Qaude West­
Ford (Ly) 14:53 11; Tracey
brook (M) 16:04.1 5. Brian
Mashore 14:55.7 12. Leigh
Hunter (Ly) 16:12.8 6. Mike
Gundal (LB ) 14:58.8 13. Garriques (LB) 16:17.4 7.
Cheryl Claycomb (14:59.7) 14. Todd Gordon (M) 16:30.3 8.
Dayna M iller 1I-B) 15:14.7 15.
lin e Anthony (Ly) 16:38.1 9.
Vaun Tschieder (Ly) 15:21.2 Carl S chm alm aack (Ly)

I-ake Brantley (1.B)
Lyman, (Ly)

40
48

16:45.4 10. Brad Dykes (LH)
16:51.4 11. Chris Maurer (M)
16:52.8 12. M ike Wooten
(Sem ) 16:53.1 13. M arc
Overbay (Ly) 16:59.414. Ken
Daigle (M) 13:59.9 15. E ric
Wooley (D) 17:04.116. Wayne
Straw (Ly) 17:08.3 17, Kevin
Gervais (Sea) 17:09 18. Steve
Howe (L y i 17:09.6 19. Max
Lumas (LB) 17:18.120. Eddie
West (D) 17:21.4 21. Chris
Criche (D) 17:23.6 22. Bobby
Jones (LH) 17:24 23. Dan
Wilkins rA) 17-28 5 24. Kent
Troutman (Sem) 17:30 25.
Scott Meek (Sem) 17:41.2
Boys Junior Varsity
Lyman (Ly)
'* 15
I-ake Howell (1J1)
76
I-ake Brantley (l-B)
78

Seminole (Sem)
117
Mainland (M&gt;
NTS
1. Jon Golnik (Ly) 17:37.8 2.
Jon Natalie 1Ly) 17:46.4 3. Pat
Bell (Ly) 18:06.9 4. Jim
Felicettl (Ly) 18:09.6 5. Steve
GrundorfiLyH B: 14.4 6. Steve
Drake (I-B) 18:21.7 7. Kevin
Mooney (Ly) 18:22.3 8. Todd
Kehrer (Ly) 18:22 9. Kell);
Faint (Semi 18:22.6 10. John
Peters (I-H) 18:23.2 11. Billy
Peitjck (Sem) 16:25.112. Buss
Emerson (Ly) 18:38.5 13.
James Rowley (LB) 18:39.1
14. Nate O'Hare (LH) 15.
Brett Crockett ( U l) 18:45.9
(Nole: The top eight finishers
are first-team all conference.
The second eight are secondteam all conference.)

�Evening Herald Sanlorct FI

...Brantley

S co re ca rd

Continued from 9A
third down pass was broken up by
Brantley’s Donnie O’Brian and Griffin
came on to try a 37-yard Held goal with
1:49 remaining in the game. Griffin's
kick was accurate, but fell short by about
two yards and the Lake Brantley faithful
went wild,

N orm a W aqrier
161160

Jai-alai

But it wasn't over. With Just six
seconds left Lake Brantley was forced to
punt from its own end zone. A bad snap or
bad handling of the snap could have cost
the Patriots the game. Seminole sent all
11 players after the punt. The snap was a
good one, Stallings handled it well and
booted the ball into Seminole territory as
time ran out on the Tribe.

164

P h y llis AAatf

V.h ■

Concerted -5,pM$ 4 9 B a r (',.»*
K e lle y
4 S 7 V a r y E r r nr."

'■ H&lt;ql&gt;' S e fi.V A ll ( 4 H p lU r ic A l
At O rla n d o S e m ino tr
tn Sflm (ioiion us a th r w
F ricfjy n ig h t re s u lt!
44 1
Second qam e
? « t* E ch e v *
9 40 5 40 * 80
6 C*ar&lt;f» Farah
9 20 J 10
3 N ptju« O vtif'
3 30 ;QI2 4) )) 70. P (7 41 795 70, T &lt;1
4 31 331 40 DD (3 7) 133 SO
T h ird qam e
3 Gab ola G o -n
1640 S 60 4 60
j Negu Chena
10 *Q IQ SO
t fc
A g u irre
3 BO
Q l) 4) SJ 40 P (3 4) 177 30 T (3
4 I) 39S 40
F o u rth qam e
3 Garay G o m
9 80 t M
4 00
i t,equr Ovar i
9 00 S 00
U J n / a r Keyes
9 30
O i l )) 71 40 P |1-1&gt; 74 10. T (3
I I I 1)1 10
F itth qam e
.4 O w a la Ja v ie r 17 40 6 90 6 80
3 A jp ir i / a r r e
S 90 -3 00
.-2,M&gt;fcel Soriano ::
S 10
0 ( 1 4) 50 00 P ( 4 3) 134 40. T (4
3 ?! 14) 70
Sm th qam e
1 Lt’ id/ TocU ria
It 40 4 70, 4 00
4'Pda G qir •
; 4 QC 3 70
7 ft;ta Reyes
3 60
0 II 4) 45 10 P ( 1 41 151 10 T (I
4 71 341 00
Seventh qam e
- I M a no Jo
11 40 5 4C&gt; 3 70
J U ftfa r
. ■VB0 3 10
■ :■
'
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6 O.sita
S00
Q (I 7) )0 10 P I 1 7) 114 30 T (1,
Herald! Photo by Tom V m te n I ■ 7 *1 184 40
E ig h th gam e
C lif t o n C iu n jih e ll, S e m in o le ru n n in g h a c k , ih in r e s to a long g;»iri w ith
6 A/pir i Carea
9 60 S TO S 00
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L a k e U rn lit le y 's D o n n ie O 'lt r ia n ( lig h t ) in p u rs u it.
; i rr ia r * a rat)
4 20
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N in th qam e
M uiV Zutx
12 60 11 00 7 40
3,‘jrs u s E lor in
5 60 3 40
5 Ogirango k ‘d C a re a
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On the back nine, however. “ I got a
3 5) 476 40
little tired and missed three of the last
101h qame
five greens," said Haas, who was the last
I V end
9 60. S 60 3 60
i £ haroia
9 aO 4 40
golfer to tee off. "I was hoping that I
t, i t 2 80
could
have
picked
up
another
shot
on
the
Palm course and then picked up two
Q|1 3) 3t 10. P (J 1) 140 50. T (1
last
hole
for
a
birdie
but
it
didn’t
come
l 71 204 20
more birdies on the 13th and 17th holes
11th qam e
for a two-day total of 12-under-par 132. through."
:i*&lt; ,*no to Ja v ie r •1,1 4O. :i 40 440
i Ur iM t / r ir r e
3 00 160
Haas’ only bogey was on the par-4 15th
Howard Twitty, who hasn't won a
1 Garay Z u la ic a
J 80
hole.
O I) 4) 79 40. P &lt;4 1) 54 10 T (4
tournament in two years, is one shot
-behind Haas at 1kinder 133 P la y ing the-- ,___L V 16* ID__________ __
1Jth gam e
" I ’ m having fun out there," said Haas, 6,652-yard la k e Buena Vista course,
S A/p.f Zulciica
9 20 J 20 3 60
winner of the Hall of Fame Tournament
. D.uf arnjo K id I r a ia b a i 3 80 2 80
and Texas Open. "I got off to a great Twitty had seven birdies and one bogey
ftGorostola M e n d i
4 80
O 17 5) 23 40 . P ( 5 2) 70 50. T 15
start and it was a good day for scoring." for a second-round. 6-under 66.
# 2 41 44* 40
A
1 H I H an d le U ll.M V

■- O"

V&gt;rff-«oi*8*i 53.7 N t s r A . . . j r . - ' r

lb '

'

1 "

Fuel savings
start here.

“ They i I^ke Brantley's players) may
have gotten beat seven straight times but
they never got down on themselves,"
Tullis said. "We keep trying to improve
on every game and we take them one at a
tim e."

m

Sunday Oct ] : H 8 7 —ilA

Seminole outgained Iuike Brantley
with 333 total yards to 195 for the
Patriots. "We did a good job throwing
and rushing," Posey said. "The mistakes
just killed us.”
."If you’ve got something in you,”
Posey told his team after the game,
"Y o u ’ll rise to the occasior again."
Seminole plays at Lyman next Friday
while la k e Brantley entertains lake
M ary at lake Brantley.

Haas Has Fun, Shoots 66 For Disney Lead
I-AKE BUENA VISTA (U P I)-Ja y
Haas, who has won two back-to-back
tournaments on the P G A Tour this fall,
says he's having fun playing golf these
days.

P ro G o lf

The 28-year-old golfer fired a (kinderpar 66 Friday to take a one-stroke lead
into Saturday's third-round of the
HOO.OOOWalt Disney World GoU Classic,
the final stop on the 1252 tour. Haas, who entered the second-round in
a three-way tie for the lead, birdied five
holes on the front side of the 6,917-yard

Gover Takes Batting Lead With .605

r.

Sanford Men'iSuflbull
Standing*

w

L GB
13 0
12 2 ih
11 3 2
6 6 6ls
3 7 84
4 9 9
4 9 9
2 12 IDs
2 12 IDs
*I
*

Team
Cook’s Corner
Cardinal Industries
The Bam
Pookie Bears
S&amp;H Fabricating
Session Time
Mobillte
Express
Jaycees

r

1

Monday’* game*:
The Bam vs. Pookie Bears
Cook’s Comer vs. Cardinal Industries
S&amp;H Fabricating vs. Express
- 'J-

H
■

AB
38
42
51
50
36
48

Tom Szabo, The Barn
Wayne Crocker, Pookie Bears
Zeke Washington, Cook's
David Lively, The Bum
Brian Hanrahan, Session Time
Bobbie Hanrahan, Session Time
Jay Payne, Jaycees
Julius Griffin, Mobilite
B illy Griffith, Cardinal
John Westbrook, Cardinal
Sam Haines, Cook's
Mike Throne, The Burn
Fred Aiken, Pookie Bears
Thaad Brooks, Mobilite
Ned flames, Cook’s
B lair Kitner, Jaycees

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28 .549
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Huns Butted In
1. Keith Gover. The Bam
2. Eddie Jackson, Cook's
B illy Griffity, Cardinal
3. Zeke Washington, Cook's
4. Levi Haines, Cook's
5. Robbie Hanrahan, Session Time
6. Handy Brown, Cardinal
7. Slim Washington, Cook's
Mike Throne, Hie Bam

T IR E &amp;
M U FFLER

L iN lim . O u o r a n lM ln»tolto*(*n J 00

44

Home Buns
1. Bandy Brown, Cardinal
B illy Griffith, Cardinal
2. Keith Gover, The Bam
Zeke Washington, Cook's
3. 4 ties with 2 homers

Wednesday'* games:
Express vs. Pookie Bears
S&amp;H Fabricating vs. Mobilite
Session Time vs. Jaycees
Ratting (30 or more at bats)
1. Keith Gover, The Bam
2. Kip Grant, Cardinal
3. Temell Ervin, Cook’s
4. Levi Raines, Cook's
5. Larry Cross, E ip re ss
6. Eddie Jackson, Cook's

13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.

Tuesday's games:
Jaycees vs. Cook’s Comer
S&amp;H Fabricating vs. Session Time
Mobilite vs. Express

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a.
9.
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11.
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�13A— Evening Herald, Santord, FI.

Sunday, Oct. Jl, 1981

Office To Expand

Seminole Legal Aid
Gets $5,700 Grant
By J A N E CA SSELBERR Y
Herald Staff Writer
The Seminole County Bar Association's
Legal Aid Society, Inc., has received a $5,700
grant from the Florida Bar Association and Ls
expanding its office in Regency Square in
Casselberry.
Earlier this year the Florida Bar put into
action the Interest on Trust Accounts Program
(IOTA) so the B ar could meet the challenge of
providing legal services to the indigent now
that the federal government has cut funding in
such services.
The Seminole County Legal Aid Society,
under the leadership of Bill Stem, applied for
some of the IOTA funds to expand its program.
The grant, combined with the funds received
from the county for filing fees, will allow the
society to hire a Legal Aid staff attorney and a
secretary, according to Un Neuhart,
executive director for Legal Aid. She said the
society now receives $5 for every c iv il case
filed Instead of the $2 per case formerly
received from the county.
The Legal Aid Society ls now looking for an
attorney to fill the position and will be ac­
cepting resumes until Nov. 12, Ms. Neuhart
said.
“ We hope to have an attorney on staff by the

first of the year," she added.
t,cgal Aid needs furniture, books and office
equipment for the new office to open Dec. 1.
Persons wishing to donate an item o r In­
terested in applying for the attorney job may
contact Stem or Ms. Neuhart. Donations are
tax deductible.
The legal Aid Society does not handle
criminal cases, only civil cases. "We basically
work on an urgency basis for financially in­
digent persons being sued in such cases as
eviction or divorce," said Ms. Neuhart.
“ If we can’t handle their problem, we try to
direct them to the appropriate agency," she
said "For instance, If they have a consumer
problem we refer them to the Consumer
Protection Agency where they don't need an
attorney to file a complaint or if someone has
ripped them off we explain how they can sue in
the Small H alm s Court without a lawyer."
Basically, financial eligibility for aid Is
determined by Income, assets, the number of
persons tn the fam ily and any unusual ex­
penses, she said.
"We also have a lawyer referral service in
our office," said Ms. Neuhart ‘If they don't
qualify for legal aid, we can get them a halfhour appointment with a lawyer."

... P olice S eek Safe T re a t
ARF I . . . E R , THAN KS
Sf»t. Sam Helfiorc of the* Lake Mary Police Department accepts a check for
$130 from Andrea Wise, president of the Lake Mary Extension Homemakers
L'llib, for use in the city's new canine cop corps. Magnum, a itiiie-moniii-oid
German shepherd and the latest addition to the city's force, scents pleased.

Ex-Commissioner B.C. Dodd Dies
Basil Corbett “ B.C." Dodd.
75, a former Seminole County
commissioner, dairy fanner
and unofficial historian of
Uithlow, died Thursday at
Orlando General Hospital.
Dodd, of Dodd Road in
Goldenrod, was born in
Jumping Branch, W. Va., on
Feb. 2,1907, and moved with
his lamlty from Organ Cave,
W. Va., to Central Florida in
1910.

Dodd was a dairy fanner
and a Seminole County
commissioner from 1946 to
1958, a member and past
president of the Half-Century
Club of Winter Park and the
Old-Timers Club ol Orlando
und the F irst Baptist Church
of Oviedo.
Survivors include his wife,
M ary Edna; (our daughters,
Mrs. M ary Scott, of Maitland,
M rs. V irg in ia Sutton, of

Windermere, Mrs. Bessie
Hones, of Orlando, and Mrs.
Stella I,ake, of Norfolk, Va.;
one son, Basil C. II, of
Goldenrod; one brother, John,
of Caldwell, W .Va.; one
sister, Mrs. Dale Slonlger of
Goldenrod; 12 grandchildren
and 11 great-grandchildren.
Baldwln-Falrchlld Funeral
Home, Goldenrod, ls in
charge of arrangements.

Continued From Page 1A
children trick-or-treat Sunday or to be
cautious in what they let them eat after razor
blades, nails and pins were found in food in
several cities.
Dr. Morris Herman, professor emeritus of
psychiatry at the New York University
Medical Center, characterized those who
tamper with candy as "the pranksters who
don't think of consequences, those who are
misanthropic and bitter, those who have a
grudge agihsrsociety a M u s e mis KTVlintll&amp;letheir spleen, or those looking for a vicarious
thrill."
His associate, Dr. Robert London, said, "A
certain part of this may not be mental illness,
but just plain ordinary meanness."
Police in Springfield, Ore., are warning
parents that a bottle of a euthanasia solution
stolen from a veterinary clinic hospital last
weekend could be Injected into Halloween
candy.
"It's liquid and can be injected into anything
— an apple, an orange, a candy bar," Police
Id. Roy Bcrgstron said. "We just want to make
sure that the parents check every item that
their kids get."
New York City police said they had received

Survivors include his wife,
Agnes; two daughters, Mrs.
Jolyn Russell Cox, of Hun­
tington, N.Y., and M rs.
Barbara J. Redmond, of
Redding, Conn.; one son, S.
Frank, of Rcston, Va.; one
half-sister, Jean Hidgon, of
Baltim ore, eight grand*
children and one great­
grandchild.
Baldwin-Falrchild Funeral
Home, Altamonte Springs, is
in charge of arrangements.
VINCENTF. R EY N O LD S
Vincent F. Reynolds, 75, of
919 E. Second St., in Sanford,
died Friday at C e n tra l
Florida Regional Hospital.
Bom July 15, 1907, In Nor­
walk, Conn., he came to
Sanford In 1981 from Deltona.
He was a member of the
American legion in Norwalk
and Circus Fans of America.
Survivors include two
brothers, John W. Reynolds,
of DeBary, and Edward C.
Reynolds, of Jackson Heights,
N Y .;, several nieces and
nephews.
Brisson Funeral Home P.A.
is In charge of arrangements.

★

★

★

★

★

★

★

★

★

★

★

★

★

★

★

★

★

★

★

★

★

Among the discoveries of tainted Halloween
candy made F rid a y were needles in miniature
Butterfinger bars in Beachwood, N.J.; pins in
Snickers bars and a Nestle’s Crunch in East
Brunswick, N.J.- and a double-edged razor
blade in an oatmeel cookie brought home by a
child from a Halloween party at a” PhDar
delphia school.
The Beachwood incident caused city of­
ficials there to ban trick-or-treating and the
nearby towns of Manchester, Iakehurst and
South Toms River followed suit.
Fitchburg, Mass., was one of the first towns
In the nation to cancel candy collecting after
seven people were killed by cyanide-laced
Extra-Strength Tylenol capsules in the
Chicago area.
To ensure the children of Fitchburg have a
happy Halloween, Kusan Toys of Nashville is
sending them 1,200 toys to given away Sunday
at a citywide party.

BILL McCOLLl’M

...M cC o llu m A nd
Batchelor In Race
For House Seat
Continued From Page 1A
Memorial on the steps of the administration budding at Evans
High School on Silver Star Road, where he had gone to school.
Batchelor graduated from Evans in 1966 and immediately
joined the U.S. Marine Corps, volunteering for duty in Viet­
nam. Batchelor was bom in Fort Bragg, N.C., and moved to
the Orlando area with his family when he was 10 years old.
McCollum served in the Navy as an officer in the judge
advocate general's office. He currently holds the rank of
commander in the U.S. Navy Reserve.
McCollum is m arried and be and his wile, Ingrid, have three
sons, Douglas, Andrew and Justin. Batchelor is single.
McCollum received his bachelor's degree and law degree
from the University of Florida. Batchelor received his
associate's degree from Valencia Community College after his
discharge from the Marine Corps. He received his bachelor’s
degree from the University of Central Florida.
McCollum during his first term is ranking GO P member on
the House Judiciary Committee's subcommittee on criminal
justice. He also serves on the subcommittee on inunigratlon
and on the U.S. Congressional Committee on banking, finance
and urban affairs and its subcommittees on domestic
monetary policy and financial institution. He was elected vice
president of the Republican freshman class
During Batchelor’s eight years in the legislature, he has
served as chairman of the committees on energy, joint
legislative auditing, health care cost containment oversight,
health and rehabilitative services, aging, regulatory reform
and legal profession review.
McCollum has been endorsed in his capaign for re-election
by President Reagan and Vice President Bush w hile Batchelor
has received the endorsements of Gov. Bob Graham and
former Gov, Reubin Askew.
Both men have received numerous other endorsements.

The life ipan of the average
cat it eleven year*.

AREA DEATHS
HARO LD D O KER
she lived in Orlando all her
Harold Doker, 65, of life. She was a member of St.
Villlston and formerly of M arg a ret M ary's Catholic
lanford, died Friday at the Church. Winter Park.
/eterans
A dm inistration
S u rviv o rs include her
lospital in Gainesville after parents Jin-Young and IJen
in illness of several years, Thai Whang of Maitland and
lorn in Hartwell, Ga., on May one sister, Jennifer, and two
), 1917, he moved to Williston brothers, Jimmy and Johnny
n 1976 from Sanford and the of Maitland.
lampa area where he was
Cox-Parker Funeral Home,
employed as an electrician, Winter Park, is in charge of
working out of the Inter­ arrangements.
national Brotherhood of Elec­
FRANK
trical Workers Union li&gt;cal S A N F O R D
RUSSELL
108 for more than 20 years. He
Sanford Frank Russell, 76,
was a veteran of World War
Cranes Way, Altam onte
II.
Survivors Include his wife, Springs, died Thursday at
P a rk
M em orial
Margaret; one sister, Alecne W inter
Hoover, of New Smyrna Hospital. Born Feb. 13, 1906,
Beach; one step-daughter, «in DuBois, Pa., he moved to
Betty Fender, of Williston; Altam onte Springs from
and four step-grandchildren. Clearfield, Pa., In 1968. He
Knauff F u n e ra l Home, was a retired field accountant
Williston is in charge of for the Commonwealth of
Pennsylvania
and
a
arrangements.
P resbyterian. He was a
J U L IE ANN HWANG
Julie Ann Hwang, 2, of 454 member of the American
Forest Wood
Lane In Association of Retired P er­
Maitland, died Thursday at sons, Am erican Legion,
Flo rid a Hospital-Orlando. Clearfield, and The Elks Club,
Bom Feb. 3,1980, in Orlando, Clearfield.

11 reports of “ pins and other other sharp ob­
jects" found in candy and cake and other
suspected tampering of candy and fruit has
turned up in New York, New Jersey, New
Hampshire, Ohio, Iowa, Texas and Florida.

DICK BACHELOR

Funeral Notice
REYNOLD*, VIN C EN T F.
F uneral iervlcei lor Vincent F
Reynold*, ti. ol 919 E Second Si
m Sanlord. who died Friday al
Central
F lo rid a
Regional
hospital, will be held al J p m
Sunday al B rl**on Funeral
Home with the Rev William
Ennl* o llk la tln g
Brijson
Funeral Home P A I* in charge
ol arrangement*.

Hunt Monument Co.
Display Y a rd
Hwy. 17-fl — Fern F ir *
P h .n M tu

Gene Hunt, Owner
Bronze, Marble 4 Oranlte.

MY ANTI-HOMEOWNER OPPONENT HAS NOW COLLECTED OVER
$11,000.00 FROM DEVELOPERS AND BUILDERS. HIS ANTI-HOMEOWNERS ATTITUDE IS EVIDENT BY HIS ACTIONS IN FAVOR OF
DEVELOPERS AND BUILDERS.

ON ANOTHER IMPORTANT ISSUE MY OPPONENT HAS MADE IT
KNOWN PUBLICLY THAT HE HAS NO INTEREST IN SUPPORTING
SERVICES FOR YOUTH (CHILDREN) SINCE HIS CHILDREN ARE
GROWN. FOLKS, THIS IS THE KIND OF SPECIAL INTEREST GROUPS
BOB FRENCH WILL SUPPORT.

IF THE RESIDENTS OF SEMINOLE COUNTY WANT SOMEONE TO
REPRESENT THEM FOR A CHANGE -

VOTE FOR
United Wby
★

★

★

★

★

BOB

NOTICE TO ALL VETERANS
Who Have Honorably Served Ihehr Country In Tone of War or Peace

Because of the lack of burial space and the
distance of the National Cemetery In Florida, we
are assigning grave spaces In Veterans Garden
ol Valor, Oak lawn Mamoriat Park. As an
honorably discharged veteran of the Unltqd
Stales Armed Forces, you may be qualified tor
Free Burial Space. However, you must register
for this. You must be able to show proof ot
Honorable Discharge. There are a limited
number of Veterans spaces available. Cer­
tificates for spaces wilt be Issued on a first come
first served basis. To assure reservation, mall
the coupon below to;

?/. i

-f-—

— -—

DEMOCRAT,
DISTRICT 2,

-5 O A K L A W N M E M O R I A L P A R K -------------------

Rl. 4 Box 244, Sanford, FI 11771
(M S) 121-4141
P le a s e Send My V e te ra n of S e rvice E lig ib ilit y C e rtifica te .

NAME
ADDRESS
Branch of Service

No. In Family,.

Service Serial No..

Telephone No.-

SE M IN O L E C O U N T Y C O M M ISSIO N
PAID P O LIT IC A L A D V ER T ISEM EN T

�*)

PEO PLE
n f r m iu, a a n ro ra ,

C areer A fte r 40
Peacock: 'It's Good For A Woman To Be Out In The World1

Htraid Photo by Tom Vincent

Samantha Hakrr, left, ami Doug Gatrell pass a
hall to hnihl foumlational skills in inotur
movement class.

UCF Offers
M otor
Movem ent
Program
ByD EEG AT KELL
Herald Correspondent
“ It’s very important for a child to move like other kids-to
run, Jump, kick, throw. These things are probably more im­
portant than academic learning to the child as far as
relationships to peers go," says Dr. John W. Powell, Director
of the Motor Movement Program at UCF.
If your child Is between the ages of 4 and 12, he could possibly
be eligible for this program.
What is a motor movement program?
■‘First of all we're a motor program, we're not an academic
program," says Dr. Powell.
The goal of the program is to teach children to move more
effectively and more efficiently. Many children cannot keep up
with their peers when playing sports. Joey may find he can't
seem to catch a ball when playing baseball, can’t seem to kick
a soccer ball in P.E., and in general is Just downright un­
coordinated, Dr. Powell says. He finally gets discouraged and
wants to sit glued to the boob tube. At least there his peers
aren't making fun of him, he adds.

By LINDA HOLT
Special To The Herald
“ If anything happens, I can survive. I can make it on
my own," says Ann Peacock, order entry specialist in the
contracts department of Stromberg-Carlson, I^ake Mary.
Ann feels confident about her career now. She processes
orders for DBX contracts, earning a salary better than
an executive secretary's^
Her Job includes frequent customer contact which she
enjoys. "1 love to be with people-I’m a people-person,"
she adds.
Ann remembers a time when she couldn't talk to people
in the business world. Her conversations were limited to
topics of housework, childcare and grocery prices. For 16
years, she concentrated on being wife, mother and
homemaker only. She still firm ly believes mothers should
be at home until their children are of school age at least.
Ann took four years of typing and bookkeeping In high
school in New Jersey, preparing for the Job market upon
her graduation in 1947. “ I have always been very In­
dependent and adventurous and knew I’d want to work
outside the home."
Her first Job with Montgomery Ward was a secretarial
position and a little modeling besides. She recalls her first
salary as $65 per week.
After three years with Montgomery Ward, she entered
civil service with the U.S. Navy again performing office
duties.
On a trip to Florida in the 1950s her family made the
decision to move to Sanford near friends because of her
father's health problems. A few months later, she met and
married her husband, Don, now an associate manager for
Southern Bell Telephone and Telegraph Co.
Ann and Don moved to North Florida, and she continued
to work for four years until their first child was bom.
Ann's husband wanted her to be at home with the
children. She enjoyed the time at home when their three
cnimren were small. sneTiKentw pm nrease and- found"
satisfaction in doing her own painting, wallpapering and
yard work.
The years passed quickly arid she realized that she was
bored. Donald Jr. was in school and he was the youngest
child at 74. “ My house was Immaculate. There was only
so much housework to do.”
Job-hunting on the first day, Ann was hired as the
secretary to the director of nurses at Seminole Memorial
Hospital.
In the work field again, she arrived home at the end of
the first day, ready to quit. With a headache, a backache
and thoroughly frustrated, she announced to her family,
"I quit! The Job's too much for me." She had never used
an electric typewriter and she didn’t know proper
telephone etiquette. The family refused to accept her
defeatist attitude and reminded her that she had never
been a quitter.
Ann was back on the job the next day and by the end of
the week, she was comfortable with her duties. She was
43.
Six years later, Ann found herself in the hospital nur­
sery more and more often. She liked the nursery because
it cheered her when she found her Job depressing. She was
saddened by the elderly people that she saw daily and
their hopelessness. When her boss retired Ann decided to
quit the job.
She wanted some time of her own so she signed on as a
Kelly girl with the Norrell Agency. She could work when
she felt like it.

From Kellly Girl to order
entry specialist at
Stromberg-Carlson, Lake Mary,
a once-shy Ann Peacock,
right, says, There Isn't
anything I can'l do. I'll
tackle anything now.'

H r r t ld Photo by D o rh D ie tric h

A temporary position of one week at Stromberg-Carlson
In Lake M ary stretched to months nnd eventually became
a permanent position.

On the job for three years now, she saves most of her
money for vacations. She has made numerous cruises
and has traveled to Europe twice. A third trip to Europe is
planned for next year.
Ann sees her retirement five or six years down the road
when her husband retires also. Their plans arc to travel
even more, but mostly In the U.S. They will always live In

A very attractive and efficient Ann Peacock is hard to
imagine any other way. She says with assurance, "There
isn't anything I can’t do. I'll tackle anything now."

Open House Honors Katherine Ward On 80th Birthday

Her Calling Is Ministering Music
By DORIS DIETRICH
P E O P L E Editor
Reaching 80 is a significant milestone for Katherine
Elizabeth Ward of Sanford.
But vivacious Katherine doesn't look 80, nor does she feel it.
In celebration of her 80th birthday on Oct. 25, Katherine was
the guest of honor at open house Sunday at her Mellonville
Avenue home.

Hostesses Barbara Bair, Martha Boone and Imogene
Yarborough arranged a lovely afternoon for about 95 guests
who called during the appointed hours.
Punch, coffee, a huge birthday cake and party tidbits were
served from a beautifully appointed table. During the af­
ternoon festivity, Katherine played the piano and organ and
several Joined In singing.

Adding to the celebration was the arrival of Katherine's son,

Frederick, who lives near Cincinnati!, Ohio. He spent the
weekend with his mother In Sanford. His three children are:
Mark, Paul and Tamy who were unable to attend their grand­
mother's birthday celebration.
Monday night, Katherine was honored again at the Geneva
Methodist Church. The occasion was the annual church
meeting when a new barbecue grill was dedicated. Barbecued
pig was served to about 125 church members and friends.
There was another cake and another "Happy Birthday"
celebration.
Mrs. Ward was truly a queen on her day.
Katherine Elizabeth Post, a descendant of the Post Cereal
family was bom on Oct. 25,1902, at St. Johns, Mich., about 20
miles north of Lansing.
•

"Who cares about dumb old baseball anyhow," he says. Yet
at times you catch him watching the other children playing
sports and note a look of melancholy across his face.

Music was her field after she graduated from high school.
She married law rence Ward on Jan. 30, 1925.

"There are certain foundational skills which reed to be
developed at an early age which can be compared to building
blocks in a building," says Dr. Powell.

"We were In the ministry for 42 years," Mrs. Ward says,
"serving In the Grand Rapids area and Florida after
retirement. Along with serving churches, my husband was
treasurer of the Michigan Methodist Conference and had this
work for 36 years. He was a treasurer of a conference longer
anyone in the history of Methodism."

Dr. Powell says if a child doesn't get these skills, he can have
all kinds of problems later on. If they don't build these
datlonal skills, It's hard to build anything else onto the
datlonal skills at a later date, he says.

Before being accepted into the program a child will be tested
to make sure he needs to be in it. If he is accepted, the fee is $75
per college term which includes all pre-testing and post
testing. The class meets on Monday, from 5:30-6:30 p.m. There
Is only enough room for as many children as there
graduate and volunteer tutors to assist in the program.
Therefore there is a waiting list to get into the program.
"Our basic goal is to try to identify children who are having
trouble coming through these developmental skills and to try
to catch them up," says Dr. Powell.
If a child is having a balancing problem he may have a
problem doing anything physical all his life because almost
anything a person does takes balance.
Another example Is a child who has a problem in direc­
tionality. This problem can carry over academically. It seems
to be an attribute of poor readers, especially dyslexia children.
If a child can leam movements he can then learn to feel
better about himself and this will have some effect
academically, socially and psychologically.
"If they feel better about themselves, they'll do better
everything they do," says Dr. Powell.
Dr. Powell says the motor movement program is a fun
orientated program and the kids love It.
“It's disguised learning through fun and games. We want
these children to experience success and we work very hard to
see that they do experience success,” says Dr. Powell.
At the present tim e there are 17 children enrolled in the
program. If you are interested in learning m ore about the
program, you can call Dr. Powell at UCF.

Sanford as It is home.
Ann knows women can handle a Job and manage a
household since she’s still doing all of her housework,
some of the yardwork and still finds time to golf. "It's
good for women to get out In the world—they're better to
themselves, take more pride In their appearance
generally and feel more confident. At least, that's my
experience."

During the time the Rev. Ward was in the ministry, Mrs.
Ward served wherever she was needed—from secretarial
duties to playing the piano and organ and organizing church
choirs, orchestras and community cholra.
The Rev, Ward was an accomplished pianist at age 12 and
Mrs. Ward said, "One of our greatest Joya in life was playing
our piano and organ together in the evening. Now I play the
piano and organ at the same time."
The Wards retired in June 1965 and moved to Sanford the
next week where they were to discover that they had been
appointed to serve the Geneva Methodist Church.
"The first Sunday there, we began calling on every home in
the area at once," Mrs. Ward said. "We organized a youth
fellowship and a youth choir. After Just three years, Mr. Ward
had massive cancer surgery but continued to serve the church
until nearly the time he passed away on April 14, 1970."
Alter the death of her husband, M n. Ward continued to
attend and serve the Geneva Methodist Church. She played the
organ and directed the choir for another 15 years.
Mrs. Ward said she and her late husband had 20 hobbies and
gave more than 700 lectures on hobbies to various groups in­
cluding youths. One of Mrs. Wards hobbies is buttons.

Katherine Ward plays the organ and piano simultaneously.

"But our greatest hobby,” she says, "was the collecting of
butterflies and moths from all over the world. I still give talk*
on that subject."

AV *

�3ft—Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Sunday, Oct. It, 198J

In And Around Lake Mary

Club Reaches
Out To Serve
In Community

PEO PLE
IN BRIEF
D r a w i n g For Tree Set A t

L
The I-akc Mary Extension
Homemakers have a busy
schedule in November. On
Nov. 9, they will hold their
regular meeting at the Ag
center from 9-11 a.m. (note
time change).
Several members will be
going to the Sanford City Hall
to help with the entering and
tagging of arts and crafts for
the Goldert Age Games which
w ill be held in Sanford
beginning Nov. 9-12.

H o m e m a k e r s Showcase
The Seminole County Extension Homemakers will
hold their annual Holiday Showcase Thursday from 10
a.m. until 2 p.m. at the Sanford Civic Center. With the
theme, “ Old Fashioned Christmas,” members will be
raffling off a 6 4 foot artificial Christmas Tree with
over 200 homemade ornaments during the Holiday
Showcase.
The 50 cents admission donation, open to the public,
includes coffee and cookies with 40 homemade doorprized to be given away. The Extension clubs in
Seminole County will be selling homemade Christmas
items at reasonable rates. All proceeds from this event
will go back into the community. In the past,
Homemakers have bought a demonstration table with
mirror and a flagpole both for the Agricultural Center,
They have also used the proceeds to help sponsor
educational programs free to the public, and have
given money in the past to Kradlc Kare, Good
Samaritan Home, Golden Age Games, Humane
Society, Central Florida Zoo,4-H clubs and many other
worthwhile programs.

Other members will be
going to the Good Samaritan
Home In Sanford to serve
refreshments and to play
Bingo with the residents
there. Each resident w ill
receive a homemade favor to
keep.

Green To Teach G y m nastics
The Seminole YM CA will begin a new gymnastics
program at Rock l^ake Middle School starting Monday.
This will be held in the late afternoons Monday through
Thursday depending on the age group. Gasses will be
held Monday through Thursday for 3 and 4 year olds, 5
and 6 year olds, beginners age 7 and up and for ad­
vanced students.
Instructor will be Tennis Green gymnastics in­
structor and n physical education instructor at Rock
Lake Middle School.
For Information on times and registration, call the
Seminole Y M C A at 862-0444.

SCC P a ren t-C h ild C o - O p
The Fall-Winter session of the Seminole Community
College Parent-Child Co-Op program will begin Nov. 1,
at Christ Episcopal Church in Longwood. This
parenting education program, entitled Development of
the Pre-school Child, Is designed to instruct the parents
in arpas such as discipline, sibling rivalry, creative
activities and readiness skills. The parent actually
participates in his-her child's laboratory school located
at the church. The laboratory school operates from
8:30 a m. to 12:30 p.m. Monday through Friday for
seven weeks. Cost of the course Is $30 plus a small
materials fee.
For Information, call Edie Herota at 830-1115, or
Suzanne Tesinsky at 323-1450, Ext. 227.

Area Students At Penn State
Joanne I- Diamond and Lisa J. Shelton, both of
longwood, are among the 10,730 freshman enrolled at
Pennsylvania State University, University Park, Pa.,
for the (all semester.
National Lunch Room Week was observed at Mid­
way Elementary School this month. Guests of prin­
cipal Hampton were Sadie Hunter, Ken Brown, Royce
Graham, Walter Meriwether of the Seminole County
School Board, and retired custodian of Midway
Elementary Samuel Thompson. Mrs. Annie Murray is
manager of the lunch room - M ARVA HAWKINS

New SCC Leisure
Time Classes Start
According to F a y Brake, coordinator of the leisure Time
Program at Seminole Community College, new classes will be
starting the week of Nov. 1.

Mrs. Brake says, “These classes are self-supported by
student fees at no expense to the taxpayer."
Gasses beginning next week are:

PHOTO-CAMERA &amp; IMAGE (evening class) - A basic
study of photography. Camera and Image teaches exposure,
composition, lighting, camera types and equipment. The
course provides help for new photographers and answers
questions that m ay have come up for the veteran
photographer. Camera and Images teaches you to control your
camera effectively.
BEGINNING BALLROOM DANCING (evening class) Instruction in social level dancing. Foxtrot, Waltz, Rumba,
Cha-Cha, aqd choices of the class will be taught.
INTERMEDIATE BALLROOM DANCING (evening class)
— Instruction in social level dancing. More extensive work In
Foxtrot, Waltz, Rumba, Cha-Cha, Swing, and if desired by
class, Tango.
SLIM'N TRIM (morning, afternoon and evening classes) —
An exercise program Involving all types of exercise such as
calisthenics, slow stretches, bane exercises and others. It la
designed to Increase flexibility, endurance, energy, to become
aware of proper diet, to lose Inches and improve posture.
AEROBIC UANCE-EXERCISE (morning and evening
classes) — A physical fitness course Involving vigorous
exercise to music. Different routines are taught with the
emphasis on dancing for movement and exercise.
JAZZ DANCE-EXERCISE (morning, afternoon and evening
classes) - A total form of dance and exercise in which you are
taught proper body alignment, coordination, discipline,
flexibility and rhythm. You accomplish muscle toning,
stamina, poise and confidence In yourself along with ap­
preciation for music and total enjoyment.
CONDITIONING (morning class) - Modem day con­
ditioning using the Nautilus equipment. Jogging and
calisthenics are also a part of the program.
DRAWING &amp; SKETCHING (evening class) - Emphasis on
fundamentals of charcoal sketching in preparation for pain­
ting and working In color. Students will work from still life,
landscapes, and live models. Students will furnish their own
supplies.
BEGINNING STAINED GLASS (evening class) - A
beginner's course in the copper foil technique of stained glass.
Students will be Instructed in the tools and methods necessary
to cut gi»M and fashion small objects. Minimum Investments
will be stressed. Students must furnish their own supplies.
ADVANCED WU SHU KUNG FU (evening class) - Before a
student joins this class, he-she mdst have taken beginning Wu
Shu Rung Fu. Advanced techniques will be taught.
BASIC DOG OBEDIENCE TRAINING (evening class) - A
basic class which will teach the dog owner to teach his animal
to heel, heel and sit, sit and stay, down and stay, recall, respect
for the word “NO," problem solving and other basic skills.
Dogs must be three months old or older and on a leash at all
times.
• •

Heroic! Photo by Oorn Dietrich

A lis o n W V s tm a rk . I. lo ft, and h e r s is te r .
.M ira n d a W e s tm a rk , li, d a u g h te rs of M r . an d
M r s . W a y n e W e s t m a r k o f S a n fo rd s a m p le a

s p e c ia l s u n d a e b e fo re S u n d a y 's o ld -fa s h io n e d
ice c r e a m s o c ia l, N ov. 7.

SISTER Sundae-Fundae In The Park
SISTEU’s Fourth Ann uni “ Sundae In the Hark" will be a
real "Funtlae” . Centennial Park at Fourth Street and
Park Avenue in Sanford will be the place of entertainment
and "make your own sundaes” of vanilla Ice cream and
sauces of strawberry, chocolate, pineapple, one surprise
topping, whipped cream and nuts—all (or the uninflated
price of $2.00 each.
lemonade will be available and serving time will be
from 1 to 6 p.m. on Nov. 7.

Music will be provided by Ed Holden at the organ and a
German Band. In addition there w ill be a puppet show,
doggers and downs. A new feat-ire this year will be the
display of classic cars for enthusiastic car buffs.
Bring your own lawn chairsjirJalankeLs aruLplan lo
spend an afternoon of old-fashioned fun on that day with
SISTER (Sanford's Interested Sarahs To Encourage
Rejuvenation) whose current project Is the beautification
of Sanford's outstanding lakefront park.

Daughter s Problem Best
Treated A s Family Matter
D E A R ABBY: My problem is my
daughter. She is 15 and pregnant. How do
I cope with this, Abby? 1 haven't told my
husband yet for fear of his reaction. This
cannot be hidden from him much longer.
I have read and heard about sim ilar
cases, but never dreamed this could
happen to my daughter. She is con­
sidering abortion.
There are so many questions. I am
terribly confused. I want to be able to
give her the proper advice, but I honestly
don’t know how to udvl.se or help her. Are
there any agencies that could give me
some helpful information?
IAST ON IjONG ISlJtND
D E A R LOST: If your church has a
service organization that offers family
counseling, get In touch with it. If you ore
not affiliated with a church, call one of
the many social sendee agencies in your
community.
Y ou r local Planned Parenthood
chapter offers excellent professional
counseling. (Contrary to what maay
believe, It docs NOT talk people taio
abortions; It helps them make wise and
appropriate decisions.) There is also
"B irth rig h t” listed in your phone book.
Please tell your husband at once. It’s
as much his responsibility as yours. It is
not the end o( the w orld Your first
consideration should be the health and

Dear
Abby
welfare of your daughter. Good luck and
God Bless you.
D EA R A B B Y : Nol long ago you ad­
vertised the fact that there is a d ub for
redheads called Redheads International.
Well, would be believe there is also a club
for baldheads? It's called "T h e
Baldheaded Men of America." It was
founded by John T. Capps III in 1973, and
claims 9,500 members In 50 states and 20
foreign countries.
The organization Just had its national
convention in Morehead, N.C. (The
slogan was: "Morehead — less hair,")
President Capps, who Is 42, said, “ Skin
Is -In." Members include former
President Gerald Ford, Telly Savalas,
Joe Garagiola, Phil Silvers and Utah’s
Sen. Jake Garn.
NOT BAIT) Y E T
D E A R NOT BALD: Thanks for the
scoop. My readers might be heartened to
learn that the Baldheaded Men of
America does not discriminate against
women. The organization welcomed as a

Let Us
Cat s

a re

u n a b le

to

t ast e

sw eet

fo o d s .

member a bnldheaded woman from
Danville, Va.t
D E A R A B B Y : You once printed
something In your column that explained
a situation that had been tormenting me
for years. It was the reason a man will
pick up some tram p and treat her like a
lady, then turn around and treat his wife
like a tramp. M y daughter Is now having
the same problem. W ill you please run it
again?
F A IT H F U L R E A D E R

Several members from the
Lake Mary’ Extension Gub
will be making new curtains
for the fire hall in I-ake Mary
where the congregate meals
will be served beginning No.
3. They will also help serve
and deliver and help make Ihe
table decorations each month.

Bonn/e
O lvera
1-ake Mary
Correspondent
321-5366

public. For information call
323-2500, extension 179 or
183.
------Seminole Parents of the
G if t e d
O r g a n iz a t io n
(POGO) will meet Nov. 4 at
7:30 p.m. at I jk e Mary’ High
School.
PO GO
is
an
organization for parents,
teachers and those interested
In raising p'^.ed children.
For fu rther Information,
contact l^urie Dickie at 3234143.
An amplifying system has
been Installed at city hall. The
new system w ill be ready for
the next city council meeting
A podium and microphone for
those in the audience have
also been installed.

A
Crim e
Awareness
City Councilman Ray Fox is
Program
w ill be held In Central Florida Regional
sponsored by the Lake Mary Hospital in the Intensive Care
Extension Homemakers and Unit Best wishes go out to
Home Economics of Florida Ray for a v e ry speedy
C o o p e ra tiv e
E x te n s io n recovery.
Service, at the Ag Center
auditorium. There will be two- — Slneere—sympathy- is ex­
meetings on Nov. 15, the first tended to Mr. and Mrs. E
from 1-2 p.m. and the second Carlson of Lake Mary
from 7-9 p.m.
Boulevard during the recent
loss of their daughter, I-inda.
The Lake M ary P olice
linda and her mother at­
Department and the Seminole
County Sheriffs Department tended city council meetings
w ill discuss the county where lin d a offered opening
program to prevent crimes invocation.
such as the Neighborhood
Linda's smiling face and the
Crime Watch Program.
Inspiration she gave to many
There will be a demon­
stration on proper Installation
of door and window locks, how
to identify property and self
defense.
The program Is free to the

will be missed In the city.
A reminder to all of the
motorists who wiU be driving
on Halloween night: Please
watch out for our children.

G ardeners Learn
History O f Ferns
Debra Norquist, the "plant lady” of Deltona, and her
assistant, Steven, were guest speakers at the general business
meeting of the Sanford Garden Club’s October meeting.

DEAR R E A D E R : Here it Is:
"A man picks up a tramp because he
wants a female companion who Is no
better than he is. In her company, he
doesn’t feel Inferior. He rewards her by
treating her like n lady.
"He treats his wife (who IS a Indy) like
a tramp because he feels that by
degrading her he will bring her down to
his level. This makes him feel guilty. So
in order to get even with his wile for
making him feel guilty, he keeps right on
punishing her."

Ms. Norquist is owner of Plant I.ady. Her services Include
spraying, feeding, watering and replacing plants in hotels,
motels and restaurants in this area.

C O N F ID E N T IA L
FOOL": Move.

The head and face should be covered to prevent dangerous
chemicals from touching the skin, thus entering the blood
stream , he said. He stressed the wearing of rubber boots,
gloves and a face mask. Fertilizers should not be used as there
with bare hands, he said. Powders should not be used as there
is danger of inhalation of the dust.
At the conclusion of the talks, a question and answer period
was held, after which members and guests were served a
covered dish luncheon.

TO

"L IV E -IN

Every teen-ager should know the truth
about drugs, sex and how to be happy.
For Abby'a booklet, send $2 and a long,
stamped (37 cents), addressed envelope
to: Abby, Teen Booklet, P.O. Box 38923,
Hollywood, Calif. 90038.

Her talk included a history of ferns. The so-called Boston
Fern is native to Florida. The plant was discovered by a
botanist from Boston who was tramping through the wild
Florida woodland.
Specimens of the fern were transported to Boston where they
were cultivated and marketed under the title, "Boston Fern."

Steven, who works with Ms. Norquist, spoke to the group on
insecticides, spraying and fertilizing. He urged members to
protect the entire body when spraying trees, plants and lawn.

Suit lieu!

Just in time for holiday decorating.

30 % O F F
Save up to 30% on styles of energy*
saving fabrics. Plus savings up to
20% on wide range of casem ent,
sheer and antique satin draperies,
woven woods and mini-blinds, too!

Stylet by Henry Lee
T rim ,
Collegetown,
K o - K o .. .e l l w ith
beoulilul coordinating
blouiet
Trim
A
tailored to take you
happily through the
teovon.

Special Coordinof
Corpett. Save, too.
our great Saxo
plush carpet idle J
in tim e for y&lt;
holiday entertain!

All Pleasantly Priced.

J.
CALL
1

322-3315
OR

3 22-7642
No charge or
obligation for our
Decorating Service
SALE ENDS
NOV. t, 1112

Drapery • Carpet • Wallcovering
The colorful store that comes to your door.’

Sanford

Philips Decorating Den

Ph. 322-3524
V

,
SHOWROOM

IN BUSINESS SINCE 1*51
31&gt; W. UTH ST.
SANFORD

�Evening Herald, Sanford. FI.

Sunday, Oct. 31,1981—3B

Engagement
Dr. Kenneth Wing,
from left, his wife,
Annette and Dr. Sara
Irrg an g
and
her
husband. Skip Irrgang.
form the receiving line
to welcome guests to
S em in ole
.Mutual
Concert Association’s
membership reception
at the Wing home in
►
. Mayfair.
•&gt;

Mebane-Pizzoferrato
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Noell Mebane Jr., 207 S. Crystal
Drive, Sanford, announce the engagement of their
daughter, Gaye Elizabeth, to Michael Anthony Pizzoferrato, son of Mrs. Constantino Pizzoferrato, 108 South
Coopers Place, Tampa, and the late Mr. Pizzoferrato.
Bom in Sanford, the bride-elect is the maternal grand­
daughter of the late Mr, and Mrs, Frederick Augustus
Dyson, Sanford, and the late Mr. and Mrs Frank Noell
Mebane Sr. of Orlando.
Miss Mebane is a 1979 graduate of Seminole High School
where she was named as the most valuable swimmer and
was a member of Anchor Hub. She attended Seminole
Community College and Florida Southern College,
lakeland. She is employed at Altamonte Ticket Agency,
Altamonte Springs.
Her fiance, born in Tampa, ts the maternal grandson of
the late Mr. and Mrs. D.R. McClamma, Clearwater, and
the paternal grandson of the late Mr. and Mrs. Nichol
Pizzoferrato, Elkins, W. Va.
Mr. Pizzoferrato is a 1976 graduate of Thomas Jefferson
High School, Tampa, where he was a member of Stage
Band. He is a drummer with Argus Band.
The wedding will be an event of Nov. 27, at 8 p m., at
Holy Cross Episcopal Church, Sanford.

In And Around Sanford

Gala Reception Launches Sanford Artist
In Festival
1982-83 Concert Season This Weekend

1-ast Saturday night was not exactly an
ideal time for a gala gathering as heavy
rains and high winds swept through the
community.
But the bad weather didn't keep over
100 Seminole Mutual Concert Association
supporters from attending a membership
reception at the fashionable home of Dr.
and Mrs. Kenneth (Annette) Wing.
The reception setting was an Immense
addition to the Wing home overlooking
the pool and patio — perfect for a party.
Membership chairman Ruth Gaines
signed in members while Boyd Coleman
and Ned Yancey presided at the name
tag table.
Martha McIntosh Invited the guests
into the refreshment area where a
snooker table was transformed into an
elegant, bountiful buffet of delightful
party fare prepared by the SMCA Board
of Directors.
Chairman Martha Yancey and cochairmen Rubye King and N ellie
Coleman poured the party punch with the
assistance of Carrie Green.
Also assisting w e re the hosts’ d a u g h te r
and h er husband, Susan and D a rre n
T illtng hast.

The first concert of the 1982-83 season,
violinist Robert Rudie as Signor
Paganini, is scheduled Nov. 18, at 8 p.m.,
at l-ake Mary' High School.
Ballet Guild of Sanford-Seminole us
celebrating its 15th season with “ Fall
Frolics" on Nov. 13, from 8 p.m. to
midnight, at the Sanford Civic Center.
The fun-event will feature party food,
the band Passenger, door prizes, a cash
bar and other surprises, according to
chairman Joe Monserrat.
Donation admission is $15 a couple and
attire Is casual.

Doris
'
Dietrich

„ --

visited their former Sanford neighbors,
Vi and Woody G a rk at Mountain Home.
The G arks are "just fine," according to
Bud.

/ Y*

Something was missing on the United
Way scene in Seminole this year. It was
, the presence of Margaret Ganas who was
the executive secretary for many years.
Hut Margaret is enjoying retirement,
"doing
nothing," she says.
The United Methodist Women of the
First United Methodist Church, Sanford,
Seminole Court No. 59 Order of the
will sponsor the Annual Bazaar and
Amaranth
will sponsor a Fashion Show
Luncheon Friday.
The bazaar will be held in McKinley on Nov. 15, at 8 p.m., at the Greater
Hall, from 8:30 a m. to 5 p.m. Featured Sanford Chamber of Commerce, 400 E.
will be a Gift Boutique, Trash and 1st Street.
•P EO P LE
E d ito r

“i

Treasures, Country Store, Christmas
table, terrariums and many other items.
Nancy Terwilleger, president of the
UMW, has named Jean Musgrove as
bazaar chairman and Lou Baker as
luncheon chairman.
A salad bar type luncheon will be
served in Fellowship Hall, 5th Street,
from noon to 1.30 p.m. Donation is $3,
adults, and $1.50 children under 12.

Fashions will be from RoJay in San­
ford. Donation is $3 and advance tickets
are available at RoJay. No tickets will
be sold at the door.
There w ill also be entertainment and
door prizes. Proceeds w ill benefit
crippled children.

Clarence L Boutwell is celebrating his
80th
birthday on Halloween. According to
P roceeds w ill go to th e U M W
hts daughter, I-oris, friends have been
missionary fund.
catling all week and Belle Rossman is
Iziura Lynn I—lyer has had a rough bringing in a birthday dinner. Mr.
Boutwell has been confined to a wheel
tune of it resulting from an injury' she
chair for more than six years.
received.
In celebration of the occasion, Mr.
But the Duke University senior shed Boutwell received a congratulatory card
her crutches and is all smiles now for from President and Mrs. Reagan.
more than one reason. Laura Lynn has
He also received a certification of
been accepted into the prestigious Phi appreciation from the Grand l-odge
Beta Kappa.
Independent Order of Odd Fellows State
I.aura Lynn’s parents Mr. and Mrs. of Massachusetts at West Boylston,
William (Bud and Lucy I-ayer) have Worcester County, for 58 years of service
returned from Durham where they to the lodge he Joined on Jan. 2, 1924.
shared the exciting news with her.
"He was very surprised and pleased,”
While in North Carolina, Lucy and Bud I-oris said.

The W.L. D unw oodys R enew V o w s
Forty years ago on Oct. 7, the Rev. C. Maxwell perfomied
the wedding ceremony of Willie Lee and Estella Elkia Dunwoody at the First Shiloh Missionary Baptist Church, Sanford.
To commomerate their 40th anniversary, the couple
renewed their vows on Oct. 16, at the same church, at 4 p.ni.,
with the Rev. H.E. White officiating.
A tribute to the Dunwoodys was made by their children and
grandchlldem. After the ceremony Emanuel Luster,
dedicated the song "Endless Love" to the couple.
Given In marriage by her nephew Irving Frazier, the bride
chose for her vows a beige floral print over taffeta gown. She
carried a fan arranged with red silk roses and streamers.
, Malverse Dunwoody served her mother as maid of honor.
Bobble Jean Maynard and Pamela Lowery’, daughters of the
bride, and Anderea Maynard, granddaughter, served as
bridesmaids. Flower girl was Shantavia Hunt and ring bearer
was Terry Johnson.
Serving his grandfather as best man was Stanley C. Hogan.
Groomsmen were Carlisle Maynard, Herbert Lowery, son-inlaw of the groom, and Wayne L. Pace, grandson of the groom.
Soloist was Glorida Williams.

( ;a

Pol

v k k i .i z

\ i u :t

i i m i :b

\.n

pai d to» Dy C a r 'p .i.q n

R
‘ e -Z ie c t...

k

Mon

Slate Senator
JO HN

a)VOGT
&lt;xJle a d c i

The Del-and Museum will host over sixty artists and craft­
smen at the annual fall Art Festival. This event, sponsored by
the Friends of the Del-and Museum, is free to the public and
will be open irom 10 a m. until 5 p in. both days on the grounds
of the IX'I-and Museum. The Musernn is located at 449 East
New York Avenue lalso Florida Rt. 446 in Del-and
Joan Z'mmerman,
paper and collages.
Besides the wide variety of creative art that will be
displayed, most w ill be for sale and eight artists will be
demonstrating the how-to of their creative media throughout
the two days.
Over 10 prizes will be awarded by the two Central-Florida
Artist-Judges. Gloria Rigling of Maitland, and Richard
Weinstein of New Smyrna Beach. D ie awards ceremony will
be held on the Museum steps on Saturday at 1 p.m. A painting
by local artist, Virginia Singer, will also be awarded to a lucky
visitor.
In addition to Art, the friends of the Del-and Museum will be
painting creative clown faces on anyone. Food will be
available on the grounds and free parking will be open to
visitors across the street in the Pantry Pride parking lot.

D e m o cra t

D is t r ic t 17

L T IM E

SPECIAL
SHAM PO O4 S E T

•5.00

a REDKEN

SOKJO Prescr'ptKjn

J E N N Y G IL L IL A N D

322-7684

jtaiuys of Hair
S T Y L I N G SALON
1911 French Ave.
Sanford

P A T R IC K
S chool

Marva
Hawkins

B o a rd

Lynda M ays - Chm.

322-51U

Pd. Pol. Adv. Ray Bersch - Treas.-

A reception followed In the lower level of the church.

Unusually Qualified To Uphold Our Laws
Editorially E ndorsed by both T O D A Y
an d The O rla n d o Sentinel
J.D. law d e g re e fro m U niversity of
Florida, 1965

F o rm e r President, B re v a rd County
Legal A id , Inc.
D ire cto r, South M e r ritt Island P roperty
O w n e r s Association (present)

C h a irm a n (1 9 7 9 -8 0 ) of 18th Judicial
Circuit Judicial N o m in a tin g C o m m itte e
F o rm er President, Brevard C o u n ty Bar
Association

Past P resident, B re v a rd A c h ie v e m e n t
C e n te r
H o n o ra b le D ischarge fro m United S tates
A rm y Reserves in 1 9 6 6

Jere Lober has been involved in a general trial practice for 16 years. He
lives in Merritt Island with his wife Sandra and children, Landy and Jere.

Elect

N o n -P a rtisa n

Circuit Judge

18th JU D ICIAL CIRCUIT
GROUP 3

Morjid Photo by Morva Hiwklnt

P*lll&gt;C*l»«&gt; P*-4Of b?

M R . AND M RS. W IL L IE L E E DUNW O O DY

trtttwtr M Rot),

III. CFA

�4B— Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Sunday, Off. 31,1983

Legal Notice

A MATTER OF RECORD
R E A L ES T A T E
George Chonkick, etc, Rep r.
Est Mergaret to R je ll Sanborn
Jr. &amp; wt Jacqueline J,,' Un 207
Bldg 200 Altamonte Village I.
139.500
Vergil L Anderson B wt Jack e
C to Bill Andrews B *1 Susie, Lot
20 B N 34' ol 31, Milton Park,
S32.900
Robert S Boyles 8. wf Lee to
Forrest I Greene. Lots 21 &amp; 22. B'k
30. Sanlando
The
Suburb
Beautiful, Sanford Sec , K LI B, Bik
29, Sanlando. The
Suburb
Beautiful, Sant Sec; *44,800
Crossbow Cond Corp to Susan
Carla Snow, sgl . Un 2t. Sierra
Cond , Ph, I, 170,000
Crossbow Cond Corp to Joseph
M Quinton B wf Perry A , Un 24.
Sierra Cond Ph I, *80,500
Crossbow Cond . Corp to Sharon
E Suther.sgl B Fred L Suther Jr
B wt Karen S , Un 14, Sierra Cond.
Ph' I, *22.500
U S Home Corp to Jose Fer
nandei &amp; wt Teresi'a. Lot 44.
Sutter s Mill Un One, M3.500
Mary j ; Haynes, wld to Malian
C A Chari 8, wt Sitadevr, Lots 12,
13 &amp; E 2 32' ol 14. BIK 44, Sanlando
The Suburb Beauhlul, *25.000
Charles Coakley, sgl A Carol,
sgl 1o Investment Specialists Inc ,
Lot 15, Goldie Manor. *43,000
James L
Leudenburg A wt
Hilda to Edward E, Merldlth A wt
Judy D , Lot 152. Lake Searcy
Shores. *43.000
James H Sleg Sr , wide, to
Cahterine A Buckles s g l, Lot 3,
Bik B, Pine View, less part,
*55,005
Robert F
Reynolds A wt
Margaret to Joseph j Gucciardo,
Lot 34, The Highlands. Sec 4,
*49.000
(QCDI Edwin L Prescott, Repr
Est Georgia Ziegler to Edwin
Leroy Prescott, Lois 2 io, 22 32,
Bik C. Midway Heights. 1100
Maronda Homes, Inc. to Craig
V Van Hooven A wt Cerese S , Lot
II, Bik O, Foxmoor Un. 3, (40,900
Ft Homes Constr Io Donald G
Hall A wl Barbara. Lol 24. Replat
ot Wyndham Woods, Ph One,
*24,400
Equity Realty Inc to J R
McCullough A w l Peggy. Un 200 B
Destiny Springs, *29,900
Thomas V. Stephens A w1 Vivian
to Joseph A Boss Ettl A wt Bar
bara Bossetll, Lot 31, Weklva
iHtlla, Set - 51*7 SJi.KO
| John W Robbins B wf Dorothy lo
Kenneth G MacDonald A wf Ooris
A , Lot 35. BIK C, English E sts .
Un, 3. *94,500
HSR Prop to Raymond I
Chlmenlo, Lot 4, The ASoorlngs,
*30,500
Joyce L o llin to Allan M
Michael*, Lt 444, Weklva Hunt
Club, Fo* Hunt Sec, 2, *25,900
Dorothy Johnson, Repr. Est
Daisy J Wynn to Dorothy J
Johnson, Ind A Gdn ot minor. Lot
4 BIK A, A B Stevens Addn
JAidway, 5100
James D Vanderver A wt Nancy
to William J Halscolt A wt Con
stance, beg pt centerline ot
Curryvllle Rd 131 50' Wot ihtersec
W E line ot Sec. 35 31 12 elc.,
*114.000
Bernard
T
O ’Connor A
Roseana sgl. to Fred C Nielsen,
s g l, Lot 13, BIK 23, Borin Orlando
1st Addn, 142,000
Irvin Wallis A wt Barbara Io
Marshall J. Shaui Jr, Lot 4,
Chapman Woods, 119,000
Sol Dale Buildrrs. Inc Io Rainer

M L au b 4 wt Isabelle M . Lot 41

Tuicawilia, Un 9, jiM.eoo
H a rry B a llis, T r to A d v e n llsl
H ealth System Sunbelt, Inc W 1 1
0&lt;S V of L o f 555, Altam onte la n d
Hotel 8. N a v Co , *180.000
M e rle W W illia m s i wf P r.sciB a
K t o L y n M G ilb e rt l wt Affine S ,
Lot 10, BIK C, E a s t li" . ,k s d Un (
*43.000
T im o th y S B ru m lik E tc . Co Tr
to R o n a ld T B ell B wt Janice. Lot
Jt (less N 20') B N 5 'o i 22 B ik U
N o rih g a te , 122,100
A n to m V G eorgi B wf A liteh lo
N ic h o la s j
C a p a c c io B wt
D orothy, com m en cing ISO W at
m tersec. S r w ot 22th }t B W line
of N E '&lt; of N E ' . o l N E ' . o l S E '. or
Sec I 20 30 etc ,1120.000
M a r k I M c L in B wl P am e la to
R obert L Spinner 4 w l M ild re d
M , L o t 14. B ik D, Sterling P ark
Un 3, *28,500
P h ilip S H a lp e rn B wf K ath erine
io L h
S a n b o rn B w l Dorothy
M , L o ts 5 B 4. B ik 13, Sanlando
The S u b u rb B e a u tifu l, P a lm
Sp ring s Sec , 144,900

,♦

A

- D O N A L D 'B R IA N D I L L A R D ,

Petitioner Husband,
j and
* , •
D EBO RAH LY N N D ILLA R D .
Respondent.W ile

M A R R IA G E S
R a n q a ll A N ellis, 21. H8 D es
P in a r l i t , LW B C atherine J
R o b o lk a y . 18
T im othy C G oH , 31. 4952 A lp m a
t o e No 104 Or! &amp; P a tric ia A
B a rn e if, 34
D onald N B Brown, 32, 829
V a lle y D a le D r . D e la n d B M a rc ia
Lane. 35. D eLand
V e rn o n Sm ith. 42. S it H ib iscu s
Rd . C B B P a tric ia O Connol, 32
M ic h a e l Q W alrave. 31 1405
F o re st Dr . Sant B K e r r ,e E
M ic h a u d . 28, Sanford
R obin K Adam s, t9. Oviedo B
Cindy E Leopard, 20, 1125 SR 4!»,

NOTICE OF ACTION

l TO
DEBO RAH
LYNN
D ILL A R D
Bogle T ra ile r P ark
T ra d e r Ng 2.2
B ow ling Green. K e n tu ck y . 42101
Y O U A R E N O T IF IE D lh a l an
action tor D issolu tion o l M a r r ia g e
has been H e o a ija in s t you; and you
are req u ired to serve a copy ot
y n u f w ritten defenses. it any, to d
on M I K E L
W
CARPENTER,
| E S Q U IR E
P etitio n er H usb an d s
attorney, w hose a d d re ss is 400
M a it la n d A v e n u e , A lta m o n te
Springs, F io r d s . 32201, on or
! before N ovem ber 30. 1982 and file
rhe o rig .n al w dh the C le rk of th is
Court either before se rv ic e on
P e t it io n e r s a lto r n e y or im
4 m e diately thereafter o th erw ise a
D elautt w ill be entered ag ain st you
tor the re lie f dem anded Iff the
am ended Petition le r D issolu tion
ot fA arn ag e

DATED ON October 21, 1982
| tSEAL t
A R T H U R H, B E C K W I T H JR
As Clerk o f the C ourt
By Eve CraB trccr
■ AS D E P U T Y C L E R K
! P u b lish October 24, 3t B N ov 2, 14.
1982 '

DEA 90
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF
THE EIG H TEEN TH JU DICIAL
C IR C U IT ,
IN
ANO
FOR
SEM INOLE COUNTY. FLO RID A.
CIVIL ACTION NO 82 826 CA 20L
IN RE A D O P T IO N OF
K I M B E R L Y ANN L U D W IG ,
A D U L T , But lurls

A n tho ny Edw ards, 19, Saul
Ju lia M Johnson, 18, Sard

B

R ic h a rd W Saypatk, .25, 980
M o n lg o m e ry R d , AS B Rebecca
M C a n n is tra c i, 22
F ern an d o A Rivas, 25. ip i E,
A lta m o n te Dr No 513, AS B Helen
C Slade. 19
S a m u o l W h ee le r, 24, F a r
m in g d ale, N J B Cassandra V
W illia m s , 22, 202 Sky L a rk C r LW
Do u g la s L Storey. 24 'M ia m i B
Daw n R, G a / il. 28 , 20!2 Ch ate Aye
Z a c h a rla h Dixon. 46 D e la n d B
Betsy A A lle n . 52
W alter A Skinner J r
M o n tg o m e ry R d , AS B
C ir* , 21. 402 H erm itage
Jo hn M Henderson.
A le ita n d e ria B W illie N

. 22. 980
N an cy J
pr
AS
40. 20,1
C a rr. 54

P a u l W H a ck e lt, 41, 14 Elkw oed
C l WS B P a tr ic ia F Sanders 30
R aym ond
Zupo 25. E llsw o rth
St., AS B L e ila S Brennan, 21 412
P ow ell D r , AS
R ic h a rd A Oqw«da,76 612 Par*.
A v e . S a n to rd B G lo r ia D
W illia m s . 21. 1809 W 15th St . Sant
Jett N C la c k 29, LW B Jean L,
W ashington. 21
v
Kenneth R R ee h , 22, 1409

Valencia Cl. W„ Sint, B LoueHa
M Patterson, 30
Sean K
Ferri*. 21, 3202 S
O rla n d o D r , San! B Anne E
T ucker, 23, 3202 S O riandu Dr No
902, Santord

Legal Notice
NOTICE
The F lo r id a Departm ent pi L a *
E n fo rc e m e n t w sh e s to rent or
lease sp ace on a com m unication
tow er in Ihe q re a tir O rlando area,
lor its tw o w ay r a d io c o n i
munication system The antenna
used Is a P B 212 3, mounted In an
omnidirectional array The base
station Is a Iwo channel G .E . 100wall low band, remote control
(telephone
lines
r e q u ir e d ) ,
transceiver, which tra n sm its 45 44
and 45 82 MHZ. and receives 44 18
and 45 18 MHZ C o v e ra g e IS
required fr o m New Sm yrna Beach
south to K issim m e e E le c tric a l
power Is required, em ergency

generator service is prelw rid
Locations on the near northeast
side ot Orlando are preferred
Replies are to be submitted to
M D Brick, Technical Services
Supervisor. Florida Department ol
Law Enforcement. Post Otllce Bo*
1489, Tallahassee, FL 12302 Pnone
inquiries will be accepted at 1904)
488 8021,
Publish O d. 24. 22, 28, 29. 11. Nov
t, 19*2
DEA 98

IN
THE
C IR C U IT
CO URT
SEM IN O LE COUNTY. FLORIDA
CASE NO. 81 2551 CA 09 K
W E K IV A HUNT C LU B COM
M UNITY ASSOCIATION, IN C .
Plaint iff,
vs

CLA R E
woman.

H

KAMM

€

TO
C H A R L E S L U D W IG
3439 Old Capital T ra il
W dnunglon, D elaw are 19808
YOU
ARE
HEREBY
N O T IF IE D lh a l a P etitio n lor
Adoption o l K I M B E R L Y
ANN
L U D W IG has been tile d in Ihe
Eighteenth Ju d ic ia l C irc u it Court
in an d lo r S e m in o le C o u n ty .
Santord, F lo rid a Y o u a re req u ired
to Serve a copy ot any w ritten
c b ie c t'o n Iherefoon H E R B E R T R
S W O F F O R D . ESQ . 1212 E a st
trom ai UTTsyrrTJnanoar g n u a
32903, Attorn ey tor Ih e P etitio n ers
on or before the Iwenfh fo u rth day
ot Novem ber, 1912, oth erw ise the
Judgm ent o l Adoption m ay be
etitered arid a nam e change or
tiered
w n N E SS m y hand and t he seal
ol sa'd Court on the twenty llr s t
day ot October. 1912
(S E A L )
A rth u r H B eckw ith Jr
Clerk
of the C irc u it Court
By S u sa n .E , Tabor
Deputy C le rk
H E R B E R T H SW O FFO RD
1212 E a st Colonial D riv e
O rland o . F lo rid a 32803
A lto rn e y tor Petitioners
P u b lis h
O c to b e r
24,
II
B

November 7, 14, 1982
O E A 89

IN THE CIRCU IT COURT OF
THE IBTH JUOICIAL; CIRCU IT,
IN
AND
FOR
S E M IN O L E
COUNTY, FLORIDA
CASE NO 82 2100 CA I I E
N A M E CHANGE OF
K E N N E T H M IC H A E L M U R P H Y

NOTICE OF ACTION
TO'
F R A N C IS M M U R P H Y . J R
&lt; o A ren a
„
lo 42 Putnam Avenue
Miotjewood. New Y o r k 11384
You are nobbed that a P etitio n
lor Nam e change h a s been tile d m
the C ir c u it Cogrl Igr Sem inole
County. F lo r id a , lo change the
name ol K E N N E T H M I C H A E L
M URPHY
to
KENNETH
M IC H A E L K L O P P E N B O R G
Y ou are req u ired lo s e rv e a copy
o l your w ritten o b je ctio n to this
P etition, it any, to the P e titio n e r ’s
a tto rn e y .
JO H N
EDW ARD
JO N E S ! I S Q U IR E , whose address
is P O B o y 38, C a s s e lb e r r y ,
F lo r id a 32702. on o r before N ov II,
1962, and llle Ihe o rig in a l With the
C le rk ol th is Court either before
se ry ic e o n P etitio n e r's a tto rn e y o r
im m e d ia t e ly th e r e a ft e r , o th e r
wise a default w ill he en tered lo r
the relief dem anded in Ihe P e titio n
tor nam e change
This notice sh a ll be published
once each week lor tour con
s e c u liy t weeks In th e S a n lo rd
E ven in g H erald. Santord , F lo rid a ,
" Dated, th is 2th day of O ctober,
1982
(C O U R T S E A L )

ARTHUR M BECKW ITH
C LER K OF CIRCU IT
COURT
B Y C a rrie L B ue tlne r
Deputy Clerk
Pub lish October 10. 12, 24. 31. 1982
D E A 32

a single

Defendant.
NOTICEOF SALE
NOTICE IS H ER EB Y G IV EN
that on the 3rd day ol December,
1982 at 1100 AM at the West
Front door ol the Courthouse ot
Seminole Courtly, a) Sanlord.
Florida. Ihe undersigned Clerk
will ofler for sale Ihe following
described real properly
Lot
33. W EK IV A
H IL L S ,
SECTION TWO. accordmg lo the
ptat thereof as recorded in Plal
Book 20, Page 45. Public Records
of Seminole County, Florida
together with all structures, im
provements, fiklures. appliances,
and appurtenances on said land or
used in conjunction therewith
The aforesaid sale will be made
pursuant lo a Final Judgment
entered In Civil Nq I I 2553 CA 09
K now pending m Ihe Circuit Court
of Ihe EIG H TEEN TH Judicial
Clrcuil In and lor SEM IN O LE
County, Florida.
DATED this2tthday of October
(S E A L )
Arthur H BeckwittvJr;
CLER K
OF THE CIRCUIT COURT
BY Susan E Tabor
Deputy Clerk
Publish October 31. 1912
D EA 115

HIU

A

fflM M T tfJ
CALL TOLL KHEE
I AM 142 III!

CLASSIFIED ADS
Seminole

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF
THE EIG H TEEN TH JU O IC IA L
C IR C U IT ,
IN
AND
FOR
SEM INOLE COUNTY. FLO RIO A
CASE NO. *2 1085 CA #I O
SUN BANK, N A-.,
Plaintiff,
vs.

ALVIN T RQLLISON,
Defendant,
NOTICE OF SA LE
NOTICE 15 H E R E B Y G IV EN
lhal pursuant to a Summary F Inal
Judgment ot Foreclosure entered
on the 18th day ol October, 1982 in
the above referenced action, the
Clerk ol the Circuit Court will si
It,00 A M. on the 15th day of
November, 1982 offer for tale and
sell to the highest bidder for cash
at the east door ol the Seminole
County Cour Ihouse
Santord,
Florida Ihe lollowlng described
real property, situate, lying and
being in Seminole County, Florida,
lo w it:
Lot 75, Traci 2, P A R A D I S E
POINT, Secogd Section according
lo the plat thereof as recorded In
Plat Book 9, Page 18, Public
Records ol Sem inole County.
Florida
Said sale will be held pursuant to
sa&lt;d Summary Final Judgment ol
Foreclosure
WITNESS MY HANDaSdseal ol
said Court on the 20tn day ot Oc
lober. 1987
ICOURT SEAL)
Arthur H. Beckwith. Jr,
Clerk ol the Courl
By Carrie E, Buetfner
As Deputy Clerk
Publish October 24, 31. 1982
OEA 91

O r la n d o

- W in t e r

P a rk

CLASSIFIED DEPT
HOURS

R A T E S

p a in t e r s

B 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 9 N oon

P A R T T IM E
M A ID
323 2920

12.00 M in im u m
--------------------- 3 L in e s M in im u m

W A N T E D T e le v is io n s e r v ic e
m an E xp e rie n c e d only need
ap p ly. C an 322 Q152

DEADLINES
N o o n

The

D a y

B e fo re

S u n d a y - N oo n

P u b lic a t io n
A S S IS T A N T M an ag er Trainee R esp o nsib le person looking fo r
e ic e iie n t future, retail B m rr
ch a n d isin g e rg a plus, good
b en eM Ls, a p p ly in p e rso n
W alg ree n s 2942 O rland o Dr ,
Santord

F r id a y

Personals

12—Special Notices

A C M E C H A N I C S Duct B
tr im out men needed
___________ 446 8252__________

jMALLOWE EN PARTY ,

• ABORTION •
1st T rim ester abortion 2 12 w ks .
5150
2/ed ica'd 5120, 13 14
wks 1200
M ed t a id H45.
G yn C lirfic 125. P reg n a n cy
test m ale s te rllH a lid n . Iree
counseling P ro fe ssio n a l ca re
s u p p o r t iv e
a tm o s p h e re ,
confidential
C E N T R A L F LO R IO A
W O M E N 'S H E A L T H
O R G A N IZ A T IO N
N E W L O C A T IO N
1200W Colonial D r .O rla n d o
305 898 0921
I 800 221 2 548

5— Lost &amp; Found

andpainters

h e lp e rs needed
345 2093 ,

llim e
50c ■ lin e
I c o m t c u llv e t lm e *
50c a lin e
2 c o n u c u t lv e 1 im » « ............ &lt; lc
10 c o n s e c u liv e tim e * 37c a lin e

O d 30. 4-tQ:)0p m
C o n q r e g a tio n at
C h r is t ia n
C hurch 2401 P a rk A ve Come
in costum e Food, S o il Drinks,
P n ie s . G a m e s V ery Scary
Haunted House!

A V O N p rod u cts needs ladies B
m e n . S e ll o r buy
O n job
tr a in in g , advancem ent
322 4910

EARN
FREE
J e w e lr y lo r
C h ristm a s g iv in g V alue up to
*100 in v itin g lust 4 to 10 people
to attend the body and- skin"
ca re c la ss in your home Call
D e b b ie o r C h e r y l 321 8792
d eadline N ov 3432h
W E S T E R N A u to has moved to
2202 F'rehch Aire Watch our
sign lo r hot sp e c ia ls

FOUND
G O L O E N Cocker
S p a n ie l, m a le , no c o lla r
fA a yfg ir section 322 2829

j y

18-Help Wanted

18— H elp W anted

.M A T U R E person interested n
p a rt jim e business ot your
own in your town No in
vestm ent, "average 1330 week
and up W rite to feo&lt; 922 Si
Cloud. F la 32749

8 3 1 -9 9 9 3

3 2 2 -2 6 1 1

C IV IL E N G IN E E R I
IW ater
m an agem en t) S*acting s a la ry
*314 yyk|y B A D rg ree and 1 yr
exp in the C iy il Engineering
fie ld A pply Sem inole County
P e r s o n n e l C o u rth o u se , N
P a rk A v e Santord By noon
N ov 9. 1982 A p p lic a t io n s
accepted M o n F r i 6 30 a m
noon L U U A L O P P O R fU N I
1V E7APLO YER M F H V

C O O K fo r lin e d in in g , e&gt;
penenced only, reg u la r break
last s h ift..plus lunch B dinner
knowledge A pply 9 5
Deltona inn
M E D IC A L D IR E C T O R —
F A M I L Y P R A C T I C E C L IN IC ,
C e n tr a l F lo r id a M ig r a n t B
C o m m u n ity H e a lth - C e n te r
seeking qualiHed p ositio n to
lead M e d ica l S ta ll lo r 2 C lin ic
fa cility
B l L in g u al desired
Send c u r r ic u lu m v it a e to
E xe c u tiv e O 'recto r P O Bo*
to22 Sanlord. F la 32271 E O E
S T E A D Y R eliab le m an lo r part
lim e m aintenance E* S e rvice
man preferred, C a ll 323 2 343

OENTIST
FU;LL OR P A R T T IM E
C e n tr a l
F lo r id a
M ig r a n t
C o m m u n ity H e a lth C e n te r
s e e in g q u alified Dentist Send
cu rric u lu m vitae to E ie c u H v e
D irecto r P O Box 1077 San
lord. F la 12771 E O E
O V E R S E A S JO BS in tern a tion al
C o n s tru c to rs L is t
S k ille d
p e o p le needed C a r p e n te r s ,
e le c t r ic ia n s , p lu m b e rs etc
Send S3 00 4, SASE to O versea s
L ist 211 M e V a y Dr . Santord.
F la 37771

W O M EN S o p p o rtu n ity meeting
and bullet E a r n S 100 to *300
per week p a rt tim e Com pany
car
an d
p a id
v a c a tio n
availab le Com e learn now
Saturday. O ct. 30th. ! 30 p m
2493 O 'a n g e A v e S anlord

21 — S itu a t io n s W a n te d

W ILL DO
HOU SECLEAN IN G
___________C A LL 327 8955
Classified ads se rv e the ooylng B
selling c o m m u n ity ev e ry jay ’
Read B use them often
C O M P A N IO N h e lp e r tor elderly
L g n t housekeeping E x c ret
Lk M ary are a 327 5813

25—Lo,ms
HOME E Q U IT Y LO AN S
No pa*n*vor b ro k e r fe n
*0
U S 000 "to Mompown#*fs Gf t
Creel ? Corp Sant F» 3?) A* 10

28—Apts. &amp; Houses
To Share
S P A C IO U S 2 B e d rm , 2 Bath
ap artm en t. H a lf ren t B
e le ctric 121 5929

OPEN
Avon
T e r r it o r ie s
C h ristm as Selling now
F or
inorp nto calf H a rrie t M u o n
22 2 04 59
C U S T O M E R service E a r n Irom
ta hr or m ore W ork from
home on rM abiiShed telephone
program , fie* nr% 331 0113

29— Rooms
H ID D E N L a k e A re a R oom and
twth »n q uiet io v e ty home
Student or w o rk in g person
327 5471

CO N SU LT O U R

,v " )

&gt; -‘J 'i' H i"

6 Child Qire

NOTICE OF ADOPTION
PETITION

CB

Legal Notice
IN THE CIR CU IT COURT FOR
SEM IN OLE COUNTY. FLORIDA
PRO BATE DIVISION
F lit Number 12 SIS CP
Oivision
IN R E : E S T A T E OF
FRANCIS BER N A RD HANES
Deceased
NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION
TO A LL PERSONS HAVING
CLAIM S
OR
DEMANDS
AGAINST T H E ABOVE ESTATE
AND A L L OTHER PERSONS
IN T E R E S T E D IN THE ESTATE
YOU
ARE
H EREBY
N O T IF IE D
lh al
the
ad
m inistration ol the estate ot
FRANCIS BERN A RD HANES,
deceased. File Number 82 515 CP,
is pending In the Clrcuil Court tor
Seminole County, Florida, Protute
Division, the address ot which is
P-0 Drawer C. Sanford. Florida
3}77l The personal representative
o f'the e-tate is Byron Leonard
tifnes. whose address is 49
K&gt;ran|a, Denary, Florida 33213
TT&gt;e name and address ol (he
personal representative's attorney
aft set forth below
.£11 persons having claims or
demand* against the estate are
required,
W ITHIN
TH R EE
fj|ONTHS FROM THE DATE OF
THE F IR S T PUBLICATION OF
TjjlS N O TIC E, to til* with the
dark ol the above court a written
statement ot any claim or demand
llyey may have Each claim must
beln writing and must indicate the
basis tor the claim, the name and
address ol the creditor or his agent
oe‘ attorney, and the amount
claimed If the claim is not yet
deft, the date when d will become
due shall be staled II the claim I*
cgntmgenl or unliquidated, Ihe
najure of the uncertainly shall be
stp(ed If Ihe claim Is secured, Ihe
saCurily shall be described The
claimant shall deliver sufficient
copeis of Ihe claim Io the clerk to
cnftole Ihe clerk io mall one copy
Id,each personal representative
Jdl persons Interested in Ihe
e*M'e to whom a copy ot this
Nt|4ct of Administration has been
mljled are required. WITHIN
T H R EE MONTHS FROM THE
DJlRE
OF
TH E
F IR S T
P U B L IC A T IO N
OF
THIS
N O TICE, lo tile any obiections
thfjr may have that challenge the
vRl|)ity of the decedent1* will, Ihe
q i^ llflc a lio n * of the personel
refleienlellve, or the venue or
jumdictlon of Ihe court.
£ L L CLAIM S. DEMANOS. ANO
O BJECTIO N S NOT SO F IL E D
W fcL B E F O R E V E R BARRED
' t i t ot the llrsf publication ol
Notice ol Administration
bar II . 1912
^ron Leonard Hanes
Personel Representative
I the E strle of
fane is Bernard Hanrs
Deceased
A r t O R N E Y FOR PERSONAL
R E P R E S E N T A T IV E
Michael S May
P t f Bo* 123*
Demand. F L 32220
Telephone 904 234 5550
PuMish October 31 B November 2,
19*
O E i 109

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF
THE EIG H T EE N T H JU D IC IA L
C IR C U IT
IN
AND
FO R
SEM IN O LE COUNTY, FLO RID A
• CASE NO 12 1513 CA 04 K
IN RE The Marriage ol

18— H e lp W anted

V

\

v ?
W IL L do baby s i l l Inq in
m y home day o r pight
321 4341 JUlie Tabor

.

^

,;t

J

- UitO .Vis] “■ ^•7

H

TA

K .

J

/

AN D L E T AN E X P E R T D O TH E JO B

L O V IN G C h ild Care in m y home
E * p erl* n ce d with references
*35 wk Also drop inv Fenced
yard 322 0845

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

J

9—Good Things lo Eat
M A H N KEN PRODUCE
Fr*4h egqs, fru its, &amp; v eg 3500
B ik VJ 1st St F o o d Stam ps

12—Special Notices

Electrical

Aloe Products

CAN F L E A
Now accepting
food stam ps 111 W ? /lh St ,
Sanford 8 6 d aily except Sun

18-Help Wanted____

MAV*: Y O U R fin a n c ia l dream s
becom e a re a lity w ith Aloe
p t no in vestm en t 171 7788

A d d it io n * . A

A A A

R C E L E C T R IC
E L E C T R lC A L w o r k done che ap
R e m o d e ls and additions Flood
lig h tin g paddle tans b u rg la r
a la rm s , etc No jd b to o la rg e or
s m a ll F re e esrim ates I t h r,
s e rv ic e 322 3982.

Jo h n n ie s A p p lia n c e s
We
se rv ic e an m ajor a p p lia n c e s
Reas rates. 32 yr e x p e rie n c e
323 8334

Nur sntq Custer

R c m o c V Itrtq

E M P L O V J f lE N T

Firewood

A NEW W EEK
AN EW JO B
CALL EAR LY MONDAY
WAREHOUSE MANAGER t*fir
F u rn itu re e i per ifn c e n e c fs s a ry ,
su p e rviso ry e ip e rie n c e . som e
light d riv in g
E&gt;ce!len1 op
portunlty, benefits

BATHS kitchens rool ng, OlOlk
concrete- windows add a
room, tree estimates 323 8441
N EW . R E M O D E L . R E P A I R
A ll types and phases ot con
Strutt Ion, J O B alm ! 323 4832,
377 B445 State Licensed

B R E A K F A S T CO O K
IS
M ust be e n p e f'e n re d In tine
dining cooking
S a la ry plus
benefits

F IR E W O O D S old ra lroad ties
new lan d sca pin g tim b e rs B
lenceposts. Youi. O'Ck up or we
d e liv e r any amount A n A T r r e
S e rvice 139 5747

tO W L R S B E A U T Y S A L O N
F O R M E R L Y H a r r ie t t s Beaut,
Nook 519 E 1st St 122 5742

W AREHOUSE
SI 00 hr
Heavy shippmg. receiving, ,n
venlory control background
Tractor trailer driving a plus
Quick raises, lull benefits
TEA CH ER
C e r.tilie d te a c h e r lo r
kin d erg arte n students
tim e to go fu ll tim e ,

S*
pre
P art

DRAFTPER50N

SS

B o n t d in q &amp; G r o o m in g

A N IM A L H a v e n B oard ny and
Groom ng k e n n e ls. Shad* m
su ia lrd . scree ne d tly prool &gt;h
sd e . outside run s Fans Also
AC cages W t ca'er to your
w n f h J7? 5742

H o m e Im p r o v e m e n t

SUM
BUDGETS
ARE
BOLSTERED WITH VALlAs
FROM THE WANT A D
COLUMNS

Good math background, light
drafting eiperience needed
Perm anent, growing com
pany, benefits
SISK
Strong closer, must read
b lu e p r in t s .
f in a n c e
background helpful, Encellen!
' growing
business
*I5K
minimum lo be made
F E E PAID

Bookkeeping

C A R P E N IR v
c o n c re te
B
p lum b in g M m or re p a irs to
add ny a room Don 321 1974
P A IN T IN G and re p a x pa'
s c r e e n p o rc h o u ijt
a n ytim e 122 9x61

ind
C a iJ

W IN D O W re p a y
lio n ,
sc re e n

and m sla lla
r e p a ir
B

r e p la c e m e n t

w in d o w

Cleaning

Oil Heaters Cleaned
O IL Heater clean ing
and se rv icin g
C all Ralph 1217183

S3 15 hr

WfH tr a m , a t t r a c t iv e , good
p h ysical titness co ndition Fun
log tor rig h t person

OUR R A T ES A R E LO W E R
l axevvew N uf Smg Center
719 E Second St . Santord
__________322 4tn&gt;__________

Roofing
A

&amp;

D

R O O F IN

21 yrs experience. Licensed B
insured.
Free Estimates on Rooting.
Re Rooting and Repairs
Shingles. Built Up and Tilt

JAMES ANDERSON
G. F. BOHANNON
L I T T lK E N c o n t r a c t o r s

ROOFING
LtCffised. bonded, low price*
■'Qualify wofkm,v1hVhip
Free

701 3711.

3 2 2 -9 4 1 7

Hnulinq
H A U L I NG and C lean up.
?r e&lt;* ir im m ifig *mcj rem oval
J4 9 9730

B t '. iu T , C m *

INSTRUCTOR

Major Appliance
Repair

321 *W4

C O L L I E R 'S
H orne R e p a ir s
carp en try rootmg, paini ng

window repair 321 4477

RE ROOF IN G c a rp e n try root
repair B pa nting 15 years
exp 322 1974
J E A N 'S R O O F I N G
Licensed, insu red, low est prices
in town 323 1844.

Painting
H E I L M A N roo lm g . pa nting &lt;1
r e p a ir s
Q u a lit y
w o rk ,
re a s o n a b le
r a le *
F re e
estim ates A n y tim e 83 4 8490
H O U S E Painting, F re e Est
Beat your lowest bid
lO y rs e * p ; 322 7003
E D W E I M E R P A IN T IN G
Q uality work guaranteed
Licensed
323 474}
Insured
P A IN T IN G B R O O F IN G
Licensed, guaranteed w o rk,
321 5949

Painting &amp; or
Pressure Cleaning

W IN D O W S, doors, carp en try.
C o ncrete slabs, ceram ic 4 llo o r
tile M in o r re p a irs
firep lace s.
Insulation L ,t Bond 377 1171

NO JO B loo large or small Pro

Home Repairs

Piano Lessons

quality workmanship, and
materials Ret 372 0071.

EXPERT ROOFING
No B ig W a itin g L is t
Roolinq Sp e cia l 10 •. discount
wdh this ad when presented
lo E xp e rt R o o fin g
Rerool
s p e c ia lis ts
W r honor m
s u ra n c e c la im i F o r the best m
rooting and re m o d e lin g call
Expert R o o lin q B R em odeling
Asso The One stop shopping
center Budt up. shingles, tile
and I n fo o tin g D e a l d ire ctly
wdh a loca l c o n tra c to r who
has a re p u ta b le b usin ess
Licensed, Bonded B Insured
, 24 H our S e rv ic e

323-7473
Secretarial Services

SALES

W AREHOUSE
1900 mo.
Some college
background,
position to work info sales and
“management Quick raises
and benefits
D R IV ER
*4.00 hr
Tractor frailer experience, wllh
some warehousing involved
Dependable Quick raises
TYPIST
*110
Must lest af 20 WPM Eicellent
company, Orlando area Great
bencbls

TOO M ANY
TO LIST
D IS C O U N T F E E - T E R M *
2 W EEK S SALARY
12 00 REG ISTR ATIO N F E E
FRA N CH ISES A V A ILA B LE

O eG arm e au Bookkeeping Ser

Bookkeeping, consulting, Taxes
32 7 2 207

PIAZZA MASONRY
Quality Work At Reasonable
Prices Free Estimates
Ph 349 5500
A TLA S M A SO N RY, * Brick,
chimneys,' stone art, toun
dal ion walls, steps, patios,
slabs 37 1 3542

Ceiling Fan Installation
C E ILIN G TAN INSTALLATION
Quality Work
We Do Mosl Anything
795 9328
477 4781

1917 F R E N C H A V E
323-5176
BEV ER LY

Ceramic Tile

PAT

Did Tabby have a mile of kit
lens? Sell them wllh a fail
action Classified Ad Call 322
2411 or f t I 9993

Legal Notice
NOTICE OF P U B LIC
M EET IN G
RE
F lo rid a P ow er and Lig h t
Com pany
SOO K V
D u v a l to
Poinsett T ra n s m issio n L in e
A p ub lic meeting to d iscuss
proposed a lte rn a te routes through
G eneva w ill be he ld on Wed
nesday, N ove m b er 3, 1982, af 10 00
a.m at Ihe Sem inole County A g riCenter A u d ito riu m , 4320 South
O rland o D riv e (Sem ino le Courtly
O p e r a tio n s C e n te r ) , S a n lo r d ,
F lo rid a .

Publish October 11. 1982
O EA 107

C A R P E N T E R 25 ( rs exp Sm all
rem odKl ng jobs, fe a so n a b le
rates Chuck 323 9445

Brick &amp; Block
Stonework

M EIN TZER T IL E Exp Since
1953 New B old work comm B
rrsd Free estimate 869 8542
,
etc

C O O O Y B SONS
T ile C o n tra cto rs
321 0152

Ins

Concrete Work
B E A L C o ncrete I m an quality
operation patios drivew ays
Days 331 7313 E ve* 127 1371

CO N C R ET E work' a ll. types.
Foolers, d rivew ays, pads,
floors, pools, complete or
refinish Free est 172 7103
Modernlrinq your Home t Sell no
longer needed bul useful Rems
with a Classified Ad

E L E M E N T A R Y P ia no t-essons
. ottered lo r Beginners ages 4

and up Debbie 321 5921.

Maintenanceot ailtype4
Carpentry, painting, plumbing
B electric 323 4038

Plastering

Landscaping

• all
Phases of P la ste rin g
•P la ste rin g re p a ir stucco, h ard
rule. Sim ulated b r ic k 321 5991

L A N D C L E A R I N G I II d rl
lODSo i shale, d vkinq
in o w in g 322 1413

Lawn Service

Plumbing
Freddie Roomson Plumb,ng
Repairs, faucets W C
Sprinklers 321 8510. 321 0108

SHAMROCK LANDSCAPE
m a in t e n a n c e

“ A Cut Above The Rest"
Complete lawncare B fertilmng
service. Serving industrial,
commercial and residential
customers Free sod sampling
and estimates 321 0574
STOP AND THINK A M IN UTE
it Classified Ads didn't work
there wouldn't be anv
MOW, E D G E .W E E D E A T IN G
Cleanups B light hauling
Fr«e estimates, call 1210150
MOW Edge. Trim. Renew
Landscaping. Clean ops.
Mauling Tnatchinn, Weed ng
Mulch Emdsey's 323 OMl
A t LAWN S E R V IC E
Mow, weed, trim, haul. 1, time
clean up 24 hr*, best rates
428 4438

L a w n M o w e rs

F ix it Joa McAdams
will repair your mowers at
vour home Call 322 7055

m is t e r

R EP A IR S B leaks
pendable serv er
rales No job loo
Plum ber, tree
Plumbing 149 SS57

Fast B de
Reasonable
small Lie
set
SBM

PERSONNEL U N LIM IT ED has
temporary s e c re ta ria l ser
vicesavailableon shorl notice
122 5649

S e w in g M a c h in e s

Sewing Machines 1
Vacuums
Cltan O ilB Ad|ust

★ Christmas Special ★
89 91
In our store or your house
Phone 1)1 8280
A I M. M ACHINE*
700 Savage Ct.
Longwood, Fla.

Time Clocks
NEW, Used, Sales, Service
*19 95 Service special — oil,
adjust, replace ribbon, parts
extra Budget Time Recorder
321 4987

Tree Service
Roofing

B&amp;L ROOFING
$60 A Square Shingle
THISADWORTH
150OFF TOTAL JOB

TRI County Tree Service, Trim,
remove, trash, haullngr fire
wood Fr E st 322 9410
T R E E Stump removal
t l 00 inch diameter
Rem Tree Service 339 4791
JOHN A L L E N Y A R D B T R E E
S E R V IC E
Will trim palm
trees Reas price 331 5J80.

(305)323-7183
ROOFING ot all kmos commer
Dal B residential Bonded B
insured 12) 2597 d no answer
834 1537

Built up and Shingle root,
licensed and insured.
Free estimates, 325-1936.
JAMES E. L E E INC

T R E E e s t im a t e s . D r G r o a t s
P a lm ,
Ire e
t r im m in g
s
rem oval M au lin g , la w n c a re B
odd jobs 32) 0847

Typewriter Repair
T Y P E W R IT E R Repal*» por
tabes lo IBM Selettrlc Guar
Low Rates DIM 373 4917

�/

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

W Rooms

37 B— Rental Offices

S A N T O R O F u rm sh u d room s by
the week R easo n a b le rates
m a d K f v iC e
C a t e r ,n g to
w o rk.n g p e o p le
A ls o un
furnished a p i }}j 440;
__________ &lt;3? P a lm e tto A vp
SAN FO RD
R eas
w eekly 1
" ’ Onthly ratPS l lt . l &gt;nc- eft S0g
0.1« Adults I |4l 7)gj

30 Apartm ents U nfurnished
2 B d rm a p !

1330
3 Bdrm apt
ills
3 B drm apt
w ?s
CEN TURY ji
JU N E P O R Z IG R E A L T Y .
REALTO R
122 8678
GENEv AGAROENS
3 Bdrm a p a rtm e n ts
W 'D Hoo'li up
f f om UO0 p ef mo
'SOS A .'S’ * S'
]JJ j W0

O N E P H O N E C A U - STA R TS A
C L A S S I F I E D A D ON ITS
W ESULTFUL
END
THE
N U M B E R IS 333 l i l t

P R IM E
O F F IC E
SPACE
P r o v id e n c e B lv d
D e llo n a
2164 Sq F t C an Be Div ded
With P a r k in g
D ays 305 574
14)4
E v e n in g s A Weekends
904 736 1493

M ar ner s V illa g e on L a k e A da t
bdrm Irom S3S0 3 b d rm from
17W Located 13 97 iu st south
Ol Airport B lv d m Santord All
AdullS 133 8630
S A N F O R D , lovely 3 B drm . air,
furniture a v a ila b le $360 mo
8a 1 3813
11*.‘.'B O O C O V E A P T S
100 E A irp o rt B lv d
1 A 3 Bdrm s
F ro m $3)0 mo
Phone 333 TWO
E N J O Y country b v m q ’ 3 B drm
D uple, A p ts . O ly m p ic s i
pool S h e n a n d o a h V illa g e
Open 9 to 6 373 3»70
LU XU RY
APARTM ENTS
F a m ily 8, A d u lt s s e c tio n
Pools'de. 3 B d rm s
M aster
Cove Apts 333 1900 Open on
weekends
S A N D L E W O O D V ilta s 7 Bdrm .
3 Bath. A ir . Pool.
$396 I 295 7766
S A N F O R D 3 b d rm , k id s, appl .
a r. carpel $230 339 7300
S a vO n R en tals, tn c R e a lto r
M E L L O N V IL L E
TRACE
APARTM ENTS
S p in o u s ,
mcxlern 2 b d rm . 1 Bath apt .
carpeted, m tchen equipped
Cent HA W alk to tow n A lake
no pels $395 331 3905

31—Apartments Furnished
P A R T L Y lu rn ish e d $335 mo
q u ie t
d ea d
end
s tre e t,
screened patio C a ll 3JI 0133.
M O B IL E H om e p riv a te lot
very d e a n N o p e ts .
adults only 3030 M a g n o lia

.

k urnnhed ap a rtm e n ts lor Senior
C ilg e n s 318 P a lm e tto A ve J
Cowan No phone c a lls

31A —Duplexes
2

|

ON R ID G E W O O D
Lane,
screened porch $380 mo

JU N E P O R Z IG R E A L T Y .
R EALTO R
333 8438
7

B D R M , 1 B ath, w a ll w all
carpet Cent H A . Fenced yard,
kitchen appl 831 4788

L A R G E 3 b d rm , a ir, heat,
carpeted, a p p lia n c e s No pets
$335 m o, $150 dep 333 1600 Of
333 3338

37—Houses Unfurnished
S A N F O R D 3 B drm , k id s, appl .
p e ll, lence 1100 339 7200
Sav O n R e n la ls , Inc. R e a lto r
L A K E M A R Y 3 b d rm , I bath,
p lu s h c a r p e l, c o m p le le ly
remodeled, d o ll house, $300
mo. Call J33 3554 ask tor Steve,

M O M C 3 B drm
m a ir t J t S 'b e d

1

ML W

bath

tfru S

w«*ll

^■pp'%

fo r

kale at $41 600
C O N D O 7 B drm J o,»!h w asher
K d rye r rent w th o p !,on to
buy at $390 mo
H O M E 4 B d rm 4 oath, pool, 4
lots enclosed by 6 tf w a ll.
M ay ta 'f sec Iron For sale

6 C O M M E R C I A L O llie rs
N ew ly R e m o d e le d $95 per mo
333 9090

JI

CH A . WW C a rp e l, fenced
yard, nice a re a . U 7 S mo. +
dep 372 0218.

34-Mobile Homes
M O B ILE Home J a c re s in
Geneva, fenced In yard, 3
bdrm, large L R . O R A kitchen.
CM A. $325 mo. First A last mo
rent a security depend, 333
3931. 321 4821

_____

CA SS ELB ER R Y 2 bdrm, kids,
air appl $255 3)9 7200
Sav On Rental!, Inc. Realtor
1911 AIR condition Mobile home
30 fl attached Fla room and
large ilorage shed. 1395 mo
Oplion to buy under 135.000
331 0924

R iC E m o r e

t h a n

C A N 'T
BUY
BACK
IN

three

T iM E S ^ r ^
• TH£
Tun OTRER "L
rP u V V l E S D C V T m NCM i t s !

7HE/R M O KEVI'M U S ' N - A

WENT
OUT A
MY

5T0MA0H'

!7 I. ,

T h r e e su its s ire 48
to r
s e llin g
tost
te le p h o n e 123 0291

[/

ROBBIE’S
REALTY
R EA LTO R M LS
JJOl S F re n c h
Suife I
Santord F la

37C- For Lease
S P A f F to r lease at Santoro
A irp o it F o r sto rag e or sm all
business 327 4403

38—W anted to Rent
T HE F lo rid a D e p a rtm e n t ot Law
E n fo rce m en t w ish es to rent or
lease s p a c e
on a co m
m u n ic a llo n to w e r in the
greater O rla n d o area, for its
two way ra d io com m unication
System T he antenna used is a
D B 217 3. m o un ted n an Omni
d ire c tio n a l a r r a y
The base
station is a two channel G E ,
100 w a tt tow band, remote
control (telephone lines re
a u ire d l. tra n s c e iv e r, which
tra n sm its 4 5 44 and 15 82 74HZ.
and r e c e iv e s 45 38 and 45 18
M H Z C o v e ra g e is required
fro m N e w S m y r n a Beach
south to K is s im m e e
Elec
I r ic a l p o w e r is re q u ire d ,
em ergency g en erator service
is p re fe rre d Lo catio n s on ‘ he
near n o rth ea st s id e o l Orlando
are p re fe rre d
Replies a re to be subm itted to
M O , B r ic k , T ech nical Ser
v ic e s S u p e r v is o r . F lo r id a
D e p a r tm e n t o l L a w En
lorcem en t. P ost O ffice Box
US?. Tn iia h s s s e e . f L J2302
Phone in q u irie s w ill Be ac
ccpted at &lt;9041 488 8031
P R O F E S S I O N A L m ale desires
to rent g a ra g e a p t , guest
house or apt in n ice h o m e in o r
near S a n to rd W ill consider
room in hom e w ith balh A
kitchen p r iv ile g e s
Referen
ccs C a ll Bob, co lled ,
3 391 8389
MAKE
ROOM
TO S T O R E
YOUR
W IN T E R
IT E M
S
SELL
DON T N EED S’
F A S T W IT H A WANT AO
Phone 337 34U or 831 9991 and
a Irien d ly Ad V is o r w ill help
you

24 HOUR D3 322-9283
STEM PER

AGENCY

C O Z Y O L D B R IC K F IR E P L A C E
W ith a tta c h e d nice 3 B drm . I ' l
B a th hom e Good area T h is is
a g re a t buy lor 543 500 F H A or
O w ner m ay help
W ANT A G ARD EN ?
T his new listin g a J Bdrm . 1 B ath
hom e m Lake Monroe could be
w hat y ou 're looking lor F o r a
w ell kept home, in the country,
c a ll us soon Only 333.000
A S S O C IA T E S N E E D E D
R E A L 1 O R 122 4991 P a r or

N I C E Mouse on large landscaped
lot. tre es Gourm et kitchen, 7
b d rm . V . oath extras $47 000
Clone to Sw allow s G o ll M S
M S 4344 D eBary
NEAR
Lake
M ills
P a rk
C h u lu o ta 539:900 3 B drm . I
H aiti, new ly punted B ig lot,
4 H A 17 6 *. Owner w II assist
•n
I m a n c irq
365 78 39
W eekends 276 33)7 W o rk d a y s
7,6ID TOW N local,on N eal 3 t.
F H A approved Fence, u t il
r n i , firep lace . WY7 c arp et
N ew d r a p e r ie s in ro u g h o u t
C ity bus at door $37,750 Total
M o d erate down and seller hold
at F H A ra le Owner A sso cia te
830 01(37

e

u

e

s

nORIOA. INC m REALTORS

Be Itfwe
Call Keyed
FO R A LL YOUR
HE AL E S T A T E N EE 05

323-3200
LA S T C H A N C E !!

$44,900 lor this 3 7 on oversued
tot Only 3 mile Irom 14 in
OeBary. Large great room,
country kitchen and well
shaded lot. Low down and low
interes I ’ i v - A P R 1459 45 PI
on a 158,400 mortgage. Call lor
details Sandra Swift, Nancy
Clair, Realtor Associates. Mi842) or )2) 1)68.
54* W Lake Mary Blvd
Suite B
Lake Mary. F la )2744
)))3700

jrO U S E WITH 6 A C R E S sta lls,
tern •*t p a s lu c e , w o o d s. 3
bdrm . 3 batn. s to n e .t.rep lace,
horse lovers p a r,id se_. M U S T
S E E 1 1179.00# N W Sem inole
County. By ow ner
322 871 j

JU N E PORZIG R EALTY
R EALTO R
802 S. F re n c h Ave

M LS
323 8678

M O R E N E W L IS T IN G S !
2411 S L A K E A V E Your d re a m
house com plete! M odern and
ta ste fu lly decorated 1 B d rm , 7
B ath w ith sunken living room .
7 sid e d fire p la ce and a ll the
trim m in g s
A’ rcai buy at
$43,600
829 R O S A L IA DR lu s t perfect
tor a couple or sm all fa m ily
Im m a c u la te and cha rm in g 2
B d rm . I Bath with cent a ir and
heat. Assum ab le F H A m o r
tgage lo o $43,500
201 ,5
M A P L E AVE
Zoned
c o m m e rc ia l Ihis large 4 B drm ,
- 2‘ j B a th older home has been
m n d e r n ife d th ro u g h o u t b u t
s lid needs your'-touch) H a v e
your business where you liv e '
155,000

3 B D R M , M asonry home w ith
reason ab le down paym ent and
T E R R I F I C owner fin a n c in g
P r ic e d to s e ll at 132,500 C a ll
Today!

CallBart
WF AL E S T A T E
H E ACTO R 313 7 4*8

KI SH R E A L t S T A T E
1710041
R EALTO R
A lte r M rs 333 7468V323 7354

Mortgage $42,500 322 3378

A L L F LO R ID A R E A L T Y
OF SANFORD R E A LT O R
1 B D R M 2 Oath, s p lit plan,
corner lot, d ole g a ra g e w
electric opener, im m a c u la te in
L out with m an y e x tr a s C a ll
vs tor details $69,900,

Y O U N E E D to know who you a re
In C h ris t F in d out at The
D e e p e r L d e C la s s E v e r y
T hu rsd ay 7 30 p m 113 S
M a p le . Santord 321 4267

B E A U T I F U L 3 B d rm , 2 Bath
home in Sanora w ith sp lit
bedroom plan, g re a t room
d i e d , large screened porch,
cent HA, eq k itc h e n , fenced
yard, and just I yr. old. $$x,500.
JU S T L IS T E D 2 B d rm . , B a lh
home on a double lo ll N e a l as
a pm l E a l in kitch e n , b u ilt ins.
greenhouse.
an d
m o re l
Country atm osphere! 147,600.
B E L I E V E T H I S ! I B d rm . 1 B a lh
home, newly painted ! Sold " A s
I s " c o n d itio n ! G r e a t in
vestment! Note: C l Zoning!
SIJ.OM.
M A Y F A I R V I L L A S ! 2 A 3 B a rm .
2 B alh Condo V illa s , next to
M a y fa ir Counlry C lu b S c le d
your lot, lloor p la n A in te rio r
decor! Quality c o n stru c te d by
Shoemaker tor 147,200 A up!

REALTOR ASSO CIATES
N EE D ED !
One Residential — T w o C o m ­
m e rcia l Investm ent! If you
honestly wanl a S u cce sslu l
C a r t e r , jo in ‘ th e
N o.
I
Prolessional Sales T e a m ! A ll
in le r v ie w s
S lr ic t ly
Con
tid e n lia li

INVESTORS S P E C IA L ) Bdrm,
l ' j Bath, assume low Interest
mortgage,
low
monthly
paym ents, great location,
tcrrllic potential. Only $)4,900
also FHA and VA buyers, call
us quick on this Ontl

CO U N TR Y LIVING IS YOURS
ON THIS MINI FARM. You
can enjoy animals here. Nice
w tll kepi home. Will leas*
oplion. $61.MO.
F IS H E R M A N S PARADISE) ]
bdrm trailer right on St. Johns
River. Fence on ' i acre.

E s t a t e W a n te d

N E E D to s e ll y o u r house
q u ic k ly !
We
can
o tter
g u a ra n te e d s a le w ith in 30
days C a li 3311811

17 A

M o rtg a g es Bought

&amp; Sold
WE

RAY

K 7nd

lor

m o rtg a g e s

Legg

V o f ig j g r B ro fcrr

188

t* c

49-B— Water Front
Property

M O V IN G TO T H E
SANFO RD A R E A ?
A sk us lo r o u r
c o m p le te
R E L O C A T IO N K I T co ntain ing
in lo r m a tlo n
on
h o m e s,
schools, shopping and other
Interesting la c ts about our
C ity I

)14*
M jtk

S E R E N E AND QUIET Near
Dell CC, cathedral ceilings
throughout, spacioui 2 bdrm, 2
bath. Bright kit, opens to Ige.
court. One yr. W ARRANTY.

Real

W E B U Y eq u ity
n Houses
a p a rim e n ts vacant land ana
a tre a q e
LU CKY
(84
V E S T M E N T S P O Box 3500
Sam ordT'T ra- T777T 377 47T1

W E LIST A N D S E L L
MORE H O M ES THAN
A N Y O N E IN N O R T H
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y I

realto r
,
IJ2 i F re n c n A v e

Ml 5
322 1878

IF Y O U A R E loo kin g tor the
perfect spot to get aw ay Irom
■I a ll consider Ihis lish e rm a n s
heaven 2 b d rm . 1 b lh , elegant
A fu lly lu rn is h e d double wide
mobile ho m e W la rg e lot on
canaton St Jo hn s R iv e r Even
has covered G a te b o A fishing
clocks 164.59Q w ith owner
w illin g to h e lp finance.
SAIL TO T H E B A H A M A S OR
E U R O P E Ir o m y o u r own
b ackyard 3 B d rm . 3 B a lh spin
plan 7 fire p la c e s , larg e en
clo se d s o la r h e a te d pool:
S u rro u n d e d
w it h
tr o p ic a l
plants and g a s lig h ts, J a c u lii
Assum e 1)6.000 7 'j J mor
tgage O w n er w ill consider 2nd
lo q u a lilie d buyer SIBO.OOO In
area ot lin e hom es
JE N N Y C LA R K R EALTY
REALTO R
332 1598
24 HR A n s w e rin g Service.

50

IM M ACULATE ) bdrm, H,
both, Control heal - iir , extra
largq private yard. Paddle
Ians and much more. Terrillc
assumption. Only SO.SOO.

DO Y O U L I K E P A R T I E S ’
Nam e brand loyS and g ill item s?
Ju sl c a ll m e. I dem onstraN
toys and g ifts A ll are low
priced Shop in the com fort ot
your Thom e
SAVE M ONEY
and get your shopping done
F R E E H a v e a H ouse o l Lloyd
party V ic k y P h illip s , 3)9 3120

322-2420

WE N E E D LISTINGS

S A N F O R D S a n o ra S o u th , 1
txlrcn, 2 balh, d ou b le g araq e.
C H A , $15,000 323 4850

BATEMAN REALTY
Lie R e a l E s ta te B roker
2840 S a n tord A v t

321 0759

Eve

322 7643

U N D E R 12.000 DOWN
) b d rm , doll house A ffo rd a b le
m o n t h ly
p a y m e n ts
C a ll
O w n er B ro k e r )J| 1611

1977 H A R L E Y S p o rtste r IOOPO
Also 1980 K a w a sa k i 650 Phone
883 7786

F IL L O l R t A TOP SOIL
Y ELLO W SAND
Can C la rk A H rt) 2 3 75*0

ST OR I NG1l T M A K £ S W A S T E
S E L L IN G I T M A K E S C A SH
place

63—M i chi nery Tools

51 A

65 Pets Supplies

19/4 H O N D A 750
HOOOor best otter
331 5)95

G IV IN G A W AY
P a r t pit.
p a rto u ll. m ate
dog Call 322 3713

7?—Trucks Trailers

T w siri s e t

L O O K I N G F o r qood h o m e
Black 6 white m ale cal 4 m os
old lo r giveaw ay 327 IW B

H U N T IN G m te fn a ^ o n a l Scouf
pick up 11000
Aft 5 10 )?? 1361

67 A Feed

. PI TOY O T A i O N G B E D As s
(f runs* m a k e o ffe r
W 0061 dtt 6 p m

H A Y S3 60 per bale,
25or m o re lre e del
Other leeds av ail )49 5194

m attre ss

1 1 1 9 95 F y HI s e t

1159 95 th e y don t have to
m atch to be qood 331 528 f
F L O K I O A SLEE** 'H O P S
w i l s o n m a i e -j? f u r n i t u r e

i n 315 E F IR S ! S T
tt? 5*2?

y-

k e n m o r e p a r r s , s e rv ic e , used
w a s h e r s 371 0697

80 . Autos fo r Sate

Rui

78 P O N T IA C Sunbind
Pow W
Steering, Auto
T rans., A ir
Hatch Back, 1450 D ow n Cash
or Trade 339 9100, 8)4 4605

A L U M I N U M iarvs cooper lead
brass silye r, qold W e ekd ays
1 4 30 Sat 91 x K o M o Tool
Co 918 W 1st St 333 3100

5? 'Appliances
P E F R tG E R A T O R S
good
■election guaranteed Santord
A u ctio n 1215 S French
323 7340

/V,in f e s t t o

W E F I N A N C E . Low dow n, no
credit check
E a s y weekly
payments D e aler 321 5777

o k n g tor jar den e q u ip m e n t’
Read today s c la ssifie d a d s lor
good buys
[ M C I C L E A N baby ite m s lor
re sa le M ust be cheap Toys
- — J.MI6,-Tf,TFfV J73UWJ

M O O N E V A P P c IA N C E S

7? Auction

Make your Budget go tu rlh e r,
shop Ihe C la s s ifie d A d s every
day
1977 N O VA — 4 door, 6 c y l a u t o .
power steering 13495 Dealer
331 5777

53— T V R a d io S te re o

PUBLIC AUCTION
G ood u se d Tv s S J 6 8. up
M ILLE R S
76&lt; 90riando Or
Ph 727 0 )57
r e p o s s e Vs e d c o l o r t v s
W e s e ll re p o sse sse d c o lo r
te le v isio n s, a ll name brands,
co nso les and portables E X
AM PLE
Zenith 25” color in
w alnut console O riginal p ric e
over S7S0. balance due $196
cash or paym ents $17 month
N O M O N E Y DOWN S till In
w a rra n ty C a ll 31st C entury
S ales 862 S394day or. n d t F re e
hom e t r ia l, no obligation

* S A T . O N L Y 9 7 M u lti F a m ily
C a rp o rt Sale
Honda good
c o n d , c lo th e s , toys, new
a lg h a n s , C h r is t m a s tre e ,
m uch m o re 3009 G ran d view
A v e N olt 70th SI
3 F A M I L Y Sale, clothes, books,
s m a ll ap p l. clim bin g hooks
s a fe ly b e ll Sat 8 4. Sun I 6 at
2600 S E lm A v e Santord

55—Boots &amp; Accessories
1974
21FT T O M S A W Y E R 1 0
IAS M e rc , dual axle tra ile r
53500 o r best otter 321 5395

M o n d ayr Nov 1,1 p m
L a rg e selection of fu rn itu re lor
eve ry room in the house Som e
antiques and c o lle c tib le s plus
T V ’ s and mi sc
\ \ CASH , V ISA. MCSS

D A Y IO N A A U T O A U C T IO N
Hw ■ 93 I m ile west Of Spxed
way Daytona B each w ill hold
a eubl'C A U T O
A U C T IO N
eve ry W e d n e sd ay at 7 30 p n&gt;
Its the only one m F lo r.d * .
You set the r e s e r v e d p rice
Call 904 2SS 8)13 tor fu rth e r
details

SANFORD AUCTION
13155 F R E N C H
31) 7)40
NO L O N G E R U S E D C A M P I N G
G E A R IS IN D E M A N D S E L L
IT
NOW
W IT H
A
C L A S S IF IE D A D
F O R E S T A T E . C o m m e rc -a i or
R esid en tial A u ctio n s A A p
pr i sals C a ll D e li’ s A u ctio n
33) S670

75—Recreational Vehicles
1972 C O N T I N E N T A L
18 It
T ra v e l T r a ile r C o m p le te ly
se ll contained W ith roof a ir
conditioning and aw ning Good
condition 11900 322 B47I
L I K E N E W 17', It, P ro w le r
C om pletely sell co ntain ed w ith
root a ir conditioning
C a ll
a lte r 6 p m 123 5266

57A- Gu re &amp;Ammo
GUN AUCTION
SUND AY, NOV. 14. I P M.
SAN FOR D AUCTION
I l l i S . Frto ch
IU -1 U Q

STAH CRAFT 1979 T ra v e l
T ra ile r, II it se ll contain ed ,
to ll bath. 6 It R c tr ig
w
Ire e/er, 4 burner stove w oven,
root a ir 8. antenna, e x c , cond
32 3 3 449

F O R D 87 G ra n a d a 4 d r »,6 Cyl,
luxury t r im pkg 15 hundred
m iles l ac w a rr $7995 Aus
tarn Whsie O u tlet. 123 3660.
D eBary Auto 8. M a r in e Safes
a t r o s s 'he r iv e r top of nil) 174
M «y 17 »; D e B a r y 66* xswa
1973 M O N A R C H G M IA — auto
power steering, a ir cond . n ic e
car 11496 D e a le r 321 5777
1978 L IN C O L N Town C ar, new
(Mint, new v in y l lop, low
mileage. 12500 323 4610,
323 3 996
VW R A B B IT 197$ — R u n s goexj,
needs paint touch up $129$
Dealer 331 5777.
a

U S T A M B uys c a rs 4. trucks.
Pay Oil a n yw h e re
Cash la
y o u li! 331 1660

D A R T S W IN G E R I975f 6 c y l PS.
AC, auto . re a l n ic e econom y
car $1495 D e a le r 371 5777
1971 F O R D M u sta n g 102 engine,
Auto , A M F M ste reo $1695
Call 321 6165

77 D O D G E Morvoco 2 D r H ard
lop L ik e new cond S ilv e r
gray Loaded $99 Dow n 3)9

9100, 134 4605

B U ILD IN G T H R O U G H O U T C E N T R A L FLO R ID A

ON Y O U R L O T
Custom , Affordable, Luxury Hom es
Financing
from S 3 0 ’s to S 7 0 ’s
to suit you!

FIREWOOD

7103 O rlan d o D r
131 5300
V A 8 F H A F in a n c in g
S T O P A N D T H IN K A M I N U T E .
II C la s s ifie d
Ads
d id n 't
work
there w o u ld n ’ t be any

32) « M I

W EIGHTBENCH w squat rack
&amp; 2 sets of 110 lbs weigh! on
ea set S350 323 6165.

r:r- ; '

Example ol ten models to choose from.

'4 *

P alm b reeze — Lovely California inspired 3 bedroom,
2 bath home with double garage, cathedral ceiling,
breakfast area and 1,666 sq. ft. under roof — $4 3 ,5 0 0 .

IIM W tll First Street - Santord, Flirlda 32771 -l)0 $ )3 3 U 2 2 »

M O D K LS
M O N .-F R I.
9:00-6:0#

N O W

B U ILD ER S, INC.

O N N

sir.

SUN.

lt : M - S : M

3:0# - 1 :0#

C a l l C o ll e c t (3 05 ) 3 2 7 -0 0 0 0
Pleaae tend mor* Information 1

S O M ! P L A C iS H A V E
£&gt;

A LL THE FU N !
N ew

ao

1979 SU ZU K I 750 L B.900 m ile s
Adult ridden, new tir e s . $2600
322 3178

F urniture

M ism a tc h e d

c l a s s if ie d

1980 Y Z 125 Y A M A H A
V ery good cor'd 5700
321 5575

GENERATOR
Sets inven to ry
r e d u c tio n sa le
4000 w a tt
6647 50 5300 watt 1892 50
7»9 8868

51—Household Goods
J F T L I K E N E W davenport S-B5
bras* floor lam p MO
W h ite t.ibie lam p 130 1 b ra ss
cJesK lam p s 372 OA54

a

NOW Can 373 26H or (31 9993

D E E R H O U N D S and
Fox H o u n d s lo r sale.
332 4267

S E E SK Y L IN E IS N E W E S T
P a lm Springs A P a lm M a n o r
G R E G O R Y M O B IL E H O M E S

HAL C O LB ER T R EA LTY
REALTOR
207 E . J5th St.
32) 71)3
SA N FO R O R EA LTY
REA LTO R
33)3)24
All Mrs 337 8*54. 32) 4383

G ordon

B U N K B E D 8. Chest
ol D ra w e rs G oo d Condition
C a ll 322 9264

42 Mobile Homer

3 2 3 -5 7 7 4
7100 HWY 17 1}

L tw tt

M IN K S T O L E Tourm alene,
beautiful S a c rific e $300 F irm .
E v e s 322 1959

N IC E 3 2 HOME In great area
L a rg e great room, with
gorgeous rock fireplace and
paddle Ian Split plan Double
lot with huge oaks.
DRIFTW OOD V ILLA G E
349 W. Lake Mary Blvd.
Lake Mary, Florida 32746
Otllce: (305) 321 SMS

6T

78 fA otorcycles

M is c e lla n e o u s lo r Sate

137,500.
ASSUME 840 Q U A L IF Y IN G
Low down payment on this
largt 1 Bdrm home with
lom lly room, nicely landicaptd, fenced yard with wtll,
utility shod, and much moral
Only U9.5M.

T'DP D ollar P a d tor Junk A
Used f ars tru&lt; xs A heavy
wjy.pment 377 6990

U S E D DOORS 4 used a lu m in u m
wmdows selling out Sate 'S at
807 Santord A v e , S a n tord a ll
day 6.1 ' 323 0779

wan / ta r
$350 Ask.n g
P u th M oped
791 1

54— G a r a g e S a le s
JU N E P O R Z IG R E A L T Y

J U V JU N k C A R S S T R U C K S
t rom 110 to $60 or m o re
C a ll J73 1834

61—Building Materials

72 C H E V ?* Ton P ic k u p $1000
com plete set m e ch. tools 1900
32) 4613

CALL A N Y T I M E

R E A L T O R S 8

17

STENSTROM
REALTY - REALTORS

S U P E R 3 B drm . 2 B a tn hom e
with large eal in kitche n,
dining room, sp a c io u s y ard
w ith p riv a c y fe n c e r e a r ,
mother in law q u a rte rs and
m o rel $47,500

O D E S S Y Gam e
Irid g e s
V a lu e
1230 9 m o s old
A s k in g $275 339

s a le

LO C H A R B O R la rg e 2 level, 4
Bdrm . 7 Bath. 1105,000 by appt
Wm M a h cfo w sk l, R E A L T O R .
333 7983 E v e 323 13*7.

WE p a y fo p d o !]* r lor
Jun»=Cars and T ru ck s
CB S Au'o P a r t s 39 1 4606

P IA N O beautiful b lon de con
so le , ben ch, d e h u m id it le r
irght extras, i960 33 7 67 19

to

L e v i Jeans A Jackets
A R M Y N A V Y SU RPLUS
310 Sa n to rd A v e
32JS791

S E A L -V

&gt;T JO H N S R « v ff fronfiiQ* J
acre p a rc e ls
also
H en ur
Parcels r .y e r access $1190(1
Public w a te r jo
„ »o ait*
m o n lr M a ll
17 •. ;o , r
1 in a n c n g
no q u a lify in g
Broker 628 48 JJ,

3544 5 Trench
372 0231
A lte r hours 337 7137 339 3910

R EA L ESTATE C A R E E R !

SPARKLIN G POOL HOME 7
Bdrm wills family room. eat.
in-kitchen. Screened porch,
manicured fenced yard. Many
‘extra*. Only 145,000. Owner
financing.

43 -Lots Acreage

O L D E R 2 story, 3 b d rm 2 bath,
fire p la c e : s c r e e n e d ir o m t
porch great I inane m g $43,500

C a ll to see it you q u a lify to r our
Free Tuition P r o g r a m l E x ­
citing A R ew ard in g !

BANANA L A K E RD Country
living. 2 Bdrm gorgeous. 1.4$
acres. Huge oak trees, horses
OK. F o r the handyman.

1911 S K Y L I N E M o b ile Home
24• S3 tt s c r e e n e n c lo su re
■porch u t ilit y Shed Cent: a!
heal and a&gt;r 3 B d rm . 3 Bath
Lot s ite is 50x100 Sale pr.ee
141,900 fin a n c in g av ailab le at
80 * ol sa le s price interest rate
14'&lt; J » 2 P o in ts Can be seen
it 126 L e is u re D r
North
D e B a ry .
F la
in
’ he
M e a d o w le a on th e « v e r
M o b ile H o m e c o m m u n ity
Please co n ta ct Tom Lyon or
O b E d m o n d s f irs t f ederai ot
Sern nnle 305 322 1347

3 Bedroom, 1 bath ho m e lo r sate,
by owner A ssu m a b le S' ;

w e iq b t

9x12 O R I E N T A L sty le ru q D ark
red E x c e lle n t cor'd) on used
4 m os $183 321 5230

42—Mobile Homes

S a n fo rd '5 Sales L e a d e r

0 * 1 )6 ,
■v 1 U1
jin 2 1

O A E rt"
C A N Be

IO -30

41—Houses

77 Junk G irs Removed

GENERATOR
sets inventory
r e d u c t io n S a le 3500 w a tt
$417 50 39 9 8 886

C.ONV|N0IN6 =

:«. «&lt;»m a is*

U ghf

41— H o u se s

f C

yta

59 -M u sica l M erchandise

P R A Y a c c u ra te ly
and e ffe c tiv e ly at Tuesday
N .gnt School o l P raye r I D S
M a p le .
S a n lo r d
321 4267
FREE

M

realto rs

Sunday, Ocf. 31,19*2—SB

l R easd n

• j S H E P H E R D ') H uskey 1 yr
old G re a t With children tree to
som eone w ith a good hom e &amp;
fenced yard
M A Y T A G G as Dr yer 3100
694 0780

£

120 N P a rk Ave , Sanford. F la
R E A L T Y W O R LD 006 323 3145

O U K E SPACE
r ON LEASE
830 7773

33—Houses Furnished
D ELTO N A , 3 Bdrm , HA A',
screened: porch, $ mot
minimum. No p ell $370 First,
last, security 574 1040

THE
U lb T

Evening Herald, Santord. FI.

50—Mtscellitneous for Sale

KNOT

ft

1)7.100.

D E L T O N A — 3 B ed roo m m u ll
le e lo a p p r D epo sit, lease 1250
mo. 3 904 781 5533

CAN

LEASQ
Fenced property w
b u ild in g liq h t m an ufactu ring
$450 per ttio

N E W 1 bdrm . 3 bath, garage,
CM A. a v a ila b le N o v e m b e r IS
321 3597 a ll 5 M o n th ru F rl.
A ll day w eekends.

1 B D R 2 B ath w .th D ouble car
garage, and e x e c u tiv e type
home m D eltona C a ll 57a 1412
d a y s , 714 389) e v e s
and
weekends

i VEAS5, AN I JES’ ) ( O K , BUT
new T he si6 b c &gt;$ ( th e r e * no
VC IT/ &gt;0UR
I* WORTH SfeO!
RULE
HERE* YOUR MONEY.' NOTHIN'
S A V IN ’ I
founp c u t

RENT
3 bdrm . 2 bath. Condo
w O c e a n View 1270 vrk N ew
S m y rn a

W ant Ads Get P e o p le Together
— Those B u y in g And Those
Selling 373 3411 -or 83 1 9993

3 B D R M apt In S a n lo rd , 1375
mo Senior c lt iie n p referred
M a il 3 ref fo P 0 Box 701
Geneva. F la 32732

w ith M ajor Moople

I N L A N D R E A L T Y INC

' SANFO RD
I b d rm ,
k id s ,
com kit . c a rp e l $19$ 339 7700
Sav On R en tals, Inc. R e a lto r
- O V E L Y F u rn ish e d efficie n cy
In town $195 m o Also-1 Bdrm
unturn $335 *14 4*71

Houses

le a r n

lease I 393 6904 ask tor E d

3 A N D I B D R M F rp m
Ridgewood A rm s A pt
7540
Ridgewood A v e 373 6470

41

'600 Sq It o ib c e . US Mapte
A ve S a n to rd A vA 'I Immed
Broker O w n er 173 7309

3613 M O H A W K D R . Santord 3
ixlrm , I path, re t . stove AC
5390 m onthly, s e t
deposit,

t

t

1 a n d 2 b d rm . a p ts .

Clubhouse w health club, on Site Lake
Tennis, Racquelball, Volleyball, Jogging Trail.
Swimming, Self-Cleaning Oven, Icemaker &amp; More.

Name .

------------------------Phone__________

Street .
City _
I m m luiested in a .
I ow n property in

Stale.
. bod m om

Z 'P .
. balh home

and (dan to build in .

. m o n th j

Mall to: HALLMARK BUILDERS, INC PO Box 696 • Longwood FL 32750

a

/

n' ’

�SB— Evening Herald. Sanford, FI.

Sunday, Ocf. 11, 1981

N e w P rojects
A re O p e n e d
By C a rd in a l

BUSINESS
IN BRIEF
R ush-H am pton N a m e s
Firm As R e p re s e n ta tiv e
Jo Griffin &amp; Associates has been hired to represent
Rush-Hampton Industries, Inc.
The group started carrying Hush-Hampton's air
treatment appliances and water treatment system In
October and is representing the company In Arizona,
New Mexico, and El Paso, Texas.
President of the firm, Jo Griffin, has been in major
electric sales in the Arizona area for six years prior to
Joining Rush-Hampton. Judy Armack and Donna
Hendley are also sales representatives with the sales
group.
Jo Griffin and Associates, of Arizona specializes in
housewares, gifts and electrics.
Rush-Hampton Industries is based in liingwood. and
manufacturers a successful line of the popular
Ecologizer air and water treatment systems as well as
other environmental related products.

Sears Prom otes Darus
PAC IT
Allstate Insurance Co.
recently announced the
appointment of agent
Joyce Darus to the Allstate
sales location in the Stars
store in the Altamonte Mall
in Altamonte Springs.
Darus is a graduate of
Hawthorne High School in
Hawthorne and attended
V a le n c ia
Com m unity
College.
She is a member of the
B u s in e s s
W o m e n 's
Association of Orlando and
resides in Orlando.
Allstate is a wholly
owned subsidiary of Sears.
Roebuck and Company.

J O Y C E D A H L 'S

B a n k e r M oves Office
Janice R. Springfield, executive vice president and
cashier of Flagship Rank of Seminole, has moved her
office to Flagship's Central Office at 3000 Orlando Dr.
• in Sanford.
Springfield said "The centralized operation center
houses all the major functions of the bank and it Is
appropriate that my office be included. My respon­
sibilities include the day to day operation of eight
locations and this move will permit me to interface
with other departments more conveniently."

I'ac V Send recently marked its opening with a
rilihon eutting ceremony at Us 7! 1 W. First St. in
Sanford location. Taking part, from left, are Teri
Honnpie nf the G reater snnford Chamber of
Commerce, Greg Raird. son of the business'

owners, Charles Haird, owner; Dave Farr, city
commissioner who snipped the ribbon; Deann
Raird, owner; and Karen and Jerry O’Hrien,
friends of the owners.

Disney Wardrobe Is A Big Job
"When the war was over, all m y
L A K E BU EN A VISTA (U PI)-D ior, nations around the globe and clothes for
Gucci, Givenchy stand back—look what the 21st century," said Phelps, director friends worked In motion pictures and
of costuming for Epcot, Disney World, costumes and a guy made me an offer of
Bob Phelps has wrought.
Phelps, 60, is not a fashion designer per California's Disneyland and the yet-to- 75 cents ar. hour to come work for his
studio," said Phelps. "I tried it and got
se, but he has helped create more than be-opened Tokyo Disneyland.
hooked. I worked with tailors, hat
"President
Reagan
may
spend
(1,200
100.000 individual costumes made from
800 original designs for Walt Disney's ~fof a suilfbuFour suits are as good as his makers, shoem akers, everyone and
learned the whole business.”
new billion-dollar Epcot Center. The new and cheaper because we have great
Phelps also worked in vaudeville and
Disney wardrobe represents some two master tailors. I'd put our clothes up
"did
a little work in television" before
against
anyone
else's."
years of work by Phelps and his four
joining Disney 14 years ago.
Phelps, an Air Force pilot during
designers.
Phelps said Disney employees wear
"We have designed clothes spanning World War II, began his costuming
costumes
because they add atmosphere
career
In
1945
when
he
went
to
work
for
a
40.000 years of history from the caveman
to the park and help set the mood.
to spaceman, plus authentic garb from motion picture company.

Sun Bank D iv id e n d Up
Sun Banks of Florida, Inc., has announced it in­
creased the dividend on its common stock to 27 cents
per share for the fourth quarter, 1982, dividend. The
new amount represents an increase of 8 percent or 2
cents per share, over the previous regular quarterly
dividend rate of 25 cents per common share.
The increased dividend of 27 cents per share is
payable Dec. 15 to common stock shareholders of
record Dec. 1, 1982.
Sun Hanks of Florida, Inc., also announced it has
declared the regular quarterly dividend on its 84 37
Cumulative Convertible Preferred Stock. Amounting
to 81.09 per share, the preferred stock dividend will be
payable Nov. 15, to preferred stock shareholders of
record Nov. 2.
Sun Banks reported total consolidated assets of $4.76
billion and total consolidated deposits of (3.82 billion as
of Sept. 30, making it Florida's third largest bank
holding company. The company's 21 subsidiary banks
operate 157 offices and lfil automated teller machines
throughout the state. Sun Banks common stock is
traded on the New York Stock Exchange.

C o n tin u e d
G ro w th

Cardinal has now developed various types of complexes
within the corporate lim its of 47 Florida cities and in the
unincorporated areas of 26 Florida counties.
"Every Cardinal apartment is a ground floor garden type
unit," according to M arilyn Wrobel, the company's director of
community affairs. “ Each unit has a full circle of insulation,
including the floor," Wrobel explained, "and this is why the
double wall construction of fire rated gypsum board and in­
sulation provide tenants with maximum sound, fire and energy
control."
Cardinal has been presented energy efficiency awards by
every electric utility company in Florida which has a
recognition program.

The snacks arc great al "Snax-Snax" at 1901
Country Club Hoad in Sanford, according (o
Greater Sanford Chamber of Commerce mem­
bers. A cham ber delegation recently welcomed

the new business. Enjoying a few snacks, from
left, are Jerry Popped of the chamber, John
Baxley, owner; Bob Douglas of the chamber and
Patricia Baxley, owner.

For Florida Senate — District 11
Langley's comments on these important issues...

von
NOVEMBER 2ND

• COMPETENT
• CONSERVATIVE
• CONSISTENT

Is F o r e c a s t

f *

Cardinal, a 28-year-old company, has two plants in
Columbus, Ohio, and a plant in Atlanta plus the Sanford fac­
tory. The firm also produces and develops duplexes, triplexes,
quadraplexes, condominiums, offices, institutional type
buildings, motels, single family housing and motels.

YOU CAN TRUST

F lo rid a

There has been "a fundamental shift" in the Florida
economy during the last two years and that shift will be felt
well into the 1990s, according to Richard M. Lilly, research
analyst for Raymond, James St Associates, Inc.
At a recent seminar conducted for Florida business editors,
Lilly reviewed Florida's growth trends over the last few years
and predicted a continuing increase in working-age im­
m igrants to the developing Tampa Bay-Orlando-Melboume
high technology area, where firm s such as ABA Industries,
Concept, Inc. and Reflectone are growing.
He estimates 70 new Jobs will be created for every 100 new
residents to the state.
The construction industry, which has been hurt due to the
recession, Is not dead, he noted. Unlike the mid-1970s
recession, Lilly added, there Is now "no stock of completed
homes overhanging the m arket." Now there are 60,000 unlta,
less than a five month supply, In contrast to over 200,000 units
In 1976.
Overall, Lilly predicted the population will continue to grow
al three tim es the national average and despite the surge of
manufacturing, tourism will continue to be the state's most
significant business enterprise.

Cardinal just opened the 66-unlt second phase of the Sand­
piper Apartments at the southwest comer of Virginia Avenue
and 25th Street In Fort Pierce. Sandpiper now has a total of 136
units.
The second phase is an eight building complex consisting of
10 studios, 38 one bedroom and 18 two bedroom units. The (1.5
million development was financed by First Federal of Phenix
City,---------------------------------------------- -------------------------The new addition is the second apartment complex to be
developed by Cardinal in Fort Pierce and St. Lucie County.
Cardinal has obtained penults and broken ground for the
construction of additions to both the Ridgewood Apartments on
Apalachee Parkway and the Indian Ridge Apartments on
Mlccosukee Road near Capital Circle in Tallahassee.
The Initial phases of both developments were opened earlier
this year and almost immediate rental of 100 percent of the
units brought about the second phases a year ahead of
schedule.
The addition to Ridgewood will be a complex of seven
buildings and will consist of seven studio, 42 one bedroom and
four two bedroom apartments plus a laundry unit and parking
for 62 vehicles.
The addition to Indian Ridge will be a complex of five
buildings and will consist of seven studio, 28 one-bedroom and
four two bedroom apartments plus a laundry unit and parking
for 61 vehicles.
The projects w ill be Cardinal’s third and fourth In
Tallahassee and I^eon County and the 134th and 135th in
Florida since' Cardinal put its 26-ncrc Sanford manufacturing
complex into production.
The unique 12 by 24 foot code conforming wood frame
modules are being built on a -490-foot long assembly line Ln
Cardinal’s 125,000 square-foot Sanford plant. Weighing nearly
six tons, the six-sided modules are moved aboard special
transporters to the Job site where huge cranes lift them by the
roof and place them on crawl-space foundations. At the present
time Cardinal can remove a one bedroom apartment, 97
percent complete with drapes hung and light bulbs installed,
every 46 minutes.

A tla n tic Profit U p
Atlantic Ban corporation has announced income
before securities transactions of (6,415,000, or (1.22 per
share, for the quarter ended Sept. 30. This represents a
17 percent improvement over third-quarter 1981 results
of (5,487,000, or (1.05 per share.
Income securities transactions for the nine months
ended Sept. 30.1982 was (18,173,000, (|3.46 per share),
up 16 percent from the (15,678,000 (12.99 per share)
reported for the first nine months of 1981.
Walker, president and chief executive officer, cited a
25 percent increase in net interest income as the
prim ary factor leading to the improvement in thirdquarter 1982 earnings. This rise in net interest Income
was attributed to a 20 percent growth in the level of
average earning assets, as well as an improvement in
the net interest margin to 5.83 percent from 5.64 per­
cent for the third quarter of 1981.

Cardinal Industries, Inc., of Sanford has announced the
completion of several developments.
The 72-unit Crystal Court Apartments on a four-acre site at
1969 Crystal Grove Drive in lakeland is one just opened.
Crystal Court is a 10 building complex consisting of 64 one
bedroom and eight two bedroom units. The (1.2 million
development was financed by Equibank of Pittsburgh, Pa.,
and was constructed from start to finish in approximately 90
days.
- Crystal Court is the first apartment complex to be developed
by taidinal in lakeland, the ninth ip Polk County and 126th in
Florida since the company put its Sanford plant into operation
six years ago. These developments plus approximately 400 in
Ohio and the Midwest makes Cardinal the largest factory built
code conforming modular housing builder in the United States
and the 14th largest housing construction company of any kind
in (he nation.
Also opened was the 75-unit Curiosity Creek Apartments
located on a 4.5-acre site on the west side of Florida Avenue
between Fowler and Fletcher in Hillsborough County.
Curiosity Creek is a 10-bullding complex consisting of 10
studios, 59 one bedroom and six two bedroom units. The (1.8
million development was financed by the Buffalo Savings
Bank, Buffalo, N.Y.
Curiosity Creek is the 17Lh apartment complex to be
developed in Hillsborough County.
Another project just opened was the 52-unit Candlelight
Apartments located on a six-acre site west of the South Plaza
Shopping Center on Candlelight Boulevard.
Candlelight is an eight building complex consisting of four
studios, 43 one bedroom and five two bedroom untts. The (1.17
million development was financed by First Federal of Russel)
County in Phenix City, Ala. Construction financing was
provided by Equibank.
Candlelight is the first Cardinal apartment complex to be
developed in Hernando County.

P R O P E R T Y T A X R E L I E F • Through modification of exem p­
tions or limiting tax millage we must stop the ever increasing
property tax.
Cap On Government Growth • Government should not grow out of
proportion to the natural population and economic growth. Caps
on millage taxes and state employment w ill help control this.
Crime and Punishment - To protect society from the crim inal, I
believe in swift and sure punishment for convicted crim inals.
We should reinstate our road cam ps, making prisoners work
instead of coddling them. I support capital punishment.
Education - Our schools are falling us today. I believe this is due
in a large m easure to the lack of discipline in the classroom and
at home.
The Equal Rights Amendment - I have a record of supporting
equal pay, promotion, salaries, credit, etc., tor women. However
I do not and w ill not support the E R A which puts this m atter in
the hands of our Federal Courts.

BACKGROUND
&amp; QUALIFICATIONS
, =• * &gt;•: :■t
^. .&lt; '
*iv* . „
" ...
• Education - attended public schools in Lakeland, Graduate of University of Florida
College of Agriculture and University of Florida Law School.
• Military Service • U.S. Army in Korea.
• Chairm an ■ Lake County School Board, 1970-1972.
• Past President &amp; Director • Lake County Young Republicans.
• Eight ( I ) years service in Florida Legislature.
• Republican Floor Leader In House of Representatives.
•Designated Republican Floor Leader in the Florida Senate for 1983-84.
•Outstanding Republican - Lake County.
•Christian father and layman.

1

Drunk D rivin g-1 was a prime sponsor of the DWI Bill passed this
year by th« Florida Legislature, t w ill continue to reinforce and
strengthen our DWI legislation.
The Environm ent • God is not going to make any more lakes,
rivers and beaches. We must do everything within reason to
that which we have.

A True Conservative...
His Record Proves It!
Pd. Pol. A d v „ Pd. For By Campaign Treasurer

�Sunday, Oct J 1 .1*U— 1C

Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Graham: Bafalis Knows Not From Whence He Speaks
TALLAHASSEE lU PI) — Incumbents with a comfortable
lead in the polls don't usually criticize their opponents, but
Gov. Bob Graham says L.S. “Skip” Bafalis might not know
enough to be governor.
Democrat Graham, seeking a second term in the Nov. 2
general election against Congressman Bafalis, the Republican
nominee, says Bafalis has made several slip-ups in recent
weeks that Indicate "he has been in Washington for a long
tim e" and has not been keeping up with current Florida af­
fairs.
Much of the crime-fighting program unveliled by Bafalis
several weeks ago became law during his first four years as
governor, Graham said
And he says Bafalis has made some embarrassing flubs,
including blaming him for converting the Public Service
Commission from elected to appointed status when that ]ob
was done by his predecessor, Reubin Askew.
“ When I read over the congressman’s proposals, the im­
pression I got was that this was someone who had been in
Washington for a long time," Graham said in an interview late
last week.
“ It's really out of date with what's happening in Florida and
would have been a better crime program for him to have an­
nounced when he ran for governor in 1970."
Much of Bafalis' crime-fighting program is aimed at
juvenile criminals. He recommends that lG-and 17-year-olds
accused of major crimes be tried as adults and that their
previous criminal records be a factor in sentencing.
These changes, plus others suggested by Bafalis, would
allow a juvenile to be sentenced to life in prison for a crime like
breaking and entering of an occupied home.
The legislature already was authorized state’s attorneys to
try juveniles as adults in certain situations, tlrah ain said.
"That approach, which does it on a case-by case basis... is the
appropriate way to proceed."
Bafalis proposed tough mandatory sentences for various
crimes. The uniform sentencing guidelines to be implemented
by the Florida Supreme Court next year would accomplish the
same thing by guaranteeing that criminals will sene a
specific time for major offenses and not get off through judges'
leniency or through early parole, Graham said.
Graham said his biggest criticism of the Bafalis program,
however, is that it probably would cost (1 billion to implement
and Bafalis "doesn’t deal with the dollar implications."
Bafalis has refused to admit that the proposals would be that
expensive, although the (1 billion estimate came from Germont Sen. Dick Langley, a member of the special commission

that developed the plan for the Republican nominee, according
to Graham.
Bafalis has had some trouble getting his facts straight,
Graham said of some attacks cn his administration by the Fort
Myers congressman.
"H e issued a stinging attack on us for having passed the shift
from the elected to the appointed Public Service Commission
and it was pointed out a day or two later that it was actually
during Gov. Askew's term that this had happened.
"H e made a statement within the last week chastising me for
the people I have appointed to the Probation and Parole
Commission. They’re apoolnted by the Cabinet and myself
together.
*
"H e also has made some comments relative to the standards
of appointment of county and circuit judges and it was pointed
out that county and circuit ludges were elected.
*

M

M

M

M

M

*

“ So there Just seems to be some Important areas of basic
understanding of what’s happened in Florida that he has not
been able to keep up with "
Is Bafalis too uninformed to be governor’
"You've put me in the box between being charitable and
being candid. But it is obvious that whoever is elected will be
governor of Florida in less than 90 days.
“ So we're talking about a decision that is going to have
immediate impact. The people will make a judgement on Nov.
2 as to...which candidate they believe is better prepared to be
governor of Florida beginning on Jan. 4, 1983 "
Is Graham betting that he will be reelected’
"I'm very pleased at the way in which the people of Florida
have treated and responded to Wayne Mixson and myself and
we are very willing to let the people's decision speak on Nov.
2."
*

*

¥

JUDGE
18th Judicial Circuit, Group 3
Brevard, Seminole Counties
•Native of Cocoa.
S3 years of age, married to former
M ary Sue Poole, also of Cocoa, 2
sons and 1 daughter — Tom, John,
and Susan.

Past and present member of Board
of Directors of Brevard County Bar
Association
» Past President of Cocoa Rockledge
Rotary Club

Undergraduate and Law Degrees
with honors from the University of
Florida.

• Moderator of First Baptist Church
of Cocoa
•Member of Advisory Board of the
Central Brevard Salvation Army

Practicing Attorney in Central
Florida forover24 years with trials
in all courts.

•Professional Baseball Player —
Sanford G iants — F la . State
League (1950-51 &gt;

*7 years on Circuit Grievance
Committee, 3 years as Florida Bar
Association Grievance Referee
•In First Primary Endorsed By
Most Seminole County Voters, And
CcTendorsed
By~— T lrF v a rd 's
"To d ay" Newspaper

•Infantry Officer

IF Y O U DON'T KN O W

ED JA C K S O N
Paid Political Advertisement
Bill Jackson. Campaign Treasurer

In the United States, California was the state with the most
telephones-20.9 m illion, according to Strickler. In com­
parison, Florida's telephones number 8.3 million.

A S K SO M EO N E W HO DOES!

House of Representatives
District 35, Republican
^ O rlando Sentinel Endorses A r t G rin d It"M r. t.rin d lr i« iln ir l* ih r more knimlrdgriihli* of lltr l* o on i&lt;Mir«. H r offrr*
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PROVEN ABILITY HARD WORK &amp; INTEGRITY
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FOR

For Uv. second year in a row, Washington D.C. ranked first
in the world as the city the most telephones Imore than 172) for
every 100 residents as of Jan. 1,1981. Southfield, Mich, came in
a close second with almost 166 phones per 100 residents.
“ In Florida, Sarasota was the leading city in terms of
telephones per 100 residents with a ratio of 109.6,’ ’ saya
Southern Bell Manager I.arTy Strickler. “ If you count the ac­
tual number of telephones in a city, though, Miam i leads the
way with more than 1.2 million phones. The next three cities
are Fort Lauderdale (463,000), Tampa (459.00M and
Jacksonville (448,000)."

ie

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ED JA C K S O N

Phones Are-Plenty------

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F lo r id a A s s n , o f S u r e !) A g en ts

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F lo r id a D a i r y P r o c e s s o r *

F lo r id a F o o d I n d t is in

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F lo r id a H a n k e r s

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and C o n tra cto r*

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Korea ( 1953-54)

�7C— Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Sunday, Oct. 31,1»|j

Against U.S. Senator Chiles

Poole Facing Uphill Battle Tuesday
TALLAH ASSEE (UPI) - State Sen.
Van Poole of Fort I^uderdale has some
positive things going for him In his bid to
defeat Sen. Ijwton Chiles Nov, 2, but he
also faces serious problems.
In his favor are personal charm, a
quick smile and media-style good looks
tliat project well In his television spots.
More importantly, he has the money —
more, in fact, than incumbent Chiles — to
buy the air time to convey his message

and alleviate one of his problems — low
name recognition.
H is message is c la s s ic a lly con­
servative Republican.
“ The way to get the economy going is
to get the government off the people’s
back, reduce the size of government.
That's what the public wants, less
government, less taxes, less regulation,
less spending," he says on his favorite
subject.

IN STR U C TIO N S TO V O TER:

SAMPLE BALLOT

S

STEP

TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 2, 1 98 2

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ELECTION

Chiles, who has limited his campaign
contributions, has raised only 1648,000

STEP

S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y . FLO RIDA
GENERAL

More substantially, he has received the
financial support of Republican national
organizations. Through the last reporting
period, Poole had raised Just under II
million, 1590,000 of it from the GOP.

HOW TO VOTE YOUR BALLOT CA RD (S)

2

STEP

when Snyder was eliminated in the Sept.
7 prim ary and gained Bludworth’s
support after winning the run-off Oct. 5.

there for recovery" litany.
It is sweetened with the assurance that
Florida has not been as badly affected by
the recession as the rest of the nation and
Is ready to take off economically.
Poole got into the general election by
turning back stronger than anticipated
opposition from Sarasota businessman
George Snyder and Palm Beach County
State Attorney David Bludworth.
He picked up Snyder's endorsement

and educated in Tennessee and moved to
Florida In 1963. He was first elected to the
Florida House in 1970, where he served
until moving to the Senate In 1978.
In the Senate, he was elected minority
leader pro tern in 1980 and was a member
of Democrat Dempsey Barron’s con­
servative bl-partisan controlling faction.
On the economy, he echoes President
Reagan’s "stay the course" messages of
recent days with his own "the signs are

The big problem he still must over­
come is Poole himself and the growing
perception that his knowledge of the
issues is shallow, a criticism raised about
him in the Republican primary.
Once past the prepared texts and the
standard answers to standard questions,
Poole is prone to stumble, a characteristic he has demonstrated In his headto-head meetings with Chiles.
The 47-year-old Poole was bom, bred

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OFFICIAL BALLOT

OFFICIAL BALLOT

OFFICIAL BALLOT

OFFICIAL BALLOT

OFFICIAL BALLOT

OFFICIAL BALLOT

GENERAL ELECTION
SEMINOLE COUNTY. FLORIDA
NOVEMBER 2. 1982

GENERAL ELECTION
SEMINOLE COUNTY, FLORIDA
NOVEMBER 2. 1982

GENERAL ELECTION
SEMINOLE COUNTY. FLORIDA
NOVEMBER 2, 1982 •

GENERAL ELECTION
SEMINOLE COUNTY. FLORIDA
NOVEMBER 2. 1982

GENERAL ELECTION
SEMINOLE COUNTY, FLORIDA
NOVEMBER 2. 1982

GENERAL ELECTION
SEMINOLE COUNTY, FLORIDA
NOVEMBER 2, 1982

'oft*cw this b *ub
S I M iN O Lt COUNTY G E N E R A L I l f C H O N

C O N G R E S S IO N A L

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PRECINCTS J , } SI, 60 6) A )\

OFFICIAL I ALLOT
(I M I U ILI1TDI
liH f O t l (OURTt I t H f ll
NOVI M i l l 2 1112

O F K U i IHIOT
LIIMN FLlCTOi
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OFFiClAL BALLOT

OFFICIAL lA U O f
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OFFICIAL BALLOT

OFFICIAL BALLOT

OFFICIAL BALLOT

OFFICIAL BALLOT

GENERAL ELECTION
SEMINOLE COUNTY, FLORIDA
NOVEMBER 2, 1982

GENERAL ELECTION
SEMINOLE COUNTY. FLORIDA
NOVEMBER 2, 1982

GENERAL ELECTION
SEMINOLE COUNTY. FLORIDA
NOVEMBER 2. 1982

GENERAL ELECTION
SEMINOLE COUNTY, FLORIDA
NOVEMBER 2, 1982

OITAC h Th &gt;| BTUB

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11/1/11

SIM IN O LE COUNTY G I N I R A L ELECTIO N

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JIM SMITH

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LAWTON CHILES
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SIM INOLE CO UNTY Q t N E R A l ELECTION

COUNTY

5S? GOVERNOR AND
LT GOVERNOR
(VOTE FOR GROUP)
BOB ORAHAM lOcttroo
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WAYNE MIKSON i l l GOtt^or)
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LEGISLATIVE
STATE SENATOR
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♦
101 HAttAWAV
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TONI JtNNiNOS
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COUNTY
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VOTE BOTH SIDES

A

VOTE BOTH SIDES

-

A

NO 3 ARTICLE I SECTION 14

JEAN B RYAN T
KENNETH P ATRICK

PIITEIM UKASE 4R9 DIURflON

NONPARTISAN JUDICIAL
j

O I A COW ART j*

If J *}«•^AM I f c 0A y MScm
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CIRCUIT G R O U P 3
(VOTE FOR O N I)

Vis FOR APPROVAL

►

NO FOR REJECTION ~

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(O W A R O M J A C K S O N
JEKE ( L O S E R

PROPOSED CONSTITUTIONAL
AMENDMENTS
NO 1 AR TIC LE M SECTION B

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NO

APPWQVAL
FOR R E JE C T IO N
NO 2

»

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ARTIC LE lt SECTION 12

54MCMH AND SEIZURES

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PROPOSED CO NSTITUTIONAL
AM ENDM ENTS

(VOTE FOR ONE)

yes’ p o r a

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NONPARTISAN

d i s t r ic t s

11/2/11

S IM IN O L E COUNTY G E N E R A L ELECTIO N

SCHOOL B O A H Q M EM B (F)

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11/1/12

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SEMINOLE COUNTY GENERAL ELECTION

f TATE

! GOVERNOR ANO
(VOTE TOR GROUP)
L i GOVERNOR
BOS GRAHAM Go«*^oo
WAYNE MI1SON (Lt Oo*b »p ^.
• ri# l A P A llt &gt;Oo **'VoH
|R«B) *
LIO CALLAHAN (U Oo.Brnon

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►

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st* c o N a n t s s iC M i O'St
( v o r i n on o * n
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lOimi ►
■I I I MtCOlLUU
(■•■I ►

STATE

g tC * { t* W Y O U T t U

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►

REPRESENTATIVE *N C O N Q R E 5 S
SIR C O N Q RESS iO N A L O'ST
(VOTE FOR O N Ii
OICR B A TCH ELO R

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V*M B * 0 0 .1

(R*pi *

VAN B POOLE

OETACM TH t STUB

DITAC h

B C M iN O L E COUNTY Q IR E R A l I lC C T lO N

C O N Q A E 5 3 IO N A L
u m t t o s t it t s s t t iit o H
&lt; v o tt r o n o h i i

CONGRESSIONAL
UN 'TID STATES SE N A T O R
LA*TO N CHILES

TOP

^p r o V a l

i

:

-

FQ R R E JE C T IO N

* ...

VOTE BOTH SIDES

-

tStCINCTS 1). U. II. 10. IS, 41 H i

M tCIN CTt II A J l

PRECINCTS 44.414 41

.

A lim c I N C T S

A U PRECINCTS

�Evening Herald, Sanford. FI.

Sunday, Oct 31, 1982—3C

U .S. C o n g r e s s m a n B ill M c C o llu m , F ifth D is t r ic t

STRAIGHT TALK
NOT DOUBLE TALK
Bill McCollum is respected
at home and in Washington
because when he talks you
know where he stands. He
acts decisively and is the kind
ot leader who makes things
happen. Lixtk at his record
on these important issues.
THE E C O N O M Y
“I’ve supported President
Reagan’s efforts to cut federal
spending and taxes, to bring
down inflation and to reduce
interest rates. The results speak
fut-themselvesd’_____________

1980

NOW

21.5% 12.0%
Interest
Inflation
12.4%
5.1%
Rate of growth
of Federal
Spending
17.5% 4.9%
...A nd most American families
will pay $788 less in taxes
next year.
“We are working overtime to
reduce unemployment. The
only way to reduce unemploy'
ment is to put the economy on
a solid financial tooting. The
dramatic reductions in interest,
inflation and federal spending
growth rate are positive
evidence that substantial
progress is being made.”
S O C IA L S E C U R IT Y
- S E N IO R C IT IZ E N S
“Tlie benefits of those retired or
about to retire should not be
reduced. T he trust funds must
be restored to solvency. Social
Security has its own tax base
and should be removed from
the general budget.” Bill
McCollum introduced legisla­
tion to exempt those 62 and
older from paying federal income
taxes on dividends or on interest
earned on savings and has co­
sponsored a bill to eliminate
mandatory retirement.

H\*5r :

“Bill McCollum's calibre of leadership is needed in Congress. I urge you to vote f&lt;rr Bill"

C R IM E
“As ranking Republican
member of the Subcommittee
on Criminal Justice 1am
convinced that the greatest
single deterrent to crime is just,
swift and sure punishment
for guilty offenders.” Bill
McCollum has introduced and
co-sponsored bills which would
restore the death sentence for
certain federal crimes such as
murder and treason and abolish
the insanity defense so that
people like John Hinkley don’t
walk out free.
IL L E G A L A L IE N S
“Illegal aliens threaten our
quality of life.” As a member of
the Immigration Subcommittee,
Bill McCollum introduced
legislation to create an Immigra­
tion Court so that illegal aliens

will be sent back home.
P R A Y E R IN
SCH O O LS
“Traditional family values must
he preserved. Voluntary silent
prayer should be returned to
our schools.”
OUR
E N V IR O N M E N T
“The pollution of our air and
water and the ravaging of our
earth effects the well being of
every American. I am deeply
concerned about maintaining
a healthy environment and
appropriate regulations to assure
we have clean air and water.
We cannot jeopardize the future
quality of our national resources
and endanger the health of
our children.”

Signed, Ronald Reagan

VETERANS
“1 am a veteran myself. 1 have
fought and will continue to
tight proposed cuts in benefits
tor all veterans. I have asked the
President to elevate the VA
Administrator to a Cabinet
level position.” Bill McCollum
supported legislation to increase
disability benefits tor veterans;
to extend readjustment
counseling tor Vietnam vets; to
provide priority medical care to
those exposed to Agent Orange
and to increase medical care in
central Florida.
V o te N o v . 2
C o n g re ssm a n
B ill M c C o l l u m
-

*

'

■

.t

D i s ,t r i c t
- V. • :

■
•,.*

-

.

*'
&gt;

Paul for by hill M cCollum For Qingress

F o r Y o u in C o n g r e s s

■

•vt

v .
-r

t

,4 ’

• • • ~***7 r *

�4C- Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Sunday, Oct. Jt, 1982

the seventh

o

»y

C M R IS T U N , T E D
M E T H O D IS T C H U R C H
tu c b y f D r l . l SublOKd EstO 'eS
R&lt;« Rob o rtW M ille r
P t t lir
S u n d lv School
f 41J m
M o f" i» * W o 'ih io
1100 d m
M Y F ) n d l llt l Sun
J M l m
E . t W orship
1 ) r d Sun
M lp ^
W vdnvjdey M orning P r i y o , G roup

..THE HOPE OF OUR COMMUNITY,

a d v e n t is t c h u r c h

Co , n * , e l? ih f t E im
" V « « ''"* th B r,m ,
P , „ 8r
Soluidoi S tru ttt
Sobboth School
* )o . m

Worth,p to n ic *
W o d M id ty Niphi
P ro , »• S f f . it .

Methodist

,VoV.*.v.yA*.v

Adventist

r i s o o r,
I M « n

A ssem bly O f God
f ir s t a s s e m b l y o f

F IR S T U N I T E D
M E T H O D IS T C H U R C H
4,1 P ir n Ay*
L H F K ing
P 4 l,« r
Thom *.
O . r f t lp r o l M u l- t
M orning W orthio
I 10 4 H i m
Sundlv Sthoel
T tt« rn
UM YF
I Mp m
M o n t Pf»»»r B r v l h l i l l
Jnd A Sth T h u fld O y
»M»m

ooo

Corner J T f h t E lm

David Bohannon

P « ltO f
10 M a m

■ Sllfttfay f«9M&gt;fill •
N u r w r y th e g | T h g r a d e

Worthip Service ■
Strvitiotn I t p iA p i
e v e n in g Worship
Wtd Family Nighf
W ed L igM houte Youth
Royal Rangers 4

1 0 W a- m
10 M a m
* Mp m
? M p m
7 00 p .m

OUR NATION!

7 M p,m
B H E M A ASSEM BLY OF GO D
Cornar ol Country C lu b R o a d
and Wilbur Avenue
Labe M a ry
i
in o w
R o m o Bowen
P asto r
M o r n i no Service
lla m
E v a n m q Service
Jp m

Baptist
c e n t r a l b a p t iit c h u r c h

1)11 O ik Ave San fo rd
))) )91l
E r e d d it Smith
Sunday School
9
V or rung Worship
11
C h u rc h T r im in f
4
E vtnsng Worship'
J
Wed P ra y e r Serv
7

P asto r
4$ a m
da a m
00 p m
Mp m
40 p m

C O U N T R Y S I D E B A P T I1ST C H U R C H
Country Club Read, Lab * M a r y
A ver y M Long
P a llo r
•Sunday School
t : *S • m
P re a c h in g A Worshiping
' l l : *S a m
fi , b it Study
■ 1 110 p m
S h arin g 4 P ro claim in g
MO p m
Wad, P r a y e r M e t l1 jo p m
Nursery P ro v id e d ■: F IR S T B A PT IST C H U R C H
111 Par* Avenue. S a n lo rd
R«v P lw IE M u rp h y . Jr
Pastor
Sunday School
t H im
M o rn in g W orthip
t l CO a m
C h u rc h Training
4 CO p m
t ventng Worship
f Mp m
W ed P ra y e r Service
4 10 p m
F IR S T B A P T IS T C H U R C H
OF D E L T O N A
1100 Providence B lv d
574 1111 or SM 1171
(independent)
R e v Donald Herchenroder
P a sto r
R e v B e rn ard P ecb
A sst P a sto r
O r w C CeiU M
A n t P a tto r
M r t J e ffre y K trle y
Y o u th D ir
M en'» P ra y e r
F e llo w sh ip
I M am
M o rn in g W orthip
I M ill M am
Sunday School
9 45 e m
C h ild r a n 't Church
1104am

Church Tfllg jftf_________t;-M P J IL
I vem ng W orthip
M 0 p m
W ednesday Prayer A
B ib le Study
T :0 4 p m
N u rte ry and But S e rv ic e
J O R D A N B A P T tlT C H U R C H
979 U p tH a Rd
S f SlA nlbn
'P a tto r
Su nd ay S c h o o l................... 10 M a m.
M o f rung Service
11 0 0 a m
E v th in g Set vie • .
M 0 p m
W v d n tid e r Service '
7 10 p m
O ld T ruth! |pr a New D ay
L A K E M A R Y B A P T IS T M IS S IO N
111 Lah e vitw , L a k e M a r y
S u n d a yS ch oo l
fa s am
W o rth ip Service
1104am
E v e n in g W orthip
7 W pm
W ed P ra y e r Serv
7 40pm
N u rte ry P ro v id e d
FIRST BAPTIST CH U R CH
O P I O N O WOOD
1 Blk West t i l l 9) on Hwy 4)4
ISouthern)
R e v J a m e t w Ham m ock
P a tte r
Sunday School
MO a m
Morning Worthip
I IS A 10 H i m
Children t Church
10 H i m
Church Tra ning
1 Hp m
E vrning Worthip
7 04 p m
Wed Evening
Prayer Service
7 00 p m

PA LM E TTO A V E N U E
B A PT IST C H U R C H
J I J l Palm etto Ave
R e v R aym ond Crocker
P a sto r
S u nd a yS ch oo l
9 41a m
M d rm n g W orship
11.00 a m
E 'v a n g tH itic Services
I M pm
W ed P ra y e r A A-blo Study
M O pm
ind* pen dent M issio n a ry
P I N E C R E S T B A P T IS T C H U R C H
1VIW A irport B lv d . SanfO'ird
m in i
M a r k P Weaver
P asto r
B ib le Study
t i i a m;
M o rn in g W orship
II M m i m
E v e n in g Worship
M O pm
Wednesday
F e llo w sh ip Supper
4.10 p m
N u rtery P ro v id e d F o r
Alt Services

C O M M U N IT Y U N I T E D
M E T H O D IS T C H U R C H
H ir r ,» »J i l P m p y R id g t R d
C t t lt lb t r r y
R t v H W lgh, K irtto y
P o tte r
R t* O o ld H H odgoi
A ste . P o tto ,
M orning W orship
d ild - ll • m
C h u rth School
1:1011 » m
S o r v ic t t a im ( I n i n lo r i l l ogot
F o llo a .n .p CoHoo b o ta o o n I . r . i c n
J Y F 'o r i
S Sdp m
UM YF
S :M p m
E ironing W o rth ip
TMpm
W rd B.bio Study
T. M p r n

Episcopal

Baptist
R EV k NNA PARK
B A P T IS T C H U R C H
2f4) C o u n try C lu b Road
Rev G ir y D r Busk
P is fg r
Sunday School
9 45 a m
M orning W o rship
f la m
Church T ra in in g
7 ID p m
Evening W orship
7 10pm
Wed P ra ye r S e rv tC f
4 19 p m
1
S E M IN O L E H E IG H T S
B A P T IS T C H U R C H
Dr J iy T CosmaTq
P iste ,
Sunday S e rv ic e s &lt;n the
L ik e M a r y M -iifi School
A u d ito rium i
Bible Study
♦ H im
wonhip
I I M im
rou th Choir
S 00 p m
Church Traiinm g
I 00 p m
W orthip *
T to p m

H O L Y C R O II
401 P ark Ave
The R e v L e ro y D Soper
H o ly Co m m unio n
H oly Co m m unio n
C h u rc h School
H o ly Co m m unio n

, ,1.

VVh.il do b u r h a n d s tell us?

A ch ild 's hands— smooth, pliable, soft and b e a u tifu lspeak o f innocence.
The hands of youth— restless, finger-snapping. rhythmheating—are searching (or answers.
*
A mother's hands arc firm , capable, yet gentle Dad's
hands are big, strong— they represent authority, (handmother's hands are w rinkled and veined— they tell us ab­
out kneading bread . .. ami praying. A n old man's hands are
gnarled and crip pled , crossed on a cane, waiting.

W td n ttd a y S e rv ic e s at
Covenant P f i i b y t t f l p n Church
Prayer A B ib la Study
1 00 p
Adult C h o ir
T;4l p m

R e ctor
I OOi m
10 00 a m
10 00 a m
10 00 a m

E P IS C O P A L C H U R C H OF
THE NEW CO VEN ANT
| t ) T u sh iw .lia Road
W inter Springs
Phone 471 RT?I
R e v G re g o ry O Brew er
V ic a r
Sunday C te c tltrlIt
I A 10 a m
S u n d a yS ch o o l

F IR S T C H U R C H
O FTH E N AZAREN E
n i l Sanfo rd A v t
John J Hinton
F a it o r
SundaySchool
S jI S im .
M o rn in g W o rth ip
I l: 4 f i. i9 l.
Y o u th Hour
4 04 p m
Evangelist Service1
4:44 p.m,
M id week Service (W a d )
7 04 p m
N u rse ry Pra vld e d to r aft S e rv ices

Evangelical

American

Congregational

Orthodox

W INTER SPGS COM M UNITY

frayin g hands, working hands, little hands, old hands
.ill grapple w ith the problems of life.

Catholic
A LL SO U LS C A T H O L IC CH U R CH
710 Oak A v e ,. Sanford
P r W illia m E n n it
Patter
fat. V ig il M a t t
5pm
Ion M ata
1 . 10:11. u oa
C antettion tf Sat
ij p m

Some problems are too great to solve alone. It takes a
helping hand . . . outstretched to your hand.
With outstretched hands the Church welcomes you,
seeks you. extends a joyous invitation to w orship God.

Christian
FIR ST CHRISTIAN
1447 S. Sanford Ave
I Edward John ton
Minuter
SundaySchool
9:41 a i
Morning Worship
119411
I vmlng Worthip
7 09 p r
W H i f f r l c i ____________ L jg

ev a n o elic a l

CO N GREGATIO N AL
119 wade Straet
Rev Robert Burnt
Pattor
SundaySchool
10
00a m
Worship
10 00 a m
TIES THAT BIND
EVA N G E LIST IC C E N T E R
Full Gospel Beardall Chapel
Interfaith
Sunday
10 H a m A 7 p m
W ednesday
7
00p m
P ra y e r. P ra is e A
Bible Study Sat
4
10p m
Everyone Welcome

Lutheran
THE R E D E E M E R
"T h e Luther an H o u r” and
TV T h u it The L i f t ”
ISIS Oak Ave
R e v E lm e r A R tu tc h e r
P a sto r
S u n d a yS ch o o l
t 11a m
W o rsh ip Se rv ice
10 10 a m
K in d e rg a rte n and N u rsery

SA N FO R D C H R IS T IA N CH U R CH
1)7 A irp o rt B lvd
Phone 112 t t l t
Joe Johnson
M inister
Sunday School
T lO a m
W orship Se rv ice
10 1 9 a m
Evening S e rv ice
7194 p m
P ra ye r M e e tin g W ed
7 00 p m

Chr/sf/an Sc/ence

GOOD SH EP H ER D
LU T H E R A N C H U R C H
1917 Orlando Or 17 9)
I L u th e ra n Church in A m e ric a )
Rev Ralph i lum an
Pastor
Sunday School
4 4Sam
Worship
10 04 a m
Nursery Provided

C H R IS T IA N S C I E N C E S O C IE T Y
c « Sw eetw ater Academ y
East Labe B ra n tle y D rive
L o n | wood
Sunday Service
lOOOam
SundaySchool
tOOOam
Wed Testimony
M e e tin g s
?;M p m

ST L U K E ’ S L U T H E R A N C H U R C H
SR 414 A Red Aug Rd
O viedo (S ia v ia )
E d w in j R o tto w
P a tte r
Sunday School
9 :4 S a m
W o rth ip Se rvices
I M A IIO O a m
We m a in ta in a C h ristia n School
K in d e rg a rte n through I lg M h G ra d e

Church Of Christ
C H U R C H O F CHRIST
1SU Park Avenue
Fred Baker
Bible Study
Morning W o rship
Evening S e rv ice
l a d . f i B ib le C la ss
Wednesday
Wednesday Bible Class

Nazarene

lAm oricpn,
STS P E T E R ft PAUL
1,11 M o g n o lll Ay*
Sanlord. Flo
Rov Fr Anthony Grant
Poitor
D .v.no L itu rg y
llim
Sundoy
Contott.ani
fty Appolnlmonl
R o d or*
j : ; : : tt

Pentecostal
FIRST P E N T E C O S T A L
CHURCHO F LONGW OOD
J41 Orange Street. Longwood
Rev E Ruth Grant
Pastor
SundaySchool
10 00 a m
Morning Worship
H M a ifl
Sunday Evening
7 10 p m
Wed Bibie Study
7 10 p m
Conquerors Meeting Sunday 4 10 p m

I G L E S IA D E OIOS
P E N T E C O S T A L .M l
C all* 14th E s q Call#
M agnolia. Sanford, FI#
Phone 111 S447
R e v L iv iI Etienne
F a tte r
E ic u t la B lb ilc a tedos lo t d e m &gt; ^ » a
la s 1 do la ttrd e

P resbyfer/an
FIRST P R E S B Y T E R IA N CHU RCH
Oak Avt A )rd St
Rev Virgil L Bryant. Pallor
Phone 111 144)
Morning Worship
Church School
Morning Worship
Nursery

119am
9 e! • m
It 04a m

THE LAK E M A R Y U N IT ED
PR E S B Y T E R IA N CHURCH
Wilbur Ave . Lake M ary
Rev A F Stevens
Minuter
f untfey Church School
t 4f#.m
Morning Worship
it 90 am
Youth Group
7 10 p m
Wed Choir Practice
• 40 p m

Methodist

Church Of God
C H U R C H O F GOD
•01 W 72nd Street
Rev B ill Thom pson
Sunday School
M orning W o rsh ip
E va n g e listic S e rv
F a m ily E n ric h m e n t
S w r it t
7 04pm

G R A C E U N IT E D
M E T H O D IS T C H U R C H
A irp o rt B lv d A Woodland D r
W illia m J B o yer
P a sto r
C h u rc h School
t;M i m
W o rsh ip Se rvice
nooam
Y o u th F e llo w sh ip
4 :0 4 p m
T u esda y B ib le Study
19 04 a m
N u rs e ry p ro vid ed tor a ll se rv ice s

Copyright I W Kmlftf A4vftftrvng Se*V&lt;#
P O Bo« BQ24 C*m *&gt;,i'&gt;*vi **. Vug nut 22906

C o n g re g atio n a l
CO N G R EG A TIO N A L
CHRISTIAN CH U RCH
. 1401 'S Park Ave
11MSB4
Pastor
Rev Fred Neat
A n o Pastor
Rev Edm ond L W eber
t
10
a m
Sunday School
Fellow ship
IB 10 l i a m
M orning Wor th ip
11 04 a m
Wed P ra y e r M e e tin g
A B ible Study
7 10 p m

Scjipeures ta’PCtaJ hy Ih# Am«ncan tli^g SDOtlf

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M m i t lt iy

Tuesday

W ednesday

T h u rsd a y

F r id a y

S a ia r d r i y

M u lllu n

M a lK ie n ’

A rts

1 ( .'o r ie l It i n n s

G a la t ia n s

G u la liu n s

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4 : 2 1 -3 1

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2 .4 - 1 3

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S A N L A N D O U N IT E D
M E T H O D IS T C H U R C H
St. R d 4)4 A 1-4
Longwood F la .
Ja m e s E. U lm e r Sr.
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UPS ALA P R E S B Y T E R IA N CHURCH
Cor Country Club A Upsaia Rd
Darwin Shea
Pastor
SundaySchool
0 04 a m
Worship Service
10 04 am
Nurtery Provided

YOUCAN FE A T U R E
YO UR C H U R C H
IN T H I S S P A C E F O R
II M P E R W E E K
C A L L 111 1411

m .it u n .H

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'The Following Sponsors M ake This Church Notice And Directory Page Possible1
A T LAN TIC N A T IO N A L BANK
Sanford, Fla.
Howard H. Hodges and Staff

F L A G S H IP BAN K
OF S E M IN O L E and Staff
200 W. First St.
3000 S. Orlando Dr.

C E L E R Y CITY
PR IN T IN G CO., INC.

G R EG O RY LUM BER
TRUE V A L U E H ARD W ARE
500 M aple Ave., Sanford

C O LO N IAL ROOM
RESTAURANT
Downtown Sanford
115 East First St,
Bill 8. Dot Painter

H AR R ELL&amp; BEVERLY
TRANSM ISSION
David Beverly and Staff

D A IR Y Q U E E N
Mark and Esther Perry
2523 P a rk Drive

JC Penney
Sanford Plaza
Ed Hemannand Staff

K N IG H T 'S SHOE STORE
Downtown Sanford
Don Knight &amp; Staff

O SBORN'S BOOK
and B IB L E STORE
2599 Sanford Ave.

L. D. P L A N T E , INC.
Oviedo, Florida

P A N T R Y PR ID E
DISCOUNT FOODS
and Employees

THE M cK IB B IN A G E N C Y
Insurance

P U B L IX M A R K E T S
and Employees

M E L 'S
G U L F S E R V IC E
Mel D ekleand Employees

S E N K A R IK GLASS
&amp; PA IN T CO., INC.
Je rry &amp; Ed Senkarik
and Employees

SMITTY'S SNAPPIN' TURTLE
MOWERS, INC.
2506 Park Ave.
Mike&amp; Connie Smith
ST EN ST R O M R E A L T Y
Herb Stenstrom and Staff
W IL S O N -E IC H E L B E R G E R
MORTUARY
Eunice Wilson and Staff
WILSON M A IE R F U R N IT U R E CO.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Wilson
W IN N -D IXIE STORES
and Employees

SEMINOLE COUNTY AREA CHURCH DIRECTORY1
i

’

A S S E M B L Y OF OOO
F lf t l All»m U» *1 God Ifth ft Elm
flh tim Au tm b 'y »l 0«R. Corn** ol Country Clot Rood ond
**&gt;IOur AvO., LOtO Mory
BA P TIST
Antioch Soptitl Church, Oviodo
Colvory BopliitChurch. C rytlP l Lo o t ft )rd. Lobo Mory
Conoiborry ftoplnl Church. HO Somlnolo Bl»d
Control B op lill Church. ( I ll Ook A«o
ChuluolO F in l Boplill
Clpprycotor Mnironory B p p liil Church. Sou'hooil Rd
CpBKlryUdo BopHlI Church. Country Club Rood. Lobo Mory
Vigtoyy B op lill Church. Old Or Undo Rd ol Hoilor A*o
F irst B op lill Church. BIB Pork A&gt;o
P i n ! B op lill Cburch pi Allom pnlg Springi. ftl IM. AHomonto
Bpringi
P ir t l B op lill Church pi Oono*P
F irst B t p lill Church ol Lobo Mory
F it s , B op lill Cburch §• Lobo Monro*
P in t B o p lill Church ol longwood. 1 Bib W tll b l l M l on Hwy.
4M
F irg l B o p lill ol Onodo
F u l l B op lill Cburch ol lonlondo Spring!
F irst B op lill Church ol Wintor Springi. 110 R ih im i hd
F ir t l Shiloh Mmionory B o p lill Church, I 111 K l f h II
For o il B op lill Church o( Qgloon
Fduhlom Hood Boplill Church, O«iodo
Orgco BiMo Church. 1044 I lo n lo rd Ayo
Jordon M H ilor try Bo p rill Church. T » Upoow Rd
northilda Boplill Church. Chuluolh
M u tio n iry Boplill Church. North Ad . Enlprprlio
M bctdtni* M illion B op lill Church. Oob Hill R d . Otloon
Morning Olory Boplill Church. Oonpyo Hwy
M t, Morion P flim lirt Bopinr. t i l l lo c u li A«o . lonlord
M l. Oliva Mmionory B o p lill Church lonlondo Springi Rd..
M l. SmoMWiilonory B o p lill Church. I M Jorry Ato
m j lio n Mmionory b op lill. Sipoi A . t
Ngw Brthyl Mmionor y Church, t in SI ft Hlchory Aro
indopondonco BopMI M ilt Ciulc Ltoguo B&gt;og . Longwood
Mtpo B o p lill Church. F o r m C ily Community Coolor, F o r tit
City
N o* M l Colvory Mm ionory h o p in ' H M * l!*h It
Now S ilim Prlmifiyo B i r i n ' Church. I SOT W. IHh II.
Now Toilomoni Boplill Church. Ouollly l»h. Nprlh Longwood
Now M l lion Boplill Church. ITT* Pppr A yo

’

Now Lilo Filtowihip. co il B Lobo Dnro. Com iborry. FI S2T0S
Ro.onno P u b Boo'nl Church. 1111 W Itih tl
Pooplo‘1 Boplill Chopol. 1101 W P in l Strut, tonlord
Fintcroit Boplill Church, l i t w Airport Bird
Proirlo Lobo Boplill. Ridgo Rd . Porn Porb
P ro g rtu Mm ionory B o p lill Church. Mldooy
Sound Shiloh M m ionory B o p lill Church W ill Sonlord
Somlnolo Hoighli Bpptlol church. Sort k m In L*kp Mory H W
SclsMf Ayditefluffi
Smyrno Boplill Church, i l l Oyorbrpob O r . Conoiborry
Sunlond Boplill Church. 1111 PolmoHo
St Jom oi Mm ionory B o p lill Church. St Rd lll.O it o f R
St Lubo Mmionory B o p lill Church ol Comyron City Inc
St Pool Boplill Church, t l) Pmo A*o
S, Motthowi Bopinr Church, C m i in Hgti
Springhold Mnnonory B o p lill. lith A Codor
SI John's Mm ionory B o p ln l Church. »• Cyprtn SI
Totnplo Boplill Church, P ilm Springs Rd . Altim onti Springs
Willipm Chipol M m ionory B o p lill Church. Morb B Willlom St.
Allom onli Springs
lion Horn Boplill Church, PII Orongi A*|
CATHOLIC
Church ol lho N itm ty . Lobo Mory
All Souli Colholic Church. I l l Oob Avo , Sonlord
Our LodyOuoonol Pooco Colholic Chop*!, t il S Mognolip A*o ,
Sonlord
It Aren't Colholic Church. Dogwood Trail. OtBory
St Auguilino Colholic Church. S unni D r, noor Button Rd.,
Cioiolborry
St
Mory Mogodolono Colholic Church. Mo it, ond A * t „
AHomonto Springi
Our L id y oltho L o b tl Colholic Church. D ’ lM o n m ilio n . Doltom
CHRISTIAN
Chriitlon Scionco Socioly. C O Swootwilor Acodomy. ■ oil Lobo
•rjnlloy D r, Longwood
p ir il Chriitlon Church. IMI S Sonlord A*o
Sonlord Chriitlon Church. 1)1 W Airport Bl*d
Nurthiido Chritlion Church. Plorldo M u m O r . Moihond
llk o uio w Chrm iir, Church. Roor Lobo Rd . ol jom .ion
CH U R CH OP CHRIST
Church ol Ch m l. I ll) S Pork Avo
Church ol Chritl ol Loot Ellon. U S I I 11. N Conoiborry
South Somlnolo Church *1 C h rlil. S4I0 lo b o Howoll Rd
Chvr:h ol Chrnl. 100 P ilm Springs O r . AHomonto Spgi

Church ol Chritl. Gonoio
Church ol Ch rn l. Longwood
Church ol Ch rnl. W nth SI
Horlhiido Church ol C h rn l. P l i H u m O r . Moillond
CHURCH OP OOO
Church ol O ld . SO) Hicborv
Church ol O ld . M l W lln d St
Church ol Ood. Oyiodo
Church ol Ood H in n it i. Lobo M o w n
Church ol O ld M illion. E n lir p r lt i
Church ol Ood. n i l w n th St
Church ol Ood in C h rn l. Oiiodo
Church ol Ood o, Prophocy. SIM S E lm A * i
Church ol God ol Prophocy, 1100 t Porummon A»|
R ticu t Church ol Ood. IIMW 11th S I, Sonlord
. Truo Church Ol Ood. 1100 Bideowood Ayo.. Sontord
EA S TE R N O n THOOOX
E tiitrn O rth o a o i Church. I l l P ilo t ft Pool, t i l l M ognolll Avt-,
tonlord. Flo
•
E it lir n Orthodol Church, S* Ooorgo, III Shtrwood C l.,
Altim oMo Springs
E it lir n Orthodol Church, t l S llv m 't ol O C A , t i l South St..
F ir n Fork
E it lir n Ortho do ■ Church, SI. John Chryidotim Chopol- U S
Hwy. V Tl. F ir n Fork
CO N GR EGATIO N AL
Congrogoiionbl C h riitiin Church. I4SI I P o ri A * t . tonlord
EPISCO PAL
Epncopol Church ol Iht Now Covononl. I l l T u ik n rillo Rood.
Win lor Springs
Tho Church ol Iho Oood Sbtphtrd, M iillm d . 1)1 L o kt A yo
All l ii n lt Epncopol Church. E . Or lo r y A v o . E n ltrp riio
Ch rnl Epncopol Church. Longwood
Holy Cron Epncopol. Porb Aug., o l l t h l l , lonlord
t l Nicbord‘1 Church, 1111 Lo kt Howoll Rd , Winlor Pork
JEWISH
Both Am ly m g o gut mooting o l Intorttilo Moll. Allom onli
Springi
LU T H ER A N
A ic tn u m Lulhorm Church. Ovorhrpob Dr.. CPltolhorry
Good Sbophord un-iod Lulhoron. 1117 S. Orlm do Dr.
Lulhorm Church ol Providm co. Doilom
Luthorm Church oltho Rodoomor. 11) w Uth. Ploco
M illio n Lulhoron Church, Goldin O ly i Dr. ft Hwy. IJ.fl.
ConHborry
SI L u k tl Lulhoron Church. Rt 410. tim id

II Stophon Lulhoron Church. 4M lu ll W ttlo l 1-4, Longwood
M IT H O O IIT
ftirnolt Unilrd Mtm oribl Church. E OoBory A * o , Entorprno
Bi*r L i k t Uni,od bAithodnl Church
Bothcl A M I Church. Conoon Hglt
Cbtsolhorry Community Unilod Myihodul Church. Hwy. 17 *1.,
Pmoy Rldg* Bd . Conoiborry
C h rlil Unilod Mothodnl Church. Tuckor Or , Sunlond E ilo lo i
OoBory Community Mithodnt Church, w Highbonky R d .
OoBory
First Unilod Mothodnl Church. I l l Pork fty*
First Mothodnl Church i t O*ndo
First Southorn Mothodnl Church. Iiog lonlord Avt
Fro* Mothodnl Church, SM W ith SI.
F ir tl Unilod Mothodnl Church *1 Omovo. O m o v i
O ontYi Mothodnl Church. Otnovo
O ro ci U M ..J Mothodnl Church, Airpod Hvd
Gronl Chopol A M R Church, Oyiodo
O ib g riY i Molhodnl Church, Ovlodo
Otloon Mothodnl Church
Pool* Woiityon Mothodnl. Rt. It W i t Pmib
It. J tm ts A M E *1h ot C y p ru s
St. Luhp M B Church Pi Cpm tronCity. Inc , ft lt rd lll oil 1 R. 41

E.
II Mory s A M E Church. It Rt 411. Dstom ,
II Pout's M oll odist Church. Ootoon R d , Inlorprlt*
Stotlord Mom* 1st Church, t. OoBory
lonlondo Umlod Mothodnl Church. SR IM ond 14, Longwood
Otloon UnsttF Mithodnt Church, Cor. *1 Corptntor ft M u rriy St.,
O tlom
N A T .- a r .a
■ rtt Church *1 Ih* Nosorm t, ISII lonlord A n .

G o n s v i Church *1 lh* H iig ro n o , I R. 44. G m t v i
L o k t M ory Church t l Ih* N iioroo *. 1)1 E. C ryslol Lobo A vt.,
L d k t M ory
M irhhom Wood* Church ol IM N kitrtn o. I» 44, )ty M ilts W *•
14 ol Ih* Wokluo R u n
Longwood Church *1 IM N i n r m i , Woymon ft Jissup A * t .

Loogw tod
P R E S B Y T E R IA N
DoHono Prosbylonon Church. Hoiitnd Bird A Austin Avo..
Doltom
Lobo Mory United PrttBytorlb* Church
First Proskylirion Church Dob Aoo A Ird It.
Flrsl P ro sb ylirltn Church t l OoBory. E Highlond
Conronont Prosbylonon Church. 1171 I Orlondu Or

1, Andrews P r it b y lir n n Church, dun Boor L o k t Rd
SI Morks P ru ib y tin o n Church, n i l P ilm Springs Rd..
Allom onli Springs
U pto ll Community Prosbylonon Church. U p tilu Rd
W ittm inn tir PrutByltrlon Church. Bod Bug Rd . Coitulburry
Wmior Springs P r it h y lin i n Chopol. Ithdoy Ad**nlist Church.
Moss Rd . Winlor Springs
S E V iN T H DAY A D V E N T IS T
Forost Lobo SovtMh O ty A d vm in t Church, Hwy CM. Forts!
City
Stvonth O ly Ad*onlnl Church. Moillond A*o . A llo m o n li Spgi
Sonlord Sovmth Dor A d ym lisl Church. Ith ft E lm
Winter Springs t*«onlh Ooy A d vin iiit Church. M I Moss Rd
Mors Hill S i* in ih Ooy A d .tn tm Church. M l E Ind S I . Sonlord
O TH ER CH U R CH E S
Alim 's A M E Church. Olivo A Uth
All F ilth Chopol. Comp S im in tli. Wtbivo Fork Rd
■oprdoll A n nu o H o i.m u Chopol. Boordill A*o
ChuluolO Community Church
Church *1 Jotut C h rlil ol l l l i r Doy loinls, 1)11 P ork A v l.
Lobo Monro* Chopol. O rih f* Blvd . Lobo Monro*
Kingdom H ill ol J o M * ih ’t Witnoss. Lobo Monro* Uml, 1147 W
Third Itroil
Flrsl Born Church *1 Ih* Lvlng God. Midwiy
First Church t l Clw itl. Iclm lisl. lu o m Bird ond Vtnut I I ,
DHM m
P m l t COi i l l Open Bihit Toko* m en , Ridgt wood A » t , O il IStn
oppisitt Sim in o n High School
First Pm ttcottol Church t l Longwood
Flrsl P m t ic iit o l Church ol lonlord
Full Ottpol Church ol Ood in Chritl, 111* Jorry Aug.. lonlord
Full Otsptl To bur me I*. ITU Country Club
M l. Ohio H e lm u t Church. Oob Hill R d , Os,ion
Sonlord Alllonc* Church. MSI I P u b A*t.
lonlord Biblo Church. l«4b Sonlord A*t.
Sonlord Congrogotionol ol Jth**lh l W ilM SSit. IU4 W. 4th II.
T M St'vttion A rm y, IM W 14th SI
Rollins Hills M o ro v iin Chgrch. SR 4)4. Longwood
Rodoomor M o ri* ,tn Church. 711 Tusciwillo Rd . Winlor Springs
Unilod Church *1 Chritl. Altim onti Community Chopol.
Allomonli Springs
Holy Trinity Church ol God m Christ. 1111 M v g o u i'm o A yo
Tho Full Gospul Church *1 Our M rd Jotut t h r ill. WUhin«|oi\
I I . Conoon City
Winlor Springs Community C.ongtlicol Congrogotim il. Wlrrlor
Springs, E km p n lo ry School

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�&lt;

RELIGION
Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Sunday, Oct. 31.1»«J-SC

A N N IV E R S A R Y

Briefly

CELEBRATION
Luke Man Church of The N a/arcn r (see photo
left) wili celebrate its .Tilth anniversary this
Sunday with form er pastors participating in the 11
a.m. amt :i p.m. services. There will he a dinner at
mum at the Lake .Mary Lire Hall. There will he
special music by the original Christianaires of
Trevccca X a/aretie College at the 11 a.m. service
and by the Pickering Family in the afternoon.
Central Florida District Superintendent .1. It.
Morseli will he the afternoon speaker.

Seminole H eights Baptist
B an q u e t To C lim a x Drive
Ned Julian Jr., catnpa*gn director for the Seminole
Heights Baptist Church building fund drive, w ill give his
testimony in the the 11 a m. sendee Sunday at 1.ake Mary
High School. Victor Richburg, co-director, will share in the
7 p.m service. Dr J.T. Cosmato will present the children's
sermon. The "Pastor's P als" will sing. The ordinanceof
baptism will be observed Sunday evening in the pool at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Tom Deppen, 2111 Oak A v e , Sanford,
lig h t refreshments will be served following the baptism.
An advanced commitments dinner1by invitation i will be
held at 7 p.m. Thursday at the Skyport Restaurant. The
churchwide commitment banquet is scheduled for G p m.,
Nov 11 at the Sanford Garden Club

Women Plan B aza a r
The DeBary United Methodist Women will meet Tuesday
at 1:30 p.m. in the church parlor. Ruth Sargent will present
a program on "Strangers and Sojourners with Me."
Following the meeting the Ruth Circle will serve refresh­
ments.
The church bazaar will be Nov. 6 from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. A
lunch of soup, sandwich and dessert will be served by the
Martha Circle. There will be a baked goods booth, kitchen
cupboard, jams and jellies, arts and crafts, a thrift shop, a
men's booth

V a r ie ty S h o w
The Spiritual Church of Awareness, Winter Park, will
sponsor a variety show at 7:30 p.m, Nov. 6 at the Orlando
Garden Club on Rollins Avenue F.ddie Rose of Altamonte
Springs will be master of ceremonies. Proceeds will go to
the church building fund. Among the entertainers will be
the Arthur Murray Dancers, a rock band, a belly dancer,
prizes. For ticket information call B34-5378.

C outure Conducts S e m in a r
Dr Gary Couture of California, will tie the speaker at a
special one-day seminar on "New Answers for Smokers,
Drinkers and Overeaters", 9:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the
Science of Mind Center, 1113 Gene St., Winter Park. He has
been in private practice in the field of preventive health
care with emphasis on nutrition, diet, weight control, stress
and aging Educated in France, England and this country.
Couture received his doctorate in the mid-'60s.
He is a nationally known lecturer, educator, -seminar
leader and consultant. He is author of "How to Win the
Aging Game.” Brochures are available. For information
call Science of Mind Center at 611-1818

C hristology S tud y Begins
Dr. Jay T. Cosmato, pastor of the Seminole Heights
Baptist Church, announces the beginning of a new special
Bible study series Wednesday, 7 p.m, Christology will be
the general category. Studies will deal with designations for
Christ, such as Saviour, Messiah, U rd, l«unb of God, and
Ixigos, and will take the hearers into the Christmas season.

H a g in Is O utreach S p e a k e r
The Rev. James D, Hagin, pastor of Providence-Antioch
Missionary Baptist churches in Seminole County, will speak
at the 8 a m. service Sunday at Bethel Missionary Baptist
Church, 125 W. Welbome Ave., Winter Park, to launch the
church’s Outreach Emphasis Month.

R evival S c h e d u le d
Evangelist Pearl McDaniel will be speaking at the
Sanford Church of God Revival services at 7 p.m. Oct. 31Nov. 2. The church is located at 801 W. 22nd St.. Sanford.

I)H. L E W I S D R U M M O N D

Evangelist To Lead
Spiritual Life Weekend
Dr. Lewis A. Drummond,
an internationally known
evangelist and author, will
lead a Spiritual Life Weekend
at Pinecrest Baptist Church,
119 W. Airport Boulevard,
Sanford, Nov. 5-7, at 7 p.m.
nightly and at 11 a.m . on
Sunday.
Drummond has served as
the Billy Graham Professor of
Evangelism. Southern Baptist
T h eo lo g ic a l
S e m in a ry ,
Louisville, Ky. since 1973.
From 1968-1973 he taught at
S p u rg e o n 's T h e o lo g ic a l
College, Ix&gt;ndon, England, in
the Chair of Evangelism and
Practical Theology-this was
the first full Professorship of
Evangelism in Europe. He

has preached and lectured
extensively
in
Europe,
Australia, and the F ar East.
For the first 20 years of his
m inistry, Dr. Drummond
pastored
ch u rch es - in
Alabama, K entucky and
Texas. He h as authored
numerous books and articles.
Kathy Crosson, a music
m ajor
from
Stetson
University, will lead the
singing during this special
weekend. She has served in
the Music and
Youth
Ministries at Ravenna Park
Baptist Church, Sanford. For
additional information, call
the Pinecrest Baptist Church
office at 322-3737.
A.nursery will be provided.

Mrrifd Phofo by Toth Vincent

D e a lin g W ith Stress By P raying
Prayer is one of the best ways to deal with stress — but it is
Important to know how to pray.

Saints
A nd
Sinners

When I was a small boy, I hit upon an idea of how to get my
prayers said without having it cut into my playing time. 1
would say my prayers while pushing my toy automobiles
around the bed It worked — until one night when my mother
caught me!

George Plagrnz

My defense was that, since I was saying my prayers out
loud, God could hear them. What difference did it make that I
wasn't paying attention to what I was saying?
My mother didn't buy that and I now know she was right. It is
not the words we say that matter in prayer, it is the thoughts
we think.

nuts" but much of his advice made good sense — and still does
Maefadden, who became a m illionaire as head of a
publishing empire whose biggest money maker was True Story
magazine, also published a magaz*ne called Physical Culture.
As a bonus, subscribers got an enutnous timepiece called a
Physical Culture watch whose dial gave such instructions .as:
NOON to 5 P.M. — Hefuse to be rushed. Maintain cheerful
mind.

And there is something else I have learned. You must believe
your prayers will be answered. Jesus couldn't have been more
clear on that point when he said, “ What things soever ye
tteurcTbrlievr-that-yerveeive-t hem-und ye-shalThave-them^!When I was a parish minister, people frequently would ask
me, "How long should a prayer be?" I would reply: "P ra y till
you feel like smiling."
That is, pray until your prayer is completely believable to
you and there is no doubt in your mind that it will be answered.
There is one way to help your prayers become more
believable. Instead of saying "Amen," end your prayers bysaying, "It's really true." That is what Amen means anyway:
"It shall be so."
Say it with feeling — like people on the TV commercials who
are extolling the wonder of some headache remedy or floor
cleaner. "It really works'." they say.

8 to 10 P.M. — Don’t work evenings. Have a harmless time.
Eat a few nuts or grapes
It is true that much of our stress is caused by changes and
events in our life. But as much stress is caused by our fastpaced lifestyle.
The Mormons are salt, to be at least 25 percent less
susceptible than other Americans lo cancer, heart attack and
high blood pressure. Some attribute this, in part, to their
lifestyle. The strong Mormon family unit is said to be a factor.
Mormons spend every Monday night in joint activities with
members of their immediate family. Such togetherness is said
to indoctrinate every Mormon with the idea that when trouble
or stress comes, there will bo others around who will care and
who will help.

Unless you bellave your prayers will really work, they won't.
A change in lifestyle can also reduce stress. Sachcl Paige,
the legendary black baseball pitcher, was also something of a
philosopher. One of his rules for happy livin' was, "G o on very
lightly on the vices, such as carrying on in society. The social
ramble ain’t restful."
Bem arr Maefadden may have been the first of the "health

"It is known," says a physician, "that possibly dangerous
hormonal discharges occur In the body as a result of emotional
deprivation, breakup of the family, m arital problems and drug
dependency."

Sch°o1 of Prayer Begins
IL'fwIa
ie lrro n n
a c tr t f of
fif the
Ihft
Wade D
Pickren,
pastor
non-denominational
Christ
Community Church. 113 S,
Maple Ave., Sanford, will
begin a weekly School of
Prayer at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday.
The course, open to the public,
will emphasize different kinds
of prayer and how lo ac­
curately and effectively pray.
A nursery will be provided.
A native of Geneva, he is a
graduate of the Kenneth
Hagui Bheina Bible Training
Center, Tulsa, Okla. He
recently returned here to
start the new work. He for­
m erly taught and was
director of the C h ristian Bible
Center in Tulsa and served as
an associate pastor.
He and his wife. Jane, have
a three-year-old daughter,
Emily.
Services at Christ Com­
munity Church are held at
10:30 a.m. and 7 p.m, on

H r

.

\\ \I)F. IMI’KIIKN
Sunday ard a Bible study is
held at 7:30 p.m each
Thursday.

Organists Set Hymn Festival
The Central Florida Chapter of the American Guild of
Organists will host a Hymn Festival on Tuesday, Nov. 9 at 7:30
p.m. at St. M ary Magdalen Church, 8fil Maitland Ave.,
Altamonte Springs. Starting at 7:10 p.m. Thomas A, DeWitt
will play a 20-minute prelude of hymn tunes. Joe Troxell will
play the offertory and postlude.
Paul Skcvlngton w ill be organist for the hymns and will be
assisted by a Brass Quartet from University of Central
Florida. Dr. Robert Fort will be coordinator. This program is
open to the public and a free will offering will be received.

Real Friendship Is Rare
Try this exercise! Write down on a sheet of
paper six friends that you could call on in case
of a real emergency. Did you have problems
corning up with six names?
Today’s world Is much different in im­
portant ways from the world of previous
generations. Sociologists call our world today
"mass society." By this is meant that millions
of people may each be doing the same thing at
thb same time, but each engages in the ac­
tivity in virtual Isolation from all the others.
A good example is TV viewing. This mass
means of communication, rapid tran­
sportation, leisure time, and unprecedented
affluence have given multitudes a degree of
mobility and knowledge unknown before,
except to the elite.
Unfortunately, it has not been an im­
provement in the spiritual, moral, and social
life of our society. In fact, a common word
used lo describe modem man In a
technological society is "alienation." Man is
alienated from God, from his neighbor, and
even internally, from himself. I&gt;oneliness and
friendlessness are common afflictions of our
age.
The Church needs to respond to the cry of
these alienated persons by displaying the
warmth of genuine friendliness. This will
minister to people In today’s world at a level of
felt-need which will bear a bountiful harvest
for the kingdom of God!
True friendship Is built on common values.
Let me draw from the lifestyles of David and
Jonathan in scripture to illustrate my point.
Each of these men were: noble, courageous,
holy, generous, and devout in character. As a
result, they were drawn to each other in a most
beautiful friendship. (1 Sam. 16-20) Virtues
such as loyalty, dependability and faithfulness
to one another can be clearly seen.

On the surface you would never expect these
two men to establish such a relationship.
Jonathan was the king’s son, yet it was David
who rose to prominence because of his Godgiven anointing and leadership ability. People

Pastor's
C orner
^
*

■
2

By PHILIPC.W ALSANEN
New Covenant Fellowship
of Winter Springs

began to recognize it and this meant more to
them than the crown on King Saul's head.
What a valuable lesson can be teamed from
Jonathan and David, In a society that en­
courages us to "look out for number one", we
can break from this mold and begin to "con­
sider one another as more important than
himself." (Ph. 2:3).
Ask yourself these questions.
—Do I ever feel secretly pleased when I hear
another person criticized?
—Do I ever feel secret satisfaction when 1
see 'lo th e r person fall or fall?
—Do I ever feel secret resentment when I
see another person enjoying prosperity, ad­
vancement, popularity, or success beyond my
own?
—Do I ever hear another person criticized
without feeling pain or without desiring to rise
in his defense?
—Do I ever refrain from helping another
person when he is in need because it would
secure for him blessings l cannot have?
—Do I ever fall to be friendly to another
person when I know my friendship will ad­
vance his interests but not mine?
—Do I think of friendship as a matter of
being loved rather than loving, of getting
rather than giving, of concern for self, rather
than concern for others?
Jonathan accepted the fact that it was the
lo r d ’s will for David to have the throne. On
one occasion he came to David's rescue and
gave him his own royal garments and arms.
This is self-sacrificing friendship. Are there
any Jonathan's in Seminole County? Great!
Then shine forth!

"The Word of FAITH Which We Preach"

SUNDAY: 10:30 A.M. - 7:00 P.M.
THURSDAY: DEEPER LIFE CLASS ■7:30 P.M.
TUESDAY: SCHOOL OF PRAYER 7:30 P.M.

6

CHRIST COMMUNITY CHURCH
OF SANFORD
113 S. Maple 1 Blk West of 17-9}
For More Information Call32M2«7

•w

HELLO
DOLLY

Holiday Festival co-ordinator Jan e Wtirn (right)
and Dixie Humes display dolls, which arc among
items made by the United Methodist Women to
sell at the annual bazaar to he held 1-8 p.m.,
Friday and !) a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday in the
fellowship hall of Community United Methodist
Church, Casselberry.

THOUGHTS
Jeremiah used the figure
ol speech hath settled on
his lees" as if a people were
a liquid that is poured from
vessel to vessel lo keep the
contents stirred.
“Moab hath at ease from
hi* youth, and he hath s ti­
lled oo his lets, and hath not
been emptied from vessel to
vessel, neither bath be gone
into captivity..." — Jer.
48:11

j $ t . f lu k e ’s
llu % n m

(ttljurcl]
Highway m

&amp; Red Bug Road, Oviedo 33745

S U N D A Y W ORSHIP S E R V I C E S
8:30 A.M. and 11:00 A.M .
S U N D A Y SC H O O L-9:45 A .M

�BLO N DIE

SC— Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

TV W T T O O T H 16 G O IN G
T O w a v e TO C O M E
: - OUT

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T H E =|RST T H IN G I 'L L
H A '/E TO CO 15 I N J E C T
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Sunday, Oct. 11,1987

T h a t 5 n o t t h e p i £?6T
T h in g V O U L L HAVE ,
TO D O
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W H A T 16 T H E
P I R 5 T T H IN G
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DO?

B E E T L E B A IL E Y

by Chic Young
( C A T C H M E . '' ^

by M o r t W a lk e r

across

S9 Triton

Answer to Previous Pu»le

DOWN

1
5
8
12

Greek island
Time division
Quaffs
Part of the
day
13 Rhea
14 College
athletic group
15 Conjunction

1 Easy task
2 Charged
particles
3 Fashion
4 Make certain
5 Lure by
artifice
6 Physician s as
(pl.)
sociation
[abbr)
16
Tech
7 Christmas
17 tthenal
8 Slowpoke
18 false |prefi«|
9 Frappe
20 Slurs
10 Peel
22 Cowboy
1 1 Tells ‘
Rogers
23 Sesame plant 19 Defense de
parlment
24 Fitted
[abbr)
27 Uproar
21 Type row
28 Women s
24 Soft drmk
patriotic
25 Author
.
society (abbr}
Turgenev
3 1 Eggs
26 Funny
32 Lateral
27 Eal formally
33 Set of two
1
f
34 Biblical tribe
35 Without Rat)
36 Jackie s 2nd
ts
husband
37 One or more
38 Pindar opus
39 Brotherly
41 Ascnhable
7«
42 Father
43 Blurs
J«
46 Most unique
50 Goddess of
Ji
fate
5 1 Greek letter
53 Town s
position
54 Got oH
T T - 'T T

by Art Sansom

wELL,^CVSE6,t Ml ,.
AMD THAT'S h is TOP­
COAT vC O T O (X .,;

■

'[ in
A «!*
\k t Il y

41
42
43
44
45

28 Normandy
invasion day
29 Distinctive air
30 Make muddy
32 Dodge an
($sue
35 Become
morose
39 Stripling
40 Having best
chance
!

47
48
49
52

Italian poet
Distrust
Obstacle
Birthmark
Island of
saints
Republic o&lt;
Ireland
Boil slowly
E«amine
Arab garment

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1

55 Low tide

56 Source of
metals
57 Golfer
Sararen
58 Gentle tap

By BERN ICE BEDE OSOL

For Sunday, October 31, 1982

r

TH E BORN LOSER

HOROSCOPE

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by Larry Wright

YOUR niRTHDAY
October31,19*2
As greater responsibilities
are placed on your shoulders
in the year ahead, you’ll show
the world the stuff you are
made of. Much confidence
and pride will be gained from
your many successes.
SCORPIO IOct. 24-Nov. 22)
Be of assistance to others
today, but also be sensible
about not letting them shift
unwanted burdens onto your
shoulders. Find out more of
what lies ahead for you in the
seasons following your b ir­
thday by sending for your
copy of Astro-Graph. Send II
to Astro-Graph, Box 489,
Radio City Station, N Y .
10019. Be sure to specify birth
date. Send an additional 12 for
the NEW Astro-Graph Match­
maker wheel and booklet
which reveals rom antic
com binations and com ­
patibilities for all signs.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) If you are involved in
any competitive social ac­
tivity today, try to make the
game more important than
winning. Be the good sport
you always are.
' CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) Try to set aside the
problems of the workaday
world today. You could upset
the family if this becomes the
major topic of discussion. Put
your mind on other things.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) Try to maintain your
philosophical outlook and
sense of humor today and
don’t read things Into the
r n m n p W n t n fK o p e

iv K I a K

ti'u w o

not intended.
PISCES i Feb. 29-March 20)
Little expenses have a way of

adding up to a sizable sum, so
if you are going shopping
today forego impulse buying.
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
People not pertinent to your
plans today could gum things
up if they get involved in your
affairs. Try not to leave the
door open.
TAURUS l April 20-May 20)
Unfortunately, duties and
responsibilities ca n ’ t be
rationalized away today, if
you don't do what needs doing
now, it will prove harder
later.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
Try to avoid groups or cliques
today which might include
individuals with whom you do
not feel at ease. There are far
better ways to spend your
time.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
N o r m a lly
c h a lle n g in g
situations awaken your better
qualities, but this may not be
true today. It’s best to avoid
any areas which could cause
you frustrations.
LE O (July 23-Aug. 22)
Gauge
your
audience
carefully today. If you see
they're not in accord with
your ideas or views, don't try
to press them further. Change
the topic.
VIRGO i Aug. 23-Sept 22)
Persons who want you to
share what you have but who
may not be willing to share
what they have with you could
cause complications today.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23)
Your judgment might not be
up to par today if you aree
f

4vl w u

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nUn

M tu ttb

r! r&gt; t inf i-tn. i-

V4 4 , A . 4 J T O I P

under pressure. Keep at
arm's length any who might
try to pressure you.

For Monday, November f, 1982

E E K &amp; M EEK

WULL, I c o n A WJN. GOVS.
H EA V Y T V SCHbDULfc [DWIGHT
f x £

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5,

J A ,X ir' ' ir? -

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WIN AT BRIDGE
10-30 13

MIRTH
♦A6

P R IS C IL LA 'S POP

by Ed Sullivan

91052
*86 42
♦ J 105 3
EAST
♦ K 109
9 J yJ
♦ J 1097
♦ y 72

WEST

♦J843
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SOUTH

♦ Q7 52

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♦ Ka
Vulnerable East-West
Dealer West
Vkeit
16
Pass

BUGS BU N N Y

North
pus
Pass

Ka»t
2*
Pass

South
49

by Stoflel &amp; Heimdahl

X WAnTTX) APPLY POR DON'T YA WANT TO v\W£N THE TVSTUDO VB ANCH0RPECSON
TME JO0 A6 ANCHOR HEA? ME'EEADANV SON A HOUSEBOAT, DQeSNT HAVET) SAi AVORD.
PERSON AT VOUR -rl NEWS REPOPTSTr
TgLEVlSlQN STUDIO-)

Opening lead 9 K

By Oswald Jacoby
and'Alan Sontag
This is Alan Sontag's last
dav as co-author of this
cofutnn It seems appropri­
ate to show him as declarer
in one of the great hands of
all-time
It look place in the 1976

M U

Cavendish invitational and
helped Alan and partner
Peter Wetschel win tins fine
event.
Alan's jump to four hearts
was a gambling overbid dic­
tated by the vulnerability
West started proceedings
for the defense by leading
king and another diamond
Alan ruffed and studied the
whole hand He was looking
at three sure losers plus
problems in both black suits.
He studied spades first It
seemed evident that West
would hold four spades and
East three With four spades
East would probably have
bid a spade. Further study
showed that unless East held
both the king of spades and
queen of duos the contract
would be unmakable.
Then Alan made one of
the brilliant plays of alltime He led a low spade and
played dummy’s six.
East won and returned a
trump Alan won, led a
spade to dummy's acc. led
tne jack of clubs and let it
ride to West's ace
West led another diamond
for Alan to ruff. Now Alan
led and ruffed his last low
spade and saw the king drop
Now he pulled trumps to
make a contract that had
required both luck and skill
iNKWSPAPKR ENTERPRISE ASSN I

YOUR BIRTHDAY
November 1,19*2
You’re likely to do better
this coming year in ventures
or projects which you can
direct Independently. Be very
selective if you feel partners
are required.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Associates could be a trifle
difficult to get along with
today and you might find it
necessary to appease them,
even though you feel your
position is right. Find out
more of what lies ahead for
you in the seasons following
your birthday by sending for
your copy of Astro-Graph.
Send |1 to AstroGraph, Box
489, Radio City Station, N.Y.
10019. Be sure to specify birth
date. Send an additional $2 for
the NEW Astro-Graph M atch­
maker wheel and booklet.
R eveals romantic com ­
binations and compatibilities
for all signs.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) Be sensible about
health matters today. Make
moderation your byword. If
there are things which you
shouldn't eat or drink, pass
them up.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) Don't be caught In
p o litic a l situations with
friends today where you
might find yourself forced to
side with one pal against
another.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) Be extremely diplomatic
and tactful today if you have
to deal with persons in
authority, especially those
who could hurt your career.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
This is not a good day to bring

G A R F IE L D
F R A N K AND E R N E S T

by Bob Thaves

by Jim Davis

M
IT S C O M IN G TO G ET
W
I U5, G A R F IE L P . IT KNOWS 1 i
E WE’ RE IN TH E C L 0 5 E T / M
—

^

Cl
P-T
ClLOM? •
I O

TU M BLEW EED S

by T. K. Ryan

M

'

ANNIE

by Leonard Starr
YES. HE 0VERHEARP I ..Eft-GUESS
5TELLA HAN 5AY SHE Y’ FEEL SORT
WAS TAKING YOU T O j a BAD ABOUT
THE POCKS. r r f S T E l l A hAN TUftHPf
AGAINST YOU .HER
OWN UNCLE- LIKE
THAT...

/O ’ 3 0

up any subjects where
another could hold strong
opposing views from yours. It
might cause sparks.
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
Be very careful today and
tomorrow in business or
financial matters. Do not
become involved in things
which you don't fully com­
prehend.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Steer clear today of those
whom you know, from ex­
perience, alw ays try to
dictate you course of action.
You won’t appreciate bossy
types,
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
This Is not a good time to let
your duties and respon­
sibilities start to pile up. Take
care of things as they occur,
or they may be worse later.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
Be careful today that you
don’t yield to peer pressure
and do things which are
against your better Judgment.
Be your own person and do
your own thing.
L E O (July 23-Aug. 22)
There's a possibility today
that you may attempt to reach
your objectives the hard way
and thereby deprive yourself
of a success which could be
yours.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Even though you believe your
way to be right today, don't
try to impose it on others.,
Serious misunderstandings
could result.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23)
Take extra measures today to
protect your valued resources
or possessions. Carelessness
might lead to losses which
could be avoided.

C 4**#|***n8M “K

•

f

I AM SAP. YES. NOT
BETTER
BECAUSE SHE CHOSE AN HONEST
A DIFFERENT PATH.. ENEMY THAN
BUT BECAUSE 5HE
A FALSE
PIP IT WHILE
FRIEND, ANNIE.
PRETENDING
LOYALTY-

�c

Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Sunday, Oct. 31, 198J-7C

TONIGHTS TV
i

SATURDAY

I

U
(17)
TRATED

AFTERNOON
2:30
€D (10) IT S EVERYBODY'S BU SI­
NESS
2:35
H (17) MOVIE
The leg en d 01
Sleepy McUlo* (1980) Jeift G o ld ­
blum Dick Butkus In the 1830s the
no* schoolteacher m small upstate
Ne* Yolk town has a frightening
encounlei *ilh i headless ghost
lh.it is the Subiect ol a local legend
3:00

CD (1 0 )PRESENTE

1

3:30
O (41 LORNE GREENE S NEW
WILDERNESS
f l O NCAA FOOTBALL
CD 110) TONY BROWN S JOUR­
NAL Black Revolt In The 80s
Tony Brown uses historical compar*
i$ons as a basis for discussion
400
0
4
SPORTSW ORLD
Scheduled highlights ot the B rit­
ish Motorcycle Grand P rti (Irom
SiUetstone Englandl coverage o l
the fro n t* ! Days Rodeo (Irom
Prescott A n y ) coverage ot the
women s World Pro Wrist Wrestling
competition
5 Q TO BE ANNOUNCED
11 (35) INCREDIBLE HULK
CD (10) PAPER CHASE A Day In
The Lite Ol 1 A third-year law s tu ­
dent IDarlene Carr)almost seriously
iniurns bicycling James Hart IJames
Stephens! white driving her car
4:35
11 (17) MISSION IMPOSSIBLE
5:00
1) (35) OAN1EL BOONE
CD (10) WASHINGTON WEEK IN
REVIEW
5:30
0 4 HERE'S RICHARD
CD (10) WALL STREET W EEK
Sailing Along With MegeUan
Gu«$t PeU»t lynch vie© president.
Fidelity Management A Research
Company

5:3 5
MOTORW EEK

®

0

6:00
Q '3 '&lt; 3 ) 0 n e w s
11 (3s&gt; KUNQ FU
CD (10) NATURE The Flight Ot
The Condor Dr Donald Johanson
lakes viewers on a rare journey
through the Andes Mountains
11 (17) WRESTLING
6 :3 0
4 NBC NEWS
V O CBS NEWS

0

7 :00
3 LEAGUE OF WOMEN VOT­
ERS GUBERNATORIAL DEBATE
1 O HEEHAW
W □ MEMORIES WITH LAWRENCEWELK
It (35) THE JEFFERSONS
CD (10) UNDERSEA WORLD OF
JACQUES COUSTEAU

0

7:3 0
It (35) BARNEY MILLER

6:00
0 ® DIFF RENT STROKES
I E O WALT DISNEY thsney s
Halloween Treat
Outstanding
excerpts Irom such Disney classics
as Peter Pan. " t o t Dalmaltons,
Snow White and Lady And The
Tramp are presented
1 O T J HOOKER
)1 (35) WHO. W ILD WEST
(D ( 10) MOVIE
The Scarlet Pim­
pernel \ 1935) Leslie How ard Mer'e
O&amp;eron In d sguise as a gentleman
of the English Court, an under­
ground hero rescues noblemian
from the guillotine during the
French Revolution
8 :2 5
11 (17) C A LY PS O COUNTDOWN
"Rigging For The Amazon'
8 :3 0
0 4 SILVER SPOONS Ricky s
strict and independent mother
arrives to tat*e him home with her

0

9 :0 0
4 GIMME A BREAK

— T n pnrnphrase W ill H o u r s ' ob scr-

vntlon ubout the weather, everybody talks about politics but
few will turn out at the polls Tuesday to do anything about it.
If political pundits and pollsters are right, only 33 to 37 per
cent of all registered voters will exercise their franchise in this
year's election, but thanks to television, the apathetic majority
will hot escape its results.
"I-avemc and Shirley" wrtll not be there Tuesday night to
take minds off unemployment, Reagonomics or gun control.
"Three’s Company" and "St. Elsewhere" w ill provide no
anodyne.
Television will be wall-to-wall with demographics, exit polls
and election results virtually wherever the dial is set from
early evening until the wee hours of Wednesday morning.
Given the volatility of issues this year — unemployment, a
nuclear freeze referendum in nine states and a still militant
Moral Majority — analysis of the emerging political profile
will center more upon the ideological make-up of the House
and Senate than upon strict party lines,
"l,ooklng at the House strictly as Democratic and
Republican clearly doesn’t tell you the clear story," said CBS
coverage producer Joan Rlchman. "You've got Boll Weevils
and Gypsy Moths — none of this Is a simple party line break­
down. Who will control policy making Is what counts."
NBC research indicates If liberal lawmakers win 25 or mo-C
races, house control will shift to their Ideology. ABC research
shows roughly a 50-40 edge for the Democrats,
CBS will interview blue collar workers in Detroit, senior
citizens in Sun City, A ril., blacks In Washington D.C. and Wall
Street brokers In New York In an effort to put it all In per­
spective and CNN will do the same thing with 20 party bosses,
analysts and special interest lobbyists.
"It's going to be hard to analyze, as it always is In an off-year
election," said Walter Cronkite who, having surrendered his
CBS anchor to Dan Rather, will spend election night in­
terviewing the political superstars of Washington.
"I think using exit polls to call elections is a little shaky," he
said. "You've got people asking other people, in a moment of
drama as they leave the polls, how they voted, and they may
not tell you the truth ... It’s very hard to do."
Still, the networks are trying — expensively — with advance
surveys, man-in-the street Interviews and computer compu­
tations,
NBC has hired political analyst Sheldon GHwtser to preside
over exit polls representing 36,000 voters In 13 key states.
A BC’s Jeff Alderman has been busy for weeks probing for
demographics and voter trends.

SC H O O L M EN U

IABCI Orlando

(ID ( 3 5 )

Independent
Orlando

fC B S l Orlando-

®

Independent
Atlanta Ga

N8Ct Daytona Beach
Orlando

( io )

(IV O MOVIE Someth,ng Big
| T97t| Dean Martin Brian Keith A
band ot renegades plots to Blunder
ihe hideout ol another band.t
® O LOVE BOAT A mother and
her daughter face a crisis when they
meet the girl • lather Gopher is
pursued by a teen-ager traveling
with her da rents and a tun-loving
woman falls tor a married man Q
©(351GUNSMOHE

Whole White Potatoes
Green Beans
Pineapple Chunks
Bun or Roll

Milk
EXPRESS
/ Fish with
Cbeesburger
TaterTots
Fruit
Milk or
Orange Juice
TllRiDAY, NOV. 2
ENTREE 4 EXPRESS
MANAGER’S CHOICE
(Ground Beef
Menu will vary
by ichool
WEDNESDAY, NOV. 3
ENTREE
Flestado

Mixed Vegetables
Fresh Fruit
Milk
EXPRESS
Flestado
Tater Tots
F ruit
Milk or
Orange Juice
THURSDAY, NOV. 4
ENTREE
Hotdog on Bun
Potato AuGratln
Green Peas
Ice Cream
Milk
EXPRESS
Hotdog on Bun
Chicken Pattie
Potato AuGratln or
French Fries
Fruit
Milk or
Orange Juice

( 1 7 )

6:35
II (17) NICE PEOPLE

Orlando Public
Broadciifmq System

m

K I T 'N ' C A R L Y L E

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10:00
1 THE DEVLIN CONNECTION
N»ck poses as a patent at an
escape-proof mental hospital to
fmd out bo* a wealthy patient is
managing to sneak out
f f l O FANTASY ISLAND A rock
star who witnessed a murder hides :out as the butter to three sillers
and a would*be entertainer gets the
chance to overcome her stage
fright in Judge Roy Bean s rowdy
Western bar r i
11 (35) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
NEWS
21(10) DAVE ALLEN AT LARGE

0

005
12 (1 7 )
NASHVILLE ALIVE!
Guests Gary Stewart Dean Dillon.
Connie Cato
0:30

® 0
r &gt;

10:30
&lt;J1(35) AT THE MOVIES

IV

11:00

11:30
f f l SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE
Host Michael Keaton Guests Joe
Jackson Michael Palm
O BARRY FARBER
O MOVIE
lo*e is A Baa
(1964! Glenn Ford, Hope La^g©
HJ (35) MADAME'S PLACE
0

a

---------------12:05“ “
® ( 17) NEWS
12:30
(£ O
MOVIE
Street Killing
( 19761 Andy GntMh Bradford Dllman
(Li (35) MOVIE
The Curse Of
The C a l People 0944) Simone
Simon. Kent Smith

1:00

0 ® LAUGH TRAY
1:05
12 (17) MOVIE
The Night That
Panicked America (I97S) Vu. Mot:
row, Clift De Young
V40
(J 3 O MOVIE
Road to Glory
(1936) Fredric March, Lionel Bar
rymore

2:00

C '■) lw M
7 O ORAL ROBERTS
J J (35| A CRICKET IN TIMES
S Q U A R E Animated
A cricket
named Chester has the unusual
ability of producing sounds like a
violin
9:00
O &lt;4 THE WORLD TOMORROW
9 O SUNDAY MORNING
7 O BEST O f KIDS A R E P E O ­
P L E TOO Guesls rock fetar Led
Garret! treasure hunter Mel Fisher
com ic Pal Hurley Dr Tom Cottle
bike eipert John Marino (R)
ill! (35) WITCHS NIGHT OUT
Animated A has-been witch dlsplay* herjnagical miachiel tor two
kids who ask to be transformed Into
their favotile holiday monsters
ED &lt;10) MATINEE AT THE BUO U
Featured Wagon Wheels" (19341
staffing Randolph Scott and Gail
Patrick, a 1935 cartoon. Holly­
wood On Parade
a 193? short
and Chapter 3 of The Undersea
Kingdom (1936)
9:05
1 2 ( 17) LOST IN SPACE
9:30
O
f f l MONTAGE THE B LA C K
PRESS
1 !)(3 5 ) t h e j e t s o n s

O ® N EW S

10:00

2:10
( ft (17) MOVIE "Th* Pit And The
Pendulum ' (1961) Vincwn! Price.
John K er r
3:40
f f l O MOVIE
Doctor Faustuj
(19681 Eluabeth Taylor Richard
Burton
4:00
02 (17) MOVIE
An Etenlng Ol
Edgar Allan Poe (1971) Vincenl
Price

0 ® MOVIE
Assault On The
W a y n e ’ (1970) Joseph Colten,
Lloyd Haynes A Navy commander
discover* that members ot hi* crew
are actually lorergn agents
ffl) Q CENTRAL FLORIOA FOOTBALL HIGHLIGHTS
CLD (35) MOVIE Abbott And Costello Meet Dr Jekytl And M r Hyde
11953) Boris Karloff. Craig Stevens
Two men encounter evildoings
when they become involved with
ihe mysterious Dr Jekyll
1005
32 (17) LIOHTER SIDE OF THE
NEWS

SUNDAY
MORNING

6:00
a ! O LAW AND YOU
(7) Q AGRICULTURE U S A
6 ) (T7) NEWS
6:30
1O SPECTRUM
j O VIEWPOINT ON NUTRITION

3

7:00
0 ffl OPPORTUNITY LINE
f f l O ROBERT SCHULLER
(7) Q TODAY'S BLACK WOMAN
tfl) (35) BEN HAOEN

10:30
}&gt; O B LACK AW ARENESS
(7) O FIRST BAPTIST CH UR CH
ED (10) MOVIE
Danger Lights
(1930) Jean Arthur. Robert Arm ­
strong Color and romance are Ihe
rewards tor railroad workers
10:35
3 2 (17) MOVIE
Anatomy O l A
M urder" (1989) James StewaH, Ben
G a tta 'a A small town attorney
delands an Army lieutenant who is
accused ol killing a m in suspected
ot attacking hi* wila

11:00

7:05
32 (17) JAMES ROBISON

CJ) o

7:30
O f f l J ’S COMPANY
ffl O
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH OF ORLANDO
55 (35) E.J DANIELS

THIRTY MINUTES

11:30
0 f f l BOBBY BOWDEN
T ) O FACE THE NATION
(I) 0 THIS WEEK WITH OAVIO
BRINKLEY
11:45
0D (35) LAUREL AND HAROY
AFTERNOON

7:35
3 2 (17) IT IS WRITTEN

8:00

12:00

0 ® VOICE OF VICTORY
&gt; G REXHUMBARD
T O BOB JONES
IT (75) JONNY QUEST
® 110) SESAME STREET |R)g

0 f f l MEET THE PRESS
J 0 JOHN MCKAY
ID (35) MOVIE The People N esl
Door " (1970) Eli Wattach, Julie
Herns A young man is banished by
hit lather who believes he Is
responsible lor supplying drugs to
hit staler.
ED (10) EVERYDAY COOKING
WITH JACQUES PEPtN Jacques
Pepin shows how to prepare c a n ­
died citrus peels and eiptains how

8:30
B ® SUNDAY MASS
f f l O DAY OF DISCOVERY

7:00
0 ® VOYAGERSI
i O H MINUTES
J : O RIPLEY'S BELIEVE IT OfT
NOT1 Featured Ihe tala ot an Eng­
lish ghost who led lo the recovery o l
a missing human heart Transyl­
vania s real-lde model lor the evil
Count Dracuts
11 (3 5 ) B O O Animated Featured
monsters Dracuta Frank ensleln
and the Wollman are |Oined by
guests Dionne Warwick and Rip
Taylor in this Ha-towerm special
ff) (10) AUSTIN CITY LIMITS
The Charlie Daniels Band The
Country Music Association s Instru­
mental Group ol the Year performs
the Devil Wen! Down To Georg­
ia - I n Am encs and Te.as

800
0 ® CHIPS
(D O ARCHIE BUNKER S PLACE
3) 0
M A H HOUSTON
ID (35)
HEALTH MATTERS
Sports Infuriei
03 (10) EVENING AT POPS Rich
Lillie
Impressionist Rich Little
loins John Williams and ihe Boston
Pops Orchestra in an evening that
includes a salute lo Ihe MGM musica's and Ihe world premiere ot
Ragomsnia by W.ll.jm Bolcom

9:30
LOVE. SIDNEY

0 4 } O J O NEWS
It (35) BENNY HILL
f T ) 10) FALL AND RISE OF REGI­
NALD PERRIN

1:05

7:05
32(17) WHESTLINQ

MV FAce jNSfeAbf

9:05
Q (17) NCAA FOOTBALL San
Diego Stale A jle cs vs Utah Utes

0:05
3 2 117) CARTOONS

MONDAY, NOV. 1
ENTREE
Htbwlcb

2 0

Cable Ch

In addition to the channels listed cabievislon subscribers may tune in to independent channel M.
St Petersburg, by tuning to channel 1. tuning to channel 11. which carnet sports and the Christian
Broadcasting Network (CBN !

6:10

O n ly P r im e T im e S h o w
V O ltK i U P ! )

®

o
o

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Ev e n i n g

E le ctio n '82 : T u e s d a y s
NhW

(.able Ch

ILLUS­

(WFD)
2 ! (10) FLORIDA HOME GROWN
(FRII

6 30
ABC NEWS

lo buy section and serve fresh c it­
rus hurts
12:30
4 TO BE ANNOUNCED
O STAR TREK
f f l 0 CHARLIE PELL
ED (10) WOODWRIGHT 3 SHOP
Th« Plan# Tfulh Version II Roy
Underhill demonstrates how to
work with and care for planes

8

— fc&lt;»—

G (J MOVIE The Red Tent
(1971) Peter Finch. Sean Connery
A 1928 flight to Alaska is downed
and rescuers attempt to reach the
stranded crew
(D 110) MAGIC OF OIL PAINTING
1:30
i i O Rf l t o d a y
7 0 PRO AND CON
ED (10) FLORIDA H OM E GROWN
Care A Maintenance Of Trees

2:00
C5 0 NFL FOOTBALL TampaBa*
Buccaneers at Baltimore Cods
(Tentative)
1 Q WALL STREET JOURNAL
ilil (35) MOVIE
The Tiger Ar)d
The Pussycat (1967) Vittorio Gassman Eleanor Parker
ED ( 10) MOVIE The Grn.it Gsbbo (1929) Erich von Stroheim, Bet­
ty Compson
2:05
i U (17) MOVIE
The M.t»*k&gt;» Ot
October ’ 11974J William Devine,
Martin Sheen Events within the
Kennedy Administration during the
196? Cuban Missile Crisis are dep­
icted
2:30
(7) Q MOVIE
Tho Grnat l,«
( 1941)B«lteDsvrs, Geocgn Brent A
woman makes a strange pact with
her dead husbands lust wits
regarding the latter s pregnancy
3:30
O lD N F L f l?
0)
(1 0 )
MARK
R U SSELL
Washington s top political satirist
pokes fun at major issues and news
stones of the day
4:00
® NFL FOOTBALL The regg
tarty scheduled games may be pre­
empted d the NFL owner I player
dispute remains unresolved, with
elternale programming scheduled
on a week-lo-week basis
(U) (35) INCREDIBLE HULK
ffl (10) WORLD TURNED UPSIDE
DOWN

0

5:00
ID O NFL FO O TBALL (Joined In
Progress) Dalits Cowboys at New
York Giants (Tentative)
0 GUBERNATORIAL DEBATE
(35) DANIEL BOOI
(10) FIRING LINE

I8

5:05
32 (17) RAT PATROL

GLORIA
i l l (35) JERRY FALWELL
9:00
0 ® MOVIE
Halloween (1978)
Donald Ploasence Jamie Lee
Curtis Aher serving IS years in a
m ental h o sp ita l, a murderer
escapes on Halloween night and
wreaks terror on hn small home­
town (R| (Parental discretion is
® O THE JEFFERSONS
(I) O MOVIE The Wild Women
Of Chastity Gulch (Pfemiwie) Pris­
cilla Barnas, la * Horsley Tha barr»om belies of a Missouri mining
loan join forces with their self*
righteous sisters when the mem go
ott n r w i r and 4 f)4n0 of renegade
so*d»ers take over n
iD 110) MASTERPIECE THEATRE
to Serve Them All My Oays The
lirsl woman |Oins Ihe teaching staff
at Bamfylde and belnends one ol
the older boys, who Inevitably tails
in love wilh her (Part A i n
9 30
1 O ONE DAY AT A TIME
11(35) JIMMY SWAOOART

10:00
} O TRAPPER JOHN. M 0
2) (10) TO THE MANOR BORN
10:05

0 4 ) 0 ’

5:45
31 (17) WORLD At LARGE (WED,
FRI)

2:30
(1 O CAPITOL
2) (101 EVEROAY COOKINO
WITH JACQUES PEPIN (MONI
2) (10) MEN OF LSU(TUE)
2) (10) INSIDE BUSINESS TOOAY
(WED)
ffl 110) PORTRAITS IN PASTELS
(FRI|

5:50
1 1 ( 1 7 ) WORLO AT LARG E (TUE)
600
o . 4111(171 NEWS
®
O
CB S EARLY
NEWS
7 Q SUNRISE
H (35) JIM BAKKER

MORNING

6:30
0 4 EARLY TODAY
J O
CBS EARLY MORNING
NEWS
(J O ABC NEWS THIS MORNING
645

l? 0 \ NEWS

23 (TO) A M

O 4
5O
7 O

3:05
11(17) FUNTIME

TODAY
MORNING NEWS
GOOD MORNING AM ERICA
11 (35) WOOOY W OODPECKER
f f l (10) TO LIFE!

32 (17| FUNTIME
7:15
2 ) (10) A M WEATHER
7:30
(11 (35) TOM AND JERRY
2D (10) SESAME STREET ( R | g
7:35
32 (17) 1DREAM OF JEANNIE
800
Q l (35) FRED FLIfrtSTONE AND
FRIENDS
805
3 2 (17) MY THREE SONS

3:30
31 (35) B U G S BUNNY AND
FRIENDS
2 ) 110) ELECTRIC CO M PAN Y (R)
3:35
32117) THE FLINTSTONES
4:00
4 LITTLE HOUSE ON THE
PRAIRIE (MON. WED-FRI)
0 4) SPECIAL TREAT (TUE)
}1O HOUR MAGAZINE
f 'O M E R V GRIFFIN
11 (35) TOM AND JERRY
2 ) 110) SESAME STREET (R )n

0

4:05
ill (17) THE MUNSTERS
4 30
IT (35) SCOOBY DOO
4:35
32(17) LEAVE IT TO BEAVER

8:30
,11 (35) GREAT SPACE CO AST ER
2 ) (10) MISTER ROGERS (R|
8:35
3 2 ( 1 7 ) t h a t o ir l
9:00
0 4 RICHARD SIMMONS
i ‘ 0 DONAHUE
( 7 1Q MOVIE
31 (35) LEAVE IT TO BEAVER
f f i i 10) SESAME STREET ( R ) g
9.05
32 (17) MOVIE
9:30
0
41 SO YOU THINK YOU GOT
TROUBLES
3 ! (35) FAMILY AFFAIR

1000
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31
2)

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(35) ANDY GRIFFITH
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11
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10:30
&lt;4 WHEEL OF FORTUNE
Q CHILD SPLAY
(35 DORIS DAY
(10) J-2-1 CONTACT ( R i g

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11014%*&gt;0

11:30
3J| (35) INDEPENDENT NETWORK

S P O R T S SUNDAY

11:30
0
(4) ENTERTAINMENT THIS
WEEK
® O J-'.CK ANDERSON CONFI­
DENTIAL
3Ji (35) IT S YOUR BUSINESS
11:35
(.5J O SOLID OOLD

12:00
® O MOVIE
Too Much. Too
Soon'' i 1959) Oorolhy Malone, to o t
Flynn
d f (35) W V GRANT
12:05
«
32 (17) SA LLY STRUTHERS'
W ORLD OF LOVE Sally Struthers
hosts this hmd-retSing program lor
the Chnatian Children s Fund
12:30
® MOVIE
Houdini
Tony Curtis. Janet Leigh

3 00
J FANTASY
5 O GUIDING LIGHT
7 Q GENERAL HOSPITAL
i f (35) CASPER
ID(10 FRENCH CHEF (MONI
2) io COOKIN CAJUN (TUE)
GD 10 WOnLOOF BOOKS (WED)
2_ )i 10 WILD AMERICA (THU)
2) 110 THE LAW MAKERS (FRII

0

700

11:05
3 2 ( 1 7 ) PERRY MASON

0

0

WEATHER

11:05
32(17) JERRY FALWELL

(1953)

12:35
® Q MOVIE
"Lillie Big Man '
(1970) Dustin MoFtman, Faye Duna­
way

NEWS
0D ( 10) POSTSCRIPTS
AFTERNOON

12.00
0 ( 4 SOAP WORLD
T * O 7 1O NEWS
jj; (35) BIG VALLEY
23 (10) MYSTERY (MON)
f f i (10) MASTERPIECE THEATRE
ffl^ flo ) NATURE (WEDI
(lO)NOVAfTHUI
f f l (10) EVENING AT POPS (FRI)
12:05
3 2 (17) PEOPLE NOW
12:30
O (4 NEWS
®
O
THE YOUNO AND TMF
RESTLESS
®
RYAN'S HOPE

o

1:00
0 ® DAYS OF OUR LIVES
7 O ALL MY CHILDREN
(ft) (35) MOVIE
ffl (10) MOVIE (MON. TUE. THU)
f f l (101 MATINEE AT THE BUOU

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1:05
32(17) OPEN UP
2:05
32 (17) MOVIE
A Town Called
Hell (1972) Robert Shaw. Telly
Savalaa

EVENING

2:10

6:00

® Q
MOVIE
Conspiracy Of
T error' (19751 Michaet Constenime,
Bar bare Rhoades

NEWS

4 ANOTHER WORLD
7 O ONE LIFE TO LIVE
2) T O ) MAGIC OF OIL PAINTING
(FRII

Q 4 TEXAS
i y O THE PRICE IS RIGHT
3 O
i7
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ill
(35)
(ft) (3
5 )!35 LIVE
23 (10) OVER EASY

11:20

2:00

530
4 NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT
(TUE-FRI)
I I (17) IT S YOUR BUSINESS
(MON)

0

ONEW S
2) 110) SNEAK PREVIEWS Neal
Gabier and Jeffrey Lyons host an
informative look at what a new at
the movies

1)0

1:30
S O AS THE WORLO TURNS
2) (101 THIS OLO HOUSE |FRI1

MORNING

11:00

5:35
32 (17) UNDERSEA WORLD OF
JACQUES COUSTEAU

)a

MONDAY

32(17) n e w s
10:30
Oil (35) JIM BAKKER
2 H 10) BUTTERFLIES

1 1 (17) MOVIE

SUN DAY |
DINNER A T

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BISCUIT SANDWICHES
SAUSAGE A COUNTRY-FRIED STEAK
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-----------------------COUPON

MADAME KATHERINE
PALM - CARD*- CRYSTAL BALL READING

Paat — Present - Future
HELPFUL ADVICE ON ALL AFFAIRS

2

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COUPON REQ UIRED GOOD THRU l i lt-11

• LIFE *LOVE • MAMUACE • BUSINESS

BEEN IN BUSINESS FOR 5 0 YEARS
IN PRIVACY OF NY HONE
LO H aW O O D

(305)
1831-4405

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J B L O C K S N O RTH OF DOG T R A C K HO.
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Sunday, Oct. 31,19B]

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                    <text>75th Y ear, No 58—W ednesday. O ctober 27, 1982—Sanford, F lo rid a 32771

Evening H erald —(USPS -181 280)

P rice 20 Cents

County May Appeal Cabinet Power Line Decision
Seminole County commissioners agreed Tuesday to consider
filing an appeal of the state Cabinet's Oct. 6 action ordering a
citizens’ group to locate n power line corridor west of Geneva.
The proposal u „ ; ipp. "eu over the opposition of County
Administrator Roger Nelswender and County Attorney Nikki
Clayton who said there was little basis (or an appeal.
But commissioners unanimously supported a request by
Commissioner Robert G. "B ud" Feather to research the
possibility of an appeal.
The artion orders Neiswendcr to meet with several at­
torneys to examine what the chances would be of winning an
appeal The resolution also sets a limit of 120,000 for the ap­
peal, if it is filed.
But Neiswender said such an appeal would cost far in excess
of $20,000. “I don't think $20,000 will scratch the surface."
He said the cost of expert witnesses to testify and the legal
research that would be required for the county to prove that
the conclusions drawn by a state hearing officer from series of

hearings were wrong would be enormous.
Ms. Clayton said the commissioners, if they decide to appeal
the Oct. 6 action, would be appealing a decision which did what
they requested.
Commissioners had asked the Cabinet to consider a route for
Florida Power &amp; light Co.’s twin 500,000-volt line which
bypassed Geneva.
The Cabinet gave the responsibility of placing a route to the
west of Geneva to People Against Power Intrusion, a citizens'
group that had protested the plan to run it through their
community. PAPI had proposed running the line which ex­
tends from Duval to Orange Counties through Brevard or
Volusia counties.
Ms. Clayton said there is nothing in the order issued by the
Cabinet that could be appealed by Seminole County.
She told commissioners she felt they have less than a 50
percent chance of winning an appeal of anything in the case.
But an attorney who has worked with the PAPI group, Abbot

Herring, himself a Geneva resident, disagreed.
"I would say there would be an excellent opportunity to
challenge what has been done Florida Power 4 light ad­
mitted they hadn't studied the corridor we suggested," he said.
Commissioners also heard from several residents of West
Geneva who feel they have been victimized by the selection of
an alternate route that goes to the west of Geneva
Those residents told commissioners PAPI leaders had
abandoned them in the fight against the power line.
They signed petitions supporting PAPI's efforts to get an
alternate route throught Brevard or Volusia counties but claim
they were abandoned when the line was routed through their
property.
"We feel had the governor known how many people live on
the west side of Geneva it would have sway ed him." said Millie
Gilbert, a West Geneva residentResidents of that area hnve sent petitions to the governor
and prompted a meeting with FT4L officials on Nov. 3 to

O f G a m es

Ex-Zoo Boss
Offers Site
Study Help

Medalist
Honorary
Chairman
By JANF. CASSELBERRY
Herald Staff Writer
Former ice skating star Dorothy
F'raney l-angkop, an Olympic gold medal
winner at the age of 16 in 1932, has been
named honorary chairman of the eighth
annual Golden Age Games to be held
here Nov. M3.
A Dallas resident who turned 67 on Oct.
25, she was chairman of the first Texas
Senior Games held June 24-26 this year in
Arlington. The Texas Games also are
expected to become an annual event.
Mrs. luingkop wanted to see how other
states were organizing sports contests
for senior citizens before starting plans
for Texas, so last year she and her
husband, Eugene, signed up to par­
ticipate in Sanford’s Golden Age Games.
Together and separately, the Langkops
won several gold medals in both golf and
tennis competition here last year and
made many friends.
A n ativ e of St. P a u l, M inn., Mr*

Langkop won her first Olympic gold
medal for the 500-meter Ice skating race
at the 1932 Winter Games In t-ake Placid,
N Y. Since the ’30s, she has been a
perennial supporter of U.S. Olympic
team s and is a voting m ember of the U.S
Olympic Committee.
A featured skater in Ice shows, she
later organized a show of her own, ser­
ving as producer, d ire c to r and
choreographer.
In 1957, it appeared her participation In
sports would be ended when her left fool
was mangled by a blast from a 16-gauge
shotgun in a hunting accident. Gangrene
developed and doctors feared It would be
necessary to amputate the foot. She
underwent several operations but it was
impossible to remove all of the pellets. As
a result of the accident and remaining
pellets in her foot, she is never really free
from pain.
But the role of spectator was not
enough for a dedicated athlete like
Dorothy. A year and a half later she
surprised her doctors by winning a golf
tournament. She is still an avid golfer
and frequently plays m ixed-doubles
tournament tennis with Roger Staubach,
ex-Dallas Cowboy football star, as her
partner.
" I ’d rather be in pain on a golf course
or tennis court than home in a rocking
chair feeling sorry for myself,” she
explains.
As honorary chairman of the Golden
Age Games, Mrs. l-angkop will be in
Sanford throughout the week of the
Games Nov. 8-13 attending the various
events and making participants from all
over the country feel welcome.
Previous honorary chairmen Include
Buster Crabbe and Stella Taylor.

TODAY
Action Reports.....................3A
Around The Clock................4A
B rid ge................................... IB
Calendar............................... 3 A
Classified A ds.............. 10-1 IB
Comics .................................8B
Crossword............................SB
Dear A bb y............................IB
D eaths................................... 5A
Dr. L am b ............................. SB
Editorial............................... 4A
Florida ..................................3A
H oroscope............................SB
H osp ital........................... 2A
Sports..............................l»-l*A
Television ............................ SB
Weather ..............................*A

Bands
Seven local high school bands
will compete In the Sth Annual
Seminole County Band F esti­
val Saturday at S p-m. la the
Lyman High School stadium
In Longwood.

choose one of the two routes tor presentation to the Cabinet at
a Nov. 16 meeting. If no agreement is reached at the second
meeting, cabinet officials said they will approve the original
plan.
George Kendrick, a realtor who represents the owners of a
2,216-acre tract in West Geneva along with residents of
Cockran Forest and Seminole Woods, complained that PAPI
leaders had a conflict of interest in placing the line west of
Geneva.
Kendrick said PAPI did not represent the people of West
Geneva and the people who designed the western route did not
have experience.
Kendrick said S:d Kraftsow, the leader of PAPI, has asked
him to find buyers for Kraftsow's 600 acres which lie near the
original corridor.
I-ee Voorhees told commissioners he has replaced Kraftsow
as spokesman for PAPI. Kraftsow could not be reached for
comment.—MICIIEAL BEI1A

H e ra ld

K im l.c a s o n , a stu d e n t in th e C e n tr a l F lo rid a

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Trick Or Treat Safety
Concerning Parents
Sanford parents are more concerned about the safety of
their children this Halloween than about what night will be
the official trick or treat observance in the city, a random
survey of local residents shows.
Most of those questioned in a telephone poll today said
they have no objections to observing Halloween on Satur­
day. Several of those interviewed said Saturday is
preferable because there are more alternatives for the
children and one person suggested that trick or treating
should be banned.
But they were far more concerned that their children
may pick up some contaminated candy or fruit while
making the rounds through their neighborhoods.
Sanford and Oviedo officials have designated Saturday to
observe Halloween. Other cities In Seminole County will
observe Halloween on Sunday, the traditional night.
Central Florida Regional Hospital in Sanford will provide
free X-ray service of any goodies the children collect be­
tween 7-8:30 p.m. Saturday. The children must be ac­
companied by an adult. Free X-rays will not be offered
Sunday, hospital officials said.
Orlando General Hospital. 7727 Underhill Drive, will
provide X-ray service Sunday night only from 7 to 9.
Kay Sheppard of Crystal Drive in Sanford said her family
will stay home this Halloween. "We’ve never had any
trouble but just decided to avoid It this year," she said.
The family Is planning to have a small Halloween party
Instead.
For treats, Mrs. Sheppard said her family will be giving
toys instead of candy or fruit.

But the confusion over which night should be the official
observance has thrown Mrs. Sheppard into a dilemma. "My
husband and I always dress up like clowns to hand out the
goodies. I guess we’ll dress up Saturday night. We’re sure
not going to do it both nights."
Mary' Blair of Holly Avenue in Sanford said her 6-year-old
daughter will visit "only people we know," on Saturday
night.
For treats the family will give money instead of candy.
Gall Stewart of Tammy Drive said her family's ob­
servance will be low-key this year. "Lots of people are
having parties and there is a party at the skating rink."
Mrs. Stewart said her three children — aged 10,8 and 6 —
will still go to a few friends homes.
At Shenandoah Village apartments, a Halloween party is
planned for Sunday night.
"We decided against trick-or-treating because of all the
problems lately," said Teresa Coker, the mother of a 7year-old daughter.
Marcy O’Brien of Tangerine Drive said she prefers to
observe Halloween on Sunday but will take her children,
ages 5 and 2 to "a few neighbors' houses."
She plans to give popcorn to trick or treaters.
Cindy Szabo, whose daughter is 5, said, "I'd just as soon
cancel it."
She plans to take her daughter to "just a couple of
houses."
Gail Fleming said she probably won't take her children
out. "Candy can be tampered with too easily," she said.
— MICHEALBE1LA

By DONNA ESTES
Herald Staff Writer
Jack Hanna, former director of the
Central Florida Zoo, will be in Sanford
either the day before or the day after
Thanksgiving offering his assistance in
the study of the zoo's current location.
Hanna, now director of the Columbus
Zoo in Powell, Ohio, reaffirmed by
telephone today his support of the
current site off U.S. Highway 17-92, near
Interstate 4 and Just outside the Sanford
city limits.
Of the contention that the 21-acre zoo
site is too damp for hoofed and exotic
animals, Hanna said: "We went in there
before and built up crushed rock areas
for animul pads without interfering with
th e flo ra a t th e alta .

’ "The entire site doesn't have to be
filled In, only certain areas for the hoofed
stock to get them out of anything that is
wet or damp," he said.
He noted that many Florida tourist
attractions are located in similar terrain
in Central Florida, pointing to Silver
Springs and Cypress Gardens in par­
ticular.
Hanna said both sites are swampy and
now Cypress Gardens is planning to
place animals with that attraction.
“The Central Florida Zoo is one of the
few zoos in the country with a major
interstate highway running by its front
door," Hanna said, insisting the zoo
needs marketing and tax subsidies to
make a success at any location.
"The Central Florida Zoo is located In
the center of the tourist industry of the
country. There has got to be some way of

marketing it," he said, adding it is going
to take the support of the people In
Seminole County and Sanford to keep it
"If 96 percent of the zoos in the United
States have a tax subsidy that ought to
tell the Central Florida Zoo board of
trustees something. It doesn't take a lot
of study to figure that out,” Hanna said.
Currently a $5,000 study paid for by the
city of Orlando, Orange County and the
Dr. Phillips Foundation is being con­
ducted at the Dick Pope Center for
Tourism at the University of Central
Florida on the feasibility of moving the
Central Florida Zoo to Turkey I^ike Park
in Orlando.
The study Is expected to be completed
in February. Zoo Executive Director A1
llozon re q u e s te d th e funding fro m th e
P h illip s F o u n d a tio n and O ranK e C ounty.

"If the people in Seminole don't want
the zoo and the people of Orlando do, it's
a simple m atter," Hanna said. "But even
if the zoo were moved, the current zoo
site would be beautiful as a picnic area
because of its natural gardens."
Hanna, in response to a letter from
Rozon earlier this month, told the zoo
executive director that some of the finest
zoological collections are found in the
state of Florida and several of these
parks are found in areas similar to the
site on which the Central Florida Zoo is
located.
Ho aLso told Rozon that he hopes to
bring several other zoo directors and
veterinarians with him on his visit to
assist both Rozon and his associates in
the study. Rozon is on vacation and
unavailable for comment.

M a rtin M a rie tta G ets N e w
$ 4 1 4 M illio n M is s ile Jo b
ORUNDO (UPI) - The Army is
giving Martin Marietta Corp. an ad­
ditional $414 million to produce the
controversial Pershing 2 missile system,
officials say.
The weapons system is being produced
by 800 workers at Martin Marietta
Aerospace in Orlando. Company
spokesman Hal Gettings said Tuesday
the present Pershing 2 contract is now at
$605 million — the division's largest
single contract.
The Army’s recent decision to supply
$414 million more to the project had been
expected for some time, said Gettings.

The Army began its contract last
D ecem ber by authorizing M artin
Marietta to obtain materials and com­
ponents for production. In June, the
Army continued the co n tract by
authorizing initial production valued at
$104 million.
The Pershing 2 missile system will
replace the Pershing 1A system in
Europe. The first of 108 Pershing 2
missiles are scheduled to be shipped to
NATO forces in West Germany in late
1983. The weapons system is designed to
counter Soviet Intermediate-range mis­
siles aimed at Western Europe.

Investigation Is Continuing

Confusion Clouds Case O f Girl's Death
ByTENlYARBOROUGH
Herald SUM Writer

A lack of communications between Seminole
County sheriff’s Investigators and the State Attor­
ney's office has caused a cloud of confusion con­
cerning the status of a probe Into the brutal slaying of
a Longwood girl In September.
Katherine Suzanne Greco, 14, of 1685 Glenethel
Court died Sept. 9 a t Orlando Regional Medical
Center, just two days after Seminole sheriffs
deputies discovered the badly beaten girl on the
kitchen floor of her home. Doctors said Miss Greco,
who never regained consciousness, suffered 14 or 15
blows in the head with a metal, claw hammer, which
deputies discovered next to her on the floor.
While sheriff’s deputies say they have a suspect In
the case, little else has been disclosed concerning
their Investigation. Sheriffs spokesman John Spolski
said his department has been working with the State
Attorney’s office but no charges have been filed In the
case.

However, Spolski said today Prosecutor Ralph
Eriksson had a subpoenae Issued requiring Miss
Greco's father, Richard J., 37, to report to his office
for interviewing In the case Monday.
"We were notified that Eriksson had Mr. Greco
subpoenaed and that he showed up Monday to talk to
Eriksson with a court reporter present," Spolski said.
"We were told that we could not be present at the
Inquiry because It was similar to a grand Jury inquiry
and no one Is allowed in those either. We don’t know
what went on in that conversation and what I don't
understand Is why It took place since Mr. Greco isn’t
even a suspect in the case."
When asked why Greco had been subpoenaed,
Eriksson said he was not working on the Greco case
and he had not subpoenaed Greco or discussed
anything with him in the presence of a court reporter.
"I am not working on a case concerning the Greco
girl," Eriksson said. “ I just give legal advice to the
sheriffs department when they request it on any
case.

"Mr. Greco just stopped in to say hi and discuss the
case and see if I knew anything new that's happening
in it," he continued. "I didn't talk to him in the
presence of a court reporter. We Just had a con­
versation between me and him."
Eriksson refused to discuss the Greco case further,
adding that "this case may never be solved. There’s
been a tragedy here. I don’t even know if anything
will ever come of it. But I’m not going to discuss what
the sheriff's office may have said we are doing, or
what we are doing or anything else about i t "
Meanwhile, W.J. Patterson, executive director of
the State Attorney's Sanford office, said Greco was
subpoenaed to appear at his office and that Eriksson
discussed the daughter's murder with him "with and
without a court reporter present."
Patterson added his office, has not Initiated its own
case concerning Mias Greco's slaying but are
"rendering assistance to the sheriffs investigators.
"I don't know why they were not present at the
interview between Ralph and Mr. Greco, but if they

have not been informed of that conversation, they will
be," Patterson said. “ However, I just can’t say why
we subpoenaed the girl's father because this Is a very
delicate case. I Just can’t say at this point.”
Spolski said his department is continuing its in­
vestigation into what deputies say is a m urder case
and that "there is a very good chance we’U have an
arrest soon."
Deputies discovered the bleeding child at about 7
p.m. Sept. 9 after her brother, Richard David, 16,
notified Greco at work and told him Katherine had
been attacked.
Greco called deputies, asking them to check on his
daughter's well-being, while also calling a neighbor,
Michael Young, and asking him to go to the home,
deputies said.
When deputies arrived at the home, they found the
young boy lying on the front porch, apparently in
shock, saying, "My sister, my sister," deputies said.
Deputies said they entered the home and were met
by Young who led them to the girl.

�Wednejday, Oct. 27, i m

3A— Even in g Hen Id, Sanford, F I.

But Pace Is Slowing Down

NATION

Americans' Spending Power Shrinking

IN BRIEF

American Incomes Before and After

2nd Witness In Ex-C/A
Agent Case Found Dead

The Consumer Price Index for September
went up by only 0.2 percent, a tiny ripple
compared to the double digit inflationary
waves of the recent past. So far this year in­
flation has fallen to a 4.8 percent annua! rate,
matching 1976.

EDINBURG, Va. (UPI) — The former CIA agent
who informed on ex-agent Edwin Wilson and the CIALibyan connection mysteriously died in the doorway of
his rural cottage, becoming the second potential
witness in Wilson's trial to die, police say.
"There was no inkling whatsoever. No trauma to the
body, no marks, no tiwGiing that indicated foul play,"
said Shenandoah County Sheriff Gary Alton. An
autopsy was scheduled today,
Kevin Nulcahey, 38, was expected to be a key
government witness in the case against former CIA
agents Wilson and Frank Terpil, accused in a Ubyan
terrorist support scheme.
Rafael Villaverde was also expected to testify, but he
disappeared from a boat accident near the Bahamas
seven months ago. Survivors said Villaverde dropped
overboard when the boat exploded and sank and they
were unable to rescue him. The Coast Guard never
found a trace of his body and the death was ruled an
accident.

But the Labor Department also reported
Tuesday Americans’ spending power declined
by 0.3 percent.
The spending power — inflation-adjusted
earnings — are calculated from three
statistics, the month's inflation rate, the
change in hourly pay and the length of the
average work week. The figure demonstrated
the relationship between a lower Inflation rate
and less work which sent the unemployment
rate to 10.1 percent.

Auto Workers Won't Strike
j OUMGE

DETROIT (UPI) — United Auto Workers over­
whelmingly rejected a strike against Chrysler Corp.,
deciding instead to resume contract negotiations after
Jan. 1, when the union hopes to gain pay increases the
automaker claims it can’t afford now.
Workers at 54 Chrysler locals Tuesday approved by a
70 percent margin the resumption of contract talks,
instead of a strike that would have begun Nov. 1.
UAW President Douglas Fraser said the strong vote
against a strike may have reflected workers' fears that
their jobs at the still-struggling automaker might be
lost if a walkout took place.

I
;!
I

Bob Smith, owner of Sanford radio station WTRR, said today
he is In the process of selling the station subject to approval of
the Federal Communications Commission.
The prospective buyers are Bill Udell of lighthouse Point
and Jim Harbart of Pittsburg, Kan. The two have formed
Sunshine Air Corporation. Both are veteran broadcasters and
have been In the business for several years, Smith said.
Udell owns radio stations in Indiana and Harbart recently
sold a station which he owned in Kansas, Smith said.
WTRR currently h u a country lavorlte* formal and Smith
s*Wt th e buyer* hmv« not disclosed whet type ot tormet they
plan to have. He said he anticipates the new owners will add to
staff at WTRR.
Smith said Udell and Harbart have signed an agreement to
buy the station, but no money has exchanged hands. They arc
awaiting approval by the FCC.
Smith purchased the 30-year-old station on July 7,1377, from
Rill and Myron Reck, who were partners of Communlco
Broadcasting. The Reck family had owned Ihe station for 29
years.
Smith said he Is selling the station because of his health. He
plans to sell the three other stations he owns in Wisconsin he
said.
Smith said ho Is retiring and plans to stay in Sanford. "We
have our home here and have no idea of leaving,” he said.

WEATHER
NATIONAL REPORT: Violent storms swirling 50-mph
winds blasted the Pacific Coast, leaving the skipper of a
swamped fishing boat dead and his crewman missing, and ii
dying Atlantic storm doused New York with more than an inch
of rain. Heavy rains Tuesday caused flooding and mudslides in
Utah and record cold stung the South. The Pacific storm hit
Puget Sound with 40-mph gusts that raised heavy swells and
sank two fishing boats, then rocked I^ke Washington's
floating bridges with 50-mph blasts during the morning rush
hour in Seattle. The storm hit Astoria, Ore., with brisk 30-mph
winds and knocked out power to 1,000 homes and businesses
south of Portland. Gusts to 50 inph were reported at Desert
Rock, Nev.
THURSDAY TIDES: DAYTONA REACH: highs, 5:24 a.m.,
5:51 p.m ., lows, 11:20a.m., 11:49 p.m.; PORT CANAVERAL:
highs, 5:16 a m ., 5:43 p.m.; lows, 11:11 a.m., 11:40 p.m.;
BAYPORT: highs, 11:32 a.m .,; lows, 5:53 a.m., 6:05 p.m.
BOATING FORECAST: SL Augustine to Jupiter Inlet, Out
50 Miles: Small craft should exercise caution south of
Sebastian Inlet. Wind northeast around 15 knots decreasing to
10 to 15 knots Thursday. Seas 4 to 6 feet. Partly cloudy.
AREA FORECAST: Mostly fair today. Highs near 80. Wind
northeast around 10 inph. Today and Thursday partly cloudy
with slightly higher temperatures. law s upper 50s. Highs low
80s. IJght northeast wind tonight.
EXTENDED FORECAST — Partly cloudy Friday through
Sunday. law s from 50s north to mid and upper 60s south. Highs
upper 70s north to mid 80s south.

HOSPITAL NOTES
B ro o k s , a b a b y g ir l, S a n lo rd
M ic h a e l L a n d R o b in E Sch
m id i, a b a b y boy. D e lto n a
D IS C H A R G E S
S an lo rd

S a n fo rd
W illia m C la s s
M y r t le M D a rn e ll
J u lia A . G ir t le r
L . D a r le n e H a rt
Jo h n A K r is e n
S co tt M L e w is
W illia m J D e d r itL . D e lto n a
R ic h a r d L S tu ll. D e lto n a
R a y m o n d G F o » J r , L a ke M a r y

BIRTHS
M ic h a e l

E.

and

E ile e n

Evening Ikiuld

M.

J e n a th a C a m p b e ll
C a n e n e E Johnson
Jo s h u a T M e r ric k
P h y llis J P eabody
W ilm a H P u rte il
R o b e rt B South Sr
S a n d ra L Johnson. D e B a ry
D o n s W F o a . D elto n a
D e b o ra M L a w s. D e lto n a
B u r c h lie ld M ille r, O sle e n
J e a n e tte E W a rre n a n d b a b y
g ir l, S a n lo rd
iw p s

at m i

Wednesday,October 27, 1962—Vol. 75, N a 58
Published Daily and Sunday, encepl Saturday by Tbe Sanford
Herald, tnt., 100 N. French Art., Sanlord, Fla. Sim.
Second Class Postage Paid at Sanlord, Florida lllll
Homo Oftiyfry. Week, II 04; Month, S4.ll; 4 Months, 114.00;
Year, I4S.M. By Mall: Week Si l l ; Month, Si l l ; 4 Months.
IJI.gO; Year, 117 N

tenure.
House Speaker Thomas "Tip" O’Neill
responded with an equally partisan Jibe,
saying "(President Herbert) Hoover could
point to an inflation rate of zero in 1930 and a
negative inflation rate of 2 percent by 1932,"
during the Great Depression.
"For the second time this century a
Republican president is leading us into a
tragic national deflation," O'Neill said.
This year's recession-fueled cuts in tax
revenues and increased welfare costs swelled
the federal deficit for fiscal 1982 to a record
(110.7 billion, the Treasury Department said
Tuesday.
The report on the government’s money year
ending Sept. 30 showed the most red ink ever,
far beyond last year’s (57.9 billion and the
previous high of (66 billion set by the Ford
administration in 1976.

Hourly pay, held down by recessionary
pressures, slipped by 0,1 percent in September
while the length of the workweek remained the
same.

Federal receipts for the year totaled $617.76
billion, the department said, (4.3 billion less
than the final Reagan administration estimate
issued in July.

The leaders of the Republican and
Democratic parties were quick to comment on
the September inflation rate, in advance of the
congressional elections Tuesday.

The 1982 deficit was fueled mostly by the
recession, which held down economic growth,
and with it tax revenues, while accelerating
the growth of unemployment benefits and crop
price supports paid to farmers.

"By a curious coincidence," President
Reagan said, "The last time we had that (4.8
percent) inflation rate was the last time there
was a Republican administration here,"
referring to President Ford’s 1976 White House

House Budget Committee Chairman Jim
Jones, D-Okla., said the deficit "is convincing
evidence of an economic policy sliding
dangerously off course.”

Lawyer: DeLorean Should Be Free In A Day O r Two'

Radio WTRR Being Sold

Central Florid* Regional
Hospital
Tuetday
ADMISSIONS

Ta« F '.uncjationInc

'Hu* m e d ia n incoim * fo r a n A m e ric a n fa m ily of fo u r w ith o n e f u ll-tim e w ag e
e a r n e r is p r o je c te d to h it a re c o rd h ig h o f (2:LH9.&gt; th is y e a r — a 114 p e r c e n t
in c r e a s e in 10 y e a r s . B ut in fla tio n a m i in c r e a s in g f e d e r a l t a x e s , in c lu d in g
s o c ia l s e c u r ity , h a v e le ft th e fa m ily w ith less to sp e n d . P o s t- ta x d is p o s a b le
in c o m e in c o n s ta n t 19*2 d o lla r s , a d ju s te d fo r in fla tio n , is d o w n m o r e th a n
S I.000.

Reagan's Son Back At Work
NEW YORK (UPI) — The president's son, Ron, who
caused a stir when he was laid off and collected
unemployment checks, is back at work as a ballet
dancer, a Joffrey Ballet spokeswoman says.
The dancers arc rehearsing for Christmas season
performances of "Taming of the Shrew," set to open
Dec. 22.

WASHINGTON (UPI) - The spending
power of Americans is not eroding as fast as it
used to, but it is still dropping, government
figures show.

LOS ANGEIJSS (UPI) — Automaker John
DeI.orean may soon be bailed out of prison,
but the millionaire Jet-setter — a "colossal ball
risk" — will be closely monitored by federal
agents and his travel severely restricted.
DeLorean's attorney said Tuesday he
reached an agreem ent with federal
prosecutors on securing his client’s (5 million
bail, adding the former General Motors whix
kid will soon be released from Terminal Island
federal prison.
"I expect be’U be out in a day or two," famed
criminal attorney Joseph Ball said after a
meeting with Delxirean, who has spent eight
days behind bars since his arrest while
allegedly trying to arrange a (24 million
cocaine deal to save his failing sports car
company.
Prosecutors, who said they would seek a
federal grand Jury indictment in the case no

later than Friday, could not confirm DeLorean
would soon be released from custody.
Asked if he was worried about DeLorean
fleeing after posting bail, Chief Assistant U.S.
Attorney Alexander Williams said, "We ex­
pressed our concern In court last week ... we
termed him a 'colossal ball risk.'"
To win his release from prison, DeLorean
must put up (250,000 cash and the remainder in
collateral from his 48-acre estate in San
Diego's plush Pauma Valley, which has been
for sale for nearly a year.
If the entrepreneur makes ball, his passport
will be revoked and his travel restricted to
New York, where he resides with his family,
and a large area of Southern California.
"Interestingly, the travel restriction does
not include the eastern district of New York,
where all the airports are," Williams said.
The silver-haired DeLorean, arrested last

DeLand Man Killed By Police
DELAND (UPI) — A DeLand man was
shot and killed by a policeman after he tossed
some lye in the officer’s face during a
disturbance in a housing project, police said
today.
Police spokesman l i . Alan Elliott said Ervin
MacMillan, 58, died Tuesday night after he
was shot twice by officer A.L. Berry. He said
the patrolman fired in self defense after
MacMillan threw some potash into Berry's
face and eyes.
"Berry told him to put it down, but the
subject came toward hlin and threw the stuff
in his face," said Elliott. "Berry continued to
backup and then drew his service revolver and

shot the man twice in the chest."
Elliott said the officer was called to the
housing project after Barbara Sherman
notified police that MacMillan had thrown
potash In her face.
"She apparently came next door and was
talking to the victim's wife, and for some
unknown reason, the victim approached her
and threw the potash In her face,” Elliott said.
"We are told it was an unprovoked attack."
Berry and Ms. Sherman were taken to a
Deland hospital where they were treated for
bums and released. Berry, who was placed on
sick leave, was hit in the eye by the potash and
was to be examined by a doctor, Elliott said.

week by FBI agents, will also be under "in­
tense” supervision by the Pretrial Services
Agency, requiring him to personally check In
with a probation officer twice a week,
spokesman Mike Meline said.

While DeLorean was confined at Terminal
Island, the Northern Ireland car company that
prosecutors said he desperately tried to save
with (60 million In cocaine and heroin profits
declared bankruptcy Monday in Detroit.

Frazier Facing 140 Years In Prison
A man dubbed by Seminole and Orange
county deputies as the “weekend rapist" could
face up to 146 years in prison following his
convictions in a string of burglaries, including
an April 26 break-in at an Altamonte Springs
woman's apartment.
Allen Lee Frailer, 34, who has been con­
victed In Orange County earlier this month for
burglary, attempted trespassing and grand
theft, and who Is facing a rape charge, was
convicted of burglary and grand theft Tuesday
in Seminole Circuit Court in connection with
the burglary of the home of Theresa Nursey,
617 San Sebastian Court, prosecutors said.
The six-member Jury rendered Its verdict
after about an hour and a half of deliberation,
prosecutor Steve Brady said. Judge Robert
McGregor set sentencing for Dec. 6.
"Under the law, he could receive a
maximum penalty of 15 years In prison for the
burglary conviction and five y ean In prison
for the theft charge. But, I plan to ask the
Judge for an enhanced penalty under the
habitual offender provision which would
double that sentence to 40 years," Brady said.
“F railer has nine prior convictions and Is
still facing more burglary charges and a rape
charge," Brady continued. "He’s supposed to
be sentenced In Orange County for charges he
was convicted of there and Judge McGregor

has said that the penalty imposed here could
be ordered to run consecutively with what he is
sentenced to in Orange County. He’s going to
be In jail a long time — probably the rest of his
life because he could get an additional 100
years or so if prosecutors in Orange County go
for the enhanced penalty."
While Mrs. Nursey told the court Monday
that she awoke at 3:50 a.m. and saw a man
whom she identified as Frailer going through
her Jewelry box, F railer denied that he was in
the apartment that night because he was with
his girlfriend at her home.
However, his airlfriend, Joyce Green, said

that although F railer often spent the night at
her home, she could not swear that he was
there at the time of the April 26 burglary.
The friend, Derek Green, said he saw
Frazier at the bar and had seen him buy stolen
jewelry but that all watches and rings looked
the same to him and that he couldn't swear
that the Jewelry Frazier bought was or wasn't
Mrs. Nursey’s property. Green also said that
Frazier left the bar, went behind the building
and returned with a bag of Jewelry. However,
Green said he could not identify the items.
Frailer is being held in the Seminole County
jail awaiting sentencing, Jail officials said.
— TENIYARBOROUGH

A r m e d B a n d it H o ld s U p F e r n P a r k M u s ic S t o r e
ByTENIYARBOROUGH
Herald Staff Writer
Seminole County sheriff's deputies are continuing their
search today for nn armed bandit who robbed a Fcm Park
store, employees and customers Tuesday evening.
According to Keller Music employee Rose Glascock, a
masked gunman came Into the store on 2040 U.S. Highway 1792, ordered her to open the cash register and hand over the
store's money. Miss Glascock told deputies the man also or­
dered store customers to Ue vn the floor as he stole their
wallets.
Deputies said Ihe man, whose face was partially covered
with a black and grey cloth which he had taped to his skin, was
armed with a .45-caliber automatic handgun.
Deputies said the gunman stole about (150 from the cash
register. He also stole several checks and a wallet from
Charles Glascock, 54, of Casselberry; (16 cash from Larry
Weed, 46, of Orlando; and, a wallet containing (23 from Miss
Glascock, deputies said. Joseph Delano, 25, of Altamonte
Springs, told deputies that although he was forced to lie bn the
floor with the others, the bandit stole nothing from him.
UPS OFFICE BURGLARIZED
Thieves broke into the United Parcel Service office at 1060
Miller Road near Altamonte Springs between 10 p.m. Sunday
and 3:30 a.m. Monday, searched desks and cabinets and stole
an undisclosed amount of cash from a coin machine.
Deputies said the culprits entered the building after prying
open a section of the roof and lowering themselves Into the
building. Deputies said the thieves tore the machine from the
wall, pried it open and stole the coins.
MAN ATTACKED, ROBBED
A Sanford man was struck In the face with a two-by-four
board, knocked unconscious and robbed while walking along
Olive Avenue at about 11:30 p.m. Sunday.
Willie Lee Tucker, 45, of 1507 W. lllh St., told police he waa
returning home from a nearby bar when two men hit him with
the board on the shoulders and In the face, knocked him un­
conscious then stole his wallet and (IS cash.
Police said Tucker w as treated for swelling and cuts on his
lips and cheeks as a result of the robbery.
NEAR-DROWNING REPORTED
A 14-month-old baby was rushed to Florida HospitalAltamonte Springs at about 5:54 p.m. Monday aftq^her father
discovered the child at the bottom of the family pool.
Gerald Konlng, 42, of 123 Lake Rena Drive In Longwood told
deputies he and his family were enjoying a backyard barbeque
at their home when he realized that 14-month-old Loria was not
around. Konlng said he then saw his young daughter at the
bottom of the swimming pool, dived Into the water after her
and pulled her out.
Deputies said the young girl was rushed to the hospital
where doctors said she Is breathing on her own and Is expected
to fully recover from the Incident.

Action Reports
★

Fires
A Courfs
* Police

MORE THAN (2,M l WORTH TAKEN
More than $3,000 worth of property was stolen from a south
Seminole County man's home between 11:30 a.m. and 11:35
p.m. Sunday.
Steven W. Mongeal, 30, of 1500 Westdale Drive In Maitland
told deputies the thieves stole his washing and drying
machines, refrigerator, garage door opener, celling fan
chrome and glass dining set and other miscellaneous Items.
BOAT MIS8ING FROM CANAL
Someone stole a 14-foot aluminum boat from a canal near a
Sanford woman's home between 5 p.m. Oct. 21 and 11:30 a.m.
Sunday.
Anna Marie Ward, 70, of 153 Canal St. told deputies someone
stole her boat which w u located behind her home docked at
the canal. Mrs. Ward said the boat Is valued at about $170,
deputies added.
PURSE-SNATCHER STRIKES
A man grabbed a Longwood woman's purse but didn't get
her wallet as she was walking along Laka Brantley Road near
Longwood at about 7:30 p m Thursday.
Ruth A. Hebei, 23, of 101 Shadow Lake Drive told deputies
she Injured her hands trying to prevent a purse-snatcher from
stealing her puraa and although the culprit riole the purse, she
managed to hang onto her wallet, deputies said.
Mrs. Hebei told deputies the thieves fled on foot toward the
Wekiva Spring! area.
SANFORD MAN HELD
A 30-year-old Sanford man was being held In Seminole
County Jail under $600 bond following his arrest at 13:47 p m .
Monday after police aald they discovered a man sitting In the
cockpit of a turbojet at Sanford Airport with hla suttcaae at the
foot of the craft’s boarding Udder.
Axel Bernard Carlson of 51 Shenandoah Village w u being
held on a tra p a irin g charge after police said they observed
him sitting in the control seat of a Cannon Aire four-engine
turbo jet, which they say la valued at about $1 million and
owned by Weattnghouae. Police said Carlson's packed suitcase
w u also discovered at tho bottom of Ihe boarding ladder.
When asked by police why ho w u rittlng in the aircraft, the
man told them he w u "juri checking It out," police aald.
Police added that Carlson offered no resistance when he w u
asked to get out of tbe airplane and w u placed under a r r a t

v

MURDER TRIAL DEIAYED
The murder trial ot an Altamonte Springs man accused In
the July slaying of another Altamonte Springs man in
Homestead, Fla., h u been postponed because lawyers for both
sides are not prepared to go to court.
T h o m u J. Farragher, 49, street address unknown, is being
held in the Dade County jail without bond following his arrest
July 8 In connection with the shooting death of David Gene
Buckles, 39, of 625 Little Wekiva Road, according to MetroDade police Sgt. Jim Retcliff.
Farragher was scheduled to appear In court this week to
face a first-degree murder charge In connection with Buckles'
death but prosecutors and defense lawyers requested the case
be tried at a later date because neither were prepared to go to
court, according to Assistant State Attorney lauren Kogen.
Circuit Judge Murray Goldman has rescheduled the case for
Jan. 17, 1983.
R etdlff said Buckles was shot in the chest and then allegedly
driven by Farragher to a convenience store In Homestead
where F arr agher told the store manager to call the police. The
manager called police and Farragher surrendered himself and
the weapon, Retcliff said.
Buckles, who Is survived by his wife Alleen, and their three
children, w u reportedly a buyer of gold and jewelry.
THIEVES TAKE CLOCKS, CHEST, FAN

Thieves broke Into a home near Sanford between 6:30 p.m.
Oct. 20 and 7:45 a m . Sunday stealing an undisclosed amount of
property.
Juanita M. Fortier, 51, of 2507 Old U k e Mary Road told
deputies she believes the thieves entered her home through a
window at about 6:45 p m . Friday because a clock had been
unplugged with that patlcular tim e showing.
Mrs. Fortier said the burglars also stole an engagement
ring, cedar chest, color television, black and white TV, two
gold watches, six silver dollars, a brass cigarette lighter, two
shotguns, a rifle, a pistol, six Ashing rods and reels, a reel-tor a l tape player, a gold broach, a wedding band, an electric
guitar and amplifier, two clocks, a chain u w , a can opener, a
staple gun, a police scanner radio, a vacuum cleaner, an AMFM cassette tape player, an iron, a window fan and a celling
fan, deputies aald.

Deputies added that the thieves may also have been
responsible (or cutting an eiectridal wire leading to a street
lamp near the home.
JEWELRY STOLEN FROM HOME
Four rings and a set of diamond earrings were stolen from
an Altamonte Springs home between 1:30 p.m. Friday and
11:45 p.m. Sunday.
D o u g in L Brown, 46, of 206 Whippoorwill Drive told
deputies someone broke into his home through a bathroom
window and stole a gold dinner ring, a pearl ring, an onyx ring
and a diamond ring along with a set of diamond earrings.

�Evening H erald, Sanford FI

PROVISIONS OF 1982 DUI LAW

FLORIDA

i

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

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IN B R IE F

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Search, Seizure Rule

fm««

Challenged In Court
QUINCY i Ul’Ii — lawyers attempting lo block state
constitutional amendment No. 2 from the November 2
ballot say they will bring their cause before a circuit
court of appeals today.
I-ate Tuesday circuit court judge Ben C. Willis
rejected legal arguments that the wording of the
controversial amendment would mislead voters into
giving up their protection from unreasonable searches
and seizures.
The amendment, if voted into law, would expend
prosecutor’s ability to use illegally gathered evidence.
Such evidence, such as tape recordings made without a
warrant, would be permissible if gathered "in good
faith."

• &gt;&gt;»♦«!*•»*

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V » .«

l .•••« *-• -•-«
I* Mf •* I t %•*
i M il

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Irt l

ST. AUGUSTINE (UPI) - Florida’s tougher drunken
driving laws are curbing the number of intoxicated motorists
while helping beaches, parks and roadsides stay free of litter,
officials say.
New drinking-and-driving laws that took effect earlier this
year are prompting more arrests for driving under the in­
fluence, and judges ar&lt;* rc.iteiicing many convicted motorists
to at least 50 hours of community service work.
In some parts of north Florida, crews of DUI offenders —
guarded by soldiers of the Salvation Army — can be seen
cleaning up trash along roads and in recreation areas.
Because of the large number of cases already burdening the
state’s probation officers, courts in St. Johns and Putnam
counties and other areas have commissioned the Salvation
Army to oversee work crews assigned to pick up litter at

AVON PARK i UPI) — An Avon Park woman who
claims she was burned on the lips and mouth by a
contaminated bottle of fruit punch was in Walker
Memorial Hospital for tests today.
Hospital officials refused to say what type treatment
the woman required when admitted Tuesday, or the
extent of the injury.
Policy Chief Paul Frost said Carlene Afflick, 40,
reported she purchased a 10-ounce bottle of Tropicana
fruit punch at a Shop-N-Go store Tuesday and took it
home where she later opened it. Frost said the woman
said she did not notice if the seal on the bottle had been
broken or whether the juice had a strange odor.

Orlando Saving Water

CALENDAR

ORLANDO i UPI | — The city of Orlando is spending
$564,000 to install free water-restricting gadgets in
every home in the city and that could mean a $3 to $5
savings to residential customers, officials say.
Tom Brownlee, who proposed the water-saving idea
to the City Council last year, said Orlando may be the
first city in the nation to give all of its residents free
water savers.
The installations will be done by city employees and
it will take about 10 months to complete, officials said.
A three-month pilot program conducted this summer
showed the devices, which restrict the flow of water in
taps, showers and toilets, cut water consumption by 18
to 20 percent.

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 27
Haunted House, 7-9 p.m., First United Methodist
Church of Sanford youth wing, 419 Park Ave To benefit
sununer camp fund.
Casselberry AA, closed, 8 p.m.. Ascension Lutheran
Church Overbrook Drive.
Wednesday Step, 8 p in. i closed I Penguin Building,
dental Health Center, Crane’s Roost, Altamonte
springs.

beaches, roadsides and city and state parks
"There’s no need to be alarmed because he could be your
next-door neighbor — definitely not the criminal type,"
Salvation Army probation supervisor Don Powell said of the
cleanup crews.
"The drunken drivers are a new development, but the
Salvation Army has been meeting ex-prisoners at the gates of
Raiford istate prison) smee the days when they turned them
loose with $10 and a new suit," he said.
First-time DUI convicts must perform a mandatory 50 hours
of community service under the new Florida law. Powell said
most members of the cleanup crew s are cooperative and seem
eager to serve their sentences as quickly as possible.
Powell said many of the convicted drivers also are reporting
to blood banks to make donations, because giving a pint of
blood substitutes for eight hours of community service time.
"These aren't hardened criminals," he said. "They make
good workers.
"They don't look upon themselves as crim inals," he said.
"Most of them think the new law is unfair to them, but they're
realizing how serious their driving while drinking can
become."
Powell said more than 20 people from Putnam County and
about 50 people from St. Johns Co.rnty have been sentenced to
the work details since July, when ihe stiffer drunken driving
statutes took effect.
Besides overseeing the probation, the Salvation Army also is
finding community service projects to keep the DUI offenders
busy.

Starlight Promenaders, 8 p m , DeBary Community
Center, Shell Road.

Want A Free House?

THURSDAY. OCTOBER28
Jam -reisers perform for March of Dimes, 6-8 p.m.,
Altamonte Mall, 800 Jazzercisers will include UCF
fixitball team.

MIAMI ( U PI) — It sounds like a great deal a $75,000
house for free.
The only catch is that the three-bedroom, two-bath
home — with garage — must be removed from the
property. And the property is encircled by expressway
overpasses in every direction.

( assclberry AA, 8 p.m. Ascension Lutheran Church,
Overbrook Drive (dosed open speaker second and last
Wednesday.)

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1982—3A

Seminole County commissioners have agreed to put up
stop signs, lower the weight limit and continue road patrols
along I-ike Howell Road to improve safety in Tanglewood
subdivision.
Residents of the subdivision, which is adjacent to Winter
Park, have been up in arms since a child was struck and
killed by a car traveling the road on July 26.
Commissioners agreed to install a four-way stop sign at
l.ake Howell Road and linden Avenue and a three-way stop
at U k e Howell Road and Ivy Avenue. Their action goes
beyond '.he recommendation of Traffic Engineer Gary
lis te r , who suggested the reduction in weight limit and
continued police enforcement of the speed limit but left out
installation of any stop signs along the road.
l i s t e r said the road is a minor arterial which is used by
more than 9,000 cars per day. Installing stop signs on U ke
Howell Road will worsen the congestion by forcing the
vehicles to stay in the neighborhood longer.
l i s t e r said stop signs do not effectively slow traffic. "It
only takes 200 feet for a compact car to accelerate back up
to 30 miles per hour." he said.
Commissioners supported the stop signs claiming they
would stop motorists from using I-ake Howell Road.
"I don’t think four-way stops will deter anyone from using
the road," I-ester said.
Commissioner Robert G. "Bud" Feather voted against
the plan because l .ake Howell Road is in "the same class as
liongwood Avenue, Red Bug Road and I-ike Mary
Boulevard."
Feather said no one is considering stop signs for in­
stallation along those highways.
But Commissioner Bill Kirchhoff said the safety factor
must be considered.
"We’re getting excess traffic through an area which is not
capable of handling it." Kirchhoff said. "The streets aren't
made for pedestrians They don't have to speak for
pedestrians. Yet they're the ones who get killed."
Commissioners voted 4-1 in favor of the traffic control
m easures with Feather casting the dissenting vote.
They may face similar requests for stop signs from
residents in other areas, I-ester said.
That may increase the dilemma for commissioners who
must balance the need to keep traffic moving with the
desires of residents who don’t want traffic in their neigh­
borhoods
_ MICIIF-AL BEHA

New DUI Law Working

Fruit Punch Contaminated?

If,

County Tries To
Improve Safety
In Tanglewood

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�E v e n in g H erald
(U S P S M l J901

300 N. FRENCH AVE., SANFORD, FIA . 32771
Area Code 305-322-2611 or 531 -9903
W ednesday, October 27. 1982—4A
Wayne D Doyle, Publisher
Thomas Giordano, Managing Editor
Robert Lovenbury, Advertising and Circulation Director
Home Delivery: Week, SI 00; Month, $4 25; GMonths, $24 00;
Year, $45.00. By Mail; Week, $1.25; Month. $5.25; G Months,
$30.00; Year. $57.00.

Anybody Out
There Listening?
National Democratic Chairman Charles T.
Manatt has complained because his parly got only
five minutes of time on the NBC network to air a
rebuttal to the 24-minute television talk by
President Reagan about the economy.
Manatt should not protest too much. Most of
what the Democrats can say about Reaganomics
can be said in five minutes or so, and Sen. Donald
Itiegle of Michigan did it well in the time allotted.
A full 24 minutes would have required him to
elaborate on the “change of course" he was
calling for, and that would surely disclose that the
traditional Democratic response to recession
would lead us back into the woods rather than out
of them.
That, of course, was the point of Mr. Reagan’s
talk, a lesson in economic history as well as a plea
to "stay the course" toward the better times he
sees ahead. Graphs on the screen made it clear
enough that past efforts to treat rising unem­
ployment with the quick-fix of government taxing,
spending and borrowing leads only to the inflation
and high interest rates that make unemployment
worse the next time around.
The Democratic argument that the Reagan
administration is responsible for the current
recession is difficult to make for more than five
minutes. Just as Mr. Reagan must give some
credit to the Federal Reserve’s tight money policy
for bringing the inflation rate down to less than 5
percent, so must the Democrats acknowledge that
the recession might have been turned around
sooner if the Fed has not allowed its monetary
policy to get out of step with the fiscal policy the
administration began putting in place in 1981.
As it is, the dramatic decline in prime interest
rates which followed the Fed’s belated change of
course has come too late to relieve Republicans of
the burden of 10.1 percent unemployment which
the Democrats are fastening on them in their
campaign rhetoric. While there is good reason for
the optimism Mr. Reagan finds in the long-term
economic outlook, we are still not out of the
woods.
We won’t be until the buoyancy which the in­
terest-rate news has brought to Wail Street moves
into the shopping districts uptown. Although the
verdict may still be out on the efficacy of supplyside economics, what is needed now is some ac­
tion on the demand side — from consumers still
waiting for more favorable terms to take the
plunge on big-ticket installment purchases like
cars and appliances or investing in a home.
As Mr. Reagan pointed out, it is sad but true
that unemployment is the last indicator to move
down when other factors move the economy from
recession into recovery. It is more annoying than
sad that interest rates on installment loans and
home mortgages lag behind when the prime rate
falls.
The president, as powerful as he is, cannot
make decisions for the Federal Reserve or for the
banking and savings and loan industry. Fed
Chairman Paul Volcker has concluded that the
back of inflation has been broken. Are the private
bankers listening? If they are, we might expect
interest rates for consumer and housing credit to
refleet less of a premium anticipating inflation —
and the lifting of another roadblock in the way of
recovery.

Watt's Junkets
A cabinet officer who misused government
aircraft for his family's personal travel and his
own partisan political appearances would be an
embarrassment to any administration.
Hut Interior Secretary James Watt's profligacy
at taxpayers’ expense is doubly damaging to the
Reagan administration, pledged as it is to a war
on every form of government waste and abuse.
According to congressional investigators, Watt
and members of his family have spent tens of
thousands of dollars jetting about the country in
an Interior Department aircraft on trips that
could hardly be described as official business.
Neither Watt nor his spokesmen have deigned to
discuss these findings with the watchdog General
Accounting Office or with investigators for the
House Government Operations Committee. Thus,
arrogance has been added to the sin of misusing
public funds.

By SAM COOK

Five Star Conference Seminole County teams
will play each other in football this Friday, but
the games are miles apart in Importance.
Lyman and ta k e Howell battle for the Five
Star lead at Howell. Seminole and take Brantley
get together in the “Basement Bowl" at Bran­
tley.
Lyman is coming off a crucial 15-7 victory over
conference co-leader Apopka. I-ake Howell, with
a 3-1 record like Apopka, pasted Spruce Creek,
40-20. The Greyhounds have one more con­
ference game to play than the others, but their
three remaining games are against cellar
dwellers Seminole, Spruce Creek and ta k e
Brantley.
A look at the only common opponent —
Mainland — doesn't shed much light. Mainland
nipped the ’Hounds by two points early in the
season and shutout Lake Howell by 15 two weeks

ago.
The Silver Hawks should be sky-high after a
big win last Friday in which fullback Jay Robey
powered for 253 yards on just 16 carries. Robey
ran for touchdowns of 20, 69 and 70 yards.
Quarterback Troy Quackenbush Is recovered
from an arm injury. He is a master at running
the Silver Hawks veer offense behind huge of­
fensive linemen Jim Royal, Billy Norton and
Dan Rae.
Lyman, meanwhile, boasts an explosive of­
fense with the likes of QB Jerry Alley, split end
Todd Marriott and running backs Vince Presley
and Willis Perry. linebacker Mike Hill Is an AllState probable. Jam es and Greg Pilot are other
tough defenders.
The winner of Friday's matchup could go on to
the conference title, although Apopka still has to
be considered a threat.

Seminole and Brantley aren't fighting for a
conference crown, but they are fighting to stay
out of the Five S tar basement. Each has lost six
straight games without a victory.
Seminole has more speed and quickness, but
the Patriots have played better in the last three
outings while the 'Notes have gone downhill.
Brantley’s young defense has given up Just 37
points In the past three weeks. The problem has
been offense where it has scored only 12 points
all year.
TheSeminoles opened the season with two fine
outings against Titusville Astronaut and ta k e
Howell, but has slumbered since then except for
an excellent th re e -q u a rte r effort ag ain st
Apopka.
Last week, Seminole was uninspired in a 41-0
disaster at lakeland Kathleen.
A loss Friday could result In an 0-10 season.

JEFFREY HART

ANTHONY HARRIGAN

Some
Deeper

U.S. May
Import
Water
Malcolm Forbes, ed ito r of Forbes
magazine, wrote In a recent issue of his
publication that "Canada's most vital export
to the U.S. will one day be w ater." He Is ab­
solutely right.
The development of the Western states In
recent decades has seriously depleted water
supplies. Farming in the arid Southwest
requires huge supplies of water. The ex­
pansion of cities such as ta s Angeles and
Denver also have created a need for water
supplies on a colossal scale. The expansion of
coal mining In Montana and Wyoming
depends on abundant water. Arizona and
California have engaged in fierce struggles In
the courts over water from the Colorado
River.
There is only so much water In the
American West, and underground water
tables are dropping. Conservation helps, but
not enough. What's the answer? The
population of the West Isn’t going to move
back east. Western agriculture and mining
will be more needed than ever in the 21st
century.
The answer is to obtain water from Canada,
a country with a huge w ater surplus. A
proposal for utilizing Canada’s excess water
was advanced as far back as 1964 when the
Ralph M. Parsons Co. of Pasadena,
California, suggested a North American
Water and Power Alliance. The company
proposed to divert the flow of Canada's huge
rivers southward, Into a 500-mile long
reservoir in British Columbia and Montana.
Through a system of canals and aqueducts,
water from the reservoir could be channeled
to water-poor areas o( Canada, the United
States and Mexico.
In 1964, the Parsons Co. estimated that the
project would require 30 years to build and
cost $150 billion. For a country that could
build the Panama Canal and send men Into
space, the water project was feasible.
The proposal didn’t get wide support,
however. At the time, coal mining In the West
was at a much less ambitious stage than it is
today. Water problems for Western cities and
farms weren't so critical. Some Canadian
liberals were furious at the Idea of the United
Stales taking Canadian water — even at a
good price.
The urgency of a North American water
project is now much greater. Western in­
terests can better see the need for a longrange approach to water needs. The
Canadians, with crushing economic
problems, may be able to recognize that the
sale of surplus water aouth of the border
would be advantageous to Canada.
The North American Water and Power
Alliance may be an Idea whose time has
come. If Forbes magazine finds merit In the
Idea, other leading buslneas voices may be
alerted to the opportunity.

PLEASE WRITE
ta tte n to the editor are welcomed for
publicaUoa All letters roust be signed,
with a mailing address 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 spare requirements.

Questions

ROBERT WALTERS

Vitriolic Campaigning
WINTEHSET, Iowa — A scowl crosses the
face of Rep. Thomas Harkln, D-Iowa, as he
reads the strident letter which accuses him of
telling "lies," "total lies" and "outright lies"
to his constituents.
"Most voters in my district get down about
this far," be says, pointing to the third of 10
separate references to his alleged dishonesty,
"and they throw this thing away."
"This thing" Is a letter distributed in a
mass mailing to residents of Iowa’s 5th
Congressional District (which spans the
predominantly rural southwestern quarter of
the state) by the Mid-America Conservative
Political Action Committee.
"Harkins is lying," says the vitriolic
document. "The voters in our district w ill...
be appalled when they learn how Harkin lied
to them ... Put a stop to llarkin's lies and
remove him from Congress."
The letter is similar to uncounted millions
flooding the mull in this election year as New
Right political groups press their attack
against politicians they have designated as
"ultra-liberal,’’ unsupportlve of "Christian
values" or otherwise unsuitable to hold public
office,
It is a sleazy practice which has un­
necessarily degraded Ihe political process
and has been justifiably criticized by
Republicans and Democrats, conservatives
and liberals.
In addition to debasing the democratic
process, what do such campaigns achieve?
One of their few notable accomplishments is
to provide a lucrative business for their
organizers.
When one Iowa newspaper, the Waterloo
Courier, examined MACPAC’s operations, it
discovered that the organization raised more
than $143,000 (rom the time of Its formation In
January 1961 through the middle of this year.
But only one congressional candidate
received a direct contribution from MACPAC
— and that $2,000 donation went to a
Republican state senator in Illinois who
appears on MACPAC’s letterhead as one of
the group's 12 "directors and advisors.’’
Moreover, that money didn't do much to
promote the conservative cause because the

recipient was unceremoniously defeated In a
primary contest early this year.
In addition, the Courier found that more
than $22,000 of the organization’s disbur­
sements went to MACPAC Chairman Leroy
D. Corey to reimburse him for his
management and consulting aervicM, travel
expenses and assorted ether costa he In­
curred.
More than $6,000 in other expenditures was
paid to three organizations — the American
Liberty Association, Conservative List
Exchange and Christian Voice Moral
Government Fund — for the rental of mailing
lists, office expenses and business supplies.
Those three groups all share the same
address — and it is identical to Corey's home,
address in Cedar Falls, Iowa.
Corey claims that his organization is
committed to defeating not only Harkins but
also two other congressional candidates here
In Iowa and assorted other politicians in
slates stretching from Massachusetts to
California.
But operational expenses and various self­
dealing transactions consumed so much of
MACPAC's fund that It had only slightly more
than $1,750 In its treasury at mid-year, four
months prior to election day.
"Leroy Corey and his group are highly
overrated In this state," says a disdainful
Harkin. "Their so-called power Is a myth.
They’re little more than a nuisance."
He was the target of other right-wing
groups two years ago when a conservative
political tide swept across the country and
President Reagan carried Iowa by an
overwhelming margin — but Harkin won
rejection with 61 percent of the vote.
Harkin suggests that the shrill rhetoric of
the extremist groups has virtually no Impact
in local races, where voters often a re familiar
with the candidates, but may have a great
effect in statewide races where personal
contact is less frequent.
Adds the congressman; “They’ve gone
after me, they’ve leaflet*!, they've taken out
ads, but they've never had any effect. If
anything, they’ve probably gotten me more
votes because sensible voters resent this type
of campaign.

The Republicans may be hurt in the
November elections by the present high rate
of unemployment, being blamed not only by
the unemployed themselves but by people
afraid of losing their jobs and people who
know others who are out of work.
Nevertheless, there are strong signs of an
economic upturn.
Speaking last week before the Business
Council in Hot Springs, Va., Federal Reserve
Chairman Paul Volcker announced that in the
near future, because inflation has been so
successfully wrung out of the economy, the
Fed could now move to stimulate the
economy by lowering interest rates or
carefully increasing the money supply. "The
forces are there that would push the economy
toward recovery," said Volcker. "I would
think the policy objective should be to sustain
that recovery... There Is growing evidence
that the Inflationary momentum has been
broken. Indeed, with appropriate policies, the
prospects a p p e a r good for continuing
moderation of Inflation in the months ahead.”
Historically, a high and surging inflation
has never been cured without unemployment.
And Interest rates cannot come down under
conditions of high inflation. Now, as Mr.
Volcker says, the rates can come down,
fueling the recovery.
All of the above is no doubt small comfort to
people out of work or to the proprietors of
(ailed businesses, and the Republicans may
suffer at the polls — though the Democrats do
not appear to have any better ideas — but
"Reagaonomics," which the Democrats have
tried to make the major Issue this fall, ap­
pears In fact to be working.
Neverthelosa, th ere ere deeper problem *

with the American economy than are in­
volved in the present cycle of inflation and
unemployment, but which certainly have
contributed to our difficulties.
Take, as a symbol of one order of problem,
the huge modem steel mill In the bustling port
city of Koohsiung in southern Taiwan. I
visited this plant not long ago. It is spotlessly
clean, wholly run by computers which arc
tended by Chinese technicians In white coals.
By comparison, U.S. steel mills In Pittsburgh
are helplessly out of date, something out of
the Victorian era.
Neit to the great Koohsiung steel mill,
there is a modem shipyard, which uses steel
from the next-door mill in ship repair and ship
construction. Indeed, out on the waters of the
Taiwan Strait, vessels from countless nations
were lined up waiting for repairs of one kind
or another.
But there Is a second order of problem,
equally serious. The Japanese, the govern­
ment working closely with corporate industry
— so closely in fact, that Prime Minister
Zenko Zuzukl decided not to seek reelection
when that country's economy took a turn for
the worse — have developed a coherent
strategy which Involved actual warfare
against selected U.S. industries. At the
present time, for example, It Is the dram atic
fact that no black-and-white TV sets are being
manufactured In the United States. With the
advantage of favorable treatment accorded
by the Japanese government, the Japanese
companies deliberately put us out of business.
In a sim ilar way, the French government
has now Initiated a deliberate strategy to
dominate the world market (or small homeuse computers — a potentially multi-billion
dollar enterprise.
All of this suggests that we are In a new
phase of the global economy and face
problems that will not simply take care of
themselves.

JACK ANDERSON

Defense Department: Top Energy User
WASHINGTON - With appropriate ruffles
and flourishes, Defense Secretary Casper
Weinberger will present awards today to
those who have done the roost to conserve
energy in their military units.
At risk of being the skunk at Cap’s garden
party, I'm obliged to tell the true story of
energy conservation in the military establish­
ment. The sad details have been compiled by
the Pentagon’s own Investigators.
The Defense Department, whose $10.7
billion energy bill for the past fiscal year
made it the biggest single energy consumer in
the country, must also be the moat wasteful.
My associate Lucette tagnado obtained a
copy of the investigators' report.
They visited all four m ilitary services and
tried to determine the actual situation, not the
official good intentions. For example, they
wrote: "We wanted to know if building
temperatures were kept within guidelines,
not whether certificates were posted or an

instruction Issued."
The investigators did not "attempt to fix
blame (or) embarrass anyone ... but the
report calls It the way we see It, without
‘sugar coating.'"
Intentionally or not, the report should spoil
Weinberger’s awards ceremony. Here are
some of the investigators’ findings:
— Energy conservation "is not a high
intereat-hlgh priority com m and item ."
U su a lly , responsibility for conservation
programs Is delegated to relatively low-level
personnel, with little attention from the
commander.
— The Pentagon doesn’t offer "anything
resembling a real Incentive for saving
energy." In one interview, the investigators
were told: "The only Incentive was the Joy of
foUowiqg orders."’ This, the report observes
dryly, seemed "somewhat inadequate for
most people's commitment." *
— Commanding officers had a disincentive

concerning energy conservation, it a com­
mander does enforce strict m easures, like
keeping the thermostat down, "his people
may operate with some discomfort" — and he
may decide it’s not worth all the griping from
the ranks.
— At some Installations, the brass hats
tried to disguise their failure to cut down on
energy consumption. "It appeared that
square footage data had been manipulated to
present an unrealistically rosy status of
energy conservation progress," the report
states.
— Many of the officers charged with the
energy-saving responsibility sim ply didn’t
know what they were doing, or what they
were supposed to be doing. In moat cajes, no
energy audit had been conducted on the
buildings, and there was neither a working
program nor a plan - nor the detailed
knowledge necessary to produce one.
— Carelessness and a hang-tt-all attitude

)

were rampant. Windows were left open,
upper floors were overheated, temperature
controls that could be set back at night were
licking, while low-cost, hlgh-retum m easures
like sto rm window s, Insulation and
westherstripplng were not taken.
— Some steps that were taken were
ludicrous. At one base, for example, an In­
spector drove* around each day looking for
porch lights that had been left on. “A good
symbol for commitment, but grossly inef­
ficient for saving BTU’s," the report noted.
— R e sista n c e to conservation w as
widespread among commanding officers.
One engineer told the investigators his
commander had told him to “buzz o f f ’ when
he proposed ways to save energy.
Fortnotc: Chairman John Dtngell, D-Mlch.,
of the House subcommittee on oversight and
Investigations is looking into the Pentagon's
use - and abuse — of energy.

�Evening Herald. Sanford, F I

W ORLD
IN BRIEF
Israel, Syria Beef Up
Positions In Lebanon
United Press International
Syria moved new batteries of Soviet missiles into
eastern Lebanon and Israel beefed up its own forces
there despite U.S.-led talks scheduled to start next
week on withdrawing foreign arm ies from the country,
.reports said.
In the occupied West Bank, Israel dedicated a new
settlement Tuesday in defiance of President Reagan's
Middle E ast peace plan
At the United Nations, following an intensive
American lobbying effort, the General Assembly
Tuesday overwhelmingly defeated a renegade Iranian
attempt to oust Israel from the world body.

Report Says Torture Used
LONDON (UPIi — Amnesty International’s 1982
report charged some governments use floggings,
beatings with barbed wire, sexual abuse, amputations
and psychological tactics such a s mock executions to
torture prisoners.
The report of the London-based human-rights
organization documented human rights situations in
121 countries and said both torture and execution were
being used against political prisoners.
The organization, which won the Nobel Peace Prize
in 1980, expressed urgent concern about alleged
political killings by the governments of El Salvador,
Syria and Libya. Other political killings — those out­
side the legal process — were carried out by
Guatemala, Uganda, the Philippines, Pakistan, India,
Indonesia, Afghanistan and Iran, the group said.
Thousands of other executions were carried out
around the world, with more than half of the 3,278
recorded by Amnesty during 1981 by Iran’s extremist
Islamic regime of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini.

Falklands War Costly
LONDON (UPI) - Prime Minister Margaret
Thatcher said the war with Argentina to regain the
Falkland Islands cost Britain • an estimated $1.19
billion.
Approximately $17 million of the defense budget has
been allocated for rehabilitation work on the Falkland
Islands, she said.

Wednesday. Ocf. J7, i*82—5A

Police Hint At Major Break In Cyanide-Tylenol Case
United P re n International
Chicago officials said they were "closer than
we have ever been" to cracking the month-old
cyanlde-Tylenol case and the government
announced the removal of Excedrin capsules
from Colorado stores because of the mercury
poisoning of a man who was in critical con­
dition today.
At least two other people were hospitaliied
in what officials were calling a copy cat con­
tamination case in Florida and the Food and

D rug Administration issued a warning
Tuesday asking consumers nationwide to
inspect all purchased products for possible
tampering.
Illinois Attorney General Tyrone Fahner
refused to elaborate on developments in the
killings of seven people in the Chicago area by
cyanide-laced Extra-Strength Tylenol cap­
sules.
Hut he announced officials would release the
results of fingerprint tests on an eighth bottle

of the poisoned pills today and said his in­
vestigators are "closer than we have ever
been” to making an arrest
He would not say ,f Reger Arnold,
questioned earlier as a suspect and whose
name resurfaced Monday, was still under
suspicion
He said the husband of one poisoning victim.
Edwin Heiner, had passed a lie detector test
and was not a suspect. Arnold works with the
father of Mary Reiner, the victim.

The nationwide search continued for Jam es
W Lewis and his wife. Leann, also considered
suspects in the case L-wis is wanted on
federal charges for writing a fl million ex­
tortion letter to the makers of Tylenol
In Colorado, spokesmen for the state's three
largest supermarket chains issued statewide
removal orders for all Excedrin capsules and
smaller retailers were expected to follow suit
after an announcement of a withdrawal b\ the
FDA

Seminole Police And Firefighters Keeping Busy
The following people were arrested in Seminole County on
charges of driving under the influence i DUIi of alcoholic
beverages.
— Donna Catherine Isaac, 19, of Orlando, arrested 2:53 a m.
Monday, charged with DUI. Ms. Isaac was arrested by
deputies along Lake of the Woods Boulevard at U.S. 17-92.
Bond was set at $500.
— Curtis Hicks, 53, of 1B11 Persimmon Ave., Sanford,
arrested 11:59 p.m. Sunday, charged with DUI and failure to
maintain a single lane. Hicks was arrested by the Florida
Highway Patrol along U.S. 17-92 at Third Street. Bond was set
at $500.
— Phillip Pena Aguilar, 29, of Zellwood, arrested 10:40 p rn.
Saturday, charged with DUI. Aguilar was arrested by
Altamonte Springs police along State Road 436 near 1196 E,
Altamonte Drive. Bond was set at $500.
— Obdon Garcia Almanza, 25, of East Moline, III., arrested 1
a.m . Saturday, charged with DUI. Almanza was arrested byOviedo police along North Central Avenue. Bond was set at
$500.
— Kirk McKenzie, of Longwood, arrested 4:30 a.m . Satur­
day, charged with DUI and unlawful crossing of a median.
McKenzie was arrested by the Florida Highway Patrol along
Interstate 4 about one-half mile west of State Road 436. Bond
was set at $500.
— Lawrence Evan Smith, 30, of Orlando, arrested 2:34 a m
Saturday charged with DUI and failure to maintain a single
lane. Smith was arrested by Longwood police along Lemon
Avenue at Hoffa Way. Bond was set at $500.
— George Robert Joyce, 42, of 112 Dogwood St., Altamonte
Springs, arrested 4:15 p.m. Friday, charged with DUI,
careless driving, failure to leave information with property
owner, and no valid driver's license. Joyce was arrested by
Altamonte Springs police In connection with an accident w hich
occurred at Jamestown Boulevard. Police said they arrested
Joyce after he was observed walking along Sand laike Road
and after he was identified as the driver of the car involved in
the accident by other motorists at the scene. Bond was set at
$500.

- Michael Anthony Noll, 23. of Johnstown. Pa., arrested
12:16 a.m Monday, charged with DUI and improper lamchange. Noll was arrested by Casselberry police along Slate
Hoad 436 near County Road 427. Bond was set at $500
- David William Smith. 64. of Royal Palm Beach was
arrested 2:30 a.m. Monday, charged with DUI. failure to
maintain a single lane, speeding, assault on a police officer
and resisting arrest with violence. Smith was arrested byCasselberry police along U.S 17*92 near Fern Park Bond was
set at $5,000
The Sanford Fire Department responded to the following fire
alarms:
Friday
- 12:05 a.m ., 412 E. Seventh St., man down
- 12:40 a.m ,, 4220 Orlando Dr.. Apartment 59, rescue.
- 4:42 a.m., 104 Rabun Court, rescue.
- 10:49 a.m ., 18th Street and French Avenue, woman down
- 11:24 a.m ., 126 Country Gub Hoad, man down.
- 12:32 p.m ., Seminole Community College, man down
- 2:52 p.m , 25th Street and Palmetto Avenue, auto ac­
cident.
- 7:02 p.m., 1612 W 13th St., man down.
- 9:11 p.m., 2425 S. French Ave., assault, man Injured
during armed robbery of service station, treated.

.109 a m Holiday Inn Room 713 Sanford v.ar:: .i. rc *ru.
— 7:53 a.m., Fourth Street and Sanford Avenue, rescue
— 12 36 p.m., 1305 Olive Ave , grass fire
1:48 p.m., 1304 Summerlin Ave , possible contaminated
soft drink, nothing harmful found in drink
Monday
12:16 a.m., 124 Centennial Drive, rescue.
— 8:23 a m,, 1401 W. Seminole Blvd., car in take, no injuries
— 9:18 a.m., Park Avenue and Sixth Street, woman fell
11:13 a.m., Lake view Middle School, Likeview Drive, boy
injured playing volleyball
— 3:20 p.m , 629 F. Second St ., heater caused fire, no injuries
reported, some fire damage reported
— 3:47 p.m., 121 Mayfair Court, woman down
— 9:33 p.m., 25th Street and Palmetto Avenue, man down
— 10:57 p in., 24th Street arm Sanford Avenue, motorcycle
accident, motorist drove vehicle through barricades, injuries,
treated at scene and Central Florida Regional Hospital

*0*

Saturday

- 12:18 a.m .. 519 E. First St., woman down
- 2 a.m., 4220 Orlando Drive, false alarm .
- 2:54 a.m ., 2623 Orlando Drive, woman injured during
robbery, treated.
- 6:54 a m., 4107 Orlando Drive, auto accident with Injuries.
- 9 55 a.m .. 407 E. First St., n a n down.
_ 2 29 p.m., Like Golden at Sanford Airport, man fell
- 3 25 p.m., 1320 Forest Drive, power lines in trees
~ - 6 32 p.m . 1717 Park Ave., rescue.
- 7 13 p.m.. 608* j Cypress Ave., man fell.
Sunday
- 1:08 a.m ., Holiday Inn Room 229, Sanford Marina, man
down.

V.e'

FREE
C o n s u lta tio n &amp; E v alu atio n
C*"''C;J)»«|i ti
P(L* Ir
• • ■r"
) M#»d*Ch#
\ BlcllC*#
2

SUM N o t*

I

) Should*' Pirn

4 ir g t

7 N?'ifvu»»#ta
I l *9 o» Pout C■

No Extra Out Of Pocket
Expense. We Accept
Insurance Assignments
Group • A u la • H ealth ’ M edicare 'U nion

Live Oak Blvd. M ay G et Signal
Hy M1CHF.ALBF.ua
Herald Staff Writer
Relief m ay be in store for motorists
who use U.S. Highway 17-92 in
Casselberry.
Casselberry Mayor Owen Sheppard is
heading up a drive to collect $15,000 from
merchants in Live Oak Center for in­
stallation of a traffic signal at the In­
tersection of U ve Oak Boulevard and
U.S. 17-92.
The intersection is heavily traveled
with the U.S. Postal Service and the
Seminole County library’s Casselberry'
branch being two of the biggest users.
Nineteen accidents occurred a t the
inlersection last year. County Traffic
Engineer Gary lis te r said. This y e a r's
loll will be considerably higher, Shep­
pard said.
The Casselberry City Council has
approved $15,000 for the project and one
store in the area has a $2,500 com­
mitment to the city for signals that

Sheppard said will be put toward the
project.
Representatives of Barnett Bank and
Brentwood P ro p e rtie s have given
Sheppard commitments to participate In
the project. Brentwood Properties and
Live Oak Center Corp. own the buildings
in the complex. Pizza Hut and other
businesses on the west tide of U.S. 17-02
have not yet committed to the project.
Lester put the price tax for Installation
of the signal at $30,000.
He said one signal would eliminate the
accident problem caused by southbound
vehicles turning across the highway but
admitted the signal would not eradicate
the traffic congestion created by people
traveling to Live Oak Center, Seminole
Plaza and Jimmy Bryan Auto Sales.
Seminole Plaza representatives said
they were Interested in getting traffic
signals installed but only If a second
signal is installed to control traffic at that
site. A second signal would cost at least
$30,000, Lester said.

The congestion has been a problem for
city, county, state and federal officials
who have sought to correct the problem
In the past.
Because Live Oak Boulevard is a
private road, by state and federal rules,
no funds can be appropriated for the
road, a Florida Department ol Tran­
sportation official said.
Casselberry officials have tried to get
the federal government to chip In with
funds because the post office is the
biggest user of the road. Postal officials
promised to help fund the project several
years ago, but federal officials ruled
against the light.
If enough funds are collected, county
commissioners agreed lo install lhe light
and take care of maintenance with
Casselberry paying lor maintenance
costs.
Commissioners said if the efforts to get
funding fall short, they will seek to have
the median closed at the Intersection.

AREA DEATHS
He is survived by his wife,
KIRBY FITE
Kirby F ite , 59, of 214 C la ire H.; a son, Rick
Vlnewood D rive, Sanford, Edward, of Winter Park; a
died
Tuesday at Orlando daughter, Devron Milner, of
Regional M edical Center. Fort Lauderdale; two sisters,
Bom Feb. 15, 1923, at Hun­ Mrs. Walter Steele, of San­
tersville, N.C., he was a ford, and Mrs. Mary Helen
lifetime resident of Sanford. Bohman, of Orlando; and a
He was a salesm an for brother, John D. Fite, of
Packard M arketing and Clearwater.
Gramkow Funeral Home,
former owner of Fite Tire
Supply. He was a deacon and S anfo rd , is in charge of
mem ber
of
First arrangem ents.
Presbyterian Church, San­
RICHA RDM. SOUZA
ford, and m em ber of Sanford
Richard M. Souza, 47, of 713
Masonic Lodge 62 F&amp;AM,
Bahia S h rin e Temple In L au rel Way, Casaelberry,
Orlando, Civil Air Patrol, died Monday at the Navy Re­
Medical Center,
Sanford Elks Lodge BPOE gional
Orlando. Bom In Falls River,
1241.

Mbss., on Feb. 14, 1935, he
moved to Casselberry from
Portsmouth, R.I., in July 1982.
He was a clerk and a m em ber

Funeral Notice
F I T E . M E . K IR B Y - M e m o r ia l
s e rv ic e s lo r M r K irb y F it e , S».
o l 214 V in e w oo d D riv e . S e n lo ra .
w tio d ie d Tuesday, w ill b e a t I I
am
W e d n is d a y a l
F ir s t
P re s b y te ria n C hurch, S a n fo rd ,
w ith O r V irg il L. B r y a n t o l
f ic la lin g The la m ily w ill r e c e iv e
c a lle rs f l p m W e d n e s d a y a t
O ra m K o w F u n e ra l H o m e In lie u
o f flo w e rs , c o n trib u tio n s m a y be
m a d e lo T h o rn w e ll H o m e lo r
C h ild r e n in c a re o l F i r s t
P re s b y te ria n C h u rch , M l O a k
A y e ., S ant P riv a te b u r ia l a t a
la te r d a te G ra m ko w F u n e r a l
H o m e in ch a rg e

of St. Augustine's Church. He
was a past president of the Air
Force Sergeants Association.
Survivors include his wife,
Natalie M.; two sons, Robert
J., of Providence, R.I., and
Perry M., of Casselberry; and
one daughter, Deborah A., of
Casselberry.
Baldwin-Fairchild Funeral
Home, Goldenrod, is in
charge of arrangements.

W o rk m a n '* C om p

SANFORD PAIN
CONTROL CLINIC
OH T H O M A S Y A N O E ll

C h iro p rA d ic Ph*»&gt;ci*n

r o w s F R E N C H A V E ( A c f o t t f r o m P i l l * Hut) S A N F O R D

3 2 3 -5 7 6 3

CV

^ F r e e c o m u l t i t mm* and e v i l met io n d o e * non in c lu d e a r a n t e r I r e t t m t ^ i if
■ r a p t o r t re a tm e n t * i f in d ic a t e d M ont u n tu ra n c e »acJude% (tie r© p r a t i t
* o ve rag e .
in tv ro m ce
a i t v p f t t i *% p t y r n t n i *n M l * , m
rw»
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�6A—Evening Herald. S a n f o r d . W e d n e s d a y , Oct. 27, i m

A Presence

THE PRICE OF HEAT:
AM ERICA’S GAS BILL
H e w '(

Saigon

The Children Americans Left Behind

1

E n g la n d

By DON GRAFF
the US. and Vietnamese governments to
HO CHI MINI! CITY (NEA) - Seven years
process the emigration of Vietnamese with
after the last evacuation helicopter lifted off
bona fide American connections.
the U S. embassy roof in this former capital of
And if the visitor is passing through
South Vietnam, the American presence per­
Bangkok, could he please check to see that all
S o u th ^
sists.
is in order1 The number is....
r Atlantic
It is there to be read in the fading signs of
The Orderly Departure Program is the sole
South-1
C e n t r ll
shuttered Tu Do Street bars. It can be heard in
direct contact between the two governments.
W South
Central
the slangy English of the Saigonese. It is on
The American end of it is based in Thailand
display in the war crimes museum, a small
where there are tens of thousands of eligible
arsenal of captured weapons made in the
cases on file, each a number and identifying
U.S.A. It is even the law of the Socialist
whole families as well as individuals. For
Republic of Vietnam, which requires visiting. . most, the :\i!l .oust he long.
foreigners to pay their way In dollars.
And life, meanwhile, is hard. There is food in
- f —a
Nahw • *....... j j . - njswj
And it lives on in the children Americans left
apparent quantity in the central market,
r4
behind.
tv
crowded with buyers as well as sellers, but
1m \
[ K*. i "m'1
4it
They infest scruffy downtown streets around
also evidence of hunger in the streets. Faces
.y
W\ rrtn C*T*’4
H4
1Z'O
the once grand, now decaying hotels reserved
are drawn, women carrying sickly infants beg
ti f*VtYvCffrilr*! l J S I
m
for foreigners. Easily recognizable with their
scraps in restaurants.
1 So.vt' Ctf.fta
zv.
distinctive features and coloring varying from
Work is difficult to find and unrewarding,
f U,'ffi
IV.
*VI *
VQ
very
light
to
very
dark,
even
the
youngest
are
especially
for the young of the dispossessed
**"* frigLlflti
*».18*
U4
dealers.'They sell stamps and trinkets, but
middle class. The waste of human resources in
MrI Alutftfic
* S3!
r/t
f *
most often and profitably the universal
an economy that needs all the help il can get is
souin Anemic
- I 1* .
,M.„
___
currency of shattered economies - cigarettes.
: continuing tragedy of post-war Vietnam. A
Their mothers are usually hovering close by
university graduate fluent in one or more
N a t u r a l g a s lu lls a r c i* \|» cctcil to a v e r a g e $:i!)K th is
and always eager to tell their stories.
European languages may have no other way of
w in te r n a tim m ic lc . a n i n c r e a s e of Ssr» o v e r la s t
making a living than to peddle a "cydo," the
Basically,
it
is
one
story.
The
lucky
ones
live
w in te r . C u rre n t law p r o v id e s for a g r a d u a l r is e in
pedicabs that are Sigon's taxis and must be
with Vietnamese relatives, extended families
n a t u r a l |*;is p ric e s w ith c o m p le te d e c o n tro l ta k in g
rented from the government.
jammed into two or three rooms. The unluckye f fe c t J a n . I,
H o w e v e r, s e v e r a l p r o p o s a ls fo r
The (long, the northern currency that
live in the streets, taking shelter where they
a c c e le r a te d d e c o n tr o l a r e u n d e r c o n s id e r a tio n in
replaced the south's piastre, is officially set at
can. At night, the central railroad station
nine to the dollar. On the street, the rate is
C o n g r e s s and th e W h ite H o u se.
becomes a huge dormitory.
four or five times that, especially for the scrip
If they are lucky, the children may be
"Vietnam Dollar" which the government
permitted to go to school. But what they learn
issues one for one and Is required for pur­
is cruelty. They are rejected and taunted t ;
chases in the special stores restricted to
the Vietnamese children, particularly children
of officials from the north who are Saigon’s
foreigners.
new elite.
Russians Included. I rooking uncomfortable
The father left with the last Americans. He
in ill-fitting tropical clothing, these
is back in the United States now, or maybe
"Americans without dollars" move about the
stationed in Thailand or the Philippines. Often
city in small herds, an official presence
married and with a family. Even so, he oftei
universally disliked by the Saigonese.
writes and sometimes sends money.
There is also a Chinese presence, unofficial
WASHINGTON lIll’ll — A consumer coalition on energy • That helps. But what they really want is a
ami massive, in Saigon’s twin city of Cholon. It
issues predicts more than 300,000 American households will
is said to be only half the city of a million it
number, one that means acceptance under the
have their natural
and heat shut off this winter for non­ Orderly Departure Program established by
once was. Cholon has contributed generously
payment of bills.
The study, released by the Citizen-labor Energy Coalition,
predicts shutoffs will occur at more than twice last year’s rate.
The coalition's findings are based on a national survey of gas
utility disconnections as of September 1982.
"It won't be just the poorest people who will lose their heal
this winter," said William Hutton, secretary-treasurer of the
group and executive director of the National Council of Senior
Citizens.
The coalition estimated more than 1 million residential gas
disconnections occurred in the United States between (X’tober
1981 and September 1982. Based on those figures, it predicted:
—At least 300,000 households will have their gas heal turned
off this winter. That compares with about 150,000 households
the coalition estimated were faced with disconnections last
winter, the first year a survey was performed.
—Many gas users, who barely made it through lust winter
without being disconnected, may lose their heat this winter if
llvey do not turn the I t 00-1200 needed. Natural gus prices will
tie up Iroin 20 percent to 25 percent ttila wtnter compared with
last winter, and some cold-wcather cities could have increases
of +0 percent.
Tens of thousands of Americans whose gas heat was
disconnected last spring in states where winter disconnections
are not allowed still owe utility bills of 1300-$500, offering little
chance for reconnection before winter.
"As the recession deepens and as natural gas price increases
continue, the working poor, senior citizens and the growing
number of unemployed all face the terror of winter days
without heat."
w North
C entral

to the flood of "boat people."
But there is little visible evidence of
depopulation. Compared to subdued Saigon,
Cholon is Jumping. The pace is quicker, the
traffic in Ihe narrow streets thicker and
noisier. It is also fouler, from exhausts of
sputtering trucks more numerous than in
Saigon. And. despite laments that all the great
restaurants are gone, the food is better.
The return from hustling Cholon to hushed
Saigon is to another world. Cycle traffic
sweeps along the avenues of the graceful cityin stately processions and near silence except
for the squeak of wheels needing oil and the
occasional staccato bark of an exhaust.

Fuel Cutoffs
Could Leave
Many Heatless

Until Sunday evening.
Then, at dusk, as if on cue, streets fill with
motorbikes. One. two, three to a bike, young
Saigon rides along the tree-lined streets ami
through the broad plazas of the city’s heart.
Motors blend in a throaty, hypnotic rhythm
Around and around and back again, it is a
spectacle that nothing else in the dispirited
city has prepared an observer for. It is over as
suddenly as it began. The rum ble of motors
recedes into silence in the warm night and the
cycles again take over.
Hut for a brief hour of a single evening, the
hard life of Ho Chi Minh City could be
forgotten. Saigon was vibrantly alive.

AMERICAS FAMILY DF^JG STORE

WM

COLGATE

SHAVE CREAM

19c

SYSTEM1

Invectives: The
Dying Art Of
Verbal Hostility
CHARLESTON, S.C. (UPI) —Sigmund Freud viewed Invec­
tives as a substitute for dueling. Ur. Norman Olsen Jr. believes
swearing is a dying art.
"Because our hostile impulses towards others have been
repressed by society,verbal hostility replaces physical at­
tack," Freud wrote.
"Wc obtain the pleasure of our enemy's degradation by
scorning or ridiculing him (preferably) In the presence of a
third person, an inactive spectator who laughs."
Olsen, an English professor who has researched the use of
invectives in literature and elsewhere, says swearing is a
decaying folk art.
"It used to be that people could swear at great lengths
without being obscene or vulgar," he says. "It seems to be an
art form that is dying out.
"One finds the whole process of oral and written com­
munication on the decline. I think our visual orientation has
detracted from the way people handle language these days."
As artful cursing declines, people are more likely to hear
four letter Anglo-Saxonlsms, says the College of Charleston
professor.
"What is bad about what lias happened is that people didn't
need to use obscenity to get their point across in the past," he
says. "1 don’t hold out much hope (or the future."
Newspaper columnist Jack Leland, who cherishes the ability
of someone to lambaste a person for five minutes without using
a obscene word, says the constant over use of four letter words
by "smallbralned cretins" lessens their shock value.
Invectives generally take one of two forms - a short jab or a
sustained and-all-inclusive putdown that can obliterate an
opponent.
"I think the quick jab is more challenging and more fun
because it requires quick thinking," Olsen says. "You need a
sharp tongue, a sense of humor and a quick wit because it's a
rapier thrust."
Winston Churchill was an expert with the verbal jab, which
has become a popular tool of politicians. Responding to a
woman who said she would put strychnine in his coffee if he
were her husband, Churchill said: "If I were your husband, I'd
drink it."
Drama critics also have also used invective Jabs effectively.
Heywood Broun was once sued for libel for branding a
performer the world's worst actor. After winning the court
case, Broun covered the actor's next performance and said he
was "not up to his usual standard."
Leland recalled the epithets of a lumber camp operator in
nearby McClellanvllle who prided himself on his oratorical
ability while driving his mules, horses or oxen:
"You bandy-legged, spavinated, hay-bunting son of* an
illegitimate, misconceived, ornery'! hell-fired cuss of a var­
mint. You either get your tail in high gear or I’ll flay the flesh
off your bones and leave your stinking carcass for the boxankied hounds and splittoed buzzards to feed on."

AQUA-FRESH
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�Eveninq Herald. Sanford F I

Equal Medicine

Why Dr. Betty Jones Is A Scientist
BETHF.SDA, Md. NKAi — (lazing into an
electron microscope at the H arvard School of
Public Health in Boston Dr Betty Jones is
trying to make progress in the field of
biomedical research
Dr. Jones, on leave as a researcher and
assistant professor of Biology at Morehouse
College in Atlanta, is among the handful of
young black females working in her branch of
medicine.
She studies the pathology and control of
schistosomiasis, an acute and chronic disease
caused by parasites in the blood. Involved are
disorders of the liver, bladder, lungs or central
nervous system It affects 10 percent of the
world's population, most of them living in
tropical areas
Twenty years ago. a person such as Betty
Jones more likely would have become a
laboratory technician, or perhaps a nurse,
Today she is in the mainstream of biomedical
research.
But her studies were backed by a govern­
ment program that for 10 years has been
helping to expand research a t universities
with high minority enrollments The Minority
Biom edical Research S upport (MBRSi
program operates under grants from the
Division of Research Resources at the
National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, Md
While the money does such things as
upgrade laboratory facilities, it also pays
salaries to students for any research they
conduct on behalf of their institutions Thus,
the student gains invaluable experience —
which otherwise may have been impossible to
attain — through employment as a research
assistant in one of the MBRS faculty projects

Jones came in contact with Dr lafayette
Frederick, chairman of the Atlanta University
biology department. Dr Frederick, who was
recruiting graduate students, told her if she
enrolled at Atlanta University, he could place
her in the large MBRS program.
So, Betty Jones accepted a spot at the AU
Graduate School. After five years, she earned
a Master of Science in Biology and a Doctor of
Philosophy in Biology while doing prodigious
amounts of high quality research.
Praising the MBRS program, she says, “ 1
shall never forget the type of academic and
research training l received at Ntlanta
University."
After receiving her Ph.D., Dr. Jones
accepted a teaching and research position at
nearby Morehouse College. She became an
MBRS faculty member, helping to train more
minority researchers During her first year at
Morehouse, she received three separate
academic awards for her teaching skills.
After three years at Morehouse, Dr. Jones
was encouraged by the person who first
recruited her to Atlanta, Dr. Frederick, to
broaden her experiences by applying for a
post-doctoral research position at Harvard
through the Bunting Institute of Radcliffe
College.
To accept the three-year position, Dr. Jones
and her husband, an Atlanta police officer,
have been forced to set up a long-distance
marriage.
“ We do try to be together as often as
possible, but it does have an impact on the
relationship," she says.

Betty Jones needed such an opportunity.
One of 11 children, she majored in Biology at
small Rust College in Holly Springs, Miss She
desperately wanted a career in biomedical
research. However, that required advanced
training. She had no idea how she or her family
could afford graduate school.
During her senior year at Rust in 1973, Betty

Now about halfway through
pointment at Harvard, Dr. Jones
return to Morehouse, even though
portunities will be opening up —
major institutions.

her ap­
plans to
new op­
many at

"I want the opportunity to train young black
students whose situations are similar to
mine," she says. "I want to be able to teach,
train, counsel, serve as a role-model,
motivate, stimulate and inspire students who

l) r . I l r l t ) .lo u r s o p e r a te s a n e le c tr o n m ic ro s c o p e w h ile ilo in u b io m e d ic a l
r e s e a r c h . S h e w as h e lp e d in h e r m e d ic a l c a r e e r l&gt;\ a f e d e r a l p r o g r a m th a t
rncouragO N m in o r itie s .

are interested in pursuing science careers."
Dr. C irdaco Gonzales, who heads the MBRS
Program at the National Institutes of Health,
says Betty Jones is typical of her coun­
terparts.
lie cites statistics to demonstrate that
minorities arc more underrepresented in the
sciences than in most other professions
"For many minorities, there’s a lack of
personal finances to pursue the necessary
training," Dr. Gonzales says.

"There's also been a lack of adequate
research facilities at minority institutions," he
says, "as well as the need to free faculty
members from heavy teaching loads so they
can spend more tune as researchers working
with their students ... When these things are
corrected, minority students can achieve
success as teachers just as readily as other
students."
Says Dr. Gonzales: "That's what the MBRS
Program is all about."

Wednesday Ocf ?7. 198?- .’ A

Young Dippers, Chewers
Endangering Their Health
ATl-ANTA (UPI) - A "campus rage" of dipping snuff
and chewing tobacco has caused an alarming increase in
the incidence of oral cancers and pre-cancerous lesions in
young people, oral surgeons say.
"Smokeless — either chewing tobacco or dipping snuff
has become a campus rage," said Drs Irving Meyer and
Kr ;t Cohenour. members of the American Association of
Oral and Maxillofacial Surgeons in Atlanta for a scientific
session
"1 have been shocked to see kids all the way down to age 7
dipping snuff or chewing,” said Cohenour "They think it's
neat to chew and dip this stuff."
Both Meyer, of Springfield. Mass., a professor of oral
pathology at Tufts University, and Cohenour of Oklahoma
City, said Friday they have noted increases in the incidence
of oral malignacies or pre-cancerous conditions in their
practices.
Chewing tobacco and dipping snuff can lead to oral
leukoplakia, a pre-cancerous condition of the mouth It has
a malignant transformation rate of between 3 and 5 per­
cent, they said.
Each year, 27,000 people are diagnosed as having oral
cancer, causing 9,000 deaths.
Meyer said leukoplakia is a white patch of plaque that
may range from a smooth, shiny area to a thickened,
wrinkled, hardened lesion, much like the skin of an
elephant.
The condition often appears in the spot where the tobacco
rests in the mouth but it also can be present on the tongue,
lips, salvary glands, palate, checks, or between the mouth
and esophagus

Scientists Taking
New Tact In Fight
Against Cancer
By AL ROSSITER Jr.
UPI Science Editor
SEATT1J-11UPI I — Researchers are changing tactics in the
war against cancer by stepping up the effort to find chemicals
that prevent it rather than trying to eliminate all the agents
causing the disease.
A variety of substances such as beta carotene in carrots and
selenium in most foods already are under investigation and
scientists report an increasing number of other natural and
synthetic chemicals are being studied as possible cancer
preventers.
"I'm very excited about it," said Dr. Vincent DeVita, who as
director of the government's National Cancer Institute is the
head of the nation's effort against cancer.
"It seems to me we have a lot of information that suggests
we're going to be able to interfere with cancer," he said
Wednesday at a briefing at the 13th International Cancer Con­
gress.
DeVita said the cancer institute has increased its support of
such studies after "a little twisting and turning of our
machinery to get it pointed in the right direction "
"Most of the emphasis in preceding decades was on
removing the initiator from the environment," he said. “That
turns out to be very difficult although it's a worthwhile at­
tem pt. tt turns out th e re are many more thintts around that

interfere with promotion (of cancer)."
Dr. le e W. Wattenberg, professor of laboratory medicine at
the University of Minnesota, said in an opening session of the
congress some cancer-preventing compounds suppress the
cancer process and others "simply block the cancer-producing
agent from ever hitting its target site."
lie said his laboratory has found two naturally occurring
constituents of coffee that appear to be able to prevent cancer
in rats. They arc kahwcol palmitate and cafcstol palmitate.
Wattenberg said the studies, still in the early stage, indicate
the two compounds produce “ a panorama of protective ef­
fects."
“ It’s as if you rang a bell and suddenly you had all kinds of
things coming about," he said. "They're extremely interesting
compounds."
But Wattenberg said researchers have not yet investigated
these chemicals for any adverse effects when used in large
amounts.
“ It's going to take us some time to find out what their real
implications are for m an," he said.
"Once you find an inhibitor, then you have to explore it very
extensively to make sure you're not dealing with something
which might have an unexpected toxic or adverse side effect."
An estimated 8,000 health professionals from 95 countries
arc expected to attend the cancer meeting. It runs through
next Wednesday and more than 4,000 reports on all aspects of
cancer will be presented.

Midwife Battles
Medical Board

NORTHERN MIST

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OPEN DAILY 9 lo 9, SUNOAY 10 to 7. Salt Prlct. good thru S a t (Jet 3 0 U i.s a ta v l the Dark Continent
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OAANOI CITY
Tour Town** Shopping Center

5045 Red Bug Lake

i
« &lt;v

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DERMOTT, Ark. (U PI) — In a turn of the century Victorian
home on Main Street, midwife Carolyn Vogler delivers the
children of the people who work the farms on the flat
Mississippi River Delta land of southeast Arkansas.
She charges 8300 compared to the 82,000 the same care might
cost in a hospital — no small m atter to people who mostly have
too much money for Medicaid and too little to have adequate
insurance or savings.
Her clients praise her, but the Arkansas Medical Board says
what she is doing is illegal and has filed suit claiming she is
practicing medicine without a license.
"I wouldn’t be caught practicing obstetrics," said Ms.
Vogler, a pleasant-tooking woman with a broad, bright smile,
who has two children of her own. "They (doctors) intervene in
a natural process. If It's not going the way they want it, they
intervene. I'm a watchdog — a specialist in normal labor and
deliveries. If something’s not going right, I know it."
Robert Cearly, the attorney for the state Medical Board,
filed the suit against Ms. Vogler seeking an injunction to stop
her business.
"What she's doing constitutes the practice of medicine —
holding herself out as being able to treat a condition and taking
a fee for doing that," said Cearly, noting the state Medical
Practices Act does not address midwifery.
"If the legislature want to change that, they can," Cearly
said, "but right now, It's Illegal."
Ms. Vogler said the Medical Board’s reaction to her clinic
represented "a threat to (physicians') territory, power and
their pocketbooks."
" It's economic, authority and power more so than safety,"
she said. "They can throw that (the safely factor) around, but
they can't document It in hospitals."
Ms. Vogler, 32, and h er husband, William, opened the Delta
Midwife Clinic in July In Dermott, a town of 4,000 in an area of
rice, soybean and cotton farms.
Ms. Vogler, who attended the Bethlehem Child Birth Center
in El Paso, Texas, but has no formal medical training, had
been a practicing midwife for two yean in central Arkansas.
She said one reason she moved to Dermott was because the
infant mortality rate in southeast Arkansas is higher than the
national average.

�8A —

Evening Herald, Sen l o r d ,

F I.

W e d n e s d a y , O c l. 1 1 . 1981

Napoleon Was Not Murdered
quantity nt arsenic in s&lt;&gt;tw -ti*‘ sar. •' ' *•
*
Books were then written 'pt’&lt;ulatir.c b&lt; * ■ •
with arsenic

LONDON i l ’PI i — Evidence from examination uf strands
Napoleon Bonaparte's hair and pieces of his wallpaper appear
to disprove theories the exiled French military tennis was
murdered by poisoning with arsenic
Two teams of doctors who used the most sophisticated
technology to review the circumstances of his death disclosed
their findings in separate articles in this week's issue of the
scientific magazine Nature.
After his defeat at Waterloo in 1815. Napoleon was dis­
patched into exile on the isolated South Atlantic island of St
Helena. He died there in 1921 at the age of 51. suffering from
what appeared to be arsenical poisoning
Neutron analysis in the 1960s found 13 times the normal

Dr David Jones of the University i V * ■
and Dr Kenneth Led in g ham of the Umversit'.
Scotland, examined a sample f riguia »
Napoleon’s residence on St Helena

VV

They said it was known many people were p&gt;
semcal vapors from wallpaper in the '.9th ent
X-ray fluorescence measurements &gt;n this
enough arsenic to be capable : austr.g dinesnot death." their report said

H o rm o n e s M a y H o ld L ife S p an K e y

K x e n itiv e D i r e c to r Itoh W alk o . a n d l.o u W hitney,
c lia irn ia n of th e M ajor I n d u s tr ie s D iv isio n , gel
se rio u s a lim it how to re a c h th e g o a l of Sins.imn.

W ith o n ly u few d a y s left in th e c a m p a ig n , 'f r o m
le ft to rig h t t U n ite d W a y of S e m in o le C o m ity
1‘r e s id e n t Dick K e s s ; itr u c c Cox, c a m p a ig n
w o r k e r at S l r o m h e r g C a r ls o n ; U n ite d W ay

IN THE
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Until the early 60s, the thymus gland
was thought to be useless, he said It
started shrinking after puberty

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7 2 .9 5 R e lsk a V o d k a
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8 Y r. 86*
™ BOURBON

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10 OZ. TIN

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L T R ______A B C

CASE OF 12- 83.85

WILLIAM WILBANKS

____

HAPPY HOUR

G IA N T P A R T Y S IZ E —

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HI-WAY 17-92 AT 436 OPEN SUNDAY

59

MINIATURES

(DUN k f T

COST

* *CASSELBERRY

E a rly Tim es Brb. 6 8 .9 4
8 6 * SCOTCH K e n tu ck y G e n t m . 6 5 .9 5
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6 2 .9 5
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uni

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TTTTV

1 O «99750M L

Second L I John Hong, son of
Theodore C and Seouhee Mono of
1106 C al la St Altam onte Springs
h asg ractu a le d tro m u S A ir Fo rce
pilot training and h as re ce ive d
silv e r w m g s at l auqhlm A ir F o rc e

Disrut*

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750 Ml

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HI-WAY 17-92 SOUTH CITY LIMITS

m
w

IRISH CREAM

A rm y I *wt Samuel W W illia m s ,
stepson of Thomas W H en m yan of
71 M osswood C r c l e , W in te r
S p rin g s fias co m p le te d b a sic
fram in g af fo rt ¥ no*. K y
During the fra rung, students
r re e l ve il instruction in d r ill and
c e re m o n ie s
w e ap o n s,
m ap
read m y tactics, m ilita ry cour
tesy m ilita ry »usbcr f ir s t a d amt
A rm y history and trad itio n s
He is *i Ivfl7 graduate of la k e
How ell High School M a itla n d

o z.

# 7 5 0 ML

BAILEY’S

SAMUEL WI1J.IAMS

b

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■Ie.ll t WVH. Ivet.ll
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3
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SCOTCH

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saniTs

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Drive, Omaha Neb. has arrived
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COLADAI

son of Kenneth pegley of 133S4
yyinnona Awe Meclusay, Ohio, and

IT*

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United Way gift
is really
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1

CASE OF 12- 59.85

S e n io r A irm a n Her He % B *R ta ve

Th is ad
Is for
all those
who ever wonder
if your

P R IC E S G O O D T H R U T U E S D A Y

LITER

TRACY COOK

N a v y S eam an W illia m
O
W ilb a n k s , son o l H o ra c e C a n d
t ra n e e s L W ilb a n ks o t 2012 C e d a r
A v e . S a n to ro re c e n tly d e p lo y e d
to th e W e s te rn P a d lic a n d In d ia n
O ce an
H e is a cre w m e m b e r a b o a r d th e
d e s t r o y e r te n d e r U S S S a m u e l
G o m p e r s . h o m e p o rte d in S a n
D ie g o
D u rin g th e sc h e d u le d seven
m o n th d e p lo ym e n t, h is s h ip w ill
p a r tic ip a te n va rio u s e a e rc u e s
w ith o th e r 1th f le ft u n its a n d th o se
o t a llie d n a tio n s
T h e S am u e l G o m p e rs is u &lt; te e t
lo n g a n d c a rrie s a crew ot 1.801 Its
p r im a r y m is sio n is to p ro v id e
re p a ir se rv ic e s to d e s tro y e rs w h ile
at lo a t

A large body of evidence p mt&gt; to an
age-related decline in the immune
system which may tie rejuvenated by
agents like thymosin." Goldstein said
The next several years will be the most
potentially exciting time

Thvmosins used m medicine are ex­
tracted from the thy mus glands of calves
or made in laboratories, using recom­
binant DNA technology, and doctors -aid
their use in disease treatment ts very
promising."

L IQ U O R

ABC 6 Y R . K Y
BOURBON X 4 9

TAAKA
VO D KA

A rm y P vt Tracy L Cook, son of
V r «»mJ M rs W illiam t f tie* of I?
Cunningham Hoad, Of B a r y has
com plelifd basic 1raining a I f o r t
iK.no*. k y
D uring ihi* nam ing, s fud«*nts
re ce ive d instruction n d r ill and
c frp m o n c s
w eap o ns.
m ap
re ad in g , tactics m ilita ry cour
t r s if, m ilita ry ju stic e .firs t a id , and
A rm y hr story and trad itions
He is a 19/1 graduate of D e l and
Senior High School

Nrvorwi L

Thymosin may very well hold the key
to extending our life span to 100 years or
more," said Dr Allan I. Goldstein, the
co-discoverer of thymosin and chairman
of the department of biochemistry at the
George Washington University School of
Medicine in Washington. D C

ABC, A M ERICA 'S LARGEST W IN E AND SPIRITS DEALER HAS THE LO W ER EV ER YD A Y PRICE. . .SA VE UP TO 4 0 % . . .A S MUCH AS $3 A BOTTLE

PETER DEMPSEY II
tta v r Seam an Secruit P e te r £
D e m m e * II, ion of L nda ft and
P eter F D rm p ie y Sr o&lt; 112 Knob
H ill C rc le . Longwood. h as com
dieted re tru t training at the
N av al Training Center, Q riando
D uring the e gfit &lt;vrek tra in in g
c y c le , tra in e e ! itu d e d g e n e ral
m il it a r y s u b ie c ti d e sig n e d *o
p re p a re
them
tor
fu rth e r
acad e m ic and on the iob tra in in g
m one ot the Navy's IS b a s ic oc
ru p atio n at fields
in clud ed in their slud ies w e re
se am an sh ip , close order d r ill,
N a v a l history and lirsl a&gt;d P e r
sonnet who complete this c o u rse ol
nstruct'O n a re eligible lo r three
to u rs ol college t r r d t in P h y s ic a l
E d u ca tio n and ttyqrene

This is very excituit.. ■••-•ust- ir -aid
explaining thymosins keep the immune
system in go" condition V healthy
immune system helps the !«»)&gt; fight off
infections of all kinds fr m viruses or
bacteria

of Health, doctors told the Conference u
Aging Monday

NEW YORK i LTD - An u.jnunesystem gland once thought to be useless
produces hormones found to be “ very
p rom ising" in fighting cancer and
crippling arthritis and could extend the
human life span to 100 years or more,
scientists say.
Thymosuis, produced in humans by the
small, pinkishgrav thymus gland cradled
between the heart and breastbone, were
found to be effective against certain
types of cancer seven years ago.
They are now being tested on
seemingly age-related cancers such as
those of the lung, kidney and prostate
under funding by the National Institutes

p e p p e r m in t

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R e v c o r e s e r v e s t h e r i g i d t o l i m i t q u a n t it ie s

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HfeMHM

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M ailerCard

�SPORTS
Lyman Takes More
| For
Perfect5-Star

Robey Runs
Lake Howell
Into Race
•

llv&lt; 1II11S FLSTF.R
f!••» 1 •' Sport* w rttrr
.

■• ,

.

-» .t ■

past the half-way pfiir.t with the
r'-iiiauung games standing out as ke\
tn.iti f:ups fur the teams in Rir running
fur (he Five Star Omfereme crown
IV Like Unwell Silver Hawks are
lomingiiff Llsmrist impressive show-mg
I the year arid have the conference's
besi overall rerun! 4-2 and are tied
fur lhe i (inference lead 1*11 with
\piipkn Last week, tin* Hawks
palletized Spruce Creek. 46-20. behind
Ha running of junior bark Jay Robey
Robey carried lfi times fur a
Seminole County best of 251 yards
rusf.ua' and three tnui'tidowns against
.spruce Creek He also
over the
only rushing lead with 635 yards in
si* games Robey has been the Silver
(I rak leader on offense the entire 8?
season aiiil will Ite bar k in *61
Against Spruce Creek, Robey ran lor
tiui'hdowns of 69 7(i and 29 yards and
ilso lock the lead in the county in
storm# with 42 points
We got good blocking up front and
lav can really accelerate once he gels
past Ihc line of scrim m age." Itiseeglia
said He s deceptively fast
Hohey who has 4 7 speed in the 40,
said In got excellent blocking and
aught the Spruce Creek defense off
guard in the two long Tl&gt; runs The
first one was right up the middle, the
offensive line JU.nI blew them lSpruce
Creek' away." Robey said
The
.second IT) run was a draw play and Jeff
Solomon led the way through the hole
and look out the linebacker and there
w,i&gt; n mu- else around 1
Hie 25.1 yards was Robey's second
i .line in who b lie gained over inn yards
Hu o ,&lt;s"ii lb also gained 96 yards in a
game
He's "ills a junior and already
■a line Ho- onfcreme m rushing.'
Risii i'i a aid Vmi usually think that
a (il.i'Ts a nior year wilt be his best
I : Ins iiiupetitiveness. deter
ii .nation and hard work. Rnbey is
i1 Ki it to a one ol the loke Howell

f -Iu* /■nfi'iil

I a k c Unwell’s las Itidn

s

Hashes

learn leaders
Jay practices as hard as he play s
Lake Howell roach Mike Him eglt.t -aid
He gives ion percent at all tunes
Robey played organized fnnttwll tor
the first tune when he wits in sixth
grade and he said since he has been
playing the game, Rise glia lias her: IL
biggest influence nn his plus
' oat h
Rl.sceglto has helped llle the lle'sl .1
alls one Robey said
In ninth grade Kuliev plased an the
1zike Unwell freshniui: team but nas . 1
some of that season with an injury Th»
injury didn’t hold bun Ian k fnr long
though As a sophomore Roin v made
the Rowell varsity team when I" ■&gt; i
first associated with Him &gt;glia
He
Rubey ■ has all kind.' •'
potential Rlsi eglln said .ilmul tin-

' Prep Schedule

.\\
f

I i nl.i s \ g a m e s
s p in
'sem nm lc a t I a k c Hi .iiillev
I a k c H al s al \\ ildwmitl
I s m a n a l I ak c Unwell
l iislis al l &gt;v icdn
\p n p k a al I le i an d
spi in i I i i r k at M ain lan d

s .l l d 'I s |e

Ills

IHo ptoindei
fb* has size 'jo ' d and .ill
the other quailin', that mak&lt; i good
fi«itball player
Holies i» enjoying his best season
sun e he took an interest u f"Ot!wilJ anil
hi' goal is to hidji the Silser Hawks ■
the Five .Star title perhaps it"- Hawks
key game of the year is this Fridas
■igattlsl the l-Vllian i ire* [ ij;.U it. J,ike
Unwell
I iman will hi Ho* kes .’anie
Rola'S said \\ ■ hnve *. .s. rk LirJ r.
get tends fur them and we think we .till
give them a gi»id gatlu Hies .in an all
aro ;m| tough team
Right now Rohey Ini' tin Fise Star
I .inference tltb Ml: e of. t,js muid III
. UP Robes will tie hui k at I .ike Howell
•liteMlei!
; " king to lead Hi*- Hawk.
ill Ho

: tdereio r agaii:

County
Football
Leaders

m

s&gt;alm d a s 's g a m e
ji m
11vs ai .Is at 11 m il v I’rc p
I h i su n ( ooler&lt;-iue Standings
C hi star
Overall
w 1. T PI
It AM
W1 1
0
tf'.i
1akc Howell t i i
4 2 ll
VjH'pk.i
i 1 11 I 3 11 HI)
Lyman' l &gt; 1
1 1 0 3 1 0 117
i 3 1)
Spruce Creek
2 1 ti
71
3 l II
72
Mainland
t i II
a 1 0
77
DeLiml
2 2 0
69
Seminole 'Sellll
11 3 11 0 6 u
i) 6 n
14
lk Itronlte) I.Hi
0 1 0
Other &lt; ouiilv Schools llrimgr
VV t. 1
Ovltifo Ovi
12 0
Trinity Prep
L i Ki M.uv iM i
Rushing
1 Juv llnliey LH
2 .1 V\ \
"ugh i r\
' Harry Wilburns Hlv '
I lieiiiiell Manley ■Si'iii'
j Thru Juiu-.s 1Ly1
ii ftun Burke iSenn
i Jeff Solomon'! .11
8 Vine Presley I y
i Tun lutwrence Sem
Hi Mike Palowitch • IJI &gt;
I’axsUig
1 Jerry Alley Lyj
2 Mike Futrellf Seim
1 Troy (juackenbush 11JI i
1 Dwayne Johnson i Ov i
5 Darin Slack I .Hi
6 Dennis(irosecloM* 11Jt&lt;
; Jodie Huggins i Ov i
8 Jim Rnghos HA1)

Itrerlviug
1. Todd Marriott i LY j
1 Ken Ashe i Ov i
3 Willis Perry il.yi
4. Tun Liwrence (Semi
5 Ptul L'gas 11JR
6. Fred McNeil i LIR
7 Piui Lilt (Ovi
8 Jeff Reynolds lLM|
9 I lied with 4 recpls.

Scoring

I Juy Robeyi 1JD
l (tendril Manley (Seim
Harrs Williams iUvt

(iwrull
W 1. T
3 3 0
3 » ii
1 5 0

PA
62
75
89
110
86
HI
174
no

i*n
667
5n&gt;
500
5**i
129
,w:i
III!
IM&gt;

PF PA Pi 1
93 66 500
429
74
U 126 2lKI
Alt. Yds Wg
86 6.15 7 3
81 517 ti l
93 456 4 9
11 436 III 6
51 .108 6 'J
75 279 3 7
17 262 5 6
15 243 4 1
30 237 7 9
15 223 4 9

Ait. Co. Yds. Pel.
108 46 685 42
56 26 232 «
35 21 228 60
41 17 201 41
41 13 182 31
45 17 171 37
20 11 136 55
15 8 110 53
No. Yds. Avg.
19 368 19 1
18 257 14 J
16 256 16 0
12 131 109
9
85 94
6 152 25 3
6 139 23.1
75 15.0
5

Td. Fg. I p Tola l
7
42
4 — — 24
4 24

i Hlei« tones I v
I Willis Herrs Is
Toiid Marriott 1 &gt; •
a Paul Griffin Scm
Riili Moody i &gt;v
\iuiy Hi,mlm I.R

-H
18
*
Ri
1

n
1.1
13

I’uiitlng
1 Bill Ling I II
2 Ouii'k Stiilluigs LB
i Jeff Ittipkuis 1M.
i John tjumiami i iv
5 Juhn Poor Ly
ii Steve Alexander Sen

No MR 1"in;
t:
48
14
;u
18
14
18
37
**»
16
50
Ji)
t.l
55

Defense
1 Mike Hill l y
2 Bill Caught!) LM
3 Donnie Oltnen I ID
4 Tuin John sou i iv
5 David Williams l y
6 Dyrul Manley Sem
7 Don Meyer LM
6 Bill Ling 111:
9 David Butterfield »&gt;\
10 Eric Putman (K
Anthony Wilson 'Sem

l Hi­ AM. Tola!
79
tt 24
44 19
61
12 16
58
35 Ifl
53
31 18
51
.15 15
50
35 R)
45
H 111
44
26 17
43
.6 14
III
28 12
40

Turnov ers
1 Mike Hill Ly
Tom Johnson Ovi
2 Mike Clay borne 1JR
DavidHaisten 'Seim
3 Jeff Hopkins i LM t
4 David Horny a k LMi
5 Greg Pilot &lt;Ly i
6 fi tied with 2 tni or rev

I IHI JOHNSON
l inn lin e b a c k e r

lot Iter . Td.
I
rl* 0
&gt;
•i
0
0
0
3
0
0
J
0
1
2
■&gt; 1
0
0
1
1

Its s \ 'H "UK
... laid ,...:. 1 illior
1 ' jails undefeated &lt;onferenec seasons
are hard to ■«me tiy
Hut Lyman * volleyball Greyhounds
rt .,de it i'sik easy luesd.is night, rolling
past .spi ui e i reek and Yptipka fur a
port's 1 Red r e rr l and Hu Fisc Star
Confereni &lt;■ hampinnship
I was surprised it was that easy,
Mild si" end-year l.yman ouch Kurre:;
Newman whose team finished at 17-1
verall
SjKipka
.usually the speller
tint sse :,„,k «-are "f them "
1.sman whose only loss was to (Kirrio
t,..'t&gt; tin Distrnt 4A-9 Tournament
beginning Wednesdav Nov 3 Firstr-ouid games begin at R u n for the eight
jis tr u t teams The sem ifinals are
noirsday amt Hie finals are Fridas at
pm
1; i he &lt;Ires hounds 15-12. 15-6 hliiz of
spr n &lt; ' leek flu -erving ami spiking of
■emot i and Rogers keyed the win
l.ynia: reversed a 124 deficit with six
straight |mml.s f»r the victory
\
defensive sav by Rhonda Tempest a
0 ided tin winning jnunt
In M-t two. Rogers served the first si*
p..mi. \m&gt; liab"" k added the next four
ai. I iptam I yon I ugcnng served out
:•! the win
\gamst \(i"pka a return to form from
iaeviuu.sls injured latiue \h Namee
t i.pe'ltb. Hounds l" 15*2. 15-« triuinphs
\S one Wsi off had several gmid dinks
in • Mm r
pumled out Newman ' And
’l . lefi iisise plus from Ram Stambaugh
ai,&lt;i Rhonda Tempest* was very good
In tin sc "lid set ’Aye ifI served the
•i: . • . i*.ui‘ iided by solid h it' trolli
M N.iiuei 2 St.uilbaugh and Rogers
Stallib.inidi ervetl the final four Juilnt-N
.mil R . its bad three spikes
It t to Uici Five Star action, Seminole
tr.ppnl Del and 15-11. 15-H. but lost to
Liki Howell, L 111. 15-10
'.s. .si ouldri't get anslhing going
a,tains'. Like Howell.' said Tribe coach
Ri Hi ..rsI! we could have beaten
M et. we w'uld tiave tiisl for second
place
As it was. Seminole (unshed third, Red
wilh Del .anil, with a Rvfi record Tile
• wefi 12-d '.erall loke Howell
who f' wi ;&gt; DcLmd la-*). I5a&gt;. was
'i i.tot 11 1 m.»n with a LM mark Hie
a ■
■ef Hawks sseie 14-5 overall
\. .i Hist Ikdjutil leri H ardys ace
.., • Seiium le a ; 2 lead aiul thri‘e more
■i-rves '.I Herntis Mallsvnrth pushed the
margin to B-.T
ITie Halldni stunned Ino k for .in 11-8
■ad tail I Isa Nelson Roth Nelson, Sara
Vet. lb''bubs an,| L-,j Morse served out
the filial M-sen points (or the win
In set two Lso Nelson and Arlenv
1 nos oTved the ’Soles In a 7-2 lead
I'eL m d irept within 7-fi but Tracy
l.regary and Stallworth helped by
' i' s it j I fine spikes by Junes, pulled nut
Hi* s u tors

Prep Volleyball
Like Howell meanwhile bad it'
problems with Del and Pel ;&lt; taking
i are .J Seminole

'tine ui '.5 games Impping i !hre»- -•! .
15 15-.I 15-17 .ieriMnh

Wi shnuld have
i. that insd game,
moaned Ram ma #h t in.ls Henry Ae
missed serves 'fi the game jaijrit twice
Henry singled "Ut junior Ibdun [bnk (• r her hitting se n tng and defense
as the Like Mary bright sjiut

A R F. lass mid have beaten ils
against Del- amt." surmised Hiwell

ioo

..inch Jo I uciano
.Ve played very
jemriy
Sgainst Seminole, however, the Hawks
regrouped as F.deen Thiebauth hit twe
.i ts as Howell sprinted to an 11-5 ad­
vantage Cathy Saunders had several
-d .pikes before tTinsts .Si ott served
out the final two points
In set two, Unwell fell behind. 7-1 but
the serving if Thiebauth. Kathy Hanna
and Dawn Crawford eventually pulled
nut a fis e-psimt victors
vt Fustis. Like Mary lust for the 13th

The lady Lons of Oviedo had little
trouble with Leesburg Wciinesday
downing the Yellow Jackets m straight
sets. 15-7 154
Fran Foster was the outstanding
server Fayotta Robinson was Hie
leading sjuker and Theresa Wtllis .mie
up with some key dinks
Oviedo is now RLl overall. 10-.1 m the
district and ti-2 in &lt;'.inference play The
Lions travel to Luther High today and
will end the regular season in a district
match at Like Mary Thursday

Mrrafi) P fw fo tiv B onnir

N em inole n e tte i \ i l e n e J u n e s M ig h t' sp ik e s a p o in t a s I r u in m a tc
I is,i N elsin i Im iks mi I In- 11 llie s p lit T liesd .rs In lin isli in (liin l p la c e
ill th e L iv e s t a r 4 o n le rc iu 'c

Grooms Crunches Oviedo
The lug play on both offense and
defense iMisleil the (.'rooms Panthers to
i t2-2'2 victory over Oviedo m freahman
loi .tliall Tuesday night at Seminole High
i rooms benefited (rum a kickoff anil
punt return lot touchdowns, a long
scoring pass lor another TD and a long
Interception return
Oviedo took an carls i*4 lead when
liearge Tunier scored from seven-yards
out m the first quarter
('rooms gut those si* points right Lick
as Mike Wright returned the ensuing
kickoff '7-sards for a touchdown The
two {mint (inversion pass failed and the
score was Red. te6 still ui the first
quarter
The Panthers to&lt;ik a i'2-*) lead ui the
second quarter ori a 25-s art! scoring pass
from fh'xter Franklinl" \!vin Junes TTe
two-point pass failed.
&lt;Medo regained the lead ill the second
quarter when Turner rumbled 'JJ-yards
fur a touchdown and he also ran in the

Prep Football
two-point conversion as CMt-do took a 1412 lead &lt;i( the half
The second half opened with Oviedo
breathing down (’rooms' back The
freshman ljons were inside the ('rooms
10-yard line and threatening to add to its
lead Hut a fumble was recovered by
froom s.it the Panters three-yard line as
("rooms dodged a bullet
The game then turned m the Panthers’
favor as Franklin directed a 57-yard
s&lt; unng drive Croums started the drive
after a (uinble and it ended alter a
fumble as Melvin Brucson scooped up the
loose ball and ran three-yards lor a
touchdown Jones ran m the Iwu-poml
i (inversion us ( rooms took a 22-14 lead in
the third quarter
Die Panthers broke the game open
when Craig Dixun picked off an Oviedo

pass and relumed H 70-yards fur a touch­
down Franklin passed to Horace Jones
for the two point conversion and a 30-14
lead
(’rooms went up 38-14 when Jones
returned a punt 66-vards fur a TD and ran
in the two-point conversion Junes scored
two touchdowns und a pair of two-point
conversions on the night
The Panthers' final touchdown came
mi a three-yard run by Mike Hickman
and he ran in the two-point conversion
too
("rooms finished the season, the first
for head coach Bill Zeiss, with a 4-2
record, tying its previous best
We had a lot of good talent Hus year,"
Zeiss said They all did a good job 1
tried to stress the fundamentals and 1
had a lot of fun coaching this team ”
In other freshman football action
Tuesday night, the Lyman Greyhounds
finished with a spotless 6-0 record by
edging Uke Mary 21-14 at Like Mary

Cook's Corner, Cardinal, The Barn Post Wins
Cook's Comer got off to a shaky start
Tuesday night but came back to hammer
Session Tune, 23-8 in Sanford Men’s
league soflball action at Pinehurst
Field
•Session Tune jumped to a 5-3 lead with
a five-run first inning There were seven
singles in the inning for Session Tune and
the big blow was a two-run triple by
Robbie Hanrahan
Cook's scored two runs ui the second to
Re the score al live on run scoring singles
by John Boggs and Terrell Ervin, The
Comer broke the game open with five
runs in the third to take a 10-5 lead. Zeke
Washington's solo homer and Carl l^e's
two-run were the key hits In the inning
Washington and Dun Causseaux led the
26-hit Cook' s attack with four hits each.
Hanrahan had two triples for Session
Time.
In other action Tuesday night, David

Men’s Softball
luvety connected for four RBI on two
doubles and Dan Cannon had four tills to
lead The Ram to &lt;i 15-2 mut over
Mobtllte.
The Ham struck for five runs In the
second and five mure in the fourth to put
the game on ice early luvely's three-run
double was the highlight of the fourth
inning rally
Die Bam collected 19 hits on the night
while Mobilite had only six hits. Howard
Brooks led Mobilite with three hits in
three at bats.
Cardinal Industries rallied for six runs
in the fust inning and went on to pummel
Jaycees, 17-6 in Tuesday night's third
game.
liinnie Tucker's Iwo-run double was

the big blow in the six-run inning for
Cardinal.
tarry Pressley and Randy "Bulldog"
Merthle led the 19-hil Cardinal attack
with three hits euch Marty Cerosoll had
three hits Lr Jaycees. - CHRIS F1STF.R
Sanford Men's Uague
W l. GB
Cook's Comer
13 0
Cardinal Industries
11 2 2
The Bam
10 3 3
Pookie Bears
6 5 6
S&amp;H Fabricating
3 7 8D
Mobilite
4 9 9
Session Time
3 B 9
Express
3 10 10
2 11 11
Jaycees

Tonight's games:
Cardinal Industries vs. Pookie Bears
Session Tune vs. Mobilite
Die Bam vs. Jaycees

�Carlson Puts Foot In Record Book;

SYSA
Scorecard

Blake's ID Passes Sink Rock Lake

Football

MIGHTY MITF.
Tuskawilla Blue
Tuskawilla Gold
Milwee
I akeview
So Semmole
Jackson Hts
Rock lake
Teague Gold
Teague Red

WL
6 0
5 0
i 1
3 3
3 3
2 3
1 4
0 5
0 5

T
0
a
0
8
0
0
0
1)
0

Saturday rriults
Tuskawilla Gold .14. Teague Red 7
Tuskawilla Blue 13. 1akeview 0
Jack.vin Mis 19. So Seminole 6
Milwee 27, Teague Gold 0
Games of OrL 30
Rock lake vs Teague Red 9 a m
Tuskawilla Blue vs So Semmole 10 30
am
Tuskawilla Gold vs Milwee 12 noon
Teague Gold vs Jac kson Heights 1 30 p in

JUNIOR PF.KWEF.
Tuskawilla
Rock 1-ake
Teague Gold
SS- Mil wee
Teague Bed

CONF.
W t. T
3 0 1
4 1 0
2 2 1
2 3 0
0 5 0

ALL
WLT
4 0 1
4 2 0
3 2 1
3 3 0
0 6 0

Rock la k e Green vs Hudson 2 30 p m
Milwee vs Fort Uiuderdale 7 p m

JUNIOR MIDGET
Jackson Hts
Milwee
I .akeview
Rock la k e Green
Tuskawilla Blue
So Serrunole
Rock I.ake Red
Tuskawilla Gold
Teague

Teague Gold 7. Teague Red 0
Rock I-eke 13. SS-Milwee 0
Tuskawilla 30. St Johns 6
Oamrs of Oct. 30
So Semlnole-MUwee vs Tuskawilla 9 a m
Rock lake vs Teague Red 10 30 a m
Teague Gold vs Hudson 12 noon

VI \
w l
5 0
4 0
4 i
4 1
3
2 4
1 3
1 5
0 5

T
n
i
n
i
i
n
l

0
0

Saturday results
Tuskawilla Blue 28, Teague 0
Milwee 26, Tuskawilla Gold 0
1.akeview 25. Rock lake Red 0
Rock la k e Green 19. So Seminole 0

Jl M u ll I'EEW E F.

Game* of OrL 30
Milwee vs Jackson Heights 10 a m
Teague vs Tuskawilla Gold 11 30 a m
South Seminole vs Tuskawilla Blue 1 p m
1akeview vs Rock lake Green 3 p m
Rock la k e Red at Atlanta

n ONE
V4 L T
4 1 0
4 2 0
3 2 0
2 2 1
2 2 1
■1 3 0
0 5 0

MIDGET
Jackson Hts
Rock tak e
Tuskawilla
Milwee
lakeview
So Seminole
Teague

S a tu r d a y re s u lt*

CONF.
W t. T
4 0 0
4 (1 1
3 1 l)
3 1 1
2 1 1
2 4 0
1 3 1
1 5 0
0 4 0

AIL
w 1.
4 1
4 2
3 3
2 •&gt;
2 2
2 4
0 6

T
0
0
1)
1
1
0
0

Saturday result*
So Seminole 28. Teague 0
Tuskawilla 19. Rock la k e 6
1akeview 0, Milwee 0

PEE WEE
Tuskawilla
Jackson Ills
Milwee
Teague
So Semmole
1.akeview
Hock lake Red
Rock 1-ike Green

CONF
WLT
5 0 0
4 1 0
4 2 0
3 2 0
2 2 0
1 3 0
1 4 0
0 6 0

A1J.
W 1. T
6 0 0
4 1 o
4 2 0
3 2 0
2 4 0
1 4 0
1 4 0
0 6 0

Saturday m u lt*
Jackson Hts. 7. So. Seminole 6
Tuskawilla 18. Milwee 7
Teague 8. Rock 1-ake Red 6
I akeview 7. Rock la k e Green 0

1

By SAM LOOK
Herald Sp«irt* Editor
T hM « arlson pul his foot in tin Sem:r:&gt;&gt;!i Youth
Sports Association record book Saturday ,i*
1uskawilla Gold rippe&lt;l Teague Red '4-7. in Mighty
Mite Division play at Sylvan la k e Park
Carlson Itecame the first ever Mighty Mite t &gt;kick
an extra point in league play To prove the kick w.o
no fluke. Carlson booted another one and &lt;i!s-‘ ran
yards for a score in the Tuskawilla romp
Chuck Read ' five yards Kyle Mason 10 yard'
ih ris Keezel 20 yardsi and Robby Wilson to
yards all added touchdown runs as the Gold un­
proved tr. 5-0 in the league
In another Mighty Mite mismatch. MUwe&lt;
blanket! Teague Gold. 27-0. behind two scoring runby Greg Gouch
Gouch tallied on runs of 14 and 17 yards and
Milwee added a safety for 1 14-" halftime lead
David Specter added a 13-yard quarterback keeper
for a TI) in the second half and Todd Cleveland
circled in on a 10-yard end around to complete the
scoring
Gouch carried eight limes for 70 yards while
Cleveland picked up 19 in two

Game* of OrL 30
Teague vs Jackson Heights 10 a m
Tuskawilla vs South Seminole 11 30 n m
[akeview vs Hudson 1 p in
Rock lak e at Atlanta
Milwee at Fort lauderdale

Rock Like put two scores on the board early and
let its defense do the rest in a 173-43 whitewash over
Milwec-South Seminole
Quarterback Jason Varitek slipped over from one
yard nut for the first score and Vincent Alexander

CONK.

Silver lions
Seminole Bulldogs

WL T
2 0 0
0 2 0

Football

' «&gt;k .t punt hack 35 sards for another H e'hen ran in
the point after
John H ub) led the defense with a 45-yard run with
a pass inten eption and Aantek rei m ered a fumble
Amiv Spolski. Hilly Hark David Sw.an ind Carl
Kaufman were tin leading taeklers
Aantek pitched lfi pasM'-. completing eight for 63
yards H ark snared six tor 40 yards
In another -hutout league Gold tipped Teague
Red. 7-0 Scott Meredith completed .1 if 8 passes for
Red (or 27 yards Brian Hufford aught two for 17
yards
PEE WKF
Gary l'order r.m for two touchdowns and Donnie
Scarlettt chipped in one as Tuskawilla tripped
Milwee tii improve iL, record to 54)
('order ran for 120 yards on 18 carries to lead all
rushers He al&gt;. caught a pass foi .10 yards Kyle
Scott hit 3 of ii tosses for 80 yards
In other ailm n. Teague rallied for a last-quarter
touchdown to stun Risk lake Red, 8-0
Chris Knutson returned a punt 50 yards for a TD
and Chris McCracken calmly booted the extra
points for the narrow win
Knutson carried eight times lor 26 yards behind
some solid blocking from Adam Fuller, Hnan Mills
and Dalton Reed

Hot k I .ike Haider run­
ning hack Scut I AurtTiisnn heads for a log
gain as South Seminole- Milwce's
tiraig
l e r r e t l chases him
(low n.
Hock I ake
blanked South Seminull* Milwee. Kl-li, ill
Seminole Youth Spoils
Association Junior I'ee
Wee action Saturday
at Svlvan Lake Park.
M r r g ii d

JU N IO R BANTAM

SYSA

Dann\ 1’ierro was Ihi lefenstve standout wT.h 12
t,K gics while Km Thompson added nine and Slum
Fulp seven Jnhn Sabo I made two key interceptions
to thwart a Rock lake scoring drive and Jeff
Hi hardson boomed .i 4.3-yar 1punt to move the Red
•ut of st oring position
Sanford - Sammy Kdwards raced 42 yards with a
kick Jf in the Ihird quarter to lift the lakeview
• akc Green. 74
Ralph Anderson ran ir. the extra point to n *"■' 'he
I iidpin- iheir fir t win Kdwards gained 65 yariLs on
-f\eri i arrn-s Amh i v n added 35 on six Kdwards
also eon pieted IP of 13 passes for 50 yards Hubert
ASilhams aught four for 30 yards
In th- fourth Pee Wee encounter of the d i\
Jackson Heights nipped South Seminole. 745. to
improve to 4-1 for the year
Raymond Williams ran 80 yards for the South
Seminole touchdown He gained 100 yards on 10
• .irrit- Steve Jerry chipped in 80 \ arils on 10
Jl MOIl MIDGFT
Sanford's Jeff Blake tossed four touchdown
passes as thr I akeview Dolphins stomped Rock
I-ike Red. 3141
Rlake threw for scores of 80. 26 . 32 and 50 yards
while rolling up 191 yards on 5 of 8 completions
Tarance labile caught three of the TDs and Knr
Williams snared another one
Tarance Carr ran 48 yards for the last score. He
finished wtih four carries for 75 yards Eddie’s three
See R1-AKF- Page 12A

P h o to * by

Tom

V in c m l

ALL

W IT
4 1 0
2 4 0

Saturday m u lt*
Seminole Bulldogs 33, Port Salerno 13

Games of Orl. 30
Teague vs So Seminole 8.30 a in
Rock lake Red vs Jackson Heights 8 30
d.tn
lakeview vs. Tuskawilla 2:30 p.m

Game* of Oct. 30
Stiver Lions vs. Hudson
Semmole at Atlanta

Owners Plan Dramatic Move
As NFL Seconds Tick Away
Culled Press International
With seconds ticking on the clock
governing the NFL season, club owners
may attempt a dram atic move designed
to end the 37-day-old players' strike.
Cincinnati Rengals assistant general
manager Alike Brown, a member of the
NFL Management Council's executive
committee, suggested the owners might
have to "go over the heads" of union
leaders and appeal directly to the rank
and file for a contract agreement.
The players may have some moves,
too The New York Dally News reported
in Wednesday editions that NFL Com­
m issioner Pete Rozelle and chief
negolialor Jack Donlan are to be named
by the federal government as chief
culprits In stalemating talks
If the league Is to complete Its season
jnder anything resembling the original
'ormal, the parties may have to settle by
his weekend Otherwise, the season
■ould be canceled or the date of the Super
Bowl moved
"There Is a growing feeling among our

Pro Football
people that the NFL is trying to back into
the USFL (United States Football
leag u e) season," union head Ed Garvey
said Tuesday. "They can kill two birds
with one stone."
The fledgling USFL Is slated to begin In

March, weeks alter the dale of the Super
Bowl Garvey and Washington Redskins
player representative Mark Murphy said
they think the NFL will play a 14-game
schedule th at would extend into
February The NFL canceled its sixth
week of games Tuesday. Rozelle had said
at least 12 games must be played by all
teams to constitute a "credible" season
before the Jan 30 Super Bowl.

NBC Covets Tangerine Bowl
ORLANDO (UPI)
A
published report says NBC television
wants to buy the broadcast rights for
the 37th annual Tangerine Bowl from
the Mtzlou network, and if the deal
goes through, each team would take
home about 8500,000
The Orlando Sentinel reported
today that NBC not only wants to
purchase the telecast rights from
Mtzlou but shift the postseason game
from its Dec. 18 date to the afternoon
of Sunday Dec. 19

A PROMISING
NEW APPROACH
TO CAR CARE.

Executives of NBC are scheduled to
meet in Orhndo for a meeting with
Tangerine Bowl brass, bowl officials
confirmed.
Chuck Rohe, executive director of
the Tangerine Bowl, confirmed
Tuesday night that NBC executives
have asked for the Thursday meeting.
"If the NBC deal goes through, it
would mean we could pay each team
about $500,000 and thus makes us
competitive with all but the New
Year’s Day bowls." Rohe said.

COMING SOON

Sanforil Optimist nii'inher Hill Colbert
nmgratulalcx Seminole 11it'll linebacker Harold
Haines (light) for his contributions against
Del.and which earned him Optimist Defensive
I’layer of the Week honors. Gaines made six
tackles and assisted on five more. Hon Burke
ileltt picked up the award for the offense.

CarCare

Rebels Whitewash 3 More Foes

[
*
'

;;

'•

The All-American Rebels won all three
if its games i Midget. Junior Midget and
Jr Pee Wee Divisions) this past weektnd
ind all were shutout victories.
The Rebel Midgets silenced the South
side Steelers (St Jo h n 's Vienney
Church) by the score of 42-0 as the
Rebels' defense held the Steelers to Just
24 yards in total offense and no first
towns.
Chad Groseclose busted over from fiveyards out for the Rebels’ first score and
.he rout was on when Shane I^tterio
ossed a 48-yard scoring pass to Andy
Dunn.
The Rebels took command as Steve
Diurtnond rambled 12-yards for the third
IT) of the first quarter The defense was
ilso responsible for six points as Ryan
Lisle picked off a pass and darted 57yards for a touchdown.
U’tterio and Thurmond scored the final
ouchdowns for the Rebels who are 54) on

Football
the season and will face the Ocoee
Bulldogs Saturday at Ocoee, game tune
is 6 p.m.
The Jr. Midget Rebels won its fourth
game of the season by pinning a 34-0 loss
on the South Side Steelers
The Rebels held a slim 7-0 halftime
lead before exploding for 27 points In the
second half behind the running of Nate
Stephens, who raced 35-yards for a
touchdow n. Marc Groves, Johnnie
Griffin and Todd Fuggi also scored
touchdowns for the Rebels whose record
now stands at 4-1.
The Jr. Midgets were led on defense by
Jeff Hagen who intercepted a pass and
returned It for a TD and Hugh Graham
who amassed 13 solo tackles-

The Jr. Pee Wee's remained unbeaten
with a 194) whitewashing of the Winter
Park Tiger Cats.
Dusty McDougald led the way with 156
yards rushing and touchdowns of 43 and
45 yards.
The Rebels. 5-0, meet the Winter
Garden Bobcats Saturday, 4-0, in a battle
that could decide the conference
championship.
The Pee Wee Division, 2-30, received a
bye Saturday.
The All-American Football Conference
announces that they have been invited to
play in the "P eace River Bowl" at
Venice. The Venice Crusaders are known
throughout the country as a powerful
football program.
The trip to Venice will be on the
weekend of Nov. 20 and the Rebels are
expecting a huge following to the Gulf
Coast. - CURLS F1STER

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KEROSENE

TROUT IN D ALIGNMENT
AIR CONDITIONING
BRAKE SERVICE
OH CHANGE

TIRES A BATTERIES
W M lU BALANCING
ROAD SERVICE
TONE UPS

S A N F O R D G u lf SERVICE INC.
2 &amp; IB S O U TH FRENCH AVE • SANFORD FLORIDA
NIASt CERTIFIED

SYLVESTER CHANG
OWNER

322 4924

l A "PA PPY" RICHER
MANAGER

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W e d n e s d a y . O c t V . 1987

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Record 4th

CyYoung Leaves

Hooting efficiency with a bonus:

GE's "HEAT PUMP/
COOL PUM P."

Carlton Speechless ... Again
NIAS YOHK L'l’I
Steve Carlton's record
fourth Cy Yount Award left the Philadelphia
Chillies star pitcher still speechless and National
le a tu e hatters still muttering to themselves
As has been his custom for about five years, the
37-year old Carlton refused to grant an interview
with m em bers of the media following the announce­
ment by the Baseball Writers Association of
America that he had become the first four-time
winner of t' « award Jim Palmer, Tom Seaver and
Sandy Koufax won it three times each
Carlton, the major leagues' only 20-game winner
in 1082, won the award with 20 first-place votes and
' v . i t e , followed by Steve Rogers of the Montreal

Kxpos with 29 points. Fernando Valenzuela of the
Ixs Angeles Dodgers with 25'i and Bruce Sutter of
the world champion St l»ws Cardinals with 25
Carlton had a 23-11 won and lost record and a 3 10
earned run average in 296 innings this year He led
the league with 286 strikeouts, the seventh time he
has topped the 200-mark and bringing his career
strikeout total to 3,434 Hall of F'amer Walter
Johnson, who pitched for the Washington Senators
from 1907 through 1927, holds the major league
mark of 3,508 career strikeouts
Carlton previously won the award with a 27-10
record in 1972, a 23-10 mark in 1977 and a 24-9 slate in
1980

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A six-time 20-game winner. Carlton was once
known as an easy and articulate interview but about
five years ago began to think some media represen­
tatives were violating his confidence and privacy

DOLLARS ALL
YEAR ROUND

He gradually cut off certain members of the media
and finally discontinued all interview *-

JUNIOR MIDCfKT

Jeff Holcomb dashed 93 yards for a touchdown
and kicked two extra points as Tuskawilla Blue
whipped Teague, 22-0.
Nathan Hoskins put Blue on top in the first
quarter with a 17-yard burst for a score Holcomb
added his run later in the period and Mark Wainwright sewed up the win with a three-yard run in the
third quarter
Holcomb ran for 114 yards in just five carries
Tyler Jack added 32 in four W'ainw right hit Hie
Bohannon with a 43-yard pass
Carl Ange picked off two passes and Michael
Brown snatched one Doug Innanen, Mark Peters,
Jimmy Joe Kress and Jeff Dixon led the ladders

Charles Barnett rambled for 138 yards on 17
carries for Teague Andy Staggs hit 4 of 4 passes for
21 yards. Travis Hunt caught all four
MIDGET
Tuskawilla broke up a scoreless deadlock in the
fourth quarter with 19 points to drop Rock l.ake, 19­
6.
Tuskawilla snapped the deadlock when Kevin
Etnsig tossed a 13-yard TD pass to David Dees.
Moments later, Steve Trier galloped 28 yards for
another score and Einsig hit Brian Meskill for the
PAT and a 13-0 lead.
Rock I.ake came back with a touchdown, but
Trier scampered 50 yards, aided by a key block
from Brian Kamer, for the clinching score.
Trier had 144 yards on 16 carries Cornell Rigby
and Jerry Maley each romped for 31. Einsig hit 6 of
9 for 48 yards in the air. Rigby caught two for 29 and

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W ith H igh E ffic ie n c y
C l i m a t e Control
F o r A ll SeJtons

...B la k e 's 4 Touchdown Passes Sink Rock Lake. 31-0
(Continued From Cage ll,\i
receptions totaled 136 yards Robert Blackenship
ran ir. an extra point

Am azing! D ifferent I

COOLS &amp; HEATS

your entire bom*
efficiently and dependably.

PLUS

Dees snared three for 17.
I.arry Watkins and Nick Ramciatto each rushed
for over 100 yards as South Seminole blitzed
Teague, 28-0
Watkins carried 13 times for 108 yards and three
TDs Ramciatto zipped for 105 yards in just five
carries and tallied one six-pointer

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Ramciatto sprinted 55 yards for the first score
before Watkins bolted 16 yards for the second Steve
Ryan booted the PAT for a 14-0 lead

FOR MORE INFORMATION

C A L L 3 2 2 -6 5 6 2

In the second quarter, Watkins went 12 yards for
another score and Ryan kicked the points. Watkins
closed the scoring in the third period with a 73-yard
jaunt.
Danilo Garcia completed 4 of 10 passes for 110
yards. Tim I.amb caught two for 55 yards and
Ramciatto two for 55

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W A LL

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PLUM BIN G &amp;
H E A T IN G INC.
SANFORD

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energy savers addedy
w ell subtract
part of the cost.

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AT S A N F O R O
T U E S OA V S R E S U L T S

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HEAT PUM P BONUS

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SO UTH ERN AIR

PH- 322 8321
100 N MAPI! AVI.

o . t* N .O «0 INC

An Efficient Water Heater
FPL will actually pay you to conserve electricity
four ways:
Our Cooling &amp; Heating Incentive. FPL will pay up to
several hundred dollars towards the cost of having an older,
inefficient air conditioning system or heat pump replaced with
a qualifying high efficiency system.
Our Ceiling Insulation Incentive. FPL w ill pay up to
$300 towards the cost of having ceiling insulation installed.
Our Uhter Heating Incentive. FPL will pay up to several
hundred dollars towards the cost of having an inefficient water
heater modified or replaced w ith a solar water heater, water
heating heat pump or heat recovery system.
Our Solar Film Incentive. FPL will pay up to $150
towards the cost of having solar-reflective film installed.
To qualify tor the last three incentives, work must first be
recommended hy an FPL Hom e Energy Audit.

Will everyone benefit from Watt-Wise incentives?
Yes.
These incentives are less costly than the oil necessary to
generate the electricity wasted by inefficient homes. Every 6U0
kilowatt-hours of electricity not used is a barrel of oil no one
has to pay for. This also helps us postpone the building of expen­
sive power plants. The less oil we use. and the less new building

Solar Film
we have to do. the more we can help hold the line on everyone's
electric bill.
For more information on how to quality or to arrange lor a
I lom e Energy Audit, send us the coupon or call the Watt-Wise
Line at 1-800-432-6563.
The Watt-Wise Products Program. Another way we’re work­
ing hard at being the kind of power company you want.
Sll I

Id like moa* information on the following Watt-Wise incentives:
Cooling &amp; Heating
Water Heating
Ceiling Insulation
Solar Film
I would like to have an F P L Home Energy Audit.

Name
Address
C ity

F L Zip

Daytime telephone number:
Mail to: Energy Conservation Department.
Florida Power &amp; Light
RO. Box 529100, M iami. F L 33152

PPLtffivP

SANFORD
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